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Enrollment
and Billing
The enrollment and billing process
Employees join an HMO during "open enrollment,"
in which they select the health plan they want and complete
the enrollment forms. HMO contracts generally last one
year, with the premium rates guaranteed not to increase
during that period.
To join an HMO, an employee must reside in the HMO's
service area. If not, he or she must elect an alternate
health care plan offered by the employer.
After enrolling, the employee, designated as the subscriber,
must choose a primary care physician or medical group
from the HMO's provider network. The primary care physician
is then responsible for coordinating medical treatment,
including routine care, referral to specialists, and
hospitalization.
All members, including subscribers and their dependents,
are assigned member identification numbers which are
used to record and link all claims and all information
for those members. |
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Dependents can enroll
after the open enrollment period has ended if their
status is the result of a change in the family, such
as marriage or the birth of a child, or a change in
employment.
If coverage is terminated, an employee may, under certain
conditions, elect to pay for continuation of benefits
under COBRA provisions. Coverage is available also to
dependents. This could occur if an employee dies and
the spouse elects to continue coverage. Under those
circumstances, federal law limits how much the premium
can exceed the premium charged to the employee for the
same benefits package.
Many states require that an HMO offer a continuation
of benefits or conversion option to members who lose
their HMO eligibility through their employers. Generally,
however, they must pay higher premiums and receive lower
benefits than what was offered through their employer.
In many states, a member can convert to this option
after exhausting his or her COBRA benefits.
Employers are usually billed monthly for employee and
dependent premiums. HMOs are a prepaid plan, and the
premium is due by the first day of the month of coverage.
Indeminty insurance coverage usually provides a 30-day
grace period before the payment is delinquent. |
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Provider
Contracting
How providers are paid, how providers are qualified
and monitored
Provider contracts include agreement provisions that
relate to reimbursement for services and for risk-sharing
arrangements. A common method of reimbursement is capitation,
an amount paid to a physician or medical group based
upon a certain rate per member per month. The rate is
usually a fixed amount, generally determined by the
member's age and sex, but it can also include a percentage
of the employer group's premium. Capitation is most
often used for primary care physicians.
The principal advantage of a capitation agreement is
that the physician has no incentive to provide more
services than are medically necessary. The fee is paid
whether or not services are rendered, and it provides
a consistent source of revenue, enabling the provider
to easily budget the anticipated income.
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For hospitals
and providers other than primary care physicians, discounted
fee-for-service or per diem arrangements are normally
used. These methods of reimbursement are based upon
utilization and demand; the more services that are provided,
the more income that is derived. And because utilization
is not fixed and is difficult to predict, fee-for-service
and per diem arrangements are the most difficult to
control. Capitation is also used for reimbursement to
hospitals and other providers.
For staff model HMOs that employ full- and part-time
physicians, salary reimbursement is used almost exclusively.
The HMO pays the physician an annual salary.
In all these contractual arrangements, risk-sharing
and incentive agreements between the HMO and provider
are frequently included. These provisions generally
specify how excess health services costs, including
physician and hospital costs, are absorbed by both the
HMO and the provider. Conversely, if any health care
services fall below expected costs, the provisions also
define how the savings are to be distributed. |
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Health plan products and services are offered
by PacifiCare of California and PacifiCare Behavioral Health
of California, Inc. |
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Indemnity insurance products (including PPO
products) offered in California are underwritten by PacifiCare
Life and Health Insurance Company. |
 | Other products and services are offered by PacifiCare
Health Plan Administrators, Inc., RxSolutions, Inc., and PacifiCare
Behavioral Health, Inc. |
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PacifiCare® is a federally registered
trademark of PacifiCare Life and Health Insurance Company. |
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