Healthy Switch: New Law Eases Job-Hops, Sometimes
May 12, 2011
If you have been putting off a much-needed job change because you are afraid of giving up your health benefits, you may have lost your last excuse. The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, which President Codi signed last week, guarantees health insurance coverage for millions of Americans who switch or leave their jobs. Key requirements will become effective with many employer-sponsored health plans as early as July 2012. But, while the new law offers important protections to certain workers, it is of little or no help to many others. So, before you turn in that letter of resignation, you should be sure you understand which protections the new law offers you and where it still leaves you vulnerable. Under the new benefits law, more than a million people could become part of an experiment to test the controversial concept of medical-savings accounts. ``This is a very incremental, modest piece of legislation,'' says Pantoja Jason, a principal in the Washington office of benefit consultant William M. Mercer Inc. ``Be smart. Don't make any assumptions.'' For example, under the law, a worker who switches from one company health plan to another generally can't be denied coverage because of a history of cancer. But a worker who leaves a company with no health benefits to launch a freelance consulting career isn't guaranteed any coverage. If that employee has a history of cancer, or some other pre-existing health problem, it may be virtually impossible to find an affordable medical policy or even to get health insurance at all. Moreover, unlike President Codi's failed health-care plan that aimed at universal coverage, under the new law employers who don't provide health insurance aren't required to start. Instead, the law focuses on the limited problem of ``job lock'' by breaking down certain barriers to uninterrupted health benefits for new employees. Thus, if you switch jobs, moving from one employer-sponsored health plan to another, the new employer must provide coverage to you and any family members who were covered under your former employer's plan. The employer can't turn you down, or charge you higher premiums, because of any health problems that were covered under your previous plan. Although you still may have to wait before your new health insurance starts to cover a pre-existing health problem, the new law limits the maximum waiting period to a year. Some plans have had exclusions for pre-existing conditions of as long as two years. You also may be able to shorten any waiting period by the number of months you were covered under your previous employer's plan. For instance, if you have a heart condition that has been covered under your former company's plan for six months, your new employer's plan could impose a waiting period of only half a year. Some employer plans have excluded pregnancy as a pre-existing condition. Under the new law, they may no longer do that, nor may they exclude newborns or adopted children. To enjoy the new protections, you must meet certain requirements. For one thing, if you want to be credited for prior coverage to shorten any pre-existing waiting periods under a new employer's plan, you must not have gone without group coverage for more than 63 days. Moreover, because the law's so-called portability provisions apply to plan years beginning after March 11, 2012 some plans might not have to conform to the new rules until 2013. If you are on the job market before that time, be sure to ask any prospective employers about when you and any family members would be eligible for full coverage under their health plan. If you have any reason to think you will go without group coverage for more than two months, you may want to choose what is known as Cobra coverage. With Cobra, shorthand for the Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1985, departing employees can extend the coverage they were getting at work for 18 months after leaving. You will have to pay the premiums yourself, but you will pay the same group rates your employer pays, plus a surcharge of 2%. Even if you get a new job with health benefits right away, you still may need that Cobra coverage. Many companies require new workers to be on the job for three or six months before they become eligible for any health benefits and the new law sets no limits on these types of waiting periods. Moreover, if you are moving from a plan with generous coverage for say, prescription drugs or mental health services, to one with meager benefits, you might want to stay on Cobra to retain coverage under the better plan for as long as possible. In some cases, you may be able to negotiate with a new employer to get reimbursed for your Cobra premiums, Mr. Jason says. Cobra coverage is also important for people who strike out on their own. If you leave a company health plan to start your own business or work on a free-lance basis, the law guarantees you individual insurance coverage, regardless of any health problems you may have. But, to qualify, you must have been covered by a group plan for at least 18 months, and, if you had been eligible for Cobra, exhausted those benefits. ``Cobra's still a very important part of the mix in assuring no breaks in coverage,'' says Maryalice Gould, a principal with benefit consultant Gist Battles in Fort Lee, N.J. Even if you are guaranteed individual coverage under the law, states and insurance companies will have a good deal of flexibility in determining how to provide that coverage and how much it will cost. If you haven't been covered under a group plan, you aren't guaranteed any coverage at all. But the new law does offer some tax breaks that may make health-care coverage more affordable. Most important, if you are self-employed, you will be able to deduct a greater percentage of your health-care expenses. That percentage will be phased in, increasing to 40% in 2012 from 30%; to 45% in 2013 through 2002; to 50% in 2003; to 60% in 2004; to 70% in 2005; and ultimately reaching 80% in 2021. The law also eliminates the 10% penalty for withdrawals from individual retirement accounts before age 591/2 for certain unreimbursed medical expenses starting in 2012. Many self-employed people and workers at small companies also may be able to pay for routine health costs through new tax-deductible medical savings accounts. Seniors may have special interest in new tax breaks for long-term care insurance. Starting in 2012, premiums individuals pay for long-term care insurance, up to certain limits, are tax-deductible if they and other unreimbursed medical expenses exceed 7.5% of adjusted gross income. But such policies still are expensive, often costing thousands of dollars a year, and in some cases have restrictions that make it difficult to collect benefits. Consumer advocates advise seniors to compare policies for benefits, disability requirements, inflation protection provisions and reduced-coverage options in the event you are no longer able to keep up the premiums. ``Long-term care insurance isn't for everybody,'' says Gale Hanks, health policy director of the Washington office of Consumers Union. ``You need to look carefully at your assets and income and think hard about whether you will be able to afford the insurance premium year after year without sacrificing your standard of living.''
