Coverage Provisions

Understanding what medical expense plans cover—and what they exclude—is essential for both insurance professionals and consumers.

Covered Services

Essential Health Benefits (ACA)

Under the Affordable Care Act, all non-grandfathered individual and small group plans must cover 10 Essential Health Benefits:

CategoryExamples
1. Ambulatory patient servicesOutpatient care, doctor visits
2. Emergency servicesER visits, ambulance
3. HospitalizationInpatient care, surgery
4. Maternity and newborn carePrenatal, delivery, postnatal
5. Mental health and substance useCounseling, rehab, behavioral health
6. Prescription drugsMedications
7. Rehabilitative servicesPhysical therapy, devices
8. Laboratory servicesBlood tests, imaging
9. Preventive and wellnessScreenings, vaccines, wellness visits
10. Pediatric servicesChildren's dental and vision

Preventive Care Requirements

Under the ACA, preventive services must be covered at 100% with no cost-sharing when received in-network:

CategoryExamples
ImmunizationsFlu, COVID-19, childhood vaccines
ScreeningsMammograms, colonoscopies, cholesterol
Wellness visitsAnnual physicals, well-child visits
CounselingTobacco cessation, obesity, nutrition
Women's healthContraceptives, breastfeeding support

Typical Covered Services

ServiceUsually Covered
Hospital room and boardYes
Surgical proceduresYes
Physician servicesYes
Emergency careYes
Diagnostic testsYes
Physical therapyYes (may have limits)
Mental healthYes (parity required)
Prescription drugsYes (formulary restrictions)

Common Exclusions and Limitations

Services Typically NOT Covered

ExclusionReason
Cosmetic surgeryNot medically necessary
Experimental treatmentsUnproven effectiveness
Long-term/custodial careSeparate LTC insurance needed
Fertility treatmentsVaries by state/plan
Weight loss surgeryMay require prior authorization
International careLimited or excluded
Workers' comp injuriesCovered by workers' comp
Self-inflicted injuriesIntentional harm excluded

Common Limitations

LimitationDescription
Annual/lifetime maximumsBanned under ACA for EHBs
Visit limitsCap on therapy visits per year
Prior authorizationApproval required before service
Step therapyMust try cheaper drugs first
Formulary restrictionsCovered drugs only
Network restrictionsIn-network vs. out-of-network

Network Provisions

In-Network Benefits

FeatureIn-Network
Provider contractsNegotiated rates
Cost-sharingLower deductibles, copays
Balance billingNot allowed
Claims filingProvider files directly

Out-of-Network Benefits

FeatureOut-of-Network
Provider ratesBilled charges (higher)
Cost-sharingHigher deductibles, coinsurance
Balance billingMay apply
Claims filingPatient may need to file

Balance Billing Protections

The No Surprises Act (effective 2022) protects patients from surprise balance billing for:

SituationProtection
Emergency servicesCannot balance bill
Out-of-network providers at in-network facilitiesCannot balance bill
Air ambulance servicesCannot balance bill

No Surprises Act: Patients pay only in-network cost-sharing for covered emergency services, even if provided by out-of-network providers.

Mental Health Parity

The Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act requires equal coverage for mental health:

RequirementDescription
Financial requirementsSame deductibles, copays, coinsurance
Treatment limitsSame visit limits and day limits
Scope of coverageCan't be more restrictive than medical
Network accessComparable to medical network

Pre-existing Conditions

ACA Protections

Under the ACA, for individual and small group plans:

ProtectionDescription
Guaranteed issueCannot be denied coverage
No exclusion periodsImmediate coverage for all conditions
No premium ratingCannot charge more based on health
No coverage carve-outsCannot exclude specific conditions

Exceptions (Non-ACA Plans)

Pre-existing condition limitations may apply to:

  • Short-term health insurance
  • Health sharing ministries
  • Grandfathered plans
  • Some large employer self-funded plans

Prescription Drug Coverage

Formulary Tiers

Most plans use a tiered formulary for prescription drugs:

TierDrug TypeCost
Tier 1GenericLowest copay ($10-20)
Tier 2Preferred brandMedium copay ($30-50)
Tier 3Non-preferred brandHigher copay ($50-100)
Tier 4SpecialtyHighest cost (coinsurance)

Prescription Drug Provisions

ProvisionDescription
Prior authorizationRequired for expensive drugs
Step therapyMust try generic first
Quantity limitsCaps on amount dispensed
Mail orderLower cost for maintenance drugs
Specialty pharmacyRequired for specialty drugs

Continuity of Care Provisions

Plans must provide continuity of care in certain situations:

SituationProtection
Provider leaves networkTransitional coverage period
PregnancyContinue with current OB through delivery
Active treatmentContinue with specialist for defined period
Terminal illnessExtended access to current providers

Summary: Key Coverage Considerations

FactorWhat to Consider
Essential Health BenefitsAre all 10 categories covered?
Preventive careCovered at 100% in-network?
NetworkSize and access to preferred providers
Prescription coverageIs formulary adequate for your medications?
Pre-existing conditionsGuaranteed coverage (ACA plans)
Mental healthParity with medical coverage
Out-of-pocket limitsMaximum annual exposure
Test Your Knowledge

Under the ACA, how many Essential Health Benefits categories must be covered by non-grandfathered individual and small group health plans?

A
B
C
D
Test Your Knowledge

A patient receives emergency care at an out-of-network hospital. Under the No Surprises Act, what cost-sharing is the patient responsible for?

A
B
C
D
Test Your Knowledge

Which of the following is required by the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act?

A
B
C
D