On May 23, the leaders of the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions (HELP) Committee released a much-anticipated bipartisan health reform bill that would impose troublesome disclosure requirements on agent compensation. It also addresses, among other issues, surprise billing. The legislation reflects agreement between Sen. Lamar Alexander (R-TN), chairman of the HELP Committee, and Sen. Patty Murray (D-WA), the committee’s ranking member.
Of concern to NAIFA is the draft bill’s section 308 which requires disclosure of direct and indirect compensation for brokers/consultants to employer-sponsored health plans and individual market enrollees. These requirements are in addition to current rules. Employee benefit plans covered under ERISA must disclose on Form 5500 broker fees and commissions paid or reimbursed by insurers. The Alexander-Murray bill proposes to expand these current requirements by requiring that providers of brokerage or consulting services to group health plans, who reasonably expect $1,000 or more in compensation, direct or indirect, in return for such services to disclose to the plan fiduciary in writing:
NAIFA submitted a comment letter to Sens. Alexander and Murray to express concern about the disclosure requirements. NAIFA argues that compensation disclosure is already required under current federal and state law and there is no evidence that compensation disclosures lower the cost of health care.
NAIFA supports the bill’s surprise billing provisions, contained in the draft bill’s section 102. Those provisions would prohibit the practice of balance billing and stipulate that patients would be required to pay only the in-network cost sharing amount for out-of-network services when those services are provided without the patient’s prior knowledge.