(215 ILCS 5/315.5) (from Ch. 73, par. 927.5)
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2027)
Sec. 315.5.
Exemption of certain societies.
(a) Nothing contained in
this amendatory Act shall be so construed as to affect or apply to:
(1) grand or subordinate lodges of societies, orders |
| or associations now doing business in this State which provide benefits exclusively through local or subordinate lodges;
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(2) orders, societies or associations which admit to
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| membership only persons engaged in one or more crafts or hazardous occupations, in the same or similar lines of business, insuring only their own members and their families, and the ladies' societies or ladies' auxiliaries to such orders, societies or associations;
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(3) domestic societies which limit their membership
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| to employees of a particular city or town, designated firm, business house or corporation which provide for a death benefit of not more than $700 or disability benefits of not more than $650 to any person in any one year, or both; or
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(4) domestic societies or associations of a purely
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| religious, charitable or benevolent description which provide for a death benefit of not more than $400 or for disability benefits of not more than $350 to any one person in any one year, or both.
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(b) Any such society or association described in subsections (a)(3) or
(a)(4) supra which provides for death or disability benefits for which
benefit certificates are issued and any such society or association
included in subsection (a)(4) which has more than 1000 members
shall not be exempted from the provisions of this amendatory Act but shall
comply with all requirements thereof.
(c) No society which, by the provisions of this Section, is exempt from
the requirements of this amendatory Act, except any society described in
subsection (a)(2) supra, shall give or allow, or promise to give or allow,
to any person any compensation for procuring new members.
(d) Every society which provides for benefits in case of death or
disability resulting solely from accident and which does not obligate
itself to pay natural death or sick benefits shall have all of the
privileges and be subject to all the applicable provisions and regulations
of this amendatory Act except that the provisions thereof relating to medical
examination, valuations of benefit certificates and incontestability
shall not apply to such society.
(e) The Director may require from any society or association, by
examination or otherwise, such information as will enable the Director to
determine whether such society or association is exempt from the provisions
of this amendatory Act.
(f) Societies exempted under the provisions of this Section shall
also be exempt from all other provisions of the insurance laws of this State.
(Source: P.A. 86-187 .)
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(215 ILCS 5/315.6) (from Ch. 73, par. 927.6) (Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 103-656 )
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2027)
Sec. 315.6. Application of other Code provisions. Unless otherwise
provided in this amendatory Act, every fraternal benefit society shall be
governed
by this amendatory Act and shall be exempt from all other provisions of the
insurance laws of this State not only in governmental relations with the
State but for every other purpose, except for those provisions specified in
this amendatory Act and except as follows:
(a) Sections 1, 2, 2.1, 3.1, 117, 118, 132, 132.1, |
| 132.2, 132.3, 132.4, 132.5, 132.6, 132.7, 133, 134, 136, 138, 139, 140, 141, 141.01, 141.1, 141.2, 141.3, 143, 143c, 144.1, 147, 148, 149, 150, 151, 152, 153, 154.5, 154.6, 154.7, 154.8, 155, 155.04, 155.05, 155.06, 155.07, 155.08 and 408 of this Code; and
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(b) Articles VIII 1/2, XII, XII 1/2, XIII, XXIV, and
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(Source: P.A. 98-814, eff. 1-1-15 .)
(Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 103-656 )
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2027)
Sec. 315.6. Application of other Code provisions. Unless otherwise provided in this amendatory Act, every fraternal benefit society shall be governed by this amendatory Act and shall be exempt from all other provisions of the insurance laws of this State not only in governmental relations with the State but for every other purpose, except for those provisions specified in this amendatory Act and except as follows:
(a) Sections 1, 2, 2.1, 3.1, 117, 118, 132, 132.1,
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| 132.2, 132.3, 132.4, 132.5, 132.6, 132.7, 133, 134, 136, 138, 139, 140, 141, 141.01, 141.1, 141.2, 141.3, 143, 143.31, 143c, 144.1, 147, 148, 149, 150, 151, 152, 153, 154.5, 154.6, 154.7, 154.8, 155, 155.04, 155.05, 155.06, 155.07, 155.08 and 408 of this Code; and
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(b) Articles VIII 1/2, XII, XII 1/2, XIII, XXIV, and
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(Source: P.A. 103-656, eff. 1-1-25.)
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(215 ILCS 5/351A-1) (from Ch. 73, par. 963A-1)
Sec. 351A-1.
Definitions.
Unless the context requires otherwise, in this
Article:
(a) "Long-term care insurance" means any accident and health insurance
policy or rider advertised, marketed, offered or designed to provide
coverage for not less than 12 consecutive months for each covered person on
an expense incurred, indemnity, prepaid or other basis, for one or more
necessary or medically necessary diagnostic, preventive, therapeutic,
rehabilitative, maintenance, or personal care services, provided in a
setting other than an acute care unit of a hospital. Such term includes
group and individual annuities and life insurance policies or riders which
provide directly or which supplement long-term care insurance. The term also
includes a policy or rider that provides for payment of benefits based upon
cognitive impairment or the loss of functional capacity. The term shall also
include qualified long-term care insurance contracts. Long-term
care insurance may be issued by insurers, fraternal benefit societies,
nonprofit health, hospital, and medical service corporations, prepaid
health plans, health maintenance organizations or any similar organization
to the extent they are otherwise authorized to issue life or health
insurance. Long-term care insurance shall not include any insurance policy
which is offered primarily to provide basic Medicare supplement coverage,
basic hospital expense coverage, basic medical-surgical expense coverage,
hospital confinement indemnity coverage, major medical expense coverage,
disability income protection coverage, accident only coverage, specified
disease or specified accident coverage, or limited benefit health coverage.
Long-term care insurance may include benefits for care and treatment in
accordance with the tenets and practices of any established church or
religious denomination which teaches reliance on spiritual treatment
through prayer for healing.
(b) "Applicant" means:
(1) In the case of an individual long-term care |
| insurance policy, the person who seeks to contract for benefits.
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(2) In the case of a group long-term care insurance
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| policy, the proposed certificate holder.
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(c) "Certificate" means, for the purposes of this Article, any
certificate issued under a group long-term care insurance policy, which
policy has been delivered or issued for delivery in this State.
(d) "Director" means the Director of Insurance of this State.
(e) "Group long-term care insurance" means a long-term care insurance
policy which is delivered or issued for delivery in this State and issued
to one of the following:
(1) One or more employers or labor organizations, or
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| to a trust or to the trustee or trustees of a fund established by one or more employers or labor organizations, or a combination thereof, for employees or former employees, or a combination thereof, or for members or former members, or a combination thereof, of the labor organizations.
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(2) Any professional, trade or occupational
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| association for its members or former or retired members, or combination thereof, if such association:
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(A) is composed of individuals all of whom are or
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| were actively engaged in the same profession, trade or occupation; and
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(B) has been maintained in good faith for
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| purposes other than obtaining insurance.
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(3) An association or a trust or the trustee or
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| trustees of a fund established, created or maintained for the benefit of members of one or more associations. Prior to advertising, marketing or offering such policy within this State, the association or associations, or the insurer of the association or associations, shall file evidence with the Director that the association or associations have at the outset a minimum of 100 members and have been organized and maintained in good faith for purposes other than that of obtaining insurance, have been in active existence for at least one year, and have a constitution and by-laws which provide that:
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(A) the association or associations hold regular
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| meetings not less than annually to further the purposes of the members;
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(B) except for credit unions, the association or
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| associations collect dues or solicit contributions from members; and
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(C) the members have voting privileges and
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| representation on the governing board and committees.
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Thirty days after such filing the association or
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| associations will be deemed to satisfy such organizational requirements, unless the Director makes a finding that the association or associations do not satisfy those organizational requirements.
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(4) A group other than as described in paragraph (1),
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| (2) or (3) of this subsection (e), subject to a finding by the Director that:
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(A) the issuance of the group policy is not
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| contrary to the best interest of the public;
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(B) the issuance of the group policy would result
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| in economies of acquisition or administration; and
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(C) the benefits are reasonable in relation to
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(f) "Policy" means, for the purposes of this Article, any policy, contract,
subscriber agreement, rider or endorsement delivered or issued for delivery
in this State by an insurer, fraternal benefit society, nonprofit health,
hospital, or medical service corporation, prepaid health plan, health
maintenance organization or any similar organization.
(g) "Qualified long-term care insurance contract" or "federally
tax-qualified long-term care insurance contract" means an individual or group
insurance contract that meets the requirements of Section 7702B(b) of the
Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, as follows:
(1) The only insurance protection provided under the
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| contract is coverage of qualified long-term care services. A contract shall not fail to satisfy the requirements of this subparagraph by reason of payments being made on a per diem or other periodic basis without regard to the expenses incurred during the period to which the payments relate.
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(2) The contract does not pay or reimburse expenses
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| incurred for services or items to the extent that the expenses are reimbursable under Title XVIII of the Social Security Act, as amended, or would be so reimbursable but for the application of a deductible or coinsurance amount. The requirements of this subparagraph do not apply to expenses that are reimbursable under Title XVIII of the Social Security Act only as a secondary payor. A contract shall not fail to satisfy the requirements of this subparagraph by reason of payments being made on a per diem or other periodic basis without regard to the expenses incurred during the period to which the payments relate.
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(3) The contract is guaranteed renewable within the
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| meaning of Section 7702(B)(b)(1)(C) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended.
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(4) The contract does not provide for a cash
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| surrender value or other money that can be paid, assigned, pledged as collateral for a loan, or borrowed except as provided in subparagraph (5).
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(5) All refunds of premiums and all policyholder
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| dividends or similar amounts under the contract are to be applied as a reduction in future premiums or to increase future benefits, except that a refund on the event of death of the insured or a complete surrender or cancellation of the contract cannot exceed the aggregate premiums paid under the contract.
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(6) The contract meets the consumer protection
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| provisions set forth in Section 7702B(g) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended.
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"Qualified long-term care insurance contract" or "federally tax-qualified
long-term care insurance contract" also means the portion of a life insurance
contract that provides long-term care insurance
coverage by rider or as part of the contract and that satisfies the
requirements of Sections 7702B(b) and 7702B(e) of the Internal Revenue Code of
1986,
as amended.
(Source: P.A. 92-148, eff. 7-24-01.)
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(215 ILCS 5/351A-8) (from Ch. 73, par. 963A-8)
Sec. 351A-8.
Outline of coverage.
(a) An outline of coverage shall be delivered to a prospective applicant
for long-term care insurance at the time of initial solicitation through
means which prominently direct the attention of the recipient to the
document and its purpose.
(1) The Director shall prescribe a standard format |
| including style, arrangement and overall appearance and the content of an outline of coverage.
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(2) In the case of agent solicitations, an agent must
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| deliver the outline of coverage prior to the presentation of an application or enrollment form.
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(3) In the case of direct response solicitations, the
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| outline of coverage must be presented in conjunction with any application or enrollment form.
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(b) The outline of coverage shall include:
(1) A description of the principal benefits and
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| coverage provided in the policy.
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(2) A statement of the principal exclusions,
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| reductions and limitations contained in the policy.
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(3) A statement of the terms under which the policy
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| or certificate, or both, may be continued in force or discontinued, including any reservation in the policy of a right to change premium. Continuation or conversion provisions of group coverage shall be specifically described.
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(4) A statement that the outline of coverage is a
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| summary only, not a contract of insurance, and that the policy or group master policy contain governing contractual provisions.
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(5) A description of the terms under which the policy
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| or certificate may be returned and premium refunded.
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(6) A brief description of the relationship of cost
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(7) A statement that discloses to the policyholder or
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| certificate holder whether the policy is intended to be a federally tax-qualified long-term care insurance contract under 7702B(b) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended.
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(Source: P.A. 92-148, eff. 7-24-01.)
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(215 ILCS 5/351A-9.1) (from Ch. 73, par. 963A-9.1)
Sec. 351A-9.1.
Policy summary and benefit reports.
(a) At the time of policy delivery, a policy summary shall be delivered
for an individual life insurance policy which provides long-term care
benefits within the policy or by rider. In the case of direct response
solicitations, the insurer shall deliver the policy summary upon the
applicant's request, but regardless of request shall make such delivery no
later than at the time of policy delivery. In addition to complying with
all applicable requirements, the summary shall also include:
(1) an explanation of how the long-term care benefit |
| interacts with other components of the policy, including deductions from death benefits;
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(2) an illustration of the amount of benefits, the
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| length of benefit, and the guaranteed lifetime benefits if any, for each covered person;
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(3) any exclusions, reductions and limitations on
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| benefits of long-term care; and
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(4) if applicable to the policy type, the summary
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(A) disclosure of the effects of exercising other
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(B) disclosure of guarantees related to long-term
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| care costs of insurance charges; and
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(C) current and projected maximum lifetime
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(b) Any time a long-term care benefit, funded through a life insurance
vehicle by the acceleration of the death benefit, is in benefit payment
status, a monthly report shall be provided to the policyholder. Such
report shall include:
(1) any long-term care benefits paid during the month;
(2) an explanation of any changes in the policy,
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| including changes in death benefits or cash values, due to long-term care benefits being paid out; and
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(3) the amount of long-term care benefits existing or
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(Source: P.A. 86-384.)
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(215 ILCS 5/355) (from Ch. 73, par. 967) (Text of Section from P.A. 103-106) Sec. 355. Accident and health policies; provisions. (a) As used in this Section: "Inadequate rate" means a rate: (1) that is insufficient to sustain projected losses |
| and expenses to which the rate applies; and
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(2) the continued use of which endangers the solvency
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| of an insurer using that rate.
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"Large employer" has the meaning provided in the Illinois Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act.
"Plain language" has the meaning provided in the federal Plain Writing Act of 2010 and subsequent guidance documents, including the Federal Plain Language Guidelines.
"Unreasonable rate increase" means a rate increase that the Director determines to be excessive, unjustified, or unfairly discriminatory in accordance with 45 CFR 154.205.
(b) No policy of insurance against loss or damage from the sickness, or from the bodily injury or death of the insured by accident shall be issued or delivered to any person in this State until a copy of the form thereof and of the classification of risks and the premium rates pertaining thereto have been filed with the Director; nor shall it be so issued or delivered until the Director shall have approved such policy pursuant to the provisions of Section 143. If the Director disapproves the policy form, he or she shall make a written decision stating the respects in which such form does not comply with the requirements of law and shall deliver a copy thereof to the company and it shall be unlawful thereafter for any such company to issue any policy in such form. On and after January 1, 2025, any form filing submitted for large employer group accident and health insurance shall be automatically deemed approved within 90 days of the submission date unless the Director extends by not more than an additional 30 days the period within which the form shall be approved or disapproved by giving written notice to the insurer of such extension before the expiration of the 90 days. Any form in receipt of such an extension shall be automatically deemed approved within 120 days of the submission date. The Director may toll the filing due to a conflict in legal interpretation of federal or State law as long as the tolling is applied uniformly to all applicable forms, written notification is provided to the insurer prior to the tolling, the duration of the tolling is provided within the notice to the insurer, and justification for the tolling is posted to the Department's website. The Director may disapprove the filing if the insurer fails to respond to an objection or request for additional information within the timeframe identified for response. As used in this subsection, "large employer" has the meaning given in Section 5 of the federal Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act.
(c) For plan year 2026 and thereafter, premium rates for all individual and small group accident and health insurance policies must be filed with the Department for approval. Unreasonable rate increases or inadequate rates shall be modified or disapproved. For any plan year during which the Illinois Health Benefits Exchange operates as a full State-based exchange, the Department shall provide insurers at least 30 days' notice of the deadline to submit rate filings.
(d) For plan year 2025 and thereafter, the Department shall post all insurers' rate filings and summaries on the Department's website 5 business days after the rate filing deadline set by the Department in annual guidance. The rate filings and summaries posted to the Department's website shall exclude information that is proprietary or trade secret information protected under paragraph (g) of subsection (1) of Section 7 of the Freedom of Information Act or confidential or privileged under any applicable insurance law or rule. All summaries shall include a brief justification of any rate increase or decrease requested, including the number of individual members, the medical loss ratio, medical trend, administrative costs, and any other information required by rule. The plain writing summary shall include notification of the public comment period established in subsection (e).
(e) The Department shall open a 30-day public comment period on the rate filings beginning on the date that all of the rate filings are posted on the Department's website. The Department shall post all of the comments received to the Department's website within 5 business days after the comment period ends.
(f) After the close of the public comment period described in subsection (e), the Department, beginning for plan year 2026, shall issue a decision to approve, disapprove, or modify a rate filing within 60 days. Any rate filing or any rates within a filing on which the Director does not issue a decision within 60 days shall automatically be deemed approved. The Director's decision shall take into account the actuarial justifications and public comments. The Department shall notify the insurer of the decision, make the decision available to the public by posting it on the Department's website, and include an explanation of the findings, actuarial justifications, and rationale that are the basis for the decision. Any company whose rate has been modified or disapproved shall be allowed to request a hearing within 10 days after the action taken. The action of the Director in disapproving a rate shall be subject to judicial review under the Administrative Review Law.
(g) If, following the issuance of a decision but before the effective date of the premium rates approved by the decision, an event occurs that materially affects the Director's decision to approve, deny, or modify the rates, the Director may consider supplemental facts or data reasonably related to the event.
(h) The Department shall adopt rules implementing the procedures described in subsections (d) through (g) by March 31, 2024.
(i) Subsection (a) and subsections (c) through (h) of this Section do not apply to grandfathered health plans as defined in 45 CFR 147.140; excepted benefits as defined in 42 U.S.C. 300gg-91; student health insurance coverage as defined in 45 CFR 147.145; the large group market as defined in Section 5 of the Illinois Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act; or short-term, limited-duration health insurance coverage as defined in Section 5 of the Short-Term, Limited-Duration Health Insurance Coverage Act. For a filing of premium rates or classifications of risk for any of these types of coverage, the Director's initial review period shall not exceed 60 days to issue informal objections to the company that request additional clarification, explanation, substantiating documentation, or correction of concerns identified in the filing before the company implements the premium rates, classifications, or related rate-setting methodologies described in the filing, except that the Director may extend by not more than an additional 30 days the period of initial review by giving written notice to the company of such extension before the expiration of the initial 60-day period. Nothing in this subsection shall confer authority upon the Director to approve, modify, or disapprove rates where that authority is not provided by other law. Nothing in this subsection shall prohibit the Director from conducting any investigation, examination, hearing, or other formal administrative or enforcement proceeding with respect to a company's rate filing or implementation thereof under applicable law at any time, including after the period of initial review.
(Source: P.A. 103-106, eff. 1-1-24 .)
(Text of Section from P.A. 103-650, Article 3, Section 3-5)
Sec. 355. Accident and health policies; provisions.
(a) As used in this Section:
"Inadequate rate" means a rate:
(1) that is insufficient to sustain projected losses
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| and expenses to which the rate applies; and
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(2) the continued use of which endangers the solvency
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| of an insurer using that rate.
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"Large employer" has the meaning provided in the Illinois Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act.
"Plain language" has the meaning provided in the federal Plain Writing Act of 2010 and subsequent guidance documents, including the Federal Plain Language Guidelines.
"Unreasonable rate increase" means a rate increase that the Director determines to be excessive, unjustified, or unfairly discriminatory in accordance with 45 CFR 154.205.
(b) No policy of insurance against loss or damage from the sickness, or from the bodily injury or death of the insured by accident shall be issued or delivered to any person in this State until a copy of the form thereof and of the classification of risks and the premium rates pertaining thereto have been filed with the Director; nor shall it be so issued or delivered until the Director shall have approved such policy pursuant to the provisions of Section 143. If the Director disapproves the policy form, he or she shall make a written decision stating the respects in which such form does not comply with the requirements of law and shall deliver a copy thereof to the company and it shall be unlawful thereafter for any such company to issue any policy in such form. On and after January 1, 2025, any form filing submitted for large employer group accident and health insurance shall be automatically deemed approved within 90 days of the submission date unless the Director extends by not more than an additional 30 days the period within which the form shall be approved or disapproved by giving written notice to the insurer of such extension before the expiration of the 90 days. Any form in receipt of such an extension shall be automatically deemed approved within 120 days of the submission date. The Director may toll the filing due to a conflict in legal interpretation of federal or State law as long as the tolling is applied uniformly to all applicable forms, written notification is provided to the insurer prior to the tolling, the duration of the tolling is provided within the notice to the insurer, and justification for the tolling is posted to the Department's website. The Director may disapprove the filing if the insurer fails to respond to an objection or request for additional information within the timeframe identified for response. As used in this subsection, "large employer" has the meaning given in Section 5 of the federal Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act.
(c) For plan year 2026 and thereafter, premium rates for all individual and small group accident and health insurance policies must be filed with the Department for approval. Unreasonable rate increases or inadequate rates shall be modified or disapproved. For any plan year during which the Illinois Health Benefits Exchange operates as a full State-based exchange, the Department shall provide insurers at least 30 days' notice of the deadline to submit rate filings.
(c-5) Unless prohibited under federal law, for plan year 2026 and thereafter, each insurer proposing to offer a qualified health plan issued in the individual market through the Illinois Health Benefits Exchange must incorporate the following approach in its rate filing under this Section:
(1) The rate filing must apply a cost-sharing
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| reduction defunding adjustment factor within a range that:
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(A) is uniform across all insurers;
(B) is consistent with the total adjustment
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| expected to be needed to cover actual cost-sharing reduction costs across all silver plans on the Illinois Health Benefits Exchange statewide, provided that such costs are calculated assuming utilization by the State's full individual-market risk pool; and
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(C) assumes that the only on-Exchange silver
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| plans that will be purchased are the 87% and 94% cost-sharing reduction variations.
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(2) The rate filing must apply an induced demand
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| factor based on the following formula: (Plan Actuarial Value) 2 - (Plan Actuarial Value) + 1.24.
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In the annual notice to insurers described in subsection (c), the Department must include the specific numerical range calculated for the applicable plan year under paragraph (1) of this subsection (c-5) and the formula in paragraph (2) of this subsection (c-5).
(d) For plan year 2025 and thereafter, the Department shall post all insurers' rate filings and summaries on the Department's website 5 business days after the rate filing deadline set by the Department in annual guidance. The rate filings and summaries posted to the Department's website shall exclude information that is proprietary or trade secret information protected under paragraph (g) of subsection (1) of Section 7 of the Freedom of Information Act or confidential or privileged under any applicable insurance law or rule. All summaries shall include a brief justification of any rate increase or decrease requested, including the number of individual members, the medical loss ratio, medical trend, administrative costs, and any other information required by rule. The plain writing summary shall include notification of the public comment period established in subsection (e).
(e) The Department shall open a 30-day public comment period on the rate filings beginning on the date that all of the rate filings are posted on the Department's website. The Department shall post all of the comments received to the Department's website within 5 business days after the comment period ends.
(f) After the close of the public comment period described in subsection (e), the Department, beginning for plan year 2026, shall issue a decision to approve, disapprove, or modify a rate filing within 60 days. Any rate filing or any rates within a filing on which the Director does not issue a decision within 60 days shall automatically be deemed approved. The Director's decision shall take into account the actuarial justifications and public comments. The Department shall notify the insurer of the decision, make the decision available to the public by posting it on the Department's website, and include an explanation of the findings, actuarial justifications, and rationale that are the basis for the decision. Any company whose rate has been modified or disapproved shall be allowed to request a hearing within 10 days after the action taken. The action of the Director in disapproving a rate shall be subject to judicial review under the Administrative Review Law.
(g) If, following the issuance of a decision but before the effective date of the premium rates approved by the decision, an event occurs that materially affects the Director's decision to approve, deny, or modify the rates, the Director may consider supplemental facts or data reasonably related to the event.
(h) The Department shall adopt rules implementing the procedures described in subsections (d) through (g) by March 31, 2024.
(i) Subsection (a) and subsections (c) through (h) of this Section do not apply to grandfathered health plans as defined in 45 CFR 147.140; excepted benefits as defined in 42 U.S.C. 300gg-91; student health insurance coverage as defined in 45 CFR 147.145; the large group market as defined in Section 5 of the Illinois Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act; or short-term, limited-duration health insurance coverage as defined in Section 5 of the Short-Term, Limited-Duration Health Insurance Coverage Act. For a filing of premium rates or classifications of risk for any of these types of coverage, the Director's initial review period shall not exceed 60 days to issue informal objections to the company that request additional clarification, explanation, substantiating documentation, or correction of concerns identified in the filing before the company implements the premium rates, classifications, or related rate-setting methodologies described in the filing, except that the Director may extend by not more than an additional 30 days the period of initial review by giving written notice to the company of such extension before the expiration of the initial 60-day period. Nothing in this subsection shall confer authority upon the Director to approve, modify, or disapprove rates where that authority is not provided by other law. Nothing in this subsection shall prohibit the Director from conducting any investigation, examination, hearing, or other formal administrative or enforcement proceeding with respect to a company's rate filing or implementation thereof under applicable law at any time, including after the period of initial review.
(Source: P.A. 103-106, eff. 1-1-24; 103-650, Article 3, Section 3-5, eff. 1-1-25.)
(Text of Section from P.A. 103-650, Article 4, Section 4-5)
Sec. 355. Accident and health policies; provisions.
(a) As used in this Section:
"Inadequate rate" means a rate:
(1) that is insufficient to sustain projected losses
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| and expenses to which the rate applies; and
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(2) the continued use of which endangers the solvency
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| of an insurer using that rate.
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"Large employer" has the meaning provided in the Illinois Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act.
"Plain language" has the meaning provided in the federal Plain Writing Act of 2010 and subsequent guidance documents, including the Federal Plain Language Guidelines.
"Unreasonable rate increase" means a rate increase that the Director determines to be excessive, unjustified, or unfairly discriminatory in accordance with 45 CFR 154.205.
(b) No policy of insurance against loss or damage from the sickness, or from the bodily injury or death of the insured by accident shall be issued or delivered to any person in this State until a copy of the form thereof and of the classification of risks and the premium rates pertaining thereto have been filed with the Director; nor shall it be so issued or delivered until the Director shall have approved such policy pursuant to the provisions of Section 143. If the Director disapproves the policy form, he or she shall make a written decision stating the respects in which such form does not comply with the requirements of law and shall deliver a copy thereof to the company and it shall be unlawful thereafter for any such company to issue any policy in such form. On and after January 1, 2025, any form filing submitted for large employer group accident and health insurance shall be automatically deemed approved within 90 days of the submission date unless the Director extends by not more than an additional 30 days the period within which the form shall be approved or disapproved by giving written notice to the insurer of such extension before the expiration of the 90 days. Any form in receipt of such an extension shall be automatically deemed approved within 120 days of the submission date. The Director may toll the filing due to a conflict in legal interpretation of federal or State law as long as the tolling is applied uniformly to all applicable forms, written notification is provided to the insurer prior to the tolling, the duration of the tolling is provided within the notice to the insurer, and justification for the tolling is posted to the Department's website. The Director may disapprove the filing if the insurer fails to respond to an objection or request for additional information within the timeframe identified for response. As used in this subsection, "large employer" has the meaning given in Section 5 of the federal Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act.
(c) For plan year 2026 and thereafter, premium rates for all individual and small group accident and health insurance policies must be filed with the Department for approval. Unreasonable rate increases or inadequate rates shall be modified or disapproved. For any plan year during which the Illinois Health Benefits Exchange operates as a full State-based exchange, the Department shall provide insurers at least 30 days' notice of the deadline to submit rate filings.
(d) For plan year 2025 and thereafter, the Department shall post all insurers' rate filings and summaries on the Department's website 5 business days after the rate filing deadline set by the Department in annual guidance. The rate filings and summaries posted to the Department's website shall exclude information that is proprietary or trade secret information protected under paragraph (g) of subsection (1) of Section 7 of the Freedom of Information Act or confidential or privileged under any applicable insurance law or rule. All summaries shall include a brief justification of any rate increase or decrease requested, including the number of individual members, the medical loss ratio, medical trend, administrative costs, and any other information required by rule. The plain writing summary shall include notification of the public comment period established in subsection (e).
(e) The Department shall open a 30-day public comment period on the rate filings beginning on the date that all of the rate filings are posted on the Department's website. The Department shall post all of the comments received to the Department's website within 5 business days after the comment period ends.
(f) After the close of the public comment period described in subsection (e), the Department, beginning for plan year 2026, shall issue a decision to approve, disapprove, or modify a rate filing within 60 days. Any rate filing or any rates within a filing on which the Director does not issue a decision within 60 days shall automatically be deemed approved. The Director's decision shall take into account the actuarial justifications and public comments. The Department shall notify the insurer of the decision, make the decision available to the public by posting it on the Department's website, and include an explanation of the findings, actuarial justifications, and rationale that are the basis for the decision. Any company whose rate has been modified or disapproved shall be allowed to request a hearing within 10 days after the action taken. The action of the Director in disapproving a rate shall be subject to judicial review under the Administrative Review Law.
(g) If, following the issuance of a decision but before the effective date of the premium rates approved by the decision, an event occurs that materially affects the Director's decision to approve, deny, or modify the rates, the Director may consider supplemental facts or data reasonably related to the event.
(h) The Department shall adopt rules implementing the procedures described in subsections (d) through (g) by March 31, 2024.
(i) Subsection (a), subsections (c) through (h), and subsection (j) of this Section do not apply to grandfathered health plans as defined in 45 CFR 147.140; excepted benefits as defined in 42 U.S.C. 300gg-91; or student health insurance coverage as defined in 45 CFR 147.145. For a filing of premium rates or classifications of risk for any of these types of coverage, the Director's initial review period shall not exceed 60 days to issue informal objections to the company that request additional clarification, explanation, substantiating documentation, or correction of concerns identified in the filing before the company implements the premium rates, classifications, or related rate-setting methodologies described in the filing, except that the Director may extend by not more than an additional 30 days the period of initial review by giving written notice to the company of such extension before the expiration of the initial 60-day period. Nothing in this subsection shall confer authority upon the Director to approve, modify, or disapprove rates where that authority is not provided by other law. Nothing in this subsection shall prohibit the Director from conducting any investigation, examination, hearing, or other formal administrative or enforcement proceeding with respect to a company's rate filing or implementation thereof under applicable law at any time, including after the period of initial review.
(j) Subsection (a) and subsections (c) through (h) do not apply to group policies issued in the large group market as defined in Section 5 of the Illinois Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act. For large group policies issued, delivered, amended, or renewed on or after January 1, 2026 that are not described in subsection (i), the premium rates and risk classifications, including any rate manuals and rules used to arrive at the rates, must be filed with the Department annually for approval at least 120 days before the rates are intended to take effect.
(1) A rate filing shall be modified or disapproved if
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| the premiums are unreasonable in relation to the benefits because the rates were not calculated in accordance with sound actuarial principles.
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(2) Within 60 days of receipt of the rate filing, the
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| Director shall issue a decision to approve, disapprove, or modify the filing along with the reasons and actuarial justification for the decision. Any rate filing or rates within a filing on which the Director does not issue a decision within 60 days shall be automatically deemed approved.
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(3) Any company whose rate or rate filing has been
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| modified or disapproved shall be allowed to request a hearing within 10 days after the action taken. The action of the Director in disapproving a rate or rate filing shall be subject to judicial review under the Administrative Review Law.
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(4) Nothing in this subsection requires a company to
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| file a large group policy's final premium rates for prior approval if the company negotiates the final rates or rate adjustments with the plan sponsor or its administrator in accordance with the rate manual and rules of the currently approved rate filing for the policy.
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In this subsection, "administrator" and "plan sponsor" have the meaning given to those terms in 29 U.S.C. 1002(16).
(Source: P.A. 103-106, eff. 1-1-24; 103-650, Article 4, Section 4-5, eff. 1-1-25.)
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(215 ILCS 5/355a) (from Ch. 73, par. 967a)
Sec. 355a. Standardization of terms and coverage.
(1) The purposes of this Section shall be (a) to provide
reasonable standardization and simplification of terms and coverages of
individual accident and health insurance policies to facilitate public
understanding and comparisons; (b) to eliminate provisions contained in
individual accident and health insurance policies which may be
misleading or unreasonably confusing in connection either with the
purchase of such coverages or with the settlement of claims; and (c) to
provide for reasonable disclosure in the sale of accident and health
coverages.
(2) Definitions applicable to this Section are as follows:
(a) "Policy" means all or any part of the forms |
| constituting the contract between the insurer and the insured, including the policy, certificate, subscriber contract, riders, endorsements, and the application if attached, which are subject to filing with and approval by the Director.
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(b) "Service corporations" means voluntary health and
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| dental corporations organized and operating respectively under the Voluntary Health Services Plans Act and the Dental Service Plan Act.
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(c) "Accident and health insurance" means insurance
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| written under Article XX of this Code, other than credit accident and health insurance, and coverages provided in subscriber contracts issued by service corporations. For purposes of this Section such service corporations shall be deemed to be insurers engaged in the business of insurance.
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(3) The Director shall issue such rules as he shall deem necessary
or desirable to establish specific standards, including standards of
full and fair disclosure that set forth the form and content and
required disclosure for sale, of individual policies of accident and
health insurance, which rules and regulations shall be in addition to
and in accordance with the applicable laws of this State, and which may
cover but shall not be limited to: (a) terms of renewability; (b)
initial and subsequent conditions of eligibility; (c) non-duplication of
coverage provisions; (d) coverage of dependents; (e) pre-existing
conditions; (f) termination of insurance; (g) probationary periods; (h)
limitation, exceptions, and reductions; (i) elimination periods; (j)
requirements regarding replacements; (k) recurrent conditions; and (l)
the definition of terms, including, but not limited to, the following:
hospital, accident, sickness, injury, physician, accidental means, total
disability, partial disability, nervous disorder, guaranteed renewable,
and non-cancellable.
The Director may issue rules that specify prohibited policy
provisions not otherwise specifically authorized by statute which in the
opinion of the Director are unjust, unfair or unfairly discriminatory to
the policyholder, any person insured under the policy, or beneficiary.
(4) The Director shall issue such rules as he shall deem necessary
or desirable to establish minimum standards for benefits under each
category of coverage in individual accident and health policies, other
than conversion policies issued pursuant to a contractual conversion
privilege under a group policy, including but not limited to the
following categories: (a) basic hospital expense coverage; (b) basic
medical-surgical expense coverage; (c) hospital confinement indemnity
coverage; (d) major medical expense coverage; (e) disability income
protection coverage; (f) accident only coverage; and (g) specified
disease or specified accident coverage.
Nothing in this subsection (4) shall preclude the issuance of any
policy which combines two or more of the categories of coverage
enumerated in subparagraphs (a) through (f) of this subsection.
No policy shall be delivered or issued for delivery in this State
which does not meet the prescribed minimum standards for the categories
of coverage listed in this subsection unless the Director finds that
such policy is necessary to meet specific needs of individuals or groups
and such individuals or groups will be adequately informed that such
policy does not meet the prescribed minimum standards, and such policy
meets the requirement that the benefits provided therein are reasonable
in relation to the premium charged. The standards and criteria to be
used by the Director in approving such policies shall be included in the
rules required under this Section with as much specificity as
practicable.
The Director shall prescribe by rule the method of identification of
policies based upon coverages provided.
(5) (a) In order to provide for full and fair disclosure in the
sale of individual accident and health insurance policies, no such
policy shall be delivered or issued for delivery in this State unless
the outline of coverage described in paragraph (b) of this subsection
either accompanies the policy, or is delivered to the applicant at the
time the application is made, and an acknowledgment signed by the
insured, of receipt of delivery of such outline, is provided to the
insurer. In the event the policy is issued on a basis other than that
applied for, the outline of coverage properly describing the policy must
accompany the policy when it is delivered and such outline shall clearly
state that the policy differs, and to what extent, from that for which
application was originally made. All policies, except single premium
nonrenewal policies, shall have a notice prominently printed on the
first page of the policy or attached thereto stating in substance, that
the policyholder shall have the right to return the policy within 10 days of its delivery and to have the premium refunded if after
examination of the policy the policyholder is not satisfied for any
reason.
(b) The Director shall issue such rules as he shall deem necessary
or desirable to prescribe the format and content of the outline of
coverage required by paragraph (a) of this subsection. "Format" means
style, arrangement, and overall appearance, including such items as the
size, color, and prominence of type and the arrangement of text and
captions. "Content" shall include without limitation thereto,
statements relating to the particular policy as to the applicable
category of coverage prescribed under subsection (4); principal benefits;
exceptions, reductions and limitations; and renewal provisions,
including any reservation by the insurer of a right to change premiums.
Such outline of coverage shall clearly state that it constitutes a
summary of the policy issued or applied for and that the policy should
be consulted to determine governing contractual provisions.
(c) (Blank).
(d) (Blank).
(e) (Blank).
(f) (Blank).
(6) Prior to the issuance of rules pursuant to this Section, the
Director shall afford the public, including the companies affected
thereby, reasonable opportunity for comment. Such rulemaking is subject
to the provisions of the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act.
(7) When a rule has been adopted, pursuant to this Section, all
policies of insurance or subscriber contracts which are not in
compliance with such rule shall, when so provided in such rule, be
deemed to be disapproved as of a date specified in such rule not less
than 120 days following its effective date, without any further or
additional notice other than the adoption of the rule.
(8) When a rule adopted pursuant to this Section so provides, a
policy of insurance or subscriber contract which does not comply with
the rule shall, not less than 120 days from the effective date of such
rule, be construed, and the insurer or service corporation shall be
liable, as if the policy or contract did comply with the rule.
(9) Violation of any rule adopted pursuant to this Section shall be
a violation of the insurance law for purposes of Sections 370 and 446 of this
Code.
(Source: P.A. 102-775, eff. 5-13-22.)
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(215 ILCS 5/356a) (from Ch. 73, par. 968a) Sec. 356a. Form of policy. (1) No individual policy of accident and health insurance shall be delivered or issued for delivery to any person in this State unless: (a) the entire money and other considerations |
| therefor are expressed therein; and
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(b) the time at which the insurance takes effect and
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| terminates is expressed therein; and
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(c) it purports to insure only one person, except
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| that a policy may insure, originally or by subsequent amendment, upon the application of an adult member of a family who shall be deemed the policyholder, any 2 or more eligible members of that family, including husband, wife, dependent children or any children under a specified age which shall not exceed 19 years and any other person dependent upon the policyholder; and
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(d) the style, arrangement and over-all appearance of
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| the policy give no undue prominence to any portion of the text, and unless every printed portion of the text of the policy and of any endorsements or attached papers is plainly printed in light-faced type of a style in general use, the size of which shall be uniform and not less than ten-point with a lower-case unspaced alphabet length not less than one hundred and twenty-point (the "text" shall include all printed matter except the name and address of the insurer, name or title of the policy, the brief description if any, and captions and subcaptions); and
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(e) the exceptions and reductions of indemnity are
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| set forth in the policy and, except those which are set forth in Sections 357.1 through 357.30 of this Act, are printed, at the insurer's option, either included with the benefit provision to which they apply, or under an appropriate caption such as "EXCEPTIONS", or "EXCEPTIONS AND REDUCTIONS", provided that if an exception or reduction specifically applies only to a particular benefit of the policy, a statement of such exception or reduction shall be included with the benefit provision to which it applies; and
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(f) each such form, including riders and
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| endorsements, shall be identified by a form number in the lower left-hand corner of the first page thereof; and
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(g) it contains no provision purporting to make any
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| portion of the charter, rules, constitution, or by-laws of the insurer a part of the policy unless such portion is set forth in full in the policy, except in the case of the incorporation of, or reference to, a statement of rates or classification of risks, or short-rate table filed with the Director.
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(2) If any policy is issued by an insurer domiciled in this State for delivery to a person residing in another state, and if the official having responsibility for the administration of the insurance laws of such other state shall have advised the Director that any such policy is not subject to approval or disapproval by such official, the Director may by ruling require that such policy meet the standards set forth in subsection (1) of this Section and in Sections 357.1 through 357.30.
(Source: P.A. 103-718, eff. 7-19-24.)
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(215 ILCS 5/356g) (from Ch. 73, par. 968g)
Sec. 356g. Mammograms; mastectomies.
(a) Every insurer shall provide in each group or individual
policy, contract, or certificate of insurance issued or renewed for persons
who are residents of this State, coverage for screening by low-dose
mammography for all women 35 years of age or older for the presence of
occult breast cancer within the provisions of the policy, contract, or
certificate. The coverage shall be as follows:
(1) A baseline mammogram for women 35 to 39 years of |
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(2) An annual mammogram for women 40 years of age or
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(3) A mammogram at the age and intervals considered
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| medically necessary by the woman's health care provider for women under 40 years of age and having a family history of breast cancer, prior personal history of breast cancer, positive genetic testing, or other risk factors.
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(4) For an individual or group policy of accident and
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| health insurance or a managed care plan that is amended, delivered, issued, or renewed on or after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 101st General Assembly, a comprehensive ultrasound screening and MRI of an entire breast or breasts if a mammogram demonstrates heterogeneous or dense breast tissue or when medically necessary as determined by a physician licensed to practice medicine in all of its branches.
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(5) A screening MRI when medically necessary, as
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| determined by a physician licensed to practice medicine in all of its branches.
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(6) For an individual or group policy of accident and
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| health insurance or a managed care plan that is amended, delivered, issued, or renewed on or after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 101st General Assembly, a diagnostic mammogram when medically necessary, as determined by a physician licensed to practice medicine in all its branches, advanced practice registered nurse, or physician assistant.
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A policy subject to this subsection shall not impose a deductible, coinsurance, copayment, or any other cost-sharing requirement on the coverage provided; except that this sentence does not apply to coverage of diagnostic mammograms to the extent such coverage would disqualify a high-deductible health plan from eligibility for a health savings account pursuant to Section 223 of the Internal Revenue Code (26 U.S.C. 223).
For purposes of this Section:
"Diagnostic
mammogram" means a mammogram obtained using diagnostic mammography.
"Diagnostic
mammography" means a method of screening that is designed to
evaluate an abnormality in a breast, including an abnormality seen
or suspected on a screening mammogram or a subjective or objective
abnormality otherwise detected in the breast.
"Low-dose mammography"
means the x-ray examination of the breast using equipment dedicated
specifically for mammography, including the x-ray tube, filter, compression
device, and image receptor, with radiation exposure delivery of less than
1 rad per breast for 2 views of an average size breast. The term also includes digital mammography and includes breast tomosynthesis. As used in this Section, the term "breast tomosynthesis" means a radiologic procedure that involves the acquisition of projection images over the stationary breast to produce cross-sectional digital three-dimensional images of the breast.
If, at any time, the Secretary of the United States Department of Health and Human Services, or its successor agency, promulgates rules or regulations to be published in the Federal Register or publishes a comment in the Federal Register or issues an opinion, guidance, or other action that would require the State, pursuant to any provision of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (Public Law 111-148), including, but not limited to, 42 U.S.C. 18031(d)(3)(B) or any successor provision, to defray the cost of any coverage for breast tomosynthesis outlined in this subsection, then the requirement that an insurer cover breast tomosynthesis is inoperative other than any such coverage authorized under Section 1902 of the Social Security Act, 42 U.S.C. 1396a, and the State shall not assume any obligation for the cost of coverage for breast tomosynthesis set forth in this subsection.
(a-5) Coverage as described by subsection (a) shall be provided at no cost to the insured and shall not be applied to an annual or lifetime maximum benefit.
(a-10) When health care services are available through contracted providers and a person does not comply with plan provisions specific to the use of contracted providers, the requirements of subsection (a-5) are not applicable. When a person does not comply with plan provisions specific to the use of contracted providers, plan provisions specific to the use of non-contracted providers must be applied without distinction for coverage required by this Section and shall be at least as favorable as for other radiological examinations covered by the policy or contract.
(b) No policy of accident or health insurance that provides for
the surgical procedure known as a mastectomy shall be issued, amended,
delivered, or renewed in this State unless
that coverage also provides for prosthetic devices
or reconstructive surgery
incident to the mastectomy.
Coverage for breast reconstruction in connection with a mastectomy shall
include:
(1) reconstruction of the breast upon which the
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| mastectomy has been performed;
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(2) surgery and reconstruction of the other breast to
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| produce a symmetrical appearance; and
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(3) prostheses and treatment for physical
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| complications at all stages of mastectomy, including lymphedemas.
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Care shall be determined in consultation with the attending physician and the
patient.
The offered coverage for prosthetic devices and
reconstructive surgery shall be subject to the deductible and coinsurance
conditions applied to the mastectomy, and all other terms and conditions
applicable to other benefits. When a mastectomy is performed and there is
no evidence of malignancy then the offered coverage may be limited to the
provision of prosthetic devices and reconstructive surgery to within 2
years after the date of the mastectomy. As used in this Section,
"mastectomy" means the removal of all or part of the breast for medically
necessary reasons, as determined by a licensed physician.
Written notice of the availability of coverage under this Section shall be
delivered to the insured upon enrollment and annually thereafter. An insurer
may not deny to an insured eligibility, or continued eligibility, to enroll or
to renew coverage under the terms of the plan solely for the purpose of
avoiding the requirements of this Section. An insurer may not penalize or
reduce or
limit the reimbursement of an attending provider or provide incentives
(monetary or otherwise) to an attending provider to induce the provider to
provide care to an insured in a manner inconsistent with this Section.
(c) Rulemaking authority to implement Public Act 95-1045, if any, is conditioned on the rules being adopted in accordance with all provisions of the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act and all rules and procedures of the Joint Committee on Administrative Rules; any purported rule not so adopted, for whatever reason, is unauthorized.
(Source: P.A. 100-395, eff. 1-1-18; 101-580, eff. 1-1-20 .)
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(215 ILCS 5/356i) (from Ch. 73, par. 968i)
Sec. 356i.
Medical assistance; coverage of child.
(a) In this Section, "Medicaid" means medical assistance authorized under
Section 1902 of the Social Security Act.
(b) An individual or group
policy of accident and health insurance that is delivered or issued for
delivery to any person in this State or renewed or amended may not contain
any provision which limits or excludes payments of hospital or
medical
benefits coverage to or on behalf of the insured because the insured or
any covered dependent is eligible for or receiving Medicaid benefits in this or any other state.
(c) To the extent that payment for covered expenses has been made under
Article V, VI, or VII of the Illinois Public Aid Code for health care services
provided to an individual, if a third party has a legal liability to make
payments for those health care services, the State is considered to have
acquired the rights of the individual to payment.
(d) If a child is covered under an accident and health insurance policy
issued to the child's noncustodial parent, the issuer of the policy shall do
all of the following:
(1) Provide necessary information to the child's |
| custodial parent to enable the child to obtain benefits under that coverage.
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(2) Permit the child's custodial parent (or the
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| provider, with the custodial parent's approval) to submit claims for payment for covered services without the approval of the noncustodial parent.
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(3) Make payments on claims submitted in accordance
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| with paragraph (2) directly to the custodial parent, the provider of health care services, or the state Medicaid agency.
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(e) An insurer may not deny enrollment of a child under the accident and
health insurance coverage of the child's parent on any of the following
grounds:
(1) The child was born out of wedlock.
(2) The child is not claimed as a dependent on the
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| parent's federal income tax return.
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(3) The child does not reside with the parent or in
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| the insurer's service area.
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(f) If a parent is required by a court or administrative order to provide
accident and health insurance coverage for a child and the parent is insured
under a plan that offers coverage
for eligible dependents, the insurer, upon receiving a copy of the order,
shall:
(1) Upon application, permit the parent to add to the
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| parent's coverage such a child who is otherwise eligible for that coverage, without regard to any enrollment season restrictions.
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(2) Add the child to the parent's coverage upon
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| application of the child's other parent, the state agency administering the Medicaid program, or the state agency administering a program for enforcing child support and establishing paternity under 42 U.S.C. 651 through 669 (or another child support enforcement program), if the parent is covered but fails to apply for coverage for the child.
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(g) An insurer may not impose, on a state agency that has been assigned the
rights of a covered individual who
receives Medicaid benefits, requirements that are different from requirements
applicable to an assignee of any other individual covered under the same
insurance policy.
(h) Nothing in subsections (e) and (f) prevents an
insurer from denying any such application if the child is not eligible for
coverage according to the insurer's medical underwriting standards.
(i) The insurer may not eliminate coverage of such a child unless the
insurer
is provided
satisfactory written evidence of either of the following:
(1) The court or administrative order is no longer in
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(2) The child is or will be covered under a
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| comparable health care plan obtained by the parent under such order and that coverage is currently in effect or will take effect not later than the date the prior coverage is terminated.
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(Source: P.A. 89-183, eff. 1-1-96.)
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(215 ILCS 5/356m) (from Ch. 73, par. 968m) Sec. 356m. Infertility coverage. (a) No group policy of accident and health insurance providing coverage for more than 25 employees that provides pregnancy-related benefits may be issued, amended, delivered, or renewed in this State after January 1, 2016 and through December 31, 2025 unless the policy contains coverage for the diagnosis and treatment of infertility including, but not limited to, in vitro fertilization, uterine embryo lavage, embryo transfer, artificial insemination, gamete intrafallopian tube transfer, zygote intrafallopian tube transfer, and low tubal ovum transfer. (a-5) No group policy of accident and health insurance that provides pregnancy-related benefits may be issued, amended, delivered, or renewed in this State on or after January 1, 2026 unless the policy contains coverage for the diagnosis and treatment of infertility, including, but not limited to, in vitro fertilization, uterine embryo lavage, embryo transfer, artificial insemination, gamete intrafallopian tube transfer, zygote intrafallopian tube transfer, surgical sperm extraction procedures, and low tubal ovum transfer. The coverage required shall include procedures necessary to screen or diagnose a fertilized egg before implantation, including, but not limited to, preimplantation genetic testing for aneuploidy, preimplantation genetic testing for chromosome structural rearrangements, and preimplantation genetic testing for monogenic or single gene disorders. Coverage under this subsection for the diagnosis and treatment of infertility shall be required only if the procedures: (1) are considered medically appropriate by the |
| patient's medical provider based on clinical guidelines or standards developed by the American Society for Reproductive Medicine, the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, or the Society for Assisted Reproductive Technology; and
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(2) are performed at medical facilities or clinics
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| that are members in good standing of the Society for Assisted Reproductive Technology.
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(b) The coverage required under subsection (a) for procedures for in vitro fertilization, gamete intrafallopian tube transfer, or zygote intrafallopian tube transfer shall be required only if:
(1) the covered individual has been unable to attain
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| a viable pregnancy, maintain a viable pregnancy, or sustain a successful pregnancy through reasonable, less costly medically appropriate infertility treatments for which coverage is available under the policy, plan, or contract;
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(2) the covered individual has not undergone 4
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| completed oocyte retrievals, except that if a live birth follows a completed oocyte retrieval, then 2 more completed oocyte retrievals shall be covered; and
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(3) the procedures are performed at medical
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| facilities that conform to the American College of Obstetric and Gynecology guidelines for in vitro fertilization clinics or to the American Fertility Society minimal standards for programs of in vitro fertilization.
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(c) As used in this Section, "infertility" means a disease, condition, or status characterized by:
(1) a failure to establish a pregnancy or to carry a
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| pregnancy to live birth after 12 months of regular, unprotected sexual intercourse if the woman is 35 years of age or younger, or after 6 months of regular, unprotected sexual intercourse if the woman is over 35 years of age; conceiving but having a miscarriage does not restart the 12-month or 6-month term for determining infertility;
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(2) a person's inability to reproduce either as a
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| single individual or with a partner without medical intervention; or
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(3) a licensed physician's findings based on a
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| patient's medical, sexual, and reproductive history, age, physical findings, or diagnostic testing.
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(d) A policy, contract, or certificate may not impose any exclusions, limitations, or other restrictions on coverage of fertility medications that are different from those imposed on any other prescription medications, nor may it impose any exclusions, limitations, or other restrictions on coverage of any fertility services based on a covered individual's participation in fertility services provided by or to a third party, nor may it impose deductibles, copayments, coinsurance, benefit maximums, waiting periods, or any other limitations on coverage for the diagnosis of infertility, treatment for infertility, and standard fertility preservation services, except as provided in this Section, that are different from those imposed upon benefits for services not related to infertility.
(e) The procedures required to be covered under this Section are not required to be contained in any policy or plan issued to or by a religious institution or organization or to or by an entity sponsored by a religious institution or organization that finds the procedures required to be covered under this Section to violate its religious and moral teachings and beliefs.
(Source: P.A. 102-170, eff. 1-1-22; 103-751, eff. 8-2-24.)
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(215 ILCS 5/356r)
(Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 103-718 )
Sec. 356r. Woman's principal health care provider.
(a) An individual or group policy of accident and health insurance or a
managed care plan amended, delivered, issued, or renewed in this State after
November 14, 1996 that
requires an insured or enrollee to designate an individual to coordinate care
or to control access to health care services shall also permit a female insured
or enrollee to designate a participating woman's principal health care
provider,
and the insurer or managed care plan shall provide the following written
notice to all female insureds or enrollees no later than 120 days after the
effective date of this amendatory Act of 1998; to all new enrollees at the
time of enrollment;
and thereafter to all existing enrollees at least annually, as a part of a
regular publication or informational mailing:
"NOTICE TO ALL FEMALE PLAN MEMBERS:
YOUR RIGHT TO SELECT A WOMAN'S PRINCIPAL
HEALTH CARE PROVIDER.
Illinois law allows you to select "a woman's |
| principal health care provider" in addition to your selection of a primary care physician. A woman's principal health care provider is a physician licensed to practice medicine in all its branches specializing in obstetrics or gynecology or specializing in family practice. A woman's principal health care provider may be seen for care without referrals from your primary care physician. If you have not already selected a woman's principal health care provider, you may do so now or at any other time. You are not required to have or to select a woman's principal health care provider.
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Your woman's principal health care provider must be a
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| part of your plan. You may get the list of participating obstetricians, gynecologists, and family practice specialists from your employer's employee benefits coordinator, or for your own copy of the current list, you may call [insert plan's toll free number]. The list will be sent to you within 10 days after your call. To designate a woman's principal health care provider from the list, call [insert plan's toll free number] and tell our staff the name of the physician you have selected.".
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If the insurer or managed care plan exercises the option set forth in
subsection
(a-5), the notice shall also state:
"Your plan requires that your primary care physician
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| and your woman's principal health care provider have a referral arrangement with one another. If the woman's principal health care provider that you select does not have a referral arrangement with your primary care physician, you will have to select a new primary care physician who has a referral arrangement with your woman's principal health care provider or you may select a woman's principal health care provider who has a referral arrangement with your primary care physician. The list of woman's principal health care providers will also have the names of the primary care physicians and their referral arrangements.".
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No later than 120 days after the effective date of this amendatory Act of
1998, the insurer or managed
care plan shall provide each employer who has a policy of insurance or a
managed
care plan with the insurer or managed care plan with a list of physicians
licensed to practice medicine in all its branches specializing in obstetrics or
gynecology or specializing in family practice who have contracted with the
plan. At the time of enrollment and thereafter within 10 days after a request
by an insured or enrollee, the insurer or managed care plan also shall provide
this list directly to the insured or enrollee.
The list shall include each physician's address, telephone
number, and specialty. No insurer or plan formal or informal
policy may restrict a female insured's or enrollee's right to designate a
woman's
principal health care provider, except as set forth in subsection (a-5).
If the
female enrollee is an enrollee of a managed care plan under contract with the
Department of Healthcare and Family Services, the physician chosen by the enrollee as her woman's
principal health care provider must be a Medicaid-enrolled provider.
This requirement does not require a female insured or enrollee to make a
selection of a woman's principal health care provider.
The female insured or enrollee may designate a physician licensed to practice
medicine in
all its branches specializing in family practice as her woman's principal
health care provider.
(a-5) The insured or enrollee may be required by the insurer or managed care
plan to select a woman's principal health care provider who has a
referral
arrangement with the insured's or enrollee's individual who coordinates care or
controls access to health care services
if such referral arrangement exists
or to
select a new individual to coordinate care or to control access to health care
services who has a referral arrangement with the
woman's principal health care provider chosen by the insured or enrollee, if
such referral arrangement exists. If an
insurer or a managed care plan requires an insured or enrollee to select a new
physician under this subsection (a-5), the insurer or managed care plan must
provide the insured or enrollee with both options to select a new physician
provided in this subsection
(a-5).
Notwithstanding a plan's restrictions of the frequency or timing of making
designations of primary care providers, a female enrollee or insured who is
subject to the selection requirements of this subsection, may, at any time,
effect a change in primary care physicians in order to make a
selection of a woman's principal health care provider.
(a-6) If an insurer or managed care plan exercises the option in
subsection (a-5), the list to be provided under subsection (a) shall identify
the referral arrangements that exist between the individual who
coordinates
care or controls access to health care services and the woman's principal
health care provider in order to assist the female insured or enrollee to make
a selection within the insurer's or managed care plan's requirement.
(b) If a female insured or enrollee has designated a woman's principal
health care provider, then the insured or enrollee must be given direct access
to the woman's principal health care provider for services covered by the
policy or plan without the need
for a referral or prior approval. Nothing shall prohibit the insurer or
managed care plan from requiring prior authorization or approval from either a
primary care provider or the woman's principal health care provider for
referrals for additional care or services.
(c) For the purposes of this Section the following terms are defined:
(1) "Woman's principal health care provider" means a
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| physician licensed to practice medicine in all of its branches specializing in obstetrics or gynecology or specializing in family practice.
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(2) "Managed care entity" means any entity including
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| a licensed insurance company, hospital or medical service plan, health maintenance organization, limited health service organization, preferred provider organization, third party administrator, an employer or employee organization, or any person or entity that establishes, operates, or maintains a network of participating providers.
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(3) "Managed care plan" means a plan operated by a
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| managed care entity that provides for the financing of health care services to persons enrolled in the plan through:
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(A) organizational arrangements for ongoing
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| quality assurance, utilization review programs, or dispute resolution; or
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(B) financial incentives for persons enrolled in
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| the plan to use the participating providers and procedures covered by the plan.
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(4) "Participating provider" means a physician who
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| has contracted with an insurer or managed care plan to provide services to insureds or enrollees as defined by the contract.
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(d) The original provisions of this Section became law on July 17,
1996 and took effect November 14, 1996, which is 120 days after
becoming law.
(Source: P.A. 95-331, eff. 8-21-07.)
(Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 103-718 )
Sec. 356r. Access to obstetrical and gynecological care.
(a) An individual or group policy of accident and health insurance or a managed care plan amended, delivered, issued, or renewed in this State must not require authorization or referral by the plan, issuer, or any person, including a primary care provider, for any covered individual who seeks coverage for obstetrical or gynecological care provided by any licensed or certified participating health care professional who specializes in obstetrics or gynecology.
(a-5) If a policy, contract, or certificate requires or allows a covered individual to designate a primary care provider and provides coverage for any obstetrical or gynecological care, the insurer shall provide the notice required under 45 CFR 147.138(a)(4) and 149.310(a)(4) in all circumstances required under that provision.
(a-6) The requirements of this Section shall be construed in a manner consistent with the requirements for access to and notice of obstetrical and gynecological care in 45 CFR 147.138 and 45 CFR 149.310.
(b) Nothing in this Section prevents a health insurance issuer from requiring a participating obstetrical or gynecological health care professional to agree, with respect to individuals covered under a policy of accident and health insurance, to otherwise adhere to the health insurance issuer's policies and procedures, including procedures regarding referrals and obtaining prior authorization and providing services pursuant to a treatment plan, if any, approved by the issuer.
(c) (Blank).
(d) Nothing in this Section shall be construed to preclude a health insurance issuer from requiring that a participating obstetrical or gynecological health care professional notify the covered individual's primary care physician or the issuer of treatment decisions or update centralized medical records.
(Source: P.A. 103-718, eff. 1-1-25.)
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(215 ILCS 5/356u)
(Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 103-30 )
Sec. 356u. Pap tests and prostate cancer screenings.
(a) A group policy of accident and health insurance that provides coverage
for hospital or medical treatment or services for illness on an
expense-incurred basis and is amended, delivered, issued, or renewed after January 1, 2024 shall provide coverage, without imposing a deductible, coinsurance, copayment, or any other cost-sharing requirement, for all of
the
following:
(1) An annual cervical smear or Pap smear test for |
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(2) An annual prostate cancer screening for male
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| insureds upon the recommendation of a physician licensed to practice medicine in all its branches for:
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(A) asymptomatic men age 50 and over;
(B) African-American men age 40 and over; and
(C) men age 40 and over with a family history of
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(3) Surveillance tests for ovarian cancer for female
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| insureds who are at risk for ovarian cancer.
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(b) This Section shall not apply to agreements, contracts, or policies that
provide coverage for a specified disease or other limited benefit coverage.
(c) This Section does not apply to coverage of prostate cancer screenings to the extent such coverage would disqualify a high-deductible health plan from eligibility for a health savings account pursuant to Section 223 of the Internal Revenue Code.
(d) For the purposes of this Section:
"At risk for ovarian cancer" means:
(1) having a family history (i) with one or more
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| first-degree relatives with ovarian cancer, (ii) of clusters of women relatives with breast cancer, or (iii) of nonpolyposis colorectal cancer; or
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(2) testing positive for BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutations.
"Prostate cancer screening" means medically viable methods for the detection and diagnosis of prostate cancer, including a digital rectal exam and the prostate-specific antigen test and associated laboratory work. "Prostate cancer screening" includes medically necessary subsequent follow-up testing as directed by a health care provider, including, but not limited to:
(1) urinary analysis;
(2) serum biomarkers; and
(3) medical imaging, including, but not limited to,
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| magnetic resonance imaging.
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"Surveillance tests for ovarian cancer" means annual screening using (i) CA-125 serum tumor marker testing, (ii) transvaginal ultrasound, (iii) pelvic examination.
(Source: P.A. 102-1073, eff. 1-1-23 .)
(Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 103-30 )
Sec. 356u. Pap tests and prostate cancer screenings.
(a) A group policy of accident and health insurance that provides coverage
for hospital or medical treatment or services for illness on an
expense-incurred basis and is amended, delivered, issued, or renewed after January 1, 2024 shall provide coverage, without imposing a deductible, coinsurance, copayment, or any other cost-sharing requirement, for all of
the
following:
(1) An annual cervical smear or Pap smear test for
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(2) An annual prostate cancer screening for insureds
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| upon the recommendation of a physician licensed to practice medicine in all its branches for:
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(A) asymptomatic individuals age 50 and over;
(B) African-American individuals age 40 and over;
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(C) individuals age 40 and over with a family
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| history of or genetic predisposition to prostate cancer.
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(3) Surveillance tests for ovarian cancer for
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| insureds who are at risk for ovarian cancer.
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(b) This Section shall not apply to agreements, contracts, or policies that
provide coverage for a specified disease or other limited benefit coverage.
(c) This Section does not apply to coverage of prostate cancer screenings to the extent such coverage would disqualify a high-deductible health plan from eligibility for a health savings account pursuant to Section 223 of the Internal Revenue Code.
(d) For the purposes of this Section:
"At risk for ovarian cancer" means:
(1) having a family history (i) with one or more
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| first-degree relatives with ovarian cancer, (ii) of clusters of relatives with breast cancer, or (iii) of nonpolyposis colorectal cancer; or
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(2) testing positive for BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutations.
"Prostate cancer screening" means medically viable methods for the detection and diagnosis of prostate cancer, including a digital rectal exam and the prostate-specific antigen test and associated laboratory work. "Prostate cancer screening" includes medically necessary subsequent follow-up testing as directed by a health care provider, including, but not limited to:
(1) urinary analysis;
(2) serum biomarkers; and
(3) medical imaging, including, but not limited to,
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| magnetic resonance imaging.
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"Surveillance tests for ovarian cancer" means annual screening using (i) CA-125 serum tumor marker testing, (ii) transvaginal ultrasound, (iii) pelvic examination.
(Source: P.A. 102-1073, eff. 1-1-23; 103-30, eff. 1-1-25.)
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