By Dan M. Clark
A federal judge deemed actions by the
state Department of Financial Services over risk adjustment payments as
constitutional, and dismissed a lawsuit from UnitedHealthCare against
the state agency.
U.S. District Judge John Koeltl of the
Southern District of New York granted a motion to dismiss DFS, which
was defending its method of distributing risk adjustment payments
alongside a federal program.
DFS was sued by UnitedHealthCare of
New York and Oxford Health Insurance in October for promulgating a
regulation that allowed it to modify the federal risk adjustment program
that was implemented in New York by the U.S. Department of Health and
Human Services.
A risk adjustment program requires
insurers with healthier, or low-risk, enrollees to pay into a common
fund. Money from that fund is then distributed to insurers who incur
higher claim costs due to less healthy enrollees. The system is designed
to ensure that insurers do not only seek out the healthiest, and
therefore least expensive, enrollees.
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Source: New York Law Journal
Statement from Governor Andrew Cuomo
"UnitedHealthcare of New York's lawsuit against the state attempted to put the profits of a large insurance company over the stability of New York's health insurance market. In dismissing the suit, the federal court has not only affirmed that the Affordable Care Act expressly provides states with the authority to implement their own risk adjustment rules, but upheld New York's right and responsibility to promote and protect its health insurance market and broad access to affordable care for all New Yorkers.
"In New York, we believe health care is a right, not a luxury. While President Trump tries to tear health care away from millions of Americans, New York is committed to ensuring that every New Yorker has access to quality, affordable health care. We are proud that a record 95 percent of New Yorkers have health insurance coverage, and we won't let President Trump or wealthy insurance companies take us backwards."
Source: The Office of Governor Andrew M. Cuomo
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