Pritzker signs health insurance reform measures
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[July 11, 2024]
By PETER HANCOCK
Capitol News Illinois
phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – Gov. JB Pritzker signed legislation Wednesday that puts
new controls on the state’s health insurance industry, including bans on
certain practices companies have used to reduce costs by controlling the
amount of health care services a patient receives.
The Health Care Protection Act, House Bill 5395, was among Pritzker’s
top legislative priorities during the just-completed legislative
session.
Pritzker also signed House Bill 2499, which bans the sale of short-term,
limited-duration insurance plans in Illinois – policies Pritzker and
other critics refer to as “junk insurance” because they are not required
to meet the minimum standards under the federal Affordable Care Act.
“For too long, insurance companies have used predatory tactics to make
an extra dime at the expense of Illinois consumers,” Pritzker said at a
bill signing ceremony in Chicago. “For too long, patients have delayed
or been denied medically necessary treatments because of profit-driver
utilization management practices. For too long, shoddy networks, price
gouging and overly complicated bureaucracies have stood in the way of
our families getting the care that they deserve. Today, with my
signature, Illinois is addressing and rectifying that problem.”
Among other things, the Health Care Protection Act bars the use of a
restriction known as “step therapy,” also known as a “fail first”
provision, that requires a patient to try and fail on one or more
treatments preferred by the insurance company before they can access a
treatment recommended by their doctor.
It also prohibits insurers from requiring prior authorization before a
patient can receive emergency inpatient treatment at a psychiatric
facility.
“Illinois, by the way, is once again a pioneer, the first state in the
nation to do this for adults and children,” Pritzker said.
The new law also requires insurers to maintain accurate, up-to-date
lists of providers in their networks. And it gives the Illinois
Department of Insurance authority to approve or reject proposed premium
rate changes in large-group health insurance plans, similar to the
authority it already has over small-group plans.
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Gov. JB Pritzker holds up a pair of bills that were part of the
Healthcare Protection Act, which he signed into law Wednesday at
Rush University Medical Center in Chicago. Pritzker first outlined
the insurance changes in his State of the State address in February.
(Capitol News Illinois photo by Dilpreet Raju)
Pritzker first announced the plan in his State of the State address in
February, saying he expected stiff resistance from the insurance
industry but vowing “to spend serious political capital” if necessary to
pass the legislation.
The bill was, in fact, the subject of intense behind-the-scenes
negotiations between the administration, insurance industry
representatives, health care providers and other stakeholder groups. In
the end, the final version of the act had little opposition and drew
some Republican support. It passed 45-14 in the Senate and 83-23 in the
House.
Part of the reason for the bipartisan support was that the more
controversial provision banning the sale of short-term, limited-duration
insurance plans was taken out and put into a separate bill.
Those policies are marketed as temporary plans intended mainly for
people who find themselves in between coverage plans, often because of
changes in employment. Supporters of the bill argued those plans provide
substandard coverage and often leave individuals liable for huge medical
bills. But many Republicans argued that those policies provide a
lower-cost option that suits the needs of some individuals.
That measure passed largely along party lines: 40-19 in the Senate, and
72-35 in the House.
Pritzker signed the two bills at a ceremony at Rush University Medical
Center in Chicago where he was joined by lawmakers who supported the
bill, as well as health care providers.
“The health insurance reforms passed by the Illinois lawmakers, many of
them are right here, will ensure that administrative delays caused by
the insurance companies as well as their inadequate provider networks,
so called ghost networks, should be a thing of the past,” said Piyush
Vyas, president of the Illinois State Medical Society.
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