Insurance Commissioner v. CareFirst of Maryland, Inc.

816 A.2d 126, 149 Md. App. 446, 2003 Md. App. LEXIS 13
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 10, 2003
DocketNo. 2378
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 816 A.2d 126 (Insurance Commissioner v. CareFirst of Maryland, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Insurance Commissioner v. CareFirst of Maryland, Inc., 816 A.2d 126, 149 Md. App. 446, 2003 Md. App. LEXIS 13 (Md. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

ADKINS, J.

In this case, two non-profit health insurers seek to limit the scope of the authority held by the Maryland Insurance Commissioner (the “IC”) to regulate insurance rates proposed by them. Appellees CareFirst of Maryland, Inc. (“CareFirst”) and Group Hospitalization & Medical Services, Inc. (“GHMSI”)(together referred to as “the insurers”) challenge the IC’s right to venture outside strict actuarial concerns (1) in deciding to disapprove the insurers’ proposed rate increases as excessive, and (2) in treating as income the benefit of a subsidy or discount earned by the insurers because they were [453]*453willing to offer certain open enrollment insurance known as “SAAC products” to high risk individuals. The insurers also challenge the method that the IC used to set new rates after he disapproved the rates they proposed. We hold that the IC acted within his authority, both in disapproving the rate increases requested by the insurers, and in modifying those rates.

FACTUAL AND LEGAL PROCEEDINGS

The history of a Maryland independent agency known as the Health Services Cost Review Commission (“HSCRC”) provides the backdrop to this case. The HSCRC was established by the General Assembly to regulate the rates charged by hospitals and other related institutions. See Health Svcs. Cost Review Comm’n v. Franklin Square Hosp., 280 Md. 233, 234-38, 372 A.2d 1051 (1977). It reviews such rates to determine whether they are reasonable, and if so, approves them. See Md.Code (1982, 2000 Repl.Vol, 2002 Cum.Supp.), § 19-211(a)(1), § 19-219 of the Health-General Article.

In 1974, the HSCRC observed that “some practices of major third parties either reduced hospital costs or averted bad debts.” At that time, Maryland Blue Cross/Blue Shield, Care-First’s predecessor, offered an “open enrollment” health care policy for individuals, which enabled an applicant to obtain health insurance without regard to his or her health condition. The HSCRC concluded that the availability of such insurance coverage for high risk individuals resulted in a reduction in the amount of uncompensated or “bad debt” care that hospitals would otherwise have been required to provide if those high risk individuals had not been able to obtain insurance.

In order to encourage other insurers to offer such open enrollment coverage, the HSCRC developed the “SAAC” program. The acronym “SAAC” stands for “Substantial, Available, and Mfordable Coverage.” Under this program, any insurer wdio offers a product meeting the SAAC criteria is entitled to a 4% discount from HSCRC-approved hospital rates for the services that Maryland hospitals provide to its [454]*454subscribers.1 The amount of this discount, known as the “SAAC differential,” was “designed to reflect the cost savings to hospitals by carriers offering ... SAAC.” Once an insurer qualifies for the SAAC differential, the 4% discount applies, not only when health services are provided to those patients purchasing the qualified insurer’s SAAC product, but also when services are provided to other persons insured by that carrier under non-SAAC policies. A carrier is required to apply for the SAAC differential each year, and, in doing so, to demonstrate that it meets the criteria specified by the HSCRC. See COMAR 10.37.10.26A(6).

Interestingly, the cost savings to the hospitals from having SAAC insurance available dramatically exceeded the loss that the insurers incurred in providing insurance to these high-risk individuals. Because the 4% discount was predicated on the hospital’s savings resulting from SAAC coverage, rather than the cost to the insurers, the latter received a large “profit” from the SAAC differential. According to a 2001 HSCRC staff report, the value of the SAAC differential to CareFirst was $26,089,900 in 2000, and was projected to be $27,000,000 for the year 2001. The value of the SAAC differential to GHMSI was $4,600,190 in 2000, and was projected to be $4,900,000 for the year 2001.

In 2001, the General Assembly, recognizing this differential, funded a Short-Term Prescription Drug Subsidy Plan by requiring each insurer receiving the SAAC differential to contribute 37.5% of the discount to the Plan. See 2001 Md. Laws ch. 135; codified at Md.Code (1997, 2002 Repl.Vol., 2002 Cum.Supp.), § 15-606(c) of the Insurance Article (“Ins.”). With a 37.5% reduction, the net SAAC differential still avail[455]*455able to CareFirst would be $16,875,000 for 2001. The net SAAC differential still available to GHMSI would be $8,062,500 for 2001.2

The dispute in this case arose when the IC took the SAAC differential into consideration in disapproving the insurers’ proposals to increase premiums for their SAAC products. Rates charged by a non-profit health insurer to its subscribers must first be “submitted to and approved by the” IC. See Md.Code (1997, 2002 Repl.Vol.), § 14-126(a) of the Insurance Article (“Ins.”) Alter evaluating a proposed change in rates, the IC “shall disapprove or modify the proposed [rate] change” whenever, inter alia, “the table of rates appears by statistical analysis and reasonable assumptions to be excessive in relation to benefits[.]” Ins. § 14—126(b) (3)(i).

On March 9, 2001, the insurers submitted to the Maryland Insurance Administration (“MIA”) new rate filings that contained substantial rate increases for certain SAAC products. In support, the insurers provided extensive actuarial information relating to the costs and expenses of the SAAC products. According to these filings, the insurers proposed two contracts, the first to existing SAAC subscribers, with the same level of benefits that had been provided in the past (“the old SAAC product”). The second was offered to new subscribers after June 1, 2001 (“the new SAAC product”), which contained additional benefits required by the Maryland Health Care Commission. All new subscribers would be required to purchase the new SAAC product, which contained more benefits and carried a higher premium.

Under the new scheme, the proposed monthly rates increased as the age of the insured increased, a practice known as “age banding.” Depending on the age of the insured, the increases for new CareFirst SAAC customers ranged from 65% to 578%. The rate changes for new GHMSI SAAC customers ranged from a 5.7% decrease to a 270% increase. [456]*456The following percentages of increase were proposed by the insurers:

EXISTING [CAREFIRST! SAAC PRODUCT

_Current New Increase Over Existing SAAC Rates

_$_%

25 $131 $197 $66_50.4%

35 $131 $197 $66_50.4%

45 $131 $197 $66_50.4%

55 $131 $197 $66_50.4%

65 $131 $197 $66_50.4%

NEW [CAREFIRST] SAAC PRODUCT WITH AGE BANDING

Current New Increase Over Existing SAAC Rates

25 $217 86 65.6%

35 $266 $135 103.1%

45 $396 $265 202.3%

55 — $622 $491 374.8%

65 — $889 $758 578.6%

EXISTING [GHMSI] SAAC PRODUCT

%

25 $210 $316 $106 50.5%

35 $210 $316 $106 50.5%

45 $210 $316 $106 50.5%

55 $210 $316 $106 50.5%

65 $210 $316 $106 50.5%

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Related

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880 F. Supp. 2d 676 (D. Maryland, 2012)

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Bluebook (online)
816 A.2d 126, 149 Md. App. 446, 2003 Md. App. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/insurance-commissioner-v-carefirst-of-maryland-inc-mdctspecapp-2003.