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Bill > A2431


NJ A2431

Requires health insurers to provide plans that limit patient cost-sharing concerning certain prescription drug coverage. *


summary

Introduced
02/01/2018
In Committee
12/05/2019
Crossed Over
01/13/2020
Passed
01/13/2020
Dead
Vetoed
01/13/2020
Signed/Enacted/Adopted
01/21/2020

Introduced Session

2018-2019 Regular Session

Bill Summary

This bill requires certain health insurers, under certain policies or contracts that provide coverage for prescription drugs, to place limitations on covered persons' cost sharing for prescription drugs. The bill's provisions apply to the following insurers and programs that provide coverage for prescription drugs under a policy or contract: health, hospital and medical service corporations; commercial individual and group health insurers; health maintenance organizations; health benefits plans issued pursuant to the New Jersey Individual Health Coverage and Small Employer Health Benefits Programs; the State Health Benefits Program (SHBP) and the School Employees' Health Benefits Program (SEHBP). Unless the plan or contract is required to provide bronze level of coverage or is a catastrophic plan under the federal Affordable Care Act, the bill requires insurers to ensure that plans limit a covered person's out-of-pocket financial responsibility, including any copayment or coinsurance, for prescription drugs, including specialty drugs, to no more than $100 per month for each prescription drug for up to a 30-day supply of any single drug. If the plan or contract is required to provide a bronze level of coverage, as defined in 45 C.F.R. s.156.140, the plan shall ensure that any required enrollee cost-sharing, including any copayment or coinsurance, does not exceed $200 per month for each prescription drug for up to a 30-day supply of any single drug. In the case of a plan that meets the requirements of a catastrophic plan, as defined in 45 C.F.R. s.156.155, it is exempt from these requirements. In the case of high-deductible plans, these cost sharing limits apply at any point in the benefit design, including before and after any applicable deductible is reached. For prescription drug benefits offered in conjunction with a high-deductible health plan, the plan shall not provide prescription drug benefits until the expenditures applicable to the deductible under the plan have met the amount of the minimum annual deductibles in effect for self-only and family coverage under section 223(c)(2)(A)(i) of the federal Internal Revenue Code (26 U.S.C. 223(c)(2)(A)(i)) for self-only and family coverage, respectively. Once the foregoing expenditure amount has been met under the plan, coverage for prescription drug benefits shall begin, and the limit on out-of-pocket expenditures for prescription drug benefits would be as specified in the bill. The bill also requires the plans to implement an exceptions process that allows enrollees to request an exception to any formulary, which exception shall permit a nonformulary drug to be deemed covered under the formulary if the prescribing physician determines that the formulary drug for treatment of the same condition either would not be as effective for the enrollee or would have adverse effects for the enrollee, or both. If an enrollee is denied such an exception, that denial is deemed an adverse determination that will be subject to appeal.

AI Summary

This bill requires certain health insurers, such as hospital service corporations, medical service corporations, health service corporations, individual and group health insurers, and health maintenance organizations, to limit a covered person's out-of-pocket financial responsibility for prescription drugs, including specialty drugs, to no more than $100 per month for up to a 30-day supply of any single drug. The bill provides exceptions for plans that are required to provide a bronze level of coverage, where the limit is $200 per month, and for catastrophic plans, which are exempt from these requirements. The bill also requires the insurers to implement an exceptions process that allows enrollees to request coverage for a non-formulary drug if the prescribing physician determines it is necessary. These provisions apply to policies and contracts delivered, issued, executed, or renewed in New Jersey on or after the effective date of the bill.

Committee Categories

Budget and Finance, Business and Industry

Sponsors (20)

Last Action

Approved P.L.2019, c.472. (on 01/21/2020)

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