Oregon Health Insurance Underwriting
General Overview
In the State of Oregon, the Legislature
has created a set of rules that govern the way insurance
is designed and sold. The Oregon Insurance
Commissioner has the task of enforcing those rules. For
the most part, Oregon is considered an "Accept/Reject"
State, meaning that insurance companies are not allowed
to charge a client a higher premium because they have
pre-existing health conditions. In most cases
(ODS will make counter offers and LifeWise will make
counter offers on their drug benefit), companies do
not put specific waiting periods on pre-existing conditions
listed on an individual/family health insurance application. This
creates an environment where insurance companies are
cautious in the way they evaluate an application. The
result is that many applicants have their applications
rejected due to their health history. To
balance this, the Oregon Legislature created the Oregon
Medical Insurance Pool also know as OMIP,
which is the state high risk pool designed to offer
people health insurance coverage when they could otherwise
not get it based on their health history. In
order to "qualify" for OMIP, an applicant
must have either: 1) been rejected for individual health
insurance by one of the insurance companies doing business
in Oregon, or 2) have a Qualifying
Condition that is listed on their application.
Pre-existing Condition Clause
Many clients ask about whether an insurance plan from
"Company A" or "Company B" covers
pre-existing conditions. This is an important question,
and it is equally important to understand the answer. By
Oregon Insurance Code, an insurance company that accepts
an application and issues coverage to this applicant,
they must cover any pre-existing conditions as any other
illness or injury subject to the 6 month pre-existing
condition waiting period unless it is specifically excluded
in the offer. Now this is a lot of information
to digest, so what does it really mean?
- An insurance company is allowed to decline an application
based on an applicants health history for the preceeding
5 year period.
- Exhausting COBRA does not guarantee that an insurance
company will issue an individual health insurance
policy regardless of your health history.
- An insurance company is allowed to rider a certain
condition for up to 2 years listed on an application
in order to issue a policy to an applicant. (NOTE:
currently only ODS is doing this in Oregon)
- An insurance company can decline one person on an
application based on the health history and still
issue coverage to others listed on the application.
- When moving from one plan to a new one, the span
of time in between can not exceed 63 days in order
to waive the pre-existing condition clause.
How long does it take to get a policy
in force?
Many companies allow you to request a specific start
date for a new policy, however this is not a guarantee
that the company will actually be finished evaluating
the application by that date. In this instance,
IF the policy is issued, it will be done so retroactive
to the requested effective date. DO NOT
CANCEL YOUR CURRENT POLICY UNTIL THE APPLICATION FOR
YOUR NEW POLICY HAS BEEN APPROVED! Just because
you have applied, it does not mean that you will absolutely
be issued a new policy. It must first be evaluated and
then approved. The general rule of thumb
is that it takes 30 to 45 days for a company
to receive and evaluate an application. A
company is required to render a decision in 60 days
or less. If a decision is not reached in
60 days, it is generally considered to have expired. Some
exceptions exist to this.
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