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Page 1: Kristin Madison, "Wellness Incentives, the ADA, and GINA"

4th Annual Health Law Year in P/Review: Wellness Incentives, the ADA, and GINA

Kristin Madison Professor of Law & Health Sciences

Northeastern University January 29, 2016

Page 2: Kristin Madison, "Wellness Incentives, the ADA, and GINA"

Wellness Program Initiatives Among Firms

Offering Health Benefits (2015)

Program type

Small Firms

(3-199

workers)

Large Firms

(200+

workers)

Smoking cessation programs 41% 71%

Weight loss programs 39% 61%

Other lifestyle/behavioral 39% 68%

At least one program 49% 81%

Source: THE KAISER FAMILY FOUNDATION AND HEALTH RESEARCH & EDUCATIONAL TRUST, EMPLOYER HEALTH BENEFITS 2015 ANNUAL SURVEY, Exhibit 12.11.

Page 3: Kristin Madison, "Wellness Incentives, the ADA, and GINA"

Wellness Program Initiatives Among Firms

Offering Health Benefits (2015)

Program type

Small Firms

(3-199

workers)

Large Firms

(200+

workers)

Smoking cessation programs 41% 71%

Weight loss programs 39% 61%

Other lifestyle/behavioral 39% 68%

At least one program 49% 81%

Of firms with programs, percent

offering incentives for participation

or completion

15% 38%

Source: THE KAISER FAMILY FOUNDATION AND HEALTH RESEARCH & EDUCATIONAL TRUST, EMPLOYER HEALTH BENEFITS 2015 ANNUAL SURVEY, Exhibits 12.11 and 12.12.

Page 4: Kristin Madison, "Wellness Incentives, the ADA, and GINA"

Of Firms Offering Health Benefits

Small Firms Large firms

% Offering Health Risk Assessment 18% 50%

Of firms with HRAs, % offering incentives 29% 62%

% Offering Biometric Screening 13% 50%

Of firms with screening

% incentivizing completion 56%

% incentivizing biometric outcomes 20%

Of these firms

% targeting blood pressure 93%

% targeting BMI 87%

% with rewards > $500 43%

Source: THE KAISER FAMILY FOUNDATION AND HEALTH RESEARCH & EDUCATIONAL TRUST, EMPLOYER HEALTH BENEFITS 2015 ANNUAL SURVEY, Exhibits 12.1, 12.3, 12.5, 12.6, 12.8, and 12.9.

Page 5: Kristin Madison, "Wellness Incentives, the ADA, and GINA"

Affordable Care Act on

Health Contingent Wellness Programs

• Program must be reasonably designed to promote health

• Reward must be:

– Limited to 30% of total cost of insurance coverage

(50% for programs targeting tobacco use)

– Offered at least once per year

– Available to all similarly situated individuals

• Must offer alternative standards in some cases and

must disclose availability of alternative

Page 6: Kristin Madison, "Wellness Incentives, the ADA, and GINA"

Equal Employment Opportunity Commission Challenges Wellness Programs

o September 2014: Flambeau Inc.

o October 2014: Honeywell International Inc.

– Alleged that if employee/spouse fail to take biometric tests,

• Employee loses up to $1500 of Honeywell HSA contribution

• Employee charged $500 surcharge

• Employee & spouse each face $1000 tobacco surcharge

– Claim 1: Biometric testing is an involuntary and therefore unlawful medical exam under Americans with Disabilities Act

– Claim 2: Honeywell violates Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act (GINA) by offering inducement for medical info from spouse

Page 7: Kristin Madison, "Wellness Incentives, the ADA, and GINA"

Last Year's Health Law in Preview: Questions

o Under what circumstances do incentives render a medical examination or inquiry involuntary, potentially running afoul of the Americans with Disabilities Act?

o Could wellness programs be protected by an ADA safe harbor for organizations that establish or administer the terms of a benefit plan that are based on administering risks (see 11th Circuit case, Seff v. Broward County)?

o Will GINA prevent biometric testing-based wellness programs from reaching employees’ family members?

o Will the EEOC issue a rule clarifying whether the ADA permits employers to offer incentives for wellness programs?

YES

NO

MAYBE

IT'S COMPLICATED

Page 8: Kristin Madison, "Wellness Incentives, the ADA, and GINA"

Wellness Incentive Regulations: Year in Review

Page 9: Kristin Madison, "Wellness Incentives, the ADA, and GINA"

The Americans with Disabilities Act

o Prohibits medical examinations and disability-related inquiries unless job-related and consistent with business necessity. 42 USC 12112(d)(4)(A).

o But prohibition does not apply to

“voluntary medical examinations, including voluntary medical histories, which are part of an employee health program” 42 USC 12112(d)(4)(B).

Page 10: Kristin Madison, "Wellness Incentives, the ADA, and GINA"
Page 11: Kristin Madison, "Wellness Incentives, the ADA, and GINA"

ADA Proposed Rule on Wellness Programs with Medical Exams or Disability-Related Inquiries

o Employee health program is voluntary if

– No requirement for participation

– No denial of coverage under group health plan or benefit package to nonparticipants

– No adverse employment action against nonparticipants

– Appropriate notice regarding use and disclosure of medical information is provided (for health plan-based programs)

o Only aggregate medical info provided to ADA-covered entity

o Plan-based incentives, together with other plan-based incentives, total no more than 30% of employee-only coverage cost

Page 12: Kristin Madison, "Wellness Incentives, the ADA, and GINA"
Page 13: Kristin Madison, "Wellness Incentives, the ADA, and GINA"

ADA "Safe Harbor" Provision

o Certain ADA provisions, including the prohibition on medical exams, shall not restrict an organization from

– "establishing . . . or administering the terms of a bona fide benefit plan that are based on underwriting risks, classifying risks, or administering such risks . . ."

42 U.S.C. 12201(c)(2)

o In Flambeau, federal district court found that:

– Using wellness data, consultant classified risks/projected costs

– Consultant provided recommendations about

• Charges for maintenance drugs & preventive care

• Plan premiums, including higher premiums for smokers

– Defendants purchased insurance as shield from large claims

Page 14: Kristin Madison, "Wellness Incentives, the ADA, and GINA"
Page 15: Kristin Madison, "Wellness Incentives, the ADA, and GINA"

Does GINA Limit Incentives to Spouses?

o GINA prohibits employers from requesting genetic information, including family medical history

– There is an exception for voluntary wellness programs, but no inducements are allowed

o Spouses are included in definition of family members

o So while it is acceptable to offer incentives to employee to provide non-genetic information related to the employee's own health status

– Programs cannot offer the same incentives to the spouse, because the information would constitute family medical history -- genetic information -- with respect to the employee

Page 16: Kristin Madison, "Wellness Incentives, the ADA, and GINA"

Some provisions of GINA Proposed HRA Rule

o Covered entity may offer inducement for provision of information regarding spouse's health (not spouse's genetic information), if spouse is covered by health plan

o Total inducements cannot exceed 30% of cost of coverage of plan in which employee and dependents are enrolled

o If employer offers inducement to employee & spouse to participate in wellness program that requests spouse's health information, inducement for that information cannot exceed

– 30% cost of coverage of plan covering employee, less

– 30% of cost of self-only coverage

o Maximum employee inducement for inquiries/examinations is 30% of cost of self-only coverage

o Inducements for children's information are prohibited

Page 17: Kristin Madison, "Wellness Incentives, the ADA, and GINA"

Wellness Incentive Regulations: Year in Preview

Page 18: Kristin Madison, "Wellness Incentives, the ADA, and GINA"

Questions

o Assuming that the Flambeau decision is appealed, will the appeals court uphold the lower court's decision?

o Will the EEOC finalize the ADA and GINA proposed rules this year, and, if so, what changes will it make?

o Will increased certainty about legal constraints accelerate wellness program adoption?

o Or will continued uncertainty about program effects slow wellness program adoption?