Could the COVID National Emergency End? 4 Things to Keep in Mind
October 31, 2022
The latest COVID-19 National Emergency period is set to end on February 28, 2023. If it’s not extended again, employer-sponsored health plans may need to adjust.
The latest COVID-19 National Emergency period is set to end on February 28, 2023. If it’s not extended again, employer-sponsored health plans may need to adjust.
The latest COVID-19 National Emergency period is set to end on February 28, 2023. If it’s not extended again, employer-sponsored health plans may need to adjust. Here are some quick reminders of what your plan needs to keep doing, what you can stop, new opportunities you might be missing and ideas on preparing for the post-emergency period.
Subsidized COBRA premiums and mandatory paid leave for COVID-related absences ended on December 31, 2020.
Plans are no longer required to cover telehealth visits with no deductible for HSA-qualified HDHP participants. That provision expired on December 31, 2021. They are, however, allowed to do so through 2023.
The loosened deadlines for changing elections offered through a cafeteria plan also have expired.
More generous deadlines for electing and paying for COBRA have been extended. Employees can still elect COBRA coverage up to a year after a COBRA-qualifying event and pay for it up to 60 days after the National Emergency is over.
Employees are also still allowed up to a year to elect health coverage under the HIPAA special enrollment rules, or until 60 days after the National Emergency ends, if sooner. That will be April 29, 2023, if the National Emergency expires in February as expected. NOTE: Surprisingly, there aren’t any specific requirements for employers to inform employees of the extensions to the COBRA deadlines or HIPAA special enrollment periods.
Health plans are still required to provide COVID test kits and testing for free – up to eight tests per covered individual per month – even for HSA-eligible HDHPs.
Inspired in part by challenges in obtaining health services during the pandemic, the government has softened the rules about the medications and services HSA-qualified HDHPs are allowed to cover as preventive services.
Are you missing out on this opportunity? If you offer an HDHP, it can now cover the following at 100%, with no deductible:
Just a few things to consider before adopting these changes for your HDHP:
Once the National Emergency ends, employers will no longer be required to cover COVID-19 testing and related services or vaccinations from out-of-network providers without cost sharing. You’ll need to consider whether you want to continue this coverage.
You will be required to continue covering in-network COVID-19 vaccinations with no cost sharing as preventive care.
Depending on what you’ve communicated thus far, you may want or need to update employees on: