HIPAA Regulatory Alert: Wellness incentives fine; no penalties for opt-outs
HIPAA Regulatory Alert
Wellness incentives fine; no penalties for opt-outs
Hospitals slow to catch on to national trend
Hospitals are boosting incentives for wellness programs, with the hopes that healthier employees will have lower medical claims and better productivity. That push for greater incentives is likely to continue despite a recent advisory notice cautioning employers not to penalize employees who choose not to participate.
The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) issued a letter informal guidance but not a formal ruling that advises employers that participation in a health risk assessment must be truly voluntary. A health risk assessment is usually the first step toward enrollment in a wellness program.
Incentives are permitted in voluntary wellness programs, and "a wellness program is voluntary if employees are neither required to participate nor penalized for nonparticipation," says Joyce Walker-Jones, senior attorney adviser in the EEOC's ADA division in Washington, DC.
Clearly, it's acceptable to provide token gifts or rewards to employees who take the health risk assessment. But some employers have provided substantial cash bonuses or discounts on health insurance premiums for active participation in wellness programs.
"At what point is an incentive so great that it's a penalty to those who don't participate? We know that in order to get people interested the incentive has to be something more than a T-shirt or mug," says Walker-Jones. The EEOC will continue to consider the question of incentives, she says.
Meanwhile, some guidance comes from HIPAA, which states that financial inducements can't exceed 20% of the cost of the employees' health insurance. "[T]he percentage limit is designed to avoid a reward or penalty being so large as to have the effect of denying coverage or creating too heavy a financial penalty on individuals who do not satisfy an initial wellness program standard that is related to a health factor," HIPAA states.
Hospitals are boosting incentives for wellness programs, with the hopes that healthier employees will have lower medical claims and better productivity. That push for greater incentives is likely to continue despite a recent advisory notice cautioning employers not to penalize employees who choose not to participate.Subscribe Now for Access
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