HHS NEWS
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
September 3, 2015
Contact: HHS Press
Office 202-690-6343
HHS takes next step in advancing health
equity through the Affordable Care Act
Proposed rule implements new protections against sex
discrimination; enhances language assistance; protects individuals with
disabilities; and extends to insurers participating in Health Insurance
Marketplaces
Washington,
DC-- Today, the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) issued a proposed
rule to advance health equity and reduce disparities in health care. The
proposed rule, Nondiscrimination in Health Programs and Activities, will
assist some of the populations that have been most vulnerable to discrimination
and will help provide those populations equal access to health care and health
coverage.
Section
1557 of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) extended civil rights protections banning
sex discrimination to health programs and activities. Previously, civil
rights laws enforced by HHS’s Office for Civil Rights (OCR) barred
discrimination based only on race, color, national origin, disability, or age.
The proposed rule also extends al l civil rights obligations to the Health
Insurance Marketplaces and HHS health programs and activities, and clarifies
the standards HHS applies in implementing Section 1557 across all bases of
discrimination.
The
proposed rule establishes that the prohibition on sex discrimination includes
discrimination based on gender identity. It also includes requirements
for effective communication for individuals with disabilities and enhanced
language assistance for people with limited English proficiency.
“This
proposed rule is an important step to strengthen protections for people who
have often been subject to discrimination in our health care system,” Health
and Human Services Secretary Sylvia M. Burwell said. “This is another example
of this Administration’s commitment to giving every American access to the
health care they deserve.”
While OCR
has already been accepting complaints under the ACA, the proposed rule makes
clear that individuals can seek legal remedies for discrimination under Section
1557.
Today’s
proposed rule applies to Health Insurance Marketplaces, any health program that
HHS itself administers, and any health program or activity, any part of which
receives funding from HHS, such as hospitals that accept Medicare patients or
doctors who treat Medicaid patients. Finally, the proposed rule extends
these nondiscrimination protections to individuals enrolled in plans offered by
issuers participating in the Health Insurance Marketplaces and explicitly bars
any marketing practices or benefit designs that discriminate on the basis of
race, color, national origin, sex, age, or disability. All the plans of
insurers participating in the Marketplace are covered by the proposed rule.
The
proposed rule makes clear HHS’s commitment, as a matter of policy, to
preventing discrimination based on sexual orientation, and requests comment on
how a final rule can incorporate the most robust set of protections
against discrimination that are supported by the courts on an ongoing
basis.
The
proposed rule requests comment on whether Section 1557 should include an
exemption for religious organizations and what the scope of any such exemption
should be. Nothing in the proposed rule would affect the application of
existing protections for religious beliefs and practices, such as provider
conscience laws and the regulations issued under the ACA related to preventive
health services.
The
proposed rule includes a number of new protections. Among them:
- Women must be treated equally with men in the health
care they receive. Other provisions of the ACA bar certain types of
sex discrimination in insurance, for example by prohibiting women from
being charged more than men for coverage. Under Section 1557, women
are protected from discrimination not only in the health coverage they
obtain but in the health services they seek from providers.
- Individuals may not be subject to discrimination based
on gender identity. For example, some insurance policies have historically
contained categorical exclusions on coverage of all care related to gender
transition. Those categorical exclusions are prohibited under the
proposed rule. Individuals must also be treated consistent with
their gender identity, including in access to facilities.
- The rule bolsters language assistance for people with
limited English proficiency, so that individuals are able to communicate
more effectively with their health care providers to, for example,
describe their symptoms and understand the treatment they have been
prescribed. The proposed rule provides clear guidance on the
requirements of the law with regard to provision of language services,
such as oral interpreters and written translations.
- For individuals with disabilities, the rule contains
requirements for the provision of auxiliary aids and services, including
alternative formats and sign language interpreters, and the accessibility
of programs offered through electronic and information technology.
The
proposed rule is open for public comment through November 6, 2015 and is
available at: https://www.federalregister.gov/public-inspection.
For more
information, including a fact sheet and Frequently Asked Questions,
visit: ttp://www.hhs.gov/ocr/civilrights/understanding/section1557/index.html.
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