
In July 2001, House Enrollment Act 1122 went into effect as Indiana Code 27-8-14.2, mandating insurance coverage for individuals with Autism Spectrum Disorders for any accident or health insurance policy that is issued on a group basis (large or small). Also, insurers selling individual policies must offer the option to include coverage for Autism Spectrum Disorders (ASD).
To find a copy of the Insurance Mandate for ASDs:
Indiana State Law Now Defines Autism Spectrum Disorders as "Neurological Disorders."
The medical community has recognized for many years that ASDs are not "mental health disorders" or "emotional disorders;" however, many insurance companies were using these very classifications in order to severely restrict or completely deny coverage for services for ASDs. In 2001, the Indiana Legislature passed a law defining ASDs as neurological disorders. For insurance purposes, this means that an insurer with a contract in Indiana cannot classify ASDs as mental health or emotional disorders for any purpose or use mental heath exclusions or contract limitations to limit coverage.
The Indiana Autism Insurance Mandate covers any health or accident insurance policy that is issued on a group basis (small or large). Insurers selling individual policies must offer the individual the option to include coverage for ASDs, probably at additional premium costs. Odds are, if you receive insurance through an employer that is based in Indiana, your policy is probably covered under the mandate. It is important to check with your Human Resources Department or Benefits Manager to determine if your plan is covered under the mandate.
A large exception to the law is "self-insured" companies. Self-insured companies are usually large companies that have several hundred employees. Instead of contracting with an insurance company to provide health insurance, the employer essentially is the insurer and supplies its own health plan to its employees. This may be confusing, however, as many self-insured companies use an existing insurance company to "administer" its health plan. That is, the insurance company only provides many of the "paperwork" functions of the health plan, such as claims processing or producing and distributing materials for the employees. To find out if your health plan is "self-insured", ask a Human Resources representative at your employer. If you are under a self-insured plan, your employer is not obligated to provide any insurance coverage for ASDs. They may be willing to do so, though, if several employees express the need, or as a means of working in "good faith" to provide important benefits to valued employees. Self-insured companies may also offer health plan options to employees that fall outside of the self-insured plan. These may be covered under the mandate.
Another exception to the law involves an employer that is not based in Indiana, but has employees in Indiana. For example, you work for X Co.'s Indianapolis office, but X Co.'s headquarters are in Kansas. X Co. has contracted for health insurance for all of its employees nationwide with Insurer Y. This contract was done under a master policy in Kansas – thus Kansas law, not Indiana law, regulates it, and you would not be able to get coverage for ASD if Kansas law does not mandate it. If you work for ZZ Inc., which is a national company, but it has its "corporate home" in Indiana, the health plan contract done under Indiana law would require that ZZ Inc.'s health plan offer coverage for ASDs to all of its employees, whether they worked in Indiana or in another state. Therefore, if you work for ZZ Inc., an Indiana-based national company, but transfer to another state, the coverage for ASDs would still have to follow Indiana's mandate because the insurance contract is under Indiana state law.
To find out if your plan is covered by the mandate:
The wording of the Insurance Mandate law is intentionally vague, because ASD affects each person differently. Each person with ASD requires different treatment options—there is no "cookie cutter" treatment plan for ASDs.
The law requires that a Care Plan by the prescribing physician be submitted to the insurance company. The primary care doctor, developmental pediatrician, or psychiatrist usually can write this, but you should check with your insurer to see if they require the plan to be written by a certain type of physician.
Therapies provided in the public schools cannot be covered under the insurance mandate. It is also strongly recommended that care plans are limited to "traditional therapies", or therapies that are generally accepted by the medical community. For example, the Surgeon General's office has recommended the use of Applied Behavioral Analysis (ABA). In addition, the American Academy of Pediatrics currently recommends the following therapies as generally accepted for ASD:
It is very important to limit care plans to medically necessary, generally accepted therapies in order to insure that we can count on continuing health care coverage for our loved ones, and not return to the very recent past when insurers could simply refuse to cover people with autism at all. The law requires the insurers to finally share the burden along with families and the state. Let us not jeopardize what has been accomplished. As more research on autism provides data to support other treatments, they will become "generally accepted" by the medical community, and thus acceptable to add to a care plan for insurance purposes.
For example, if your child requires ABA therapy, odds are your insurer does not have an ABA consultant and staff of therapists on their network panel. They must pay for your clinic or home based provider. If your child needs speech therapy and their network provider has a waiting list that is unacceptably long, they must pay for out-of-network services until a spot opens up in the network.
You also have the option to file a complaint with the Department of Insurance (DOI) if you feel your insurer is not complying with the law. You may file a complaint on the DOI website or write Joy Long, Deputy Commissioner at The Indiana Department of Insurance, 311 W. Washington Street, Suite 350, Indianapolis, Indiana 46204 or call the DOI at (317)-232-2385. You may also e-mail specific questions to Joy Long at jlong@doi.state.in.us. Often, a call or letter from the DOI can clarify the legal obligations for your insurer and avoid lengthy appeals.
The best way to ensure that your loved one receives the insurance coverage he or she is entitled to under the law is to know your policy, keep good records, follow your insurer's policies and procedures and include only therapies that are generally accepted by the medical community in your loved one's care plan. As the science of autism progresses, we can look forward to including more options for treatment under medical insurance plans.
American Academy of Peditrics Committee on Children with Disabilities Technical Report: The Pediatrician's Role in the Diagnosis and Management of ASD in Children. Pediatrics. (2001, May). Vol. 107 No. 5.