This week, the U.S. Departments of Health and Human Services, Labor, and the Treasury issued final rules on employment-based wellness programs.
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The final rules continue to support “participatory wellness programs,” which generally are available without regard to an individual’s health status. These include programs that reimburse for the cost of membership in a fitness center; that provide a reward to employees for attending a monthly, no-cost health education seminar; or that reward employees who complete a health risk assessment, without requiring them to take further action, according to the government press release.
The rules also outline standards for nondiscriminatory “health-contingent wellness programs,” which generally reward individuals who meet a specific standard related to their health. Examples of health-contingent wellness programs include programs that provide a reward to those who do not use, or decrease their use of, tobacco, or programs that reward those who achieve a specified health-related goal such as a specified cholesterol level, weight, or body mass index, as well as those who fail to meet such goals but take certain other healthy actions.
Today’s final rules allow flexibility for employers by increasing the maximum reward that may be offered under appropriately designed wellness programs, including outcome-based programs.
The final rules also protect consumers by requiring that health-contingent wellness programs be reasonably designed, be uniformly available to all similarly situated individuals, and accommodate recommendations made at any time by an individual’s physician based on medical appropriateness.
The final rules will be effective for plan years beginning on or after January 1, 2014. To view the final rule visit—http://www.ofr.gov/inspection.aspx.
BLR will provide additional analysis on this topic after legal editors thoroughly review the final rules.