Pennsylvania Code & Bulletin
COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA

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31 Pa. Code § 89a.107. Required disclosure provisions.

§ 89a.107. Required disclosure provisions.

 (a)  Renewability. Individual long-term care insurance policies shall contain a renewability provision.

   (1)  The provision shall be appropriately captioned, shall appear on the first page of the policy and shall clearly state that the coverage is guaranteed renewable or noncancellable. This provision does not apply to policies that do not contain a renewability provision, and under which the right to nonrenew is reserved solely to the policyholder.

   (2)  A long-term care insurance policy or certificate, other than one in which the insurer does not have the right to change the premium, shall include a statement that premium rates may change.

 (b)  Riders and endorsements. Except for riders or endorsements by which the insurer effectuates a request made in writing by the insured under an individual long-term care insurance policy, all riders or endorsements added to an individual long-term care insurance policy after date of issue or at reinstatement or renewal that reduce or eliminate benefits or coverage in the policy shall require signed acceptance by the individual insured. After the date of policy issue, a rider or endorsement which increases benefits or coverage with a concomitant increase in premium during the policy term shall be agreed to in writing signed by the insured, except if the increased benefits or coverage are required by law. When a separate additional premium is charged for benefits provided in connection with riders or endorsements, the premium charge shall be set forth in the policy, rider or endorsement.

 (c)  Payment of benefits. A long-term care insurance policy that provides for the payment of benefits based on standards described as “usual and customary,” “reasonable and customary” or words of similar import shall include a definition of these terms and an explanation of the terms in its accompanying outline of coverage.

 (d)  Limitations. If a long-term care insurance policy or certificate contains limitations with respect to preexisting conditions, the limitations shall appear as a separate paragraph of the policy or certificate and shall be labeled as “Preexisting Condition Limitations.”

 (e)  Other limitations or conditions on eligibility for benefits. A long-term care insurance policy or certificate containing limitations or conditions for eligibility other than those prohibited in sections 1105 and 1108 of the act (40 P. S. § §  991.1105 and 991.1108) shall set forth a description of the limitations or conditions, including the required number of days of confinement, in a separate paragraph of the policy or certificate and shall label this paragraph ‘‘Limitations or Conditions on Eligibility for Benefits.’’

 (f)  Benefit triggers. Activities of daily living and cognitive impairment shall be used to measure an insured’s need for long-term care and shall be described in the policy or certificate in a separate paragraph and shall be labeled “Eligibility for the Payment of Benefits.” Additional benefit triggers shall also be explained in this section. If these triggers differ for different benefits, explanation of the trigger shall accompany each benefit description. If an attending physician or other specified person must certify a certain level of functional dependency in order to be eligible for benefits, this too shall be specified.

 (g)  Disclosure statement—qualified. A qualified long-term care insurance contract shall include a disclosure statement in the policy and in the outline of coverage as contained in §  89a.126(e)(3) (relating to standard format outline of coverage) that the policy is intended to be a qualified long-term care insurance contract under section 7702B(b) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 (26 U.S.C.A. §  7702B(b)).

 (h)  Disclosure statement—nonqualified. A nonqualified long-term care insurance contract shall include a disclosure statement in the policy and in the outline of coverage as contained in §  89a.126(e)(3) that the policy is not intended to be a qualified long-term care insurance contract.



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