Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 7— - SOCIAL SECURITY › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER XVIII— - HEALTH INSURANCE FOR AGED AND DISABLED › Part Part C— - Medicare+Choice Program › § 1395w–25
Medicare+Choice plans must be run by organizations that are set up and licensed in each State where they sell plans. A special kind of plan run by doctors or hospitals (called a provider-sponsored organization) can ask the federal government for a temporary waiver of that State license rule if it applies by November 1, 2002 and the Secretary finds one of these things: the State did not act on the license in 90 days (not counting time before August 5, 1997), the State denied the license but imposed extra or different rules or forced the group to sell other products, or the State used solvency rules that are different from the federal solvency rules. A granted waiver works only in that State, lasts 36 months and cannot be renewed, and the Secretary must decide on a complete waiver request within 60 days. Waived organizations must follow the same consumer protection and quality rules as if they were licensed, the rules go into the federal contract, the State can help monitor them, and the Secretary must report by December 31, 2001 on whether the waiver process should continue after December 31, 2002. Organizations must take full financial responsibility ahead of time for the covered care they promise. They may buy insurance for very expensive services set by the Secretary, for care that was needed before the plan could provide it, and for up to 90 percent of any year’s costs that exceed 115 percent of its income. They can also make contracts that let doctors or hospitals take on some of the financial risk. Definitions: provider-sponsored organization — created and run by health care providers that deliver most services through those providers and where the providers share major financial risk and own a majority interest; affiliated — providers linked by contract, ownership, shared risk, or certain tax-code groups; control — presumed if one party holds 51 percent or more of voting or governance rights; health care provider — a person or facility that delivers care and is licensed when State law requires it.
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The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
42 U.S.C. § 1395w–25
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73