(a) Establishing minimum benefit standards;
(b) Requiring the ratio of benefits to premiums to be not less than a specified percentage in order to be considered reasonable, and requiring the periodic filing of data that will demonstrate the insurer’s compliance;
(c) Establishing requirements intended to discourage duplication or overlapping of coverage and replacement, without regard to the advantage to policyholders, of existing policies by new policies; and
(d) Establishing requirements for carriers offering health benefit plans to spend at least 12 percent of total medical expenditures on payments for primary care.
(2) As used in this section:
(a) “Primary care” means family medicine, general internal medicine, naturopathic medicine, obstetrics and gynecology, pediatrics or general psychiatry.
(b) “Total medical expenditures” means payments to reimburse the cost of physical and mental health care provided to enrollees, excluding prescription drugs, vision care and dental care, whether paid on a fee-for-service basis or as part of a capitated rate or other type of payment mechanism. [1979 c.857 §2; 1997 c.96 §1; 1999 c.987 §4a; 2017 c.489 §§5,15]