Every long-term care policy or certificate covering confinement in a nursing facility shall also include a provision with the following features:
(a) Care in a residential care facility must be covered. “Residential care facility” means a facility licensed as a residential care facility for the elderly or a residential care facility as defined in the Health and Safety Code. Outside California, eligible providers are facilities that meet applicable licensure standards, if any, and are engaged primarily in providing ongoing care and related services sufficient to support needs resulting from impairment in activities of daily living or impairment in cognitive ability and which also provide care and services on a 24-hour basis, have a trained and ready-to-respond employee on duty in the facility at all times to provide care and services, provide three meals a day and accommodate special dietary needs, have agreements to ensure that residents receive the medical care services of a physician or nurse in case of emergency, and, have appropriate methods and procedures to provide necessary assistance to residents in the management of prescribed medications.
(b) The benefit amount payable for care in a residential care facility shall be no less than 70 percent of the benefit amount payable for institutional confinement.
(c) All expenses incurred by the insured while confined in a residential care facility, for long-term care services that are necessary diagnostic, preventative, therapeutic, curing, treating, mitigating, and rehabilitative services, and maintenance or personal care services, needed to assist the insured with the disabling conditions that cause the insured to be a chronically ill individual as authorized by Public Law 104-191 and regulations adopted pursuant thereto, shall be covered and payable, up to but not to exceed the maximum daily residential care facility benefit of the policy or certificate. There shall be no restriction on who may provide the service or the requirement that services be provided by the residential care facility, as long as the expenses are incurred while the insured is confined in a residential care facility, the reimbursement does not exceed the maximum daily residential care facility benefit of the policy or certificate, and the services do not conflict with federal law or regulation for purposes of qualifying for favorable tax consideration provided by Public Law 104-191.
(d) In policies or certificates that are not intended to be federally qualified, the threshold establishing eligibility for care in a residential care facility shall be no more restrictive than that for home care benefits, as defined in subdivision (a) of Section 10232.8, and the definitions of impairment in activities of daily living and impairment of cognitive ability shall be the same as for home care benefits, as defined in subdivisions (a) and (g) of Section 10232.8. In policies or certificates that are intended to be federally qualified, the threshold establishing eligibility for care in a residential care facility shall be no more restrictive than that for home care benefits, as defined in subdivision (b) of Section 10232.8, and the definitions of impairment in activities of daily living and impairment in cognitive ability shall be the same as those for home care benefits as defined in subdivisions (b), (c), (d), (e), and (f) of Section 10232.8.
(Repealed and added by Stats. 1999, Ch. 947, Sec. 6. Effective January 1, 2000.)
Last modified: October 25, 2018