Health plan promotions are efforts by health insurance providers to encourage enrollment in health plans. An American Journal of Preventive Medicine study notes, “Health plans may be pursuing many different goals in offering health-promotion and disease-prevention programs: (1) as a marketing device to entice consumers to join their plan. (2) to increase member satisfaction as a means of increasing retention of their membership5 ; (3) to prevent disease and injury as a means to reducing medical costs; and (4) to improve or maintain the health of their members.”
Health plan promotions are more targeted than broader health promotion efforts that improve population health through social and environmental interventions. For example, initiatives like wellness rewards, and discounted premiums for participating in health assessments. The challenge with health plan promotions stems from the fact that they are often inclined toward preventative care. It is also most accessible to those in higher socio-economic brackets, with it being used by only 2% of the insured population, according to the same study.
Under HIPAA, marketing is defined as any communication that encourages individuals to purchase or use a product or service. The definition implies that if a health plan promotion is used to attract new members for health plans, it would be classified as marketing, requiring prior written authorization from patients before their protected health information is used for these purposes.
The HIPAA Privacy Rule provides specific exceptions where certain communications do not fall under the definition of marketing. For example, communications that inform patients about their health plan benefits or enhancements to services offered by the plan are generally excluded from being categorized as marketing.
Health maintenance organizations focus on preventive care and often offer a more comprehensive set of health promotion and disease prevention programs compared to other types of health plans.
Yes, disease prevention programs can be considered a form of marketing when the programs are used to attract new members and retain existing ones.
HIPAA does not explicitly regulate providers receiving payments from pharmaceutical companies. It does, however, govern the use and disclosure of PHI.