Nearly 20,000 Maine customers of health insurer Aetna are getting premium rebates because a provision in the Affordable Care Act limits what insurance companies can spend on administrative costs.
The rebates for 2013 service, totaling more than $1.8 million, will be issued by Aug. 1.
The Portland Press Herald reports that most will be in the form of temporary premium reductions although some customers might receive checks. The average payment will be $149 for thousands of the insurer’s Maine customers with employer-based plans.
The rebates are the result of the “medical loss ratio” rule that caps administrative spending. The law is meant to protect consumers by ensuring that extra profits made by insurance companies would be rebated to customers and not used for executive bonuses or other administrative costs.
Was this article valuable?
Here are more articles you may enjoy.
20,000 AI Users at Travelers Prep for Innovation 2.0; Claims Call Centers Cut
Pacific Life Seeks to Dismiss Kyle Busch’s $8.5M Lawsuit Over Insurance Policies
Longtime Alabama Dentist Charged With Insurance Fraud in 2025 Office Explosion
LA Fire Survivors Got a Rude Surprise That Could Hit More Americans 

