80_FR_21734 80 FR 21659 - Amendments to Regulations Under the Americans With Disabilities Act

80 FR 21659 - Amendments to Regulations Under the Americans With Disabilities Act

EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY COMMISSION

Federal Register Volume 80, Issue 75 (April 20, 2015)

Page Range21659-21670
FR Document2015-08827

The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (``EEOC'' or ``Commission'') is issuing a proposed rule that would amend the regulations and interpretive guidance implementing Title I of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) as they relate to employer wellness programs. The proposed rule amends the ADA regulations to provide guidance on the extent to which employers may use incentives to encourage employees to participate in wellness programs that include disability-related inquiries and/or medical examinations.

Federal Register, Volume 80 Issue 75 (Monday, April 20, 2015)
[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 75 (Monday, April 20, 2015)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 21659-21670]
From the Federal Register Online  [www.thefederalregister.org]
[FR Doc No: 2015-08827]


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EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY COMMISSION

29 CFR Part 1630

RIN 3046-AB01


Amendments to Regulations Under the Americans With Disabilities 
Act

AGENCY: Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.

ACTION: Proposed rule.

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SUMMARY: The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (``EEOC'' or 
``Commission'') is issuing a proposed rule that would amend the 
regulations and interpretive guidance implementing Title I of the 
Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) as they relate to employer 
wellness programs. The proposed rule amends the ADA regulations to 
provide guidance on the extent to which employers may use incentives to 
encourage employees to participate in wellness programs that include 
disability-related inquiries and/or medical examinations.

DATES: Comments regarding this proposal must be received by the 
Commission on or before June 19, 2015. Please see the sections below 
entitled ADDRESSES and SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION for additional 
information on submitting comments.

ADDRESSES: You may submit comments, identified by RIN number 3046-AB01, 
by any of the following methods:
     Federal eRulemaking Portal: http://www.regulations.gov. 
Follow the instructions for submitting comments.
     Fax: (202) 663-4114. (There is no toll free FAX number). 
Only comments of six or fewer pages will be accepted via FAX 
transmittal, in order to assure access to the equipment. Receipt of FAX 
transmittals will not be acknowledged, except that the sender may 
request confirmation of receipt by calling the Executive Secretariat 
staff at (202) 663-4070 (voice) or (202) 663-4074 (TTY). (These are not 
toll free numbers).
     Mail: Bernadette B. Wilson, Acting Executive Officer, 
Executive Secretariat, Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, U.S. 
Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, 131 M Street NE., Washington, 
DC 20507.
     Hand Delivery/Courier: Bernadette Wilson, Acting Executive 
Officer, Executive Secretariat, Equal Employment Opportunity 
Commission, U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, 131 M Street 
NE., Washington, DC 20507.
    Instructions: The Commission invites comments from all interested 
parties. All comment submissions must include the agency name and 
docket number or the Regulatory Information Number (RIN) for this 
rulemaking. Comments need be submitted in only one of the above-listed 
formats. All comments received will be posted without change to http://www.regulations.gov, including any personal information you provide.
    Docket: For access to the docket to read background documents or 
comments received, go to http://www.regulations.gov. Copies of the 
received comments also will be available for review at the Commission's 
library, 131 M Street NE., Suite 4NW08R, Washington, DC 20507, between 
the hours of 9:30 a.m. and 5:00 p.m., from June 19, 2015 until the 
Commission publishes the rule in final form.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Christopher J. Kuczynski, Assistant 
Legal Counsel, (202) 663-4665, or Joyce Walker-Jones, Senior Attorney 
Advisor, at (202) 663-7031, or (202) 663-7026 (TTY), Office of Legal 
Counsel, U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. (These are not 
toll free numbers.) Requests for this notice in an alternative format 
should be made to the Office of Communications and Legislative Affairs 
at (202) 663-4191 (voice) or (202) 663-4494 (TTY). (These are not toll 
free numbers.)

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

Introduction

    The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (``EEOC'' or 
``Commission'') is issuing a proposed rule that would amend the 
regulations and interpretive guidance implementing Title I of the 
Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) as they relate to employer 
wellness programs. Congress enacted the ADA in 1990 to prohibit 
discrimination against individuals with disabilities. The EEOC issued 
implementing regulations in 1991 to provide additional guidance on the 
law's requirements and prohibited practices with respect to 
employment.\1\

[[Page 21660]]

This proposed rule provides guidance on the extent to which the ADA 
permits employers to offer incentives to employees to promote 
participation in wellness programs that are employee health 
programs.\2\ It does not apply to similar types of programs that may be 
provided by entities other than those subject to Title I of the ADA, 
such as social service agencies covered under Title II of the ADA, 42 
U.S.C. 12131 et seq., or places of public accommodation subject to 
Title III of the ADA, 42 U.S.C. 12181 et seq., who may provide similar 
programs to individuals who are considered volunteers.\3\
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    \1\ The citations in this proposed rule are to the 2011 
regulations. In 2011, EEOC issued amended regulations to revise the 
definition of disability and other provisions to conform to changes 
to the ADA made by the ADA Amendments Act of 2008, but did not amend 
the provisions concerning disability-related inquiries and medical 
examinations of employees at 29 CFR 1630.14 that affect employee 
health programs. Some of the other revisions, however, resulted in 
renumbering.
    \2\ The ADA provides that, ``[a] covered entity may conduct 
voluntary medical examinations and inquiries, including voluntary 
medical histories, which are part of an employee health program 
available to employees at that work site.'' 42 U.S.C. 
12112(d)(4)(B)(emphasis added). As referenced in this proposed rule, 
wellness programs are ``employee health programs.''
    \3\ This proposed rule also does not address the extent to which 
Title II of the Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act (GINA) of 
2008, 42 U.S.C. 2000ff, et seq., affects an employer's ability to 
condition incentives on a family member's participation in a 
wellness program. This issue will be addressed in future EEOC 
rulemaking.
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    A wellness program may be part of a group health plan or may be 
offered outside of a group health plan.\4\ The references in the 
proposed rule regarding the requirement to provide a notice and the use 
of incentives, and changes to the corresponding section of the 
interpretive guidance, apply only to wellness programs that are part of 
or provided by a group health plan or by a health insurance issuer 
offering group health insurance in connection with a group health 
plan.\5\ The term ``group health plan'' includes both insured and self-
insured group health plans and is used interchangeably with the term 
``health plan'' throughout the preamble. All of the other proposed 
changes to the regulations apply to all ``health programs,'' which 
include wellness programs whether or not they are offered as part of or 
outside of a group health plan or group health insurance coverage. The 
term ``incentives'' includes both financial and in-kind incentives, 
such as time-off awards, prizes, or other items of value.
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    \4\ The term ``group health plan'' is defined in ERISA section 
733(a). An employer may establish or maintain more than one group 
health plan.
    \5\ This proposed rule asks for comments on whether employers 
offer (or are likely to offer in the future) wellness programs 
outside of a group health plan or group health insurance coverage 
that use incentives to promote participation in such programs or to 
encourage employees to achieve certain health outcomes and whether 
EEOC should issue regulations specifically limiting incentives 
provided as part of such programs.
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Discussion

    As a means of attempting to improve employees' health and reduce 
health care costs, many employers that provide health coverage also 
offer employee health programs and activities to promote healthier 
lifestyles or prevent disease.\6\ Commonly referred to as workplace 
wellness programs, these programs may include, for example: nutrition 
classes, onsite exercise facilities, weight loss and smoking cessation 
programs, and/or coaching to help employees meet health goals. Wellness 
programs also may incorporate health risk assessments and biometric 
screenings that measure an employee's health risk factors, such as body 
weight and cholesterol, blood glucose, and blood pressure levels.\7\ 
Some employers offer incentives to encourage employees simply to 
participate in a wellness program, while others offer incentives based 
on whether employees achieve certain health outcomes.\8\ Incentives can 
be framed as rewards or penalties and often take the form of prizes, 
cash, or a reduction or increase in health care premiums or cost 
sharing. Of the employers who offer incentives to complete wellness 
programs, the majority use incentives totaling less than $500 per 
year.\9\
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    \6\ See Rand Health, Workplace Wellness Programs Study Final 
Report (2013), sponsored by the U.S. Departments of Labor and Health 
and Human Services, available at http://www.rand.org/content/dam/rand/pubs/research_reports/RR200/RR254/RAND_RR254.pdf [hereinafter 
referred to as the RAND Final Report]; see also The Kaiser Family 
Foundation and Health Research & Educational Trust 2014 Employer 
Health Benefits Survey, available at http://kff.org/health-costs/report/2014-employer-health-benefits-survey/ [hereinafter referred 
to as the Kaiser Survey].
    \7\ Id.
    \8\ According to the RAND Final Report, 69 percent of employers 
with at least 50 employees offer financial incentives to encourage 
employee participation, while 10 percent offer incentives tied to 
health outcomes. By contrast, the Kaiser Survey found that 36 
percent of large employers with 200 or more employees and 18 percent 
of smaller employers offer financial incentives to participate in a 
wellness program.
    \9\ According to the Kaiser Survey, 68 percent of all large 
firms that offered an incentive for the completion of a wellness 
program used a maximum incentive below $500.
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    Employee health programs offered by employers must comply with laws 
enforced by the EEOC, including Title I of the Americans with 
Disabilities Act (ADA) which restricts the medical information 
employers may obtain from applicants and employees and makes it illegal 
to discriminate against individuals based on disability.\10\ They also 
must comply with other laws EEOC enforces that prohibit discrimination 
based on race, color, sex (including pregnancy), national origin, 
religion, compensation, age, or genetic information.\11\ Additionally, 
wellness programs that are part of group health plans must comply with 
the requirements of the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability 
Act of 1996 (HIPAA), as amended by the Patient Protection and 
Affordable Care Act (``Affordable Care Act'')\12\--set forth in 
regulations jointly issued by the Department of Labor (DOL), Department 
of the Treasury, and Department of Health and Human Services (HHS)--
that generally prohibit discrimination in group health plans based on 
any health factor.\13\
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    \10\ 42 U.S.C. 12101 et seq.
    \11\ See Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. 
2000e et seq.; the Equal Pay Act of 1963, 29 U.S.C. 206(d); the Age 
Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA) of 1967, 29 U.S.C. 621 et 
seq.; and Title II of GINA. However, this proposed rule concerns 
only the application of the ADA's rules limiting disability-related 
inquiries and medical examinations of employees to employer-
sponsored wellness programs. Compliance with the limits on 
incentives in this proposed rule does not necessarily result in 
compliance with other nondiscrimination laws or other parts of the 
ADA. For example, as the interpretive guidance accompanying the 
proposed rule explains, even if an employer's wellness program 
complies with the incentive limits set forth in the ADA regulations, 
the employer violates Title VII or the ADEA if that program 
discriminates on the basis of race, sex, national origin, or age.
    \12\ The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, Public Law 
111-148, and the Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act, Pub. 
L. 111-152, are known collectively as the Affordable Care Act. 
Section 1201 of the Affordable Care Act amended and moved the 
nondiscrimination and wellness provisions of the Public Health 
Service (PHS) Act from section 2702 to section 2705, and extended 
the nondiscrimination provisions to the individual market. The 
Affordable Care Act also added section 715(a)(1) to ERISA and 
section 9815(a)(1) to the Code to incorporate the provisions of part 
A of title XXVII of the PHS Act, including PHS Act section 2705, 
into ERISA and the Code and make them applicable to group health 
plans and group health insurance issuers.
    \13\ A wellness program that is part of a group health plan also 
must comply with HIPAA's Privacy, Security, and Breach Notification 
requirements set forth at 45 CFR part 160 and part 164. These 
requirements are discussed later in this preamble.
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    The laws relevant to this proposed rule are discussed below.

HIPAA's Nondiscrimination Provisions

    HIPAA's nondiscrimination provisions, as amended by the Affordable 
Care Act, generally prohibit group health plans and health insurance 
issuers offering group health insurance in connection with a group 
health plan from discriminating against participants and beneficiaries 
in premiums, benefits, or eligibility based on a health factor.\14\

[[Page 21661]]

An exception to the general rule allows premium discounts or rebates or 
modification to otherwise applicable cost sharing (including 
copayments, deductibles, or coinsurance) in return for adherence to 
certain programs of health promotion and disease prevention.\15\
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    \14\ The HIPAA nondiscrimination provisions set forth eight 
health status-related factors, which the December 13, 2006 final 
regulations refer to as ``health factors.'' Under HIPAA and the 2006 
regulations, as well as under the Public Health Service (PHS) Act 
section 2705 (as added by the Affordable Care Act), the eight health 
factors are health status, medical condition (including both 
physical and mental illnesses), claims experience, receipt of health 
care, medical history, genetic information, evidence of insurability 
(including conditions arising out of acts of domestic violence), and 
disability. 71 FR 75014 (Dec. 13, 2006). In the view of the 
Departments of Labor, HHS, and the Treasury, ``[t]hese terms are 
largely overlapping and, in combination, include any factor related 
to an individual's health.'' 66 FR 1379 (January 8, 2001).
    \15\ Prior to the enactment of the Affordable Care Act, HIPAA 
added section 9802 of the Internal Revenue Code, section 702 of the 
Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA), and section 2702 of 
the PHS Act. DOL, Treasury, and HHS issued joint final regulations 
in 2006 regarding wellness programs in connection with a group 
health plan or group health insurance coverage under which any of 
the conditions for obtaining a reward is based on satisfying a 
standard related to a health factor. See 26 CFR 54.9802-1(f); 29 CFR 
2590.702(f); 45 CFR 146.121(f). Paragraph (f)(2) of the 2006 
regulations limited the total reward for such wellness programs to 
20 percent of the total cost of coverage under the plan. The 
Affordable Care Act amended the PHS Act to raise the limitation on 
incentives to 30 percent of the total cost of coverage under the 
plan. See PHS Act section 2705(j)(3)(A). The DOL, IRS, and HHS 
issued final regulations in June 2013 to implement PHS Act section 
2705 and amend the 2006 HIPAA regulations regarding 
nondiscriminatory wellness programs in group health coverage. 78 FR 
33158 (June 3, 2013). Under the 2013 final regulations on 
nondiscriminatory wellness programs, references to ``a plan 
providing a reward include both providing a reward (such as a 
discount or rebate of a premium or contribution, a waiver of all or 
part of a cost-sharing mechanism, an additional benefit, or any 
financial or other incentive) and imposing a penalty (such as a 
surcharge or other financial or nonfinancial disincentive).''
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    HIPAA's nondiscrimination provisions, as amended by the Affordable 
Care Act, and the 2013 final regulations issued by the Departments of 
Labor, Treasury, and HHS, discuss two types of wellness programs: 
Participatory and health-contingent. Participatory wellness programs 
either do not provide a reward or do not include any conditions for 
obtaining a reward that are based on an individual satisfying a 
standard related to a health factor. Examples in the final regulations 
include: A program that reimburses employees for all or part of the 
cost for membership in a fitness center; a program that reimburses 
employees for the costs of participating, or that otherwise provides a 
reward for participating, in a smoking cessation program without regard 
to whether the employee quits smoking; and a program that provides a 
reward to employees who complete a health risk assessment (HRA) 
regarding current health status, without any further action 
(educational or otherwise) required by the employee with regard to the 
health issues identified as part of the assessment. The 2013 final 
regulations state that participatory wellness programs are permissible 
under the HIPAA nondiscrimination requirements provided they are made 
available to all similarly situated individuals.
    Health-contingent wellness programs, which may be either activity-
only or outcome-based, require individuals to satisfy a standard 
related to a health factor to obtain a reward (or require an individual 
to undertake more than a similarly situated individual based on a 
health factor in order to obtain the same reward). Activity-only 
programs require individuals to perform or complete an activity related 
to a health factor in order to obtain a reward, but do not require an 
individual to attain or maintain a specific health outcome. Outcome-
based programs require individuals to attain or maintain a specific 
health outcome (such as not smoking or attaining certain results on 
biometric screenings) in order to obtain a reward.
    There are five requirements for health-contingent wellness programs 
under the Public Health Service (PHS) Act section 2705 and the 2013 
final regulations.\16\ First, all individuals eligible for a health-
contingent wellness program must be given the opportunity to qualify 
for the reward at least once per year. Second, the total reward offered 
to an individual under all health-contingent wellness programs with 
respect to a plan cannot exceed 30 percent of the total cost of 
employee-only coverage under the plan, including both employee and 
employer contributions towards the cost of coverage (or 50 percent to 
the extent that the additional percentage is attributed to tobacco 
prevention or reduction). Third, health-contingent wellness programs 
must be reasonably designed to promote health or prevent disease. 
Fourth, the full reward under a health-contingent wellness program must 
be available to all similarly situated individuals. For this purpose, 
an activity-only program must allow a reasonable alternative standard 
(or waiver of the otherwise applicable standard) for obtaining the 
reward for any individual for whom, for that period, it is unreasonably 
difficult due to a medical condition to satisfy the otherwise 
applicable standard, and for any individual for whom, for that period, 
it is medically inadvisable to attempt to satisfy the otherwise 
applicable standard. An outcome-based program must allow a reasonable 
alternative standard (or waiver of the otherwise applicable standard) 
for obtaining the reward to any individual who does not meet the 
initial standard based on a measurement, test, or screening. Fifth, 
plans and issuers must disclose the availability of a reasonable 
alternative standard to qualify for the reward in all plan materials 
describing the terms of a health-contingent wellness program and in any 
disclosure that an individual did not satisfy an initial outcome-based 
standard.
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    \16\ For the requirements applicable to activity-only programs, 
see 26 CFR 54.9802-1(f)(3), 29 CFR 2590.702(f)(3), and 45 CFR 
146.121(f)(3). For requirements applicable to outcome-based 
programs, see 26 CFR 54.9802-1(f)(4), 29 CFR 2590.702(f)(4), and 45 
CFR 146.121(f)(4).
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    The 2013 final regulations recognize that compliance with HIPAA 
nondiscrimination rules (as amended by the Affordable Care Act), 
including the wellness program requirements, is not determinative of 
compliance with any other provision of any other state or federal law, 
including, but not limited to, the ADA, Title VII of the Civil Rights 
Act of 1964 (Title VII), and the Genetic Information Nondiscrimination 
Act (GINA).\17\
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    \17\ See 78 FR at 33168 (``The Departments recognize that many 
other laws may regulate plans and issuers in their provision of 
benefits to participants and beneficiaries. These laws include, but 
are not limited to, the ADA, Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 
1964, Code section 105(h) and PHS Act section 2716 (prohibiting 
discrimination in favor of highly compensated individuals), the 
Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act of 2008, the Family and 
Medical Leave Act, ERISA's fiduciary provisions, and State law.'').
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Title I of the ADA

    Title I of the ADA prohibits discrimination against individuals on 
the basis of disability ``in regard to . . . employment compensation . 
. . and other terms, conditions, and privileges of employment,'' 
including ``fringe benefits available by virtue of employment, whether 
or not administered by the covered entity.'' \18\

[[Page 21662]]

The ADA also requires employers to provide reasonable accommodations 
(modifications or adjustments) to enable individuals with disabilities 
to have equal access to the fringe benefits offered to individuals 
without disabilities.\19\ Additionally, the ADA restricts employers 
from obtaining medical information from employees by generally 
prohibiting them from making disability-related inquiries or requiring 
medical examinations.\20\ The statute, however, provides an exception 
to this rule by stating that ``[a] covered entity may conduct voluntary 
medical examinations, including voluntary medical histories, which are 
part of an employee health program available to employees at that work 
site.'' \21\ Employee health programs include workplace wellness 
programs. In previous guidance on disability-related inquiries and 
medical examinations under the ADA, EEOC stated that: ``A wellness 
program is `voluntary' as long as an employer neither requires 
participation nor penalizes employees who do not participate.'' \22\ 
However, neither the statute nor EEOC's regulations address the extent 
to which incentives might affect the voluntary nature of a wellness 
program.
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    \18\ See 42 U.S.C. 12112(a) and 29 CFR 1630.4(a)(1)(vi). Title I 
of the ADA applies to individuals and covered entities other than 
employees and employers, including employment agencies, labor 
organizations, and joint-labor management committees. See 42 U.S.C. 
12111(2), 12111(4), 12111(5), and 12112(b) (describing the 
prohibited practices of each of these entities); see also 29 CFR 
1630.2(b) (definition of covered entity) and 29 CFR 1630.4(a)(1) 
(description of prohibited practices). Although employers generally 
will be the ADA covered entities that offer wellness programs, this 
preamble, the proposed rule, and the interpretive guidance 
accompanying the proposed rule frequently use the term ``covered 
entity,'' as that term appears throughout EEOC's entire ADA 
regulation. The term ``covered entity'' also has a different meaning 
for purposes of the HIPAA Privacy, Security, and Breach Notification 
Rules, as explained later in this preamble. The proposed rule uses 
the term ``HIPAA covered entity'' when discussing HIPAA privacy 
requirements that apply to the group health plan.
    \19\ 42 U.S.C. 12112(b)(5)(A) and 29 CFR 1630.9 (prohibiting 
covered entity from failing to provide reasonable accommodations 
absent undue hardship); 29 CFR 1630.2(o)(1)(iii) (reasonable 
accommodation includes modifications and adjustments that enable a 
covered entity's employees to enjoy ``equal benefits and privileges 
of employment.'')
    \20\ 42 U.S.C. 12112(d)(4)(A) (a covered entity ``shall not 
require a medical examination and shall not make inquiries of an 
employee as to whether such employee is an individual with a 
disability or as to the nature or severity of the disability, unless 
such examination or inquiry is shown to be job-related and 
consistent with business necessity.''). EEOC refers to the types of 
inquiries prohibited by the ADA as ``disability-related inquiries'' 
and has issued guidance on what constitutes such an inquiry. See 
Enforcement Guidance on Disability-Related Inquiries and Medical 
Examinations of Employees Under the Americans with Disabilities Act, 
Q&A 1 (July 27, 2000), available at http://www.eeoc.gov/policy/docs/guidance-inquiries.html (hereafter ``Guidance'').
    \21\ 42 U.S.C. 12112(d)(4)(B).
    \22\ See Guidance, at Q&A 22.
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The Interaction of Title I of the ADA and HIPAA's Nondiscrimination 
Provisions, as Amended by the Affordable Care Act

    The Commission's interpretation of the term ``voluntary'' in the 
ADA's disability-related inquiries and medical examinations provision 
is central to the interaction between the ADA and HIPAA's wellness 
program provisions, as amended by the Affordable Care Act. A plausible 
reading of ``voluntary'' in isolation is that covered entities can only 
offer de minimis rewards or penalties to employees for their 
participation (or nonparticipation) in wellness programs that include 
disability-related inquiries and medical examinations. That reading, 
however, would make many wellness program incentives tied to the 
disclosure of health information or the completion of medical 
examinations expressly permitted by HIPAA impermissible under the ADA. 
Although it is clear that compliance with the standards in HIPAA is not 
determinative of compliance with the ADA,\23\ the Commission believes 
that it has a responsibility to interpret the ADA in a manner that 
reflects both the ADA's goal of limiting employer access to medical 
information and HIPAA's and the Affordable Care Act's provisions 
promoting wellness programs.
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    \23\ See 78 FR at 33168 (noting that HIPAA compliance is not 
determinative of ADA compliance); see also PHS Act section 
2705(j)(3)(A) (noting that wellness programs complying with the 
HIPAA requirements ``shall not violate this section'' of the Act).
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    Accordingly, the Commission concludes that allowing certain 
incentives related to wellness programs, while limiting them to prevent 
economic coercion that could render provision of medical information 
involuntary, is the best way to effectuate the purposes of the wellness 
program provisions of both laws.\24\ One purpose of the ADA's provision 
applicable to employee health programs is to allow such programs access 
to medical information where employees voluntarily provide that 
information.\25\ One purpose of HIPAA's nondiscrimination provisions 
governing wellness programs is to ensure that wellness programs do not 
offer incentives so large as to have the effect of denying coverage or 
creating too heavy a financial penalty for individuals who do not meet 
certain health standards.\26\ HIPAA's nondiscrimination provisions 
governing wellness programs, however, do not include provisions like 
those in the ADA that limit the kinds of medical information employers 
may ask employees to provide through disability-related inquiries or 
medical examinations.
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    \24\ The Commission does not believe that the ADA's ``safe 
harbor'' provision applicable to insurance, as interpreted by the 
court in Seff v. Broward County, 778 F. Supp. 2d 1370 (S.D. Fla. 
2011), affirmed, 691 F.3d 1221 (11th Cir. 2012), is the proper basis 
for finding wellness program incentives permissible. The ADA 
contains a clear ``safe harbor'' for wellness programs--the 
``voluntary'' provision at 42 U.S.C. 12112(d)(4)(B). See H.R. Rep. 
101-485, pt. 2, at 51 (``A growing number of employers today are 
offering voluntary wellness programs in the workplace. These 
programs often include medical screening for high blood pressure, 
weight control, cancer detection, and the like. As long as the 
programs are voluntary and the medical records are maintained in a 
confidential manner and not used for the purpose of limiting health 
insurance eligibility or of preventing occupational advancement, 
these activities would fall within the purview of accepted 
activities.''). Reading the insurance safe harbor as exempting these 
programs from coverage would render the ``voluntary'' provision 
superfluous.
    \25\ See id. at H.R. Rep. 101-485, pt. 2, at 51.
    \26\ 71 FR 75014, 75018 (December 13, 2006).
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    The proposed rule explains what an employee health program is, what 
it means for an employee health program to be voluntary, what 
incentives employers may offer as part of a voluntary employee health 
program, and what requirements apply concerning notice and 
confidentiality of medical information obtained as part of voluntary 
employee health programs. In addition, the proposed rule explains that 
compliance with rules concerning voluntary employee health programs 
does not ensure compliance with all the antidiscrimination laws EEOC 
enforces.
    The proposed rule clarifies that an employer may offer limited 
incentives up to a maximum of 30 percent of the total cost of employee-
only coverage, whether in the form of a reward or penalty, to promote 
an employee's participation in a wellness program that includes 
disability-related inquiries or medical examinations as long as 
participation is voluntary. As noted below, EEOC seeks comment on 
whether additional protections for low-income employees are needed. 
Voluntary means that a covered entity: (1) Does not require employees 
to participate; (2) does not deny coverage under any of its group 
health plans or particular benefits packages within a group health plan 
for non-participation or limit the extent of such coverage (except 
pursuant to allowed incentives); and (3) does not take any adverse 
employment action or retaliate against, interfere with, coerce, 
intimidate, or threaten employees within the meaning of Section 503 of 
the ADA, at 42 U.S.C. 12203.
    Further, to ensure that participation in a wellness program that 
includes disability-related inquiries and/or medical examinations, and 
that is part of a group health plan, is truly voluntary, an employer 
must provide a notice that clearly explains what medical information 
will be obtained, who will receive the medical information, how the 
medical

[[Page 21663]]

information will be used, the restrictions on its disclosure, and the 
methods the covered entity will employ to prevent improper disclosure 
of the medical information. Finally, the proposed rule allows the 
disclosure of medical information obtained by wellness programs to 
employers only in aggregate form, except as needed to administer the 
health plan. The proposed rule does not implicate disability-related 
inquiries or medical examinations outside the context of a voluntary 
wellness program.

Summary of Proposed Revisions

    The proposed rule re-asserts the Commission's position, based on 
the language of the ADA, that employee health programs that include 
disability-related inquiries or medical examinations (including 
inquiries or medical examinations that are part of a HRA or medical 
history) must be voluntary and clarifies the application of that rule 
in light of the amendments made to HIPAA by the Affordable Care Act.
    Proposed section 1630.14(d)(1) says that an employee health 
program, including any disability-related inquiries and medical 
examinations that are part of such a program, must be reasonably 
designed to promote health or prevent disease. This standard is similar 
to the standard under the tri-agency regulations applicable to health-
contingent wellness programs.\27\ In order to meet the standard, the 
program must have a reasonable chance of improving the health of, or 
preventing disease in, participating employees, and must not be overly 
burdensome, a subterfuge for violating the ADA or other laws 
prohibiting employment discrimination, or highly suspect in the method 
chosen to promote health or prevent disease. The interpretive guidance 
offers examples of programs that would and would not meet this 
standard.
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    \27\ See 26 CFR 54.9802-1(f)(3)(iii); 29 CFR 
2590.702(f)(3)(iii); 45 CFR 146.121(f)(iii).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Section 1630.14(d)(2)(i)-(iii) explains that, for a program to be 
considered voluntary, a covered entity may not require an employee to 
participate in such a program and may not deny coverage under any of 
its group health plans or particular benefits packages within a group 
health plan, generally may not limit the extent of such coverage, and 
may not take any other adverse action against employees who refuse to 
participate in an employee health program or fail to achieve certain 
health outcomes. Additionally, an employer may not retaliate against, 
interfere with, coerce, intimidate, or threaten employees in violation 
of Section 503 of the ADA, at 42 U.S.C. 12203 (e.g., by coercing an 
employee to participate in an employee health program or threatening to 
discipline an employee who does not participate).
    Section 1630.14(d)(2)(iv) says that for an employee's participation 
in a wellness program that is part of a group health plan to be deemed 
voluntary, a covered entity must provide a notice clearly explaining 
what medical information will be obtained, how the medical information 
will be used, who will receive the medical information, the 
restrictions on its disclosure, and the methods the covered entity uses 
to prevent improper disclosure of medical information.
    Section 1630.14(d)(3) clarifies that the offer of limited 
incentives to participate in wellness programs that are part of a group 
health plan and that include disability-related inquiries and/or 
medical examinations, will not render the program involuntary. However, 
the total allowable incentive available under all programs (both 
participatory programs and health-contingent programs) may not exceed 
30 percent of the total cost of employee-only coverage, which generally 
is the maximum allowable incentive available under HIPAA and the 
Affordable Care Act for health-contingent wellness programs.\28\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \28\ The interpretive guidance accompanying the proposed rule as 
well as question 6 below address the application of incentives 
related to smoking cessation programs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The EEOC proposes to extend the 30 percent limit set under HIPAA 
and the Affordable Care Act to include participatory wellness programs 
that ask an employee to respond to a disability-related inquiry or 
undergo a medical examination. HIPAA and Affordable Care Act wellness 
program provisions are limited to regulating what constitutes 
discrimination based on a health factor. As long as an incentive for a 
participatory wellness program is available to all similarly situated 
employees, regardless of any health factor, the incentive will not 
violate HIPAA and the Affordable Care Act. By contrast, the ADA rules 
concerning disability-related inquiries and medical examinations of 
employees limit the circumstances under which employers may obtain 
medical information from employees and the type of information that may 
be sought. For this reason, EEOC has determined that placing limits on 
the rewards employers may offer for employee participation (or 
penalties for non-participation) where participation requires employees 
to answer disability-related inquiries or take medical examinations 
promotes the ADA's interest in ensuring that incentive limits are not 
so high as to make participation in the program involuntary. At the 
same time, these limits comport with HIPAA and the Affordable Care Act 
wellness program provisions.
    The EEOC has not changed any of the exceptions to confidentiality 
set out in section 1630.14(d). The Commission, however, proposes to add 
a new subsection, 1630.14(d)(6), concerning the confidentiality and use 
of medical information gathered in the course of providing voluntary 
health services to employees, including information collected as part 
of an employee's participation in an employee health program. This 
subsection states that medical information collected through an 
employee health program only may be provided to a covered entity under 
the ADA in aggregate terms that do not disclose, or are not reasonably 
likely to disclose, the identity of specific individuals, except as 
needed to administer the health plan and except as permitted under 
1630.14(d)(4). The interpretive guidance explains that both employers 
that sponsor wellness programs and administrators of wellness programs 
acting as agents of employers have obligations to ensure compliance 
with this provision.
    Further, the interpretive guidance explains that where a wellness 
program is part of a group health plan, the individually identifiable 
health information collected from or created about participants as part 
of the wellness program is protected health information under the HIPAA 
Privacy, Security, and Breach Notification Rules. See 45 CFR part 160 
and Part 164. The HIPAA Privacy, Security, and Breach Notification 
Rules apply to HIPAA covered entities, which include group health 
plans, and generally protect the individually identifiable health 
information maintained by or on behalf of such entities. Accordingly, 
the interpretative guidance provides that where a wellness program is 
part of a group health plan and required to comply with HIPAA, its 
obligation to comply with section 1630.14(d)(6) generally may be 
satisfied by adhering to the HIPAA Privacy Rule. Thus, when an employer 
that is a health plan sponsor performing plan administration receives 
individually identifiable health information from or on behalf of the 
group health plan, as permitted by HIPAA, it generally satisfies its 
requirement to comply with section 1630.14(d)(6) by certifying to the 
group

[[Page 21664]]

health plan, as provided by 45 CFR 164.504(f)(2)(ii), that it will not 
use or disclose the information for purposes not permitted by its group 
health plan documents and the HIPAA Privacy Rule and abiding by that 
certification. If an employer is not performing plan administration on 
behalf of the group health plan, then the aggregate information that 
the employer may receive from the wellness program under section 
1630.14(d)(6) must be de-identified in accordance with the HIPAA 
Privacy Rule. Further, other disclosures of protected health 
information from the wellness program may only be made in accordance 
with the Privacy Rule. Thus, certain disclosures that are otherwise 
permitted under 1630.14(d)(4) for employee health programs generally 
may not be permissible under the Privacy Rule for wellness programs 
that are part of a group health plan without the written authorization 
of the individual.
    Section 1630.14(d)(7) clarifies that compliance with paragraph (d) 
of this section, including the proposed limit on incentives under the 
ADA, does not relieve a covered entity of its obligation to comply with 
other employment nondiscrimination laws. Thus, for example, as the 
interpretive guidance accompanying the proposed rule explains, even if 
an employer's wellness program complies with the incentive limits set 
forth in the ADA regulations, the employer would violate Title VII or 
the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA) if that program 
discriminates on the basis of race, sex, national origin, or age, or 
any other grounds prohibited by those statutes.
    Employee health programs that do not include disability-related 
inquiries or medical examinations, such as those that provide employees 
with general health information and education programs are not subject 
to the incentive rules discussed here. Like other benefit programs 
offered by covered entities, however, these programs must not 
discriminate against employees with disabilities. This 
nondiscrimination requirement includes providing reasonable 
accommodations that enable employees with disabilities to fully 
participate in employee health programs and earn any reward or avoid 
any penalty offered as part of those programs.\29\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \29\ Additionally, as discussed earlier in this preamble, the 
regulations under HIPAA and the Affordable Care Act require that an 
activity-only program allow a reasonable alternative standard (or 
waiver of the otherwise applicable standard) for obtaining the 
reward for any individual for whom, for that period, it is 
unreasonably difficult due to a medical condition to satisfy the 
otherwise applicable standard, or for whom it is medically 
inadvisable to attempt to satisfy the otherwise applicable standard. 
Similarly, an outcome-based program must allow a reasonable 
alternative standard (or waiver of the otherwise applicable 
standard) for obtaining the reward to any individual who does not 
meet the initial standard based on a measurement, test, or 
screening.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    This revision will require renumbering 29 CFR 1630.14(d).
    The Commission invites written comments from members of the public 
on any issues related to this proposed rule, including general comments 
about wellness programs or about particular practices that might 
violate the ADA or other laws enforced by the EEOC. In addition, the 
Commission specifically requests comments on several issues:
    (1) Whether the way in which the Commission reconciles the ADA's 
``voluntary'' requirement with the wellness program provisions in the 
Affordable Care Act is appropriate given the intent behind both 
provisions. Specifically, the Commission seeks comment on:
    (a) Whether to be ``voluntary'' under the ADA, entities that offer 
incentives to encourage employees to disclose medical information must 
also offer similar incentives to persons who choose not to disclose 
such information, but who instead provide certification from a medical 
professional stating that the employee is under the care of a physician 
and that any medical risks identified by that physician are under 
active treatment.
    (b) Whether to be considered ``voluntary'' under the ADA, the 
incentives provided in a wellness program that asks employees to 
respond to disability-related inquiries and/or undergo medical 
examinations may not be so large as to render health insurance coverage 
unaffordable under the Affordable Care Act and therefore in effect 
coercive for an employee. Specifically, the Commission seeks input on 
whether it would be appropriate for the Commission to provide that the 
incentives employers offer to employees to promote participation in 
wellness programs must not render the cost of health insurance 
unaffordable to employees within the meaning of 26 U.S.C. 36B (c)(2)(C) 
as implemented by 26 CFR 54.4980H-5(e). Generally, the cost of health 
insurance is affordable within the meaning of 26 U.S.C. 36B(c)(2)(C) if 
the portion an employee would have to pay for employee-only coverage 
would not exceed a specified percent of household income (9.56 percent 
in 2015). Where such incentives would render a plan unaffordable for an 
individual, it would be deemed coercive and involuntary to require that 
individual to answer disability-related inquiries and/or submit to 
medical examinations connected with the wellness program at issue.
    (c) Whether there are any methods other than those mentioned in the 
proposed regulation and the questions above by which the Commission can 
effectuate the intent of both the ``voluntary'' requirement in the ADA 
and the provisions in the Affordable Care Act intended to encourage 
workplace health promotion and disease prevention.
    (2) Should the proposed notice requirements of this rule, at 
section 1630.14(d)(2)(iv), also include a requirement that employees 
participating in wellness programs that include disability-related 
inquiries and/or medical examinations, and that are part of a group 
health plan, provide prior, written, and knowing confirmation that 
their participation is voluntary? If so, what form should such an 
authorization take? Are principles of informed consent in the medical 
context helpful in fashioning an appropriate authorization? Are there 
existing forms that could provide adequate protections, such as forms 
developed under HIPAA, forms employers already use in connection with 
wellness programs, or forms employers use to comply with Title II of 
GINA? What costs would be associated with developing an appropriate 
authorization form and/or collecting and maintaining authorization 
forms for employees who decide to participate in wellness programs?
    (3) Should the proposed notice requirement apply only to wellness 
programs that offer more than de minimis rewards or penalties to 
employees who participate (or decline to participate) in wellness 
programs that ask them to respond to disability-related inquiries and/
or undergo medical examinations? If so, how should the Commission 
define ``de minimis''?
    (4) Which best practices ensure that wellness programs are designed 
to promote health and do not operate to shift costs to employees with 
health impairments or stigmatized conditions?
    (5) Whether employers offer (or are likely to offer in the future) 
wellness programs outside of a group health plan or group health 
insurance coverage that use incentives to promote participation in such 
programs or to encourage employees to achieve certain health outcomes 
and the extent to which the ADA regulations should limit incentives 
provided as part of such programs.
    (6) What will be the practical effect of adopting the specific 
incentive limit set

[[Page 21665]]

forth in the proposed rule (rather than expressly referencing and 
incorporating the wellness-program incentive limits as they are defined 
by the Secretaries of Labor, Treasury, and Health and Human Services 
pursuant to the Affordable Care Act)? Specifically, what, if any, will 
be the impact of the proposed rule's 30-percent limit on incentives 
offered with respect to wellness programs intended to prevent or reduce 
tobacco use where such programs ask employees to respond to disability-
related inquiries and/or undergo medical examinations?

Regulatory Procedures

Executive Order 12866

    Pursuant to Executive Order 12866, EEOC has coordinated this 
proposed rule with the Office of Management and Budget. Under section 
3(f)(1) of Executive Order 12866, EEOC has determined that the proposed 
regulation will not have an annual effect on the economy of $100 
million or more, or adversely affect in a material way the economy, a 
sector of the economy, productivity, competition, jobs, the 
environment, public health or safety, or state, local or tribal 
governments or communities.
    Although a detailed cost-benefit analysis of the proposed 
regulation is not required, the Commission recognizes that providing 
some information on potential costs and benefits of the rule may be 
helpful in assisting members of the public in better understanding the 
potential impact of the proposed rule. The Commission notes that the 
rule will significantly aid compliance with the ADA and with HIPAA, as 
amended by the Affordable Care Act, by employers and group health plans 
that offer wellness programs. Currently, employers face uncertainty as 
to whether providing incentives permitted by HIPAA will subject them to 
liability under the ADA. This rule will clarify that the ADA does 
permit employers to offer incentives to promote participation in 
wellness programs that include disability-related inquiries and/or 
medical examinations. We believe that a potential benefit of this rule 
is that it will enable employers to adopt wellness programs that 
include incentives with certainty about their obligations under the 
ADA. The Commission does not believe the costs associated with the rule 
are significant. Employers covered by the ADA are already required to 
comply with wellness program incentive limits for health-contingent 
wellness programs. EEOC's proposed rule differs from HIPAA's wellness 
program incentives only in that it extends the 30 percent limit on 
incentives under health-contingent wellness programs to participatory 
wellness programs. HIPAA, as amended by the Affordable Care Act, places 
no limits on incentives for participatory wellness programs. As the 
incentives offered by the vast majority of employers currently fall 
below the limit of 30 percent of the cost of self-only coverage, the 
Commission does not believe the rule will negatively affect the ability 
of employers to offer incentives sufficient to promote meaningful 
participation in wellness programs.
    The only other potential cost is associated with the requirement 
that employers provide a notice to employees informing them what 
medical information will be obtained, how it will be used, who will 
receive it, and the restrictions on disclosure. For the reasons set 
forth in the Paperwork Reduction Act analysis that follows, the 
Commission concludes that approximately 299,115 employers will need to 
develop such a notice. The Commission estimates the time required to 
develop the notice to be four hours, for a total of 1,196,460 hours. 
According to data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the average 
hourly compensation for employees in ``management, professional, and 
related'' occupations was $55.56 as of December 2014, and the average 
hourly compensation for employees working in ``office and 
administrative support'' was $23.98. See Bureau of Labor Statistics, 
Employer Costs for Employee Compensation--December 2014 (March 11, 
2015), available at www.bls.gov/news.release/pdf/ecec.pdf. Assuming 
that 50 percent of the time required to develop an appropriate notice 
is attributable to employees working in management, professional, and 
related occupations and that 50 percent of the time is attributable to 
employees working in office and administrative support, the Commission 
estimates that the total cost of developing a notice that complies with 
the requirements of the proposed rule would be $42,583,000. We note 
that some employers and group health plans may already have notices 
that comply with these requirements, and that those that do not will 
incur only a one-time cost to develop an appropriate notice. The 
Commission seeks comments on these cost estimates.
    Other requirements in the rule will result in no costs, since they 
simply restate basic principles of nondiscrimination under the ADA. 
Even in the absence of this rule, employers are prohibited from 
requiring employees to participate in employee health programs that 
include disability-related inquiries and/or medical examinations; 
denying employees health insurance (or any other benefit of employment) 
if they do not participate in wellness programs; retaliating against 
employees who file charges claiming that a wellness program violates 
the ADA; and attempting to induce participation in employee health 
programs through interference with their ADA rights, coercion, 
intimidation, and threats. Employers are also required to provide 
reasonable accommodations to enable employees to enjoy equal benefits 
and privileges of employment, which would include participation in 
employee health programs. To the extent confidentiality of medical 
information acquired in the course of providing an employee health 
program is required, the proposed rule will result in no additional 
costs. The ADA already requires employers to keep medical information 
about applicants and employees confidential.
    To the extent the proposed rule can be read to impose additional 
confidentiality obligations, the interpretive guidance to the rule 
makes clear that a wellness program that is part of a group health plan 
may generally satisfy its obligation to comply with proposed section 
1630.14(d)(6) by adhering to the HIPAA Privacy Rule. See 45 CFR part 
160 and Part 164, Subparts A and E. An employer that is a health plan 
sponsor and receives individually identifiable health information from 
or on behalf of the group health plan, as permitted by HIPAA when the 
plan sponsor is administering aspects of the plan, may generally comply 
with the proposed rule by certifying to the group health plan, also 
pursuant to the HIPAA Privacy Rule, that it will not use or disclose 
the information for purposes not permitted by its plan documents and 
the Privacy Rule, such as for employment purposes, and abiding by that 
certification. Further, if an employer is not performing plan 
administration functions on behalf of the group health plan, then the 
employer may receive aggregate information from the wellness program 
under section 1630.14(d)(6) only so long as it is de-identified in 
accordance with the HIPAA Privacy Rule.

Paperwork Reduction Act

    These proposed additions to EEOC's regulations contain an 
information collection requirement subject to review and approval by 
the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) under the Paperwork Reduction 
Act. As required by the Paperwork Reduction Act, the EEOC is submitting 
to OMB a

[[Page 21666]]

request for approval of the information collection requirement under 
section 3507(d) of the Act. Organizations or individuals desiring to 
submit comments for consideration by OMB on the information collection 
requirement should address them to Chad Lallemand in the Office of 
Information and Regulatory Affairs, Office of Management and Budget, 
725 17th Street NW., Room 10235, New Executive Office Building, 
Washington, DC 20503, or by email to [email protected].
    Copies of comments should also be sent to Bernadette Wilson, Acting 
Executive Officer, Executive Secretariat, Equal Employment Opportunity 
Commission, 131 M Street NE., Washington, DC 20507. As a convenience to 
commenters, the Executive Secretariat will accept comments totaling six 
or fewer pages via FAX transmittal. This limitation is necessary to 
assure access to the equipment. The telephone number of the fax 
receiver is (202) 663-4114. (This is not a toll-free number.) Receipt 
of FAX transmittals will not be acknowledged, except that the sender 
may request confirmation of receipt by calling the Executive 
Secretariat staff at (202) 663-4070 (voice) or (202) 663-4074 (TTY). 
(These are not toll-free numbers.) Instead of sending written comments 
to EEOC, you may submit comments and attachments electronically at 
http://www.regulations.gov, which is the Federal eRulemaking Portal. 
Follow the instructions online for submitting comments. All comments 
received through this portal will be posted without change, including 
any personal information you provide. Copies of comments submitted by 
the public to EEOC directly or through the Federal eRulemaking Portal 
will be available for review at the Commission's library between the 
hours of 9:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. Eastern Time or can be reviewed at 
http://www.regulations.gov.

Overview of This Information Collection

    Collection Title: Notice requirement under Title I of the ADA, 29 
CFR 1630.14(d)(2)(iv).
    OMB number: 3046-xxxx.
    Description of affected public: Employers with 15 or more employees 
that are subject to Title I of the ADA and offer wellness programs as 
part of group health plans.
    Number of respondents: 299,115.
    Initial one-time hour burden: 1,196,460.
    Annual hour burden: None.
    Number of forms: None.
    Federal cost: None.
    Abstract: The proposed rule says that a wellness program that 
includes disability-related inquiries or medical examinations and that 
is part of a group health plan must meet several requirements to be 
deemed voluntary, including providing a notice to employees informing 
them what medical information will be obtained, how it will be used, 
who will receive it, and the restrictions on disclosure.
    Burden Statement: We estimate that there are approximately 782,000 
employers with 15 or more employees subject to the ADA and, of that 
number, one half to two thirds (391,000 to 586,500) offer some type of 
wellness program.\30\ Of those employers, 32 percent to 51 percent 
require employees to complete a health risk assessment (HRA) that 
likely contains disability-related questions.\31\ Using the highest 
estimates, we assume that 299,115 (51 percent of 586,500 employers) 
will be covered by this requirement.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \30\ According to the RAND Final Report, ``approximately half of 
U.S. employers offer wellness promotion initiatives.'' By contrast, 
the Kaiser Survey found that ``[s]eventy-four percent of employers 
offering health benefits'' offer at least one wellness program.
    \31\ The Kaiser Survey reports that 51 percent of large 
employers versus 32 percent of small employers ask employees to 
complete a HRA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Some employers and group health plans may already use forms that 
comply with the proposed notice requirement; therefore, the burden only 
will be on employers and group health plans that will incur a one-time 
burden to develop an appropriate notice to ensure that employees who 
provide medical information pursuant to a wellness program do so 
voluntarily. This notice may be included on or attached to any HRA 
employees are asked to complete and should explain what medical 
information will be obtained, how it will be used, who will receive it, 
and the restrictions on disclosure. Assuming that creation of such a 
document would take four hours, and assuming that 299,115 employers 
would be covered by the proposed regulation, this one-time burden would 
be 1,196,460 hours. Because employers do not have to develop a new form 
unless they collect medical information for a different purpose, they 
will be able to annually redistribute the same notice to all relevant 
employees.
    For those wishing to comment on the above information collection, 
OMB is particularly interested in comments which:
    (1) Evaluate whether the proposed collection of information is 
necessary for the proper performance of the Commission's functions, 
including whether the information will have practical utility;
    (2) Evaluate the accuracy of the Commission's estimate of the 
burden of the proposed collection of information, including the 
validity of the methodology and assumptions used;
    (3) Enhance the quality, utility, and clarity of the information to 
be collected; and
    (4) Minimize the burden of the collection of information on those 
who are to respond, including the use of appropriate automated, 
electronic, mechanical, or other technological collection techniques or 
other forms of information technology, e.g., permitting electronic 
submission of responses.

Regulatory Flexibility Act

    Title I of the ADA applies to approximately 782,000 employers with 
15 or more employees subject to the ADA, approximately 764,233 of which 
are small firms (entities with 15-500 employees) according to data 
provided by the Small Business Administration Office of Advocacy. See 
Firm Size Data at http://www.sba.gov/advocacy/849/12162.
    The Commission certifies under 5 U.S.C. 605(b) that this proposed 
rule will not have a significant economic impact on a substantial 
number of small entities because it imposes no reporting burdens and 
only minimal costs on such firms. The proposed rule clarifies that, in 
most respects, employers who offer wellness programs that are part of 
their health plans may offer incentives to employees consistent with 
HIPAA and the Affordable Care Act without violating the ADA. The amount 
of an incentive offered for participation (alone or in combination with 
incentives offered for health-contingent wellness programs) in a 
wellness program will not render a program involuntary under the ADA as 
long as the incentive does not exceed 30 percent of the total cost of 
employee-only coverage.
    To the extent that employers will expend resources to train human 
resources staff and others on the revised rule, we note that the EEOC 
conducts extensive outreach and technical assistance programs, many of 
them at no cost to employers, to assist in the training of relevant 
personnel on EEO-related issues. For example, in FY 2013, the agency's 
outreach programs reached more than 280,000 persons through 
participation in more than 3,800 no-cost educational, training, and 
outreach events. We estimate that the typical human resources 
professional will need to dedicate, at most, 90 minutes to gain a 
satisfactory understanding of the

[[Page 21667]]

revised regulations. We further estimate that the median hourly pay 
rate of a human resources professional is approximately $48.50. See 
Bureau of Labor Statistics, Occupational Employment and Wages, May 2013 
at http://www.bls.gov/oes/current/oes113121.htm. Assuming that small 
entities have between one and five human resources professionals/
managers, we estimate that the cost per entity of providing appropriate 
training will be between approximately $72.75 and $363.75.
    EEOC does not believe that this cost will be significant for the 
impacted small entities. We urge small entities to submit comments 
concerning EEOC's estimates of the number of small entities affected, 
as well as the cost to those entities.

Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995

    This proposed rule will not result in the expenditure by state, 
local, or tribal governments, in the aggregate, or by the private 
sector, of $100 million or more in any one year, and it will not 
significantly or uniquely affect small governments. Therefore, no 
actions were deemed necessary under the provisions of the Unfunded 
Mandates Reform Act of 1995.

List of Subjects in 29 CFR Part 1630

    Equal employment opportunity, Individuals with disabilities.

    For the Commission,

    Dated: April 13, 2015.
Bernadette B. Wilson,
Acting Executive Officer.
    For the reasons set forth in the preamble, the EEOC proposes to 
amend 29 CFR part 1630 to read as follows:

PART 1630--[AMENDED]

0
1. The authority citation for part 1630 continues to read as follows:

    Authority: 42 U.S.C. 12116 and 12205a of the American with 
Disabilities Act, as amended.

0
2. Amend Sec.  1630.14 by:
0
a. Redesignating paragraph (d)(1) as paragraph (d)(4);
0
b. Redesignating paragraph (d)(2) as paragraph (d)(5);
0
c. Adding new paragraphs (d)(1), (d)(2), (d)(3), (d)(6), and (d)(7).
    The revisions and additions read as follows:


Sec.  1630.14  Medical examinations and inquiries specifically 
permitted.

* * * * *
    (d) * * *
    (1) Employee health program. An employee health program, including 
any disability-related inquiries or medical examinations that are part 
of such program, must be reasonably designed to promote health or 
prevent disease. A program satisfies this standard if it has a 
reasonable chance of improving the health of, or preventing disease in, 
participating employees, and it is not overly burdensome, is not a 
subterfuge for violating the ADA or other laws prohibiting employment 
discrimination, and is not highly suspect in the method chosen to 
promote health or prevent disease.
    (2) Voluntary. An employee health program that includes disability-
related inquiries or medical examinations (including disability-related 
inquiries or medical examinations that are part of a health risk 
assessment) is voluntary as long as a covered entity:
    (i) Does not require employees to participate;
    (ii) Does not deny coverage under any of its group health plans or 
particular benefits packages within a group health plan for non-
participation, or limit the extent of benefits (except as allowed under 
paragraph (d)(3) of this section) for employees who do not participate;
    (iii) Does not take any adverse employment action or retaliate 
against, interfere with, coerce, intimidate, or threaten employees 
within the meaning of Section 503 of the ADA, at 42 U.S.C. 12203; and
    (iv) Where a health program is a wellness program that is part of a 
group health plan, provides employees with a notice that:
    (A) Is written so that the employee from whom medical information 
is being obtained is reasonably likely to understand it;
    (B) Describes the type of medical information that will be obtained 
and the specific purposes for which the medical information will be 
used; and
    (C) Describes the restrictions on the disclosure of the employee's 
medical information, the employer representatives or other parties with 
whom the information will be shared, and the methods that the covered 
entity will use to ensure that medical information is not improperly 
disclosed (including whether it complies with the measures set forth in 
the HIPAA regulations codified at 45 CFR parts 160 and 164).
    (3) Incentives offered for employee wellness programs that are part 
of a group health plan. The use of incentives (financial or in-kind) in 
an employee wellness program, whether in the form of a reward or 
penalty, together with the reward for any other wellness program that 
is offered as part of a group health plan (as defined in 29 U.S.C. 
1191b(a)), will not render the program involuntary if the maximum 
allowable incentive available under the program (whether the program is 
a participatory program or a health-contingent program, or some 
combination of the two, as those terms are defined in regulations at 26 
CFR 54.9802-1(f)(1)(ii) and (iii), 29 CFR 2590.702(f)(1)(ii) and (iii), 
and 45 CFR 146.121(f)(1)(ii) and (iii), respectively) does not exceed 
30 percent of the total cost of employee-only coverage.
* * * * *
    (6) Except as permitted under paragraph (d)(4) and as is necessary 
to administer the health plan, information obtained under paragraph (d) 
of this section regarding the medical information or history of any 
individual may only be provided to an ADA covered entity in aggregate 
terms that do not disclose, or are not reasonably likely to disclose, 
the identity of any employee.
    (7) Compliance with the requirements of paragraph (d) of this 
section, including the limit on incentives under the ADA, does not 
relieve a covered entity from the obligation to comply in all respects 
with the nondiscrimination provisions of Title VII of the Civil Rights 
Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. 2000e et seq., the Equal Pay Act of 1963, 29 
U.S.C. 206(d), the Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967, 29 
U.S.C. 621 et seq., Title II of the Genetic Information 
Nondiscrimination Act of 2008, 42 U.S.C. 2000ff, et seq., or other 
sections of Title I of the ADA.
0
3. In the Appendix to Part 1630 revise Section 1630.14(d), to read as 
follows:

Appendix to Part 1630--Interpretive Guidance on Title I of the 
Americans With Disabilities Act

* * * * *

Section 1630.14 Medical Examinations and Inquiries Specifically 
Permitted

Section 1630.14(d)(1): Health Program

    Part 1630 permits voluntary medical examinations and inquiries, 
including voluntary medical histories, as part of employee health 
programs. These health programs include wellness programs, which 
often incorporate, for example: A health risk assessment (HRA) 
(consisting of a medical questionnaire, with or without medical 
examinations, to determine risk factors); medical screening for high 
blood pressure, cholesterol, or glucose; classes to help employees 
stop smoking or lose weight; physical activities in which employees 
can engage (such as walking or exercising daily); coaching to help 
employees meet health goals; and/or the administration of 
prescription drugs (like insulin). Many employers offer wellness 
programs as part of a group health plan as a means of improving 
overall employee health with the goal of realizing lower health care 
costs.

[[Page 21668]]

    It is not sufficient for a covered entity merely to claim that 
its collection of medical information is part of a wellness program; 
the program, including any disability-related inquiries and medical 
examinations that are part of such program, must be reasonably 
designed to promote health or prevent disease. In order to meet this 
standard, the program must have a reasonable chance of improving the 
health of, or preventing disease in, participating employees, and 
must not be overly burdensome, a subterfuge for violating the ADA or 
other laws prohibiting employment discrimination, or highly suspect 
in the method chosen to promote health or prevent disease. 
Conducting a HRA and/or a biometric screening of employees for the 
purpose of alerting them to health risks of which they may have been 
unaware would meet this standard, as would the use of aggregate 
information from employee HRAs by an employer to design and offer 
health programs aimed at specific conditions that are prevalent in 
the workplace. An employer might conclude from aggregate 
information, for example, that a significant number of its employees 
have diabetes or high blood pressure and might design specific 
programs that would enable employees to treat or manage these 
conditions. On the other hand, collecting medical information on a 
health questionnaire without providing employees follow-up 
information or advice, such as providing feedback about risk factors 
or using aggregate information to design programs or treat any 
specific conditions, would not be reasonably designed to promote 
health. Additionally, a program is not reasonably designed to 
promote health or prevent disease if it imposes, as a condition to 
obtaining a reward, an overly burdensome amount of time for 
participation, requires unreasonably intrusive procedures, or places 
significant costs related to medical examinations on employees. A 
program also is not reasonably designed if it exists mainly to shift 
costs from the covered entity to targeted employees based on their 
health.

Section 1630.14(d)(2): Definition of ``Voluntary''

    Section 1630.14(d)(2)(i)-(iii) of this part says that 
participation in employee health programs that include disability-
related inquiries or medical examinations (such as disability-
related inquiries or medical examinations that are part of a HRA) 
must be voluntary in order to comply with the ADA. This means that 
covered entities may not require employees to participate in such 
programs, may not deny employees access to health coverage under any 
of its group health plans or particular benefits packages within a 
group health plan for non-participation, may not limit coverage 
under their health plans for such employees, except to the extent 
the limitation (e.g., having to pay a higher deductible) may be the 
result of forgoing a financial incentive permissible under paragraph 
(d)(3), and may not take any other adverse action against employees 
who choose not to answer disability-related inquiries or submit to 
medical examinations. Additionally, covered entities may not 
retaliate against, interfere with, coerce, intimidate, or threaten 
employees within the meaning of Section 503 of the ADA, at 42 U.S.C. 
12203. For example, an employer may not retaliate against an 
employee who refused to participate in a health program or filed a 
charge with the EEOC concerning the program, may not coerce an 
employee into participating in a health program or into giving the 
employer access to medical information collected as part of the 
program, and may not threaten an employee with discipline if the 
employee does not participate in a health program. See 42 U.S.C. 
12203(a) and (b); 29 CFR 1630.12.
    Section 1630.14(d)(2)(iv) of this part also states that for a 
wellness program that is part of a group health plan to be 
voluntary, an employer must provide employees with a notice clearly 
explaining what medical information will be obtained, how the 
medical information will be used, who will receive the medical 
information, the restrictions on its disclosure, and the methods the 
covered entity uses to prevent improper disclosure of medical 
information.

Section 1630.14(d)(3): Limitations on Incentives

    The ADA, interpreted in light of the Health Insurance 
Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA), as amended by the 
Affordable Care Act, does not prohibit the use of incentives to 
encourage participation in employee health programs, but it does 
place limits on them. In general, the use of limited incentives 
(which include both financial and in-kind incentives, such as time-
off awards, prizes, or other items of value) in a wellness program 
that is part of a group health plan or group health insurance 
coverage will not render a wellness program involuntary. However, 
the maximum allowable incentive for a participatory program that 
involves asking disability-related questions or conducting medical 
examinations (such as having employees complete a HRA) or for a 
health-contingent program that requires participants to satisfy a 
standard related to a health factor may not exceed 30 percent of the 
total cost of employee-only coverage. Thus, for example, for 
purposes of compliance with these provisions under the ADA, suppose 
a group health plan under which an employee is enrolled has a total 
annual premium for employee-only coverage of $5,000 (which includes 
both the employer's and employee's contributions toward coverage). 
The plan provides a $250 reward to employees who complete a HRA 
(this reward is given to any participant who completes the HRA, 
without regard to the health issues identified as part of the 
assessment). The plan also offers a health-contingent wellness 
program to promote cardiovascular health, with an opportunity to 
earn a $1,500 reward. An employee who satisfies both components of 
the program could earn a total reward of $1,750. Such a reward would 
violate the ADA because the total reward available exceeds 30 
percent of the total cost of coverage. However, if the employer 
offered no reward for completing the HRA and a $1,500 reward for 
achieving health outcomes under the wellness program (or offered 
$750 for completing the HRA and $750 for achieving health outcomes 
in the wellness program), the incentives would comply with the ADA. 
Not all wellness programs require disability-related inquiries or 
medical examinations in order to earn an incentive. Examples may 
include attending nutrition, weight loss, or smoking cessation 
classes. These types of programs are not subject to the ADA 
incentive rules discussed here, although programs that qualify as 
health-contingent programs are subject to HIPAA incentive limits.
    Under the ADA, regardless of whether a wellness program includes 
disability-related inquiries or medical examinations, reasonable 
accommodations must be provided, absent undue hardship, to enable 
employees with disabilities to earn whatever financial incentive an 
employer or other covered entity offers. Providing a reasonable 
alternative standard and notice to the employee of the availability 
of a reasonable alternative under HIPAA and the Affordable Care Act 
as part of a health-contingent program would likely fulfill a 
covered entity's obligation to provide a reasonable accommodation 
under the ADA. However, under the ADA, a covered entity would have 
to provide a reasonable accommodation for a participatory program 
even though HIPAA and the Affordable Care Act do not require such 
programs to offer a reasonable alternative standard.
    For example, an employer that offers employees a financial 
incentive to attend a nutrition class, regardless of whether they 
reach a healthy weight as a result, would have to provide a sign 
language interpreter so that an employee who is deaf and who needs 
an interpreter to understand the information communicated in the 
class could earn the incentive, as long as providing the interpreter 
would not result in undue hardship to the employer. Similarly, an 
employer would, absent undue hardship, have to provide written 
materials that are part of a wellness program in an alternate 
format, such as in large print or on computer disk, for someone with 
a vision impairment. An individual with a disability also may need a 
reasonable accommodation to participate in a wellness program that 
includes disability-related inquiries or medical examinations, 
including waiver of a generally applicable requirement. For example, 
an employer that offers a reward for completing a biometric 
screening that includes a blood draw would have to provide an 
alternative test (or certification requirement) so that an employee 
with a disability that makes drawing blood dangerous can participate 
and earn the incentive.

Application of Section 1630.14(d)(3) to Smoking Cessation Programs

    Regulations implementing the wellness provisions in HIPAA, as 
amended by the Affordable Care Act, permit covered entities to offer 
incentives as high as 50 percent of the total cost of employee 
coverage for tobacco-related wellness programs, such as smoking 
cessation programs. As noted above, the incentive rules in Section 
1630.14(d)(3) apply only to employee health programs that include 
disability-related inquiries or medical examinations. A smoking 
cessation program that merely asks employees whether

[[Page 21669]]

or not they use tobacco (or whether or not they ceased using tobacco 
upon completion of the program) is not an employee health program 
that includes disability-related inquiries or medical examinations. 
The incentive rules in Section 1630.14(d)(3) would not apply to 
incentives a covered entity could offer in connection with such a 
program. Therefore, a covered entity would be permitted to offer 
incentives as high as 50 percent of the cost of employee coverage 
for that smoking cessation program, pursuant to the regulations 
implementing HIPAA, as amended by the Affordable Care Act, without 
implicating the disability-related inquiries or medical examinations 
provision of the ADA. The ADA nondiscrimination requirements, such 
as the need to provide reasonable accommodations that provide 
employees with disabilities equal access to benefits, would still 
apply.
    By contrast, a biometric screening or other medical examination 
that tests for the presence of nicotine or tobacco is a medical 
examination. The ADA financial incentive rules discussed supra would 
therefore apply to a wellness program that included such a 
screening.

Section 1630.14(d)(4)-(6): Confidentiality

    Paragraphs (d)(4) and (d)(5) say that medical records developed 
in the course of providing voluntary health services to employees, 
including wellness programs, must be maintained in a confidential 
manner and must not be used for any purpose in violation of this 
part, such as limiting insurance eligibility. See House Labor Report 
at 75; House Judiciary Report at 43-44. Further, although an 
exception to confidentiality that tracks the language of the ADA 
itself states that information gathered in the course of providing 
employees with voluntary health services may be disclosed to 
managers and supervisors in connection with necessary work 
restrictions or accommodations, such an exception would rarely, if 
ever, apply to medical information collected as part of a wellness 
program. In addition, as described more fully below, certain 
disclosures that are permitted for employee health programs 
generally may not be permissible under the HIPAA Privacy Rule for 
wellness programs that are part of a group health plan without the 
written authorization of the individual.
    Section 1630.14(d)(6) says that a covered entity only may 
receive information collected as part of an employee health program 
in aggregate form that does not disclose, and is not reasonably 
likely to disclose, the identity of specific individuals except as 
is necessary to administer the plan or as permitted by section 
1630.14(d)(4). Notably, both employers that sponsor employee health 
programs and the employee health programs themselves (if they are 
administered by the employer or qualify as the employer's agent) are 
responsible for ensuring compliance with this provision.
    Where a wellness program is part of a group health plan, the 
individually identifiable health information collected from or 
created about participants as part of the wellness program is 
protected health information (PHI) under the HIPAA Privacy, 
Security, and Breach Notification Rules. (45 CFR parts 160 and 164.) 
The HIPAA Privacy, Security, and Breach Notification Rules apply to 
HIPAA covered entities, which include group health plans, and 
generally protect identifiable health information maintained by or 
on behalf of such entities, by among other provisions, setting 
limits and conditions on the uses and disclosures that may be made 
of such information.
    PHI is information, including demographic data that identifies 
the individual or for which there is a reasonable basis to believe 
it can be used to identify the individual (including, for example, 
address, birth date, or social security number), and that relates 
to: An individual's past, present, or future physical or mental 
health or condition; the provision of health care to the individual; 
or the past, present, or future payment for the provision of health 
care to the individual. HIPAA covered entities may not disclose PHI 
to an individual's employer except in limited circumstances. For 
example, as discussed more fully below, an employer that sponsors a 
group health plan may receive PHI to administer the plan (without 
authorization of the individual), but only if the employer certifies 
to the plan that it will safeguard the information and not 
improperly use or share the information. See Standards for Privacy 
of Individually Identifiable Health Information (``Privacy Rule''), 
Pub. L. 104-191; 45 CFR part 160 and Part 164, Subparts A and E. 
However, there are no restrictions on the use or disclosure of 
health information that has been de-identified in accordance with 
the HIPAA Privacy Rule. Individuals may file a complaint with HHS if 
a health plan fails to comply with privacy requirements and HHS may 
impose civil money penalties for noncompliance.
    A wellness program that is part of a HIPAA covered entity likely 
will be able to comply with its obligation under section 
1630.14(d)(6) by complying with the HIPAA Privacy Rule. An employer 
that is a health plan sponsor and receives individually identifiable 
health information from or on behalf of the group health plan, as 
permitted by HIPAA when the plan sponsor is administering aspects of 
the plan, may generally satisfy its requirement to comply with 
section 1630.14(d)(6) by certifying to the group health plan, as 
provided by 45 CFR 164.504(f)(2)(ii), that it will not use or 
disclose the information for purposes not permitted by its plan 
documents and the Privacy Rule, such as for employment purposes, and 
abiding by that certification. Further, if an employer is not 
performing plan administration functions on behalf of the group 
health plan, it may receive aggregate information from the wellness 
program under section 1630.14(d)(6) only so long as the information 
is de-identified in accordance with the HIPAA Privacy Rule. In 
addition, disclosures of protected health information from the 
wellness program may only be made in accordance with the Privacy 
Rule. Thus, certain disclosures that are otherwise permitted under 
section 1630.14(d)(4) for employee health programs generally may not 
be permissible under the Privacy Rule for wellness programs that are 
part of a group health plan without the written authorization of the 
individual.
    Employers and wellness program providers must take steps to 
protect the confidentiality of employee medical information provided 
as part of an employee health program. Some of the following steps 
may be required by law; others may be best practices. Proper 
training of individuals who handle medical information in the 
requirements of the HIPAA Rules, the ADA, and any other applicable 
privacy laws is critical. Employers and program providers should 
have clear privacy policies and procedures related to the 
collection, storage, and disclosure of medical information. On-line 
systems and other technology should guard against unauthorized 
access, such as through use of encryption for medical information 
stored electronically.
    As a best practice, individuals who handle medical information 
that is part of an employee health program should not be responsible 
for making decisions related to employment, such as hiring, 
termination, or discipline. Use of a third-party vendor may reduce 
the risk that medical information will be disclosed to individuals 
who make employment decisions, particularly for employers whose 
organizational structure makes it difficult to provide adequate 
safeguards. If an employer uses a third-party vendor, it should be 
familiar with the vendor's privacy policies for ensuring the 
confidentiality of medical information. Employers that administer 
their own wellness programs need adequate firewalls in place to 
prevent unintended disclosure.
    If individuals who handle medical information obtained through a 
wellness program also act as decision-makers (which may be the case 
for a small employer that administers its own wellness program), 
they may not use the information to discriminate on the basis of 
disability in violation of the ADA.
    Breaches of confidentiality should be reported to affected 
employees immediately and should be thoroughly investigated. 
Employers should make clear that individuals responsible for 
disclosures of confidential medical information will be disciplined 
and should consider discontinuing relationships with vendors 
responsible for breaches of confidentiality.

Section 1630.14(d)(7): Compliance With Other Employment 
Nondiscrimination Laws

    Finally, section 1630.14(d)(7) clarifies that compliance with 
the requirements of paragraph (d) of this section, including the 
limits on incentives applicable under the ADA, does not mean that a 
covered entity complies with other federal employment 
nondiscrimination laws, such as Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 
1964, 42 U.S.C. 2000e et seq., the Equal Pay Act of 1963, 29 U.S.C. 
206(d), the Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967, 29 U.S.C. 
621 et seq., Title II of the Genetic Information Nondiscrimination 
Act of 2008, 42 U.S.C. 2000ff et seq., and other sections of Title I 
of the ADA. Thus, even though an employer's wellness program might 
comply with the incentive limits set out in paragraph (d)(3), the 
employer would violate federal nondiscrimination statutes if that 
program

[[Page 21670]]

discriminates on the basis of race, sex, national origin, or age.

[FR Doc. 2015-08827 Filed 4-16-15; 11:15 am]
 BILLING CODE 6570-01-P



                                                                             Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 75 / Monday, April 20, 2015 / Proposed Rules                                                      21659

                                                    Code of Federal Regulations (10 CFR),                     For the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.                  • Hand Delivery/Courier: Bernadette
                                                    ‘‘Emergency core cooling system                         Harriet Karagiannis,                                   Wilson, Acting Executive Officer,
                                                    performance during loss-of-coolant                      Acting Chief, Regulatory Guidance and                  Executive Secretariat, Equal
                                                    accidents (LOCA),’’ with respect to the                 Generic Issues Branch, Division of                     Employment Opportunity Commission,
                                                    effects of debris during long-term                      Engineering, Office of Nuclear Regulatory              U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity
                                                                                                            Research.                                              Commission, 131 M Street NE.,
                                                    cooling.
                                                                                                            [FR Doc. 2015–08964 Filed 4–17–15; 8:45 am]            Washington, DC 20507.
                                                       The voluntary alternative was
                                                                                                            BILLING CODE 7590–01–P                                    Instructions: The Commission invites
                                                    included in the proposed 10 CFR 50.46c                                                                         comments from all interested parties.
                                                    rule at the direction of the Commission                                                                        All comment submissions must include
                                                    in the Staff Requirements Memorandum                                                                           the agency name and docket number or
                                                                                                            EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY
                                                    (SRM) regarding SECY–12–0093                                                                                   the Regulatory Information Number
                                                                                                            COMMISSION
                                                    ‘‘Closure Options for Generic Safety                                                                           (RIN) for this rulemaking. Comments
                                                    Issue—191, Assessment of Debris                         29 CFR Part 1630                                       need be submitted in only one of the
                                                    Accumulation on Pressurized-Water                                                                              above-listed formats. All comments
                                                    Reactor Sump Performance,’’ and in the                  RIN 3046–AB01
                                                                                                                                                                   received will be posted without change
                                                    SRM regarding SECY–12–0034                              Amendments to Regulations Under the                    to http://www.regulations.gov, including
                                                    ‘‘Proposed Rulemaking—10 CFR 50.46c:                    Americans With Disabilities Act                        any personal information you provide.
                                                    Emergency Core Cooling System                                                                                     Docket: For access to the docket to
                                                    Performance During Loss-of-Coolant                      AGENCY:  Equal Employment                              read background documents or
                                                    Accidents (RIN 3150–AH42).’’ This                       Opportunity Commission.                                comments received, go to http://
                                                    guide is intended to provide a                          ACTION: Proposed rule.                                 www.regulations.gov. Copies of the
                                                    consistent approach for licensees to use                                                                       received comments also will be
                                                    when performing a risk assessment of                    SUMMARY:    The Equal Employment                       available for review at the Commission’s
                                                    the complex phenomena associated                        Opportunity Commission (‘‘EEOC’’ or                    library, 131 M Street NE., Suite
                                                    with debris generation and transport,                   ‘‘Commission’’) is issuing a proposed                  4NW08R, Washington, DC 20507,
                                                                                                            rule that would amend the regulations                  between the hours of 9:30 a.m. and 5:00
                                                    and the resulting effect on long-term
                                                                                                            and interpretive guidance implementing                 p.m., from June 19, 2015 until the
                                                    core cooling.
                                                                                                            Title I of the Americans with                          Commission publishes the rule in final
                                                    III. Backfitting and Issue Finality                     Disabilities Act (ADA) as they relate to               form.
                                                                                                            employer wellness programs. The                        FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
                                                       This DG, if finalized, would not                     proposed rule amends the ADA                           Christopher J. Kuczynski, Assistant
                                                    constitute backfitting as defined in                    regulations to provide guidance on the                 Legal Counsel, (202) 663–4665, or Joyce
                                                    § 50.109 (the Backfit Rule), and would                  extent to which employers may use                      Walker-Jones, Senior Attorney Advisor,
                                                    not be otherwise inconsistent with the                  incentives to encourage employees to                   at (202) 663–7031, or (202) 663–7026
                                                    issue finality provisions in 10 CFR part                participate in wellness programs that                  (TTY), Office of Legal Counsel, U.S.
                                                    52, ‘‘Licenses, Certifications and                      include disability-related inquiries and/              Equal Employment Opportunity
                                                    Approvals for Nuclear Power Plants.’’                   or medical examinations.                               Commission. (These are not toll free
                                                    The NRC published a proposed revision                   DATES: Comments regarding this                         numbers.) Requests for this notice in an
                                                    of 10 CFR 50.46c on March 24, 2014 (79                  proposal must be received by the                       alternative format should be made to the
                                                    FR 16106). The proposed rule includes                   Commission on or before June 19, 2015.                 Office of Communications and
                                                    the option of allowing an applicant or                  Please see the sections below entitled                 Legislative Affairs at (202) 663–4191
                                                    licensee to address the effects of debris               ADDRESSES and SUPPLEMENTARY                            (voice) or (202) 663–4494 (TTY). (These
                                                    on longterm cooling with respect to                     INFORMATION for additional information                 are not toll free numbers.)
                                                    ECCS performance requirements in                        on submitting comments.                                SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
                                                    § 50.46c and GDC–35 using a risk-                       ADDRESSES: You may submit comments,
                                                    informed approach. The proposed rule                    identified by RIN number 3046–AB01,                    Introduction
                                                    would also allow applicants and                         by any of the following methods:                          The Equal Employment Opportunity
                                                    licensees who select the option to use                     • Federal eRulemaking Portal: http://               Commission (‘‘EEOC’’ or
                                                    the same approach in demonstrating                      www.regulations.gov. Follow the                        ‘‘Commission’’) is issuing a proposed
                                                    compliance with GDC–38 and GDC–41.                      instructions for submitting comments.                  rule that would amend the regulations
                                                    This DG provides guidance on one                           • Fax: (202) 663–4114. (There is no                 and interpretive guidance implementing
                                                    possible means for implementing that                    toll free FAX number). Only comments                   Title I of the Americans with
                                                    option. The proposed guidance does not                  of six or fewer pages will be accepted                 Disabilities Act (ADA) as they relate to
                                                    exceed the scope of the proposed rule.                  via FAX transmittal, in order to assure                employer wellness programs. Congress
                                                    Therefore, the backfitting and issue                    access to the equipment. Receipt of FAX                enacted the ADA in 1990 to prohibit
                                                    finality discussion for the proposed rule               transmittals will not be acknowledged,                 discrimination against individuals with
                                                                                                            except that the sender may request                     disabilities. The EEOC issued
                                                    applies to this DG, and further
                                                                                                            confirmation of receipt by calling the                 implementing regulations in 1991 to
                                                    consideration and discussion of
                                                                                                            Executive Secretariat staff at (202) 663–
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS




                                                    backfitting and issue finality for the DG                                                                      provide additional guidance on the
                                                                                                            4070 (voice) or (202) 663–4074 (TTY).                  law’s requirements and prohibited
                                                    is not necessary.                                       (These are not toll free numbers).                     practices with respect to employment.1
                                                      Dated at Rockville, Maryland, this 13th day              • Mail: Bernadette B. Wilson, Acting
                                                    of April 2015.                                          Executive Officer, Executive Secretariat,                1 The citations in this proposed rule are to the

                                                                                                            Equal Employment Opportunity                           2011 regulations. In 2011, EEOC issued amended
                                                                                                                                                                   regulations to revise the definition of disability and
                                                                                                            Commission, U.S. Equal Employment                      other provisions to conform to changes to the ADA
                                                                                                            Opportunity Commission, 131 M Street                   made by the ADA Amendments Act of 2008, but
                                                                                                            NE., Washington, DC 20507.                                                                          Continued




                                               VerDate Sep<11>2014   17:02 Apr 17, 2015   Jkt 235001   PO 00000   Frm 00002   Fmt 4702   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\20APP1.SGM   20APP1


                                                    21660                     Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 75 / Monday, April 20, 2015 / Proposed Rules

                                                    This proposed rule provides guidance                     incentives, such as time-off awards,                     enforces that prohibit discrimination
                                                    on the extent to which the ADA permits                   prizes, or other items of value.                         based on race, color, sex (including
                                                    employers to offer incentives to                                                                                  pregnancy), national origin, religion,
                                                                                                             Discussion
                                                    employees to promote participation in                                                                             compensation, age, or genetic
                                                    wellness programs that are employee                         As a means of attempting to improve                   information.11 Additionally, wellness
                                                    health programs.2 It does not apply to                   employees’ health and reduce health                      programs that are part of group health
                                                    similar types of programs that may be                    care costs, many employers that provide                  plans must comply with the
                                                    provided by entities other than those                    health coverage also offer employee                      requirements of the Health Insurance
                                                    subject to Title I of the ADA, such as                   health programs and activities to                        Portability and Accountability Act of
                                                    social service agencies covered under                    promote healthier lifestyles or prevent                  1996 (HIPAA), as amended by the
                                                    Title II of the ADA, 42 U.S.C. 12131 et                  disease.6 Commonly referred to as                        Patient Protection and Affordable Care
                                                    seq., or places of public accommodation                  workplace wellness programs, these                       Act (‘‘Affordable Care Act’’)12—set forth
                                                    subject to Title III of the ADA, 42 U.S.C.               programs may include, for example:                       in regulations jointly issued by the
                                                    12181 et seq., who may provide similar                   nutrition classes, onsite exercise                       Department of Labor (DOL), Department
                                                    programs to individuals who are                          facilities, weight loss and smoking                      of the Treasury, and Department of
                                                    considered volunteers.3                                  cessation programs, and/or coaching to                   Health and Human Services (HHS)—
                                                       A wellness program may be part of a                   help employees meet health goals.                        that generally prohibit discrimination in
                                                    group health plan or may be offered                      Wellness programs also may incorporate                   group health plans based on any health
                                                    outside of a group health plan.4 The                     health risk assessments and biometric                    factor.13
                                                    references in the proposed rule                          screenings that measure an employee’s                      The laws relevant to this proposed
                                                    regarding the requirement to provide a                   health risk factors, such as body weight                 rule are discussed below.
                                                    notice and the use of incentives, and                    and cholesterol, blood glucose, and
                                                                                                             blood pressure levels.7 Some employers                   HIPAA’s Nondiscrimination Provisions
                                                    changes to the corresponding section of
                                                    the interpretive guidance, apply only to                 offer incentives to encourage employees                     HIPAA’s nondiscrimination
                                                    wellness programs that are part of or                    simply to participate in a wellness                      provisions, as amended by the
                                                    provided by a group health plan or by                    program, while others offer incentives                   Affordable Care Act, generally prohibit
                                                    a health insurance issuer offering group                 based on whether employees achieve                       group health plans and health insurance
                                                    health insurance in connection with a                    certain health outcomes.8 Incentives can                 issuers offering group health insurance
                                                    group health plan.5 The term ‘‘group                     be framed as rewards or penalties and                    in connection with a group health plan
                                                                                                             often take the form of prizes, cash, or a                from discriminating against participants
                                                    health plan’’ includes both insured and
                                                                                                             reduction or increase in health care                     and beneficiaries in premiums, benefits,
                                                    self-insured group health plans and is
                                                                                                             premiums or cost sharing. Of the                         or eligibility based on a health factor.14
                                                    used interchangeably with the term
                                                                                                             employers who offer incentives to
                                                    ‘‘health plan’’ throughout the preamble.
                                                                                                             complete wellness programs, the                             11 See Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964,
                                                    All of the other proposed changes to the                                                                          42 U.S.C. 2000e et seq.; the Equal Pay Act of 1963,
                                                                                                             majority use incentives totaling less
                                                    regulations apply to all ‘‘health                                                                                 29 U.S.C. 206(d); the Age Discrimination in
                                                                                                             than $500 per year.9
                                                    programs,’’ which include wellness                          Employee health programs offered by
                                                                                                                                                                      Employment Act (ADEA) of 1967, 29 U.S.C. 621 et
                                                    programs whether or not they are                                                                                  seq.; and Title II of GINA. However, this proposed
                                                                                                             employers must comply with laws                          rule concerns only the application of the ADA’s
                                                    offered as part of or outside of a group                 enforced by the EEOC, including Title I                  rules limiting disability-related inquiries and
                                                    health plan or group health insurance                    of the Americans with Disabilities Act                   medical examinations of employees to employer-
                                                    coverage. The term ‘‘incentives’’                        (ADA) which restricts the medical
                                                                                                                                                                      sponsored wellness programs. Compliance with the
                                                    includes both financial and in-kind                                                                               limits on incentives in this proposed rule does not
                                                                                                             information employers may obtain from                    necessarily result in compliance with other
                                                                                                             applicants and employees and makes it                    nondiscrimination laws or other parts of the ADA.
                                                    did not amend the provisions concerning disability-      illegal to discriminate against                          For example, as the interpretive guidance
                                                    related inquiries and medical examinations of                                                                     accompanying the proposed rule explains, even if
                                                    employees at 29 CFR 1630.14 that affect employee         individuals based on disability.10 They                  an employer’s wellness program complies with the
                                                    health programs. Some of the other revisions,            also must comply with other laws EEOC                    incentive limits set forth in the ADA regulations,
                                                    however, resulted in renumbering.                                                                                 the employer violates Title VII or the ADEA if that
                                                       2 The ADA provides that, ‘‘[a] covered entity may        6 See Rand Health, Workplace Wellness Programs        program discriminates on the basis of race, sex,
                                                    conduct voluntary medical examinations and               Study Final Report (2013), sponsored by the U.S.         national origin, or age.
                                                    inquiries, including voluntary medical histories,        Departments of Labor and Health and Human                   12 The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act,
                                                    which are part of an employee health program             Services, available at http://www.rand.org/content/      Public Law 111–148, and the Health Care and
                                                    available to employees at that work site.’’ 42 U.S.C.    dam/rand/pubs/research_reports/RR200/RR254/              Education Reconciliation Act, Pub. L. 111–152, are
                                                    12112(d)(4)(B)(emphasis added). As referenced in         RAND_RR254.pdf [hereinafter referred to as the           known collectively as the Affordable Care Act.
                                                    this proposed rule, wellness programs are                RAND Final Report]; see also The Kaiser Family           Section 1201 of the Affordable Care Act amended
                                                    ‘‘employee health programs.’’                            Foundation and Health Research & Educational             and moved the nondiscrimination and wellness
                                                       3 This proposed rule also does not address the        Trust 2014 Employer Health Benefits Survey,              provisions of the Public Health Service (PHS) Act
                                                    extent to which Title II of the Genetic Information      available at http://kff.org/health-costs/report/2014-    from section 2702 to section 2705, and extended the
                                                    Nondiscrimination Act (GINA) of 2008, 42 U.S.C.          employer-health-benefits-survey/ [hereinafter            nondiscrimination provisions to the individual
                                                    2000ff, et seq., affects an employer’s ability to        referred to as the Kaiser Survey].                       market. The Affordable Care Act also added section
                                                    condition incentives on a family member’s                   7 Id.                                                 715(a)(1) to ERISA and section 9815(a)(1) to the
                                                    participation in a wellness program. This issue will        8 According to the RAND Final Report, 69 percent      Code to incorporate the provisions of part A of title
                                                    be addressed in future EEOC rulemaking.                  of employers with at least 50 employees offer            XXVII of the PHS Act, including PHS Act section
                                                       4 The term ‘‘group health plan’’ is defined in        financial incentives to encourage employee               2705, into ERISA and the Code and make them
                                                    ERISA section 733(a). An employer may establish          participation, while 10 percent offer incentives tied    applicable to group health plans and group health
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                                                    or maintain more than one group health plan.             to health outcomes. By contrast, the Kaiser Survey       insurance issuers.
                                                       5 This proposed rule asks for comments on             found that 36 percent of large employers with 200           13 A wellness program that is part of a group

                                                    whether employers offer (or are likely to offer in the   or more employees and 18 percent of smaller              health plan also must comply with HIPAA’s
                                                    future) wellness programs outside of a group health      employers offer financial incentives to participate      Privacy, Security, and Breach Notification
                                                    plan or group health insurance coverage that use         in a wellness program.                                   requirements set forth at 45 CFR part 160 and part
                                                    incentives to promote participation in such                 9 According to the Kaiser Survey, 68 percent of all   164. These requirements are discussed later in this
                                                    programs or to encourage employees to achieve            large firms that offered an incentive for the            preamble.
                                                    certain health outcomes and whether EEOC should          completion of a wellness program used a maximum             14 The HIPAA nondiscrimination provisions set

                                                    issue regulations specifically limiting incentives       incentive below $500.                                    forth eight health status-related factors, which the
                                                    provided as part of such programs.                          10 42 U.S.C. 12101 et seq.                            December 13, 2006 final regulations refer to as



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                                                                              Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 75 / Monday, April 20, 2015 / Proposed Rules                                                    21661

                                                    An exception to the general rule allows                 that provides a reward to employees                     any individual for whom, for that
                                                    premium discounts or rebates or                         who complete a health risk assessment                   period, it is unreasonably difficult due
                                                    modification to otherwise applicable                    (HRA) regarding current health status,                  to a medical condition to satisfy the
                                                    cost sharing (including copayments,                     without any further action (educational                 otherwise applicable standard, and for
                                                    deductibles, or coinsurance) in return                  or otherwise) required by the employee                  any individual for whom, for that
                                                    for adherence to certain programs of                    with regard to the health issues                        period, it is medically inadvisable to
                                                    health promotion and disease                            identified as part of the assessment. The               attempt to satisfy the otherwise
                                                    prevention.15                                           2013 final regulations state that                       applicable standard. An outcome-based
                                                      HIPAA’s nondiscrimination                             participatory wellness programs are                     program must allow a reasonable
                                                    provisions, as amended by the                           permissible under the HIPAA                             alternative standard (or waiver of the
                                                    Affordable Care Act, and the 2013 final                 nondiscrimination requirements                          otherwise applicable standard) for
                                                    regulations issued by the Departments                   provided they are made available to all                 obtaining the reward to any individual
                                                    of Labor, Treasury, and HHS, discuss                    similarly situated individuals.                         who does not meet the initial standard
                                                    two types of wellness programs:                            Health-contingent wellness programs,                 based on a measurement, test, or
                                                    Participatory and health-contingent.                    which may be either activity-only or                    screening. Fifth, plans and issuers must
                                                    Participatory wellness programs either                  outcome-based, require individuals to                   disclose the availability of a reasonable
                                                    do not provide a reward or do not                       satisfy a standard related to a health                  alternative standard to qualify for the
                                                    include any conditions for obtaining a                  factor to obtain a reward (or require an                reward in all plan materials describing
                                                    reward that are based on an individual                  individual to undertake more than a                     the terms of a health-contingent
                                                    satisfying a standard related to a health               similarly situated individual based on a                wellness program and in any disclosure
                                                    factor. Examples in the final regulations               health factor in order to obtain the same               that an individual did not satisfy an
                                                    include: A program that reimburses                      reward). Activity-only programs require                 initial outcome-based standard.
                                                    employees for all or part of the cost for               individuals to perform or complete an                      The 2013 final regulations recognize
                                                    membership in a fitness center; a                       activity related to a health factor in                  that compliance with HIPAA
                                                    program that reimburses employees for                   order to obtain a reward, but do not                    nondiscrimination rules (as amended by
                                                    the costs of participating, or that                     require an individual to attain or                      the Affordable Care Act), including the
                                                    otherwise provides a reward for                         maintain a specific health outcome.                     wellness program requirements, is not
                                                    participating, in a smoking cessation                   Outcome-based programs require                          determinative of compliance with any
                                                    program without regard to whether the                   individuals to attain or maintain a                     other provision of any other state or
                                                    employee quits smoking; and a program                   specific health outcome (such as not                    federal law, including, but not limited
                                                                                                            smoking or attaining certain results on                 to, the ADA, Title VII of the Civil Rights
                                                    ‘‘health factors.’’ Under HIPAA and the 2006            biometric screenings) in order to obtain                Act of 1964 (Title VII), and the Genetic
                                                    regulations, as well as under the Public Health         a reward.
                                                    Service (PHS) Act section 2705 (as added by the
                                                                                                                                                                    Information Nondiscrimination Act
                                                    Affordable Care Act), the eight health factors are
                                                                                                               There are five requirements for                      (GINA).17
                                                    health status, medical condition (including both        health-contingent wellness programs
                                                    physical and mental illnesses), claims experience,      under the Public Health Service (PHS)                   Title I of the ADA
                                                    receipt of health care, medical history, genetic        Act section 2705 and the 2013 final                       Title I of the ADA prohibits
                                                    information, evidence of insurability (including
                                                    conditions arising out of acts of domestic violence),
                                                                                                            regulations.16 First, all individuals                   discrimination against individuals on
                                                    and disability. 71 FR 75014 (Dec. 13, 2006). In the     eligible for a health-contingent wellness               the basis of disability ‘‘in regard to . . .
                                                    view of the Departments of Labor, HHS, and the          program must be given the opportunity                   employment compensation . . . and
                                                    Treasury, ‘‘[t]hese terms are largely overlapping       to qualify for the reward at least once                 other terms, conditions, and privileges
                                                    and, in combination, include any factor related to
                                                    an individual’s health.’’ 66 FR 1379 (January 8,
                                                                                                            per year. Second, the total reward                      of employment,’’ including ‘‘fringe
                                                    2001).                                                  offered to an individual under all                      benefits available by virtue of
                                                       15 Prior to the enactment of the Affordable Care     health-contingent wellness programs                     employment, whether or not
                                                    Act, HIPAA added section 9802 of the Internal           with respect to a plan cannot exceed 30                 administered by the covered entity.’’ 18
                                                    Revenue Code, section 702 of the Employee               percent of the total cost of employee-
                                                    Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA), and
                                                    section 2702 of the PHS Act. DOL, Treasury, and         only coverage under the plan, including                    17 See 78 FR at 33168 (‘‘The Departments

                                                    HHS issued joint final regulations in 2006 regarding    both employee and employer                              recognize that many other laws may regulate plans
                                                    wellness programs in connection with a group            contributions towards the cost of                       and issuers in their provision of benefits to
                                                    health plan or group health insurance coverage                                                                  participants and beneficiaries. These laws include,
                                                                                                            coverage (or 50 percent to the extent                   but are not limited to, the ADA, Title VII of the
                                                    under which any of the conditions for obtaining a
                                                    reward is based on satisfying a standard related to     that the additional percentage is                       Civil Rights Act of 1964, Code section 105(h) and
                                                    a health factor. See 26 CFR 54.9802–1(f); 29 CFR        attributed to tobacco prevention or                     PHS Act section 2716 (prohibiting discrimination in
                                                    2590.702(f); 45 CFR 146.121(f). Paragraph (f)(2) of     reduction). Third, health-contingent                    favor of highly compensated individuals), the
                                                    the 2006 regulations limited the total reward for                                                               Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act of
                                                                                                            wellness programs must be reasonably                    2008, the Family and Medical Leave Act, ERISA’s
                                                    such wellness programs to 20 percent of the total
                                                    cost of coverage under the plan. The Affordable         designed to promote health or prevent                   fiduciary provisions, and State law.’’).
                                                    Care Act amended the PHS Act to raise the               disease. Fourth, the full reward under a                   18 See 42 U.S.C. 12112(a) and 29 CFR

                                                    limitation on incentives to 30 percent of the total     health-contingent wellness program                      1630.4(a)(1)(vi). Title I of the ADA applies to
                                                    cost of coverage under the plan. See PHS Act            must be available to all similarly                      individuals and covered entities other than
                                                    section 2705(j)(3)(A). The DOL, IRS, and HHS                                                                    employees and employers, including employment
                                                    issued final regulations in June 2013 to implement      situated individuals. For this purpose,                 agencies, labor organizations, and joint-labor
                                                    PHS Act section 2705 and amend the 2006 HIPAA           an activity-only program must allow a                   management committees. See 42 U.S.C. 12111(2),
                                                                                                            reasonable alternative standard (or
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                                                    regulations regarding nondiscriminatory wellness                                                                12111(4), 12111(5), and 12112(b) (describing the
                                                    programs in group health coverage. 78 FR 33158          waiver of the otherwise applicable                      prohibited practices of each of these entities); see
                                                    (June 3, 2013). Under the 2013 final regulations on                                                             also 29 CFR 1630.2(b) (definition of covered entity)
                                                    nondiscriminatory wellness programs, references to      standard) for obtaining the reward for                  and 29 CFR 1630.4(a)(1) (description of prohibited
                                                    ‘‘a plan providing a reward include both providing                                                              practices). Although employers generally will be
                                                    a reward (such as a discount or rebate of a premium       16 For the requirements applicable to activity-only   the ADA covered entities that offer wellness
                                                    or contribution, a waiver of all or part of a cost-     programs, see 26 CFR 54.9802–1(f)(3), 29 CFR            programs, this preamble, the proposed rule, and the
                                                    sharing mechanism, an additional benefit, or any        2590.702(f)(3), and 45 CFR 146.121(f)(3). For           interpretive guidance accompanying the proposed
                                                    financial or other incentive) and imposing a penalty    requirements applicable to outcome-based                rule frequently use the term ‘‘covered entity,’’ as
                                                    (such as a surcharge or other financial or              programs, see 26 CFR 54.9802–1(f)(4), 29 CFR            that term appears throughout EEOC’s entire ADA
                                                    nonfinancial disincentive).’’                           2590.702(f)(4), and 45 CFR 146.121(f)(4).                                                          Continued




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                                                    21662                     Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 75 / Monday, April 20, 2015 / Proposed Rules

                                                    The ADA also requires employers to                       interaction between the ADA and                         wellness programs is to ensure that
                                                    provide reasonable accommodations                        HIPAA’s wellness program provisions,                    wellness programs do not offer
                                                    (modifications or adjustments) to enable                 as amended by the Affordable Care Act.                  incentives so large as to have the effect
                                                    individuals with disabilities to have                    A plausible reading of ‘‘voluntary’’ in                 of denying coverage or creating too
                                                    equal access to the fringe benefits                      isolation is that covered entities can                  heavy a financial penalty for individuals
                                                    offered to individuals without                           only offer de minimis rewards or                        who do not meet certain health
                                                    disabilities.19 Additionally, the ADA                    penalties to employees for their                        standards.26 HIPAA’s
                                                    restricts employers from obtaining                       participation (or nonparticipation) in                  nondiscrimination provisions governing
                                                    medical information from employees by                    wellness programs that include                          wellness programs, however, do not
                                                    generally prohibiting them from making                   disability-related inquiries and medical                include provisions like those in the
                                                    disability-related inquiries or requiring                examinations. That reading, however,                    ADA that limit the kinds of medical
                                                    medical examinations.20 The statute,                     would make many wellness program                        information employers may ask
                                                    however, provides an exception to this                   incentives tied to the disclosure of                    employees to provide through
                                                    rule by stating that ‘‘[a] covered entity                health information or the completion of                 disability-related inquiries or medical
                                                    may conduct voluntary medical                            medical examinations expressly                          examinations.
                                                    examinations, including voluntary                        permitted by HIPAA impermissible                          The proposed rule explains what an
                                                    medical histories, which are part of an                  under the ADA. Although it is clear that                employee health program is, what it
                                                    employee health program available to                     compliance with the standards in                        means for an employee health program
                                                    employees at that work site.’’ 21                        HIPAA is not determinative of                           to be voluntary, what incentives
                                                    Employee health programs include                         compliance with the ADA,23 the                          employers may offer as part of a
                                                    workplace wellness programs. In                          Commission believes that it has a                       voluntary employee health program,
                                                    previous guidance on disability-related                  responsibility to interpret the ADA in a                and what requirements apply
                                                    inquiries and medical examinations                       manner that reflects both the ADA’s goal                concerning notice and confidentiality of
                                                    under the ADA, EEOC stated that: ‘‘A                     of limiting employer access to medical                  medical information obtained as part of
                                                    wellness program is ‘voluntary’ as long                  information and HIPAA’s and the                         voluntary employee health programs. In
                                                    as an employer neither requires                          Affordable Care Act’s provisions                        addition, the proposed rule explains
                                                    participation nor penalizes employees                    promoting wellness programs.                            that compliance with rules concerning
                                                    who do not participate.’’ 22 However,                      Accordingly, the Commission                           voluntary employee health programs
                                                    neither the statute nor EEOC’s                           concludes that allowing certain                         does not ensure compliance with all the
                                                    regulations address the extent to which                  incentives related to wellness programs,                antidiscrimination laws EEOC enforces.
                                                    incentives might affect the voluntary                    while limiting them to prevent                            The proposed rule clarifies that an
                                                    nature of a wellness program.                            economic coercion that could render                     employer may offer limited incentives
                                                                                                             provision of medical information                        up to a maximum of 30 percent of the
                                                    The Interaction of Title I of the ADA                                                                            total cost of employee-only coverage,
                                                    and HIPAA’s Nondiscrimination                            involuntary, is the best way to effectuate
                                                                                                             the purposes of the wellness program                    whether in the form of a reward or
                                                    Provisions, as Amended by the                                                                                    penalty, to promote an employee’s
                                                    Affordable Care Act                                      provisions of both laws.24 One purpose
                                                                                                             of the ADA’s provision applicable to                    participation in a wellness program that
                                                      The Commission’s interpretation of                     employee health programs is to allow                    includes disability-related inquiries or
                                                    the term ‘‘voluntary’’ in the ADA’s                      such programs access to medical                         medical examinations as long as
                                                    disability-related inquiries and medical                 information where employees                             participation is voluntary. As noted
                                                    examinations provision is central to the                 voluntarily provide that information.25                 below, EEOC seeks comment on
                                                                                                             One purpose of HIPAA’s                                  whether additional protections for low-
                                                    regulation. The term ‘‘covered entity’’ also has a
                                                                                                             nondiscrimination provisions governing                  income employees are needed.
                                                    different meaning for purposes of the HIPAA                                                                      Voluntary means that a covered entity:
                                                    Privacy, Security, and Breach Notification Rules, as
                                                    explained later in this preamble. The proposed rule         23 See 78 FR at 33168 (noting that HIPAA             (1) Does not require employees to
                                                    uses the term ‘‘HIPAA covered entity’’ when              compliance is not determinative of ADA                  participate; (2) does not deny coverage
                                                    discussing HIPAA privacy requirements that apply         compliance); see also PHS Act section 2705(j)(3)(A)     under any of its group health plans or
                                                    to the group health plan.                                (noting that wellness programs complying with the       particular benefits packages within a
                                                       19 42 U.S.C. 12112(b)(5)(A) and 29 CFR 1630.9         HIPAA requirements ‘‘shall not violate this section’’
                                                    (prohibiting covered entity from failing to provide      of the Act).
                                                                                                                                                                     group health plan for non-participation
                                                    reasonable accommodations absent undue                      24 The Commission does not believe that the          or limit the extent of such coverage
                                                    hardship); 29 CFR 1630.2(o)(1)(iii) (reasonable          ADA’s ‘‘safe harbor’’ provision applicable to           (except pursuant to allowed incentives);
                                                    accommodation includes modifications and                 insurance, as interpreted by the court in Seff v.       and (3) does not take any adverse
                                                    adjustments that enable a covered entity’s               Broward County, 778 F. Supp. 2d 1370 (S.D. Fla.
                                                    employees to enjoy ‘‘equal benefits and privileges
                                                                                                                                                                     employment action or retaliate against,
                                                                                                             2011), affirmed, 691 F.3d 1221 (11th Cir. 2012), is
                                                    of employment.’’)                                        the proper basis for finding wellness program
                                                                                                                                                                     interfere with, coerce, intimidate, or
                                                       20 42 U.S.C. 12112(d)(4)(A) (a covered entity
                                                                                                             incentives permissible. The ADA contains a clear        threaten employees within the meaning
                                                    ‘‘shall not require a medical examination and shall      ‘‘safe harbor’’ for wellness programs—the               of Section 503 of the ADA, at 42 U.S.C.
                                                    not make inquiries of an employee as to whether          ‘‘voluntary’’ provision at 42 U.S.C. 12112(d)(4)(B).    12203.
                                                    such employee is an individual with a disability or      See H.R. Rep. 101–485, pt. 2, at 51 (‘‘A growing
                                                    as to the nature or severity of the disability, unless   number of employers today are offering voluntary
                                                                                                                                                                       Further, to ensure that participation
                                                    such examination or inquiry is shown to be job-          wellness programs in the workplace. These               in a wellness program that includes
                                                    related and consistent with business necessity.’’).      programs often include medical screening for high       disability-related inquiries and/or
                                                    EEOC refers to the types of inquiries prohibited by      blood pressure, weight control, cancer detection,       medical examinations, and that is part
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                                                    the ADA as ‘‘disability-related inquiries’’ and has      and the like. As long as the programs are voluntary
                                                    issued guidance on what constitutes such an              and the medical records are maintained in a
                                                                                                                                                                     of a group health plan, is truly
                                                    inquiry. See Enforcement Guidance on Disability-         confidential manner and not used for the purpose        voluntary, an employer must provide a
                                                    Related Inquiries and Medical Examinations of            of limiting health insurance eligibility or of          notice that clearly explains what
                                                    Employees Under the Americans with Disabilities          preventing occupational advancement, these              medical information will be obtained,
                                                    Act, Q&A 1 (July 27, 2000), available at http://         activities would fall within the purview of accepted
                                                    www.eeoc.gov/policy/docs/guidance-inquiries.html         activities.’’). Reading the insurance safe harbor as
                                                                                                                                                                     who will receive the medical
                                                    (hereafter ‘‘Guidance’’).                                exempting these programs from coverage would            information, how the medical
                                                       21 42 U.S.C. 12112(d)(4)(B).                          render the ‘‘voluntary’’ provision superfluous.
                                                       22 See Guidance, at Q&A 22.                              25 See id. at H.R. Rep. 101–485, pt. 2, at 51.        26 71   FR 75014, 75018 (December 13, 2006).



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                                                                             Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 75 / Monday, April 20, 2015 / Proposed Rules                                           21663

                                                    information will be used, the                           interfere with, coerce, intimidate, or                 participation requires employees to
                                                    restrictions on its disclosure, and the                 threaten employees in violation of                     answer disability-related inquiries or
                                                    methods the covered entity will employ                  Section 503 of the ADA, at 42 U.S.C.                   take medical examinations promotes the
                                                    to prevent improper disclosure of the                   12203 (e.g., by coercing an employee to                ADA’s interest in ensuring that
                                                    medical information. Finally, the                       participate in an employee health                      incentive limits are not so high as to
                                                    proposed rule allows the disclosure of                  program or threatening to discipline an                make participation in the program
                                                    medical information obtained by                         employee who does not participate).                    involuntary. At the same time, these
                                                    wellness programs to employers only in                    Section 1630.14(d)(2)(iv) says that for              limits comport with HIPAA and the
                                                    aggregate form, except as needed to                     an employee’s participation in a                       Affordable Care Act wellness program
                                                    administer the health plan. The                         wellness program that is part of a group               provisions.
                                                    proposed rule does not implicate                        health plan to be deemed voluntary, a                     The EEOC has not changed any of the
                                                    disability-related inquiries or medical                 covered entity must provide a notice                   exceptions to confidentiality set out in
                                                    examinations outside the context of a                   clearly explaining what medical                        section 1630.14(d). The Commission,
                                                    voluntary wellness program.                             information will be obtained, how the                  however, proposes to add a new
                                                                                                            medical information will be used, who                  subsection, 1630.14(d)(6), concerning
                                                    Summary of Proposed Revisions                                                                                  the confidentiality and use of medical
                                                                                                            will receive the medical information,
                                                      The proposed rule re-asserts the                      the restrictions on its disclosure, and                information gathered in the course of
                                                    Commission’s position, based on the                     the methods the covered entity uses to                 providing voluntary health services to
                                                    language of the ADA, that employee                      prevent improper disclosure of medical                 employees, including information
                                                    health programs that include disability-                information.                                           collected as part of an employee’s
                                                    related inquiries or medical                              Section 1630.14(d)(3) clarifies that the             participation in an employee health
                                                    examinations (including inquiries or                    offer of limited incentives to participate             program. This subsection states that
                                                    medical examinations that are part of a                 in wellness programs that are part of a                medical information collected through
                                                    HRA or medical history) must be                         group health plan and that include                     an employee health program only may
                                                    voluntary and clarifies the application                 disability-related inquiries and/or                    be provided to a covered entity under
                                                    of that rule in light of the amendments                 medical examinations, will not render                  the ADA in aggregate terms that do not
                                                    made to HIPAA by the Affordable Care                    the program involuntary. However, the                  disclose, or are not reasonably likely to
                                                    Act.                                                    total allowable incentive available                    disclose, the identity of specific
                                                      Proposed section 1630.14(d)(1) says                   under all programs (both participatory                 individuals, except as needed to
                                                    that an employee health program,                        programs and health-contingent                         administer the health plan and except as
                                                    including any disability-related                        programs) may not exceed 30 percent of                 permitted under 1630.14(d)(4). The
                                                    inquiries and medical examinations that                 the total cost of employee-only                        interpretive guidance explains that both
                                                    are part of such a program, must be                     coverage, which generally is the                       employers that sponsor wellness
                                                    reasonably designed to promote health                   maximum allowable incentive available                  programs and administrators of wellness
                                                    or prevent disease. This standard is                    under HIPAA and the Affordable Care                    programs acting as agents of employers
                                                    similar to the standard under the tri-                  Act for health-contingent wellness                     have obligations to ensure compliance
                                                    agency regulations applicable to health-                programs.28                                            with this provision.
                                                    contingent wellness programs.27 In                        The EEOC proposes to extend the 30                      Further, the interpretive guidance
                                                    order to meet the standard, the program                 percent limit set under HIPAA and the                  explains that where a wellness program
                                                    must have a reasonable chance of                        Affordable Care Act to include                         is part of a group health plan, the
                                                    improving the health of, or preventing                  participatory wellness programs that ask               individually identifiable health
                                                    disease in, participating employees, and                an employee to respond to a disability-                information collected from or created
                                                    must not be overly burdensome, a                        related inquiry or undergo a medical                   about participants as part of the
                                                    subterfuge for violating the ADA or                     examination. HIPAA and Affordable                      wellness program is protected health
                                                    other laws prohibiting employment                       Care Act wellness program provisions                   information under the HIPAA Privacy,
                                                    discrimination, or highly suspect in the                are limited to regulating what                         Security, and Breach Notification Rules.
                                                    method chosen to promote health or                                                                             See 45 CFR part 160 and Part 164. The
                                                                                                            constitutes discrimination based on a
                                                    prevent disease. The interpretive                                                                              HIPAA Privacy, Security, and Breach
                                                                                                            health factor. As long as an incentive for
                                                    guidance offers examples of programs                                                                           Notification Rules apply to HIPAA
                                                                                                            a participatory wellness program is
                                                    that would and would not meet this                                                                             covered entities, which include group
                                                                                                            available to all similarly situated
                                                    standard.                                                                                                      health plans, and generally protect the
                                                                                                            employees, regardless of any health
                                                      Section 1630.14(d)(2)(i)–(iii) explains                                                                      individually identifiable health
                                                                                                            factor, the incentive will not violate
                                                    that, for a program to be considered                                                                           information maintained by or on behalf
                                                                                                            HIPAA and the Affordable Care Act. By
                                                    voluntary, a covered entity may not                                                                            of such entities. Accordingly, the
                                                                                                            contrast, the ADA rules concerning
                                                    require an employee to participate in                                                                          interpretative guidance provides that
                                                                                                            disability-related inquiries and medical
                                                    such a program and may not deny                                                                                where a wellness program is part of a
                                                                                                            examinations of employees limit the                    group health plan and required to
                                                    coverage under any of its group health                  circumstances under which employers
                                                    plans or particular benefits packages                                                                          comply with HIPAA, its obligation to
                                                                                                            may obtain medical information from                    comply with section 1630.14(d)(6)
                                                    within a group health plan, generally                   employees and the type of information
                                                    may not limit the extent of such                                                                               generally may be satisfied by adhering
                                                                                                            that may be sought. For this reason,                   to the HIPAA Privacy Rule. Thus, when
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                                                    coverage, and may not take any other                    EEOC has determined that placing
                                                    adverse action against employees who                                                                           an employer that is a health plan
                                                                                                            limits on the rewards employers may                    sponsor performing plan administration
                                                    refuse to participate in an employee                    offer for employee participation (or
                                                    health program or fail to achieve certain                                                                      receives individually identifiable health
                                                                                                            penalties for non-participation) where                 information from or on behalf of the
                                                    health outcomes. Additionally, an
                                                    employer may not retaliate against,                       28 The interpretive guidance accompanying the
                                                                                                                                                                   group health plan, as permitted by
                                                                                                            proposed rule as well as question 6 below address
                                                                                                                                                                   HIPAA, it generally satisfies its
                                                      27 See 26 CFR 54.9802–1(f)(3)(iii); 29 CFR            the application of incentives related to smoking       requirement to comply with section
                                                    2590.702(f)(3)(iii); 45 CFR 146.121(f)(iii).            cessation programs.                                    1630.14(d)(6) by certifying to the group


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                                                    21664                    Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 75 / Monday, April 20, 2015 / Proposed Rules

                                                    health plan, as provided by 45 CFR                         This revision will require                          require that individual to answer
                                                    164.504(f)(2)(ii), that it will not use or              renumbering 29 CFR 1630.14(d).                         disability-related inquiries and/or
                                                    disclose the information for purposes                      The Commission invites written                      submit to medical examinations
                                                    not permitted by its group health plan                  comments from members of the public                    connected with the wellness program at
                                                    documents and the HIPAA Privacy Rule                    on any issues related to this proposed                 issue.
                                                    and abiding by that certification. If an                rule, including general comments about                    (c) Whether there are any methods
                                                    employer is not performing plan                         wellness programs or about particular                  other than those mentioned in the
                                                    administration on behalf of the group                   practices that might violate the ADA or                proposed regulation and the questions
                                                    health plan, then the aggregate                         other laws enforced by the EEOC. In                    above by which the Commission can
                                                    information that the employer may                       addition, the Commission specifically                  effectuate the intent of both the
                                                    receive from the wellness program                       requests comments on several issues:                   ‘‘voluntary’’ requirement in the ADA
                                                    under section 1630.14(d)(6) must be de-                    (1) Whether the way in which the                    and the provisions in the Affordable
                                                    identified in accordance with the                       Commission reconciles the ADA’s                        Care Act intended to encourage
                                                    HIPAA Privacy Rule. Further, other                      ‘‘voluntary’’ requirement with the                     workplace health promotion and disease
                                                    disclosures of protected health                         wellness program provisions in the                     prevention.
                                                    information from the wellness program                   Affordable Care Act is appropriate given                  (2) Should the proposed notice
                                                    may only be made in accordance with                     the intent behind both provisions.                     requirements of this rule, at section
                                                    the Privacy Rule. Thus, certain                         Specifically, the Commission seeks                     1630.14(d)(2)(iv), also include a
                                                    disclosures that are otherwise permitted                comment on:                                            requirement that employees
                                                    under 1630.14(d)(4) for employee health                    (a) Whether to be ‘‘voluntary’’ under               participating in wellness programs that
                                                    programs generally may not be                           the ADA, entities that offer incentives to             include disability-related inquiries and/
                                                    permissible under the Privacy Rule for                  encourage employees to disclose                        or medical examinations, and that are
                                                    wellness programs that are part of a                    medical information must also offer                    part of a group health plan, provide
                                                    group health plan without the written                   similar incentives to persons who                      prior, written, and knowing
                                                    authorization of the individual.                        choose not to disclose such information,               confirmation that their participation is
                                                      Section 1630.14(d)(7) clarifies that                  but who instead provide certification                  voluntary? If so, what form should such
                                                    compliance with paragraph (d) of this                   from a medical professional stating that               an authorization take? Are principles of
                                                    section, including the proposed limit on                the employee is under the care of a                    informed consent in the medical context
                                                    incentives under the ADA, does not                      physician and that any medical risks                   helpful in fashioning an appropriate
                                                    relieve a covered entity of its obligation              identified by that physician are under                 authorization? Are there existing forms
                                                    to comply with other employment                         active treatment.                                      that could provide adequate protections,
                                                    nondiscrimination laws. Thus, for                          (b) Whether to be considered                        such as forms developed under HIPAA,
                                                    example, as the interpretive guidance                   ‘‘voluntary’’ under the ADA, the                       forms employers already use in
                                                    accompanying the proposed rule                          incentives provided in a wellness                      connection with wellness programs, or
                                                    explains, even if an employer’s wellness                program that asks employees to respond                 forms employers use to comply with
                                                    program complies with the incentive                     to disability-related inquiries and/or                 Title II of GINA? What costs would be
                                                    limits set forth in the ADA regulations,                undergo medical examinations may not                   associated with developing an
                                                    the employer would violate Title VII or                 be so large as to render health insurance              appropriate authorization form and/or
                                                    the Age Discrimination in Employment                    coverage unaffordable under the                        collecting and maintaining
                                                    Act (ADEA) if that program                              Affordable Care Act and therefore in                   authorization forms for employees who
                                                    discriminates on the basis of race, sex,                effect coercive for an employee.                       decide to participate in wellness
                                                    national origin, or age, or any other                   Specifically, the Commission seeks                     programs?
                                                    grounds prohibited by those statutes.                   input on whether it would be                              (3) Should the proposed notice
                                                      Employee health programs that do not                  appropriate for the Commission to                      requirement apply only to wellness
                                                    include disability-related inquiries or                 provide that the incentives employers                  programs that offer more than de
                                                    medical examinations, such as those                     offer to employees to promote                          minimis rewards or penalties to
                                                    that provide employees with general                     participation in wellness programs must                employees who participate (or decline
                                                    health information and education                        not render the cost of health insurance                to participate) in wellness programs that
                                                    programs are not subject to the incentive               unaffordable to employees within the                   ask them to respond to disability-related
                                                    rules discussed here. Like other benefit                meaning of 26 U.S.C. 36B (c)(2)(C) as                  inquiries and/or undergo medical
                                                    programs offered by covered entities,                   implemented by 26 CFR 54.4980H–5(e).                   examinations? If so, how should the
                                                    however, these programs must not                        Generally, the cost of health insurance                Commission define ‘‘de minimis’’?
                                                    discriminate against employees with                     is affordable within the meaning of 26                    (4) Which best practices ensure that
                                                    disabilities. This nondiscrimination                    U.S.C. 36B(c)(2)(C) if the portion an                  wellness programs are designed to
                                                    requirement includes providing                          employee would have to pay for                         promote health and do not operate to
                                                    reasonable accommodations that enable                   employee-only coverage would not                       shift costs to employees with health
                                                    employees with disabilities to fully                    exceed a specified percent of household                impairments or stigmatized conditions?
                                                    participate in employee health programs                 income (9.56 percent in 2015). Where                      (5) Whether employers offer (or are
                                                    and earn any reward or avoid any                        such incentives would render a plan                    likely to offer in the future) wellness
                                                    penalty offered as part of those                        unaffordable for an individual, it would               programs outside of a group health plan
                                                                                                                                                                   or group health insurance coverage that
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                                                    programs.29                                             be deemed coercive and involuntary to
                                                                                                                                                                   use incentives to promote participation
                                                      29 Additionally, as discussed earlier in this         applicable standard, or for whom it is medically       in such programs or to encourage
                                                    preamble, the regulations under HIPAA and the           inadvisable to attempt to satisfy the otherwise        employees to achieve certain health
                                                    Affordable Care Act require that an activity-only       applicable standard. Similarly, an outcome-based       outcomes and the extent to which the
                                                    program allow a reasonable alternative standard (or     program must allow a reasonable alternative            ADA regulations should limit incentives
                                                    waiver of the otherwise applicable standard) for        standard (or waiver of the otherwise applicable
                                                    obtaining the reward for any individual for whom,       standard) for obtaining the reward to any individual   provided as part of such programs.
                                                    for that period, it is unreasonably difficult due to    who does not meet the initial standard based on a         (6) What will be the practical effect of
                                                    a medical condition to satisfy the otherwise            measurement, test, or screening.                       adopting the specific incentive limit set


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                                                                             Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 75 / Monday, April 20, 2015 / Proposed Rules                                            21665

                                                    forth in the proposed rule (rather than                 limit on incentives under health-                      inquiries and/or medical examinations;
                                                    expressly referencing and incorporating                 contingent wellness programs to                        denying employees health insurance (or
                                                    the wellness-program incentive limits as                participatory wellness programs.                       any other benefit of employment) if they
                                                    they are defined by the Secretaries of                  HIPAA, as amended by the Affordable                    do not participate in wellness programs;
                                                    Labor, Treasury, and Health and Human                   Care Act, places no limits on incentives               retaliating against employees who file
                                                    Services pursuant to the Affordable Care                for participatory wellness programs. As                charges claiming that a wellness
                                                    Act)? Specifically, what, if any, will be               the incentives offered by the vast                     program violates the ADA; and
                                                    the impact of the proposed rule’s 30-                   majority of employers currently fall                   attempting to induce participation in
                                                    percent limit on incentives offered with                below the limit of 30 percent of the cost              employee health programs through
                                                    respect to wellness programs intended                   of self-only coverage, the Commission                  interference with their ADA rights,
                                                    to prevent or reduce tobacco use where                  does not believe the rule will negatively              coercion, intimidation, and threats.
                                                    such programs ask employees to                          affect the ability of employers to offer               Employers are also required to provide
                                                    respond to disability-related inquiries                 incentives sufficient to promote                       reasonable accommodations to enable
                                                    and/or undergo medical examinations?                    meaningful participation in wellness                   employees to enjoy equal benefits and
                                                                                                            programs.                                              privileges of employment, which would
                                                    Regulatory Procedures                                      The only other potential cost is                    include participation in employee
                                                    Executive Order 12866                                   associated with the requirement that                   health programs. To the extent
                                                                                                            employers provide a notice to                          confidentiality of medical information
                                                      Pursuant to Executive Order 12866,
                                                                                                            employees informing them what                          acquired in the course of providing an
                                                    EEOC has coordinated this proposed
                                                                                                            medical information will be obtained,                  employee health program is required,
                                                    rule with the Office of Management and                  how it will be used, who will receive it,              the proposed rule will result in no
                                                    Budget. Under section 3(f)(1) of                        and the restrictions on disclosure. For                additional costs. The ADA already
                                                    Executive Order 12866, EEOC has                         the reasons set forth in the Paperwork                 requires employers to keep medical
                                                    determined that the proposed regulation                 Reduction Act analysis that follows, the               information about applicants and
                                                    will not have an annual effect on the                   Commission concludes that                              employees confidential.
                                                    economy of $100 million or more, or                     approximately 299,115 employers will                      To the extent the proposed rule can be
                                                    adversely affect in a material way the                  need to develop such a notice. The                     read to impose additional
                                                    economy, a sector of the economy,                       Commission estimates the time required                 confidentiality obligations, the
                                                    productivity, competition, jobs, the                    to develop the notice to be four hours,                interpretive guidance to the rule makes
                                                    environment, public health or safety, or                for a total of 1,196,460 hours. According              clear that a wellness program that is part
                                                    state, local or tribal governments or                   to data from the Bureau of Labor                       of a group health plan may generally
                                                    communities.                                            Statistics, the average hourly                         satisfy its obligation to comply with
                                                      Although a detailed cost-benefit                      compensation for employees in                          proposed section 1630.14(d)(6) by
                                                    analysis of the proposed regulation is                  ‘‘management, professional, and                        adhering to the HIPAA Privacy Rule.
                                                    not required, the Commission                            related’’ occupations was $55.56 as of                 See 45 CFR part 160 and Part 164,
                                                    recognizes that providing some                          December 2014, and the average hourly                  Subparts A and E. An employer that is
                                                    information on potential costs and                      compensation for employees working in                  a health plan sponsor and receives
                                                    benefits of the rule may be helpful in                  ‘‘office and administrative support’’ was              individually identifiable health
                                                    assisting members of the public in better               $23.98. See Bureau of Labor Statistics,                information from or on behalf of the
                                                    understanding the potential impact of                   Employer Costs for Employee                            group health plan, as permitted by
                                                    the proposed rule. The Commission                       Compensation—December 2014 (March                      HIPAA when the plan sponsor is
                                                    notes that the rule will significantly aid              11, 2015), available at www.bls.gov/                   administering aspects of the plan, may
                                                    compliance with the ADA and with                        news.release/pdf/ecec.pdf. Assuming                    generally comply with the proposed
                                                    HIPAA, as amended by the Affordable                     that 50 percent of the time required to                rule by certifying to the group health
                                                    Care Act, by employers and group                        develop an appropriate notice is                       plan, also pursuant to the HIPAA
                                                    health plans that offer wellness                        attributable to employees working in                   Privacy Rule, that it will not use or
                                                    programs. Currently, employers face                     management, professional, and related                  disclose the information for purposes
                                                    uncertainty as to whether providing                     occupations and that 50 percent of the                 not permitted by its plan documents
                                                    incentives permitted by HIPAA will                      time is attributable to employees                      and the Privacy Rule, such as for
                                                    subject them to liability under the ADA.                working in office and administrative                   employment purposes, and abiding by
                                                    This rule will clarify that the ADA does                support, the Commission estimates that                 that certification. Further, if an
                                                    permit employers to offer incentives to                 the total cost of developing a notice that             employer is not performing plan
                                                    promote participation in wellness                       complies with the requirements of the                  administration functions on behalf of
                                                    programs that include disability-related                proposed rule would be $42,583,000.                    the group health plan, then the
                                                    inquiries and/or medical examinations.                  We note that some employers and group                  employer may receive aggregate
                                                    We believe that a potential benefit of                  health plans may already have notices                  information from the wellness program
                                                    this rule is that it will enable employers              that comply with these requirements,                   under section 1630.14(d)(6) only so long
                                                    to adopt wellness programs that include                 and that those that do not will incur                  as it is de-identified in accordance with
                                                    incentives with certainty about their                   only a one-time cost to develop an                     the HIPAA Privacy Rule.
                                                    obligations under the ADA. The                          appropriate notice. The Commission
                                                    Commission does not believe the costs                                                                          Paperwork Reduction Act
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                                                                                                            seeks comments on these cost estimates.
                                                    associated with the rule are significant.                  Other requirements in the rule will                   These proposed additions to EEOC’s
                                                    Employers covered by the ADA are                        result in no costs, since they simply                  regulations contain an information
                                                    already required to comply with                         restate basic principles of                            collection requirement subject to review
                                                    wellness program incentive limits for                   nondiscrimination under the ADA. Even                  and approval by the Office of
                                                    health-contingent wellness programs.                    in the absence of this rule, employers                 Management and Budget (OMB) under
                                                    EEOC’s proposed rule differs from                       are prohibited from requiring employees                the Paperwork Reduction Act. As
                                                    HIPAA’s wellness program incentives                     to participate in employee health                      required by the Paperwork Reduction
                                                    only in that it extends the 30 percent                  programs that include disability-related               Act, the EEOC is submitting to OMB a


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                                                    21666                    Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 75 / Monday, April 20, 2015 / Proposed Rules

                                                    request for approval of the information                    Federal cost: None.                                 Commission’s functions, including
                                                    collection requirement under section                       Abstract: The proposed rule says that               whether the information will have
                                                    3507(d) of the Act. Organizations or                    a wellness program that includes                       practical utility;
                                                    individuals desiring to submit                          disability-related inquiries or medical                  (2) Evaluate the accuracy of the
                                                    comments for consideration by OMB on                    examinations and that is part of a group               Commission’s estimate of the burden of
                                                    the information collection requirement                  health plan must meet several                          the proposed collection of information,
                                                    should address them to Chad Lallemand                   requirements to be deemed voluntary,                   including the validity of the
                                                    in the Office of Information and                        including providing a notice to                        methodology and assumptions used;
                                                    Regulatory Affairs, Office of                           employees informing them what                            (3) Enhance the quality, utility, and
                                                    Management and Budget, 725 17th                         medical information will be obtained,                  clarity of the information to be
                                                    Street NW., Room 10235, New                             how it will be used, who will receive it,              collected; and
                                                    Executive Office Building, Washington,                  and the restrictions on disclosure.                      (4) Minimize the burden of the
                                                    DC 20503, or by email to OIRA_                             Burden Statement: We estimate that                  collection of information on those who
                                                    submission@omb.eop.gov.                                 there are approximately 782,000                        are to respond, including the use of
                                                       Copies of comments should also be                    employers with 15 or more employees                    appropriate automated, electronic,
                                                    sent to Bernadette Wilson, Acting                       subject to the ADA and, of that number,                mechanical, or other technological
                                                    Executive Officer, Executive Secretariat,               one half to two thirds (391,000 to                     collection techniques or other forms of
                                                    Equal Employment Opportunity                            586,500) offer some type of wellness                   information technology, e.g., permitting
                                                    Commission, 131 M Street NE.,                           program.30 Of those employers, 32                      electronic submission of responses.
                                                    Washington, DC 20507. As a                              percent to 51 percent require employees                Regulatory Flexibility Act
                                                    convenience to commenters, the                          to complete a health risk assessment
                                                                                                                                                                      Title I of the ADA applies to
                                                    Executive Secretariat will accept                       (HRA) that likely contains disability-
                                                                                                                                                                   approximately 782,000 employers with
                                                    comments totaling six or fewer pages via                related questions.31 Using the highest
                                                                                                                                                                   15 or more employees subject to the
                                                    FAX transmittal. This limitation is                     estimates, we assume that 299,115 (51
                                                                                                                                                                   ADA, approximately 764,233 of which
                                                    necessary to assure access to the                       percent of 586,500 employers) will be
                                                                                                                                                                   are small firms (entities with 15–500
                                                    equipment. The telephone number of                      covered by this requirement.
                                                                                                                                                                   employees) according to data provided
                                                    the fax receiver is (202) 663–4114. (This                  Some employers and group health
                                                                                                                                                                   by the Small Business Administration
                                                    is not a toll-free number.) Receipt of                  plans may already use forms that
                                                                                                                                                                   Office of Advocacy. See Firm Size Data
                                                    FAX transmittals will not be                            comply with the proposed notice
                                                                                                                                                                   at http://www.sba.gov/advocacy/849/
                                                    acknowledged, except that the sender                    requirement; therefore, the burden only
                                                                                                                                                                   12162.
                                                    may request confirmation of receipt by                  will be on employers and group health                     The Commission certifies under 5
                                                    calling the Executive Secretariat staff at              plans that will incur a one-time burden                U.S.C. 605(b) that this proposed rule
                                                    (202) 663–4070 (voice) or (202) 663–                    to develop an appropriate notice to                    will not have a significant economic
                                                    4074 (TTY). (These are not toll-free                    ensure that employees who provide                      impact on a substantial number of small
                                                    numbers.) Instead of sending written                    medical information pursuant to a                      entities because it imposes no reporting
                                                    comments to EEOC, you may submit                        wellness program do so voluntarily.                    burdens and only minimal costs on such
                                                    comments and attachments                                This notice may be included on or                      firms. The proposed rule clarifies that,
                                                    electronically at http://                               attached to any HRA employees are                      in most respects, employers who offer
                                                    www.regulations.gov, which is the                       asked to complete and should explain                   wellness programs that are part of their
                                                    Federal eRulemaking Portal. Follow the                  what medical information will be                       health plans may offer incentives to
                                                    instructions online for submitting                      obtained, how it will be used, who will                employees consistent with HIPAA and
                                                    comments. All comments received                         receive it, and the restrictions on                    the Affordable Care Act without
                                                    through this portal will be posted                      disclosure. Assuming that creation of                  violating the ADA. The amount of an
                                                    without change, including any personal                  such a document would take four hours,                 incentive offered for participation (alone
                                                    information you provide. Copies of                      and assuming that 299,115 employers                    or in combination with incentives
                                                    comments submitted by the public to                     would be covered by the proposed                       offered for health-contingent wellness
                                                    EEOC directly or through the Federal                    regulation, this one-time burden would                 programs) in a wellness program will
                                                    eRulemaking Portal will be available for                be 1,196,460 hours. Because employers                  not render a program involuntary under
                                                    review at the Commission’s library                      do not have to develop a new form                      the ADA as long as the incentive does
                                                    between the hours of 9:00 a.m. and 5:00                 unless they collect medical information                not exceed 30 percent of the total cost
                                                    p.m. Eastern Time or can be reviewed at                 for a different purpose, they will be able             of employee-only coverage.
                                                    http://www.regulations.gov.                             to annually redistribute the same notice                  To the extent that employers will
                                                                                                            to all relevant employees.                             expend resources to train human
                                                    Overview of This Information                               For those wishing to comment on the
                                                    Collection                                                                                                     resources staff and others on the revised
                                                                                                            above information collection, OMB is                   rule, we note that the EEOC conducts
                                                      Collection Title: Notice requirement                  particularly interested in comments                    extensive outreach and technical
                                                    under Title I of the ADA, 29 CFR                        which:                                                 assistance programs, many of them at no
                                                    1630.14(d)(2)(iv).                                         (1) Evaluate whether the proposed
                                                      OMB number: 3046–xxxx.                                                                                       cost to employers, to assist in the
                                                                                                            collection of information is necessary                 training of relevant personnel on EEO-
                                                      Description of affected public:                       for the proper performance of the                      related issues. For example, in FY 2013,
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                                                    Employers with 15 or more employees
                                                    that are subject to Title I of the ADA and                 30 According to the RAND Final Report,
                                                                                                                                                                   the agency’s outreach programs reached
                                                    offer wellness programs as part of group                ‘‘approximately half of U.S. employers offer           more than 280,000 persons through
                                                    health plans.                                           wellness promotion initiatives.’’ By contrast, the     participation in more than 3,800 no-cost
                                                      Number of respondents: 299,115.                       Kaiser Survey found that ‘‘[s]eventy-four percent of   educational, training, and outreach
                                                                                                            employers offering health benefits’’ offer at least    events. We estimate that the typical
                                                      Initial one-time hour burden:                         one wellness program.
                                                    1,196,460.                                                 31 The Kaiser Survey reports that 51 percent of     human resources professional will need
                                                      Annual hour burden: None.                             large employers versus 32 percent of small             to dedicate, at most, 90 minutes to gain
                                                      Number of forms: None.                                employers ask employees to complete a HRA.             a satisfactory understanding of the


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                                                                             Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 75 / Monday, April 20, 2015 / Proposed Rules                                               21667

                                                    revised regulations. We further estimate                disability-related inquiries or medical                will not render the program involuntary
                                                    that the median hourly pay rate of a                    examinations that are part of such                     if the maximum allowable incentive
                                                    human resources professional is                         program, must be reasonably designed                   available under the program (whether
                                                    approximately $48.50. See Bureau of                     to promote health or prevent disease. A                the program is a participatory program
                                                    Labor Statistics, Occupational                          program satisfies this standard if it has              or a health-contingent program, or some
                                                    Employment and Wages, May 2013 at                       a reasonable chance of improving the                   combination of the two, as those terms
                                                    http://www.bls.gov/oes/current/                         health of, or preventing disease in,                   are defined in regulations at 26 CFR
                                                    oes113121.htm. Assuming that small                      participating employees, and it is not                 54.9802–1(f)(1)(ii) and (iii), 29 CFR
                                                    entities have between one and five                      overly burdensome, is not a subterfuge                 2590.702(f)(1)(ii) and (iii), and 45 CFR
                                                    human resources professionals/                          for violating the ADA or other laws                    146.121(f)(1)(ii) and (iii), respectively)
                                                    managers, we estimate that the cost per                 prohibiting employment discrimination,                 does not exceed 30 percent of the total
                                                    entity of providing appropriate training                and is not highly suspect in the method                cost of employee-only coverage.
                                                    will be between approximately $72.75                    chosen to promote health or prevent                    *      *     *     *    *
                                                    and $363.75.                                            disease.                                                  (6) Except as permitted under
                                                       EEOC does not believe that this cost                    (2) Voluntary. An employee health                   paragraph (d)(4) and as is necessary to
                                                    will be significant for the impacted                    program that includes disability-related               administer the health plan, information
                                                    small entities. We urge small entities to               inquiries or medical examinations                      obtained under paragraph (d) of this
                                                    submit comments concerning EEOC’s                       (including disability-related inquiries or             section regarding the medical
                                                    estimates of the number of small entities               medical examinations that are part of a                information or history of any individual
                                                    affected, as well as the cost to those                  health risk assessment) is voluntary as                may only be provided to an ADA
                                                    entities.                                               long as a covered entity:                              covered entity in aggregate terms that do
                                                                                                               (i) Does not require employees to                   not disclose, or are not reasonably likely
                                                    Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995                    participate;                                           to disclose, the identity of any
                                                      This proposed rule will not result in                    (ii) Does not deny coverage under any               employee.
                                                    the expenditure by state, local, or tribal              of its group health plans or particular                   (7) Compliance with the requirements
                                                    governments, in the aggregate, or by the                benefits packages within a group health                of paragraph (d) of this section,
                                                    private sector, of $100 million or more                 plan for non-participation, or limit the               including the limit on incentives under
                                                    in any one year, and it will not                        extent of benefits (except as allowed                  the ADA, does not relieve a covered
                                                    significantly or uniquely affect small                  under paragraph (d)(3) of this section)                entity from the obligation to comply in
                                                    governments. Therefore, no actions were                 for employees who do not participate;                  all respects with the nondiscrimination
                                                    deemed necessary under the provisions                      (iii) Does not take any adverse                     provisions of Title VII of the Civil Rights
                                                    of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act                     employment action or retaliate against,                Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. 2000e et seq., the
                                                    of 1995.                                                interfere with, coerce, intimidate, or                 Equal Pay Act of 1963, 29 U.S.C. 206(d),
                                                                                                            threaten employees within the meaning                  the Age Discrimination in Employment
                                                    List of Subjects in 29 CFR Part 1630                    of Section 503 of the ADA, at 42 U.S.C.                Act of 1967, 29 U.S.C. 621 et seq., Title
                                                      Equal employment opportunity,                         12203; and                                             II of the Genetic Information
                                                    Individuals with disabilities.                             (iv) Where a health program is a
                                                                                                                                                                   Nondiscrimination Act of 2008, 42
                                                                                                            wellness program that is part of a group
                                                      For the Commission,                                                                                          U.S.C. 2000ff, et seq., or other sections
                                                                                                            health plan, provides employees with a
                                                      Dated: April 13, 2015.                                                                                       of Title I of the ADA.
                                                                                                            notice that:                                           ■ 3. In the Appendix to Part 1630 revise
                                                    Bernadette B. Wilson,                                      (A) Is written so that the employee
                                                                                                                                                                   Section 1630.14(d), to read as follows:
                                                    Acting Executive Officer.                               from whom medical information is
                                                      For the reasons set forth in the                      being obtained is reasonably likely to                 Appendix to Part 1630—Interpretive
                                                    preamble, the EEOC proposes to amend                    understand it;                                         Guidance on Title I of the Americans
                                                    29 CFR part 1630 to read as follows:                       (B) Describes the type of medical                   With Disabilities Act
                                                                                                            information that will be obtained and                  *       *    *    *      *
                                                    PART 1630—[AMENDED]                                     the specific purposes for which the
                                                                                                            medical information will be used; and                  Section 1630.14 Medical Examinations and
                                                    ■ 1. The authority citation for part 1630                  (C) Describes the restrictions on the               Inquiries Specifically Permitted
                                                    continues to read as follows:                           disclosure of the employee’s medical                   Section 1630.14(d)(1): Health Program
                                                      Authority: 42 U.S.C. 12116 and 12205a of              information, the employer                                Part 1630 permits voluntary medical
                                                    the American with Disabilities Act, as                  representatives or other parties with                  examinations and inquiries, including
                                                    amended.                                                whom the information will be shared,                   voluntary medical histories, as part of
                                                    ■ 2. Amend § 1630.14 by:                                and the methods that the covered entity                employee health programs. These health
                                                                                                            will use to ensure that medical                        programs include wellness programs, which
                                                    ■ a. Redesignating paragraph (d)(1) as
                                                                                                            information is not improperly disclosed                often incorporate, for example: A health risk
                                                    paragraph (d)(4);                                                                                              assessment (HRA) (consisting of a medical
                                                    ■ b. Redesignating paragraph (d)(2) as                  (including whether it complies with the
                                                                                                                                                                   questionnaire, with or without medical
                                                    paragraph (d)(5);                                       measures set forth in the HIPAA                        examinations, to determine risk factors);
                                                    ■ c. Adding new paragraphs (d)(1),                      regulations codified at 45 CFR parts 160               medical screening for high blood pressure,
                                                    (d)(2), (d)(3), (d)(6), and (d)(7).                     and 164).                                              cholesterol, or glucose; classes to help
                                                                                                               (3) Incentives offered for employee
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                                                      The revisions and additions read as                                                                          employees stop smoking or lose weight;
                                                    follows:                                                wellness programs that are part of a                   physical activities in which employees can
                                                                                                            group health plan. The use of incentives               engage (such as walking or exercising daily);
                                                    § 1630.14 Medical examinations and                      (financial or in-kind) in an employee                  coaching to help employees meet health
                                                    inquiries specifically permitted.                       wellness program, whether in the form                  goals; and/or the administration of
                                                                                                                                                                   prescription drugs (like insulin). Many
                                                    *     *    *    *    *                                  of a reward or penalty, together with the              employers offer wellness programs as part of
                                                      (d) * * *                                             reward for any other wellness program                  a group health plan as a means of improving
                                                      (1) Employee health program. An                       that is offered as part of a group health              overall employee health with the goal of
                                                    employee health program, including any                  plan (as defined in 29 U.S.C. 1191b(a)),               realizing lower health care costs.



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                                                    21668                    Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 75 / Monday, April 20, 2015 / Proposed Rules

                                                       It is not sufficient for a covered entity            intimidate, or threaten employees within the           wellness program), the incentives would
                                                    merely to claim that its collection of medical          meaning of Section 503 of the ADA, at 42               comply with the ADA. Not all wellness
                                                    information is part of a wellness program; the          U.S.C. 12203. For example, an employer may             programs require disability-related inquiries
                                                    program, including any disability-related               not retaliate against an employee who                  or medical examinations in order to earn an
                                                    inquiries and medical examinations that are             refused to participate in a health program or          incentive. Examples may include attending
                                                    part of such program, must be reasonably                filed a charge with the EEOC concerning the            nutrition, weight loss, or smoking cessation
                                                    designed to promote health or prevent                   program, may not coerce an employee into               classes. These types of programs are not
                                                    disease. In order to meet this standard, the            participating in a health program or into              subject to the ADA incentive rules discussed
                                                    program must have a reasonable chance of                giving the employer access to medical                  here, although programs that qualify as
                                                    improving the health of, or preventing                  information collected as part of the program,          health-contingent programs are subject to
                                                    disease in, participating employees, and must           and may not threaten an employee with                  HIPAA incentive limits.
                                                    not be overly burdensome, a subterfuge for              discipline if the employee does not                       Under the ADA, regardless of whether a
                                                    violating the ADA or other laws prohibiting             participate in a health program. See 42 U.S.C.         wellness program includes disability-related
                                                    employment discrimination, or highly                    12203(a) and (b); 29 CFR 1630.12.                      inquiries or medical examinations,
                                                    suspect in the method chosen to promote                    Section 1630.14(d)(2)(iv) of this part also         reasonable accommodations must be
                                                    health or prevent disease. Conducting a HRA             states that for a wellness program that is part        provided, absent undue hardship, to enable
                                                    and/or a biometric screening of employees               of a group health plan to be voluntary, an             employees with disabilities to earn whatever
                                                    for the purpose of alerting them to health              employer must provide employees with a                 financial incentive an employer or other
                                                    risks of which they may have been unaware               notice clearly explaining what medical                 covered entity offers. Providing a reasonable
                                                    would meet this standard, as would the use              information will be obtained, how the                  alternative standard and notice to the
                                                    of aggregate information from employee                  medical information will be used, who will             employee of the availability of a reasonable
                                                    HRAs by an employer to design and offer                 receive the medical information, the                   alternative under HIPAA and the Affordable
                                                    health programs aimed at specific conditions            restrictions on its disclosure, and the                Care Act as part of a health-contingent
                                                    that are prevalent in the workplace. An                 methods the covered entity uses to prevent             program would likely fulfill a covered
                                                    employer might conclude from aggregate                  improper disclosure of medical information.            entity’s obligation to provide a reasonable
                                                    information, for example, that a significant                                                                   accommodation under the ADA. However,
                                                                                                            Section 1630.14(d)(3): Limitations on                  under the ADA, a covered entity would have
                                                    number of its employees have diabetes or
                                                                                                            Incentives                                             to provide a reasonable accommodation for a
                                                    high blood pressure and might design
                                                    specific programs that would enable                        The ADA, interpreted in light of the Health         participatory program even though HIPAA
                                                    employees to treat or manage these                      Insurance Portability and Accountability Act           and the Affordable Care Act do not require
                                                    conditions. On the other hand, collecting               (HIPAA), as amended by the Affordable Care             such programs to offer a reasonable
                                                    medical information on a health                         Act, does not prohibit the use of incentives           alternative standard.
                                                    questionnaire without providing employees               to encourage participation in employee                    For example, an employer that offers
                                                    follow-up information or advice, such as                health programs, but it does place limits on           employees a financial incentive to attend a
                                                    providing feedback about risk factors or using          them. In general, the use of limited                   nutrition class, regardless of whether they
                                                    aggregate information to design programs or             incentives (which include both financial and           reach a healthy weight as a result, would
                                                    treat any specific conditions, would not be             in-kind incentives, such as time-off awards,           have to provide a sign language interpreter so
                                                    reasonably designed to promote health.                  prizes, or other items of value) in a wellness         that an employee who is deaf and who needs
                                                    Additionally, a program is not reasonably               program that is part of a group health plan            an interpreter to understand the information
                                                    designed to promote health or prevent                   or group health insurance coverage will not            communicated in the class could earn the
                                                    disease if it imposes, as a condition to                render a wellness program involuntary.                 incentive, as long as providing the interpreter
                                                    obtaining a reward, an overly burdensome                However, the maximum allowable incentive               would not result in undue hardship to the
                                                    amount of time for participation, requires              for a participatory program that involves              employer. Similarly, an employer would,
                                                    unreasonably intrusive procedures, or places            asking disability-related questions or                 absent undue hardship, have to provide
                                                    significant costs related to medical                    conducting medical examinations (such as               written materials that are part of a wellness
                                                    examinations on employees. A program also               having employees complete a HRA) or for a              program in an alternate format, such as in
                                                    is not reasonably designed if it exists mainly          health-contingent program that requires                large print or on computer disk, for someone
                                                    to shift costs from the covered entity to               participants to satisfy a standard related to a        with a vision impairment. An individual
                                                    targeted employees based on their health.               health factor may not exceed 30 percent of             with a disability also may need a reasonable
                                                                                                            the total cost of employee-only coverage.              accommodation to participate in a wellness
                                                    Section 1630.14(d)(2): Definition of                    Thus, for example, for purposes of                     program that includes disability-related
                                                    ‘‘Voluntary’’                                           compliance with these provisions under the             inquiries or medical examinations, including
                                                       Section 1630.14(d)(2)(i)–(iii) of this part          ADA, suppose a group health plan under                 waiver of a generally applicable requirement.
                                                    says that participation in employee health              which an employee is enrolled has a total              For example, an employer that offers a
                                                    programs that include disability-related                annual premium for employee-only coverage              reward for completing a biometric screening
                                                    inquiries or medical examinations (such as              of $5,000 (which includes both the                     that includes a blood draw would have to
                                                    disability-related inquiries or medical                 employer’s and employee’s contributions                provide an alternative test (or certification
                                                    examinations that are part of a HRA) must be            toward coverage). The plan provides a $250             requirement) so that an employee with a
                                                    voluntary in order to comply with the ADA.              reward to employees who complete a HRA                 disability that makes drawing blood
                                                    This means that covered entities may not                (this reward is given to any participant who           dangerous can participate and earn the
                                                    require employees to participate in such                completes the HRA, without regard to the               incentive.
                                                    programs, may not deny employees access to              health issues identified as part of the
                                                    health coverage under any of its group health           assessment). The plan also offers a health-            Application of Section 1630.14(d)(3) to
                                                    plans or particular benefits packages within            contingent wellness program to promote                 Smoking Cessation Programs
                                                    a group health plan for non-participation,              cardiovascular health, with an opportunity to            Regulations implementing the wellness
                                                    may not limit coverage under their health               earn a $1,500 reward. An employee who                  provisions in HIPAA, as amended by the
                                                    plans for such employees, except to the                 satisfies both components of the program               Affordable Care Act, permit covered entities
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                                                    extent the limitation (e.g., having to pay a            could earn a total reward of $1,750. Such a            to offer incentives as high as 50 percent of
                                                    higher deductible) may be the result of                 reward would violate the ADA because the               the total cost of employee coverage for
                                                    forgoing a financial incentive permissible              total reward available exceeds 30 percent of           tobacco-related wellness programs, such as
                                                    under paragraph (d)(3), and may not take any            the total cost of coverage. However, if the            smoking cessation programs. As noted above,
                                                    other adverse action against employees who              employer offered no reward for completing              the incentive rules in Section 1630.14(d)(3)
                                                    choose not to answer disability-related                 the HRA and a $1,500 reward for achieving              apply only to employee health programs that
                                                    inquiries or submit to medical examinations.            health outcomes under the wellness program             include disability-related inquiries or
                                                    Additionally, covered entities may not                  (or offered $750 for completing the HRA and            medical examinations. A smoking cessation
                                                    retaliate against, interfere with, coerce,              $750 for achieving health outcomes in the              program that merely asks employees whether



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                                                                             Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 75 / Monday, April 20, 2015 / Proposed Rules                                                  21669

                                                    or not they use tobacco (or whether or not              Security, and Breach Notification Rules. (45             Employers and wellness program providers
                                                    they ceased using tobacco upon completion               CFR parts 160 and 164.) The HIPAA Privacy,             must take steps to protect the confidentiality
                                                    of the program) is not an employee health               Security, and Breach Notification Rules                of employee medical information provided as
                                                    program that includes disability-related                apply to HIPAA covered entities, which                 part of an employee health program. Some of
                                                    inquiries or medical examinations. The                  include group health plans, and generally              the following steps may be required by law;
                                                    incentive rules in Section 1630.14(d)(3)                protect identifiable health information                others may be best practices. Proper training
                                                    would not apply to incentives a covered                 maintained by or on behalf of such entities,           of individuals who handle medical
                                                    entity could offer in connection with such a            by among other provisions, setting limits and          information in the requirements of the
                                                    program. Therefore, a covered entity would              conditions on the uses and disclosures that            HIPAA Rules, the ADA, and any other
                                                    be permitted to offer incentives as high as 50          may be made of such information.                       applicable privacy laws is critical. Employers
                                                    percent of the cost of employee coverage for               PHI is information, including demographic           and program providers should have clear
                                                    that smoking cessation program, pursuant to             data that identifies the individual or for             privacy policies and procedures related to
                                                    the regulations implementing HIPAA, as                  which there is a reasonable basis to believe
                                                                                                                                                                   the collection, storage, and disclosure of
                                                    amended by the Affordable Care Act, without             it can be used to identify the individual
                                                                                                                                                                   medical information. On-line systems and
                                                    implicating the disability-related inquiries or         (including, for example, address, birth date,
                                                                                                            or social security number), and that relates           other technology should guard against
                                                    medical examinations provision of the ADA.                                                                     unauthorized access, such as through use of
                                                    The ADA nondiscrimination requirements,                 to: An individual’s past, present, or future
                                                                                                            physical or mental health or condition; the            encryption for medical information stored
                                                    such as the need to provide reasonable                                                                         electronically.
                                                    accommodations that provide employees                   provision of health care to the individual; or
                                                                                                            the past, present, or future payment for the             As a best practice, individuals who handle
                                                    with disabilities equal access to benefits,                                                                    medical information that is part of an
                                                    would still apply.                                      provision of health care to the individual.
                                                                                                            HIPAA covered entities may not disclose PHI            employee health program should not be
                                                      By contrast, a biometric screening or other                                                                  responsible for making decisions related to
                                                    medical examination that tests for the                  to an individual’s employer except in limited
                                                                                                            circumstances. For example, as discussed               employment, such as hiring, termination, or
                                                    presence of nicotine or tobacco is a medical                                                                   discipline. Use of a third-party vendor may
                                                    examination. The ADA financial incentive                more fully below, an employer that sponsors
                                                                                                            a group health plan may receive PHI to                 reduce the risk that medical information will
                                                    rules discussed supra would therefore apply
                                                                                                            administer the plan (without authorization of          be disclosed to individuals who make
                                                    to a wellness program that included such a
                                                                                                            the individual), but only if the employer              employment decisions, particularly for
                                                    screening.
                                                                                                            certifies to the plan that it will safeguard the       employers whose organizational structure
                                                    Section 1630.14(d)(4)–(6): Confidentiality              information and not improperly use or share            makes it difficult to provide adequate
                                                       Paragraphs (d)(4) and (d)(5) say that                the information. See Standards for Privacy of          safeguards. If an employer uses a third-party
                                                                                                            Individually Identifiable Health Information           vendor, it should be familiar with the
                                                    medical records developed in the course of
                                                                                                            (‘‘Privacy Rule’’), Pub. L. 104–191; 45 CFR            vendor’s privacy policies for ensuring the
                                                    providing voluntary health services to
                                                                                                            part 160 and Part 164, Subparts A and E.               confidentiality of medical information.
                                                    employees, including wellness programs,
                                                                                                            However, there are no restrictions on the use          Employers that administer their own
                                                    must be maintained in a confidential manner
                                                                                                            or disclosure of health information that has           wellness programs need adequate firewalls in
                                                    and must not be used for any purpose in                 been de-identified in accordance with the
                                                    violation of this part, such as limiting                                                                       place to prevent unintended disclosure.
                                                                                                            HIPAA Privacy Rule. Individuals may file a               If individuals who handle medical
                                                    insurance eligibility. See House Labor Report           complaint with HHS if a health plan fails to
                                                    at 75; House Judiciary Report at 43–44.                                                                        information obtained through a wellness
                                                                                                            comply with privacy requirements and HHS               program also act as decision-makers (which
                                                    Further, although an exception to                       may impose civil money penalties for
                                                    confidentiality that tracks the language of the                                                                may be the case for a small employer that
                                                                                                            noncompliance.                                         administers its own wellness program), they
                                                    ADA itself states that information gathered in             A wellness program that is part of a HIPAA
                                                    the course of providing employees with                                                                         may not use the information to discriminate
                                                                                                            covered entity likely will be able to comply           on the basis of disability in violation of the
                                                    voluntary health services may be disclosed to           with its obligation under section
                                                    managers and supervisors in connection with                                                                    ADA.
                                                                                                            1630.14(d)(6) by complying with the HIPAA                Breaches of confidentiality should be
                                                    necessary work restrictions or                          Privacy Rule. An employer that is a health
                                                    accommodations, such an exception would                                                                        reported to affected employees immediately
                                                                                                            plan sponsor and receives individually
                                                    rarely, if ever, apply to medical information                                                                  and should be thoroughly investigated.
                                                                                                            identifiable health information from or on
                                                    collected as part of a wellness program. In                                                                    Employers should make clear that
                                                                                                            behalf of the group health plan, as permitted
                                                    addition, as described more fully below,                                                                       individuals responsible for disclosures of
                                                                                                            by HIPAA when the plan sponsor is
                                                    certain disclosures that are permitted for                                                                     confidential medical information will be
                                                                                                            administering aspects of the plan, may
                                                    employee health programs generally may not              generally satisfy its requirement to comply            disciplined and should consider
                                                    be permissible under the HIPAA Privacy                  with section 1630.14(d)(6) by certifying to the        discontinuing relationships with vendors
                                                    Rule for wellness programs that are part of             group health plan, as provided by 45 CFR               responsible for breaches of confidentiality.
                                                    a group health plan without the written                 164.504(f)(2)(ii), that it will not use or             Section 1630.14(d)(7): Compliance With
                                                    authorization of the individual.                        disclose the information for purposes not              Other Employment Nondiscrimination Laws
                                                       Section 1630.14(d)(6) says that a covered            permitted by its plan documents and the
                                                    entity only may receive information collected           Privacy Rule, such as for employment                      Finally, section 1630.14(d)(7) clarifies that
                                                    as part of an employee health program in                purposes, and abiding by that certification.           compliance with the requirements of
                                                    aggregate form that does not disclose, and is           Further, if an employer is not performing              paragraph (d) of this section, including the
                                                    not reasonably likely to disclose, the identity         plan administration functions on behalf of             limits on incentives applicable under the
                                                    of specific individuals except as is necessary          the group health plan, it may receive                  ADA, does not mean that a covered entity
                                                    to administer the plan or as permitted by               aggregate information from the wellness                complies with other federal employment
                                                    section 1630.14(d)(4). Notably, both                    program under section 1630.14(d)(6) only so            nondiscrimination laws, such as Title VII of
                                                    employers that sponsor employee health                  long as the information is de-identified in            the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. 2000e
                                                    programs and the employee health programs               accordance with the HIPAA Privacy Rule. In             et seq., the Equal Pay Act of 1963, 29 U.S.C.
                                                    themselves (if they are administered by the             addition, disclosures of protected health              206(d), the Age Discrimination in
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                                                    employer or qualify as the employer’s agent)            information from the wellness program may              Employment Act of 1967, 29 U.S.C. 621 et
                                                    are responsible for ensuring compliance with            only be made in accordance with the Privacy            seq., Title II of the Genetic Information
                                                    this provision.                                         Rule. Thus, certain disclosures that are               Nondiscrimination Act of 2008, 42 U.S.C.
                                                       Where a wellness program is part of a                otherwise permitted under section                      2000ff et seq., and other sections of Title I of
                                                    group health plan, the individually                     1630.14(d)(4) for employee health programs             the ADA. Thus, even though an employer’s
                                                    identifiable health information collected               generally may not be permissible under the             wellness program might comply with the
                                                    from or created about participants as part of           Privacy Rule for wellness programs that are            incentive limits set out in paragraph (d)(3),
                                                    the wellness program is protected health                part of a group health plan without the                the employer would violate federal
                                                    information (PHI) under the HIPAA Privacy,              written authorization of the individual.               nondiscrimination statutes if that program



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                                                    21670                    Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 75 / Monday, April 20, 2015 / Proposed Rules

                                                    discriminates on the basis of race, sex,                1969 (NEPA), please refer to NEPA in                   potential, its vibrant ecosystems, and
                                                    national origin, or age.                                the heading of your message.                           the Alaska Native communities, who
                                                    [FR Doc. 2015–08827 Filed 4–16–15; 11:15 am]               • Federal eRulemaking Portal: http://               rely on the Arctic’s resources for
                                                    BILLING CODE 6570–01–P                                  www.regulations.gov. In the entry                      subsistence and cultural traditions. The
                                                                                                            entitled ‘‘Enter Keyword or ID’’, enter                region is also characterized by extreme
                                                                                                            BSEE–2013–0011 then click search.                      environmental conditions, geographic
                                                                                                            Follow the instructions to submit public               remoteness, and a relative lack of fixed
                                                    DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
                                                                                                            comments and view supporting and                       infrastructure and existing operations.
                                                    Bureau of Safety and Environmental                      related materials available for this                     The proposed rule would add to, and
                                                    Enforcement                                             rulemaking. BOEM and BSEE may post                     revise existing regulations in, 30 CFR
                                                                                                            all submitted comments in their                        parts 250, 254, and 550 for Arctic OCS
                                                    30 CFR Parts 250 and 254                                entirety.                                              oil and gas activities. The proposed rule
                                                                                                               • Mail or hand-carry comments to the                would focus on Arctic OCS exploratory
                                                    Bureau of Ocean Energy Management                       Department of the Interior (DOI); Bureau               drilling activities that use mobile
                                                                                                            of Safety and Environmental                            offshore drilling units, and related
                                                    30 CFR Part 550                                         Enforcement; Attention: Regulations                    operations during the Arctic OCS open-
                                                                                                            and Standards Branch; 45600 Woodland                   water drilling season.
                                                    [Docket ID: BSEE–2013–0011; 15XE1700DX                  Road, Sterling, Virginia 20166. Please                   After publication of the proposed
                                                    EX1SF0000.DAQ000 EEEE500000]                            reference ‘‘Oil and Gas and Sulphur                    rule, BOEM and BSEE received public
                                                                                                            Operations on the Outer Continental                    comments asking BOEM and BSEE to
                                                    RIN 1082–AA00                                           Shelf—Requirements for Exploratory                     extend the comment period on the
                                                                                                            Drilling on the Arctic Outer Continental               proposed rule by 60 days. BOEM and
                                                    Oil and Gas and Sulphur Operations                      Shelf, 1082–AA00’’ in your comments                    BSEE are extending the original 60-day
                                                    on the Outer Continental Shelf—                         and include your name and return                       comment period by an additional 30
                                                    Requirements for Exploratory Drilling                   address. Please note that this address for             days to provide additional time for
                                                    on the Arctic Outer Continental Shelf                   BSEE is new; however, any comments                     review of and comment on the Notice of
                                                    AGENCY:   Bureau of Safety and                          already submitted to BSEE’s former                     Proposed Rulemaking. Accordingly,
                                                    Environmental Enforcement (BSEE),                       address (381 Elden Street, Herndon,                    written comments must be submitted by
                                                    Interior; Bureau of Ocean Energy                        Virginia 20181) do not need to be                      the extended due date of May 27, 2015.
                                                    Management (BOEM), Interior.                            resubmitted to the new address.                        BOEM and BSEE may not fully consider
                                                    ACTION: Extension of comment period
                                                                                                               • Public Availability of Comments—                  comments received after this date.
                                                    for Notice of Proposed Rulemaking                       Before including your address, phone                     Dated: April 14, 2015.
                                                                                                            number, email address, or other                        Janice M. Schneider,
                                                    SUMMARY:    BOEM and BSEE are                           personal identifying information in your               Assistant Secretary Land and Minerals
                                                    extending the public comment period                     comment, you should be aware that                      Management.
                                                    on the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking                    your entire comment—including your                     [FR Doc. 2015–09035 Filed 4–17–15; 8:45 am]
                                                    entitled, ‘‘Oil and Gas and Sulphur                     personal identifying information—may
                                                                                                                                                                   BILLING CODE 4310–VH–P; 4310–MR–P
                                                    Operations on the Outer Continental                     be made publicly available at any time.
                                                    Shelf—Requirements for Exploratory                      While you can ask us in your comment
                                                    Drilling on the Arctic Outer Continental                to withhold your personal identifying
                                                                                                            information from public review, we                     DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND
                                                    Shelf,’’ which was published in the
                                                                                                            cannot guarantee that we will be able to               SECURITY
                                                    Federal Register on February 24, 2015,
                                                    (80 FR 9916). The original public                       do so.                                                 Coast Guard
                                                    comment period would have ended on                      FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
                                                    April 27, 2015. However, BOEM and                       Mark E. Fesmire, BSEE, Alaska Regional                 33 CFR Part 165
                                                    BSEE have received public comments                      Office, mark.fesmire@bsee.gov, (907)
                                                    requesting an extension of the comment                  334–5300; John Caplis, BSEE, Oil Spill                 [Docket No. USCG–2015–0178]
                                                    period. BOEM and BSEE have reviewed                     Response Division, john.caplis@                        RIN 1625–AA00
                                                    the extension requests and determined                   bsee.gov, (703) 787–1364; or David
                                                    that a 30-day comment period extension                  Johnston, BOEM, Alaska Regional                        Safety Zone, Volvo Ocean Race
                                                    to May 27, 2015, is appropriate.                        Office, david.johnston@boem.gov, (907)                 Newport; East Passage, Narragansett
                                                    DATES: The comment period for the                       334–5200.                                              Bay, RI
                                                    Notice of Proposed Rulemaking                           SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: BOEM                        AGENCY:   Coast Guard, DHS.
                                                    published on February 24, 2015, (80 FR                  and BSEE published a notice of                         ACTION:   Notice of proposed rulemaking.
                                                    9916) has been extended. Written                        proposed rulemaking on Requirements
                                                    comments must be received by the                        for Exploratory Drilling on the Arctic                 SUMMARY:   The Coast Guard proposes to
                                                    extended due date of May 27, 2015.                      Outer Continental Shelf (OCS) on                       establish a safety zone in the navigable
                                                    BOEM and BSEE may not fully consider                    February 24, 2015 (80 FR 9916). This                   waters of the East Passage, Narragansett
                                                    comments received after this date.                      proposed rule is intended to provide                   Bay, RI, during the Volvo Ocean Race
                                                    ADDRESSES: You may submit comments                      regulations to ensure Arctic OCS                       Newport marine event. This safety zone
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                                                    on the proposed rulemaking by any of                    exploratory drilling operations are                    is intended to safeguard mariners from
                                                    the following methods. Please use the                   conducted in a safe and responsible                    the hazards associated with high-speed,
                                                    Regulation Identifier Number (RIN)                      manner that takes into account the                     high-performance sailing vessels
                                                    1082–AA00 as an identifier in your                      unique conditions of Arctic OCS                        competing in inshore races on the
                                                    message. For comments specifically                      drilling and Alaska Natives’ cultural                  waters of the East Passage, Narragansett
                                                    related to the draft Environmental                      traditions and need to access                          Bay, RI. Vessels would be prohibited
                                                    Assessment conducted under the                          subsistence resources. The Arctic region               from entering into, transiting through,
                                                    National Environmental Policy Act of                    is known for its oil and gas resource                  mooring, or anchoring within this safety


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Document Created: 2018-02-21 10:13:10
Document Modified: 2018-02-21 10:13:10
CategoryRegulatory Information
CollectionFederal Register
sudoc ClassAE 2.7:
GS 4.107:
AE 2.106:
PublisherOffice of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Administration
SectionProposed Rules
ActionProposed rule.
DatesComments regarding this proposal must be received by the Commission on or before June 19, 2015. Please see the sections below
ContactChristopher J. Kuczynski, Assistant Legal Counsel, (202) 663-4665, or Joyce Walker-Jones, Senior Attorney Advisor, at (202) 663-7031, or (202) 663-7026 (TTY), Office of Legal Counsel, U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. (These are not toll free numbers.) Requests for this notice in an alternative format should be made to the Office of Communications and Legislative Affairs at (202) 663-4191 (voice) or (202) 663-4494 (TTY). (These are not toll free numbers.)
FR Citation80 FR 21659 
RIN Number3046-AB01
CFR AssociatedEqual Employment Opportunity and Individuals with Disabilities

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