81_FR_31238 81 FR 31143 - Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act

81 FR 31143 - Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act

EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY COMMISSION

Federal Register Volume 81, Issue 95 (May 17, 2016)

Page Range31143-31159
FR Document2016-11557

The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC or Commission) is issuing a final rule to amend the regulations implementing Title II of the Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act of 2008 as they relate to employer-sponsored wellness programs. This rule addresses the extent to which an employer may offer an inducement to an employee for the employee's spouse to provide information about the spouse's manifestation of disease or disorder as part of a health risk assessment (HRA) administered in connection with an employer- sponsored wellness program. Several technical changes to the existing regulations are included. Published elsewhere in this issue of the Federal Register, the EEOC also issued a final rule to amend the regulations and interpretive guidance implementing Title I of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) that addresses the extent to which employers may use incentives to encourage employees to participate in wellness programs that ask them to respond to disability-related inquiries and/or undergo medical examinations.

Federal Register, Volume 81 Issue 95 (Tuesday, May 17, 2016)
[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 95 (Tuesday, May 17, 2016)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 31143-31159]
From the Federal Register Online  [www.thefederalregister.org]
[FR Doc No: 2016-11557]


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EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY COMMISSION

29 CFR Part 1635

RIN 3046-AB02


Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act

AGENCY: Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.

ACTION: Final rule.

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SUMMARY: The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC or 
Commission) is issuing a final rule to amend the regulations 
implementing Title II of the Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act 
of 2008 as they relate to employer-sponsored wellness programs. This 
rule addresses the extent to which an employer may offer an inducement 
to an employee for the employee's spouse to provide information about 
the spouse's manifestation of disease or disorder as part of a health 
risk assessment (HRA) administered in connection with an employer-
sponsored wellness program. Several technical changes to the existing 
regulations are included. Published elsewhere in this issue of the 
Federal Register, the EEOC also issued a final rule to amend the 
regulations and interpretive guidance implementing Title I of the 
Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) that addresses the extent to 
which employers may use incentives to encourage employees to 
participate in wellness programs that ask them to respond to 
disability-related inquiries and/or undergo medical examinations.

DATES: Effective date: This rule is effective July 18, 2016.
    Applicability date: This rule is applicable beginning on January 1, 
2017.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Christopher J. Kuczynski, Assistant 
Legal Counsel, at (202) 663-4665 (voice), or Kerry E. Leibig, Senior 
Attorney Advisor, at (202) 663-4516 (voice), or (202) 663-7026 (TTY). 
(These are not toll free numbers.) Requests for this rule 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: The Commission issued a proposed rule in the 
Federal Register on October 30, 2015, for a 60-day notice and comment 
period, which was extended for an additional 30 days and ended on 
January 28, 2016. After consideration of the public comments, the 
Commission has revised portions of both the final rule and the 
preamble.

Introduction

    Several federal laws govern wellness programs offered by employers. 
Employer-sponsored wellness programs must comply with Title II of the 
Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act of 2008 (GINA),\1\ Title I of 
the ADA,\2\ and other employment discrimination laws enforced by the 
EEOC. Employer-sponsored wellness programs that are part of, or 
provided by, a group health plan \3\, or that are provided by a health 
insurance issuer offering group health insurance in connection with a 
group health plan, must also comply with the Health Insurance 
Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA) nondiscrimination 
provisions, as amended by the Affordable Care Act, which is enforced by 
the Department of Labor (DOL), Department of the Treasury (Treasury), 
and Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) (referred to 
collectively as the tri-Departments).\4\ This final rule relates 
specifically to the requirements of Title II of GINA as they apply to 
employer-sponsored wellness programs, though other applicable laws are 
discussed in some detail.
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    \1\ 42 U.S.C. 2000ff-2000ff-11.
    \2\ 42 U.S.C. 12101-12117.
    \3\ The term ``group health plan'' includes both insured and 
self-insured group health plans, and is used interchangeably with 
the terms ``health plan'' and ``the plan'' in this Final Rule.
    \4\ The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, Public Law 
111-148, and the Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act, 
Public Law 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 health insurance 
market. The Affordable Care Act also added section 715(a)(1) to the 
Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) and section 
9815(a)(1) to the Internal Revenue Code (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.
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    Congress enacted Title II of GINA to protect job applicants, 
current and former employees, labor union members, and apprentices and 
trainees from employment discrimination based on their genetic 
information.\5\ GINA generally restricts the acquisition and disclosure 
of genetic information and prohibits the use of genetic information in 
making employment decisions.\6\ The EEOC issued implementing 
regulations on November 9, 2010, to provide all persons subject to 
Title II of GINA additional guidance with regard to the law's 
requirements.\7\
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    \5\ Title I of GINA applies to genetic information 
discrimination in health coverage (not employment), is applicable to 
group health plans and health insurance issuers, and is administered 
by the tri-Departments. Under Title I, group health plans may 
include, as part of a HRA, questions regarding the manifestation of 
a disease or disorder of individuals covered under the plan, but not 
genetic information (defined to include genetic test information 
about the individual or of family members of the individual or the 
manifestation of disease or disorder in family members of the 
individual not covered under the plan). See 42 U.S.C. 300gg-
91(d)(16); see also 26 CFR 54.9802-3T(b)(2); 29 CFR 2590.702-
1(b)(2); 45 CFR 146.122(a)(3). This final rule, however, which is 
specific to Title II, provides that all health information provided 
by a spouse to an employer as part of a HRA is genetic information 
with respect to the employee, even where both the employee and 
spouse are covered by the plan.
    \6\ S. Rep. No. 110-48, at 10 (2007); H.R. Rep. No. 110-28, pt. 
3, at 29 (2007).
    \7\ See Regulations Under the Genetic Information 
Nondiscrimination Act of 2007, 75 FR 68,912 (Nov. 9, 2010) (codified 
at 29 CFR pt. 1635).
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Discussion

    Title II of GINA prohibits the use of genetic information in making 
employment decisions in all circumstances, with no exceptions. It also 
restricts employers and other

[[Page 31144]]

entities covered by GINA \8\ from requesting, requiring, or purchasing 
genetic information, unless one or more of six narrow exceptions 
applies, and strictly limits the disclosure of genetic information by 
GINA-covered entities.\9\ The statute and the 2010 Title II final rule 
define ``genetic information'' to include: Information about an 
individual's genetic tests; information about the genetic tests of a 
family member; information about the manifestation of a disease or 
disorder in family members of an individual (i.e., family medical 
history); \10\ requests for and receipt of genetic services by an 
individual or a family member; and genetic information about a fetus 
carried by an individual or family member or of an embryo legally held 
by the individual or family member using assisted reproductive 
technology.\11\ Family members of an individual include someone who is 
a dependent of an individual through marriage, birth, adoption, or 
placement for adoption and any other individual who is a first-, 
second-, third-, or fourth-degree relative of the individual.\12\
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    \8\ Unless otherwise noted, the term ``GINA'' refers to Title II 
of GINA.
    \9\ See 42 U.S.C. 2000ff-2000ff-11; see also 29 CFR 1635.4-
1635.9.
    \10\ Congress recognized ``that a family medical history could 
be used as a surrogate for genetic traits by a health plan or health 
insurance issuer. A consistent history of a heritable disease in a 
patient's family may be viewed to indicate that the patient himself 
or herself is at increased risk for that disease.'' For that reason, 
Congress believed it was important to include family medical history 
in the definition of ``genetic information.'' S. Rep. No. 110-48, at 
28.
    \11\ See 42 U.S.C. 2000ff(4), 2000ff-8(b); see also 29 CFR 
1635.3.
    \12\ See 42 U.S.C. 2000ff(3)(A) (defining family member for 
purposes of GINA to include a dependent within the meaning of 
section 701(f)(2) of ERISA); see also 29 CFR 1635.3(a). The 
Commission's definition of ``dependent'' is solely for purposes of 
interpreting Title II of GINA, and is not relevant to interpreting 
the term ``dependent'' under Title I of GINA or under section 
701(f)(2) of ERISA and the parallel provisions of the PHS Act and 
the Code. See the preamble to the EEOC's regulations implementing 
Title II of GINA at 75 FR 68,914, note 5 (and the preamble to the 
regulations implementing Title I of GINA at 74 FR 51,664, 51,666) 
for additional information.
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    There are only six limited circumstances in which an employer \13\ 
may request, require, or purchase genetic information about an 
applicant or employee. One exception permits employers that offer 
health or genetic services, including such services offered as part of 
voluntary wellness programs,\14\ to request genetic information as part 
of these programs, as long as certain specific requirements are 
met.\15\ The regulations implementing Title II currently make clear 
that one of the requirements is that the employer-sponsored wellness 
program cannot condition inducements to employees on the provision of 
genetic information.\16\ This requirement is derived from a prohibition 
in Title I of GINA (which applies to health plans and health insurance 
issuers) against adjusting premium or contribution amounts on the basis 
of genetic information.\17\
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    \13\ GINA applies to individuals and covered entities in 
addition to employees and employers, including employment agencies, 
unions and their members, and joint-labor management training and 
apprenticeship programs. See 42 U.S.C. 2000ff-1, 2000ff-2, 2000ff-3, 
2000ff-4 (describing the prohibited practices of each of these 
entities); see also 29 CFR 1635.2(b) (defining ``covered entity''), 
1635.4 (describing prohibited practices). For the sake of 
readability, and recognizing that employers will be the covered 
entity most likely to offer employer-sponsored wellness programs, 
the preamble will refer to employers and employees throughout.
    \14\ A wellness program, defined as a ``program offered by an 
employer that is designed to promote health or prevent disease,'' is 
one type of health or genetic service that an employer might offer. 
See Section 2705(j)(1)(A) of the PHS Act, as amended by the 
Affordable Care Act. A wellness program that provides medical care 
(including genetic counseling) may constitute a group health plan 
required to comply with section 9802 of the Code, 26 U.S.C. 9802, 
section 702 of the ERISA, 29 U.S.C. 1182, or section 2705 of the PHS 
Act (i.e., Title I of GINA). Regulations issued under these statutes 
address employer-sponsored wellness programs that collect genetic 
information. Moreover, employer-sponsored wellness programs that 
condition rewards on an individual satisfying a standard related to 
a health factor must meet additional requirements. See 26 CFR 
54.9802-1(f); 29 CFR 2590.702(f); 45 CFR 146.121(f). As noted above, 
the EEOC has also issued a final rule amending the regulations and 
interpretive guidance implementing Title I of the ADA as they relate 
to employer-sponsored wellness programs. See 29 CFR 1630.14, 
published elsewhere in this issue of the Federal Register.
    \15\ See 42 U.S.C. 2000ff-1(b)(2), 2000ff-2(b)(2), 2000ff-
3(b)(2), 2000ff-4(b)(2); see also 29 CFR 1635.8(b)(2). Other health 
or genetic services include services such as an Employee Assistance 
Program or a health clinic that provides flu shots. Under GINA, 
employers may request genetic information as part of such health or 
genetic services, as long as the requirements of 29 CFR 1635.8(b)(2) 
are met.
    \16\ See 29 CFR 1635.8(b)(2)(ii). Consistent with the 
requirements of paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this section, a covered 
entity may not offer an inducement for individuals to provide 
genetic information, but may offer inducements for completion of 
HRAs that include questions about family medical history or other 
genetic information, provided the covered entity makes clear, in 
language reasonably likely to be understood by those completing the 
HRA, that the inducement will be made available whether or not the 
participant answers questions regarding genetic information.
    \17\ Title I of GINA applies to genetic information 
discrimination in health coverage and not employment. The 
Departments responsible for enforcing Title I determined that 
permitting employers to condition wellness program inducements on 
the provision of genetic information would undermine Title I's 
prohibition on adjusting premium or contribution amounts on the 
basis of genetic information. For more on the protections provided 
by Title I of GINA, see DOL--Employee Benefits Security 
Administration, FAQs on the Genetic Information Nondiscrimination 
Act (2010), www.dol.gov/ebsa/pdf/faq-GINA.pdf. For a discussion of 
how Titles I and II of GINA allow employers and plans to use 
financial inducements to promote employee wellness and healthy 
lifestyles, see the preamble to the 2010 Title II final rule at 75 
FR 68,923 (Nov. 9, 2010).
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    Although the EEOC received no comments prior to the publication of 
the Title II final rule in 2010 regarding how GINA's restriction on 
employers' acquiring genetic information interacts with the practice of 
offering employees inducements where a spouse participates in an 
employer-sponsored wellness program, this question arose after 
publication of the Title II final rule in 2010. Read one way, such a 
practice could be interpreted to violate the 29 CFR 1635.8(b)(2)(ii) 
prohibition on providing financial inducements in return for an 
employee's protected genetic information. This is because information 
an employer seeks from a spouse (who is a ``family member'' under GINA 
as set forth at 42 U.S.C. 2000ff(4)(a)(ii) and 29 CFR 1635.3(a)(1)) 
about his or her manifestation of disease or disorder is treated under 
GINA as requesting genetic information about the employee. Although the 
EEOC's original regulations specifically permitted employers to seek 
information about manifestation of diseases or disorders in employees' 
family members who are receiving health or genetic services from the 
employer, including such services offered as part of a voluntary 
employer-sponsored wellness program,\18\ the regulations did not say 
whether inducements could be provided in exchange for such information. 
The Commission now finalizes the clarification that an employer may, in 
certain circumstances, offer an employee limited inducements for the 
employee's spouse to provide information about the spouse's 
manifestation of disease or disorder as part of a HRA administered in 
connection with an employer-sponsored wellness program, provided that 
GINA's confidentiality requirements are observed and any information 
obtained is not used to discriminate against an employee.\19\ However, 
this narrow exception to the general rule that inducements may not be 
offered in exchange for an employee's genetic information does not 
extend to genetic information about a spouse or to

[[Page 31145]]

information about manifestation of diseases or disorders in, or genetic 
information about, an employee's children.
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    \18\ See 29 CFR 1635.8(c)(2).
    \19\ One industry group argued that using the phrase ``current 
or past health status'' to describe the types of questions to 
spouses that could include inducements was confusing because not all 
information about a spouse's current or past health status meets the 
definition of genetic information. In order to clarify that the rule 
only applies to questions asked of the spouse that meet the 
definition of genetic information, the final rule will replace the 
phrase ``current or past health status'' with ``manifestation of 
disease or disorder.''
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Background on the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking on GINA and Employer-
Sponsored Wellness Programs

    The Commission drafted a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) that 
was circulated to the Office of Management and Budget for review 
(pursuant to Executive Order 12866) and to federal executive branch 
agencies for comment (pursuant to Executive Order 12067).\20\ The NPRM 
was then published in the Federal Register on October 30, 2015 for a 
60-day public comment period,\21\ which was extended for an additional 
30 days \22\ and ended on January 28, 2016.
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    \20\ While there are differences between the definitions and 
requirements for wellness programs set forth in the Affordable Care 
Act, PHS Act, ERISA, the Code, and Title II of GINA, this final rule 
is being issued after review by and consultation with the tri-
Departments.
    \21\ Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act, 80 FR 66853 
(proposed October 30, 2015) (to be codified at 29 CFR part 1635).
    \22\ Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act, 80 FR 75956 
(proposed December, 7, 2015) (to be codified at 29 CFR part 1635).
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    The NPRM sought comment on the proposed revisions to the GINA 
regulation which:
     Clarified that an employer may offer, as part of its 
health plan, a limited inducement (in the form of a reward or penalty) 
to an employee whose spouse (1) is covered under the employee's health 
plan; (2) receives health or genetic services offered by the employer, 
including as part of a wellness program; and (3) provides information 
about his or her current or past health status.
     Explained that the total inducement for an employee and 
spouse to participate in an employer-sponsored wellness program that is 
part of a group health plan and collects information about the spouse's 
current or past health status may not exceed 30 percent of the total 
cost of the plan in which the employee and any dependents are enrolled.
     Described how inducements must be apportioned between the 
employee and spouse.
     Explained that inducements may be financial or in kind, 
consistent with regulations issued by DOL, HHS, and Treasury to 
implement the wellness program provisions in the Affordable Care Act. 
For that reason, the proposed rule deleted the term ``financial'' where 
it appeared as a modifier for the term ``inducement'' in 29 CFR 
1635.8(b)(2).
     Explained that any request for current or past health 
status information from an employee's spouse must comply in all other 
respects with 29 CFR 1635.8(b)(2) concerning requests for genetic 
information that are part of voluntary health or genetic services 
offered by an employer.
     Explained that an employer may not require employees (or 
employees' spouses or dependents covered by the employees' health plan) 
to agree to the sale, or waive the confidentiality, of their genetic 
information as a condition for receiving an inducement or participating 
in an employer-sponsored wellness program.
     Added an example making it clear that a request for 
current or past health status information from an employee's spouse who 
is participating in a wellness program does not constitute an unlawful 
request for genetic information about the employee.
     Made several technical changes to correct a previous 
drafting error and to add references, where needed, to HIPAA and the 
Affordable Care Act.
    Additionally, the Commission specifically sought comments on 
several other issues, including:
     Whether employers that offer inducements to encourage the 
spouses of employees to disclose information about current or past 
health status must also offer similar inducements to persons who choose 
not to disclose such information but, who instead, provide 
certification from a medical professional stating that the spouse is 
under the care of a physician and that any medical risks identified by 
that physician are under active treatment.
     Whether the proposed authorization requirements apply only 
to employer-sponsored wellness programs that offer more than de minimis 
rewards or penalties to employees whose spouses provide information 
about current or past health status as part of a HRA.
     Which best practices or procedural safeguards ensure that 
employer-sponsored wellness programs are designed to promote health or 
prevent disease and do not operate to shift costs to employees with 
spouses who have health impairments or stigmatized conditions.
     Whether the rule should include more specific guidance to 
employers regarding how to implement the requirements of 29 CFR 
1635.9(a) for electronically stored records. If so, what procedures are 
needed to achieve GINA's goal of ensuring the confidentiality of 
genetic information with respect to electronic records stored by 
employers.
     Whether there are best practices or procedural safeguards 
to ensure that information about spouses' current health status is 
protected from disclosure.
     Whether the regulation should restrict the collection of 
any genetic information by an employer-sponsored wellness program to 
only the minimum necessary to directly support the specific wellness 
activities, interventions, and advice provided through the program--
namely information collected through the program's HRA and biometric 
screening. Should programs be prohibited from accessing genetic 
information from other sources, such as patient claims data and medical 
records data.
     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 inducements to encourage employees' 
spouses to provide information about current or past health status as 
part of a HRA, and the extent to which the GINA regulations should 
allow inducements provided as part of such programs.

Summary of Revisions and Response to Comments

    During the 60-day comment period, which was extended by 30 days, 
the Commission received 3,003 \23\ comments on the NPRM from a wide 
spectrum of stakeholders, including, among others: Individuals, 
including individuals with disabilities; disability rights and other 
advocacy organizations and their members; members of Congress; employer 
associations and industry groups; and health insurance issuers, third 
party administrators, and wellness vendors. The comments from 
individuals included 2,911 similar, but not uniform, letters--almost 
all of which were submitted by a national organization that supports 
women and families. Most of the comments (3,000) were submitted through 
the United States Government's electronic docket system, 
Regulations.gov, under EEOC-2015-0009. The remaining three comments 
were mailed or faxed to the Executive Secretariat.
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    \23\ One of these comments was withdrawn when the commenter 
submitted a ``corrected'' version of the comment.
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    The Commission has reviewed and considered each of the comments in 
preparing this final rule. The first section of this preamble begins by 
clarifying the purpose of this rule. It goes on to address general 
comments about the interaction between GINA and the wellness program 
provisions of

[[Page 31146]]

HIPAA, as amended by the Affordable Care Act; interaction between GINA 
and the ADA; the final rule's applicability date; the rule's treatment 
of inducements for information from the children of employees; the 
confidentiality protections of the rule; tobacco cessation programs; 
and the Commission's burden calculations.
    The second section discusses comments submitted in response to 
questions the NPRM asked about several issues, as noted above.
    The third section addresses comments regarding specific provisions 
of the rule.

General Comments

Purpose of the Rule

    Many comments submitted by individuals objected to a rule that 
would allow employers to charge employees more for benefits based on 
the illness of family members, impose stiff penalties on people that do 
not measure up to certain health guidelines, allow employers to fire or 
otherwise adversely treat employees based on medical information 
collected through employer-sponsored wellness programs, and/or allow 
``metrics'' that would harm millions of people with disabilities. This 
rule, however, is more limited in scope. Instead, it addresses the very 
limited question of the extent to which an employer may offer 
inducements to an employee for the employee's spouse to provide 
information about the spouse's manifestation of disease or disorder as 
part of a HRA administered in connection with an employer-sponsored 
wellness program. The absolute prohibition on the use of genetic 
information to make employment decisions enshrined in Title II of GINA 
remains intact, as do the existing protections of Title I of the ADA, 
which prohibits discrimination on the basis of disability.

Interaction Between GINA and HIPAA's Wellness Program Provisions

    The Commission received comments expressing support for and/or 
concerns about employer-sponsored wellness programs. For example, many 
commenters stated that although properly designed employer-sponsored 
wellness programs have the potential to help employees become healthier 
and bring down health care costs, they believe that these programs also 
carry serious potential for discrimination in ways already prohibited 
by GINA and other civil rights laws, by allowing employers to coerce 
employees into providing genetic information (as well as other health 
information). Disability rights and health advocacy groups expressed 
concern that the EEOC was abandoning its prior position that GINA 
prohibits financial inducements in return for all genetic information, 
while employer and industry groups commented that the proposed rule's 
limitation on inducements was inconsistent with the wellness program 
rules under section 2705(j) of the PHS Act. Disability rights groups 
further noted that there was no need to alter Title II of GINA's 
prohibition on financial incentives in order to conform to laws that 
regulate insurance discrimination, given that Title II of GINA is about 
employment discrimination, and pointed out that the tri-Department 
wellness regulations explicitly state that GINA imposes separate and 
additional restrictions.
    Although the Commission recognizes that compliance with the 
standards in HIPAA, as amended by the Affordable Care Act, is not 
determinative of compliance with Title II of GINA,\24\ we believe that 
the final rule interprets GINA in a manner that reflects both GINA's 
goal of providing strong protections against employment discrimination 
based on the possibility that an employee or the employee's family 
member may develop a disease or disorder in the future and HIPAA's 
provisions promoting wellness programs. Additionally, as we pointed out 
in the preamble to the proposed rule, allowing limited inducements for 
spouses to provide information about manifested diseases or disorders 
(but not their own genetic information) as part of a HRA administered 
in connection with an employer-sponsored wellness program is consistent 
with HIPAA, as amended by the Affordable Care Act, and Title I of 
GINA.\25\ Accordingly, after consideration of all of the comments, the 
Commission reaffirms its conclusion that allowing inducements in return 
for a spouse providing information about his or her manifestation of 
disease and disorder, while limiting inducements to prevent economic 
coercion, is the best way to effectuate the purposes of the wellness 
provisions of GINA and HIPAA.
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    \24\ As the tri-Department wellness regulations acknowledge, the 
Affordable Care Act did not amend or overturn GINA, and compliance 
with the Affordable Care Act and its implementing regulations is not 
determinative of compliance with GINA. See Incentives for 
Nondiscriminatory Wellness Programs in Group Health Plans, 78 FR 
33158, 33168 (June 3, 2013). A publication issued jointly by the 
tri-Departments further explains that a wellness program that 
complies with the tri-Departments' wellness program regulations does 
not necessarily comply with any other provision of the PHS Act, the 
Code, ERISA, (including the Consolidated Omnibus Budget 
Reconciliation Act (COBRA) continuation provisions), or any other 
state or federal law, such as the ADA, or the privacy and security 
obligations of HIPAA, where applicable. Similarly, the fact that an 
employer-sponsored wellness program meets the requirements of the 
ADA is not determinative of compliance with the PHS Act, ERISA, or 
the Code. See DOL--Employee Benefits Security Administration, FAQs 
about the Affordable Care Act Implementation (part XXV), Question 2 
(2015), http://www.dol.gov/ebsa/pdf/faq-aca25.pdf and https://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/Resources/Fact-Sheets-and-FAQs/Downloads/Tri-agency-Wellness-FAQS-4-16-15pdf-AdobeAcrobat-Pro.pdf.
    \25\ See 80 FR at 66857, supra note 20.
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Interaction With the ADA and Other Equal Employment Opportunity (EEO) 
Laws

    The Commission received a number of comments requesting that the 
final rule be issued jointly with the final ADA wellness rule, a 
suggestion that has been adopted.
    Comments raising more substantive concerns about the interaction 
between the ADA and GINA focused on the desire for alignment of the 
inducement limits available under the statutes, suggesting that the 
incentive limit under the ADA, which is based on the total cost of 
self-only coverage, be revised to correspond with the inducement limit 
proposed in the GINA NPRM, which is based on the total cost of coverage 
for the plan in which the employee and any dependents are enrolled. The 
Commission declines to adopt this recommendation, however, because the 
ADA does not apply to the inducements employer-sponsored wellness 
programs offer in connection with spousal participation. As discussed 
in more detail below, this final GINA rule will, consistent with the 
ADA final rule, limit the maximum share of the inducement attributable 
to the employee's participation in an employer-sponsored wellness 
program (or multiple employer-sponsored wellness programs that request 
such information) to up to 30 percent of the cost of self-only 
coverage. Furthermore, the maximum total inducement for a spouse to 
provide information about his or her manifestation of disease or 
disorder will also be 30 percent of the total cost of (employee) self-
only coverage, so that the combined total inducement will be no more 
than twice the cost of 30 percent of self-only coverage.
    An advocacy group representing older individuals commented that 
protections similar to those proposed in the ADA wellness NPRM against 
conditioning access to employer-provided health insurance on the 
provision of medical information to an employer-sponsored wellness 
program and on retaliation against those who do not participate should 
be included in the GINA final

[[Page 31147]]

rule. Protections in the statute and the existing GINA regulations make 
clear that an employer may not use genetic information to make 
employment decisions, including decisions about benefits.\26\ Both the 
statute and the existing regulations also provide that it is unlawful 
for an employer to discriminate against any individual because that 
individual has opposed any act or practice made unlawful by Title II of 
GINA.\27\ We agree, however, that it would improve the final rule 
specifically to provide that it is a violation of Title II of GINA for 
an employer to deny access to health insurance or any package of health 
insurance benefits to an employee and/or his or her family members, or 
to retaliate against an employee, based on a spouse's refusal to 
provide information about his or her manifestation of disease or 
disorder to an employer-sponsored wellness program. We have added 
clarification to the final rule at Sec.  1635.8(b)(2)(v).
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    \26\ See 42 U.S.C. 2000ff-1(a), 2000ff-2(a), 2000ff-3(a), 
2000ff-4(a); 29 CFR 1635.4.
    \27\ See 42 U.S.C. 2000ff-8(c); 29 CFR 1635.7.
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    Another advocacy group whose mission is to protect the rights of 
women and girls asked that the final rule include language making clear 
that in addition to complying with the requirements of the final rule, 
employers must abide by other nondiscrimination provisions, including, 
for example, Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. We have not 
added any language to the final rule on this topic because the existing 
regulations already state that nothing contained in Sec.  1635.8(b)(2) 
limits the rights or protections of an individual under the ADA, or 
other applicable civil rights laws, or under HIPAA, as amended by GINA. 
We have made technical revisions to this provision due to the changes 
made to the renumbering of other provisions.

Applicability Date

    Employer associations and industry groups submitted comments 
regarding the effective date of the final rule, recommending that it 
allow enough time for employers to bring their wellness programs into 
compliance, that it be issued jointly with the ADA wellness rule, and 
that it not be applied retroactively. The Commission agrees and 
concludes that the provisions of Sec.  1635.8(b)(2)(iii) related to 
wellness program inducements will apply only prospectively to employer-
sponsored wellness programs as of the first day of the first plan year 
that begins on or after January 1, 2017, for the health plan used to 
determine the level of inducement permitted under this regulation. So, 
for example, if the plan year for the health plan used to calculate the 
permissible inducement limit begins on January 1, 2017, that is the 
date on which the provisions of this rule governing inducements apply 
to the employer-sponsored wellness program. If the plan year of the 
plan used to calculate the level of inducements begins on March 1, 
2017, the provisions on inducements will apply to the employer-
sponsored wellness program as of that date. For this purpose, the 
second lowest cost Silver Plan is treated as having a calendar year 
plan year.
    All other provisions of this final rule are clarifications of 
existing obligations that apply at, and prior to, issuance of this 
final rule.\28\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \28\ Prior EEOC interpretations set forth in the 2010 final rule 
implementing Title II of GINA, Regulations Under the Genetic 
Information Nondiscrimination Act of 2007, 75 FR 68912 (Nov. 9, 
2010) (codified at 29 CFR part 1635), and the proposed rule on GINA 
and employer-sponsored wellness programs, Genetic Information 
Nondiscrimination Act, 80 FR 66853 (proposed Oct. 30, 2015) (to be 
codified at 29 CFR part 1635), may be considered in determining 
whether inducements provided prior to this applicability date for an 
employee's spouse or other dependents to provide information about 
their manifested diseases or disorders as part of an employer-
sponsored wellness program comply with GINA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

Prohibition on Inducements for Information From Children of Employees

    A number of advocacy groups, employer groups, and industry groups, 
in addition to members of Congress, submitted comments concerning the 
Commission's proposal that no inducement be permitted in return for the 
current or past health status information or the genetic information of 
employees' children. Two commenters, pointing to the fact that Title II 
of GINA defines ``family members'' to include both spouses and 
children, argued that there was no basis for making a distinction 
between spouses and children and that, therefore, no inducements should 
be permitted in return for current or past health information of 
either. Others argued that prohibiting inducements in return for past 
or current health information of children conflicts with the Affordable 
Care Act's requirement that employers who offer health insurance 
coverage to dependents of employees must offer coverage to dependents 
up to age 26 and that, therefore, inducements should be permitted in 
return for current or past health information from both spouses and 
children. Although some commenters agreed with the Commission's 
argument that health information about a child is more likely to reveal 
genetic information about an employee, one commenter noted that this 
does not support the distinction made in the proposed rule because the 
same cannot be said of health information about a spouse and adopted 
children. Commenters also asked for clarification of whether the 
prohibition applied to the current or past health status information of 
all children, including children up to the age of 26 who are permitted 
to remain on their parents' health plans, or just minor children, with 
some urging the Commission to extend the prohibition and others arguing 
that children between the ages of 18 and 26 were not in need of this 
additional protection and would benefit from participation in an 
employer-sponsored wellness program.
    The Commission maintains its conclusion that the information about 
the manifestation of a disease or disorder in an employee's child can 
more easily lead to genetic discrimination against an employee than 
information about an employee's spouse. Even where the information 
provided concerns an adopted child, it is unlikely that a wellness 
program will know whether the child is biological or adopted, and the 
information may therefore be used to make predictions about an 
employee's health. Consequently, the final rule provides that no 
inducements are permitted in return for information about the 
manifestation of disease or disorder of an employee's children and 
makes no distinction between adult and minor children or between 
biological and adopted children.
    The fact that the final rule treats health information about 
spouses and children differently with respect to wellness program 
inducements, however, does not alter the statutory definition of family 
member, which includes both spouses and children. Nor does the 
distinction, as suggested by some commenters, mean that employers are 
prohibited from offering health or genetic services (including 
participation in an employer-sponsored wellness program) to an 
employee's children on a voluntary basis. They may do so, but may not 
offer any inducement in exchange for information about the 
manifestation of any disease or disorder in the child.\29\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \29\ See 29 CFR 1635.8(b)(2)(A)(iii).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Commission agrees with commenters who suggested that the final 
rule should clarify that the prohibition on inducements applies to 
adult children. The possibility that

[[Page 31148]]

information about a child could be used to discriminate against an 
employee on the basis of genetic information is not diminished by the 
age of the child whose information is provided. Therefore, the rule 
does not distinguish between minor children and those 18 years of age 
and older, and makes explicit that the prohibition extends to adult 
children. This clarification is being made to 29 CFR 
1635.8(b)(2)(A)(iii).

Confidentiality Protections

    The Commission received numerous comments from individuals and 
advocacy groups asking that we strengthen the confidentiality 
protections of the rule, especially given that the availability of 
inducements in return for certain genetic information would likely mean 
that more genetic information will end up in the hands of employer-
sponsored wellness programs. Commenters questioned how employer-
sponsored wellness programs would use the information, to whom they 
would disclose and/or sell it, and how they would ensure that it 
remained confidential. One commenter further noted that many people 
erroneously assume that the privacy protections of HIPAA apply to all 
employer-sponsored wellness programs and therefore ``may let their 
privacy guard down.'' Some of these commenters provided specific 
examples of ways in which employer-sponsored wellness programs were not 
maintaining, or might not maintain in the future, the confidentiality 
of genetic information in their possession--pointing to, for example, 
advances in technology that allow for the re-identification and de-
aggregation of unidentifiable and aggregate data that some employer-
sponsored wellness programs are taking or might take advantage of--and/
or made specific suggestions on how GINA's confidentiality protections 
could be improved. These suggestions included, among other ideas: 
Adding a requirement that individuals have the right to receive copies 
of all personal information collected about them as part of an 
employer-sponsored wellness program, to challenge the accuracy and 
completeness of that information, and to obtain a list of parties with 
whom that information was shared and a description of the compensation 
or consideration received for that disclosure; providing that covered 
entities are strictly liable for any confidentiality breaches and are 
not permitted to disclaim liability for harms that result from sharing 
data; requiring wellness programs to delete all genetic information 
obtained about an individual participating in the employer-sponsored 
wellness program if that individual stops participating and requests 
that his or her genetic information be deleted; and prohibiting the 
storage of individually identifiable information obtained by the 
wellness program on work computers, servers, or paper files. Another 
commenter noted that the rule should include confidentiality 
protections for health information provided by spouses who do not want 
that information to fall into the hands of the employee, due, for 
example, to domestic violence.
    In response, the Commission notes that Title II of GINA and the 
existing regulations implementing it include specific confidentiality 
provisions which require employers and other covered entities that 
possess genetic information to maintain it in medical files (including 
where the information exists in electronic forms or files) that are 
separate from personnel files and treat such information as a 
confidential medical record. These provisions prohibit the disclosure 
of genetic information except in six very limited circumstances.\30\ 
The provision which allows employers to acquire genetic information as 
part of health or genetic services such as employer-sponsored wellness 
programs further requires that the authorization an individual must 
sign explain the restrictions on the disclosure of that information; 
that individually identifiable genetic information is provided only to 
the individual receiving the services and the licensed health care 
professionals or board certified genetic counselors involved in 
providing those services; and that any individually identifiable 
genetic information is only available for purposes of the health or 
genetic services and is not disclosed to the employer except in 
aggregate terms.\31\ The Commission intends to continue its vigorous 
enforcement of these requirements and believes that they already 
provide strong protections against unlawful disclosure of genetic 
information provided as part of employer-sponsored wellness 
programs.\32\ Some of the ideas offered by advocacy groups as best 
practices, such as giving individuals the right to receive copies of 
genetic information collected about them, are already requirements of 
the regulation.\33\ Although others may make sense as best practices, 
such as allowing an individual to challenge the accuracy of genetic 
information within the employer's possession, the Commission does not 
believe it is necessary to add to the already stringent confidentiality 
requirements that exist in the regulations.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \30\ See 42 U.S.C. 2000ff-5; 29 CFR 1635.9.
    \31\ See 42 U.S.C. 2000ff-1(b)(2), 2000ff-2(b)(2), 2000ff-
3(b)(2), 2000ff-4(b)(2); 29 CFR 1635.8(b)(2)(i).
    \32\ Nothing in this rule is intended to affect the ability of a 
health oversight agency to receive data under HIPAA. See 45 CFR 
164.501 and 164.512(d).
    \33\ See 29 CFR 1635.9(b)(1).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

Tobacco Cessation

    Several commenters asked that the Commission clarify its position 
on GINA's application to tobacco-related employer-sponsored wellness 
programs, such as smoking cessation programs. In response, we reaffirm 
that the inducement rules in Sec.  1635.8(b)(2) apply only to health 
and genetic services that request genetic information. An employer-
sponsored wellness program does not request genetic information when it 
asks the spouse of an employee whether he or she uses tobacco or ceased 
using tobacco upon completion of a wellness program or when it requires 
a spouse to take a blood test to determine nicotine levels, as these 
are not requests for information about the spouse's manifestation of 
disease or disorder.

Burden

    One commenter asserted that the EEOC underestimated the burden the 
proposed rule would impose on employers, arguing that the rule was an 
economically significant one that would have an annual effect on the 
economy of $100 million or more. Among other things, the commenter 
argued that the EEOC underestimated training, compliance review, and 
program revision costs; failed to include ``familiarization'' costs; 
and failed to provide necessary empirical support for various 
conclusions. We disagree.
    The proposed rule appropriately estimated the training cost by 
using wage data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics indicating a median 
$49.41 per hour wage for human resource management professionals.\34\ 
Although the commenter argues that this rate should be tripled to 
reflect ``fully loaded'' hourly rates paid by the government to private 
contractors for professional labor, actual hourly wages of human 
resource professionals better estimate the economic costs of training. 
The fully loaded hourly rate inappropriately includes coverage of the 
private contractor's fixed costs and, as a result, will erroneously 
bias the estimated economic impact. Costs such

[[Page 31149]]

as a private contractor's office rent and marketing budget are not an 
economic impact of the regulation. As such, the estimate of the 
marginal economic impact of the regulation excludes firms' fixed costs 
because those costs are incurred whether or not the GINA regulation is 
revised. Moreover, in most cases, a covered entity's compliance effort 
will be conducted by its own human resource management professionals. 
The median wage of human resource management professionals therefore 
reasonably estimates the economic impact of up to three person-hours of 
staff time. The EEOC's estimates of three human resource professionals 
per covered entity and one hour per person are cautious and reflect 
agency experience and expertise.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \34\ The EEOC estimated that a covered entity will train three 
human resource management professionals, for one hour each. The 
estimated cost was $49.41 per person and $148.23 per covered entity.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    In response to the commenter's argument that the projected costs 
should have included the hiring of a private contractor to provide 
training, we reiterate that human resource professionals will be able 
to learn what is necessary for compliance with the rule by reading the 
EEOC's freely provided technical assistance documents, or participating 
in our general or GINA-specific outreach programs, many of which are 
free.
    Although the commenter asserts that ``great effort'' will be 
expended by entities that are not covered by Title II of GINA in 
reading the rule to ensure that they are not covered and that these 
costs should be included, the proposed regulation does not alter long 
established coverage requirements of Title II of GINA, and it is 
unlikely that entities that have never before concerned themselves with 
compliance with this and other workplace nondiscrimination laws will 
now undergo ``great effort'' to ensure that the changes in this rule do 
not apply to them.
    Finally, we note that the final rule does not require any changes 
to employer-sponsored wellness programs that are already in compliance 
with Title II of GINA and its existing implementing regulations. 
Instead, this rule merely clarifies that offering limited inducements 
to spouses is permitted in certain circumstances.
    We, therefore, reiterate our conclusion that the rule 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.

Comments Responding to Questions in the NPRM

    One commenter argued that the Commission could not take any action 
on issues described only in the portion of the NPRM that asked 
questions because the mere posing of a question does not provide the 
regulated community with sufficient information to adequately assess 
the impact of any eventual proposal as required by the Administrative 
Procedure Act (APA). We note, however, that notice is sufficient under 
the APA when the final rule ``follow[s] logically'' from the notice so 
that ``interested parties [are allowed] a fair opportunity to comment'' 
upon what becomes the final rule.\35\ The NPRM described the ``subjects 
and issues involved'' as required by the APA.\36\ The fact that the 
EEOC did receive comments on all seven of the ``subjects and issues'' 
raised in the questions demonstrates that the notice was adequate.\37\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \35\ See Conn. Light & Power v. Nuclear Regulatory Comm'n., 673 
F.2d 525, 533 (D.C. Cir. 1982).
    \36\ ``The Administrative Procedure Act requires an agency 
engaged in informal rule-making to publish a notice of proposed 
rule-making in the Federal Register that includes `either the terms 
or substance of the proposed rule or a description of the subjects 
and issues involved.' '' See id. at 530 (quoting the APA, 5 U.S.C. 
553(b)(3)).
    \37\ ``The purpose of the comment period is to allow interested 
members of the public to communicate information, concerns, and 
criticisms to the agency during the rule-making process.'' Id.; see 
also City of Stoughton v. EPA, 858 F.2d 747, 753 (D.C. Cir. 1988) 
(holding that petitioner could not challenge sufficiency of notice 
when petitioner had submitted comments on the issue that petitioner 
claimed was inadequately noticed).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

Certification in Lieu of Spouse Providing Information About 
Manifestation of Disease or Disorder

    Individuals, including individuals with disabilities and their 
advocates, as well as one insurance company and one industry group, 
commented that spouses should be allowed to provide a certification 
from a medical professional stating that the spouse is under the care 
of a physician and that any medical risks identified by that physician 
are under active treatment, instead of being required to answer 
questions about manifested diseases or disorders. By contrast, most of 
the health insurance issuers, industry groups, and employer groups that 
commented argued that allowing a spouse to receive the same inducement 
for completing such a certification would circumvent the ability of an 
employer-sponsored wellness program to assess and mitigate health 
risks. Several industry groups also pointed out that this alternative 
was not necessary because the tri-Department wellness regulations 
already provide a waiver standard that is sufficient to ensure 
individuals can earn full inducements even if an impairment makes it 
difficult to meet the requirements of a health-contingent wellness 
program.
    The Commission has decided that although some spouses may already 
be aware of their particular risk factors, a general certification or 
attestation that they are receiving medical care for those risks would 
limit the effectiveness of employer-sponsored wellness programs that 
the Affordable Care Act intended to promote. For example, employers may 
use aggregate information from HRAs to determine the prevalence of 
certain conditions in their workforce and in the families of their 
workforce for the purpose of designing specific programs aimed at 
improving the health of employees and spouses with those 
conditions.\38\ The Commission concludes that protections in the final 
rule--such as the requirement that employer-sponsored wellness programs 
that collect genetic information be reasonably designed to promote 
health and prevent disease and the existing confidentiality 
requirements--provide spouses with significant protections without 
adopting a medical certification as an alternative to providing 
information about the manifestation of disease or disorder.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \38\ See, e.g., RAND Health, Workplace Wellness Programs Study 
Final Report, 101 (2013), http://www.rand.org/content/dam/rand/pubs/research_reports/RR200/RR254/RAND_RR254.pdf [hereinafter RAND Final 
Report].
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

Applying Authorization Requirements Only to Employer-Sponsored Wellness 
Programs That Offer More Than De Minimis Inducements for Information 
About Spouses' Manifestation of Disease or Disorder

    Most of the individuals and advocacy groups who commented on this 
issue argued that the authorization requirements should apply to all 
employer-sponsored wellness programs, regardless of the level of 
inducement offered, in order to provide appropriate protections for 
genetic information. Some of these commenters noted that employers have 
ways to pressure employees to participate in wellness programs that 
have nothing to do with inducements, and others noted that any 
ambiguity in the definition of ``de minimis'' could lead to failure to 
obtain authorization even when significant inducements are offered. 
Although one health insurance company asserted that the authorization 
rule should apply to all employer-sponsored wellness programs due to 
the administrative complications that different standards

[[Page 31150]]

would cause, most health insurance companies, as well as the employer 
associations and industry groups that commented on this issue, went 
beyond asserting that there should be a de minimis exception to the 
authorization rules and argued for more significant revisions to the 
proposed rule. For example, some argued that the EEOC has no statutory 
authority to impose a requirement that employers obtain authorization 
from spouses, others argued that asking a spouse about his or her own 
health was not genetic information and, therefore, not subject to GINA 
at all, others argued that a de minimis exception should apply to all 
of the requirements of the proposed rule, and still others argued that 
the EEOC should consider whether the authorization requirement in 
general serves any purpose, given that a family's decision to 
participate in an employer-sponsored wellness program should be 
sufficient confirmation of voluntariness.
    We decline to exclude programs that offer de minimis inducements 
from the authorization requirement of the rule. Although commenters 
gave examples of some inducements that might be considered de minimis, 
no commenters offered a workable principle that could be used as the 
basis for defining which inducements are de minimis and which are not. 
We suspect that employers' interpretation of the term would vary, and 
there is no clear basis on which to establish a threshold for the de 
minimis value. We have responded to arguments that the authorization 
requirement of the rule be eliminated for various reasons in the in-
depth discussion of the authorization provision, below. (See Comments 
Regarding Specific Provisions: Authorization for Collection of Genetic 
Information).

Best Practices or Procedural Safeguards To Ensure Employer-Sponsored 
Wellness Programs Are Designed To Promote Health or Prevent Disease and 
Do Not Operate To Shift Costs

    Individuals and advocacy groups responded to this question with the 
same suggestions they made for strengthening the definition of 
employer-sponsored wellness programs that are ``reasonably designed to 
promote health or prevent disease,'' discussed below, raising ideas 
such as requiring that employer-sponsored wellness programs be based on 
scientifically valid evidence or that they include due process 
protections for individuals who claim rules are unfairly applied to 
them. Health insurance issuers, employer associations, and industry 
groups similarly reasserted the objections they raised in response to 
the proposed rule's suggestion that a ``reasonably designed'' standard 
be adopted, arguing that existing HIPAA, Affordable Care Act, and GINA 
protections are sufficient to protect against discrimination and 
unlawful disclosures of genetic information. Some also expressed 
frustration with the very idea that employer-sponsored wellness 
programs might operate to shift costs in a discriminatory way. The 
final rule will not adopt additional protections to safeguard spousal 
information or prevent cost-shifting, because existing protections are 
sufficient. We will, however, discuss these issues in more detail 
below, given that they essentially reiterate comments received in 
response to the proposal to adopt a ``reasonably designed'' standard. 
(See Comments Regarding Specific Provisions: Health or Genetic Services 
Must Be Reasonably Designed).

More Specific Guidance and Procedures on Confidentiality Requirements 
for Electronically Stored Records

    Several commenters urged the EEOC to convene expert stakeholder 
groups or hold public meetings to determine what guidance should be 
offered to employers on how to protect electronically stored data. Some 
commented that the EEOC should require specific protocols to maximize 
the safety of electronically stored genetic information without 
providing specifics; others provided suggested restrictions or referred 
to security standards such as those being developed by the Precision 
Medicine Initiative or those that already exist under the HIPAA Privacy 
and Security Rules (some arguing that HIPAA's existing standard already 
sufficiently restricts employer-provided wellness programs and others 
arguing that rules identical to those under HIPAA should be 
specifically applied to all employer-provided wellness programs). 
Others argued that since it is unclear whether certain kinds of genetic 
information can ever be stored in a way that prevents re-
identification, employers should not be permitted to store such data 
(e.g., molecular genetic data).
    The goal of the confidentiality and disclosure rules of GINA is to 
protect genetic information as required by the statute whether that 
information is in paper or electronic format. As noted above, the 
regulations already have specific confidentiality provisions that 
require employers and other covered entities that possess genetic 
information to maintain it in medical files (including where the 
information exists in electronic forms or files) that are separate from 
personnel files, and treat such information as a confidential medical 
record. These provisions prohibit the disclosure of genetic information 
except in six very limited circumstances.\39\ The provision that allows 
employers to acquire genetic information as part of health or genetic 
services such as wellness programs further requires that the 
authorization form the employer must provide to an individual to sign 
before providing genetic information as part of health or genetic 
services must explain the restrictions on the disclosure of that 
information. Specifically, the authorization must explain that 
individually identifiable genetic information is provided only to the 
individual receiving the services and the licensed health care 
professionals or board certified genetic counselors involved in 
providing those services; and that any individually identifiable 
genetic information is only available for purposes of the health or 
genetic services and is not disclosed to the employer except in 
aggregate terms.\40\ Although we do not believe that it is necessary to 
adopt additional protections for electronically stored data, we believe 
there are certain best practices that employers may want to consider in 
terms of safeguarding all genetic information in their possession.\41\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \39\ See 42 U.S.C. 2000ff-5(b); 29 CFR 1635.9.
    \40\ See 29 CFR 1635.8(b)(2)(i).
    \41\ See, e.g., 29 CFR part 1630 app. 1630.14(d)(4)(i) through 
(iv): Confidentiality, which describes best practices such as 
ensuring that individuals who handle medical information (in this 
case, genetic information) that is part of an employee health 
program are not responsible for making decisions related to 
employment, and that breaches of confidentiality are reported to 
affected employees immediately and thoroughly investigated.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

Best Practices or Procedural Safeguards To Ensure That Information 
About Spouses' Manifested Diseases or Disorders Is Protected From 
Disclosure

    Those who commented on this question raised points quite similar to 
those raised about ensuring the confidentiality of electronically 
stored data, which are discussed above. Health insurance issuers, 
employer associations, and industry groups asserted that existing HIPAA 
privacy and security requirements, along with GINA's existing rules, 
were sufficient, while advocacy groups provided ideas for strengthening 
applicable confidentiality requirements. We reiterate that we do not 
believe that additional protections are needed, given GINA's 
requirements that genetic information be kept confidential and 
disclosed in only six limited circumstances, but urge employers to 
consider adopting best practices such as

[[Page 31151]]

those set forth in the appendix accompanying the ADA Final Rule, issued 
today. Such practices include adoption and communication of strong 
privacy policies, training for individuals who handle confidential 
medical information, encryption of electronic files, and policies that 
require prompt notification of employees whose information is 
compromised if data breaches occur.

Restriction on the Collection of Genetic Information to Only the 
Minimum Necessary to Directly Support the Specific Wellness Activities 
and Prohibition on Accessing Genetic Information From Other Sources

    Individuals and advocacy groups argued that the collection of 
genetic information by employer-sponsored wellness programs should be 
restricted to the minimum necessary to directly support specific 
wellness activities and interventions. Many of these commenters also 
urged the EEOC to prohibit employer-sponsored wellness programs from 
obtaining genetic information from sources other than voluntarily 
submitted health risk assessments and biometric screenings, such as 
patient claims data or medical records data. Taking the opposite view, 
health insurance issuers, employer associations, and industry groups 
argued against adopting any further restrictions on employer-sponsored 
wellness programs. Some asserted that information from sources such as 
claims data and medical records assists in the development of effective 
employer-sponsored wellness programs and that restricting access to it 
would impede the design and success of the programs. These commenters 
also pointed out that when an employer-sponsored wellness program is 
offered as part of a health plan, it may work more optimally to allow 
that program to quickly identify people in need of services by using 
claims data already being received by the administrator of the health 
plan. These and other commenters noted that no additional restrictions 
were needed because the existing frameworks of the ADA and GINA 
adequately limit the information that may be collected as part of an 
employer-sponsored wellness program, while others said that existing 
tri-Department wellness rules requiring ``reasonable design'' ensure 
that programs are nondiscriminatory. Several of these commenters also 
noted that any additional restrictions would unnecessarily stifle 
innovation in the design and implementation of employer-sponsored 
wellness programs.
    The final rule will not include a specific restriction on the 
collection of genetic information to only the minimum necessary to 
directly support specific employer-sponsored wellness program 
activities or a limitation on accessing genetic information from other 
sources. The Commission believes that the protections in the final 
rule--such as the requirement that employer-sponsored wellness programs 
that collect genetic information be reasonably designed to promote 
health and prevent disease and the existing confidentiality 
requirements--provide significant protections for employees and spouses 
without adopting further restrictions or limitations. (See Comments 
Regarding Specific Provisions: Health or Genetic Services Must Be 
Reasonably Designed).

Employer-Sponsored Wellness Programs Offered Outside of Employer-
Sponsored Group Health Plans

    Numerous comments offering a broad range of opinions were submitted 
in response to the question in the NPRM asking whether employers offer 
or are likely to offer wellness programs outside of a group health plan 
or group health insurance coverage that use inducements to encourage 
employees' spouses to provide information about current or past health 
status as part of a HRA, and the extent to which the GINA regulations 
should allow inducements provided as part of such programs. Some 
commenters stated many employers already offer wellness programs that 
are outside group health plans, while others pointed out that employer-
sponsored wellness programs that offer medical care are group health 
programs in themselves. Some argued that the final rule should apply 
both to wellness programs that are part of an employer-sponsored health 
plan and to wellness programs offered by employers outside such plans, 
while others asked the EEOC to clarify what it means for a wellness 
program ``to be part of, or provided by, a group health plan.'' Others 
argued against applying the final rule to programs offered by employers 
that operate outside group health plans (thereby either allowing these 
programs to impose higher inducements in return for genetic information 
or, in the opinion of one advocacy group, meaning that these programs 
would be prohibited from offering inducements for genetic information 
at all). One employer association asserted that many of its members 
offer inducements for HRAs only under employer-sponsored wellness 
programs that are part of a larger group health plan, but that the 
breadth of the tri-Department's wellness program rules has the effect 
of applying at least some nondiscrimination requirements to nearly all 
wellness programs. That commenter concluded that it would be a better 
use of the EEOC's time to work on the alignment of Title II of GINA 
with the Affordable Care Act, rather than focusing on this issue. One 
industry group indicated that the proposed rule failed to provide 
guidance for stand-alone wellness programs and argued that anything 
less than the 30 percent maximum incentive standard would conflict with 
the Affordable Care Act.
    Rather than listing factors for determining whether an employer-
sponsored wellness program is part of, or outside of, an employer-
sponsored group health plan, the Commission has decided that all of the 
provisions in this rule apply to all employer-sponsored wellness 
programs that request genetic information. This means that this rule 
applies to employer-sponsored wellness programs that are: Offered only 
to spouses of employees enrolled in an employer-sponsored group health 
plan; offered to spouses of all employees regardless of whether the 
employee or spouse is enrolled in such a plan; or offered as a benefit 
of employment to spouses of employees of employers who do not sponsor a 
group health plan or group health insurance.
    We considered taking the position that employer-sponsored wellness 
programs that are not offered through a group health plan and that 
request information about the manifestation of disease or disorder from 
spouses could not offer any inducements. However, having concluded that 
some level of inducement is consistent with other requirements of 29 
CFR 1635.8(b)(2), including the requirement that the employer-sponsored 
wellness program be ``voluntary,'' where the wellness program is part 
of a group health plan, there seemed to be no basis for reaching a 
contrary conclusion with respect to employer-sponsored wellness 
programs that are outside of a group health plan. At the same time, 
allowing unlimited inducements where an employer-sponsored wellness 
program is not offered through a group health plan would be 
inconsistent with our position that limitations on spousal inducements 
are necessary to promote GINA's interest in limiting access to genetic 
information and ensuring that inducements are not so high as to be 
coercive. Accordingly, as noted below, this rule explains how to 
calculate the permissible inducement level for employer-sponsored 
wellness programs regardless of whether they are related to a group 
health plan.

[[Page 31152]]

Comments Regarding Specific Provisions

 Section 1635.8(b)(2)(i)(A) Health or Genetic Services Must Be 
Reasonably Designed

    The NPRM proposed that employers may request, require, or purchase 
genetic information as part of health or genetic services only when 
those services, including any acquisition of genetic information that 
is part of those services, are reasonably designed to promote health or 
prevent disease. Many commenters, including health insurance issuers, 
employer associations, industry groups, and a Congressional committee, 
urged the EEOC to strike this requirement, noting that it was beyond 
the EEOC's authority under GINA to impose a reasonable design 
requirement on health and genetic services and that the EEOC should 
leave it to the tri-Departments to determine what constitutes a 
reasonably designed employer-sponsored wellness program. Some of these 
commenters further noted that the proposed requirement was confusing 
because even though it sounded very similar, or even identical, to the 
corresponding requirement in the Affordable Care Act, it seemed to mean 
something different. They urged the Commission to delete the examples 
in the preamble and instead make clear that, as with the Affordable 
Care Act, satisfaction of the reasonable design standard is based on 
all facts and circumstances. Several of these commenters made specific 
mention of the preamble's example of a HRA that would not meet the 
``reasonably designed'' standard--one that collected information 
without providing follow-up information or advice--arguing that this 
conclusion did not conform to the Affordable Care Act's definition and 
that it is not always appropriate to provide follow-up information. 
Some further argued that if the Commission was going to rely on 
examples to explain the standard, it should put the examples in the 
regulation itself and make them more detailed.
    Individuals and advocacy groups, on the other hand, argued that the 
new standard was not sufficiently rigorous and that it should be based 
on clinical guidelines or national standards, or that there should be a 
stronger connection between the content of a HRA and the development of 
specific disease management programs. Some argued, for example, for a 
requirement that employer-sponsored wellness programs collect no more 
than the minimum necessary information from spouses directly linked to 
specific program services in order to meet the ``reasonably designed'' 
standard and/or that employer-sponsored wellness programs be required 
to provide scientific evidence that demonstrates that the program 
improves health or prevents disease. Others noted that the standard as 
described has virtually no meaning and will allow employers to decide 
for themselves what is ``reasonable.''
    The final rule acknowledges that satisfaction of the ``reasonably 
designed'' standard must be determined by examining all of the relevant 
facts and circumstances and otherwise retains the requirement in the 
NPRM that employers may request, require, or purchase genetic 
information as part of health or genetic services only when those 
services, including any acquisition of genetic information that is part 
of those services, are reasonably designed to promote health or prevent 
disease. As noted in the NPRM, in order to meet this standard, the 
program must have a reasonable chance of improving the health of, or 
preventing disease in, participating individuals, and must not be 
overly burdensome, a subterfuge for violating Title II of GINA or other 
laws prohibiting employment discrimination, or highly suspect in the 
method chosen to promote health or prevent disease. The examples in the 
preamble to the proposed rule were intended simply to illustrate how 
this standard works. We now clarify, in agreement with several comments 
about one of these examples, that programs consisting of a measurement, 
test, screening, or collection of health-related information without 
providing results, follow-up information, or advice designed to improve 
the participant's health would not be reasonably designed to promote 
health or prevent disease, unless the collected information actually is 
used to design a program that addresses at least a subset of conditions 
identified. Additionally, we would consider a program to not be 
reasonably designed to promote health or prevent disease if it imposes, 
as a condition of 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. 
We also would not consider a program to be reasonably designed to 
promote health or prevent disease if it exists merely to shift costs 
from the covered entity to targeted employees based on their health or 
if the employer is only using the program for data collection or to try 
to determine its future health costs. Additionally, under these rules, 
an employer-sponsored wellness program is not reasonably designed if it 
penalizes an employee because a spouse's manifestation of disease or 
disorder prevents or inhibits the spouse from participating or from 
achieving a certain health outcome. For example, an employer may not 
deny an employee an inducement for participation of either the employee 
or the spouse in an employer-sponsored wellness program because the 
employee's spouse has blood pressure, a cholesterol level, or a blood 
glucose level that the employer considers too high.
    The Commission believes that because the requirement that an 
employer-sponsored wellness program be ``reasonably designed to promote 
health or prevent disease'' is a standard with which health plans are 
now sufficiently familiar, it is reasonable to apply that standard 
under GINA to employers that sponsor wellness programs. For 
consistency, this same requirement, with the same examples, has 
recently been adopted under the ADA.\42\ Although the standard is less 
stringent than some commenters would prefer, the Commission believes it 
provides a sufficient level of protection against the misuse of 
employee genetic information while providing a degree of flexibility in 
designing wellness programs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \42\ See 29 CFR 1630.14(d)(1); published elsewhere in this issue 
of the Federal Register.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

Section 1635.8(b)(2)(iii)

When an Inducement May Be Offered
    As noted in the general comments section, above, numerous 
individuals and advocacy groups urged the Commission to abandon the 
position set forth in the proposed rule that employers may offer 
limited inducements when a spouse who receives genetic services offered 
by an employer provides information about his or her current or past 
health status information as part of a HRA. These commenters, as well 
as some members of Congress, argued that the absolute prohibition on 
financial inducements set forth in the existing GINA regulations should 
be reaffirmed, arguing that allowing employer-sponsored wellness 
programs to offer inducements in exchange for spouses to provide 
information about their current or past health status would be coercive 
and would substantially weaken GINA's protections. Several industry and 
employer groups, on the other hand, expressed support for the proposed 
rule's clarification that GINA does not preclude inducements for 
spouses for

[[Page 31153]]

completion of HRAs when the requirements of Sec.  1635.8(b)(2)(i) were 
met, while expressing deep dissatisfaction with the limitations on 
those inducements. As noted above, one industry group argued that use 
of the phrase ``current or past health status'' in describing the types 
of questions to spouses that could include inducements was confusing 
because not all information about a spouse's current or past health 
status meets the definition of genetic information. For example, some 
might consider questions about height, weight, and exercise regimes to 
be questions about ``current health status,'' although such questions 
asked of an employee's spouse are not requests for genetic information 
under GINA.
    The Commission retains the NPRM's requirements that, consistent 
with the requirements of Sec.  1635.8(b)(2)(i) and (ii), a covered 
entity may offer an inducement to an employee whose spouse provides 
information about the spouse's own current or past health status as 
part of a HRA. In order to clarify that the rule only applies to 
questions asked of the spouse that meet the definition of genetic 
information, the final rule will replace the phrase ``current or past 
health status'' with ``manifestation of disease or disorder.'' 
Moreover, as discussed in detail above, because the final rule will 
apply not only to employer-sponsored wellness programs that are part of 
group health plans, but to all wellness programs offered by employers, 
the language of the final rule at Sec.  1635.8(b)(2)(iii) will be 
revised to eliminate references to the employer's health plan. (See 
Comments Responding to Questions: Wellness Programs Offered Outside of 
Employer-Sponsored Group Health Plans.) The final rule will also 
explain how inducement limits are to be calculated in situations where 
participation in an employer-sponsored wellness program does not depend 
on enrollment in a particular group health plan, and in situations 
where an employer does not offer a group health plan but still wants to 
offer inducements for employees and their spouses to participate in 
wellness programs. Finally, the final rule retains the requirement that 
no inducement may be offered in return for the spouse providing his or 
her own genetic information, including results of his or her genetic 
tests, as well as the prohibition on providing inducements in return 
for health information about an employee's children.\43\ (See General 
Comments: Prohibition on Inducements for Information From Children of 
Employees.)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \43\ 29 CFR 1635.8(b)(2)(i)(B). Title I of GINA specifically 
prohibits a group health plan and a health insurance issuer in the 
group or individual market from collecting (including requesting, 
requiring or purchasing) genetic information prior to or in 
connection with enrollment in health coverage or for underwriting 
purposes. See 26 CFR 54.9802-3T(b), (d); 29 CFR 2590.702-1(b), (d); 
45 CFR 146.122(b), (d); 45 CFR 147.110; 45 CFR 148.180(b), (d). 
``Underwriting purposes'' includes rules for eligibility for 
benefits and the computation of premium or contribution amounts 
under the plan or coverage including any discounts, rebates, 
payments in kind, or other premium differential mechanisms in return 
for activities such as completing a HRA or participating in a 
wellness program. See 26 CFR 54.9802-3T(d)(1)(ii); 29 CFR 2590.702-
1(d)(1)(ii); 45 CFR 146.122(d)(1)(ii); 45 CFR 148.180(f)(1)(ii). 
Consequently, employer-sponsored wellness programs that provide 
rewards for completing HRAs that request a plan participant's 
genetic information, including family medical history, violate the 
prohibition against requesting genetic information for underwriting 
purposes, regardless of whether the plan participant provides 
authorization. Under Title I of GINA, a group health plan and a 
health insurance issuer in the group or individual market may 
request genetic information through a HRA as long as the request is 
not in connection with enrollment and no rewards are provided.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

Level of Inducement That May Be Offered
    The Commission received numerous comments on this provision of the 
proposed rule. As stated in the general comments section of this 
preamble, individuals and health advocacy groups said that the proposed 
rule was based on the erroneous assumption that the GINA rule must be 
``conformed'' to provisions of the Affordable Care Act concerning 
employer-sponsored wellness programs. These and other commenters, 
including some members of Congress, commented that allowing employer-
sponsored wellness programs to offer inducements up to 30 percent in 
exchange for spouses to provide information about their current or past 
health status would be coercive and would substantially weaken GINA's 
protection and urged the Commission to strike this proposal and 
reaffirm that inducements are not permitted in return for genetic 
information. Other advocacy groups argued that allowing inducements for 
spousal information would lead to conflict within families, worsening 
the mental and physical health of family members when, for example, an 
employee and spouse disagree about whether the spouse will provide the 
information needed to obtain a reward or avoid a penalty. One commenter 
noted that a rule that permits employers to increase the amount an 
employee pays for health insurance by as much as 30 percent of the 
total cost of coverage if the employee or the employee's spouse fails 
to provide certain health information would lead some to forego 
employer-provided health insurance and thus increase the pool of 
families without ``good'' health insurance coverage. Employer and 
industry groups, however, commented that the EEOC should align the 
inducement limits for employer-sponsored wellness programs with the 
inducement limits established in the tri-Department wellness 
regulations. One industry group asserted that requests to an individual 
for information about his or her own past or current health status is 
not genetic information (except for genetic test results) and that the 
EEOC therefore did not have authority under GINA to adopt requirements 
with respect to inducements for this information. Another industry 
group, after expressing strong disapproval of the proposed rule's 
inducement limitation, went on to provide suggestions for improving the 
description of that limitation if the Commission were to adopt it, 
suggesting, for example, that certain provisions in the regulatory 
language be moved. Although some of these commenters appreciated that 
the proposed rule based the inducement limit on the total cost of 
coverage for the plan in which the employee and any dependents are 
enrolled, employer associations and industry groups generally asserted 
that the inducement limits should conform to those established by the 
tri-Department wellness regulations, particularly the lack of incentive 
limits on participatory programs.
    Most individuals and advocacy groups that submitted comments did 
not comment on the proposed rule's discussion of how inducements should 
be apportioned. Two groups that did comment indicated their support for 
the idea, assuming that the EEOC was going to move forward with the 
proposal to allow inducements. In contrast, numerous health insurance 
issuers, employer associations, industry groups, as well as a 
Congressional committee and various United States Senators, commented 
that the apportionment rule should be eliminated, arguing that it was 
administratively complicated and/or that it conflicts with the tri-
Departments' wellness regulations, which does not require 
apportionment. Many of these commenters also pointed out that the 
apportionment rule conflicts with the general practice of providing an 
equal inducement to an employee and a spouse when both participate in 
an employer-sponsored wellness program and that encouraging a larger 
inducement for spouses was arbitrary, implied that the spouse's 
achievement of a health goal is more

[[Page 31154]]

valuable than the employee's equal accomplishment, and/or conflicted 
with the idea of a reasonably designed wellness program. One group 
requested that, if the EEOC were to move forward with apportionment 
rules, the rule clarify that the amount of the inducement attributable 
to the spouse does not have to be paid directly to the spouse but, 
instead, could be paid as part of a premium reduction or in any other 
way that the other portion of the inducement was being paid.
    The Commission agrees that the proposed rule's apportionment 
standards, which would have permitted a larger inducement to the spouse 
for providing similar information to that which the employee provided, 
is overly complicated and sends the wrong message about the value of 
employer-sponsored wellness programs for each participating individual. 
Moreover, we determined, in developing the final ADA rule on employer-
sponsored wellness programs, that incentives in excess of 30 percent of 
the cost of self-only coverage offered in exchange for an employee 
answering disability-related questions or taking medical examinations 
as part of a wellness program would be coercive. We see no reason for 
adopting a different threshold where the employee's spouse is the 
individual whose health information is being sought. Consequently, this 
final rule states that when an employee and the employee's spouse are 
given the opportunity to enroll in an employer-sponsored wellness 
program, the inducement to each may not exceed 30 percent of the total 
cost of (1) self-only coverage under the group health plan in which the 
employee is enrolled (including both employee and employer cost), if 
enrollment in the plan is a condition for participation in the wellness 
program; (2) self-only coverage under the group health plan offered by 
the employer (including both employee and employer cost), where the 
employer offers a single group health plan, but participation in a 
wellness program does not depend on the employee's or spouse's 
enrollment in that plan; (3) the lowest cost self-only coverage under a 
major medical group health plan offered by the employer (including both 
employee and employer cost), where the employer has more than one group 
health plan, but enrollment in a particular plan is not a condition for 
participating in the wellness program; or (4) the second lowest cost 
Silver Plan \44\ available on the Exchange in the location that the 
employer identifies as its principal place of business if the employer 
offers no group health plan. In this last instance, the maximum 
inducement to the employee and the spouse is equal to 30 percent of the 
cost of covering an individual who is a 40-year-old non-smoker. Thus, 
the amount of the inducement available to the spouse cannot exceed the 
amount an employer may offer to an employee, under the ADA, to 
participate in a wellness program that includes disability-related 
questions or a medical examination.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \44\ There are four ``metal'' categories of health plans in the 
Exchanges established under the Affordable Care Act: Bronze, Silver, 
Gold, and Platinum. See How To Pick a Health Insurance Plan: The 
``Metal Categories'', Healthcare.gov, https://www.healthcare.gov/choose-a-plan/plans-categories (last visited March 29, 2016).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The final rule includes examples explaining how the inducement 
limits are to be calculated. For example, if an employee is enrolled in 
a group health plan through the employer at a total cost (taking into 
account both employer and employee contributions towards the cost of 
coverage) of $14,000 for family coverage, that plan has a self-only 
option for a total cost of $6,000, and the employer provides the option 
of participating in a wellness program to the employee and spouse if 
they participate in the plan, the employer may not offer more than 
$1,800 to the employee and $1,800 to the spouse. If participation in a 
particular group health plan is not required for the employee and 
spouse to earn an inducement and the employer has only one group health 
plan under which self-only coverage costs $7,000, the employee and the 
spouse can each get an inducement of up to $2,100. If participation in 
a particular group health plan is not required for the employee and the 
spouse to earn an inducement and the employer has more than one group 
health plan and self-only coverage under the major medical group health 
plans range in cost from $5,000 to $8,000, the employee and spouse can 
each get an inducement of up to $1,500. Finally, if the employer offers 
no group health plan at all and the second lowest-cost Silver Plan 
available through the state or federal health care Exchange established 
under the Affordable Care Act in the location that the employer 
identifies as its principal place of business would cost a 40-year-old 
non-smoker $4,000, the maximum inducement the employer could offer the 
employee and the spouse would be no more than $1,200 each to answer 
questions about their current health or to take a medical examination 
as part of a wellness program.
    As noted in the ADA final rule, the Commission has concluded that 
the employer's lowest total cost self-only coverage under a major 
medical group health plan is an appropriate benchmark for establishing 
the inducement limit where an employer has more than one group health 
plan and participation in an employer-sponsored wellness program does 
not depend on enrollment in any particular plan for two reasons. First, 
it offers employers predictability and administrative efficiency in 
complying with the rule. Second, the rule is consistent with the 
Commission's objective of ensuring that inducements in return for a 
spouse providing information about his or her manifestation of disease 
or disorder are not coercive.
    The second lowest cost Silver Plan available on the Exchange in the 
location that the employer identifies as its principal place of 
business is used as a benchmark for determining the amount of an 
eligible individual's premium tax credit for purchasing health 
insurance on the Exchange.\45\ This is the most popular plan on the 
Exchanges, and information about its costs for individuals who are 40 
years old and non-smokers is available to the public.\46\ Additionally, 
because the Silver Plan typically is neither the least nor the most 
expensive plan available on the Exchanges, inducement limits that are 
tied to its costs may promote participation in wellness programs while 
not being so high as to be coercive.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \45\ See 26 U.S.C. 36B(b)(2).
    \46\ See, e.g., HHS, Health Insurance Marketplaces 2015 Open 
Enrollment Period: March Enrollment Report (2015), https://aspe.hhs.gov/sites/default/files/pdf/83656/ib_2015mar_enrollment.pdf 
(HHS report covering marketplace enrollment from November 15, 2014 
through February 15, 2015, indicating that, based on enrollment 
through all marketplaces, 67 percent of people who selected a 
marketplace plan selected Silver.)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Revisions will be made to Sec.  1635.8(b)(2)(iii) to correspond to 
these changes. We also clarify that the portion of the inducement 
attributable to the spouse's provision of information about his or her 
manifestation of disease or disorder need not be paid directly to the 
spouse, but may be paid in whatever way the remaining portion of the 
inducement is made such as, for example, as part of a reduction in 
premium.
Authorization for Collection of Genetic Information
    Although numerous health and other advocacy groups agreed that 
authorization is a much needed component of employer-sponsored wellness 
programs that collect genetic

[[Page 31155]]

information, they went on to argue that the authorization requirements 
of GINA should be strengthened. Some noted that the authorization forms 
currently in use by wellness vendors tend to use arcane language, are 
insufficiently understood, and/or on occasion are hidden in obscure 
links that few people read. Others suggested that in order to truly 
ensure that participation in an employer-sponsored wellness program 
that collects genetic information is voluntary, authorization 
requirements should allow a participant who indicates that his or her 
participation is not voluntary to obtain the reward or avoid the 
penalty even if his or her spouse does not provide the requested 
information. Several advocacy groups suggested that the Commission 
provide model authorization forms and notices. While some health 
insurance issuers and industry groups agreed that the Commission should 
provide model language that would satisfy the authorization 
requirements, these commenters, as well as employer groups, generally 
urged the Commission to strike or limit the authorization requirement. 
Some argued that the Commission did not have the authority to require 
spouses to provide authorization because the statutory language 
requires that prior, knowing, written, and voluntary authorization be 
provided by the employee, not by other individuals. Others noted that 
requiring multiple authorization forms would unduly complicate the 
operation of employer-sponsored wellness programs and that a single 
authorization completed by the employee should be sufficient.
    This final rule adds no new notice or authorization requirements. 
It reaffirms that when an employer offers an employee an inducement in 
return for his or her spouse's providing information about the spouse's 
manifestation of disease or disorder as part of a HRA, the HRA (which 
may include a medical questionnaire, a medical examination, or both), 
must otherwise comply with Sec.  1635.8(b)(2)(i) in the same manner as 
if completed by the employee, including the requirement that the spouse 
provide prior knowing, voluntary, and written authorization when the 
spouse is providing his or her own genetic information, and the 
requirement that the authorization form describe the confidentiality 
protections and restrictions on the disclosure of genetic information. 
The employer also must obtain authorization from the spouse when 
collecting information about the spouse's manifestation of disease or 
disorder, although a separate authorization for the acquisition of this 
information from the employee is not necessary.
    The Commission believes that GINA's existing authorization 
requirements prohibit many of the practices about which advocacy groups 
expressed concern. For example, these requirements already prohibit an 
employer-sponsored wellness program that collects genetic information 
from using an authorization notice that uses arcane legal language or 
is otherwise difficult to understand.\47\ Moreover, although it is true 
that GINA's statutory language, at 42 U.S.C. 2000ff-1(b)(2)(B), states 
that the ``employee'' must provide prior, knowing, voluntary, and 
written authorization, the EEOC's original implementing regulations use 
the broader term ``individual'' when describing the prior, knowing, 
voluntary, and written authorization requirement.\48\ As noted in the 
preamble to the proposed rule, the Commission believes that 
``individual'' best reflects the intent of Congress, especially when 
considering the provisions in 42 U.S.C. 2000ff-1(b), which prohibit 
employers from requesting, requiring, or purchasing genetic information 
about both employees and their family members with limited exceptions, 
and the general purpose of the statute.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \47\ The GINA notice and authorization requirement, which was 
included in the EEOC's regulations pursuant to a specific statutory 
requirement, see 42 U.S.C. 2000ff-1(b)(2)(B), is only met if the 
covered entity uses an authorization form that (1) is written so 
that the individual from whom the genetic information is being 
obtained is reasonably likely to understand it; (2) describes the 
type of genetic information that will be obtained and the general 
purpose for which it will be used; and (3) describes the 
restrictions on disclosure of genetic information. The GINA notice 
and authorization rule also requires that individually identifiable 
genetic information is provided only to the individual (or family 
member if the family member is receiving genetic services) and the 
licensed health care professionals or board certified genetic 
counselors involved in providing such services, and is not 
accessible to managers, supervisors, or others who make employment 
decisions, or to anyone else in the workplace; and, finally, that 
any individually identifiable genetic information provided under 29 
CFR 1635.8(b)(2) is only available for purposes of such services and 
is not disclosed to the covered entity except in aggregate terms 
that do not disclose the identity of specific individuals. See 29 
CFR 1635.8(b)(2)(i).
    \48\ See 29 CFR 1635.8(b)(2)(i)(B).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

Section 1635.8(b)(2)(vi) Prohibition on Conditioning Participation in 
an Employer-Sponsored Wellness Program on Agreeing To Sale of Genetic 
Information or Waiving Confidentiality

    Individuals and advocacy groups that commented on this portion of 
the proposed rule supported it but requested that it be strengthened. 
They argued, for example, that the provision should be expanded to not 
only prohibit conditioning participation in an employer-sponsored 
wellness program on agreeing to the sale of genetic information, but 
also other forms of sharing genetic information such as exchanges and 
transfers. Others argued that the provision should state that harm will 
be presumed from unauthorized disclosure of genetic information and 
that, if sharing does occur, employers should be required to reveal the 
identity of those with whom they shared the genetic information. One 
industry group expressed support for the notion that genetic 
information, as one type of protected health information, should not be 
sold, but noted that this did not necessarily apply to de-identified or 
aggregate data.
    The Commission agrees that this prohibition should be expanded. The 
final rule therefore prohibits a covered entity from conditioning 
participation in an employer-sponsored wellness program or an 
inducement on an employee, an employee's spouse, or other covered 
dependent agreeing to the sale, exchange, sharing, transfer, or other 
disclosure of genetic information (except to the extent permitted by 
paragraph 1635.8(b)(2)(i)(D)), or waiving protections provided under 
Sec.  1635.9. As explained above, however, the Commission does not 
believe that any further changes are needed because the confidentiality 
protections of Sec.  1635.9, as well as the specific disclosure rules 
that apply to health and genetic services set forth at Sec.  
1635.8(b)(2), provide strong protections against disclosure of genetic 
information. (See General Comments: Confidentiality Provisions.)

Section 1635.8(c)(2) Employer Permitted To Seek Medical Information

    Few people commented on the new example the EEOC added to this 
section of the rule. Two industry groups that did comment supported the 
EEOC's acknowledgement that employers may ask for information about the 
manifestation of disease, disorder, or pathological condition of a 
family member if that individual is receiving genetic services on a 
voluntary basis. However, comments indicated that clarification is 
needed for this example to be understood. As noted in the preamble to 
the proposed rule, this provision cross-references 29 CFR 1635.8(b)(2) 
to make clear that an employer may request information about the 
manifestation of disease, disorder, or pathological condition of a 
family member who is participating in voluntary genetic services only 
when all of the requirements for seeking genetic

[[Page 31156]]

information as part of a voluntary health or genetic service, including 
the rules on authorization and inducements, are met. In other words, 
this example does not create an exception to the general rule that 
inducements in return for genetic information are only permitted in one 
specific circumstance--when an employee's spouse is asked to provide 
information about his or her manifestation of disease, disorder, or 
pathological condition as part of a HRA. We have revised the regulatory 
language so that it emphasizes the requirements of Sec.  1635.8(b)(2), 
including the rules on authorization and inducements.

Removal of Term ``Financial'' From Definition of ``Inducement''

    Industry groups, employer associations, and several United States 
Senators urged the Commission to alter this proposal so that the final 
rule applies only to financial incentives. These groups argued that an 
expansion of the definition of inducement would be inconsistent with 
the Affordable Care Act and Congressional intent and would increase 
administrative burden by requiring employers to calculate the value of 
in-kind inducements, such as gift cards, raffle tickets, and key 
chains. Many argued that applying the inducement rule to in-kind 
inducements would cause employers to eliminate them altogether.
    The final rule reaffirms the Commission's proposal to remove the 
term ``financial'' as a modifier of the type of inducements discussed 
in the regulations and make clear that the term ``inducements'' 
includes both financial and in-kind inducements, such as time-off 
awards, prizes, or other items of value, in the form of either rewards 
or penalties. Contrary to several comments received, this clarification 
is consistent with the tri-Department wellness program provisions, 
which generally define a reward 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.'' \49\ 
Thus, because the incentive limits in the Affordable Care Act apply to 
in-kind incentives when they are offered within health-contingent 
programs, Congress and the tri-Departments clearly considered that 
these amounts would have to be calculated. Employers have flexibility 
to determine the value of in-kind incentives, as long as the method is 
reasonable.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \49\ See 26 CFR 54.9802-1(f)(1)(i); 29 CFR 2590.702(f)(1)(i); 45 
CFR 146.121(f)(1)(i); see also DOL--Employee Benefits Security 
Administration, FAQs on Affordable Care Act Implementation (Part 
XXIX) and Mental Health Parity Implementation, Question 11 (2015), 
http://www.dol.gov/ebsa/pdf/faq-aca29.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

Technical Amendments

    We received no comments concerning the proposed technical 
amendments to the rule and they are therefore adopted without change.

Regulatory Procedures

Executive Order 12866

    Pursuant to Executive Order 12866, the EEOC has coordinated this 
final rule with the Office of Management and Budget. Under section 
3(f)(1) of Executive Order 12866, the EEOC has determined that the 
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.\50\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \50\ See General Comments: Burden for our response to the 
commenter who expressed disagreement with our burden calculations.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Although a detailed cost-benefit assessment of the regulation is 
not required, the Commission notes that the rule will aid compliance 
with Title II of GINA by employers. Currently, employers face 
uncertainty as to whether providing an employee with an inducement if 
his or her spouse provides information about the spouse's manifestation 
of disease or disorder on a HRA will subject them to liability under 
Title II of GINA. This rule will clarify that offering limited 
inducements in these circumstances is permitted by Title II of GINA if 
the requirements of section 202(b)(2)(A) of GINA otherwise have been 
met. We believe that a potential benefit of this rule is that it will 
provide employers that adopt wellness programs that include spousal 
inducements with clarity about their obligations under GINA.
    The Commission does not believe the costs to employers associated 
with the rule are significant. Under HIPAA, as amended by the 
Affordable Care Act, inducements of up to 30 percent of the total cost 
of coverage in which an employee is enrolled are permitted where the 
employee and the employee's dependents are given the opportunity to 
fully participate in a health-contingent wellness program. This final 
rule simply clarifies that a similar inducement is permissible under 
Title II of GINA where an employer offers inducements for an employee's 
spouse enrolled in the group health plan to provide information about 
his or her manifestation of disease or disorder. Where participation in 
the employer-sponsored wellness program does not depend on enrollment 
in a particular group health plan, employers will be able to calculate 
the amount of the permissible inducement by reference to easily 
verifiable sources, such as the cost of the group health plans they 
provide or by reference to the second lowest cost Silver Plan available 
on the Exchange in the location that the Employer identifies as its 
principal place of business.
    The Commission further believes that employers will face initial 
start-up costs to train human resources staff and others on the revised 
rule. 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 2014, the agency's outreach programs reached more than 236,000 
persons through participation in more than 3,500 no-cost educational, 
training and outreach events. Now that the rule has become final, we 
will include information about the revisions to the GINA regulations in 
our outreach programs in general and continue to offer GINA-specific 
outreach programs which will, of course, include information about the 
revisions. As is our practice when issuing new regulations and policy 
guidances, we have posted two technical assistance documents on our Web 
site explaining the revisions to the GINA regulations.\51\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \51\ See Qs and As: The Equal Employment Opportunity 
Commission's Final Rule on the Genetic Information Nondiscrimination 
Act and Employer Wellness Programs, EEOC, https://www.eeoc.gov/laws/types/genetic.cfm (last visited April 14, 2016); Small Business Fact 
Sheet: Final Rule on Title II of the Genetic Information 
Nondiscrimination Act and Employer Wellness Programs, EEOC, https://www.eeoc.gov/laws/types/genetic.cfm (last visited April 14, 2016).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    We estimate that there are approximately 782,000 employers with 15 
or more employees subject to Title II of GINA \52\ and, of that number, 
one half to two thirds (391,000 to 521,333) offer some type of 
employer-sponsored wellness program.\53\ In the proposed rule, we 
assumed that nearly half of employer-sponsored wellness programs

[[Page 31157]]

are open for participation by the spouses or dependents of workers, and 
used the highest estimates, to conclude that approximately 260,667 
employers will be covered by this requirement.\54\ Because the final 
rule now applies to a broader set of wellness programs offered by 
employers, we will increase these estimates and assume that 347,556 
employers (two thirds of those who offer some type of wellness program) 
offer spouses an opportunity to participate in, at the very least, an 
employer-sponsored wellness program that is outside or not part of a 
group health plan. We further estimate that the typical human resource 
professional will need to dedicate, at most, 60 minutes to gain a 
satisfactory understanding of the revised regulations and that the 
median hourly pay rate of a human resource professional is 
approximately $49.41.\55\ Assuming that an employer will train up to 
three human resource professionals/managers on the requirements of this 
rule, we estimate that initial training costs will be approximately 
$51,518,230.\56\ The Commission sought comments on these cost estimates 
and responded to the one comment received above. (See the discussion in 
General Comments: Burden.)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \52\ See Firm Size Data, Small Business Administration, http://www.sba.gov/advocacy/849/12162 (last visited March 28, 2016).
    \53\ See RAND Final Report, supra note 36, xiv, http://www.rand.org/content/dam/rand/pubs/research_reports/RR200/RR254/RAND_RR254.pdf; see also Employer Health Benefits Survey, 6 (2014), 
http://files.kff.org/attachment/2014-employer-health-benefits-survey-full-report [hereinafter the Kaiser Survey]. 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.
    \54\ Although the Kaiser Survey reports that 51 percent of large 
employers versus 32 percent of small employers ask employees to 
complete a HRA, see Kaiser Survey, supra note 50, we are not aware 
of any data indicating what percentage of those employers provide 
spouses with the opportunity to participate in the HRA. We therefore 
have substituted a more general statistic to allow an estimate of 
the number of employers who will be covered by the requirements of 
this proposed rule. See Karen Pollitz & Matthew Roe, Kaiser Family 
Foundation, Workplace Wellness Programs Characteristics and 
Requirements 5 (2016), http://kff.org/private-insurance/issue-brief/workplace-wellness-programs-characteristics-and-requirements/ 
(noting that nearly half (48 percent) of employer wellness programs 
are open for participation by the spouses or dependents of workers, 
as well as workers).
    \55\ See Occupational Employment and Wages, Bureau of Labor 
Statistics, http://www.bls.gov/oes/current/oes113121.htm (last 
visited March 28, 2016).
    \56\ A study published in 2009 by the Society for Human Resource 
Management (SHRM) found that the median number of full-time 
equivalents for a HR department was three. See SHRM, Human Capital 
Benchmarking Study 2009 Executive Summary, 6 (2009), https://www.shrm.org/Research/SurveyFindings/Articles/Documents/090620_Human_Cap_Benchmark_FULL_FNL.pdf. Because we are not aware of 
any more specific data on the average number of human resources 
professionals per covered employer, we have based our estimates on 
this figure.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Finally, GINA's plain language (at 42 U.S.C. 2000ff-(1)(b)(2)) and 
the EEOC's regulations (at 29 CFR 1635.8(b)(2) and (c)(2)) make clear 
that an employer must obtain authorization for the collection of 
genetic information as part of providing health or genetic services to 
employees and their family members on a voluntary basis. Consequently, 
this rule imposes no new obligations with respect to authorization for 
the collection of genetic information.

Paperwork Reduction Act

    This rule contains no new information collection requirements 
subject to review by the Office of Management and Budget under the 
Paperwork Reduction Act (44 U.S.C. chapter 35).

Regulatory Flexibility Act

    Title II of GINA applies to all employers with 15 or more 
employees, 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.\57\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \57\ See Firm Size Data, Small Business Administration, http://www.sba.gov/advocacy/849/12162 (last visited March 28, 2016).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Commission certifies under 5 U.S.C. 605(b) that this final 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 rule simply clarifies that employers that 
offer wellness programs are free to adopt a certain type of inducement 
without violating GINA. It also corrects an internal citation and 
provides citations to the Affordable Care Act. It does not require any 
action on the part of covered entities, except to the extent that those 
entities created documentation or forms which cite to GINA for the 
proposition that the entity is unable to offer inducements to employees 
in return for a spouse's completion of HRAs that request information 
about the spouse's manifestation of disease or disorder. We do not have 
data on the number or size of businesses that may need to alter 
documents relating to their employer-sponsored wellness programs. 
However, our experience with enforcing the ADA, which required all 
employers with 15 or more employees to remove medical inquiries from 
application forms, suggests that revising questionnaires to eliminate 
or alter an instruction would not impose significant costs.
    To the extent that employers will expend resources to train human 
resources staff and others on the revised rule, we reiterate 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 fiscal year 
2014, the agency's outreach programs reached more than 236,000 persons 
through participation in more than 3,500 no-cost educational, training 
and outreach events. We will put information about the revisions to the 
GINA regulations in our outreach programs in general and continue to 
offer GINA-specific outreach programs which will, of course, include 
information about the revisions now that the rule is final. We will 
also post technical assistance documents on our Web site explaining the 
revisions to the GINA regulations, as we do with all of our new 
regulations and policy documents.
    We estimate that the typical human resources professional will need 
to dedicate, at most, 60 minutes to gain a satisfactory understanding 
of the revised regulations. We further estimate that the median hourly 
pay rate of a human resource professional is approximately $49.41.\58\ 
Assuming that small entities have between one and five human resource 
professionals/managers, we estimate that the cost per entity of 
providing appropriate training will be between approximately $49.41 and 
$247.05. The EEOC does not believe that this cost will be significant 
for the impacted small entities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \58\ See Occupational Employment and Wages, supra note 53.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995

    This final 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 1635

    Administrative practice and procedure, Equal employment 
opportunity.

    For the reasons set forth in the preamble, the EEOC amends chapter 
XIV of title 29 of the Code of Federal Regulations as follows:

PART 1635--[AMENDED]

0
1. The authority citation for part 1635 is revised to read as follows:

    Authority: 29 U.S.C. 2000ff.

0
2. In Sec.  1635.8(b):
0
a. Redesignate paragraphs (b)(2)(i)(A) through (D) as paragraphs 
(b)(2)(i)(B) through (E);
0
b. Add new paragraph (b)(2)(i)(A);

[[Page 31158]]

0
c. Revise paragraph (b)(2)(ii) introductory text;
0
d. Redesignate paragraphs (b)(2)(iii) and (iv) as paragraphs (b)(2)(vi) 
and (vii);
0
e. Add new paragraphs (b)(2)(iii) through (v);
0
f. Revise newly redesignated paragraph (b)(2)(vii); and
0
g. Revise paragraph (c)(2).
    The revisions and additions read as follows:


Sec.  1635.8  Acquisition of genetic information.

* * * * *
    (b) * * *
    (2) * * *
    (i) * * *
    (A) The health or genetic services, including any acquisition of 
genetic information that is part of those services, are 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 individuals, and it is not overly 
burdensome, is not a subterfuge for violating Title II of GINA or other 
laws prohibiting employment discrimination, and is not highly suspect 
in the method chosen to promote health or prevent disease. A program is 
not reasonably designed to promote health or prevent disease if it 
imposes a penalty or disadvantage on an individual because a spouse's 
manifestation of disease or disorder prevents or inhibits the spouse 
from participating or from achieving a certain health outcome. For 
example, an employer may not deny an employee an inducement for 
participation of either the employee or the spouse in an employer-
sponsored wellness program because the employee's spouse has blood 
pressure, a cholesterol level, or a blood glucose level that the 
employer considers too high. In addition, a program consisting of a 
measurement, test, screening, or collection of health-related 
information without providing participants with results, follow-up 
information, or advice designed to improve the participant's health is 
not reasonably designed to promote health or prevent disease, unless 
the collected information actually is used to design a program that 
addresses at least a subset of conditions identified. Whether health or 
genetic services are reasonably designed to promote health or prevent 
disease is evaluated in light of all the relevant facts and 
circumstances.
* * * * *
    (ii) Consistent with, and in addition to, the requirements of 
paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this section, a covered entity may not offer an 
inducement (financial or in-kind), whether in the form of a reward or 
penalty, for individuals to provide genetic information, except as 
described in paragraphs (b)(2)(iii) and (iv) of this section, but may 
offer inducements for completion of health risk assessments that 
include questions about family medical history or other genetic 
information, provided the covered entity makes clear, in language 
reasonably likely to be understood by those completing the health risk 
assessment, that the inducement will be made available whether or not 
the participant answers questions regarding genetic information.
* * * * *
    (iii) Consistent with, and in addition to, the requirements of 
paragraphs (b)(2)(i) and (ii) of this section, a covered entity may 
offer an inducement to an employee whose spouse provides information 
about the spouse's manifestation of disease or disorder as part of a 
health risk assessment. No inducement may be offered, however, in 
return for the spouse's providing his or her own genetic information, 
including results of his or her genetic tests, or for information about 
the manifestation of disease or disorder in an employee's children or 
for genetic information about an employee's children, including adult 
children. The health risk assessment, which may include a medical 
questionnaire, a medical examination (e.g., to detect high blood 
pressure or high cholesterol), or both, must otherwise comply with 
paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this section in the same manner as if completed 
by the employee, including the requirement that the spouse provide 
prior, knowing, voluntary, and written authorization, and the 
requirement that the authorization form describe the confidentiality 
protections and restrictions on the disclosure of genetic information. 
The health risk assessment must also be administered in connection with 
the spouse's receipt of health or genetic services offered by the 
employer, including such services offered as part of an employer-
sponsored wellness program. When an employee and spouse are given the 
opportunity to participate in an employer-sponsored wellness program, 
the inducement to each may not exceed:
    (A) Thirty percent of the total cost of self-only coverage under 
the group health plan in which the employee is enrolled, if enrollment 
in the plan is a condition for participation in the employer-sponsored 
wellness program. For example, if an employee is enrolled in health 
insurance through the employer at a total cost (taking into account 
both employer and employee contributions toward the cost of coverage) 
of $14,000 for family coverage, that plan has a self-only option for 
$6,000, and the employer provides the option of participating in a 
wellness program to the employee and spouse because they are enrolled 
in the plan, the employer may not offer more than $1,800 to the 
employee and $1,800 to the spouse.
    (B) Thirty percent of the total cost of self-only coverage under 
the group health plan offered by the employer where the employer offers 
a single group health plan, but participation in a wellness program 
does not depend on the employee's or spouse's enrollment in that plan. 
For example, if the employer offers one group health plan and self-only 
coverage under that plan costs $7,000, and the employer provides the 
option of participation in a wellness program to the employee and the 
spouse, the employer may not offer more than $2,100 to the employee and 
$2,100 to the spouse.
    (C) Thirty percent of the total cost of the lowest cost self-only 
coverage under a major medical group health plan offered by the 
employer, if the employer offers more than one group health plan but 
enrollment in a particular plan is not a condition for participation in 
the wellness program. For example, if the employer has more than one 
major medical group health plan under which self-only coverage ranges 
in cost from $5,000 to $8,000, and the employer provides the option of 
participation in a wellness program to the employee and the spouse, the 
employer may not offer more than $1,500 to the employee and $1,500 to 
the spouse.
    (D) Thirty percent of the cost of self-only coverage available to 
an individual who is 40 years old and a non-smoker under the second 
lowest cost Silver Plan available through the Exchange in the location 
that the employer identifies as its principal place of business is 
located, where the employer has no group health plan. For example, if 
the cost of insuring a 40-year-old non-smoker is $4,000 annually, the 
maximum inducement the employer could offer the employee and the spouse 
would be no more than $1,200 each.
    (iv) A covered entity may not, however, condition participation in 
an employer-sponsored wellness program or provide any inducement to an 
employee, or the spouse or other covered dependent of the employee, in 
exchange for an agreement permitting the sale, exchange, sharing, 
transfer, or other disclosure of genetic information, including 
information about the

[[Page 31159]]

manifestation of disease or disorder of an employee's family member 
(except to the extent permitted by paragraph (b)(2)(i)(D)) of this 
section, or otherwise waiving the protections of Sec.  1635.9.
    (v) A covered entity may not deny access to health insurance or any 
package of health insurance benefits to an employee, or the spouse or 
other covered dependent of the employee, or retaliate against an 
employee, due to a spouse's refusal to provide information about his or 
her manifestation of disease or disorder to an employer-sponsored 
wellness program.
* * * * *
    (vii) Nothing contained in paragraphs (b)(2)(ii) through (v) of 
this section limits the rights or protections of an individual under 
the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), as amended, or other 
applicable civil rights laws, or under the Health Insurance Portability 
and Accountability Act (HIPAA), as amended by GINA. For example, if an 
employer offers an inducement for participation in disease management 
programs or other programs that promote healthy lifestyles and/or 
require individuals to meet particular health goals, the employer must 
make reasonable accommodations to the extent required by the ADA; that 
is, the employer must make modifications or adjustments that enable a 
covered entity's employee with a disability to enjoy equal benefits and 
privileges of employment as are enjoyed by its other similarly situated 
employees without disabilities unless such covered entity can 
demonstrate that the accommodation would impose an undue hardship on 
the operation of its business. See 29 CFR 1630.2(o)(1)(iii) and 29 CFR 
1630.9(a). In addition, if the employer's wellness program provides 
(directly, through reimbursement, or otherwise) medical care (including 
genetic counseling), the program may constitute a group health plan and 
must comply with the special requirements for employer-sponsored 
wellness programs that condition rewards on an individual satisfying a 
standard related to a health factor, including the requirement to 
provide an individual with a reasonable alternative (or waiver of the 
otherwise applicable standard) under HIPAA, when it is unreasonably 
difficult due to a medical condition to satisfy or medically 
inadvisable to attempt to satisfy the otherwise applicable standard. 
See section 9802 of the Internal Revenue Code (26 U.S.C. 9802, 26 CFR 
54.9802-1 and 54.9802-3T), section 702 of the Employee Retirement 
Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA) (29 U.S.C. 1182, 29 CFR 2590.702 
and 2590.702-1), and section 2705 of the Public Health Service (PHS) 
Act (45 CFR 146.121, 146.122, and 147.110), as amended by section 1201 
of the Affordable Care Act.
* * * * *
    (c) * * *
    (2) A covered entity does not violate this section when it 
requests, requires, or purchases genetic information or information 
about the manifestation of a disease, disorder, or pathological 
condition of an individual's family member who is receiving health or 
genetic services on a voluntary basis, as long as the requirements of 
paragraph (b)(2) of this section, including those concerning 
authorization and inducements, are met. For example, an employer does 
not unlawfully acquire genetic information about an employee when it 
asks the employee's family member who is receiving health services from 
the employer if her diabetes is under control. Nor does an employer 
unlawfully acquire genetic information about an employee when it seeks 
information--through a medical questionnaire, a medical examination, or 
both--about the manifestation of disease, disorder, or pathological 
condition of the employee's family member who is completing a health 
risk assessment on a voluntary basis in connection with the family 
member's receipt of health or genetic services (including health or 
genetic services provided as part of an employer-sponsored wellness 
program) offered by the employer in compliance with paragraph (b)(2) of 
this section.
* * * * *
0
3. In Sec.  1635.11, revise paragraphs (b)(1)(iii) and (iv) to read as 
follows:


Sec.  1635.11  Construction.

* * * * *
    (b) * * *
    (1) * * *
    (iii) Section 702(a)(1)(F) of ERISA (29 U.S.C. 1182(a)(1)(F)), 
section 2705(a)(6) of the PHS Act, as amended by section 1201 of the 
Affordable Care Act and section 9802(a)(1)(F) of the Internal Revenue 
Code (26 U.S.C. 9802(a)(1)(F)), which prohibit a group health plan or a 
health insurance issuer in the group or individual market from 
discriminating against individuals in eligibility and continued 
eligibility for benefits based on genetic information; or
    (iv) Section 702(b)(1) of ERISA (29 U.S.C. 1182(b)(1)), section 
2705(b)(1) of the PHS Act, as amended by section 1201 of the Affordable 
Care Act and section 9802(b)(1) of the Internal Revenue Code (26 U.S.C. 
9802(b)(1)), as such sections apply with respect to genetic information 
as a health status-related factor, which prohibit a group health plan 
or a health insurance issuer in the group or individual market from 
discriminating against individuals in premium or contribution rates 
under the plan or coverage based on genetic information.
* * * * *

    Dated: May 11, 2016.

    For the Commission:
Jenny R. Yang,
Chair.
[FR Doc. 2016-11557 Filed 5-16-16; 8:45 am]
 BILLING CODE 6570-01-P



                                                                     Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 95 / Tuesday, May 17, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                                  31143

                                                 transgender status, and sexual orientation),            regulations are included. Published                   Labor (DOL), Department of the
                                                 color, religion, national origin, or age.               elsewhere in this issue of the Federal                Treasury (Treasury), and Department of
                                                 Additionally, if a wellness program                     Register, the EEOC also issued a final                Health and Human Services (HHS)
                                                 requirement (such as a particular blood                 rule to amend the regulations and
                                                 pressure or glucose level or body mass index)                                                                 (referred to collectively as the tri-
                                                 disproportionately affects individuals on the           interpretive guidance implementing                    Departments).4 This final rule relates
                                                 basis of some protected characteristic, an              Title I of the Americans with                         specifically to the requirements of Title
                                                 employer may be able to avoid a disparate               Disabilities Act (ADA) that addresses                 II of GINA as they apply to employer-
                                                 impact claim by offering and providing a                the extent to which employers may use                 sponsored wellness programs, though
                                                 reasonable alternative standard.                        incentives to encourage employees to                  other applicable laws are discussed in
                                                 Section 1630.14(d)(6): Inapplicability of the           participate in wellness programs that                 some detail.
                                                 ADA’s Safe Harbor Provision                             ask them to respond to disability-related
                                                                                                         inquiries and/or undergo medical                         Congress enacted Title II of GINA to
                                                    Finally, section 1630.14(d)(6) states that                                                                 protect job applicants, current and
                                                 the ‘‘safe harbor’’ provision, set forth in             examinations.
                                                                                                                                                               former employees, labor union
                                                 section 501(c) of the ADA, 42 U.S.C.                    DATES: Effective date: This rule is                   members, and apprentices and trainees
                                                 12201(c), that allows insurers and benefit              effective July 18, 2016.
                                                 plans to classify, underwrite, and administer                                                                 from employment discrimination based
                                                                                                            Applicability date: This rule is
                                                 risks, does not apply to wellness programs,                                                                   on their genetic information.5 GINA
                                                                                                         applicable beginning on January 1,
                                                 even if such programs are part of a covered                                                                   generally restricts the acquisition and
                                                                                                         2017.
                                                 entity’s health plan. The safe harbor permits                                                                 disclosure of genetic information and
                                                 insurers and employers (as sponsors of health           FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:                      prohibits the use of genetic information
                                                 or other insurance benefits) to treat                   Christopher J. Kuczynski, Assistant                   in making employment decisions.6 The
                                                 individuals differently based on disability,            Legal Counsel, at (202) 663–4665                      EEOC issued implementing regulations
                                                 but only where justified according to                   (voice), or Kerry E. Leibig, Senior
                                                 accepted principles of risk classification
                                                                                                                                                               on November 9, 2010, to provide all
                                                                                                         Attorney Advisor, at (202) 663–4516                   persons subject to Title II of GINA
                                                 (some of which became unlawful subsequent
                                                                                                         (voice), or (202) 663–7026 (TTY). (These              additional guidance with regard to the
                                                 to passage of the ADA). See Senate Report at
                                                 85–86; House Education and Labor Report at              are not toll free numbers.) Requests for              law’s requirements.7
                                                 137–38. It does not apply simply because a              this rule in an alternative format should
                                                 covered entity asserts that it used                     be made to the Office of                              Discussion
                                                 information collected as part of a wellness             Communications and Legislative
                                                 program to estimate, or to try to reduce, its           Affairs, at (202) 663–4191 (voice) or                   Title II of GINA prohibits the use of
                                                 risks or health care costs.                             (202) 663–4494 (TTY). (These are not                  genetic information in making
                                                                                                         toll free numbers.)                                   employment decisions in all
                                                   Dated: May 11, 2016.
                                                                                                         SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
                                                                                                                                                               circumstances, with no exceptions. It
                                                   For the Commission:                                                                                         also restricts employers and other
                                                 Jenny R. Yang,                                          Commission issued a proposed rule in
                                                 Chair.
                                                                                                         the Federal Register on October 30,
                                                                                                                                                                  4 The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act,
                                                                                                         2015, for a 60-day notice and comment
                                                 [FR Doc. 2016–11558 Filed 5–16–16; 8:45 am]                                                                   Public Law 111–148, and the Health Care and
                                                                                                         period, which was extended for an                     Education Reconciliation Act, Public Law 111–152,
                                                 BILLING CODE 6570–01–P
                                                                                                         additional 30 days and ended on                       are known collectively as the Affordable Care Act.
                                                                                                         January 28, 2016. After consideration of              Section 1201 of the Affordable Care Act amended
                                                                                                         the public comments, the Commission                   and moved the nondiscrimination and wellness
                                                 EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY                                                                                  provisions of the Public Health Service (PHS) Act
                                                                                                         has revised portions of both the final                from section 2702 to section 2705 and extended the
                                                 COMMISSION
                                                                                                         rule and the preamble.                                nondiscrimination provisions to the individual
                                                                                                                                                               health insurance market. The Affordable Care Act
                                                 29 CFR Part 1635                                        Introduction                                          also added section 715(a)(1) to the Employee
                                                 RIN 3046–AB02                                             Several federal laws govern wellness                Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) and
                                                                                                                                                               section 9815(a)(1) to the Internal Revenue Code
                                                                                                         programs offered by employers.                        (Code) to incorporate the provisions of part A of
                                                 Genetic Information Nondiscrimination                   Employer-sponsored wellness programs                  title XXVII of the PHS Act, including PHS Act
                                                 Act                                                     must comply with Title II of the Genetic              section 2705, into ERISA and the Code.
                                                 AGENCY:  Equal Employment                               Information Nondiscrimination Act of                     5 Title I of GINA applies to genetic information

                                                                                                         2008 (GINA),1 Title I of the ADA,2 and                discrimination in health coverage (not
                                                 Opportunity Commission.                                                                                       employment), is applicable to group health plans
                                                                                                         other employment discrimination laws                  and health insurance issuers, and is administered
                                                 ACTION: Final rule.
                                                                                                         enforced by the EEOC. Employer-                       by the tri-Departments. Under Title I, group health
                                                 SUMMARY:     The Equal Employment                       sponsored wellness programs that are                  plans may include, as part of a HRA, questions
                                                                                                         part of, or provided by, a group health               regarding the manifestation of a disease or disorder
                                                 Opportunity Commission (EEOC or                                                                               of individuals covered under the plan, but not
                                                 Commission) is issuing a final rule to                  plan 3, or that are provided by a health              genetic information (defined to include genetic test
                                                 amend the regulations implementing                      insurance issuer offering group health                information about the individual or of family
                                                 Title II of the Genetic Information                     insurance in connection with a group                  members of the individual or the manifestation of
                                                                                                         health plan, must also comply with the                disease or disorder in family members of the
                                                 Nondiscrimination Act of 2008 as they                                                                         individual not covered under the plan). See 42
                                                 relate to employer-sponsored wellness                   Health Insurance Portability and                      U.S.C. 300gg–91(d)(16); see also 26 CFR 54.9802–
                                                 programs. This rule addresses the extent                Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA)                    3T(b)(2); 29 CFR 2590.702–1(b)(2); 45 CFR
                                                 to which an employer may offer an                       nondiscrimination provisions, as                      146.122(a)(3). This final rule, however, which is
                                                                                                         amended by the Affordable Care Act,                   specific to Title II, provides that all health
                                                 inducement to an employee for the
mstockstill on DSK3G9T082PROD with RULES2




                                                                                                                                                               information provided by a spouse to an employer
                                                 employee’s spouse to provide                            which is enforced by the Department of                as part of a HRA is genetic information with respect
                                                 information about the spouse’s                                                                                to the employee, even where both the employee and
                                                                                                           1 42 U.S.C. 2000ff–2000ff–11.                       spouse are covered by the plan.
                                                 manifestation of disease or disorder as
                                                                                                           2 42 U.S.C. 12101–12117.                               6 S. Rep. No. 110–48, at 10 (2007); H.R. Rep. No.
                                                 part of a health risk assessment (HRA)                    3 The term ‘‘group health plan’’ includes both      110–28, pt. 3, at 29 (2007).
                                                 administered in connection with an                      insured and self-insured group health plans, and is      7 See Regulations Under the Genetic Information
                                                 employer-sponsored wellness program.                    used interchangeably with the terms ‘‘health plan’’   Nondiscrimination Act of 2007, 75 FR 68,912 (Nov.
                                                 Several technical changes to the existing               and ‘‘the plan’’ in this Final Rule.                  9, 2010) (codified at 29 CFR pt. 1635).



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                                                 31144                 Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 95 / Tuesday, May 17, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                 entities covered by GINA 8 from                            genetic information about an applicant                     Although the EEOC received no
                                                 requesting, requiring, or purchasing                       or employee. One exception permits                      comments prior to the publication of the
                                                 genetic information, unless one or more                    employers that offer health or genetic                  Title II final rule in 2010 regarding how
                                                 of six narrow exceptions applies, and                      services, including such services offered               GINA’s restriction on employers’
                                                 strictly limits the disclosure of genetic                  as part of voluntary wellness                           acquiring genetic information interacts
                                                 information by GINA-covered entities.9                     programs,14 to request genetic                          with the practice of offering employees
                                                 The statute and the 2010 Title II final                    information as part of these programs, as               inducements where a spouse
                                                 rule define ‘‘genetic information’’ to                     long as certain specific requirements are               participates in an employer-sponsored
                                                 include: Information about an                              met.15 The regulations implementing                     wellness program, this question arose
                                                 individual’s genetic tests; information                    Title II currently make clear that one of               after publication of the Title II final rule
                                                 about the genetic tests of a family                        the requirements is that the employer-                  in 2010. Read one way, such a practice
                                                 member; information about the                              sponsored wellness program cannot                       could be interpreted to violate the 29
                                                 manifestation of a disease or disorder in                  condition inducements to employees on                   CFR 1635.8(b)(2)(ii) prohibition on
                                                 family members of an individual (i.e.,                     the provision of genetic information.16                 providing financial inducements in
                                                 family medical history); 10 requests for                   This requirement is derived from a                      return for an employee’s protected
                                                 and receipt of genetic services by an                      prohibition in Title I of GINA (which                   genetic information. This is because
                                                 individual or a family member; and                         applies to health plans and health                      information an employer seeks from a
                                                 genetic information about a fetus carried                  insurance issuers) against adjusting                    spouse (who is a ‘‘family member’’
                                                 by an individual or family member or of                    premium or contribution amounts on                      under GINA as set forth at 42 U.S.C.
                                                 an embryo legally held by the                              the basis of genetic information.17                     2000ff(4)(a)(ii) and 29 CFR 1635.3(a)(1))
                                                 individual or family member using                                                                                  about his or her manifestation of disease
                                                 assisted reproductive technology.11                          14 A wellness program, defined as a ‘‘program         or disorder is treated under GINA as
                                                 Family members of an individual                            offered by an employer that is designed to promote      requesting genetic information about the
                                                                                                            health or prevent disease,’’ is one type of health or
                                                 include someone who is a dependent of                      genetic service that an employer might offer. See
                                                                                                                                                                    employee. Although the EEOC’s original
                                                 an individual through marriage, birth,                     Section 2705(j)(1)(A) of the PHS Act, as amended        regulations specifically permitted
                                                 adoption, or placement for adoption and                    by the Affordable Care Act. A wellness program that     employers to seek information about
                                                 any other individual who is a first-,                      provides medical care (including genetic                manifestation of diseases or disorders in
                                                                                                            counseling) may constitute a group health plan
                                                 second-, third-, or fourth-degree relative                 required to comply with section 9802 of the Code,       employees’ family members who are
                                                 of the individual.12                                       26 U.S.C. 9802, section 702 of the ERISA, 29 U.S.C.     receiving health or genetic services from
                                                    There are only six limited                              1182, or section 2705 of the PHS Act (i.e., Title I     the employer, including such services
                                                 circumstances in which an employer 13                      of GINA). Regulations issued under these statutes       offered as part of a voluntary employer-
                                                                                                            address employer-sponsored wellness programs
                                                 may request, require, or purchase                          that collect genetic information. Moreover,             sponsored wellness program,18 the
                                                                                                            employer-sponsored wellness programs that               regulations did not say whether
                                                    8 Unless otherwise noted, the term ‘‘GINA’’ refers      condition rewards on an individual satisfying a         inducements could be provided in
                                                 to Title II of GINA.                                       standard related to a health factor must meet           exchange for such information. The
                                                    9 See 42 U.S.C. 2000ff–2000ff–11; see also 29 CFR       additional requirements. See 26 CFR 54.9802–1(f);
                                                 1635.4–1635.9.                                             29 CFR 2590.702(f); 45 CFR 146.121(f). As noted         Commission now finalizes the
                                                    10 Congress recognized ‘‘that a family medical          above, the EEOC has also issued a final rule            clarification that an employer may, in
                                                 history could be used as a surrogate for genetic           amending the regulations and interpretive guidance      certain circumstances, offer an
                                                 traits by a health plan or health insurance issuer.        implementing Title I of the ADA as they relate to       employee limited inducements for the
                                                 A consistent history of a heritable disease in a           employer-sponsored wellness programs. See 29 CFR
                                                                                                            1630.14, published elsewhere in this issue of the       employee’s spouse to provide
                                                 patient’s family may be viewed to indicate that the
                                                 patient himself or herself is at increased risk for that   Federal Register.                                       information about the spouse’s
                                                 disease.’’ For that reason, Congress believed it was         15 See 42 U.S.C. 2000ff–1(b)(2), 2000ff–2(b)(2),      manifestation of disease or disorder as
                                                 important to include family medical history in the         2000ff–3(b)(2), 2000ff–4(b)(2); see also 29 CFR         part of a HRA administered in
                                                 definition of ‘‘genetic information.’’ S. Rep. No.         1635.8(b)(2). Other health or genetic services
                                                                                                            include services such as an Employee Assistance
                                                                                                                                                                    connection with an employer-sponsored
                                                 110–48, at 28.
                                                    11 See 42 U.S.C. 2000ff(4), 2000ff–8(b); see also 29    Program or a health clinic that provides flu shots.     wellness program, provided that GINA’s
                                                 CFR 1635.3.                                                Under GINA, employers may request genetic               confidentiality requirements are
                                                    12 See 42 U.S.C. 2000ff(3)(A) (defining family          information as part of such health or genetic           observed and any information obtained
                                                 member for purposes of GINA to include a                   services, as long as the requirements of 29 CFR         is not used to discriminate against an
                                                 dependent within the meaning of section 701(f)(2)          1635.8(b)(2) are met.
                                                                                                              16 See 29 CFR 1635.8(b)(2)(ii). Consistent with the   employee.19 However, this narrow
                                                 of ERISA); see also 29 CFR 1635.3(a). The
                                                 Commission’s definition of ‘‘dependent’’ is solely         requirements of paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this section,    exception to the general rule that
                                                 for purposes of interpreting Title II of GINA, and         a covered entity may not offer an inducement for        inducements may not be offered in
                                                 is not relevant to interpreting the term ‘‘dependent’’     individuals to provide genetic information, but may     exchange for an employee’s genetic
                                                 under Title I of GINA or under section 701(f)(2) of        offer inducements for completion of HRAs that
                                                 ERISA and the parallel provisions of the PHS Act           include questions about family medical history or
                                                                                                                                                                    information does not extend to genetic
                                                 and the Code. See the preamble to the EEOC’s               other genetic information, provided the covered         information about a spouse or to
                                                 regulations implementing Title II of GINA at 75 FR         entity makes clear, in language reasonably likely to
                                                 68,914, note 5 (and the preamble to the regulations        be understood by those completing the HRA, that         discussion of how Titles I and II of GINA allow
                                                 implementing Title I of GINA at 74 FR 51,664,              the inducement will be made available whether or        employers and plans to use financial inducements
                                                 51,666) for additional information.                        not the participant answers questions regarding         to promote employee wellness and healthy
                                                    13 GINA applies to individuals and covered              genetic information.                                    lifestyles, see the preamble to the 2010 Title II final
                                                 entities in addition to employees and employers,             17 Title I of GINA applies to genetic information     rule at 75 FR 68,923 (Nov. 9, 2010).
                                                 including employment agencies, unions and their            discrimination in health coverage and not                  18 See 29 CFR 1635.8(c)(2).

                                                 members, and joint-labor management training and           employment. The Departments responsible for                19 One industry group argued that using the
                                                 apprenticeship programs. See 42 U.S.C. 2000ff–1,           enforcing Title I determined that permitting            phrase ‘‘current or past health status’’ to describe
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                                                 2000ff–2, 2000ff–3, 2000ff–4 (describing the               employers to condition wellness program                 the types of questions to spouses that could include
                                                 prohibited practices of each of these entities); see       inducements on the provision of genetic                 inducements was confusing because not all
                                                 also 29 CFR 1635.2(b) (defining ‘‘covered entity’’),       information would undermine Title I’s prohibition       information about a spouse’s current or past health
                                                 1635.4 (describing prohibited practices). For the          on adjusting premium or contribution amounts on         status meets the definition of genetic information.
                                                 sake of readability, and recognizing that employers        the basis of genetic information. For more on the       In order to clarify that the rule only applies to
                                                 will be the covered entity most likely to offer            protections provided by Title I of GINA, see DOL—       questions asked of the spouse that meet the
                                                 employer-sponsored wellness programs, the                  Employee Benefits Security Administration, FAQs         definition of genetic information, the final rule will
                                                 preamble will refer to employers and employees             on the Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act        replace the phrase ‘‘current or past health status’’
                                                 throughout.                                                (2010), www.dol.gov/ebsa/pdf/faq-GINA.pdf. For a        with ‘‘manifestation of disease or disorder.’’



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                                                                      Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 95 / Tuesday, May 17, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                                 31145

                                                 information about manifestation of                         • Explained that any request for                      • Whether there are best practices or
                                                 diseases or disorders in, or genetic                    current or past health status information             procedural safeguards to ensure that
                                                 information about, an employee’s                        from an employee’s spouse must                        information about spouses’ current
                                                 children.                                               comply in all other respects with 29                  health status is protected from
                                                                                                         CFR 1635.8(b)(2) concerning requests                  disclosure.
                                                 Background on the Notice of Proposed                                                                             • Whether the regulation should
                                                                                                         for genetic information that are part of
                                                 Rulemaking on GINA and Employer-                                                                              restrict the collection of any genetic
                                                                                                         voluntary health or genetic services
                                                 Sponsored Wellness Programs                                                                                   information by an employer-sponsored
                                                                                                         offered by an employer.
                                                    The Commission drafted a Notice of                      • Explained that an employer may                   wellness program to only the minimum
                                                 Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) that was                     not require employees (or employees’                  necessary to directly support the
                                                 circulated to the Office of Management                  spouses or dependents covered by the                  specific wellness activities,
                                                 and Budget for review (pursuant to                      employees’ health plan) to agree to the               interventions, and advice provided
                                                 Executive Order 12866) and to federal                   sale, or waive the confidentiality, of                through the program—namely
                                                 executive branch agencies for comment                   their genetic information as a condition              information collected through the
                                                 (pursuant to Executive Order 12067).20                  for receiving an inducement or                        program’s HRA and biometric screening.
                                                 The NPRM was then published in the                      participating in an employer-sponsored                Should programs be prohibited from
                                                 Federal Register on October 30, 2015 for                wellness program.                                     accessing genetic information from
                                                 a 60-day public comment period,21                          • Added an example making it clear                 other sources, such as patient claims
                                                 which was extended for an additional                    that a request for current or past health             data and medical records data.
                                                 30 days 22 and ended on January 28,                     status information from an employee’s                    • Whether employers offer (or are
                                                 2016.                                                   spouse who is participating in a                      likely to offer in the future) wellness
                                                    The NPRM sought comment on the                       wellness program does not constitute an               programs outside of a group health plan
                                                 proposed revisions to the GINA                          unlawful request for genetic information              or group health insurance coverage that
                                                 regulation which:                                       about the employee.                                   use inducements to encourage
                                                    • Clarified that an employer may                        • Made several technical changes to                employees’ spouses to provide
                                                 offer, as part of its health plan, a limited            correct a previous drafting error and to              information about current or past health
                                                 inducement (in the form of a reward or                  add references, where needed, to HIPAA                status as part of a HRA, and the extent
                                                 penalty) to an employee whose spouse                    and the Affordable Care Act.                          to which the GINA regulations should
                                                 (1) is covered under the employee’s                        Additionally, the Commission                       allow inducements provided as part of
                                                 health plan; (2) receives health or                     specifically sought comments on several               such programs.
                                                 genetic services offered by the                         other issues, including:                              Summary of Revisions and Response to
                                                 employer, including as part of a                           • Whether employers that offer                     Comments
                                                 wellness program; and (3) provides                      inducements to encourage the spouses
                                                 information about his or her current or                 of employees to disclose information                     During the 60-day comment period,
                                                 past health status.                                     about current or past health status must              which was extended by 30 days, the
                                                    • Explained that the total inducement                also offer similar inducements to                     Commission received 3,003 23
                                                 for an employee and spouse to                           persons who choose not to disclose such               comments on the NPRM from a wide
                                                 participate in an employer-sponsored                    information but, who instead, provide                 spectrum of stakeholders, including,
                                                 wellness program that is part of a group                certification from a medical professional             among others: Individuals, including
                                                 health plan and collects information                    stating that the spouse is under the care             individuals with disabilities; disability
                                                 about the spouse’s current or past health               of a physician and that any medical                   rights and other advocacy organizations
                                                 status may not exceed 30 percent of the                 risks identified by that physician are                and their members; members of
                                                 total cost of the plan in which the                     under active treatment.                               Congress; employer associations and
                                                 employee and any dependents are                            • Whether the proposed authorization               industry groups; and health insurance
                                                 enrolled.                                               requirements apply only to employer-                  issuers, third party administrators, and
                                                    • Described how inducements must                     sponsored wellness programs that offer                wellness vendors. The comments from
                                                 be apportioned between the employee                     more than de minimis rewards or                       individuals included 2,911 similar, but
                                                 and spouse.                                             penalties to employees whose spouses                  not uniform, letters—almost all of
                                                    • Explained that inducements may be                  provide information about current or                  which were submitted by a national
                                                 financial or in kind, consistent with                   past health status as part of a HRA.                  organization that supports women and
                                                                                                                                                               families. Most of the comments (3,000)
                                                 regulations issued by DOL, HHS, and                        • Which best practices or procedural
                                                 Treasury to implement the wellness                                                                            were submitted through the United
                                                                                                         safeguards ensure that employer-
                                                 program provisions in the Affordable                                                                          States Government’s electronic docket
                                                                                                         sponsored wellness programs are
                                                 Care Act. For that reason, the proposed                                                                       system, Regulations.gov, under EEOC–
                                                                                                         designed to promote health or prevent
                                                 rule deleted the term ‘‘financial’’ where                                                                     2015–0009. The remaining three
                                                                                                         disease and do not operate to shift costs
                                                 it appeared as a modifier for the term                                                                        comments were mailed or faxed to the
                                                                                                         to employees with spouses who have
                                                 ‘‘inducement’’ in 29 CFR 1635.8(b)(2).                                                                        Executive Secretariat.
                                                                                                         health impairments or stigmatized
                                                                                                                                                                  The Commission has reviewed and
                                                                                                         conditions.
                                                                                                                                                               considered each of the comments in
                                                   20 While there are differences between the               • Whether the rule should include
                                                 definitions and requirements for wellness programs                                                            preparing this final rule. The first
                                                                                                         more specific guidance to employers
                                                 set forth in the Affordable Care Act, PHS Act,                                                                section of this preamble begins by
                                                                                                         regarding how to implement the
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                                                 ERISA, the Code, and Title II of GINA, this final                                                             clarifying the purpose of this rule. It
                                                 rule is being issued after review by and consultation   requirements of 29 CFR 1635.9(a) for
                                                                                                                                                               goes on to address general comments
                                                 with the tri-Departments.                               electronically stored records. If so, what
                                                                                                                                                               about the interaction between GINA and
                                                   21 Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act, 80
                                                                                                         procedures are needed to achieve
                                                 FR 66853 (proposed October 30, 2015) (to be                                                                   the wellness program provisions of
                                                                                                         GINA’s goal of ensuring the
                                                 codified at 29 CFR part 1635).
                                                   22 Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act, 80      confidentiality of genetic information                  23 One of these comments was withdrawn when

                                                 FR 75956 (proposed December, 7, 2015) (to be            with respect to electronic records stored             the commenter submitted a ‘‘corrected’’ version of
                                                 codified at 29 CFR part 1635).                          by employers.                                         the comment.



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                                                 31146               Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 95 / Tuesday, May 17, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                 HIPAA, as amended by the Affordable                     expressed concern that the EEOC was                     Care Act, and Title I of GINA.25
                                                 Care Act; interaction between GINA and                  abandoning its prior position that GINA                 Accordingly, after consideration of all of
                                                 the ADA; the final rule’s applicability                 prohibits financial inducements in                      the comments, the Commission
                                                 date; the rule’s treatment of                           return for all genetic information, while               reaffirms its conclusion that allowing
                                                 inducements for information from the                    employer and industry groups                            inducements in return for a spouse
                                                 children of employees; the                              commented that the proposed rule’s                      providing information about his or her
                                                 confidentiality protections of the rule;                limitation on inducements was                           manifestation of disease and disorder,
                                                 tobacco cessation programs; and the                     inconsistent with the wellness program                  while limiting inducements to prevent
                                                 Commission’s burden calculations.                       rules under section 2705(j) of the PHS                  economic coercion, is the best way to
                                                    The second section discusses                         Act. Disability rights groups further                   effectuate the purposes of the wellness
                                                 comments submitted in response to                       noted that there was no need to alter                   provisions of GINA and HIPAA.
                                                 questions the NPRM asked about several                  Title II of GINA’s prohibition on                       Interaction With the ADA and Other
                                                 issues, as noted above.                                 financial incentives in order to conform                Equal Employment Opportunity (EEO)
                                                    The third section addresses comments                 to laws that regulate insurance                         Laws
                                                 regarding specific provisions of the rule.              discrimination, given that Title II of
                                                                                                                                                                    The Commission received a number
                                                 General Comments                                        GINA is about employment
                                                                                                                                                                 of comments requesting that the final
                                                                                                         discrimination, and pointed out that the
                                                 Purpose of the Rule                                                                                             rule be issued jointly with the final
                                                                                                         tri-Department wellness regulations
                                                                                                                                                                 ADA wellness rule, a suggestion that
                                                    Many comments submitted by                           explicitly state that GINA imposes
                                                                                                                                                                 has been adopted.
                                                 individuals objected to a rule that                     separate and additional restrictions.                      Comments raising more substantive
                                                 would allow employers to charge                            Although the Commission recognizes                   concerns about the interaction between
                                                 employees more for benefits based on                    that compliance with the standards in                   the ADA and GINA focused on the
                                                 the illness of family members, impose                   HIPAA, as amended by the Affordable                     desire for alignment of the inducement
                                                 stiff penalties on people that do not                   Care Act, is not determinative of                       limits available under the statutes,
                                                 measure up to certain health guidelines,                compliance with Title II of GINA,24 we                  suggesting that the incentive limit under
                                                 allow employers to fire or otherwise                    believe that the final rule interprets                  the ADA, which is based on the total
                                                 adversely treat employees based on                      GINA in a manner that reflects both                     cost of self-only coverage, be revised to
                                                 medical information collected through                   GINA’s goal of providing strong                         correspond with the inducement limit
                                                 employer-sponsored wellness programs,                   protections against employment                          proposed in the GINA NPRM, which is
                                                 and/or allow ‘‘metrics’’ that would harm                discrimination based on the possibility                 based on the total cost of coverage for
                                                 millions of people with disabilities.                   that an employee or the employee’s                      the plan in which the employee and any
                                                 This rule, however, is more limited in                  family member may develop a disease                     dependents are enrolled. The
                                                 scope. Instead, it addresses the very                   or disorder in the future and HIPAA’s                   Commission declines to adopt this
                                                 limited question of the extent to which                 provisions promoting wellness                           recommendation, however, because the
                                                 an employer may offer inducements to                    programs. Additionally, as we pointed                   ADA does not apply to the inducements
                                                 an employee for the employee’s spouse                   out in the preamble to the proposed                     employer-sponsored wellness programs
                                                 to provide information about the                        rule, allowing limited inducements for                  offer in connection with spousal
                                                 spouse’s manifestation of disease or                    spouses to provide information about                    participation. As discussed in more
                                                 disorder as part of a HRA administered                  manifested diseases or disorders (but                   detail below, this final GINA rule will,
                                                 in connection with an employer-                         not their own genetic information) as                   consistent with the ADA final rule, limit
                                                 sponsored wellness program. The                         part of a HRA administered in                           the maximum share of the inducement
                                                 absolute prohibition on the use of                      connection with an employer-sponsored                   attributable to the employee’s
                                                 genetic information to make                             wellness program is consistent with                     participation in an employer-sponsored
                                                 employment decisions enshrined in                       HIPAA, as amended by the Affordable                     wellness program (or multiple
                                                 Title II of GINA remains intact, as do the                                                                      employer-sponsored wellness programs
                                                 existing protections of Title I of the                    24 As the tri-Department wellness regulations         that request such information) to up to
                                                 ADA, which prohibits discrimination on                  acknowledge, the Affordable Care Act did not            30 percent of the cost of self-only
                                                 the basis of disability.                                amend or overturn GINA, and compliance with the         coverage. Furthermore, the maximum
                                                                                                         Affordable Care Act and its implementing                total inducement for a spouse to provide
                                                 Interaction Between GINA and HIPAA’s                    regulations is not determinative of compliance with
                                                                                                         GINA. See Incentives for Nondiscriminatory              information about his or her
                                                 Wellness Program Provisions
                                                                                                         Wellness Programs in Group Health Plans, 78 FR          manifestation of disease or disorder will
                                                    The Commission received comments                     33158, 33168 (June 3, 2013). A publication issued       also be 30 percent of the total cost of
                                                 expressing support for and/or concerns                  jointly by the tri-Departments further explains that    (employee) self-only coverage, so that
                                                                                                         a wellness program that complies with the tri-
                                                 about employer-sponsored wellness                       Departments’ wellness program regulations does          the combined total inducement will be
                                                 programs. For example, many                             not necessarily comply with any other provision of      no more than twice the cost of 30
                                                 commenters stated that although                         the PHS Act, the Code, ERISA, (including the            percent of self-only coverage.
                                                 properly designed employer-sponsored                    Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act             An advocacy group representing older
                                                                                                         (COBRA) continuation provisions), or any other
                                                 wellness programs have the potential to                 state or federal law, such as the ADA, or the privacy   individuals commented that protections
                                                 help employees become healthier and                     and security obligations of HIPAA, where                similar to those proposed in the ADA
                                                 bring down health care costs, they                      applicable. Similarly, the fact that an employer-       wellness NPRM against conditioning
                                                 believe that these programs also carry                  sponsored wellness program meets the                    access to employer-provided health
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                                                                                                         requirements of the ADA is not determinative of
                                                 serious potential for discrimination in                 compliance with the PHS Act, ERISA, or the Code.        insurance on the provision of medical
                                                 ways already prohibited by GINA and                     See DOL—Employee Benefits Security                      information to an employer-sponsored
                                                 other civil rights laws, by allowing                    Administration, FAQs about the Affordable Care          wellness program and on retaliation
                                                 employers to coerce employees into                      Act Implementation (part XXV), Question 2 (2015),       against those who do not participate
                                                                                                         http://www.dol.gov/ebsa/pdf/faq-aca25.pdf and
                                                 providing genetic information (as well                  https://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/Resources/Fact-Sheets-        should be included in the GINA final
                                                 as other health information). Disability                and-FAQs/Downloads/Tri-agency-Wellness-FAQS-
                                                 rights and health advocacy groups                       4-16-15pdf-AdobeAcrobat-Pro.pdf.                         25 See   80 FR at 66857, supra note 20.



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                                                                      Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 95 / Tuesday, May 17, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                                   31147

                                                 rule. Protections in the statute and the                to determine the level of inducement                     Commission’s argument that health
                                                 existing GINA regulations make clear                    permitted under this regulation. So, for                 information about a child is more likely
                                                 that an employer may not use genetic                    example, if the plan year for the health                 to reveal genetic information about an
                                                 information to make employment                          plan used to calculate the permissible                   employee, one commenter noted that
                                                 decisions, including decisions about                    inducement limit begins on January 1,                    this does not support the distinction
                                                 benefits.26 Both the statute and the                    2017, that is the date on which the                      made in the proposed rule because the
                                                 existing regulations also provide that it               provisions of this rule governing                        same cannot be said of health
                                                 is unlawful for an employer to                          inducements apply to the employer-                       information about a spouse and adopted
                                                 discriminate against any individual                     sponsored wellness program. If the plan                  children. Commenters also asked for
                                                 because that individual has opposed                     year of the plan used to calculate the                   clarification of whether the prohibition
                                                 any act or practice made unlawful by                    level of inducements begins on March 1,                  applied to the current or past health
                                                 Title II of GINA.27 We agree, however,                  2017, the provisions on inducements                      status information of all children,
                                                 that it would improve the final rule                    will apply to the employer-sponsored                     including children up to the age of 26
                                                 specifically to provide that it is a                    wellness program as of that date. For                    who are permitted to remain on their
                                                 violation of Title II of GINA for an                    this purpose, the second lowest cost                     parents’ health plans, or just minor
                                                 employer to deny access to health                       Silver Plan is treated as having a                       children, with some urging the
                                                 insurance or any package of health                      calendar year plan year.                                 Commission to extend the prohibition
                                                 insurance benefits to an employee and/                    All other provisions of this final rule                and others arguing that children
                                                 or his or her family members, or to                     are clarifications of existing obligations               between the ages of 18 and 26 were not
                                                 retaliate against an employee, based on                 that apply at, and prior to, issuance of                 in need of this additional protection and
                                                 a spouse’s refusal to provide                           this final rule.28                                       would benefit from participation in an
                                                 information about his or her                            Prohibition on Inducements for                           employer-sponsored wellness program.
                                                 manifestation of disease or disorder to                                                                             The Commission maintains its
                                                                                                         Information From Children of
                                                 an employer-sponsored wellness                                                                                   conclusion that the information about
                                                                                                         Employees
                                                 program. We have added clarification to                                                                          the manifestation of a disease or
                                                 the final rule at § 1635.8(b)(2)(v).                      A number of advocacy groups,                           disorder in an employee’s child can
                                                    Another advocacy group whose                         employer groups, and industry groups,                    more easily lead to genetic
                                                 mission is to protect the rights of                     in addition to members of Congress,                      discrimination against an employee
                                                 women and girls asked that the final                    submitted comments concerning the                        than information about an employee’s
                                                 rule include language making clear that                 Commission’s proposal that no                            spouse. Even where the information
                                                 in addition to complying with the                       inducement be permitted in return for                    provided concerns an adopted child, it
                                                 requirements of the final rule,                         the current or past health status                        is unlikely that a wellness program will
                                                 employers must abide by other                           information or the genetic information                   know whether the child is biological or
                                                 nondiscrimination provisions,                           of employees’ children. Two                              adopted, and the information may
                                                 including, for example, Title VII of the                commenters, pointing to the fact that                    therefore be used to make predictions
                                                 Civil Rights Act of 1964. We have not                   Title II of GINA defines ‘‘family                        about an employee’s health.
                                                 added any language to the final rule on                 members’’ to include both spouses and                    Consequently, the final rule provides
                                                 this topic because the existing                         children, argued that there was no basis                 that no inducements are permitted in
                                                 regulations already state that nothing                  for making a distinction between                         return for information about the
                                                 contained in § 1635.8(b)(2) limits the                  spouses and children and that,                           manifestation of disease or disorder of
                                                 rights or protections of an individual                  therefore, no inducements should be                      an employee’s children and makes no
                                                 under the ADA, or other applicable civil                permitted in return for current or past                  distinction between adult and minor
                                                 rights laws, or under HIPAA, as                         health information of either. Others                     children or between biological and
                                                 amended by GINA. We have made                           argued that prohibiting inducements in                   adopted children.
                                                 technical revisions to this provision due               return for past or current health                           The fact that the final rule treats
                                                 to the changes made to the renumbering                  information of children conflicts with                   health information about spouses and
                                                 of other provisions.                                    the Affordable Care Act’s requirement                    children differently with respect to
                                                                                                         that employers who offer health                          wellness program inducements,
                                                 Applicability Date                                      insurance coverage to dependents of                      however, does not alter the statutory
                                                    Employer associations and industry                   employees must offer coverage to                         definition of family member, which
                                                 groups submitted comments regarding                     dependents up to age 26 and that,                        includes both spouses and children. Nor
                                                 the effective date of the final rule,                   therefore, inducements should be                         does the distinction, as suggested by
                                                 recommending that it allow enough                       permitted in return for current or past                  some commenters, mean that employers
                                                 time for employers to bring their                       health information from both spouses                     are prohibited from offering health or
                                                 wellness programs into compliance, that                 and children. Although some                              genetic services (including participation
                                                 it be issued jointly with the ADA                       commenters agreed with the                               in an employer-sponsored wellness
                                                 wellness rule, and that it not be applied                                                                        program) to an employee’s children on
                                                                                                            28 Prior EEOC interpretations set forth in the 2010
                                                 retroactively. The Commission agrees                                                                             a voluntary basis. They may do so, but
                                                                                                         final rule implementing Title II of GINA,
                                                 and concludes that the provisions of                    Regulations Under the Genetic Information
                                                                                                                                                                  may not offer any inducement in
                                                 § 1635.8(b)(2)(iii) related to wellness                 Nondiscrimination Act of 2007, 75 FR 68912 (Nov.         exchange for information about the
                                                 program inducements will apply only                     9, 2010) (codified at 29 CFR part 1635), and the         manifestation of any disease or disorder
                                                                                                         proposed rule on GINA and employer-sponsored             in the child.29
                                                 prospectively to employer-sponsored
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                                                                                                         wellness programs, Genetic Information
                                                 wellness programs as of the first day of                Nondiscrimination Act, 80 FR 66853 (proposed Oct.
                                                                                                                                                                     The Commission agrees with
                                                 the first plan year that begins on or after             30, 2015) (to be codified at 29 CFR part 1635), may      commenters who suggested that the
                                                 January 1, 2017, for the health plan used               be considered in determining whether inducements         final rule should clarify that the
                                                                                                         provided prior to this applicability date for an         prohibition on inducements applies to
                                                                                                         employee’s spouse or other dependents to provide
                                                   26 See 42 U.S.C. 2000ff–1(a), 2000ff–2(a), 2000ff–
                                                                                                         information about their manifested diseases or
                                                                                                                                                                  adult children. The possibility that
                                                 3(a), 2000ff–4(a); 29 CFR 1635.4.                       disorders as part of an employer-sponsored
                                                   27 See 42 U.S.C. 2000ff–8(c); 29 CFR 1635.7.          wellness program comply with GINA.                        29 See   29 CFR 1635.8(b)(2)(A)(iii).



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                                                 31148               Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 95 / Tuesday, May 17, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                 information about a child could be used                 individual participating in the                        make sense as best practices, such as
                                                 to discriminate against an employee on                  employer-sponsored wellness program                    allowing an individual to challenge the
                                                 the basis of genetic information is not                 if that individual stops participating and             accuracy of genetic information within
                                                 diminished by the age of the child                      requests that his or her genetic                       the employer’s possession, the
                                                 whose information is provided.                          information be deleted; and prohibiting                Commission does not believe it is
                                                 Therefore, the rule does not distinguish                the storage of individually identifiable               necessary to add to the already stringent
                                                 between minor children and those 18                     information obtained by the wellness                   confidentiality requirements that exist
                                                 years of age and older, and makes                       program on work computers, servers, or                 in the regulations.
                                                 explicit that the prohibition extends to                paper files. Another commenter noted
                                                                                                                                                                Tobacco Cessation
                                                 adult children. This clarification is                   that the rule should include
                                                 being made to 29 CFR                                    confidentiality protections for health                   Several commenters asked that the
                                                 1635.8(b)(2)(A)(iii).                                   information provided by spouses who                    Commission clarify its position on
                                                                                                         do not want that information to fall into              GINA’s application to tobacco-related
                                                 Confidentiality Protections                                                                                    employer-sponsored wellness programs,
                                                                                                         the hands of the employee, due, for
                                                    The Commission received numerous                     example, to domestic violence.                         such as smoking cessation programs. In
                                                 comments from individuals and                              In response, the Commission notes                   response, we reaffirm that the
                                                 advocacy groups asking that we                          that Title II of GINA and the existing                 inducement rules in § 1635.8(b)(2) apply
                                                 strengthen the confidentiality                          regulations implementing it include                    only to health and genetic services that
                                                 protections of the rule, especially given               specific confidentiality provisions                    request genetic information. An
                                                 that the availability of inducements in                 which require employers and other                      employer-sponsored wellness program
                                                 return for certain genetic information                  covered entities that possess genetic                  does not request genetic information
                                                 would likely mean that more genetic                     information to maintain it in medical                  when it asks the spouse of an employee
                                                 information will end up in the hands of                 files (including where the information                 whether he or she uses tobacco or
                                                 employer-sponsored wellness programs.                   exists in electronic forms or files) that              ceased using tobacco upon completion
                                                 Commenters questioned how employer-                     are separate from personnel files and                  of a wellness program or when it
                                                 sponsored wellness programs would use                   treat such information as a confidential               requires a spouse to take a blood test to
                                                 the information, to whom they would                     medical record. These provisions                       determine nicotine levels, as these are
                                                 disclose and/or sell it, and how they                   prohibit the disclosure of genetic                     not requests for information about the
                                                 would ensure that it remained                           information except in six very limited                 spouse’s manifestation of disease or
                                                 confidential. One commenter further                     circumstances.30 The provision which                   disorder.
                                                 noted that many people erroneously                      allows employers to acquire genetic                    Burden
                                                 assume that the privacy protections of                  information as part of health or genetic
                                                 HIPAA apply to all employer-sponsored                   services such as employer-sponsored                       One commenter asserted that the
                                                 wellness programs and therefore ‘‘may                   wellness programs further requires that                EEOC underestimated the burden the
                                                 let their privacy guard down.’’ Some of                 the authorization an individual must                   proposed rule would impose on
                                                 these commenters provided specific                      sign explain the restrictions on the                   employers, arguing that the rule was an
                                                 examples of ways in which employer-                     disclosure of that information; that                   economically significant one that would
                                                 sponsored wellness programs were not                    individually identifiable genetic                      have an annual effect on the economy
                                                 maintaining, or might not maintain in                   information is provided only to the                    of $100 million or more. Among other
                                                 the future, the confidentiality of genetic              individual receiving the services and                  things, the commenter argued that the
                                                 information in their possession—                        the licensed health care professionals or              EEOC underestimated training,
                                                 pointing to, for example, advances in                   board certified genetic counselors                     compliance review, and program
                                                 technology that allow for the re-                       involved in providing those services;                  revision costs; failed to include
                                                 identification and de-aggregation of                    and that any individually identifiable                 ‘‘familiarization’’ costs; and failed to
                                                 unidentifiable and aggregate data that                  genetic information is only available for              provide necessary empirical support for
                                                 some employer-sponsored wellness                        purposes of the health or genetic                      various conclusions. We disagree.
                                                 programs are taking or might take                       services and is not disclosed to the                      The proposed rule appropriately
                                                 advantage of—and/or made specific                       employer except in aggregate terms.31                  estimated the training cost by using
                                                 suggestions on how GINA’s                               The Commission intends to continue its                 wage data from the Bureau of Labor
                                                 confidentiality protections could be                    vigorous enforcement of these                          Statistics indicating a median $49.41
                                                 improved. These suggestions included,                   requirements and believes that they                    per hour wage for human resource
                                                 among other ideas: Adding a                             already provide strong protections                     management professionals.34 Although
                                                 requirement that individuals have the                   against unlawful disclosure of genetic                 the commenter argues that this rate
                                                 right to receive copies of all personal                 information provided as part of                        should be tripled to reflect ‘‘fully
                                                 information collected about them as part                employer-sponsored wellness                            loaded’’ hourly rates paid by the
                                                 of an employer-sponsored wellness                       programs.32 Some of the ideas offered by               government to private contractors for
                                                 program, to challenge the accuracy and                  advocacy groups as best practices, such                professional labor, actual hourly wages
                                                 completeness of that information, and to                as giving individuals the right to receive             of human resource professionals better
                                                 obtain a list of parties with whom that                 copies of genetic information collected                estimate the economic costs of training.
                                                 information was shared and a                            about them, are already requirements of                The fully loaded hourly rate
                                                 description of the compensation or                      the regulation.33 Although others may                  inappropriately includes coverage of the
                                                 consideration received for that                                                                                private contractor’s fixed costs and, as a
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                                                 disclosure; providing that covered                        30 See 42 U.S.C. 2000ff–5; 29 CFR 1635.9.            result, will erroneously bias the
                                                 entities are strictly liable for any                      31 See 42 U.S.C. 2000ff–1(b)(2), 2000ff–2(b)(2),     estimated economic impact. Costs such
                                                 confidentiality breaches and are not                    2000ff–3(b)(2), 2000ff–4(b)(2); 29 CFR
                                                                                                         1635.8(b)(2)(i).                                          34 The EEOC estimated that a covered entity will
                                                 permitted to disclaim liability for harms                 32 Nothing in this rule is intended to affect the
                                                                                                                                                                train three human resource management
                                                 that result from sharing data; requiring                ability of a health oversight agency to receive data   professionals, for one hour each. The estimated cost
                                                 wellness programs to delete all genetic                 under HIPAA. See 45 CFR 164.501 and 164.512(d).        was $49.41 per person and $148.23 per covered
                                                 information obtained about an                             33 See 29 CFR 1635.9(b)(1).                          entity.



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                                                                     Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 95 / Tuesday, May 17, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                                  31149

                                                 as a private contractor’s office rent and               Comments Responding to Questions in                     already provide a waiver standard that
                                                 marketing budget are not an economic                    the NPRM                                                is sufficient to ensure individuals can
                                                 impact of the regulation. As such, the                     One commenter argued that the                        earn full inducements even if an
                                                 estimate of the marginal economic                       Commission could not take any action                    impairment makes it difficult to meet
                                                 impact of the regulation excludes firms’                on issues described only in the portion                 the requirements of a health-contingent
                                                 fixed costs because those costs are                     of the NPRM that asked questions                        wellness program.
                                                 incurred whether or not the GINA                        because the mere posing of a question                      The Commission has decided that
                                                 regulation is revised. Moreover, in most                does not provide the regulated                          although some spouses may already be
                                                 cases, a covered entity’s compliance                    community with sufficient information                   aware of their particular risk factors, a
                                                 effort will be conducted by its own                     to adequately assess the impact of any                  general certification or attestation that
                                                 human resource management                               eventual proposal as required by the                    they are receiving medical care for those
                                                 professionals. The median wage of                       Administrative Procedure Act (APA).                     risks would limit the effectiveness of
                                                 human resource management                               We note, however, that notice is                        employer-sponsored wellness programs
                                                 professionals therefore reasonably                      sufficient under the APA when the final                 that the Affordable Care Act intended to
                                                 estimates the economic impact of up to                  rule ‘‘follow[s] logically’’ from the                   promote. For example, employers may
                                                 three person-hours of staff time. The                   notice so that ‘‘interested parties [are                use aggregate information from HRAs to
                                                 EEOC’s estimates of three human                         allowed] a fair opportunity to comment’’                determine the prevalence of certain
                                                 resource professionals per covered                      upon what becomes the final rule.35 The                 conditions in their workforce and in the
                                                 entity and one hour per person are                      NPRM described the ‘‘subjects and                       families of their workforce for the
                                                 cautious and reflect agency experience                  issues involved’’ as required by the                    purpose of designing specific programs
                                                 and expertise.                                          APA.36 The fact that the EEOC did                       aimed at improving the health of
                                                                                                         receive comments on all seven of the                    employees and spouses with those
                                                    In response to the commenter’s                                                                               conditions.38 The Commission
                                                 argument that the projected costs should                ‘‘subjects and issues’’ raised in the
                                                                                                         questions demonstrates that the notice                  concludes that protections in the final
                                                 have included the hiring of a private                                                                           rule—such as the requirement that
                                                 contractor to provide training, we                      was adequate.37
                                                                                                                                                                 employer-sponsored wellness programs
                                                 reiterate that human resource                           Certification in Lieu of Spouse Providing               that collect genetic information be
                                                 professionals will be able to learn what                Information About Manifestation of                      reasonably designed to promote health
                                                 is necessary for compliance with the                    Disease or Disorder                                     and prevent disease and the existing
                                                 rule by reading the EEOC’s freely                                                                               confidentiality requirements—provide
                                                 provided technical assistance                              Individuals, including individuals
                                                                                                         with disabilities and their advocates, as               spouses with significant protections
                                                 documents, or participating in our                                                                              without adopting a medical certification
                                                 general or GINA-specific outreach                       well as one insurance company and one
                                                                                                         industry group, commented that                          as an alternative to providing
                                                 programs, many of which are free.                                                                               information about the manifestation of
                                                                                                         spouses should be allowed to provide a
                                                    Although the commenter asserts that                  certification from a medical professional               disease or disorder.
                                                 ‘‘great effort’’ will be expended by                    stating that the spouse is under the care               Applying Authorization Requirements
                                                 entities that are not covered by Title II               of a physician and that any medical                     Only to Employer-Sponsored Wellness
                                                 of GINA in reading the rule to ensure                   risks identified by that physician are                  Programs That Offer More Than De
                                                 that they are not covered and that these                under active treatment, instead of being                Minimis Inducements for Information
                                                 costs should be included, the proposed                  required to answer questions about                      About Spouses’ Manifestation of
                                                 regulation does not alter long                          manifested diseases or disorders. By                    Disease or Disorder
                                                 established coverage requirements of                    contrast, most of the health insurance
                                                 Title II of GINA, and it is unlikely that               issuers, industry groups, and employer                     Most of the individuals and advocacy
                                                 entities that have never before                         groups that commented argued that                       groups who commented on this issue
                                                 concerned themselves with compliance                    allowing a spouse to receive the same                   argued that the authorization
                                                 with this and other workplace                           inducement for completing such a                        requirements should apply to all
                                                 nondiscrimination laws will now                         certification would circumvent the                      employer-sponsored wellness programs,
                                                 undergo ‘‘great effort’’ to ensure that the             ability of an employer-sponsored                        regardless of the level of inducement
                                                 changes in this rule do not apply to                    wellness program to assess and mitigate                 offered, in order to provide appropriate
                                                 them.                                                   health risks. Several industry groups                   protections for genetic information.
                                                                                                         also pointed out that this alternative                  Some of these commenters noted that
                                                    Finally, we note that the final rule                                                                         employers have ways to pressure
                                                 does not require any changes to                         was not necessary because the tri-
                                                                                                         Department wellness regulations                         employees to participate in wellness
                                                 employer-sponsored wellness programs                                                                            programs that have nothing to do with
                                                 that are already in compliance with                                                                             inducements, and others noted that any
                                                                                                            35 See Conn. Light & Power v. Nuclear Regulatory
                                                 Title II of GINA and its existing                                                                               ambiguity in the definition of ‘‘de
                                                                                                         Comm’n., 673 F.2d 525, 533 (D.C. Cir. 1982).
                                                 implementing regulations. Instead, this                    36 ‘‘The Administrative Procedure Act requires an    minimis’’ could lead to failure to obtain
                                                 rule merely clarifies that offering                     agency engaged in informal rule-making to publish       authorization even when significant
                                                 limited inducements to spouses is                       a notice of proposed rule-making in the Federal
                                                                                                                                                                 inducements are offered. Although one
                                                 permitted in certain circumstances.                     Register that includes ‘either the terms or substance
                                                                                                         of the proposed rule or a description of the subjects   health insurance company asserted that
                                                    We, therefore, reiterate our conclusion              and issues involved.’ ’’ See id. at 530 (quoting the    the authorization rule should apply to
                                                 that the rule will not have an annual                   APA, 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(3)).                               all employer-sponsored wellness
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                                                                                                            37 ‘‘The purpose of the comment period is to
                                                 effect on the economy of $100 million                                                                           programs due to the administrative
                                                                                                         allow interested members of the public to
                                                 or more, or adversely affect in a material              communicate information, concerns, and criticisms       complications that different standards
                                                 way the economy, a sector of the                        to the agency during the rule-making process.’’ Id.;
                                                 economy, productivity, competition,                     see also City of Stoughton v. EPA, 858 F.2d 747, 753      38 See, e.g., RAND Health, Workplace Wellness

                                                                                                         (D.C. Cir. 1988) (holding that petitioner could not     Programs Study Final Report, 101 (2013), http://
                                                 jobs, the environment, public health or                 challenge sufficiency of notice when petitioner had     www.rand.org/content/dam/rand/pubs/
                                                 safety, or state, local or tribal                       submitted comments on the issue that petitioner         research_reports/RR200/RR254/RAND_RR254.pdf
                                                 governments or communities.                             claimed was inadequately noticed).                      [hereinafter RAND Final Report].



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                                                 31150               Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 95 / Tuesday, May 17, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                 would cause, most health insurance                      proposed rule’s suggestion that a                     medical record. These provisions
                                                 companies, as well as the employer                      ‘‘reasonably designed’’ standard be                   prohibit the disclosure of genetic
                                                 associations and industry groups that                   adopted, arguing that existing HIPAA,                 information except in six very limited
                                                 commented on this issue, went beyond                    Affordable Care Act, and GINA                         circumstances.39 The provision that
                                                 asserting that there should be a de                     protections are sufficient to protect                 allows employers to acquire genetic
                                                 minimis exception to the authorization                  against discrimination and unlawful                   information as part of health or genetic
                                                 rules and argued for more significant                   disclosures of genetic information.                   services such as wellness programs
                                                 revisions to the proposed rule. For                     Some also expressed frustration with                  further requires that the authorization
                                                 example, some argued that the EEOC                      the very idea that employer-sponsored                 form the employer must provide to an
                                                 has no statutory authority to impose a                  wellness programs might operate to shift              individual to sign before providing
                                                 requirement that employers obtain                       costs in a discriminatory way. The final              genetic information as part of health or
                                                 authorization from spouses, others                      rule will not adopt additional                        genetic services must explain the
                                                 argued that asking a spouse about his or                protections to safeguard spousal                      restrictions on the disclosure of that
                                                 her own health was not genetic                          information or prevent cost-shifting,                 information. Specifically, the
                                                 information and, therefore, not subject                 because existing protections are                      authorization must explain that
                                                 to GINA at all, others argued that a de                 sufficient. We will, however, discuss                 individually identifiable genetic
                                                 minimis exception should apply to all                   these issues in more detail below, given              information is provided only to the
                                                 of the requirements of the proposed                     that they essentially reiterate comments              individual receiving the services and
                                                 rule, and still others argued that the                  received in response to the proposal to               the licensed health care professionals or
                                                 EEOC should consider whether the                        adopt a ‘‘reasonably designed’’ standard.             board certified genetic counselors
                                                 authorization requirement in general                    (See Comments Regarding Specific                      involved in providing those services;
                                                 serves any purpose, given that a family’s               Provisions: Health or Genetic Services                and that any individually identifiable
                                                 decision to participate in an employer-                 Must Be Reasonably Designed).                         genetic information is only available for
                                                 sponsored wellness program should be                                                                          purposes of the health or genetic
                                                                                                         More Specific Guidance and Procedures
                                                 sufficient confirmation of voluntariness.                                                                     services and is not disclosed to the
                                                   We decline to exclude programs that                   on Confidentiality Requirements for
                                                                                                                                                               employer except in aggregate terms.40
                                                 offer de minimis inducements from the                   Electronically Stored Records
                                                                                                                                                               Although we do not believe that it is
                                                 authorization requirement of the rule.                    Several commenters urged the EEOC                   necessary to adopt additional
                                                 Although commenters gave examples of                    to convene expert stakeholder groups or               protections for electronically stored
                                                 some inducements that might be                          hold public meetings to determine what                data, we believe there are certain best
                                                 considered de minimis, no commenters                    guidance should be offered to employers               practices that employers may want to
                                                 offered a workable principle that could                 on how to protect electronically stored               consider in terms of safeguarding all
                                                 be used as the basis for defining which                 data. Some commented that the EEOC                    genetic information in their
                                                 inducements are de minimis and which                    should require specific protocols to                  possession.41
                                                 are not. We suspect that employers’                     maximize the safety of electronically
                                                 interpretation of the term would vary,                  stored genetic information without                    Best Practices or Procedural Safeguards
                                                 and there is no clear basis on which to                 providing specifics; others provided                  To Ensure That Information About
                                                 establish a threshold for the de minimis                suggested restrictions or referred to                 Spouses’ Manifested Diseases or
                                                 value. We have responded to arguments                   security standards such as those being                Disorders Is Protected From Disclosure
                                                 that the authorization requirement of                   developed by the Precision Medicine                     Those who commented on this
                                                 the rule be eliminated for various                      Initiative or those that already exist                question raised points quite similar to
                                                 reasons in the in-depth discussion of the               under the HIPAA Privacy and Security                  those raised about ensuring the
                                                 authorization provision, below. (See                    Rules (some arguing that HIPAA’s                      confidentiality of electronically stored
                                                 Comments Regarding Specific                             existing standard already sufficiently                data, which are discussed above. Health
                                                 Provisions: Authorization for Collection                restricts employer-provided wellness                  insurance issuers, employer
                                                 of Genetic Information).                                programs and others arguing that rules                associations, and industry groups
                                                                                                         identical to those under HIPAA should                 asserted that existing HIPAA privacy
                                                 Best Practices or Procedural Safeguards                 be specifically applied to all employer-              and security requirements, along with
                                                 To Ensure Employer-Sponsored                            provided wellness programs). Others                   GINA’s existing rules, were sufficient,
                                                 Wellness Programs Are Designed To                       argued that since it is unclear whether               while advocacy groups provided ideas
                                                 Promote Health or Prevent Disease and                   certain kinds of genetic information can              for strengthening applicable
                                                 Do Not Operate To Shift Costs                           ever be stored in a way that prevents re-             confidentiality requirements. We
                                                    Individuals and advocacy groups                      identification, employers should not be               reiterate that we do not believe that
                                                 responded to this question with the                     permitted to store such data (e.g.,                   additional protections are needed, given
                                                 same suggestions they made for                          molecular genetic data).                              GINA’s requirements that genetic
                                                 strengthening the definition of                           The goal of the confidentiality and                 information be kept confidential and
                                                 employer-sponsored wellness programs                    disclosure rules of GINA is to protect                disclosed in only six limited
                                                 that are ‘‘reasonably designed to                       genetic information as required by the                circumstances, but urge employers to
                                                 promote health or prevent disease,’’                    statute whether that information is in                consider adopting best practices such as
                                                 discussed below, raising ideas such as                  paper or electronic format. As noted
                                                 requiring that employer-sponsored                       above, the regulations already have                     39 See 42 U.S.C. 2000ff–5(b); 29 CFR 1635.9.
                                                 wellness programs be based on                           specific confidentiality provisions that                40 See 29 CFR 1635.8(b)(2)(i).
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                                                                                                                                                                 41 See, e.g., 29 CFR part 1630 app. 1630.14(d)(4)(i)
                                                 scientifically valid evidence or that they              require employers and other covered
                                                                                                                                                               through (iv): Confidentiality, which describes best
                                                 include due process protections for                     entities that possess genetic information             practices such as ensuring that individuals who
                                                 individuals who claim rules are unfairly                to maintain it in medical files (including            handle medical information (in this case, genetic
                                                 applied to them. Health insurance                       where the information exists in                       information) that is part of an employee health
                                                 issuers, employer associations, and                     electronic forms or files) that are                   program are not responsible for making decisions
                                                                                                                                                               related to employment, and that breaches of
                                                 industry groups similarly reasserted the                separate from personnel files, and treat              confidentiality are reported to affected employees
                                                 objections they raised in response to the               such information as a confidential                    immediately and thoroughly investigated.



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                                                                     Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 95 / Tuesday, May 17, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                          31151

                                                 those set forth in the appendix                         genetic information to only the                       requirements to nearly all wellness
                                                 accompanying the ADA Final Rule,                        minimum necessary to directly support                 programs. That commenter concluded
                                                 issued today. Such practices include                    specific employer-sponsored wellness                  that it would be a better use of the
                                                 adoption and communication of strong                    program activities or a limitation on                 EEOC’s time to work on the alignment
                                                 privacy policies, training for individuals              accessing genetic information from                    of Title II of GINA with the Affordable
                                                 who handle confidential medical                         other sources. The Commission believes                Care Act, rather than focusing on this
                                                 information, encryption of electronic                   that the protections in the final rule—               issue. One industry group indicated that
                                                 files, and policies that require prompt                 such as the requirement that employer-                the proposed rule failed to provide
                                                 notification of employees whose                         sponsored wellness programs that                      guidance for stand-alone wellness
                                                 information is compromised if data                      collect genetic information be                        programs and argued that anything less
                                                 breaches occur.                                         reasonably designed to promote health                 than the 30 percent maximum incentive
                                                                                                         and prevent disease and the existing                  standard would conflict with the
                                                 Restriction on the Collection of Genetic
                                                                                                         confidentiality requirements—provide                  Affordable Care Act.
                                                 Information to Only the Minimum
                                                                                                         significant protections for employees
                                                 Necessary to Directly Support the                                                                                Rather than listing factors for
                                                                                                         and spouses without adopting further
                                                 Specific Wellness Activities and                                                                              determining whether an employer-
                                                                                                         restrictions or limitations. (See
                                                 Prohibition on Accessing Genetic                                                                              sponsored wellness program is part of,
                                                                                                         Comments Regarding Specific
                                                 Information From Other Sources                                                                                or outside of, an employer-sponsored
                                                                                                         Provisions: Health or Genetic Services
                                                    Individuals and advocacy groups                      Must Be Reasonably Designed).                         group health plan, the Commission has
                                                 argued that the collection of genetic                                                                         decided that all of the provisions in this
                                                 information by employer-sponsored                       Employer-Sponsored Wellness Programs                  rule apply to all employer-sponsored
                                                 wellness programs should be restricted                  Offered Outside of Employer-Sponsored                 wellness programs that request genetic
                                                 to the minimum necessary to directly                    Group Health Plans                                    information. This means that this rule
                                                 support specific wellness activities and                   Numerous comments offering a broad                 applies to employer-sponsored wellness
                                                 interventions. Many of these                            range of opinions were submitted in                   programs that are: Offered only to
                                                 commenters also urged the EEOC to                       response to the question in the NPRM                  spouses of employees enrolled in an
                                                 prohibit employer-sponsored wellness                    asking whether employers offer or are                 employer-sponsored group health plan;
                                                 programs from obtaining genetic                         likely to offer wellness programs outside             offered to spouses of all employees
                                                 information from sources other than                     of a group health plan or group health                regardless of whether the employee or
                                                 voluntarily submitted health risk                       insurance coverage that use                           spouse is enrolled in such a plan; or
                                                 assessments and biometric screenings,                   inducements to encourage employees’                   offered as a benefit of employment to
                                                 such as patient claims data or medical                  spouses to provide information about                  spouses of employees of employers who
                                                 records data. Taking the opposite view,                 current or past health status as part of              do not sponsor a group health plan or
                                                 health insurance issuers, employer                      a HRA, and the extent to which the                    group health insurance.
                                                 associations, and industry groups                       GINA regulations should allow
                                                                                                                                                                  We considered taking the position
                                                 argued against adopting any further                     inducements provided as part of such
                                                                                                                                                               that employer-sponsored wellness
                                                 restrictions on employer-sponsored                      programs. Some commenters stated
                                                                                                                                                               programs that are not offered through a
                                                 wellness programs. Some asserted that                   many employers already offer wellness
                                                                                                                                                               group health plan and that request
                                                 information from sources such as claims                 programs that are outside group health
                                                                                                                                                               information about the manifestation of
                                                 data and medical records assists in the                 plans, while others pointed out that
                                                 development of effective employer-                      employer-sponsored wellness programs                  disease or disorder from spouses could
                                                 sponsored wellness programs and that                    that offer medical care are group health              not offer any inducements. However,
                                                 restricting access to it would impede the               programs in themselves. Some argued                   having concluded that some level of
                                                 design and success of the programs.                     that the final rule should apply both to              inducement is consistent with other
                                                 These commenters also pointed out that                  wellness programs that are part of an                 requirements of 29 CFR 1635.8(b)(2),
                                                 when an employer-sponsored wellness                     employer-sponsored health plan and to                 including the requirement that the
                                                 program is offered as part of a health                  wellness programs offered by employers                employer-sponsored wellness program
                                                 plan, it may work more optimally to                     outside such plans, while others asked                be ‘‘voluntary,’’ where the wellness
                                                 allow that program to quickly identify                  the EEOC to clarify what it means for a               program is part of a group health plan,
                                                 people in need of services by using                     wellness program ‘‘to be part of, or                  there seemed to be no basis for reaching
                                                 claims data already being received by                   provided by, a group health plan.’’                   a contrary conclusion with respect to
                                                 the administrator of the health plan.                   Others argued against applying the final              employer-sponsored wellness programs
                                                 These and other commenters noted that                   rule to programs offered by employers                 that are outside of a group health plan.
                                                 no additional restrictions were needed                  that operate outside group health plans               At the same time, allowing unlimited
                                                 because the existing frameworks of the                  (thereby either allowing these programs               inducements where an employer-
                                                 ADA and GINA adequately limit the                       to impose higher inducements in return                sponsored wellness program is not
                                                 information that may be collected as                    for genetic information or, in the                    offered through a group health plan
                                                 part of an employer-sponsored wellness                  opinion of one advocacy group,                        would be inconsistent with our position
                                                 program, while others said that existing                meaning that these programs would be                  that limitations on spousal inducements
                                                 tri-Department wellness rules requiring                 prohibited from offering inducements                  are necessary to promote GINA’s
                                                 ‘‘reasonable design’’ ensure that                       for genetic information at all). One                  interest in limiting access to genetic
                                                 programs are nondiscriminatory.                         employer association asserted that many               information and ensuring that
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                                                 Several of these commenters also noted                  of its members offer inducements for                  inducements are not so high as to be
                                                 that any additional restrictions would                  HRAs only under employer-sponsored                    coercive. Accordingly, as noted below,
                                                 unnecessarily stifle innovation in the                  wellness programs that are part of a                  this rule explains how to calculate the
                                                 design and implementation of                            larger group health plan, but that the                permissible inducement level for
                                                 employer-sponsored wellness programs.                   breadth of the tri-Department’s wellness              employer-sponsored wellness programs
                                                    The final rule will not include a                    program rules has the effect of applying              regardless of whether they are related to
                                                 specific restriction on the collection of               at least some nondiscrimination                       a group health plan.


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                                                 31152               Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 95 / Tuesday, May 17, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                 Comments Regarding Specific                             services in order to meet the                         an employer-sponsored wellness
                                                 Provisions                                              ‘‘reasonably designed’’ standard and/or               program is not reasonably designed if it
                                                                                                         that employer-sponsored wellness                      penalizes an employee because a
                                                 Section 1635.8(b)(2)(i)(A) Health or
                                                                                                         programs be required to provide                       spouse’s manifestation of disease or
                                                 Genetic Services Must Be Reasonably
                                                                                                         scientific evidence that demonstrates                 disorder prevents or inhibits the spouse
                                                 Designed
                                                                                                         that the program improves health or                   from participating or from achieving a
                                                    The NPRM proposed that employers                     prevents disease. Others noted that the               certain health outcome. For example, an
                                                 may request, require, or purchase                       standard as described has virtually no                employer may not deny an employee an
                                                 genetic information as part of health or                meaning and will allow employers to                   inducement for participation of either
                                                 genetic services only when those                        decide for themselves what is                         the employee or the spouse in an
                                                 services, including any acquisition of                  ‘‘reasonable.’’                                       employer-sponsored wellness program
                                                 genetic information that is part of those                                                                     because the employee’s spouse has
                                                                                                            The final rule acknowledges that
                                                 services, are reasonably designed to                                                                          blood pressure, a cholesterol level, or a
                                                                                                         satisfaction of the ‘‘reasonably
                                                 promote health or prevent disease.                                                                            blood glucose level that the employer
                                                                                                         designed’’ standard must be determined
                                                 Many commenters, including health                                                                             considers too high.
                                                                                                         by examining all of the relevant facts
                                                 insurance issuers, employer                                                                                      The Commission believes that
                                                                                                         and circumstances and otherwise
                                                 associations, industry groups, and a                                                                          because the requirement that an
                                                                                                         retains the requirement in the NPRM
                                                 Congressional committee, urged the                                                                            employer-sponsored wellness program
                                                                                                         that employers may request, require, or
                                                 EEOC to strike this requirement, noting                                                                       be ‘‘reasonably designed to promote
                                                 that it was beyond the EEOC’s authority                 purchase genetic information as part of
                                                                                                         health or genetic services only when                  health or prevent disease’’ is a standard
                                                 under GINA to impose a reasonable                                                                             with which health plans are now
                                                 design requirement on health and                        those services, including any
                                                                                                         acquisition of genetic information that is            sufficiently familiar, it is reasonable to
                                                 genetic services and that the EEOC                                                                            apply that standard under GINA to
                                                 should leave it to the tri-Departments to               part of those services, are reasonably
                                                                                                         designed to promote health or prevent                 employers that sponsor wellness
                                                 determine what constitutes a reasonably                                                                       programs. For consistency, this same
                                                 designed employer-sponsored wellness                    disease. As noted in the NPRM, in order
                                                                                                         to meet this standard, the program must               requirement, with the same examples,
                                                 program. Some of these commenters                                                                             has recently been adopted under the
                                                 further noted that the proposed                         have a reasonable chance of improving
                                                                                                         the health of, or preventing disease in,              ADA.42 Although the standard is less
                                                 requirement was confusing because                                                                             stringent than some commenters would
                                                 even though it sounded very similar, or                 participating individuals, and must not
                                                                                                         be overly burdensome, a subterfuge for                prefer, the Commission believes it
                                                 even identical, to the corresponding
                                                                                                         violating Title II of GINA or other laws              provides a sufficient level of protection
                                                 requirement in the Affordable Care Act,
                                                                                                         prohibiting employment discrimination,                against the misuse of employee genetic
                                                 it seemed to mean something different.
                                                                                                         or highly suspect in the method chosen                information while providing a degree of
                                                 They urged the Commission to delete
                                                                                                         to promote health or prevent disease.                 flexibility in designing wellness
                                                 the examples in the preamble and
                                                                                                         The examples in the preamble to the                   programs.
                                                 instead make clear that, as with the
                                                 Affordable Care Act, satisfaction of the                proposed rule were intended simply to                 Section 1635.8(b)(2)(iii)
                                                 reasonable design standard is based on                  illustrate how this standard works. We
                                                                                                         now clarify, in agreement with several                When an Inducement May Be Offered
                                                 all facts and circumstances. Several of
                                                 these commenters made specific                          comments about one of these examples,                   As noted in the general comments
                                                 mention of the preamble’s example of a                  that programs consisting of a                         section, above, numerous individuals
                                                 HRA that would not meet the                             measurement, test, screening, or                      and advocacy groups urged the
                                                 ‘‘reasonably designed’’ standard—one                    collection of health-related information              Commission to abandon the position set
                                                 that collected information without                      without providing results, follow-up                  forth in the proposed rule that
                                                 providing follow-up information or                      information, or advice designed to                    employers may offer limited
                                                 advice—arguing that this conclusion did                 improve the participant’s health would                inducements when a spouse who
                                                 not conform to the Affordable Care Act’s                not be reasonably designed to promote                 receives genetic services offered by an
                                                 definition and that it is not always                    health or prevent disease, unless the                 employer provides information about
                                                 appropriate to provide follow-up                        collected information actually is used to             his or her current or past health status
                                                 information. Some further argued that if                design a program that addresses at least              information as part of a HRA. These
                                                 the Commission was going to rely on                     a subset of conditions identified.                    commenters, as well as some members
                                                 examples to explain the standard, it                    Additionally, we would consider a                     of Congress, argued that the absolute
                                                 should put the examples in the                          program to not be reasonably designed                 prohibition on financial inducements
                                                 regulation itself and make them more                    to promote health or prevent disease if               set forth in the existing GINA
                                                 detailed.                                               it imposes, as a condition of obtaining               regulations should be reaffirmed,
                                                    Individuals and advocacy groups, on                  a reward, an overly burdensome amount                 arguing that allowing employer-
                                                 the other hand, argued that the new                     of time for participation, requires                   sponsored wellness programs to offer
                                                 standard was not sufficiently rigorous                  unreasonably intrusive procedures, or                 inducements in exchange for spouses to
                                                 and that it should be based on clinical                 places significant costs related to                   provide information about their current
                                                 guidelines or national standards, or that               medical examinations on employees.                    or past health status would be coercive
                                                 there should be a stronger connection                   We also would not consider a program                  and would substantially weaken GINA’s
                                                 between the content of a HRA and the                    to be reasonably designed to promote                  protections. Several industry and
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                                                 development of specific disease                         health or prevent disease if it exists                employer groups, on the other hand,
                                                 management programs. Some argued,                       merely to shift costs from the covered                expressed support for the proposed
                                                 for example, for a requirement that                     entity to targeted employees based on                 rule’s clarification that GINA does not
                                                 employer-sponsored wellness programs                    their health or if the employer is only               preclude inducements for spouses for
                                                 collect no more than the minimum                        using the program for data collection or
                                                 necessary information from spouses                      to try to determine its future health                   42 See 29 CFR 1630.14(d)(1); published elsewhere

                                                 directly linked to specific program                     costs. Additionally, under these rules,               in this issue of the Federal Register.



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                                                                      Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 95 / Tuesday, May 17, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                             31153

                                                 completion of HRAs when the                             Comments: Prohibition on Inducements                     provided health insurance and thus
                                                 requirements of § 1635.8(b)(2)(i) were                  for Information From Children of                         increase the pool of families without
                                                 met, while expressing deep                              Employees.)                                              ‘‘good’’ health insurance coverage.
                                                 dissatisfaction with the limitations on                                                                          Employer and industry groups,
                                                                                                         Level of Inducement That May Be
                                                 those inducements. As noted above, one                                                                           however, commented that the EEOC
                                                                                                         Offered
                                                 industry group argued that use of the                                                                            should align the inducement limits for
                                                 phrase ‘‘current or past health status’’ in                The Commission received numerous                      employer-sponsored wellness programs
                                                 describing the types of questions to                    comments on this provision of the                        with the inducement limits established
                                                 spouses that could include inducements                  proposed rule. As stated in the general                  in the tri-Department wellness
                                                 was confusing because not all                           comments section of this preamble,                       regulations. One industry group asserted
                                                 information about a spouse’s current or                 individuals and health advocacy groups                   that requests to an individual for
                                                 past health status meets the definition of              said that the proposed rule was based                    information about his or her own past
                                                 genetic information. For example, some                  on the erroneous assumption that the                     or current health status is not genetic
                                                 might consider questions about height,                  GINA rule must be ‘‘conformed’’ to                       information (except for genetic test
                                                 weight, and exercise regimes to be                      provisions of the Affordable Care Act                    results) and that the EEOC therefore did
                                                 questions about ‘‘current health status,’’              concerning employer-sponsored                            not have authority under GINA to adopt
                                                 although such questions asked of an                     wellness programs. These and other                       requirements with respect to
                                                 employee’s spouse are not requests for                  commenters, including some members                       inducements for this information.
                                                 genetic information under GINA.                         of Congress, commented that allowing                     Another industry group, after expressing
                                                    The Commission retains the NPRM’s                    employer-sponsored wellness programs                     strong disapproval of the proposed
                                                 requirements that, consistent with the                  to offer inducements up to 30 percent in                 rule’s inducement limitation, went on to
                                                 requirements of § 1635.8(b)(2)(i) and (ii),             exchange for spouses to provide                          provide suggestions for improving the
                                                 a covered entity may offer an                           information about their current or past                  description of that limitation if the
                                                 inducement to an employee whose                         health status would be coercive and                      Commission were to adopt it,
                                                 spouse provides information about the                   would substantially weaken GINA’s                        suggesting, for example, that certain
                                                 spouse’s own current or past health                     protection and urged the Commission to                   provisions in the regulatory language be
                                                 status as part of a HRA. In order to                    strike this proposal and reaffirm that                   moved. Although some of these
                                                 clarify that the rule only applies to                   inducements are not permitted in return                  commenters appreciated that the
                                                 questions asked of the spouse that meet                 for genetic information. Other advocacy                  proposed rule based the inducement
                                                 the definition of genetic information,                  groups argued that allowing
                                                                                                                                                                  limit on the total cost of coverage for the
                                                 the final rule will replace the phrase                  inducements for spousal information
                                                                                                                                                                  plan in which the employee and any
                                                 ‘‘current or past health status’’ with                  would lead to conflict within families,
                                                                                                                                                                  dependents are enrolled, employer
                                                 ‘‘manifestation of disease or disorder.’’               worsening the mental and physical
                                                                                                                                                                  associations and industry groups
                                                 Moreover, as discussed in detail above,                 health of family members when, for
                                                                                                                                                                  generally asserted that the inducement
                                                 because the final rule will apply not                   example, an employee and spouse
                                                                                                                                                                  limits should conform to those
                                                 only to employer-sponsored wellness                     disagree about whether the spouse will
                                                                                                                                                                  established by the tri-Department
                                                 programs that are part of group health                  provide the information needed to
                                                                                                                                                                  wellness regulations, particularly the
                                                 plans, but to all wellness programs                     obtain a reward or avoid a penalty. One
                                                                                                                                                                  lack of incentive limits on participatory
                                                 offered by employers, the language of                   commenter noted that a rule that
                                                                                                                                                                  programs.
                                                 the final rule at § 1635.8(b)(2)(iii) will be           permits employers to increase the
                                                                                                         amount an employee pays for health                          Most individuals and advocacy
                                                 revised to eliminate references to the                                                                           groups that submitted comments did not
                                                 employer’s health plan. (See Comments                   insurance by as much as 30 percent of
                                                                                                         the total cost of coverage if the                        comment on the proposed rule’s
                                                 Responding to Questions: Wellness                                                                                discussion of how inducements should
                                                 Programs Offered Outside of Employer-                   employee or the employee’s spouse fails
                                                                                                         to provide certain health information                    be apportioned. Two groups that did
                                                 Sponsored Group Health Plans.) The                                                                               comment indicated their support for the
                                                 final rule will also explain how                        would lead some to forego employer-
                                                                                                                                                                  idea, assuming that the EEOC was going
                                                 inducement limits are to be calculated                                                                           to move forward with the proposal to
                                                                                                         requiring or purchasing) genetic information prior
                                                 in situations where participation in an                 to or in connection with enrollment in health            allow inducements. In contrast,
                                                 employer-sponsored wellness program                     coverage or for underwriting purposes. See 26 CFR        numerous health insurance issuers,
                                                 does not depend on enrollment in a                      54.9802–3T(b), (d); 29 CFR 2590.702–1(b), (d); 45
                                                                                                                                                                  employer associations, industry groups,
                                                 particular group health plan, and in                    CFR 146.122(b), (d); 45 CFR 147.110; 45 CFR
                                                                                                         148.180(b), (d). ‘‘Underwriting purposes’’ includes      as well as a Congressional committee
                                                 situations where an employer does not                   rules for eligibility for benefits and the computation   and various United States Senators,
                                                 offer a group health plan but still wants               of premium or contribution amounts under the plan        commented that the apportionment rule
                                                 to offer inducements for employees and                  or coverage including any discounts, rebates,
                                                                                                                                                                  should be eliminated, arguing that it
                                                 their spouses to participate in wellness                payments in kind, or other premium differential
                                                                                                         mechanisms in return for activities such as              was administratively complicated and/
                                                 programs. Finally, the final rule retains               completing a HRA or participating in a wellness          or that it conflicts with the tri-
                                                 the requirement that no inducement                      program. See 26 CFR 54.9802–3T(d)(1)(ii); 29 CFR         Departments’ wellness regulations,
                                                 may be offered in return for the spouse                 2590.702–1(d)(1)(ii); 45 CFR 146.122(d)(1)(ii); 45
                                                                                                                                                                  which does not require apportionment.
                                                 providing his or her own genetic                        CFR 148.180(f)(1)(ii). Consequently, employer-
                                                                                                         sponsored wellness programs that provide rewards         Many of these commenters also pointed
                                                 information, including results of his or                for completing HRAs that request a plan                  out that the apportionment rule
                                                 her genetic tests, as well as the                       participant’s genetic information, including family      conflicts with the general practice of
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                                                 prohibition on providing inducements                    medical history, violate the prohibition against
                                                                                                                                                                  providing an equal inducement to an
                                                 in return for health information about                  requesting genetic information for underwriting
                                                                                                         purposes, regardless of whether the plan participant     employee and a spouse when both
                                                 an employee’s children.43 (See General                  provides authorization. Under Title I of GINA, a         participate in an employer-sponsored
                                                                                                         group health plan and a health insurance issuer in       wellness program and that encouraging
                                                   43 29 CFR 1635.8(b)(2)(i)(B). Title I of GINA         the group or individual market may request genetic
                                                 specifically prohibits a group health plan and a        information through a HRA as long as the request
                                                                                                                                                                  a larger inducement for spouses was
                                                 health insurance issuer in the group or individual      is not in connection with enrollment and no              arbitrary, implied that the spouse’s
                                                 market from collecting (including requesting,           rewards are provided.                                    achievement of a health goal is more


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                                                 31154                 Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 95 / Tuesday, May 17, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                 valuable than the employee’s equal                        location that the employer identifies as                 As noted in the ADA final rule, the
                                                 accomplishment, and/or conflicted with                    its principal place of business if the                Commission has concluded that the
                                                 the idea of a reasonably designed                         employer offers no group health plan. In              employer’s lowest total cost self-only
                                                 wellness program. One group requested                     this last instance, the maximum                       coverage under a major medical group
                                                 that, if the EEOC were to move forward                    inducement to the employee and the                    health plan is an appropriate benchmark
                                                 with apportionment rules, the rule                        spouse is equal to 30 percent of the cost             for establishing the inducement limit
                                                 clarify that the amount of the                            of covering an individual who is a 40-                where an employer has more than one
                                                 inducement attributable to the spouse                     year-old non-smoker. Thus, the amount                 group health plan and participation in
                                                 does not have to be paid directly to the                  of the inducement available to the                    an employer-sponsored wellness
                                                 spouse but, instead, could be paid as                     spouse cannot exceed the amount an                    program does not depend on enrollment
                                                 part of a premium reduction or in any                     employer may offer to an employee,                    in any particular plan for two reasons.
                                                 other way that the other portion of the                   under the ADA, to participate in a                    First, it offers employers predictability
                                                 inducement was being paid.                                wellness program that includes                        and administrative efficiency in
                                                    The Commission agrees that the                         disability-related questions or a medical             complying with the rule. Second, the
                                                 proposed rule’s apportionment                             examination.                                          rule is consistent with the Commission’s
                                                 standards, which would have permitted                                                                           objective of ensuring that inducements
                                                 a larger inducement to the spouse for                        The final rule includes examples                   in return for a spouse providing
                                                 providing similar information to that                     explaining how the inducement limits                  information about his or her
                                                 which the employee provided, is overly                    are to be calculated. For example, if an              manifestation of disease or disorder are
                                                 complicated and sends the wrong                           employee is enrolled in a group health                not coercive.
                                                 message about the value of employer-                      plan through the employer at a total cost                The second lowest cost Silver Plan
                                                 sponsored wellness programs for each                      (taking into account both employer and                available on the Exchange in the
                                                 participating individual. Moreover, we                    employee contributions towards the cost               location that the employer identifies as
                                                 determined, in developing the final                       of coverage) of $14,000 for family                    its principal place of business is used as
                                                 ADA rule on employer-sponsored                            coverage, that plan has a self-only                   a benchmark for determining the
                                                 wellness programs, that incentives in                     option for a total cost of $6,000, and the            amount of an eligible individual’s
                                                 excess of 30 percent of the cost of self-                 employer provides the option of                       premium tax credit for purchasing
                                                 only coverage offered in exchange for an                  participating in a wellness program to                health insurance on the Exchange.45
                                                 employee answering disability-related                     the employee and spouse if they                       This is the most popular plan on the
                                                 questions or taking medical                               participate in the plan, the employer                 Exchanges, and information about its
                                                 examinations as part of a wellness                        may not offer more than $1,800 to the                 costs for individuals who are 40 years
                                                 program would be coercive. We see no                      employee and $1,800 to the spouse. If                 old and non-smokers is available to the
                                                 reason for adopting a different threshold                 participation in a particular group                   public.46 Additionally, because the
                                                 where the employee’s spouse is the                        health plan is not required for the                   Silver Plan typically is neither the least
                                                 individual whose health information is                    employee and spouse to earn an                        nor the most expensive plan available
                                                 being sought. Consequently, this final                    inducement and the employer has only                  on the Exchanges, inducement limits
                                                 rule states that when an employee and                     one group health plan under which self-               that are tied to its costs may promote
                                                 the employee’s spouse are given the                       only coverage costs $7,000, the                       participation in wellness programs
                                                 opportunity to enroll in an employer-                     employee and the spouse can each get                  while not being so high as to be
                                                 sponsored wellness program, the                           an inducement of up to $2,100. If                     coercive.
                                                 inducement to each may not exceed 30                      participation in a particular group                      Revisions will be made to
                                                 percent of the total cost of (1) self-only                health plan is not required for the                   § 1635.8(b)(2)(iii) to correspond to these
                                                 coverage under the group health plan in                   employee and the spouse to earn an                    changes. We also clarify that the portion
                                                 which the employee is enrolled                            inducement and the employer has more                  of the inducement attributable to the
                                                 (including both employee and employer                     than one group health plan and self-                  spouse’s provision of information about
                                                 cost), if enrollment in the plan is a                     only coverage under the major medical                 his or her manifestation of disease or
                                                 condition for participation in the                        group health plans range in cost from                 disorder need not be paid directly to the
                                                 wellness program; (2) self-only coverage                  $5,000 to $8,000, the employee and                    spouse, but may be paid in whatever
                                                 under the group health plan offered by                    spouse can each get an inducement of                  way the remaining portion of the
                                                 the employer (including both employee                     up to $1,500. Finally, if the employer                inducement is made such as, for
                                                 and employer cost), where the employer                    offers no group health plan at all and                example, as part of a reduction in
                                                 offers a single group health plan, but                    the second lowest-cost Silver Plan                    premium.
                                                 participation in a wellness program                       available through the state or federal                Authorization for Collection of Genetic
                                                 does not depend on the employee’s or                      health care Exchange established under                Information
                                                 spouse’s enrollment in that plan; (3) the                 the Affordable Care Act in the location                 Although numerous health and other
                                                 lowest cost self-only coverage under a                    that the employer identifies as its                   advocacy groups agreed that
                                                 major medical group health plan offered                   principal place of business would cost                authorization is a much needed
                                                 by the employer (including both                           a 40-year-old non-smoker $4,000, the                  component of employer-sponsored
                                                 employee and employer cost), where the                    maximum inducement the employer                       wellness programs that collect genetic
                                                 employer has more than one group                          could offer the employee and the spouse
                                                 health plan, but enrollment in a                          would be no more than $1,200 each to                    45 See 26 U.S.C. 36B(b)(2).
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                                                 particular plan is not a condition for                    answer questions about their current                    46 See, e.g., HHS, Health Insurance Marketplaces
                                                 participating in the wellness program;                    health or to take a medical examination               2015 Open Enrollment Period: March Enrollment
                                                 or (4) the second lowest cost Silver                      as part of a wellness program.                        Report (2015), https://aspe.hhs.gov/sites/default/
                                                                                                                                                                 files/pdf/83656/ib_2015mar_enrollment.pdf (HHS
                                                 Plan 44 available on the Exchange in the                                                                        report covering marketplace enrollment from
                                                                                                           Platinum. See How To Pick a Health Insurance          November 15, 2014 through February 15, 2015,
                                                   44 There are four ‘‘metal’’ categories of health        Plan: The ‘‘Metal Categories’’, Healthcare.gov,       indicating that, based on enrollment through all
                                                 plans in the Exchanges established under the              https://www.healthcare.gov/choose-a-plan/plans-       marketplaces, 67 percent of people who selected a
                                                 Affordable Care Act: Bronze, Silver, Gold, and            categories (last visited March 29, 2016).             marketplace plan selected Silver.)



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                                                                     Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 95 / Tuesday, May 17, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                             31155

                                                 information, they went on to argue that                 disorder, although a separate                           argued, for example, that the provision
                                                 the authorization requirements of GINA                  authorization for the acquisition of this               should be expanded to not only prohibit
                                                 should be strengthened. Some noted                      information from the employee is not                    conditioning participation in an
                                                 that the authorization forms currently in               necessary.                                              employer-sponsored wellness program
                                                 use by wellness vendors tend to use                        The Commission believes that GINA’s                  on agreeing to the sale of genetic
                                                 arcane language, are insufficiently                     existing authorization requirements                     information, but also other forms of
                                                 understood, and/or on occasion are                      prohibit many of the practices about                    sharing genetic information such as
                                                 hidden in obscure links that few people                 which advocacy groups expressed                         exchanges and transfers. Others argued
                                                 read. Others suggested that in order to                 concern. For example, these                             that the provision should state that
                                                 truly ensure that participation in an                   requirements already prohibit an                        harm will be presumed from
                                                 employer-sponsored wellness program                     employer-sponsored wellness program                     unauthorized disclosure of genetic
                                                 that collects genetic information is                    that collects genetic information from                  information and that, if sharing does
                                                 voluntary, authorization requirements                   using an authorization notice that uses                 occur, employers should be required to
                                                 should allow a participant who                          arcane legal language or is otherwise                   reveal the identity of those with whom
                                                 indicates that his or her participation is              difficult to understand.47 Moreover,                    they shared the genetic information.
                                                 not voluntary to obtain the reward or                   although it is true that GINA’s statutory               One industry group expressed support
                                                 avoid the penalty even if his or her                    language, at 42 U.S.C. 2000ff–1(b)(2)(B),               for the notion that genetic information,
                                                 spouse does not provide the requested                   states that the ‘‘employee’’ must provide               as one type of protected health
                                                 information. Several advocacy groups                    prior, knowing, voluntary, and written                  information, should not be sold, but
                                                 suggested that the Commission provide                   authorization, the EEOC’s original                      noted that this did not necessarily apply
                                                 model authorization forms and notices.                  implementing regulations use the                        to de-identified or aggregate data.
                                                 While some health insurance issuers                     broader term ‘‘individual’’ when                           The Commission agrees that this
                                                 and industry groups agreed that the                     describing the prior, knowing,                          prohibition should be expanded. The
                                                 Commission should provide model                         voluntary, and written authorization                    final rule therefore prohibits a covered
                                                 language that would satisfy the                         requirement.48 As noted in the preamble                 entity from conditioning participation
                                                 authorization requirements, these                       to the proposed rule, the Commission                    in an employer-sponsored wellness
                                                 commenters, as well as employer                         believes that ‘‘individual’’ best reflects              program or an inducement on an
                                                 groups, generally urged the Commission                  the intent of Congress, especially when                 employee, an employee’s spouse, or
                                                 to strike or limit the authorization                    considering the provisions in 42 U.S.C.                 other covered dependent agreeing to the
                                                 requirement. Some argued that the                       2000ff-1(b), which prohibit employers                   sale, exchange, sharing, transfer, or
                                                 Commission did not have the authority                   from requesting, requiring, or                          other disclosure of genetic information
                                                 to require spouses to provide                           purchasing genetic information about                    (except to the extent permitted by
                                                 authorization because the statutory                     both employees and their family                         paragraph 1635.8(b)(2)(i)(D)), or waiving
                                                 language requires that prior, knowing,                  members with limited exceptions, and                    protections provided under § 1635.9. As
                                                 written, and voluntary authorization be                 the general purpose of the statute.                     explained above, however, the
                                                 provided by the employee, not by other                                                                          Commission does not believe that any
                                                                                                         Section 1635.8(b)(2)(vi) Prohibition on                 further changes are needed because the
                                                 individuals. Others noted that requiring                Conditioning Participation in an
                                                 multiple authorization forms would                                                                              confidentiality protections of § 1635.9,
                                                                                                         Employer-Sponsored Wellness Program                     as well as the specific disclosure rules
                                                 unduly complicate the operation of                      on Agreeing To Sale of Genetic                          that apply to health and genetic services
                                                 employer-sponsored wellness programs                    Information or Waiving Confidentiality                  set forth at § 1635.8(b)(2), provide strong
                                                 and that a single authorization
                                                                                                           Individuals and advocacy groups that                  protections against disclosure of genetic
                                                 completed by the employee should be
                                                                                                         commented on this portion of the                        information. (See General Comments:
                                                 sufficient.
                                                                                                         proposed rule supported it but                          Confidentiality Provisions.)
                                                   This final rule adds no new notice or                 requested that it be strengthened. They
                                                 authorization requirements. It reaffirms                                                                        Section 1635.8(c)(2) Employer Permitted
                                                 that when an employer offers an                            47 The GINA notice and authorization
                                                                                                                                                                 To Seek Medical Information
                                                 employee an inducement in return for                    requirement, which was included in the EEOC’s             Few people commented on the new
                                                 his or her spouse’s providing                           regulations pursuant to a specific statutory            example the EEOC added to this section
                                                 information about the spouse’s                          requirement, see 42 U.S.C. 2000ff-1(b)(2)(B), is only
                                                                                                         met if the covered entity uses an authorization form
                                                                                                                                                                 of the rule. Two industry groups that
                                                 manifestation of disease or disorder as                 that (1) is written so that the individual from whom    did comment supported the EEOC’s
                                                 part of a HRA, the HRA (which may                       the genetic information is being obtained is            acknowledgement that employers may
                                                 include a medical questionnaire, a                      reasonably likely to understand it; (2) describes the   ask for information about the
                                                 medical examination, or both), must                     type of genetic information that will be obtained       manifestation of disease, disorder, or
                                                                                                         and the general purpose for which it will be used;
                                                 otherwise comply with § 1635.8(b)(2)(i)                 and (3) describes the restrictions on disclosure of     pathological condition of a family
                                                 in the same manner as if completed by                   genetic information. The GINA notice and                member if that individual is receiving
                                                 the employee, including the                             authorization rule also requires that individually      genetic services on a voluntary basis.
                                                 requirement that the spouse provide                     identifiable genetic information is provided only to    However, comments indicated that
                                                                                                         the individual (or family member if the family
                                                 prior knowing, voluntary, and written                   member is receiving genetic services) and the           clarification is needed for this example
                                                 authorization when the spouse is                        licensed health care professionals or board certified   to be understood. As noted in the
                                                 providing his or her own genetic                        genetic counselors involved in providing such           preamble to the proposed rule, this
                                                 information, and the requirement that                   services, and is not accessible to managers,            provision cross-references 29 CFR
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                                                                                                         supervisors, or others who make employment
                                                 the authorization form describe the                     decisions, or to anyone else in the workplace; and,     1635.8(b)(2) to make clear that an
                                                 confidentiality protections and                         finally, that any individually identifiable genetic     employer may request information
                                                 restrictions on the disclosure of genetic               information provided under 29 CFR 1635.8(b)(2) is       about the manifestation of disease,
                                                 information. The employer also must                     only available for purposes of such services and is     disorder, or pathological condition of a
                                                                                                         not disclosed to the covered entity except in
                                                 obtain authorization from the spouse                    aggregate terms that do not disclose the identity of    family member who is participating in
                                                 when collecting information about the                   specific individuals. See 29 CFR 1635.8(b)(2)(i).       voluntary genetic services only when all
                                                 spouse’s manifestation of disease or                       48 See 29 CFR 1635.8(b)(2)(i)(B).                    of the requirements for seeking genetic


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                                                 31156                Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 95 / Tuesday, May 17, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                 information as part of a voluntary health               kind incentives, as long as the method                sponsored wellness program does not
                                                 or genetic service, including the rules                 is reasonable.                                        depend on enrollment in a particular
                                                 on authorization and inducements, are                                                                         group health plan, employers will be
                                                                                                         Technical Amendments
                                                 met. In other words, this example does                                                                        able to calculate the amount of the
                                                 not create an exception to the general                    We received no comments concerning                  permissible inducement by reference to
                                                 rule that inducements in return for                     the proposed technical amendments to                  easily verifiable sources, such as the
                                                 genetic information are only permitted                  the rule and they are therefore adopted               cost of the group health plans they
                                                 in one specific circumstance—when an                    without change.                                       provide or by reference to the second
                                                 employee’s spouse is asked to provide                   Regulatory Procedures                                 lowest cost Silver Plan available on the
                                                 information about his or her                                                                                  Exchange in the location that the
                                                 manifestation of disease, disorder, or                  Executive Order 12866                                 Employer identifies as its principal
                                                 pathological condition as part of a HRA.                   Pursuant to Executive Order 12866,                 place of business.
                                                 We have revised the regulatory language                 the EEOC has coordinated this final rule                The Commission further believes that
                                                 so that it emphasizes the requirements                  with the Office of Management and                     employers will face initial start-up costs
                                                 of § 1635.8(b)(2), including the rules on               Budget. Under section 3(f)(1) of                      to train human resources staff and
                                                 authorization and inducements.                          Executive Order 12866, the EEOC has                   others on the revised rule. The EEOC
                                                 Removal of Term ‘‘Financial’’ From                      determined that the regulation will not               conducts extensive outreach and
                                                 Definition of ‘‘Inducement’’                            have an annual effect on the economy                  technical assistance programs, many of
                                                                                                         of $100 million or more, or adversely                 them at no cost to employers, to assist
                                                    Industry groups, employer                            affect in a material way the economy, a               in the training of relevant personnel on
                                                 associations, and several United States                 sector of the economy, productivity,                  EEO-related issues. For example, in FY
                                                 Senators urged the Commission to alter                  competition, jobs, the environment,                   2014, the agency’s outreach programs
                                                 this proposal so that the final rule                    public health or safety, or state, local or           reached more than 236,000 persons
                                                 applies only to financial incentives.                   tribal governments or communities.50                  through participation in more than
                                                 These groups argued that an expansion                      Although a detailed cost-benefit                   3,500 no-cost educational, training and
                                                 of the definition of inducement would                   assessment of the regulation is not                   outreach events. Now that the rule has
                                                 be inconsistent with the Affordable Care                required, the Commission notes that the               become final, we will include
                                                 Act and Congressional intent and would                  rule will aid compliance with Title II of             information about the revisions to the
                                                 increase administrative burden by                       GINA by employers. Currently,                         GINA regulations in our outreach
                                                 requiring employers to calculate the                    employers face uncertainty as to                      programs in general and continue to
                                                 value of in-kind inducements, such as                   whether providing an employee with an                 offer GINA-specific outreach programs
                                                 gift cards, raffle tickets, and key chains.             inducement if his or her spouse                       which will, of course, include
                                                 Many argued that applying the                           provides information about the spouse’s               information about the revisions. As is
                                                 inducement rule to in-kind inducements                  manifestation of disease or disorder on               our practice when issuing new
                                                 would cause employers to eliminate                      a HRA will subject them to liability                  regulations and policy guidances, we
                                                 them altogether.                                        under Title II of GINA. This rule will                have posted two technical assistance
                                                    The final rule reaffirms the                         clarify that offering limited inducements             documents on our Web site explaining
                                                 Commission’s proposal to remove the                     in these circumstances is permitted by                the revisions to the GINA regulations.51
                                                 term ‘‘financial’’ as a modifier of the                 Title II of GINA if the requirements of                 We estimate that there are
                                                 type of inducements discussed in the                    section 202(b)(2)(A) of GINA otherwise                approximately 782,000 employers with
                                                 regulations and make clear that the term                have been met. We believe that a                      15 or more employees subject to Title II
                                                 ‘‘inducements’’ includes both financial                 potential benefit of this rule is that it             of GINA 52 and, of that number, one half
                                                 and in-kind inducements, such as time-                  will provide employers that adopt                     to two thirds (391,000 to 521,333) offer
                                                 off awards, prizes, or other items of                   wellness programs that include spousal                some type of employer-sponsored
                                                 value, in the form of either rewards or                 inducements with clarity about their                  wellness program.53 In the proposed
                                                 penalties. Contrary to several comments                 obligations under GINA.                               rule, we assumed that nearly half of
                                                 received, this clarification is consistent                 The Commission does not believe the                employer-sponsored wellness programs
                                                 with the tri-Department wellness                        costs to employers associated with the
                                                 program provisions, which generally                     rule are significant. Under HIPAA, as                   51 See Qs and As: The Equal Employment
                                                 define a reward as ‘‘a discount or rebate               amended by the Affordable Care Act,                   Opportunity Commission’s Final Rule on the
                                                 of a premium or contribution, a waiver                  inducements of up to 30 percent of the                Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act and
                                                 of all or part of a cost-sharing                                                                              Employer Wellness Programs, EEOC, https://
                                                                                                         total cost of coverage in which an                    www.eeoc.gov/laws/types/genetic.cfm (last visited
                                                 mechanism, an additional benefit, or                    employee is enrolled are permitted                    April 14, 2016); Small Business Fact Sheet: Final
                                                 any financial or other incentive.’’ 49                  where the employee and the employee’s                 Rule on Title II of the Genetic Information
                                                 Thus, because the incentive limits in the               dependents are given the opportunity to               Nondiscrimination Act and Employer Wellness
                                                 Affordable Care Act apply to in-kind                                                                          Programs, EEOC, https://www.eeoc.gov/laws/types/
                                                                                                         fully participate in a health-contingent              genetic.cfm (last visited April 14, 2016).
                                                 incentives when they are offered within                 wellness program. This final rule simply                52 See Firm Size Data, Small Business
                                                 health-contingent programs, Congress                    clarifies that a similar inducement is                Administration, http://www.sba.gov/advocacy/849/
                                                 and the tri-Departments clearly                         permissible under Title II of GINA                    12162 (last visited March 28, 2016).
                                                 considered that these amounts would                     where an employer offers inducements                    53 See RAND Final Report, supra note 36, xiv,

                                                 have to be calculated. Employers have                                                                         http://www.rand.org/content/dam/rand/pubs/
                                                                                                         for an employee’s spouse enrolled in the              research_reports/RR200/RR254/RAND_RR254.pdf;
                                                 flexibility to determine the value of in-
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                                                                                                         group health plan to provide                          see also Employer Health Benefits Survey, 6 (2014),
                                                                                                         information about his or her                          http://files.kff.org/attachment/2014-employer-
                                                   49 See 26 CFR 54.9802–1(f)(1)(i); 29 CFR                                                                    health-benefits-survey-full-report [hereinafter the
                                                                                                         manifestation of disease or disorder.
                                                 2590.702(f)(1)(i); 45 CFR 146.121(f)(1)(i); see also                                                          Kaiser Survey]. According to the RAND Final
                                                 DOL—Employee Benefits Security Administration,          Where participation in the employer-                  Report, ‘‘approximately half of U.S. employers offer
                                                 FAQs on Affordable Care Act Implementation (Part                                                              wellness promotion initiatives.’’ By contrast, the
                                                 XXIX) and Mental Health Parity Implementation,            50 See General Comments: Burden for our             Kaiser Survey found that ‘‘[s]eventy-four percent of
                                                 Question 11 (2015), http://www.dol.gov/ebsa/pdf/        response to the commenter who expressed               employers offering health benefits’’ offer at least
                                                 faq-aca29.pdf.                                          disagreement with our burden calculations.            one wellness program.



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                                                                     Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 95 / Tuesday, May 17, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                              31157

                                                 are open for participation by the                       health or genetic services to employees               fiscal year 2014, the agency’s outreach
                                                 spouses or dependents of workers, and                   and their family members on a                         programs reached more than 236,000
                                                 used the highest estimates, to conclude                 voluntary basis. Consequently, this rule              persons through participation in more
                                                 that approximately 260,667 employers                    imposes no new obligations with                       than 3,500 no-cost educational, training
                                                 will be covered by this requirement.54                  respect to authorization for the                      and outreach events. We will put
                                                 Because the final rule now applies to a                 collection of genetic information.                    information about the revisions to the
                                                 broader set of wellness programs offered                                                                      GINA regulations in our outreach
                                                 by employers, we will increase these                    Paperwork Reduction Act
                                                                                                                                                               programs in general and continue to
                                                 estimates and assume that 347,556                         This rule contains no new                           offer GINA-specific outreach programs
                                                 employers (two thirds of those who offer                information collection requirements                   which will, of course, include
                                                 some type of wellness program) offer                    subject to review by the Office of                    information about the revisions now
                                                 spouses an opportunity to participate in,               Management and Budget under the                       that the rule is final. We will also post
                                                 at the very least, an employer-sponsored                Paperwork Reduction Act (44 U.S.C.                    technical assistance documents on our
                                                 wellness program that is outside or not                 chapter 35).                                          Web site explaining the revisions to the
                                                 part of a group health plan. We further                 Regulatory Flexibility Act                            GINA regulations, as we do with all of
                                                 estimate that the typical human                                                                               our new regulations and policy
                                                 resource professional will need to                         Title II of GINA applies to all                    documents.
                                                 dedicate, at most, 60 minutes to gain a                 employers with 15 or more employees,                     We estimate that the typical human
                                                 satisfactory understanding of the revised               approximately 764,233 of which are                    resources professional will need to
                                                 regulations and that the median hourly                  small firms (entities with 15–500                     dedicate, at most, 60 minutes to gain a
                                                 pay rate of a human resource                            employees) according to data provided                 satisfactory understanding of the revised
                                                 professional is approximately $49.41.55                 by the Small Business Administration                  regulations. We further estimate that the
                                                 Assuming that an employer will train                    Office of Advocacy.57                                 median hourly pay rate of a human
                                                 up to three human resource                                 The Commission certifies under 5                   resource professional is approximately
                                                 professionals/managers on the                           U.S.C. 605(b) that this final rule will not           $49.41.58 Assuming that small entities
                                                 requirements of this rule, we estimate                  have a significant economic impact on                 have between one and five human
                                                 that initial training costs will be                     a substantial number of small entities                resource professionals/managers, we
                                                 approximately $51,518,230.56 The                        because it imposes no reporting burdens               estimate that the cost per entity of
                                                 Commission sought comments on these                     and only minimal costs on such firms.                 providing appropriate training will be
                                                 cost estimates and responded to the one                 The rule simply clarifies that employers              between approximately $49.41 and
                                                 comment received above. (See the                        that offer wellness programs are free to              $247.05. The EEOC does not believe that
                                                 discussion in General Comments:                         adopt a certain type of inducement                    this cost will be significant for the
                                                 Burden.)                                                without violating GINA. It also corrects              impacted small entities.
                                                    Finally, GINA’s plain language (at 42                an internal citation and provides
                                                 U.S.C. 2000ff–(1)(b)(2)) and the EEOC’s                 citations to the Affordable Care Act. It              Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
                                                 regulations (at 29 CFR 1635.8(b)(2) and                 does not require any action on the part                 This final rule will not result in the
                                                 (c)(2)) make clear that an employer must                of covered entities, except to the extent             expenditure by state, local, or tribal
                                                 obtain authorization for the collection of              that those entities created                           governments, in the aggregate, or by the
                                                 genetic information as part of providing                documentation or forms which cite to                  private sector, of $100 million or more
                                                                                                         GINA for the proposition that the entity              in any one year, and it will not
                                                   54 Although the Kaiser Survey reports that 51         is unable to offer inducements to                     significantly or uniquely affect small
                                                 percent of large employers versus 32 percent of         employees in return for a spouse’s                    governments. Therefore, no actions were
                                                 small employers ask employees to complete a HRA,        completion of HRAs that request
                                                 see Kaiser Survey, supra note 50, we are not aware                                                            deemed necessary under the provisions
                                                 of any data indicating what percentage of those         information about the spouse’s                        of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
                                                 employers provide spouses with the opportunity to       manifestation of disease or disorder. We              of 1995.
                                                 participate in the HRA. We therefore have               do not have data on the number or size
                                                 substituted a more general statistic to allow an        of businesses that may need to alter                  List of Subjects in 29 CFR Part 1635
                                                 estimate of the number of employers who will be
                                                 covered by the requirements of this proposed rule.      documents relating to their employer-                   Administrative practice and
                                                 See Karen Pollitz & Matthew Roe, Kaiser Family          sponsored wellness programs. However,                 procedure, Equal employment
                                                 Foundation, Workplace Wellness Programs                 our experience with enforcing the ADA,                opportunity.
                                                 Characteristics and Requirements 5 (2016), http://      which required all employers with 15 or
                                                 kff.org/private-insurance/issue-brief/workplace-                                                                For the reasons set forth in the
                                                 wellness-programs-characteristics-and-                  more employees to remove medical                      preamble, the EEOC amends chapter
                                                 requirements/ (noting that nearly half (48 percent)     inquiries from application forms,                     XIV of title 29 of the Code of Federal
                                                 of employer wellness programs are open for              suggests that revising questionnaires to              Regulations as follows:
                                                 participation by the spouses or dependents of           eliminate or alter an instruction would
                                                 workers, as well as workers).
                                                   55 See Occupational Employment and Wages,
                                                                                                         not impose significant costs.                         PART 1635—[AMENDED]
                                                 Bureau of Labor Statistics, http://www.bls.gov/oes/        To the extent that employers will
                                                 current/oes113121.htm (last visited March 28,           expend resources to train human                       ■  1. The authority citation for part 1635
                                                 2016).                                                  resources staff and others on the revised             is revised to read as follows:
                                                   56 A study published in 2009 by the Society for
                                                                                                         rule, we reiterate that the EEOC                          Authority: 29 U.S.C. 2000ff.
                                                 Human Resource Management (SHRM) found that
                                                 the median number of full-time equivalents for a        conducts extensive outreach and
                                                                                                                                                               ■ 2. In § 1635.8(b):
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                                                 HR department was three. See SHRM, Human                technical assistance programs, many of
                                                 Capital Benchmarking Study 2009 Executive               them at no cost to employers, to assist               ■ a. Redesignate paragraphs (b)(2)(i)(A)
                                                 Summary, 6 (2009), https://www.shrm.org/                in the training of relevant personnel on              through (D) as paragraphs (b)(2)(i)(B)
                                                 Research/SurveyFindings/Articles/Documents/
                                                                                                         EEO-related issues. For example, in                   through (E);
                                                 090620_Human_Cap_Benchmark_FULL_FNL.pdf.                                                                      ■ b. Add new paragraph (b)(2)(i)(A);
                                                 Because we are not aware of any more specific data
                                                 on the average number of human resources                  57 See Firm Size Data, Small Business

                                                 professionals per covered employer, we have based       Administration, http://www.sba.gov/advocacy/849/        58 See Occupational Employment and Wages,

                                                 our estimates on this figure.                           12162 (last visited March 28, 2016).                  supra note 53.



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                                                 31158               Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 95 / Tuesday, May 17, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                 ■ c. Revise paragraph (b)(2)(ii)                        may not offer an inducement (financial                employer at a total cost (taking into
                                                 introductory text;                                      or in-kind), whether in the form of a                 account both employer and employee
                                                 ■ d. Redesignate paragraphs (b)(2)(iii)                 reward or penalty, for individuals to                 contributions toward the cost of
                                                 and (iv) as paragraphs (b)(2)(vi) and                   provide genetic information, except as                coverage) of $14,000 for family
                                                 (vii);                                                  described in paragraphs (b)(2)(iii) and               coverage, that plan has a self-only
                                                 ■ e. Add new paragraphs (b)(2)(iii)                     (iv) of this section, but may offer                   option for $6,000, and the employer
                                                 through (v);                                            inducements for completion of health                  provides the option of participating in a
                                                 ■ f. Revise newly redesignated                          risk assessments that include questions               wellness program to the employee and
                                                 paragraph (b)(2)(vii); and                              about family medical history or other                 spouse because they are enrolled in the
                                                 ■ g. Revise paragraph (c)(2).                           genetic information, provided the                     plan, the employer may not offer more
                                                   The revisions and additions read as                   covered entity makes clear, in language               than $1,800 to the employee and $1,800
                                                 follows:                                                reasonably likely to be understood by                 to the spouse.
                                                                                                         those completing the health risk                         (B) Thirty percent of the total cost of
                                                 § 1635.8 Acquisition of genetic
                                                 information.                                            assessment, that the inducement will be               self-only coverage under the group
                                                                                                         made available whether or not the                     health plan offered by the employer
                                                 *       *     *     *    *                                                                                    where the employer offers a single
                                                    (b) * * *                                            participant answers questions regarding
                                                                                                         genetic information.                                  group health plan, but participation in
                                                    (2) * * *
                                                    (i) * * *                                            *       *     *     *     *                           a wellness program does not depend on
                                                    (A) The health or genetic services,                                                                        the employee’s or spouse’s enrollment
                                                                                                            (iii) Consistent with, and in addition
                                                 including any acquisition of genetic                                                                          in that plan. For example, if the
                                                                                                         to, the requirements of paragraphs
                                                 information that is part of those                                                                             employer offers one group health plan
                                                                                                         (b)(2)(i) and (ii) of this section, a
                                                 services, are reasonably designed to                                                                          and self-only coverage under that plan
                                                                                                         covered entity may offer an inducement
                                                 promote health or prevent disease. A                                                                          costs $7,000, and the employer provides
                                                                                                         to an employee whose spouse provides
                                                 program satisfies this standard if it has                                                                     the option of participation in a wellness
                                                                                                         information about the spouse’s
                                                 a reasonable chance of improving the                                                                          program to the employee and the
                                                                                                         manifestation of disease or disorder as
                                                 health of, or preventing disease in,                                                                          spouse, the employer may not offer
                                                                                                         part of a health risk assessment. No
                                                 participating individuals, and it is not                                                                      more than $2,100 to the employee and
                                                                                                         inducement may be offered, however, in
                                                 overly burdensome, is not a subterfuge                                                                        $2,100 to the spouse.
                                                                                                         return for the spouse’s providing his or                 (C) Thirty percent of the total cost of
                                                 for violating Title II of GINA or other                 her own genetic information, including                the lowest cost self-only coverage under
                                                 laws prohibiting employment                             results of his or her genetic tests, or for           a major medical group health plan
                                                 discrimination, and is not highly                       information about the manifestation of                offered by the employer, if the employer
                                                 suspect in the method chosen to                         disease or disorder in an employee’s                  offers more than one group health plan
                                                 promote health or prevent disease. A                    children or for genetic information                   but enrollment in a particular plan is
                                                 program is not reasonably designed to                   about an employee’s children, including               not a condition for participation in the
                                                 promote health or prevent disease if it                 adult children. The health risk                       wellness program. For example, if the
                                                 imposes a penalty or disadvantage on an                 assessment, which may include a                       employer has more than one major
                                                 individual because a spouse’s                           medical questionnaire, a medical                      medical group health plan under which
                                                 manifestation of disease or disorder                    examination (e.g., to detect high blood               self-only coverage ranges in cost from
                                                 prevents or inhibits the spouse from                    pressure or high cholesterol), or both,               $5,000 to $8,000, and the employer
                                                 participating or from achieving a certain               must otherwise comply with paragraph                  provides the option of participation in
                                                 health outcome. For example, an                         (b)(2)(i) of this section in the same                 a wellness program to the employee and
                                                 employer may not deny an employee an                    manner as if completed by the                         the spouse, the employer may not offer
                                                 inducement for participation of either                  employee, including the requirement                   more than $1,500 to the employee and
                                                 the employee or the spouse in an                        that the spouse provide prior, knowing,               $1,500 to the spouse.
                                                 employer-sponsored wellness program                     voluntary, and written authorization,                    (D) Thirty percent of the cost of self-
                                                 because the employee’s spouse has                       and the requirement that the                          only coverage available to an individual
                                                 blood pressure, a cholesterol level, or a               authorization form describe the                       who is 40 years old and a non-smoker
                                                 blood glucose level that the employer                   confidentiality protections and                       under the second lowest cost Silver Plan
                                                 considers too high. In addition, a                      restrictions on the disclosure of genetic             available through the Exchange in the
                                                 program consisting of a measurement,                    information. The health risk assessment               location that the employer identifies as
                                                 test, screening, or collection of health-               must also be administered in connection               its principal place of business is located,
                                                 related information without providing                   with the spouse’s receipt of health or                where the employer has no group health
                                                 participants with results, follow-up                    genetic services offered by the                       plan. For example, if the cost of insuring
                                                 information, or advice designed to                      employer, including such services                     a 40-year-old non-smoker is $4,000
                                                 improve the participant’s health is not                 offered as part of an employer-                       annually, the maximum inducement the
                                                 reasonably designed to promote health                   sponsored wellness program. When an                   employer could offer the employee and
                                                 or prevent disease, unless the collected                employee and spouse are given the                     the spouse would be no more than
                                                 information actually is used to design a                opportunity to participate in an                      $1,200 each.
                                                 program that addresses at least a subset                employer-sponsored wellness program,                     (iv) A covered entity may not,
                                                 of conditions identified. Whether health                the inducement to each may not exceed:                however, condition participation in an
                                                 or genetic services are reasonably                         (A) Thirty percent of the total cost of            employer-sponsored wellness program
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                                                 designed to promote health or prevent                   self-only coverage under the group                    or provide any inducement to an
                                                 disease is evaluated in light of all the                health plan in which the employee is                  employee, or the spouse or other
                                                 relevant facts and circumstances.                       enrolled, if enrollment in the plan is a              covered dependent of the employee, in
                                                 *       *     *     *    *                              condition for participation in the                    exchange for an agreement permitting
                                                    (ii) Consistent with, and in addition                employer-sponsored wellness program.                  the sale, exchange, sharing, transfer, or
                                                 to, the requirements of paragraph                       For example, if an employee is enrolled               other disclosure of genetic information,
                                                 (b)(2)(i) of this section, a covered entity             in health insurance through the                       including information about the


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                                                                     Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 95 / Tuesday, May 17, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                                31159

                                                 manifestation of disease or disorder of                 for employer-sponsored wellness                       connection with the family member’s
                                                 an employee’s family member (except to                  programs that condition rewards on an                 receipt of health or genetic services
                                                 the extent permitted by paragraph                       individual satisfying a standard related              (including health or genetic services
                                                 (b)(2)(i)(D)) of this section, or otherwise             to a health factor, including the                     provided as part of an employer-
                                                 waiving the protections of § 1635.9.                    requirement to provide an individual                  sponsored wellness program) offered by
                                                   (v) A covered entity may not deny                     with a reasonable alternative (or waiver              the employer in compliance with
                                                 access to health insurance or any                       of the otherwise applicable standard)                 paragraph (b)(2) of this section.
                                                 package of health insurance benefits to                 under HIPAA, when it is unreasonably                  *     *      *     *      *
                                                 an employee, or the spouse or other                     difficult due to a medical condition to               ■ 3. In § 1635.11, revise paragraphs
                                                 covered dependent of the employee, or                   satisfy or medically inadvisable to
                                                                                                                                                               (b)(1)(iii) and (iv) to read as follows:
                                                 retaliate against an employee, due to a                 attempt to satisfy the otherwise
                                                 spouse’s refusal to provide information                 applicable standard. See section 9802 of              § 1635.11   Construction.
                                                 about his or her manifestation of disease               the Internal Revenue Code (26 U.S.C.                  *      *     *    *     *
                                                 or disorder to an employer-sponsored                    9802, 26 CFR 54.9802–1 and 54.9802–
                                                                                                                                                                 (b) * * *
                                                 wellness program.                                       3T), section 702 of the Employee
                                                                                                         Retirement Income Security Act of 1974                  (1) * * *
                                                 *     *      *     *     *
                                                   (vii) Nothing contained in paragraphs                 (ERISA) (29 U.S.C. 1182, 29 CFR                         (iii) Section 702(a)(1)(F) of ERISA (29
                                                 (b)(2)(ii) through (v) of this section                  2590.702 and 2590.702–1), and section                 U.S.C. 1182(a)(1)(F)), section 2705(a)(6)
                                                 limits the rights or protections of an                  2705 of the Public Health Service (PHS)               of the PHS Act, as amended by section
                                                 individual under the Americans with                     Act (45 CFR 146.121, 146.122, and                     1201 of the Affordable Care Act and
                                                 Disabilities Act (ADA), as amended, or                  147.110), as amended by section 1201 of               section 9802(a)(1)(F) of the Internal
                                                 other applicable civil rights laws, or                  the Affordable Care Act.                              Revenue Code (26 U.S.C. 9802(a)(1)(F)),
                                                 under the Health Insurance Portability                  *      *     *     *     *                            which prohibit a group health plan or a
                                                 and Accountability Act (HIPAA), as                         (c) * * *                                          health insurance issuer in the group or
                                                 amended by GINA. For example, if an                        (2) A covered entity does not violate              individual market from discriminating
                                                 employer offers an inducement for                       this section when it requests, requires,              against individuals in eligibility and
                                                 participation in disease management                     or purchases genetic information or                   continued eligibility for benefits based
                                                 programs or other programs that                         information about the manifestation of a              on genetic information; or
                                                 promote healthy lifestyles and/or                       disease, disorder, or pathological                      (iv) Section 702(b)(1) of ERISA (29
                                                 require individuals to meet particular                  condition of an individual’s family                   U.S.C. 1182(b)(1)), section 2705(b)(1) of
                                                 health goals, the employer must make                    member who is receiving health or                     the PHS Act, as amended by section
                                                 reasonable accommodations to the                        genetic services on a voluntary basis, as             1201 of the Affordable Care Act and
                                                 extent required by the ADA; that is, the                long as the requirements of paragraph                 section 9802(b)(1) of the Internal
                                                 employer must make modifications or                     (b)(2) of this section, including those               Revenue Code (26 U.S.C. 9802(b)(1)), as
                                                 adjustments that enable a covered                       concerning authorization and                          such sections apply with respect to
                                                 entity’s employee with a disability to                  inducements, are met. For example, an                 genetic information as a health status-
                                                 enjoy equal benefits and privileges of                  employer does not unlawfully acquire                  related factor, which prohibit a group
                                                 employment as are enjoyed by its other                  genetic information about an employee                 health plan or a health insurance issuer
                                                 similarly situated employees without                    when it asks the employee’s family                    in the group or individual market from
                                                 disabilities unless such covered entity                 member who is receiving health services               discriminating against individuals in
                                                 can demonstrate that the                                from the employer if her diabetes is                  premium or contribution rates under the
                                                 accommodation would impose an                           under control. Nor does an employer                   plan or coverage based on genetic
                                                 undue hardship on the operation of its                  unlawfully acquire genetic information                information.
                                                 business. See 29 CFR 1630.2(o)(1)(iii)                  about an employee when it seeks                       *      *     *    *     *
                                                 and 29 CFR 1630.9(a). In addition, if the               information—through a medical
                                                                                                                                                                 Dated: May 11, 2016.
                                                 employer’s wellness program provides                    questionnaire, a medical examination,
                                                 (directly, through reimbursement, or                    or both—about the manifestation of                      For the Commission:
                                                 otherwise) medical care (including                      disease, disorder, or pathological                    Jenny R. Yang,
                                                 genetic counseling), the program may                    condition of the employee’s family                    Chair.
                                                 constitute a group health plan and must                 member who is completing a health risk                [FR Doc. 2016–11557 Filed 5–16–16; 8:45 am]
                                                 comply with the special requirements                    assessment on a voluntary basis in                    BILLING CODE 6570–01–P
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Document Created: 2018-02-07 15:05:54
Document Modified: 2018-02-07 15:05:54
CategoryRegulatory Information
CollectionFederal Register
sudoc ClassAE 2.7:
GS 4.107:
AE 2.106:
PublisherOffice of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Administration
SectionRules and Regulations
ActionFinal rule.
DatesEffective date: This rule is effective July 18, 2016.
ContactChristopher J. Kuczynski, Assistant Legal Counsel, at (202) 663-4665 (voice), or Kerry E. Leibig, Senior Attorney Advisor, at (202) 663-4516 (voice), or (202) 663-7026 (TTY). (These are not toll free numbers.) Requests for this rule 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 Citation81 FR 31143 
RIN Number3046-AB02
CFR AssociatedAdministrative Practice and Procedure and Equal Employment Opportunity

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