Bill Text: CA SB1283 | 2009-2010 | Regular Session | Amended

NOTE: There are more recent revisions of this legislation. Read Latest Draft
Bill Title: Health care coverage: grievance system.

Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 1-0)

Status: (Vetoed) 2010-09-30 - In Senate. To unfinished business. (Veto) [SB1283 Detail]

Download: California-2009-SB1283-Amended.html
BILL NUMBER: SB 1283	AMENDED
	BILL TEXT

	AMENDED IN SENATE  APRIL 27, 2010
	AMENDED IN SENATE  APRIL 8, 2010

INTRODUCED BY   Senator Steinberg

                        FEBRUARY 19, 2010

   An act to amend Section 1368 of the Health and Safety Code,
relating to health care coverage.


	LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST


   SB 1283, as amended, Steinberg. Health care coverage: grievance
system.
   Existing law, the Knox-Keene Health Care Service Plan Act of 1975,
provides for the licensure and regulation of health care service
plans by the Department of Managed Health Care. A willful violation
of the act constitutes a crime. Existing law requires every health
care service plan to establish and maintain a grievance system
approved by the department under which enrollees and subscribers may
submit a grievance to the plan. Existing law authorizes a subscriber
or enrollee to submit his or her grievance to the department for
review after completing the grievance process or after having
participated in that process for at least 30 days. Existing law
requires the department to send a written notice of the final
disposition of the grievance to an enrollee or subscriber within 30
days of receiving the request for review, unless the director
determines that additional time is reasonably necessary to fully
review the grievance.
   This bill would delete the authority of the director to determine
that additional time is necessary to review a grievance, and instead
require the department to send the written notice of the final
disposition within 30 days of receipt of all relevant information
that is necessary to make a coverage decision.  The bill would
require the department to specify the necessary information on its
Internet Web site and on each application used for filing a grievance
with the department.  
   Existing law requires the director to make and file annually with
the department as a public record an aggregate summary of grievances
against plans filed with the department, as specified.  
   This bill would require the director to include in that report
timeframe information, including, but not limited to, the average
number of days before a grievance is closed, the number of cases
resolved in less than 30 days and in more than 30 days, and specified
data regarding the independent medical review process. 
   Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: yes.
State-mandated local program: no.


THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA DO ENACT AS FOLLOWS:

  SECTION 1.  Section 1368 of the Health and Safety Code is amended
to read:
   1368.  (a) Every plan shall do all of the following:
   (1) Establish and maintain a grievance system approved by the
department under which enrollees may submit their grievances to the
plan. Each system shall provide reasonable procedures in accordance
with department regulations that shall ensure adequate consideration
of enrollee grievances and rectification when appropriate.
   (2) Inform its subscribers and enrollees upon enrollment in the
plan and annually thereafter of the procedure for processing and
resolving grievances. The information shall include the location and
telephone number where grievances may be submitted.
   (3) Provide forms for grievances to be given to subscribers and
enrollees who wish to register written grievances. The forms used by
plans licensed pursuant to Section 1353 shall be approved by the
director in advance as to format.
   (4) (A) Provide for a written acknowledgment within five calendar
days of the receipt of a grievance, except as noted in subparagraph
(B). The acknowledgment shall advise the complainant of the
following:
   (i) That the grievance has been received.
   (ii) The date of receipt.
   (iii) The name of the plan representative and the telephone number
and address of the plan representative who may be contacted about
the grievance.
   (B) Grievances received by telephone, by facsimile, by e-mail, or
online through the plan's Internet Web site pursuant to Section
1368.015, that are not coverage disputes, disputed health care
services involving medical necessity, or experimental or
investigational treatment and that are resolved by the next business
day following receipt are exempt from the requirements of
subparagraph (A) and paragraph (5). The plan shall maintain a log of
all these grievances. The log shall be periodically reviewed by the
plan and shall include the following information for each complaint:
   (i) The date of the call.
   (ii) The name of the complainant.
   (iii) The complainant's member identification number.
   (iv) The nature of the grievance.
   (v) The nature of the resolution.
   (vi) The name of the plan representative who took the call and
resolved the grievance.
   (5) Provide subscribers and enrollees with written responses to
grievances, with a clear and concise explanation of the reasons for
the plan's response. For grievances involving the delay, denial, or
modification of health care services, the plan response shall
describe the criteria used and the clinical reasons for its decision,
including all criteria and clinical reasons related to medical
necessity. If a plan, or one of its contracting providers, issues a
decision delaying, denying, or modifying health care services based
in whole or in part on a finding that the proposed health care
services are not a covered benefit under the contract that applies to
the enrollee, the decision shall clearly specify the provisions in
the contract that exclude that coverage.
   (6) Keep in its files all copies of grievances, and the responses
thereto, for a period of five years.
   (b) (1) (A) After either completing the grievance process
described in subdivision (a), or participating in the process for at
least 30 days, a subscriber or enrollee may submit the grievance to
the department for review. In any case determined by the department
to be a case involving an imminent and serious threat to the health
of the patient, including, but not limited to, severe pain, the
potential loss of life, limb, or major bodily function, or in any
other case where the department determines that an earlier review is
warranted, a subscriber or enrollee shall not be required to complete
the grievance process or to participate in the process for at least
30 days before submitting a grievance to the department for review.
   (B) A grievance may be submitted to the department for review and
resolution prior to any arbitration.
   (C) Notwithstanding subparagraphs (A) and (B), the department may
refer any grievance that does not pertain to compliance with this
chapter to the State Department of Health Care Services, the State
Department of Public Health, the California Department of Aging, the
federal Health Care Financing Administration, or any other
appropriate governmental entity for investigation and resolution.
   (2) If the subscriber or enrollee is a minor, or is incompetent or
incapacitated, the parent, guardian, conservator, relative, or other
designee of the subscriber or enrollee, as appropriate, may submit
the grievance to the department as the agent of the subscriber or
enrollee. Further, a provider may join with, or otherwise assist, a
subscriber or enrollee, or the agent, to submit the grievance to the
department. In addition, following submission of the grievance to the
department, the subscriber or enrollee, or the agent, may authorize
the provider to assist, including advocating on behalf of the
subscriber or enrollee. For purposes of this section, a "relative"
includes the parent, stepparent, spouse, adult son or daughter,
grandparent, brother, sister, uncle, or aunt of the subscriber or
enrollee.
   (3) The department shall review the written documents submitted
with the subscriber's or the enrollee's request for review, or
submitted by the agent on behalf of the subscriber or enrollee. The
department may ask for additional information, and may hold an
informal meeting with the involved parties, including providers who
have joined in submitting the grievance or who are otherwise
assisting or advocating on behalf of the subscriber or enrollee. If
after reviewing the record, the department concludes that the
grievance, in whole or in part, is eligible for review under the
independent medical review system established pursuant to Article
5.55 (commencing with Section 1374.30), the department shall
immediately notify the subscriber or enrollee, or agent, of that
option and shall, if requested orally or in writing, assist the
subscriber or enrollee in participating in the independent medical
review system.
   (4) If after reviewing the record of a grievance, the department
concludes that a health care service eligible for coverage and
payment under a health care service plan contract has been delayed,
denied, or modified by a plan, or by one of its contracting
providers, in whole or in part due to a determination that the
service is not medically necessary, and that determination was not
communicated to the enrollee in writing along with a notice of the
enrollee's potential right to participate in the independent medical
review system, as required by this chapter, the director shall, by
order, assess administrative penalties. A proceeding for the issuance
of an order assessing administrative penalties shall be subject to
appropriate notice of, and the opportunity for, a hearing with regard
to the person affected in accordance with Section 1397. The
administrative penalties shall not be deemed an exclusive remedy
available to the director. These penalties shall be paid to the
Managed Care Administrative Fines and Penalties Fund and shall be
used for the purposes specified in Section 1341.45.
   (5) The department shall send a written notice of the final
disposition of the grievance, and the reasons therefor, to the
subscriber or enrollee, the agent, to any provider that has joined
with or is otherwise assisting the subscriber or enrollee, and to the
plan, within 30 calendar days of receipt of all relevant information
 necessary to enable the department to make a coverage
decision   that the department shall have identified as
necessary for it to complete a grievance review and make a
determination. The department shall specify that necessary
information publicly on its Internet Web site and on each application
used for filing a grievance with the department  . In any case
not eligible for the independent medical review system established
pursuant to Article 5.55 (commencing with Section 1374.30), the
department's written notice shall include, at a minimum, the
following:
   (A) A summary of its findings and the reasons why the department
found the plan to be, or not to be, in compliance with any applicable
laws, regulations, or orders of the director.
   (B) A discussion of the department's contact with any medical
provider, or any other independent expert relied on by the
department, along with a summary of the views and qualifications of
that provider or expert.
   (C) If the enrollee's grievance is sustained in whole or in part,
information about any corrective action taken.
   (6) In any department review of a grievance involving a disputed
health care service, as defined in subdivision (b) of Section
1374.30, that is not eligible for the independent medical review
system established pursuant to Article 5.55 (commencing with Section
1374.30), in which the department finds that the plan has delayed,
denied, or modified health care services that are medically
necessary, based on the specific medical circumstances of the
enrollee, and those services are a covered benefit under the terms
and conditions of the health care service plan contract, the
department's written notice shall do either of the following:
   (A) Order the plan to promptly offer and provide those health care
services to the enrollee.
   (B) Order the plan to promptly reimburse the enrollee for any
reasonable costs associated with urgent care or emergency services,
or other extraordinary and compelling health care services, when the
department finds that the enrollee's decision to secure those
services outside of the plan network was reasonable under the
circumstances.
   The department's order shall be binding on the plan.
   (7) Distribution of the written notice shall not be deemed a
waiver of any exemption or privilege under existing law, including,
but not limited to, Section 6254.5 of the Government Code, for any
information in connection with and including the written notice, nor
shall any person employed or in any way retained by the department be
required to testify as to that information or notice.
   (8) The director shall establish and maintain a system of aging of
grievances that are pending and unresolved for 30 days or more that
shall include a brief explanation of the reasons each grievance is
pending and unresolved for 30 days or more.  The director shall
also include, in its annually published report that details the
number and types of complaints or grievances received during the
calendar year pursuant to Section 1397.5, data regarding the
timeframe for grievance resolutions. This data shall include, but is
not limited to, the average number of days before a grievance is
  closed, the average number of days before a grievance is
sent to independent medical review, the average number of days before
the independent medical review process is resolved and a decision
rendered by the director, and a breakdown of the number of cases
resolved in less than 30 days and in more than 30 days. 
   (9) A subscriber or enrollee, or the agent acting on behalf of a
subscriber or enrollee, may also request voluntary mediation with the
plan prior to exercising the right to submit a grievance to the
department. The use of mediation services shall not preclude the
right to submit a grievance to the department upon completion of
mediation. In order to initiate mediation, the subscriber or
enrollee, or the agent acting on behalf of the subscriber or
enrollee, and the plan shall voluntarily agree to mediation. Expenses
for mediation shall be borne equally by both sides. The department
shall have no administrative or enforcement responsibilities in
connection with the voluntary mediation process authorized by this
paragraph.
   (c) The plan's grievance system shall include a system of aging of
grievances that are pending and unresolved for 30 days or more. The
plan shall provide a quarterly report to the director of grievances
pending and unresolved for 30 or more days with separate categories
of grievances for Medicare enrollees and Medi-Cal enrollees. The plan
shall include with the report a brief explanation of the reasons
each grievance is pending and unresolved for 30 days or more. The
plan shall also include in the quarterly report data regarding the
timeframe for grievance resolutions, as determined by the department.
 The plan may include the following statement in the quarterly
report that is made available to the public by the director:



"Under Medicare and Medi-Cal law, Medicare enrollees and Medi-Cal
enrollees each have separate avenues of appeal that are not available
to other enrollees. Therefore, grievances pending and unresolved may
reflect enrollees pursuing their Medicare or Medi-Cal appeal rights."




If requested by a plan, the director shall include this statement in
a written report made available to the public and prepared by the
director that describes or compares grievances that are pending and
unresolved with the plan for 30 days or more. Additionally, the
director shall, if requested by a plan, append to that written report
a brief explanation, provided in writing by the plan, of the reasons
why grievances described in that written report are pending and
unresolved for 30 days or more. The director shall not be required to
include a statement or append a brief explanation to a written
report that the director is required to prepare under this chapter,
including Sections 1380 and 1397.5.
   (d) Subject to subparagraph (C) of paragraph (1) of subdivision
(b), the grievance or resolution procedures authorized by this
section shall be in addition to any other procedures that may be
available to any person, and failure to pursue, exhaust, or engage in
the procedures described in this section shall not preclude the use
of any other remedy provided by law.
   (e) Nothing in this section shall be construed to allow the
submission to the department of any provider grievance under this
section. However, as part of a provider's duty to advocate for
medically appropriate health care for his or her patients pursuant to
Sections 510 and 2056 of the Business and Professions Code, nothing
in this subdivision shall be construed to prohibit a provider from
contacting and informing the department about any concerns he or she
has regarding compliance with or enforcement of this chapter.
                                                    
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