Bill Text: TX SB1776 | 2017-2018 | 85th Legislature | Introduced


Bill Title: Relating to the administration and operation of the Medicaid program in a managed care model.

Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 1-0)

Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2017-03-23 - Referred to Health & Human Services [SB1776 Detail]

Download: Texas-2017-SB1776-Introduced.html
 
 
  By: Hinojosa S.B. No. 1776
 
 
 
   
 
 
A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 
AN ACT
  relating to the administration and operation of the Medicaid
  program in a managed care model.
         BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
         SECTION 1.  Subchapter C, Chapter 531, Government Code, is
  amended by adding Section 531.1133 to read as follows:
         Sec. 531.1133.  PROVIDER NOT LIABLE FOR MANAGED CARE
  ORGANIZATION OVERPAYMENT OR DEBT. If the commission's office of
  inspector general makes a determination to recoup an overpayment or
  debt from a managed care organization that contracts with the
  commission to provide health care services to recipients, a
  provider that contracts with the managed care organization may not
  be held liable for the good faith provision of services under the
  provider's contract with the managed care organization.
         SECTION 2.  Section 531.120, Government Code, is amended by
  adding Subsection (c) to read as follows:
         (c)  The commission shall provide the notice required by
  Subsection (a) to a provider that is a hospital not later than the
  90th day before the date the overpayment or debt that is the subject
  of the notice must be paid.
         SECTION 3.  Section 533.005, Government Code, is amended by
  amending Subsections (a) and (a-3) and adding Subsections (a-4),
  (a-5), and (e) to read as follows:
         (a)  A contract between a managed care organization and the
  commission for the organization to provide health care services to
  recipients must contain:
               (1)  procedures to ensure accountability to the state
  for the provision of health care services, including procedures for
  financial reporting, quality assurance, utilization review, and
  assurance of contract and subcontract compliance;
               (2)  capitation rates that ensure access to and the
  cost-effective provision of quality health care;
               (3)  a requirement that the managed care organization
  provide ready access to a person who assists recipients in
  resolving issues relating to enrollment, plan administration,
  education and training, access to services, and grievance
  procedures;
               (4)  a requirement that the managed care organization
  provide ready access to a person who assists providers in resolving
  issues relating to payment, plan administration, education and
  training, and grievance procedures;
               (5)  a requirement that the managed care organization
  provide information and referral about the availability of
  educational, social, and other community services that could
  benefit a recipient;
               (6)  procedures for recipient outreach and education;
               (7)  subject to Subdivision (7-b), a requirement that
  the managed care organization make payment to a physician or
  provider for health care services rendered to a recipient under a
  managed care plan on any claim for payment that is received with
  documentation reasonably necessary for the managed care
  organization to process the claim:
                     (A)  not later than:
                           (i)  the 10th day after the date the claim is
  received if the claim relates to services provided by a nursing
  facility, intermediate care facility, or group home;
                           (ii)  the 30th day after the date the claim
  is received if the claim relates to the provision of long-term
  services and supports not subject to Subparagraph (i); and
                           (iii)  the 45th day after the date the claim
  is received if the claim is not subject to Subparagraph (i) or (ii);
  or
                     (B)  within a period, not to exceed 60 days,
  specified by a written agreement between the physician or provider
  and the managed care organization;
               (7-a)  a requirement that the managed care organization
  demonstrate to the commission that the organization pays claims
  described by Subdivision (7)(A)(ii) on average not later than the
  21st day after the date the claim is received by the organization;
               (7-b)  a requirement that the managed care organization
  demonstrate to the commission that, within each provider category
  designated by the commission, the organization pays at least 98
  percent of claims described by Subdivision (7) within the time
  prescribed by that subdivision;
               (7-c)  a requirement that the managed care organization
  establish an electronic process for use by providers that complies
  with Section 533.0055(b)(6);
               (8)  a requirement that the commission, on the date of a
  recipient's enrollment in a managed care plan issued by the managed
  care organization, inform the organization of the recipient's
  Medicaid certification date;
               (9)  a requirement that the managed care organization
  comply with Section 533.006 as a condition of contract retention
  and renewal;
               (10)  a requirement that the managed care organization
  provide the information required by Section 533.012 and otherwise
  comply and cooperate with the commission's office of inspector
  general and the office of the attorney general;
               (11)  a requirement that the managed care
  organization's usages of out-of-network providers or groups of
  out-of-network providers may not exceed limits for those usages
  determined by the commission, including limits relating to:
                     (A)  total inpatient admissions, total outpatient
  services, and emergency room admissions [determined by the
  commission]; and
                     (B)  therapy services, home health services,
  long-term services and supports, and health care specialists;
               (12)  if the commission finds that a managed care
  organization has violated Subdivision (11), a requirement that the
  managed care organization reimburse an out-of-network provider for
  health care services at a rate that is equal to the allowable rate
  for those services, as determined under Sections 32.028 and
  32.0281, Human Resources Code;
               (13)  a requirement that, notwithstanding any other
  law, including Sections 843.312 and 1301.052, Insurance Code, the
  organization:
                     (A)  use advanced practice registered nurses and
  physician assistants in addition to physicians as primary care
  providers to increase the availability of primary care providers in
  the organization's provider network; and
                     (B)  treat advanced practice registered nurses
  and physician assistants in the same manner as primary care
  physicians with regard to:
                           (i)  selection and assignment as primary
  care providers;
                           (ii)  inclusion as primary care providers in
  the organization's provider network; and
                           (iii)  inclusion as primary care providers
  in any provider network directory maintained by the organization;
               (14)  a requirement that the managed care organization
  reimburse a federally qualified health center or rural health
  clinic for health care services provided to a recipient outside of
  regular business hours, including on a weekend day or holiday, at a
  rate that is equal to the allowable rate for those services as
  determined under Section 32.028, Human Resources Code, if the
  recipient does not have a referral from the recipient's primary
  care physician;
               (15)  a requirement that the managed care organization
  develop, implement, and maintain a system for tracking and
  resolving all provider appeals related to claims payment, including
  a process that will require:
                     (A)  a tracking mechanism to document the status
  and final disposition of each provider's claims payment appeal;
                     (B)  the contracting with physicians and other
  health care providers who are not network providers and who are of
  the same or related specialty as the appealing physician to resolve
  claims disputes related to denial on the basis of medical necessity
  that remain unresolved subsequent to a provider appeal;
                     (C)  the determination of the physician or other
  health care provider resolving the dispute to be binding on the
  managed care organization and the appealing provider; and
                     (D)  the managed care organization to allow a
  provider with a claim that has not been paid before the time
  prescribed by Subdivision (7)(A)(ii) to initiate an appeal of that
  claim;
               (15-a)  a requirement that the managed care
  organization develop, implement, and maintain on the
  organization's Internet website information that is accessible to
  the public regarding provider appeals and the disposition of those
  appeals, organized by provider and service types;
               (16)  a requirement that a medical director who is
  authorized to make medical necessity determinations is available to
  the region where the managed care organization provides health care
  services;
               (17)  a requirement that the managed care organization
  ensure that a medical director and patient care coordinators and
  provider and recipient support services personnel are located in
  the South Texas service region, if the managed care organization
  provides a managed care plan in that region;
               (18)  a requirement that the managed care organization
  provide special programs and materials for recipients with limited
  English proficiency or low literacy skills;
               (19)  a requirement that the managed care organization
  develop and establish a process for responding to provider appeals
  in the region where the organization provides health care services;
               (20)  a requirement that the managed care organization:
                     (A)  develop and submit to the commission, before
  the organization begins to provide health care services to
  recipients, a comprehensive plan that describes how the
  organization's provider network complies with the provider access
  standards established under Section 533.0061, as added by Chapter
  1272 (S.B. 760), Acts of the 84th Legislature, Regular Session,
  2015;
                     (B)  as a condition of contract retention and
  renewal:
                           (i)  continue to comply with the provider
  access standards established under Section 533.0061, as added by
  Chapter 1272 (S.B. 760), Acts of the 84th Legislature, Regular
  Session, 2015; and
                           (ii)  make substantial efforts, as
  determined by the commission, to mitigate or remedy any
  noncompliance with the provider access standards established under
  Section 533.0061, as added by Chapter 1272 (S.B. 760), Acts of the
  84th Legislature, Regular Session, 2015;
                     (C)  pay liquidated damages for each failure, as
  determined by the commission, to comply with the provider access
  standards established under Section 533.0061, as added by Chapter
  1272 (S.B. 760), Acts of the 84th Legislature, Regular Session,
  2015, in amounts that are reasonably related to the noncompliance;
  and
                     (D)  regularly, as determined by the commission,
  submit to the commission and make available to the public a report
  containing data on the sufficiency of the organization's provider
  network with regard to providing the care and services described
  under Section 533.0061(a), as added by Chapter 1272 (S.B. 760),
  Acts of the 84th Legislature, Regular Session, 2015, and specific
  data with respect to access to primary care, specialty care,
  long-term services and supports, nursing services, and therapy
  services on:
                           (i)  the average length of time between[:
                           [(i)]  the date a provider requests prior
  authorization for the care or service and the date the organization
  approves or denies the request; [and]
                           (ii)  the average length of time between the
  date the organization approves a request for prior authorization
  for the care or service and the date the care or service is
  initiated; and
                           (iii)  the number of providers who are
  accepting new patients;
               (21)  a requirement that the managed care organization
  demonstrate to the commission, before the organization begins to
  provide health care services to recipients, that, subject to the
  provider access standards established under Section 533.0061, as
  added by Chapter 1272 (S.B. 760), Acts of the 84th Legislature,
  Regular Session, 2015:
                     (A)  the organization's provider network has the
  capacity to serve the number of recipients expected to enroll in a
  managed care plan offered by the organization;
                     (B)  the organization's provider network
  includes:
                           (i)  a sufficient number of primary care
  providers;
                           (ii)  a sufficient variety of provider
  types;
                           (iii)  a sufficient number of providers of
  long-term services and supports and specialty pediatric care
  providers of home and community-based services; and
                           (iv)  providers located throughout the
  region where the organization will provide health care services;
  and
                     (C)  health care services will be accessible to
  recipients through the organization's provider network to a
  comparable extent that health care services would be available to
  recipients under a fee-for-service or primary care case management
  model of Medicaid managed care;
               (22)  a requirement that the managed care organization
  develop a monitoring program for measuring the quality of the
  health care services provided by the organization's provider
  network that:
                     (A)  incorporates the National Committee for
  Quality Assurance's Healthcare Effectiveness Data and Information
  Set (HEDIS) measures;
                     (B)  focuses on measuring outcomes; and
                     (C)  includes the collection and analysis of
  clinical data relating to prenatal care, preventive care, mental
  health care, and the treatment of acute and chronic health
  conditions and substance abuse;
               (23)  subject to Subsection (a-1), a requirement that
  the managed care organization develop, implement, and maintain an
  outpatient pharmacy benefit plan for its enrolled recipients:
                     (A)  that exclusively employs the vendor drug
  program formulary and preserves the state's ability to reduce
  waste, fraud, and abuse under Medicaid;
                     (B)  that adheres to the applicable preferred drug
  list adopted by the commission under Section 531.072;
                     (C)  that includes the prior authorization
  procedures and requirements prescribed by or implemented under
  Sections 531.073(b), (c), and (g) for the vendor drug program;
                     (D)  for purposes of which the managed care
  organization:
                           (i)  may not negotiate or collect rebates
  associated with pharmacy products on the vendor drug program
  formulary; and
                           (ii)  may not receive drug rebate or pricing
  information that is confidential under Section 531.071;
                     (E)  that complies with the prohibition under
  Section 531.089;
                     (F)  under which the managed care organization may
  not prohibit, limit, or interfere with a recipient's selection of a
  pharmacy or pharmacist of the recipient's choice for the provision
  of pharmaceutical services under the plan through the imposition of
  different copayments;
                     (G)  that allows the managed care organization or
  any subcontracted pharmacy benefit manager to contract with a
  pharmacist or pharmacy providers separately for specialty pharmacy
  services, except that:
                           (i)  the managed care organization and
  pharmacy benefit manager are prohibited from allowing exclusive
  contracts with a specialty pharmacy owned wholly or partly by the
  pharmacy benefit manager responsible for the administration of the
  pharmacy benefit program; and
                           (ii)  the managed care organization and
  pharmacy benefit manager must adopt policies and procedures for
  reclassifying prescription drugs from retail to specialty drugs,
  and those policies and procedures must be consistent with rules
  adopted by the executive commissioner and include notice to network
  pharmacy providers from the managed care organization;
                     (H)  under which the managed care organization may
  not prevent a pharmacy or pharmacist from participating as a
  provider if the pharmacy or pharmacist agrees to comply with the
  financial terms and conditions of the contract as well as other
  reasonable administrative and professional terms and conditions of
  the contract;
                     (I)  under which the managed care organization may
  include mail-order pharmacies in its networks, but may not require
  enrolled recipients to use those pharmacies, and may not charge an
  enrolled recipient who opts to use this service a fee, including
  postage and handling fees;
                     (J)  under which the managed care organization or
  pharmacy benefit manager, as applicable, must pay claims in
  accordance with Section 843.339, Insurance Code; and
                     (K)  under which the managed care organization or
  pharmacy benefit manager, as applicable:
                           (i)  to place a drug on a maximum allowable
  cost list, must ensure that:
                                 (a)  the drug is listed as "A" or "B"
  rated in the most recent version of the United States Food and Drug
  Administration's Approved Drug Products with Therapeutic
  Equivalence Evaluations, also known as the Orange Book, has an "NR"
  or "NA" rating or a similar rating by a nationally recognized
  reference; and
                                 (b)  the drug is generally available
  for purchase by pharmacies in the state from national or regional
  wholesalers and is not obsolete;
                           (ii)  must provide to a network pharmacy
  provider, at the time a contract is entered into or renewed with the
  network pharmacy provider, the sources used to determine the
  maximum allowable cost pricing for the maximum allowable cost list
  specific to that provider;
                           (iii)  must review and update maximum
  allowable cost price information at least once every seven days to
  reflect any modification of maximum allowable cost pricing;
                           (iv)  must, in formulating the maximum
  allowable cost price for a drug, use only the price of the drug and
  drugs listed as therapeutically equivalent in the most recent
  version of the United States Food and Drug Administration's
  Approved Drug Products with Therapeutic Equivalence Evaluations,
  also known as the Orange Book;
                           (v)  must establish a process for
  eliminating products from the maximum allowable cost list or
  modifying maximum allowable cost prices in a timely manner to
  remain consistent with pricing changes and product availability in
  the marketplace;
                           (vi)  must:
                                 (a)  provide a procedure under which a
  network pharmacy provider may challenge a listed maximum allowable
  cost price for a drug;
                                 (b)  respond to a challenge not later
  than the 15th day after the date the challenge is made;
                                 (c)  if the challenge is successful,
  make an adjustment in the drug price effective on the date the
  challenge is resolved, and make the adjustment applicable to all
  similarly situated network pharmacy providers, as determined by the
  managed care organization or pharmacy benefit manager, as
  appropriate;
                                 (d)  if the challenge is denied,
  provide the reason for the denial; and
                                 (e)  report to the commission every 90
  days the total number of challenges that were made and denied in the
  preceding 90-day period for each maximum allowable cost list drug
  for which a challenge was denied during the period;
                           (vii)  must notify the commission not later
  than the 21st day after implementing a practice of using a maximum
  allowable cost list for drugs dispensed at retail but not by mail;
  and
                           (viii)  must provide a process for each of
  its network pharmacy providers to readily access the maximum
  allowable cost list specific to that provider;
               (24)  a requirement that the managed care organization
  and any entity with which the managed care organization contracts
  for the performance of services under a managed care plan disclose,
  at no cost, to the commission and, on request, the office of the
  attorney general all discounts, incentives, rebates, fees, free
  goods, bundling arrangements, and other agreements affecting the
  net cost of goods or services provided under the plan;
               (25)  a requirement that the managed care organization
  not implement significant, [nonnegotiated,] across-the-board
  provider reimbursement rate reductions unless the organization
  presented the reduction to providers in an attempt to negotiate the
  reductions and:
                     (A)  subject to Subsection (a-4) [(a-3)], the
  organization has the prior approval of the commission to make the
  reduction; or
                     (B)  the rate reductions are based on changes to
  the Medicaid fee schedule or cost containment initiatives
  implemented by the commission; and
               (26)  a requirement that the managed care organization
  make initial and subsequent primary care provider assignments and
  changes.
         (a-3)  For purposes of Subsection (a)(25), "across-the-board
  provider reimbursement rate reductions" means provider
  reimbursement rate reductions proposed by a managed care
  organization that the commission determines are likely to affect a
  substantial number of providers in the organization's provider
  network during the 12-month period following implementation of the
  proposed reductions, regardless of whether:
               (1)  the organization limits the proposed reductions to
  specific service areas or provider types; or
               (2)  the affected providers are likely to experience
  differing percentages of rate reductions or amounts of lost revenue
  as a result of the proposed reductions.
         (a-4)  A [(a)(25)(A), a] provider reimbursement rate
  reduction is considered to have received the commission's prior
  approval for purposes of Subsection (a)(25) unless the commission
  issues a written statement of disapproval not later than the 45th
  day after the date the commission receives notice of the proposed
  rate reduction from the managed care organization.
         (a-5)  If a managed care organization proposes provider
  reimbursement rate reductions in accordance with Subsection
  (a)(25) and subsequently rejects alternative rate reductions
  suggested by an affected provider, the managed care organization
  must provide the provider with written notice of that rejection,
  including an explanation of the grounds for the rejection, prior to
  implementing any rate reductions.
         (e)  In addition to the requirements specified by Subsection
  (a), a contract described by that subsection must provide that if
  the managed care organization has an ownership interest in a health
  care provider in the organization's provider network, the
  organization must include in the provider network at least one
  other health care provider of the same type in which the
  organization does not have an ownership interest.
         SECTION 4.  Subchapter A, Chapter 533, Government Code, is
  amended by adding Section 533.00541 to read as follows:
         Sec. 533.00541.  PRIOR AUTHORIZATION REQUIREMENTS.
  Notwithstanding any other law, the commission shall require a
  managed care organization that contracts with the commission to
  provide health care services to recipients to:
               (1)  approve or deny a request from a provider of acute
  care inpatient services for prior authorization for the following
  services or equipment not later than 48 hours after receiving the
  request to allow for a safe and timely discharge of a patient from
  an inpatient facility:
                     (A)  home health services;
                     (B)  long-term services and supports, including
  care provided through a nursing facility;
                     (C)  private-duty nursing;
                     (D)  therapy services; and
                     (E)  durable medical equipment;
               (2)  contact, notify, and negotiate with a provider
  before approving a prior authorization request with an expiration
  date different from the expiration date requested by the provider;
               (3)  submit to a provider agency any change to a
  recipient's service plan not later than the 5th day before the date
  the plan is to be effective for purposes of giving the provider time
  to initiate the change and the recipient an opportunity to agree to
  the change;
               (4)  include on subsequent prior authorization
  requests approved with a retroactive effective date an expiration
  date that takes into account the date the service change was
  implemented by the provider; and
               (5)  provide complete electronic access to prior
  authorizations through the organization's process required under
  Section 533.005(a)(7-c).
         SECTION 5.  Subchapter A, Chapter 533, Government Code, is
  amended by adding Section 533.00611 to read as follows:
         Sec. 533.00611.  MINIMUM STANDARDS FOR DETERMINING MEDICAL
  NECESSITY. The commission shall establish minimum standards for
  determining the medical necessity of a health care service covered
  by Medicaid. In establishing minimum standards under this section,
  the commission shall ensure that each recipient has equal access to
  the same covered health care services regardless of the managed
  care plan in which the recipient is enrolled.
         SECTION 6.  Section 533.0076, Government Code, is amended by
  amending Subsection (c) and adding Subsection (d) to read as
  follows:
         (c)  The commission shall allow a recipient who is enrolled
  in a managed care plan under this chapter to disenroll from that
  plan and enroll in another managed care plan:
               (1)  at any time for cause in accordance with federal
  law, including because:
                     (A)  the recipient moves out of the managed care
  organization's service area;
                     (B)  the plan does not, on the basis of moral or
  religious objections, cover the service the recipient seeks;
                     (C)  the recipient needs related services to be
  performed at the same time, not all related services are available
  within the organization's provider network, and the recipient's
  primary care provider or another provider determines that receiving
  the services separately would subject the recipient to unnecessary
  risk;
                     (D)  for recipients of long-term services or
  supports, the recipient would have to change the recipient's
  residential, institutional, or employment supports provider based
  on that provider's change in status from an in-network to an
  out-of-network provider with the managed care organization and, as
  a result, would experience a disruption in the recipient's
  residence or employment; or
                     (E)  of another reason permitted under federal
  law, including poor quality of care, lack of access to services
  covered under the contract, or lack of access to providers
  experienced in dealing with the recipient's care needs; and
               (2)  once for any reason after the periods described by
  Subsections (a) and (b).
         (d)  The commission shall implement a process by which the
  commission verifies that a recipient is permitted to disenroll from
  one managed care plan and enroll in another plan before the
  disenrollment occurs.
         SECTION 7.  Subchapter A, Chapter 533, Government Code, is
  amended by adding Sections 533.0091 and 533.01316 to read as
  follows:
         Sec. 533.0091.  CARE COORDINATION SERVICES. A managed care
  organization under contract with the commission to provide health
  care services to recipients shall ensure that persons providing
  care coordination services through the organization coordinate
  with hospital discharge planners to facilitate the timely discharge
  of recipients to the appropriate level of care and minimize
  potentially preventable readmissions.
         Sec. 533.01316.  REIMBURSEMENT FOR CERTAIN HOSPITAL STAYS.
  The commission by rule shall adopt criteria to be used by managed
  care organizations under contract with the commission to provide
  health care services to recipients for the reimbursement of
  services provided to recipients for treatment related to an
  inpatient hospital stay, including a behavioral health hospital
  stay, that is less than 72 hours. The rules adopted under this
  section:
               (1)  must identify criteria that warrant reimbursement
  of services related to the stay as inpatient hospital services or
  outpatient hospital services, including criteria for determining
  what services constitute outpatient observation services;
               (2)  must, in identifying criteria under Subdivision
  (1), account for medical necessity based on recognized inpatient
  criteria, the severity of any psychological disorder, and the
  judgment of the treating physician or other provider;
               (3)  may not allow for the classification of services
  as either inpatient or outpatient hospital services for purposes of
  reimbursement based solely on the duration of the stay; and
               (4)  require documentation in a recipient's medical
  record that supports the medical necessity of the inpatient
  hospital stay at the time of admission for reimbursement of
  services related to the stay.
         SECTION 8.  Subchapter B, Chapter 534, Government Code, is
  amended by adding Section 534.0511 to read as follows:
         Sec. 534.0511.  ENSURING PROVISION OF MEDICALLY NECESSARY
  SERVICES. (a) This section applies only to an individual with an
  intellectual or developmental disability who is receiving services
  under a Medicaid waiver program or ICF-IID program and who requires
  medically necessary acute care services or long-term services and
  supports that are not available to the individual through the
  delivery model implemented under this chapter.
         (b)  Notwithstanding any other law, the Medicaid waiver
  program or ICF-IID program through which an individual to which
  this section applies shall pay the cost of the service and may
  submit to the commission a claim for reimbursement for the cost of
  that service.
         SECTION 9.  Section 533.005, Government Code, as amended by
  this Act, applies to a contract entered into or renewed on or after
  the effective date of this Act. A contract entered into or renewed
  before that date is governed by the law in effect on the date the
  contract was entered into or renewed, and that law is continued in
  effect for that purpose.
         SECTION 10.  If before implementing any provision of this
  Act a state agency determines that a waiver or authorization from a
  federal agency is necessary for implementation of that provision,
  the agency affected by the provision shall request the waiver or
  authorization and may delay implementing that provision until the
  waiver or authorization is granted.
         SECTION 11.  This Act takes effect September 1, 2017.
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