2022 -- S 2072 SUBSTITUTE A

========

LC003973/SUB A

========

     STATE OF RHODE ISLAND

IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY

JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2022

____________

A N   A C T

RELATING TO STATE AFFAIRS AND GOVERNMENT -- THE RHODE ISLAND HEALTH

CARE REFORM ACT OF 2004--HEALTH INSURANCE OVERSIGHT

     

     Introduced By: Senators DiMario, Miller, Euer, Lawson, Valverde, Zurier, Murray, and
Burke

     Date Introduced: January 25, 2022

     Referred To: Senate Health & Human Services

     It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows:

1

     SECTION 1. Section 42-14.5-3 of the General Laws in Chapter 42-14.5 entitled "The

2

Rhode Island Health Care Reform Act of 2004 - Health Insurance Oversight" is hereby amended

3

to read as follows:

4

     42-14.5-3. Powers and duties.

5

     The health insurance commissioner shall have the following powers and duties:

6

     (a) To conduct quarterly public meetings throughout the state, separate and distinct from

7

rate hearings pursuant to § 42-62-13, regarding the rates, services, and operations of insurers

8

licensed to provide health insurance in the state; the effects of such rates, services, and operations

9

on consumers, medical care providers, patients, and the market environment in which the insurers

10

operate; and efforts to bring new health insurers into the Rhode Island market. Notice of not less

11

than ten (10) days of the hearing(s) shall go to the general assembly, the governor, the Rhode Island

12

Medical Society, the Hospital Association of Rhode Island, the director of health, the attorney

13

general, and the chambers of commerce. Public notice shall be posted on the department's website

14

and given in the newspaper of general circulation, and to any entity in writing requesting notice.

15

     (b) To make recommendations to the governor and the house of representatives and senate

16

finance committees regarding healthcare insurance and the regulations, rates, services,

17

administrative expenses, reserve requirements, and operations of insurers providing health

18

insurance in the state, and to prepare or comment on, upon the request of the governor or

 

1

chairpersons of the house or senate finance committees, draft legislation to improve the regulation

2

of health insurance. In making the recommendations, the commissioner shall recognize that it is

3

the intent of the legislature that the maximum disclosure be provided regarding the reasonableness

4

of individual administrative expenditures as well as total administrative costs. The commissioner

5

shall make recommendations on the levels of reserves, including consideration of: targeted reserve

6

levels; trends in the increase or decrease of reserve levels; and insurer plans for distributing excess

7

reserves.

8

     (c) To establish a consumer/business/labor/medical advisory council to obtain information

9

and present concerns of consumers, business, and medical providers affected by health insurance

10

decisions. The council shall develop proposals to allow the market for small business health

11

insurance to be affordable and fairer. The council shall be involved in the planning and conduct of

12

the quarterly public meetings in accordance with subsection (a). The advisory council shall develop

13

measures to inform small businesses of an insurance complaint process to ensure that small

14

businesses that experience rate increases in a given year may request and receive a formal review

15

by the department. The advisory council shall assess views of the health provider community

16

relative to insurance rates of reimbursement, billing, and reimbursement procedures, and the

17

insurers' role in promoting efficient and high-quality health care. The advisory council shall issue

18

an annual report of findings and recommendations to the governor and the general assembly and

19

present its findings at hearings before the house and senate finance committees. The advisory

20

council is to be diverse in interests and shall include representatives of community consumer

21

organizations; small businesses, other than those involved in the sale of insurance products; and

22

hospital, medical, and other health provider organizations. Such representatives shall be nominated

23

by their respective organizations. The advisory council shall be co-chaired by the health insurance

24

commissioner and a community consumer organization or small business member to be elected by

25

the full advisory council.

26

     (d) To establish and provide guidance and assistance to a subcommittee ("the professional-

27

provider-health-plan work group") of the advisory council created pursuant to subsection (c),

28

composed of healthcare providers and Rhode Island licensed health plans. This subcommittee shall

29

include in its annual report and presentation before the house and senate finance committees the

30

following information:

31

     (1) A method whereby health plans shall disclose to contracted providers the fee schedules

32

used to provide payment to those providers for services rendered to covered patients;

33

     (2) A standardized provider application and credentials verification process, for the

34

purpose of verifying professional qualifications of participating healthcare providers;

 

LC003973/SUB A - Page 2 of 9

1

     (3) The uniform health plan claim form utilized by participating providers;

2

     (4) Methods for health maintenance organizations, as defined by § 27-41-2, and nonprofit

3

hospital or medical-service corporations, as defined by chapters 19 and 20 of title 27, to make

4

facility-specific data and other medical service-specific data available in reasonably consistent

5

formats to patients regarding quality and costs. This information would help consumers make

6

informed choices regarding the facilities and clinicians or physician practices at which to seek care.

7

Among the items considered would be the unique health services and other public goods provided

8

by facilities and clinicians or physician practices in establishing the most appropriate cost

9

comparisons;

10

     (5) All activities related to contractual disclosure to participating providers of the

11

mechanisms for resolving health plan/provider disputes;

12

     (6) The uniform process being utilized for confirming, in real time, patient insurance

13

enrollment status, benefits coverage, including co-pays and deductibles;

14

     (7) Information related to temporary credentialing of providers seeking to participate in the

15

plan's network and the impact of the activity on health plan accreditation;

16

     (8) The feasibility of regular contract renegotiations between plans and the providers in

17

their networks; and

18

     (9) Efforts conducted related to reviewing impact of silent PPOs on physician practices.

19

     (e) To enforce the provisions of Title 27 and Title 42 as set forth in § 42-14-5(d).

20

     (f) To provide analysis of the Rhode Island affordable health plan reinsurance fund. The

21

fund shall be used to effectuate the provisions of §§ 27-18.5-9 and 27-50-17.

22

     (g) To analyze the impact of changing the rating guidelines and/or merging the individual

23

health insurance market, as defined in chapter 18.5 of title 27, and the small-employer health

24

insurance market, as defined in chapter 50 of title 27, in accordance with the following:

25

     (1) The analysis shall forecast the likely rate increases required to effect the changes

26

recommended pursuant to the preceding subsection (g) in the direct-pay market and small-employer

27

health insurance market over the next five (5) years, based on the current rating structure and

28

current products.

29

     (2) The analysis shall include examining the impact of merging the individual and small-

30

employer markets on premiums charged to individuals and small-employer groups.

31

     (3) The analysis shall include examining the impact on rates in each of the individual and

32

small-employer health insurance markets and the number of insureds in the context of possible

33

changes to the rating guidelines used for small-employer groups, including: community rating

34

principles; expanding small-employer rate bonds beyond the current range; increasing the employer

 

LC003973/SUB A - Page 3 of 9

1

group size in the small-group market; and/or adding rating factors for broker and/or tobacco use.

2

     (4) The analysis shall include examining the adequacy of current statutory and regulatory

3

oversight of the rating process and factors employed by the participants in the proposed, new

4

merged market.

5

     (5) The analysis shall include assessment of possible reinsurance mechanisms and/or

6

federal high-risk pool structures and funding to support the health insurance market in Rhode Island

7

by reducing the risk of adverse selection and the incremental insurance premiums charged for this

8

risk, and/or by making health insurance affordable for a selected at-risk population.

9

     (6) The health insurance commissioner shall work with an insurance market merger task

10

force to assist with the analysis. The task force shall be chaired by the health insurance

11

commissioner and shall include, but not be limited to, representatives of the general assembly, the

12

business community, small-employer carriers as defined in § 27-50-3, carriers offering coverage in

13

the individual market in Rhode Island, health insurance brokers, and members of the general public.

14

     (7) For the purposes of conducting this analysis, the commissioner may contract with an

15

outside organization with expertise in fiscal analysis of the private insurance market. In conducting

16

its study, the organization shall, to the extent possible, obtain and use actual health plan data. Said

17

data shall be subject to state and federal laws and regulations governing confidentiality of health

18

care and proprietary information.

19

     (8) The task force shall meet as necessary and include its findings in the annual report, and

20

the commissioner shall include the information in the annual presentation before the house and

21

senate finance committees.

22

     (h) To establish and convene a workgroup representing healthcare providers and health

23

insurers for the purpose of coordinating the development of processes, guidelines, and standards to

24

streamline healthcare administration that are to be adopted by payors and providers of healthcare

25

services operating in the state. This workgroup shall include representatives with expertise who

26

would contribute to the streamlining of healthcare administration and who are selected from

27

hospitals, physician practices, community behavioral health organizations, each health insurer, and

28

other affected entities. The workgroup shall also include at least one designee each from the Rhode

29

Island Medical Society, Rhode Island Council of Community Mental Health Organizations, the

30

Rhode Island Health Center Association, and the Hospital Association of Rhode Island. In any year

31

that the workgroup meets and submits recommendations to the office of the health insurance

32

commissioner, the office of the health insurance commissioner shall submit such recommendations

33

in a report to the general assembly by January 1. The report shall include the recommendations the

34

commissioner intends to implement, with supporting rationale. The workgroup shall consider and

 

LC003973/SUB A - Page 4 of 9

1

make recommendations for:

2

     (1) Establishing a consistent standard for electronic eligibility and coverage verification.

3

Such standard shall:

4

     (i) Include standards for eligibility inquiry and response and, wherever possible, be

5

consistent with the standards adopted by nationally recognized organizations, such as the Centers

6

for Medicare and Medicaid Services;

7

     (ii) Enable providers and payors to exchange eligibility requests and responses on a system-

8

to-system basis or using a payor-supported web browser;

9

     (iii) Provide reasonably detailed information on a consumer's eligibility for healthcare

10

coverage; scope of benefits; limitations and exclusions provided under that coverage; cost-sharing

11

requirements for specific services at the specific time of the inquiry; current deductible amounts;

12

accumulated or limited benefits; out-of-pocket maximums; any maximum policy amounts; and

13

other information required for the provider to collect the patient's portion of the bill;

14

     (iv) Reflect the necessary limitations imposed on payors by the originator of the eligibility

15

and benefits information;

16

     (v) Recommend a standard or common process to protect all providers from the costs of

17

services to patients who are ineligible for insurance coverage in circumstances where a payor

18

provides eligibility verification based on best information available to the payor at the date of the

19

request of eligibility.

20

     (2) Developing implementation guidelines and promoting adoption of the guidelines for:

21

     (i) The use of the National Correct Coding Initiative code-edit policy by payors and

22

providers in the state;

23

     (ii) Publishing any variations from codes and mutually exclusive codes by payors in a

24

manner that makes for simple retrieval and implementation by providers;

25

     (iii) Use of Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act standard group codes,

26

reason codes, and remark codes by payors in electronic remittances sent to providers;

27

     (iv) The processing of corrections to claims by providers and payors.

28

     (v) A standard payor-denial review process for providers when they request a

29

reconsideration of a denial of a claim that results from differences in clinical edits where no single,

30

common-standards body or process exists and multiple conflicting sources are in use by payors and

31

providers.

32

     (vi) Nothing in this section, nor in the guidelines developed, shall inhibit an individual

33

payor's ability to employ, and not disclose to providers, temporary code edits for the purpose of

34

detecting and deterring fraudulent billing activities. The guidelines shall require that each payor

 

LC003973/SUB A - Page 5 of 9

1

disclose to the provider its adjudication decision on a claim that was denied or adjusted based on

2

the application of such edits and that the provider have access to the payor's review and appeal

3

process to challenge the payor's adjudication decision.

4

     (vii) Nothing in this subsection shall be construed to modify the rights or obligations of

5

payors or providers with respect to procedures relating to the investigation, reporting, appeal, or

6

prosecution under applicable law of potentially fraudulent billing activities.

7

     (3) Developing and promoting widespread adoption by payors and providers of guidelines

8

to:

9

     (i) Ensure payors do not automatically deny claims for services when extenuating

10

circumstances make it impossible for the provider to obtain a preauthorization before services are

11

performed or notify a payor within an appropriate standardized timeline of a patient's admission;

12

     (ii) Require payors to use common and consistent processes and time frames when

13

responding to provider requests for medical management approvals. Whenever possible, such time

14

frames shall be consistent with those established by leading national organizations and be based

15

upon the acuity of the patient's need for care or treatment. For the purposes of this section, medical

16

management includes prior authorization of services, preauthorization of services, precertification

17

of services, post-service review, medical-necessity review, and benefits advisory;

18

     (iii) Develop, maintain, and promote widespread adoption of a single, common website

19

where providers can obtain payors' preauthorization, benefits advisory, and preadmission

20

requirements;

21

     (iv) Establish guidelines for payors to develop and maintain a website that providers can

22

use to request a preauthorization, including a prospective clinical necessity review; receive an

23

authorization number; and transmit an admission notification;

24

     (v) Require the use of programs that implement prior authorization requirements,

25

uniformly across payors and utilization review agents, based on stratification of health care

26

providers’ performance and adherence to evidence-based medicine and develop uniform criteria to

27

select and maintain health care providers in such selective prior authorization programs with the

28

input of contracted health care providers and/or provider organizations. Such criteria shall be

29

transparent and easily accessible to contracted providers. Such selective prior authorization

30

programs shall encourage appropriate adjustments to prior authorization requirements when health

31

care providers participate in risk-based payment contracts;

32

     (vi) Require the review of medical services, including behavioral health services, and

33

prescription drugs, subject to prior authorization on at least an annual basis, with the input of

34

contracted health care providers and/or provider organizations. Based on this review, require the

 

LC003973/SUB A - Page 6 of 9

1

revision of prior authorization requirements, including the list of services subject to prior

2

authorization, based on the prior year’s data analytics and up-to-date clinical criteria provided to

3

the office of the health insurance commissioner by insurers. Any changes to the list of medical

4

services, including behavioral health services, and prescription drugs requiring prior authorization,

5

shall be shared via provider-accessible websites, and communicated at least annually to health care

6

providers;

7

     (vii) Improve communication channels between health plans, health care providers, and

8

patients by:

9

     (A) Requiring transparency and easy accessibility of prior authorization requirements,

10

criteria, rationale, and program changes to contracted health care providers and patients/health plan

11

enrollees; and

12

     (B) Supporting:

13

     (I) Timely submission by health care providers of the complete information necessary to

14

make a prior authorization determination, as early in the process as possible; and

15

     (II) Timely notification of prior authorization determinations by health plans to impacted

16

patients, health plan enrollees, and health care providers, including, but not limited to, ordering

17

providers, rendering providers, and dispensing pharmacists; and

18

     (viii) Increase and strengthen continuity of patient care by:

19

     (A) Defining protections for continuity of care during a transition period for patients

20

undergoing an active course of treatment, when there is a formulary or treatment coverage change

21

or change of health plan that may disrupt their current course of treatment;

22

     (B) Requiring continuity of care for medical services, including behavioral health services,

23

and prescription medications for patients on appropriate, chronic, stable therapy through

24

minimizing repetitive prior authorization requirements; and

25

     (C) Requiring communication between health care providers, health plans, and patients to

26

facilitate continuity of care and minimize disruptions in needed treatment.

27

     (4) To provide a report to the house and senate, on or before January 1, 2017, with

28

recommendations for establishing guidelines and regulations for systems that give patients

29

electronic access to their claims information, particularly to information regarding their obligations

30

to pay for received medical services, pursuant to 45 C.F.R. 164.524.

31

     (i) To issue an anti-cancer medication report. Not later than June 30, 2014, and annually

32

thereafter, the office of the health insurance commissioner (OHIC) shall provide the senate

33

committee on health and human services, and the house committee on corporations, with: (1)

34

Information on the availability in the commercial market of coverage for anti-cancer medication

 

LC003973/SUB A - Page 7 of 9

1

options; (2) For the state employee's health benefit plan, the costs of various cancer-treatment

2

options; (3) The changes in drug prices over the prior thirty-six (36) months; and (4) Member

3

utilization and cost-sharing expense.

4

     (j) To monitor the adequacy of each health plan's compliance with the provisions of the

5

federal Mental Health Parity Act, including a review of related claims processing and

6

reimbursement procedures. Findings, recommendations, and assessments shall be made available

7

to the public.

8

     (k) To monitor the transition from fee-for-service and toward global and other alternative

9

payment methodologies for the payment for healthcare services. Alternative payment

10

methodologies should be assessed for their likelihood to promote access to affordable health

11

insurance, health outcomes, and performance.

12

     (l) To report annually, no later than July 1, 2014, then biannually thereafter, on hospital

13

payment variation, including findings and recommendations, subject to available resources.

14

     (m) Notwithstanding any provision of the general or public laws or regulation to the

15

contrary, provide a report with findings and recommendations to the president of the senate and the

16

speaker of the house, on or before April 1, 2014, including, but not limited to, the following

17

information:

18

     (1) The impact of the current, mandated healthcare benefits as defined in §§ 27-18-48.1,

19

27-18-60, 27-18-62, 27-18-64, similar provisions in chapters 19, 20 and 41 of title 27, and §§ 27-

20

18-3(c), 27-38.2-1 et seq., or others as determined by the commissioner, on the cost of health

21

insurance for fully insured employers, subject to available resources;

22

     (2) Current provider and insurer mandates that are unnecessary and/or duplicative due to

23

the existing standards of care and/or delivery of services in the healthcare system;

24

     (3) A state-by-state comparison of health insurance mandates and the extent to which

25

Rhode Island mandates exceed other states benefits; and

26

     (4) Recommendations for amendments to existing mandated benefits based on the findings

27

in (m)(1), (m)(2), and (m)(3) above.

28

     (n) On or before July 1, 2014, the office of the health insurance commissioner, in

29

collaboration with the director of health and lieutenant governor's office, shall submit a report to

30

the general assembly and the governor to inform the design of accountable care organizations

31

(ACOs) in Rhode Island as unique structures for comprehensive health-care delivery and value-

32

based payment arrangements, that shall include, but not be limited to:

33

     (1) Utilization review;

34

     (2) Contracting; and

 

LC003973/SUB A - Page 8 of 9

1

     (3) Licensing and regulation.

2

     (o) On or before February 3, 2015, the office of the health insurance commissioner shall

3

submit a report to the general assembly and the governor that describes, analyzes, and proposes

4

recommendations to improve compliance of insurers with the provisions of § 27-18-76 with regard

5

to patients with mental health and substance use disorders.

6

     (p) To work to ensure the health insurance coverage of behavioral health care under the

7

same terms and conditions as other health care, and to integrate behavioral health parity

8

requirements into the office of the health insurance commissioner insurance oversight and health

9

care transformation efforts.

10

     (q) To work with other state agencies to seek delivery system improvements that enhance

11

access to a continuum of mental health and substance use disorder treatment in the state; and

12

integrate that treatment with primary and other medical care to the fullest extent possible.

13

     (r) To direct insurers toward policies and practices that address the behavioral health needs

14

of the public and greater integration of physical and behavioral healthcare delivery.

15

     (s) The office of the health insurance commissioner shall conduct an analysis of the impact

16

of the provisions of § 27-38.2-1(i) on health insurance premiums and access in Rhode Island and

17

submit a report of its findings to the general assembly on or before June 1, 2023.

18

     SECTION 2. This act shall take effect upon passage.

========

LC003973/SUB A

========

 

LC003973/SUB A - Page 9 of 9

EXPLANATION

BY THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL

OF

A N   A C T

RELATING TO STATE AFFAIRS AND GOVERNMENT -- THE RHODE ISLAND HEALTH

CARE REFORM ACT OF 2004--HEALTH INSURANCE OVERSIGHT

***

1

     This act would require a workgroup of health care providers and health insurers convened

2

by the office of the health commissioner, to make recommendations regarding prior authorization

3

policies.

4

     This act would take effect upon passage.

========

LC003973/SUB A

========

 

LC003973/SUB A - Page 10 of 9