Chapter 169 |
2018 -- H 7806 SUBSTITUTE A Enacted 07/02/2018 |
A N A C T |
RELATING TO INSURANCE - INSURANCE COVERAGE FOR MENTAL ILLNESS AND SUBSTANCE ABUSE |
Introduced By: Representatives Diaz, Slater, Blazejewski, Johnston, and Maldonado |
Date Introduced: February 28, 2018 |
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: |
SECTION 1. Section 27-38.2-1 of the General Laws in Chapter 27-38.2 entitled |
"Insurance Coverage for Mental Illness and Substance Abuse" is hereby amended to read as |
follows: |
27-38.2-1. Coverage for treatment of mental health and substance use disorders. |
[Effective April 1, 2018.]. |
(a) A group health plan and an individual or group health insurance plan shall provide |
coverage for the treatment of mental-health and substance-use disorders under the same terms and |
conditions as that coverage is provided for other illnesses and diseases. |
(b) Coverage for the treatment of mental-health and substance-use disorders shall not |
impose any annual or lifetime dollar limitation. |
(c) Financial requirements and quantitative treatment limitations on coverage for the |
treatment of mental-health and substance-use disorders shall be no more restrictive than the |
predominant financial requirements applied to substantially all coverage for medical conditions in |
each treatment classification. |
(d) Coverage shall not impose non-quantitative treatment limitations for the treatment of |
mental health and substance-use disorders unless the processes, strategies, evidentiary standards, |
or other factors used in applying the non-quantitative treatment limitation, as written and in |
operation, are comparable to, and are applied no more stringently than, the processes, strategies, |
evidentiary standards, or other factors used in applying the limitation with respect to |
medical/surgical benefits in the classification. |
(e) The following classifications shall be used to apply the coverage requirements of this |
chapter: (1) Inpatient, in-network; (2) Inpatient, out-of-network; (3) Outpatient, in-network; (4) |
Outpatient, out-of-network; (5) Emergency care; and (6) Prescription drugs. |
(f) Medication-assisted treatment or medication-assisted maintenance services of |
substance-use disorders, opioid overdoses, and chronic addiction, including methadone, |
buprenorphine, naltrexone, or other clinically appropriate medications, is included within the |
appropriate classification based on the site of the service. |
(g) Payors shall rely upon the criteria of the American Society of Addiction Medicine |
when developing coverage for levels of care for substance-use disorder treatment. |
(h) Patients with substance-use disorders shall have access to evidence-based, non-opioid |
treatment for pain, therefore coverage shall apply to medically necessary chiropractic care and |
osteopathic manipulative treatment performed by an individual licensed under § 5-37-2. |
(i) Parity of cost-sharing requirements. Regardless of the professional license of the |
provider of care, if that care is consistent with the provider's scope of practice and the health |
plan's credentialing and contracting provisions, cost-sharing for behavioral health counseling |
visits and medication maintenance visits shall be consistent with the cost-sharing applied to |
primary care office visits. |
SECTION 2. Section 42-14.5-3 of the General Laws in Chapter 42-14.5 entitled "The |
Rhode Island Health Care Reform Act of 2004 - Health Insurance Oversight" is hereby amended |
to read as follows: |
42-14.5-3. Powers and duties [Contingent effective date; see effective dates under |
this section. Powers and duties [Contingent effective date; see effective dates under this |
section.] |
The health insurance commissioner shall have the following powers and duties: |
(a) To conduct quarterly public meetings throughout the state, separate and distinct from |
rate hearings pursuant to § 42-62-13, regarding the rates, services, and operations of insurers |
licensed to provide health insurance in the state; the effects of such rates, services, and operations |
on consumers, medical care providers, patients, and the market environment in which such the |
insurers operate; and efforts to bring new health insurers into the Rhode Island market. Notice of |
not less than ten (10) days of said the hearing(s) shall go to the general assembly, the governor, |
the Rhode Island Medical Society, the Hospital Association of Rhode Island, the director of |
health, the attorney general, and the chambers of commerce. Public notice shall be posted on the |
department's web site website and given in the newspaper of general circulation, and to any entity |
in writing requesting notice. |
(b) To make recommendations to the governor and the house of representatives and |
senate finance committees regarding health-care insurance and the regulations, rates, services, |
administrative expenses, reserve requirements, and operations of insurers providing health |
insurance in the state, and to prepare or comment on, upon the request of the governor or |
chairpersons of the house or senate finance committees, draft legislation to improve the regulation |
of health insurance. In making such the recommendations, the commissioner shall recognize that |
it is the intent of the legislature that the maximum disclosure be provided regarding the |
reasonableness of individual administrative expenditures as well as total administrative costs. The |
commissioner shall make recommendations on the levels of reserves, including consideration of: |
targeted reserve levels; trends in the increase or decrease of reserve levels; and insurer plans for |
distributing excess reserves. |
(c) To establish a consumer/business/labor/medical advisory council to obtain |
information and present concerns of consumers, business, and medical providers affected by |
health-insurance decisions. The council shall develop proposals to allow the market for small |
business health insurance to be affordable and fairer. The council shall be involved in the |
planning and conduct of the quarterly public meetings in accordance with subsection (a). The |
advisory council shall develop measures to inform small businesses of an insurance complaint |
process to ensure that small businesses that experience rate increases in a given year may request |
and receive a formal review by the department. The advisory council shall assess views of the |
health-provider community relative to insurance rates of reimbursement, billing, and |
reimbursement procedures, and the insurers' role in promoting efficient and high-quality health |
care. The advisory council shall issue an annual report of findings and recommendations to the |
governor and the general assembly and present its findings at hearings before the house and |
senate finance committees. The advisory council is to be diverse in interests and shall include |
representatives of community consumer organizations; small businesses, other than those |
involved in the sale of insurance products; and hospital, medical, and other health-provider |
organizations. Such representatives shall be nominated by their respective organizations. The |
advisory council shall be co-chaired by the health insurance commissioner and a community |
consumer organization or small business member to be elected by the full advisory council. |
(d) To establish and provide guidance and assistance to a subcommittee ("the |
professional-provider-health-plan work group") of the advisory council created pursuant to |
subsection (c), composed of health-care providers and Rhode Island licensed health plans. This |
subcommittee shall include in its annual report and presentation before the house and senate |
finance committees the following information: |
(1) A method whereby health plans shall disclose to contracted providers the fee |
schedules used to provide payment to those providers for services rendered to covered patients; |
(2) A standardized provider application and credentials-verification process, for the |
purpose of verifying professional qualifications of participating health-care providers; |
(3) The uniform health plan claim form utilized by participating providers; |
(4) Methods for health maintenance organizations, as defined by § 27-41-2, and nonprofit |
hospital or medical-service corporations, as defined by chapters 19 and 20 of title 27, to make |
facility-specific data and other medical service-specific data available in reasonably consistent |
formats to patients regarding quality and costs. This information would help consumers make |
informed choices regarding the facilities and/or clinicians or physician practices at which to seek |
care. Among the items considered would be the unique health services and other public goods |
provided by facilities and/or clinicians or physician practices in establishing the most appropriate |
cost comparisons; |
(5) All activities related to contractual disclosure to participating providers of the |
mechanisms for resolving health plan/provider disputes; |
(6) The uniform process being utilized for confirming, in real time, patient insurance |
enrollment status, benefits coverage, including co-pays and deductibles; |
(7) Information related to temporary credentialing of providers seeking to participate in |
the plan's network and the impact of said the activity on health-plan accreditation; |
(8) The feasibility of regular contract renegotiations between plans and the providers in |
their networks; and |
(9) Efforts conducted related to reviewing impact of silent PPOs on physician practices. |
(e) To enforce the provisions of Title 27 and Title 42 as set forth in § 42-14-5(d). |
(f) To provide analysis of the Rhode Island affordable health plan reinsurance fund. The |
fund shall be used to effectuate the provisions of §§ 27-18.5-9 and 27-50-17. |
(g) To analyze the impact of changing the rating guidelines and/or merging the individual |
health-insurance market, as defined in chapter 18.5 of title 27, and the small-employer-health- |
insurance market, as defined in chapter 50 of title 27, in accordance with the following: |
(1) The analysis shall forecast the likely rate increases required to effect the changes |
recommended pursuant to the preceding subsection (g) in the direct-pay market and small- |
employer-health-insurance market over the next five (5) years, based on the current rating |
structure and current products. |
(2) The analysis shall include examining the impact of merging the individual and small- |
employer markets on premiums charged to individuals and small-employer groups. |
(3) The analysis shall include examining the impact on rates in each of the individual and |
small-employer-health-insurance markets and the number of insureds in the context of possible |
changes to the rating guidelines used for small-employer groups, including: community rating |
principles; expanding small-employer rate bonds beyond the current range; increasing the |
employer group size in the small-group market; and/or adding rating factors for broker and/or |
tobacco use. |
(4) The analysis shall include examining the adequacy of current statutory and regulatory |
oversight of the rating process and factors employed by the participants in the proposed, new |
merged market. |
(5) The analysis shall include assessment of possible reinsurance mechanisms and/or |
federal high-risk pool structures and funding to support the health-insurance market in Rhode |
Island by reducing the risk of adverse selection and the incremental insurance premiums charged |
for this risk, and/or by making health insurance affordable for a selected at-risk population. |
(6) The health insurance commissioner shall work with an insurance market merger task |
force to assist with the analysis. The task force shall be chaired by the health insurance |
commissioner and shall include, but not be limited to, representatives of the general assembly, the |
business community, small-employer carriers as defined in § 27-50-3, carriers offering coverage |
in the individual market in Rhode Island, health-insurance brokers, and members of the general |
public. |
(7) For the purposes of conducting this analysis, the commissioner may contract with an |
outside organization with expertise in fiscal analysis of the private-insurance market. In |
conducting its study, the organization shall, to the extent possible, obtain and use actual health- |
plan data. Said data shall be subject to state and federal laws and regulations governing |
confidentiality of health care and proprietary information. |
(8) The task force shall meet as necessary and include its findings in the annual report, |
and the commissioner shall include the information in the annual presentation before the house |
and senate finance committees. |
(h) To establish and convene a workgroup representing health-care providers and health |
insurers for the purpose of coordinating the development of processes, guidelines, and standards |
to streamline health-care administration that are to be adopted by payors and providers of health- |
care services operating in the state. This workgroup shall include representatives with expertise |
who would contribute to the streamlining of health-care administration and who are selected from |
hospitals, physician practices, community behavioral-health organizations, each health insurer, |
and other affected entities. The workgroup shall also include at least one designee each from the |
Rhode Island Medical Society, Rhode Island Council of Community Mental Health |
Organizations, the Rhode Island Health Center Association, and the Hospital Association of |
Rhode Island. The workgroup shall consider and make recommendations for: |
(1) Establishing a consistent standard for electronic eligibility and coverage verification. |
Such standard shall: |
(i) Include standards for eligibility inquiry and response and, wherever possible, be |
consistent with the standards adopted by nationally recognized organizations, such as the Centers |
for Medicare and Medicaid Services; |
(ii) Enable providers and payors to exchange eligibility requests and responses on a |
system-to-system basis or using a payor-supported web browser; |
(iii) Provide reasonably detailed information on a consumer's eligibility for health-care |
coverage; scope of benefits; limitations and exclusions provided under that coverage; cost-sharing |
requirements for specific services at the specific time of the inquiry; current deductible amounts; |
accumulated or limited benefits; out-of-pocket maximums; any maximum policy amounts; and |
other information required for the provider to collect the patient's portion of the bill; |
(iv) Reflect the necessary limitations imposed on payors by the originator of the |
eligibility and benefits information; |
(v) Recommend a standard or common process to protect all providers from the costs of |
services to patients who are ineligible for insurance coverage in circumstances where a payor |
provides eligibility verification based on best information available to the payor at the date of the |
request of eligibility. |
(2) Developing implementation guidelines and promoting adoption of such the guidelines |
for: |
(i) The use of the National Correct Coding Initiative code-edit policy by payors and |
providers in the state; |
(ii) Publishing any variations from codes and mutually exclusive codes by payors in a |
manner that makes for simple retrieval and implementation by providers; |
(iii) Use of Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act standard group codes, |
reason codes, and remark codes by payors in electronic remittances sent to providers; |
(iv) The processing of corrections to claims by providers and payors. |
(v) A standard payor-denial review process for providers when they request a |
reconsideration of a denial of a claim that results from differences in clinical edits where no |
single, common-standards body or process exists and multiple conflicting sources are in use by |
payors and providers. |
(vi) Nothing in this section, nor in the guidelines developed, shall inhibit an individual |
payor's ability to employ, and not disclose to providers, temporary code edits for the purpose of |
detecting and deterring fraudulent billing activities. The guidelines shall require that each payor |
disclose to the provider its adjudication decision on a claim that was denied or adjusted based on |
the application of such edits and that the provider have access to the payor's review and appeal |
process to challenge the payor's adjudication decision. |
(vii) Nothing in this subsection shall be construed to modify the rights or obligations of |
payors or providers with respect to procedures relating to the investigation, reporting, appeal, or |
prosecution under applicable law of potentially fraudulent billing activities. |
(3) Developing and promoting widespread adoption by payors and providers of |
guidelines to: |
(i) Ensure payors do not automatically deny claims for services when extenuating |
circumstances make it impossible for the provider to obtain a preauthorization before services are |
performed or notify a payor within an appropriate standardized timeline of a patient's admission; |
(ii) Require payors to use common and consistent processes and time frames when |
responding to provider requests for medical management approvals. Whenever possible, such |
time frames shall be consistent with those established by leading national organizations and be |
based upon the acuity of the patient's need for care or treatment. For the purposes of this section, |
medical management includes prior authorization of services, preauthorization of services, |
precertification of services, post-service review, medical-necessity review, and benefits advisory; |
(iii) Develop, maintain, and promote widespread adoption of a single, common website |
where providers can obtain payors' preauthorization, benefits advisory, and preadmission |
requirements; |
(iv) Establish guidelines for payors to develop and maintain a website that providers can |
use to request a preauthorization, including a prospective clinical necessity review; receive an |
authorization number; and transmit an admission notification. |
(4) To provide a report to the house and senate, on or before January 1, 2017, with |
recommendations for establishing guidelines and regulations for systems that give patients |
electronic access to their claims information, particularly to information regarding their |
obligations to pay for received medical services, pursuant to 45 C.F.R. 164.524. |
(i) To issue an anti-cancer medication report. Not later than June 30, 2014 and annually |
thereafter, the office of the health insurance commissioner (OHIC) shall provide the senate |
committee on health and human services, and the house committee on corporations, with: (1) |
Information on the availability in the commercial market of coverage for anti-cancer medication |
options; (2) For the state employee's health benefit plan, the costs of various cancer-treatment |
options; (3) The changes in drug prices over the prior thirty-six (36) months; and (4) Member |
utilization and cost-sharing expense. |
(j) To monitor the adequacy of each health plan's compliance with the provisions of the |
federal Mental Health Parity Act, including a review of related claims processing and |
reimbursement procedures. Findings, recommendations, and assessments shall be made available |
to the public. |
(k) To monitor the transition from fee-for-service and toward global and other alternative |
payment methodologies for the payment for health-care services. Alternative payment |
methodologies should be assessed for their likelihood to promote access to affordable health |
insurance, health outcomes, and performance. |
(l) To report annually, no later than July 1, 2014, then biannually thereafter, on hospital |
payment variation, including findings and recommendations, subject to available resources. |
(m) Notwithstanding any provision of the general or public laws or regulation to the |
contrary, provide a report with findings and recommendations to the president of the senate and |
the speaker of the house, on or before April 1, 2014, including, but not limited to, the following |
information: |
(1) The impact of the current, mandated health-care benefits as defined in §§ 27-18-48.1, |
27-18-60, 27-18-62, 27-18-64, similar provisions in chapters 19, 20 and 41, of title 27, and §§ 27- |
18-3(c), 27-38.2-1 et seq., or others as determined by the commissioner, on the cost of health |
insurance for fully insured employers, subject to available resources; |
(2) Current provider and insurer mandates that are unnecessary and/or duplicative due to |
the existing standards of care and/or delivery of services in the health-care system; |
(3) A state-by-state comparison of health-insurance mandates and the extent to which |
Rhode Island mandates exceed other states benefits; and |
(4) Recommendations for amendments to existing mandated benefits based on the |
findings in (m)(1), (m)(2), and (m)(3) above. |
(n) On or before July 1, 2014, the office of the health insurance commissioner, in |
collaboration with the director of health and lieutenant governor's office, shall submit a report to |
the general assembly and the governor to inform the design of accountable care organizations |
(ACOs) in Rhode Island as unique structures for comprehensive health-care delivery and value- |
based payment arrangements, that shall include, but not be limited to: |
(1) Utilization review; |
(2) Contracting; and |
(3) Licensing and regulation. |
(o) On or before February 3, 2015, the office of the health insurance commissioner shall |
submit a report to the general assembly and the governor that describes, analyzes, and proposes |
recommendations to improve compliance of insurers with the provisions of § 27-18-76 with |
regard to patients with mental-health and substance-use disorders. |
(p) To work to ensure the health insurance coverage of behavioral health care under the |
same terms and conditions as other health care, and to integrate behavioral health parity |
requirements into the OHIC office of the health insurance commissioner insurance oversight |
and health care transformation efforts. |
(q) To work with other state agencies to seek delivery system improvements that enhance |
access to a continuum of mental-health and substance-use disorder treatment in the state; and |
integrate that treatment with primary and other medical care to the fullest extent possible. |
(r) To direct insurers toward policies and practices that address the behavioral health |
needs of the public and greater integration of physical and behavioral health care delivery. |
(s) The office of the health insurance commissioner shall conduct an analysis of the |
impact of the provisions of § 27-38.2-1(i) on health insurance premiums and access in Rhode |
Island and submit a report of its findings to the general assembly on or before June 1, 2023. |
SECTION 3. This act shall take effect upon passage, and Section 1 shall take effect for |
all policies issued, revised, delivered, or renewed on or after January 1, 2019. |
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LC004922/SUB A |
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