Connecticut 2023 2023 Regular Session

Connecticut House Bill HB06550 Comm Sub / Analysis

Filed 03/06/2023

                     
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OLR Bill Analysis 
HB 6550  
 
AN ACT REQUIRING NOTICE OF DISCONTINUANCE OF 
PRESCRIPTION MEDICATION UNDER A WORKERS' 
COMPENSATION CLAIM.  
 
SUMMARY 
This bill requires an employer, or entities working on its behalf, to 
give notice to an employee and the Workers’ Compensation 
Commission (WCC) before discontinuing payments for prescription 
medications the employee receives under workers’ compensation. The 
bill sets requirements on how the notice must be made, gives the 
employee a right to a hearing on the matter, and requires that payments 
will not be discontinued or reduced before the administrative judge 
approves in writing. (The bill’s provisions requiring this approval 
appear to conflict with another part of the bill that states the notice must 
say the discontinuance or reduction will take place automatically if the 
employee does not request a hearing.)  
The bill also provides for a penalty if payments are discontinued or 
reduced without approval.  
EFFECTIVE DATE: October 1, 2023 
PRESCRIPTION DRUGS U NDER WORKERS’ COMPEN SATION 
By law, when an employee is injured at work, the employer must 
provide a physician, surgeon, physician assistant, or advanced practice 
registered nurse (APRN) to attend to the injured employee. These 
medical professionals can prescribe prescription drugs for the employee 
as they deem reasonable or necessary and the employer or the 
employer’s insurance (or any representative acting on behalf of the 
employer or insurer) must pay for them. 
Notice  2023HB-06550-R000008-BA.DOCX 
 
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The bill requires the employer, or any insurer or other entity acting 
on the employer’s behalf, to give notice of a possible discontinuance or 
reduction of payments to be made by certified mail to the employee and 
the WCC administrative law judge. The notice must inform the 
employee that a request for a hearing must be made no later than 15 
days after receiving the notice, or the change in payments will 
automatically take effect. (The bill states a hearing can be requested only 
for a discontinuance of payments. Presumably, even though other parts 
of the bill address both a discontinuance or reduction of payments, 
employees are not entitled to a hearing when benefits are only being 
reduced, not discontinued.)  
The notice also must include: 
1. the reason for the discontinuance or reduction and the date it 
would begin;  
2. the employee’s identity, the employee’s attorney or other 
representative, the employer, and the insurer;  
3. information about the injury, including the date it happened, the 
city or town where it happened, and its nature; and  
4. medical documentation of the basis for the discontinuance or 
reduction and the name of the claimant’s attending physician or 
APRN.  
The bill requires the notice to substantially follow a form included in 
the bill, which requires a heading stating, “IMPORTANT,” followed by 
the notification that the employer or insurer intends to reduce or 
discontinue the person’s prescription payments on a set date and the 
other required information above. 
The form includes the following directions for the employee: 
1. To request an Informal Hearing, call the Workers’ Compensation 
Commission District Office in which your case is pending. 
2. Be prepared to provide medical and other documentation to  2023HB-06550-R000008-BA.DOCX 
 
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support your objection. 
3. For your protection, note the date when you received this notice. 
Hearing 
Under the bill, after receiving the notice, the employee has 15 days to 
request a hearing. The notice says the employee can call WCC to request 
an informal hearing. These requests for a hearing must have priority 
over requests for hearings on other matters.  
An administrative law judge cannot approve a discontinuance or 
reduction prior to the expiration of the 15-day period for requesting a 
hearing or the completion of a hearing, whichever is later. 
Penalty 
Under the bill, when the administrative law judge finds the 
employer, an insurer acting on its behalf, or an entity acting on behalf of 
either the insurer or employer, has discontinued or reduced any 
payments for prescriptions without the judge’s approval, they will be 
required to pay to the employee (1) the amount of all payments 
discontinued or reduced, plus interest at 1.25% per month or portion of 
a month on any discontinued or reduced payments and (2) reasonable 
attorney’s fees incurred by the employee related to the discontinuance 
or reduction. (The bill potentially penalizes an entity acting on behalf of 
an insurer for notice requirements that the bill does not impose on these 
entities.)  
COMMITTEE ACTION 
Labor and Public Employees Committee 
Joint Favorable 
Yea 10 Nay 1 (02/16/2023)