Connecticut 2023 2023 Regular Session

Connecticut Senate Bill SB00006 Comm Sub / Analysis

Filed 03/30/2023

                     
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OLR Bill Analysis 
SB 6  
 
AN ACT CONCERNING UTILIZATION REVIEW AND HEALTH CARE 
CONTRACTS, HEALTH INSURANCE COVERAGE FOR NEWBORNS 
AND STEP THERAPY.  
 
SUMMARY 
This bill makes the following changes in the insurance statutes:  
1. establishes conditions under which health carriers (e.g., insurers 
and HMOs) must exempt providers from certain utilization 
review (e.g., prior authorization) based on their approval rates 
for health care services and treatments over the prior six months; 
2. prohibits health carriers from requiring a prospective or 
concurrent review of a recurring health care service or 
prescription drug already approved through utilization review; 
3. requires health carriers to implement a program to electronically 
receive and respond to certain utilization review requests;  
4. shortens several of the maximum timeframes for health insurers 
or independent review organizations (IROs) to notify an insured 
or his or her authorized representative of utilization review 
decisions;  
5. extends, from 61 days after birth to the later of 121 days after the 
birth or the hospital discharge date, the time period within which 
the insured person must (a) notify the insurer, HMO, or hospital 
or medical service corporation about the birth and (b) pay any 
required premium or subscription fee to continue the newborn’s 
coverage beyond that period; and 
6. expands when health carriers are prohibited from requiring that 
an insured use step therapy to include a prohibition against  2023SB-00006-R000337-BA.DOCX 
 
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requiring that step therapy be used for prescribed drugs to treat 
a behavioral health condition or a disabling, chronic, or life-
threatening condition or disease.  
EFFECTIVE DATE: October 1, 2023 
§ 1 — PROSPECTIVE AND CONC URRENT REVIEW EXEMPTION  
Exemption Threshold and Notification  
Broadly, utilization review refers to a process in which health carriers 
determine whether a specific medical service is reimbursable under an 
individual’s plan or insurance policy. Prospective reviews (which occur 
before a service is provided) and concurrent reviews (which occur while 
a person is undergoing treatment) are two types of utilization reviews. 
In practice, many prospective or concurrent reviews are “prior 
authorization” reviews, which require a health care provider to obtain 
approval before a medical service is covered.  
Beginning with health care contracts entered into, renewed, or 
amended on or after January 1, 2024, the bill prohibits health carriers 
that perform utilization review from requiring that a participating 
provider obtain a prospective or concurrent review for a specific health 
care service or course of treatment (i.e., services) if the carrier approved 
90% of the provider’s reviews for the service in the preceding six months 
(i.e., “evaluation period” as described below). Under the bill, carriers 
generally must conduct an evaluation every six months to determine 
whether providers qualify for this exemption. However, no 
participating providers are required to request an exemption in order to 
qualify for one.  
Within five business days after a provider qualifies for an exemption, 
the health carrier must provide it a written notice that (1) states that it 
qualifies for an exemption, (2) identifies the exemption’s duration, and 
(3) lists the provider’s exempt services and health benefit plans to which 
the exemption applies. 
Scope of the Evaluation 
Under the bill, the evaluation that carriers must conduct depends on  2023SB-00006-R000337-BA.DOCX 
 
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whether the participating provider has a prospective or concurrent 
review exemption for the service.  
For non-exempt services, the evaluation is a review of the provider’s 
prospective or concurrent review exemption requests during the most 
recent evaluation period to (1) determine the percentage of requests that 
were approved or (2) evaluate whether to grant or deny a prospective 
or concurrent review exemption.  
For exempt services, the evaluation is a retrospective review of a 
random sample of the payable claims the provider submitted during the 
most recent evaluation period to (1) determine the percentage of claims 
that would have been approved based on the health carrier’s applicable 
medical necessity data at the time the service was provided and (2) 
evaluate whether to continue or rescind the exemption.  
Evaluation Period 
Under the bill, the evaluation period is the six-month period before 
an evaluation. For initial exemptions or denials, the evaluation period is 
any six-month period beginning on January 1 or July 1, 2024, or any 
subsequent six-month period beginning January or July 1. After this 
initial determination, the evaluation period is the six-month period 
starting on the first day following the end of the evaluation period that 
the denial or recission was based on.  
If an exemption is being rescinded (as described below), the 
evaluation period is the six-month period after the health carrier notifies 
the provider of the rescission. However, no more than two months may 
elapse between the end of this evaluation period and the date the 
provider receives the notice.  
Length of Exemption 
Under the bill, a participating provider’s exemption remains in effect 
until 30 days after the health carrier notifies it of a decision to rescind 
the exemption unless the provider appeals. In that case, the exemption 
is in effect until the five days after the IRO (see below) affirms the health 
carrier’s decision.   2023SB-00006-R000337-BA.DOCX 
 
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Under the bill, if a health carrier does not finalize a rescission 
determination, the provider automatically qualifies for an exemption. 
(The bill does not specify how a recission determination is “finalized.”) 
Providers Submitting Exemption Eligible Claims  
Under the bill, carriers must notify providers if they submit a claim 
for a health service which qualifies for an exemption. Specifically, a 
carrier must promptly provide a written notice that (1) states that the 
provider qualifies for an exemption, (2) identifies the exemption’s 
duration, (3) lists the provider’s exempt services and health benefit 
plans to which the exemption applies, and (4) describes the carrier’s 
payment requirements. 
Rescissions 
The bill allows health carriers to rescind a participating provider’s 
exemption only during the following time periods and under the 
following circumstances: 
1. during January or July of each year; 
2. if it determines, based on a retrospective review of a random 
sample of between five and 20 claims submitted by the provider 
during the most recent evaluation period, that less than 90% of 
the claims for health care services or treatments met the medical 
necessity criteria the carrier would have used to evaluate the 
claims; and 
3. if it notifies the provider in writing at least 30 days before the 
recission is effective and includes (a) the sample information it 
used to make the determination and (b) a plain language 
description of the appeal and independent review process (see 
below).  
Exemption Denials 
The bill prohibits carriers from denying exemptions unless they 
provide the participating provider the statistics, data, and other 
information sufficient to demonstrate that the provider failed to meet 
the exemption criteria for each health care service or treatment.   2023SB-00006-R000337-BA.DOCX 
 
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Independent Review Process 
IRO Request and Timeline. The bill establishes a process for 
providers to appeal a carrier’s decision to rescind an exemption with an 
IRO. It allows a provider to request that an IRO review a health carrier’s 
decision to rescind an exemption. It additionally prohibits carriers from 
requiring that a provider engage in an internal review process before 
requesting a review of an adverse determination of an exemption. 
(Presumably, an adverse determination is a determination that an 
exemption should be rescinded.) IROs must complete the review within 
30 calendar days of when the provider files the request.  
The participating provider may request that the IRO consider a 
random sample of between five and 20 claims it submitted to the health 
carrier for the specified health service or treatment during the 
evaluation period that led to the recission. If the provider requests this, 
the IRO must base its determination on the medical necessity of the 
same claims that the insurer used in rescinding the exemption.    
IRO determinations are binding on the carrier and the provider, 
except to the extent to which either party has other remedies available 
under state or federal law.  
Fees. The bill requires health carriers issuing adverse determinations 
of a provider’s exemption (presumably a recission) must pay (1) the IRO 
for the cost of conducting the review and (2) reasonable fees for copies 
of all documents, communication, information, and evidence relating to 
the adverse determination. The bill requires the insurance commissioner 
to adopt regulations to implement these fees.  
Overturned Determinations. If an IRO overturns a health carrier’s 
determination of an exemption, the carrier (1) cannot attempt to rescind 
the exemption before the end of the next evaluation period and (2) may 
only rescind the exemption if it complies with the bill’s notification and 
other recission requirements described above.  
Reconsideration 
Under the bill, a provider who has had an exemption denied or  2023SB-00006-R000337-BA.DOCX 
 
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rescinded is eligible for reconsideration at the end of the six-month 
evaluation period that follows the one that formed the basis for the 
recission or denial.  
Patient and Provider Protections 
The bill prohibits health carriers from retroactively denying services 
because a provider’s exemption was rescinded, even if the rescission 
was affirmed by an IRO. It also prohibits carriers from denying or 
reducing a payment to a provider for a service for which it qualified for 
an exemption based on medical necessity or appropriateness of care 
except in certain cases of fraud (i.e., the provider knowingly and 
materially misrepresented the service in a claim submitted to the health 
carrier or failed to substantially perform it).  
Additionally, the bill prohibits health carriers from retrospectively 
reviewing a service (presumably for a particular health care provider) 
that is subject to an exemption except (1) to determine if a provider 
qualifies for an exemption or (2) if they have reasonable cause to believe 
that the provider knowingly and materially misrepresented the service 
or failed to substantially perform it.  
Regulations 
The bill requires the insurance commissioner to adopt regulations 
implementing the exemption provisions.  
§ 2 — ELECTRONIC PRIOR AU THORIZATIONS 
By January 1, 2024, the bill requires health carriers to establish a 
secure system to electronically receive and respond to prospective and 
concurrent review requests and other requests for prospective or 
concurrent utilization reviews, including supporting clinical 
information, submitted by hospitals and health care professionals. 
§ 3 — UTILIZATION REVIEW REQUEST TIME FRAMES 
Existing law establishes a structure and timeframe for health carriers 
and IROs to conduct benefit reviews and notify a covered individual 
whether a specific medical service is reimbursable by his or her health 
insurance plan.   2023SB-00006-R000337-BA.DOCX 
 
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The bill shortens several of the maximum timeframes a health insurer 
or IRO can take, after receiving all the required health information, to 
notify an insured or the insured’s authorized representative of 
decisions. Specifically, the bill shortens the maximum response time for 
decisions about the following requests: 
1. a non-urgent prospective or concurrent review request, from 15 
calendar days to 72 hours;  
2. a one-time extension of non-urgent prospective or concurrent 
review requests due to circumstances beyond the carrier’s control 
and following proper notice, from 15 calendar days to 72 hours;  
3. urgent care requests, from 48 hours (or 72 hours if the request or 
response time falls on a weekend) to 24 hours. 
By law, urgent review requests must be done as soon as possible, 
taking into account the insured’s medical condition.  
Notification and Processing 
The bill also changes how a health carrier must process incomplete 
review requests. Under current law, a health carrier must notify an 
insured and the insured’s authorized representative within five 
calendar days of a request that does not meet the carrier’s filing 
requirements (or within 24 hours for an urgent care request). Under the 
bill for prospective and concurrent review requests, a carrier must 
instead (1) process requests 24 hours a day, seven days a week, 
including holidays and (2) acknowledge receipt of these requests as 
soon as practicable and within 24 hours unless federal law requires a 
faster response.  
Current law allows health carriers to notify patients orally, so long as 
a written notice follows. The bill repeals this explicit authorization.  
Additionally, the bill prohibits health carriers from requiring that 
health care professionals or hospitals submit additional information 
with a prospective or concurrent review that is not reasonably available 
at the time the request is submitted.  2023SB-00006-R000337-BA.DOCX 
 
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§§ 4 & 5 — NEWBORN HEALTH INSU RANCE COVERAGE 
By law, certain health insurance policies that cover family members 
must cover newborns from birth. The coverage must include injury and 
sickness benefits, including the care and treatment of congenital defects 
and birth abnormalities.  
The bill extends, from 61 days after birth to the later of 121 days after 
the birth or the hospital discharge date, the time period within which 
the insured person must (1) notify the insurer, HMO, or hospital or 
medical service corporation about the birth and (2) pay any required 
premium or subscription fee to continue the newborn’s coverage 
beyond that period. As under current law, if notification and payment 
is not provided within the specified period, claims originating during 
that period are not prejudiced.  
The bill applies to individual and group health insurance policies 
delivered, issued, renewed, amended, or continued in Connecticut that 
cover (1) basic hospital expenses; (2) basic medical-surgical expenses; (3) 
major medical expenses; (4) accidents; or (5) hospital or medical 
services, including those provided under an HMO plan. It also applies 
to individual health insurance policies that cover limited benefits. 
Because of the federal Employee Retirement Income Security Act, state 
insurance benefit mandates do not apply to self-insured benefit plans. 
§§ 6 & 7 — STEP THERAPY PROHIB ITIONS 
Step therapy is a protocol for establishing the sequence for 
prescribing drugs for specific medical conditions; it generally requires 
patients to try less expensive drugs before higher cost drugs. The bill 
prohibits individual and group health insurers from requiring an 
insured to use step therapy for prescribed drugs to treat a behavioral 
health condition or a disabling, chronic, or life-threatening condition or 
disease, provided the drug is prescribed in accordance with federal 
Food and Drug Administration indications. Current law limits this 
prohibition to drugs used to treat stage IV metastatic cancer. By law, 
step therapy cannot be used for longer than 60 days.  2023SB-00006-R000337-BA.DOCX 
 
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§ 8 — PROHIBITION ON REVIEWS OF RECURRIN G HEALTH CARE 
SERVICES AND PRESCRI PTION DRUGS 
The bill prohibits health carriers from requiring a prospective or 
concurrent review of a recurring health care service or prescription drug 
after they have certified the service or drug through utilization review. 
The bill specifies that it does not require a health carrier to cover a health 
care service or prescription drug that a policy’s coverage conditions 
completely exclude for a specific health condition.  
COMMITTEE ACTION 
Insurance and Real Estate Committee 
Joint Favorable 
Yea 7 Nay 5 (03/14/2023)