Florida 2023 2023 Regular Session

Florida House Bill H0183 Comm Sub / Bill

Filed 04/03/2023

                       
 
CS/HB 183  	2023 
 
 
 
CODING: Words stricken are deletions; words underlined are additions. 
hb0183-01-c1 
Page 1 of 17 
F L O R I D A H O U S E O F R E P	R E S E N T A T I V E	S 
 
 
 
A bill to be entitled 1 
An act relating to Medicaid step -therapy protocols for 2 
drugs for serious mental illness treatments; amending 3 
s. 409.901, F.S.; defining the term "serious mental 4 
illness"; amending s. 409.912, F.S.; requiring the 5 
Agency for Health Care Administration to approve drug 6 
products for Medicaid recipients for the treatment of 7 
serious mental illness without step -therapy prior 8 
authorization under certain circumstances; amen ding s. 9 
409.910, F.S.; conforming a cross -reference; directing 10 
the agency to include the rate impact of this act in 11 
certain program rates that become effective on a 12 
specified date; providing an effective date. 13 
 14 
Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the S tate of Florida: 15 
 16 
 Section 1.  Present subsections (27) and (28) of section 17 
409.901, Florida Statutes, are redesignated as subsections (28) 18 
and (29), respectively, and a new subsection (27) is added to 19 
that section, to read: 20 
 409.901  Definitions; ss. 40 9.901-409.920.—As used in ss. 21 
409.901-409.920, except as otherwise specifically provided, the 22 
term: 23 
 (27)  "Serious mental illness" means any of the following 24 
psychiatric disorders as defined by the American Psychiatric 25     
 
CS/HB 183  	2023 
 
 
 
CODING: Words stricken are deletions; words underlined are additions. 
hb0183-01-c1 
Page 2 of 17 
F L O R I D A H O U S E O F R E P	R E S E N T A T I V E	S 
 
 
 
Association in the Diagnostic and St atistical Manual of Mental 26 
Disorders, Fifth Edition: 27 
 (a)  Bipolar disorders, including hypomanic, manic, 28 
depressive, and mixed -feature episodes. 29 
 (b)  Depression in childhood or adolescence. 30 
 (c)  Major depressive disorders, including single and 31 
recurrent depressive episodes. 32 
 (d)  Obsessive-compulsive disorders. 33 
 (e)  Paranoid personality disorder or other psychotic 34 
disorders. 35 
 (f)  Schizoaffective disorders, including bipolar or 36 
depressive symptoms. 37 
 (g)  Schizophrenia. 38 
 Section 2.  Paragraph (a) of su bsection (5) of section 39 
409.912, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: 40 
 409.912  Cost-effective purchasing of health care. —The 41 
agency shall purchase goods and services for Medicaid recipients 42 
in the most cost-effective manner consistent with the delivery 43 
of quality medical care. To ensure that medical services are 44 
effectively utilized, the agency may, in any case, require a 45 
confirmation or second physician's opinion of the correct 46 
diagnosis for purposes of authorizing future services under the 47 
Medicaid program. This section does not restrict access to 48 
emergency services or poststabilization care services as defined 49 
in 42 C.F.R. s. 438.114. Such confirmation or second opinion 50     
 
CS/HB 183  	2023 
 
 
 
CODING: Words stricken are deletions; words underlined are additions. 
hb0183-01-c1 
Page 3 of 17 
F L O R I D A H O U S E O F R E P	R E S E N T A T I V E	S 
 
 
 
shall be rendered in a manner approved by the agency. The agency 51 
shall maximize the use of prepaid per capita and prepaid 52 
aggregate fixed-sum basis services when appropriate and other 53 
alternative service delivery and reimbursement methodologies, 54 
including competitive bidding pursuant to s. 287.057, designed 55 
to facilitate the cost -effective purchase of a case -managed 56 
continuum of care. The agency shall also require providers to 57 
minimize the exposure of recipients to the need for acute 58 
inpatient, custodial, and other institutional care and the 59 
inappropriate or unnecessary use of high -cost services. The 60 
agency shall contract with a vendor to monitor and evaluate the 61 
clinical practice patterns of providers in order to identify 62 
trends that are outside the normal practice patterns of a 63 
provider's professional peers or the national guidelines of a 64 
provider's professional association. The vendor must be able to 65 
provide information and counseling to a provider whose practice 66 
patterns are outside the norms, in consultation with the agency, 67 
to improve patient care and reduce inappropriate utilization. 68 
The agency may mandate prior authorization, drug therapy 69 
management, or disease management participation for certain 70 
populations of Medicaid beneficiaries, certain drug classes, or 71 
particular drugs to prevent fraud, abuse, overuse, and possible 72 
dangerous drug interactions. The Pharmaceutical and Therapeutics 73 
Committee shall make recommendations to the agency on drugs for 74 
which prior authorization is required. The agency shall inform 75     
 
CS/HB 183  	2023 
 
 
 
CODING: Words stricken are deletions; words underlined are additions. 
hb0183-01-c1 
Page 4 of 17 
F L O R I D A H O U S E O F R E P	R E S E N T A T I V E	S 
 
 
 
the Pharmaceutical and Therapeutics Committee of its decisions 76 
regarding drugs subject to prior authorization. The agency is 77 
authorized to limit the entities it contracts with or enrolls as 78 
Medicaid providers by developing a provider network through 79 
provider credentialing. The agency may competitively bid single -80 
source-provider contracts if procurement of goods or services 81 
results in demonstrated cost savings to the state without 82 
limiting access to care. The agency may limit its network based 83 
on the assessment of beneficiary access to care, provider 84 
availability, provider quality standards, time and distance 85 
standards for access to care, the cultural competence of the 86 
provider network, demographic characteristics of Medicaid 87 
beneficiaries, practice and provider -to-beneficiary standards, 88 
appointment wait times, beneficiary use of se rvices, provider 89 
turnover, provider profiling, provider licensure history, 90 
previous program integrity investigations and findings, peer 91 
review, provider Medicaid policy and billing compliance records, 92 
clinical and medical record audits, and other factors. Providers 93 
are not entitled to enrollment in the Medicaid provider network. 94 
The agency shall determine instances in which allowing Medicaid 95 
beneficiaries to purchase durable medical equipment and other 96 
goods is less expensive to the Medicaid program than lo ng-term 97 
rental of the equipment or goods. The agency may establish rules 98 
to facilitate purchases in lieu of long -term rentals in order to 99 
protect against fraud and abuse in the Medicaid program as 100     
 
CS/HB 183  	2023 
 
 
 
CODING: Words stricken are deletions; words underlined are additions. 
hb0183-01-c1 
Page 5 of 17 
F L O R I D A H O U S E O F R E P	R E S E N T A T I V E	S 
 
 
 
defined in s. 409.913. The agency may seek federal waivers 101 
necessary to administer these policies. 102 
 (5)(a)  The agency shall implement a Medicaid prescribed -103 
drug spending-control program that includes the following 104 
components: 105 
 1.  A Medicaid preferred drug list, which shall be a 106 
listing of cost-effective therapeutic options recommended by the 107 
Medicaid Pharmacy and Therapeutics Committee established 108 
pursuant to s. 409.91195 and adopted by the agency for each 109 
therapeutic class on the preferred drug list. At the discretion 110 
of the committee, and when feasible, the preferred drug list 111 
should include at least two products in a therapeutic class. The 112 
agency may post the preferred drug list and updates to the list 113 
on an Internet website without following the rulemaking 114 
procedures of chapter 120. Antiretroviral agents are excluded 115 
from the preferred drug list. The agency shall also limit the 116 
amount of a prescribed drug dispensed to no more than a 34 -day 117 
supply unless the drug products' sma llest marketed package is 118 
greater than a 34-day supply, or the drug is determined by the 119 
agency to be a maintenance drug in which case a 100 -day maximum 120 
supply may be authorized. The agency may seek any federal 121 
waivers necessary to implement these cost -control programs and 122 
to continue participation in the federal Medicaid rebate 123 
program, or alternatively to negotiate state -only manufacturer 124 
rebates. The agency may adopt rules to administer this 125     
 
CS/HB 183  	2023 
 
 
 
CODING: Words stricken are deletions; words underlined are additions. 
hb0183-01-c1 
Page 6 of 17 
F L O R I D A H O U S E O F R E P	R E S E N T A T I V E	S 
 
 
 
subparagraph. The agency shall continue to provide unlimited 126 
contraceptive drugs and items. The agency must establish 127 
procedures to ensure that: 128 
 a.  There is a response to a request for prior 129 
authorization by telephone or other telecommunication device 130 
within 24 hours after receipt of a request for prior 131 
authorization; and 132 
 b.  A 72-hour supply of the drug prescribed is provided in 133 
an emergency or when the agency does not provide a response 134 
within 24 hours as required by sub -subparagraph a. 135 
 2.  A provider of prescribed drugs is reimbursed in an 136 
amount not to exceed t he lesser of the actual acquisition cost 137 
based on the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services National 138 
Average Drug Acquisition Cost pricing files plus a professional 139 
dispensing fee, the wholesale acquisition cost plus a 140 
professional dispensing fee, the state maximum allowable cost 141 
plus a professional dispensing fee, or the usual and customary 142 
charge billed by the provider. 143 
 3.  The agency shall develop and implement a process for 144 
managing the drug therapies of Medicaid recipients who are using 145 
significant numbers of prescribed drugs each month. The 146 
management process may include, but is not limited to, 147 
comprehensive, physician -directed medical-record reviews, claims 148 
analyses, and case evaluations to determine the medical 149 
necessity and appropriateness of a patient's treatment plan and 150     
 
CS/HB 183  	2023 
 
 
 
CODING: Words stricken are deletions; words underlined are additions. 
hb0183-01-c1 
Page 7 of 17 
F L O R I D A H O U S E O F R E P	R E S E N T A T I V E	S 
 
 
 
drug therapies. The agency may contract with a private 151 
organization to provide drug -program-management services. The 152 
Medicaid drug benefit management program shall include 153 
initiatives to manage drug therapies for HIV/AIDS pat ients, 154 
patients using 20 or more unique prescriptions in a 180 -day 155 
period, and the top 1,000 patients in annual spending. The 156 
agency shall enroll any Medicaid recipient in the drug benefit 157 
management program if he or she meets the specifications of this 158 
provision and is not enrolled in a Medicaid health maintenance 159 
organization. 160 
 4.  The agency may limit the size of its pharmacy network 161 
based on need, competitive bidding, price negotiations, 162 
credentialing, or similar criteria. The agency shall give 163 
special consideration to rural areas in determining the size and 164 
location of pharmacies included in the Medicaid pharmacy 165 
network. A pharmacy credentialing process may include criteria 166 
such as a pharmacy's full -service status, location, size, 167 
patient educational p rograms, patient consultation, disease 168 
management services, and other characteristics. The agency may 169 
impose a moratorium on Medicaid pharmacy enrollment if it is 170 
determined that it has a sufficient number of Medicaid -171 
participating providers. The agency mu st allow dispensing 172 
practitioners to participate as a part of the Medicaid pharmacy 173 
network regardless of the practitioner's proximity to any other 174 
entity that is dispensing prescription drugs under the Medicaid 175     
 
CS/HB 183  	2023 
 
 
 
CODING: Words stricken are deletions; words underlined are additions. 
hb0183-01-c1 
Page 8 of 17 
F L O R I D A H O U S E O F R E P	R E S E N T A T I V E	S 
 
 
 
program. A dispensing practitioner must meet all credentialing 176 
requirements applicable to his or her practice, as determined by 177 
the agency. 178 
 5.  The agency shall develop and implement a program that 179 
requires Medicaid practitioners who issue written prescriptions 180 
for medicinal drugs to use a counterf eit-proof prescription pad 181 
for Medicaid prescriptions. The agency shall require the use of 182 
standardized counterfeit -proof prescription pads by prescribers 183 
who issue written prescriptions for Medicaid recipients. The 184 
agency may implement the program in targ eted geographic areas or 185 
statewide. 186 
 6.  The agency may enter into arrangements that require 187 
manufacturers of generic drugs prescribed to Medicaid recipients 188 
to provide rebates of at least 15.1 percent of the average 189 
manufacturer price for the manufacturer 's generic products. 190 
These arrangements must shall require that if a generic -drug 191 
manufacturer pays federal rebates for Medicaid -reimbursed drugs 192 
at a level below 15.1 percent, the manufacturer must provide a 193 
supplemental rebate to the state in an amount n ecessary to 194 
achieve a 15.1-percent rebate level. 195 
 7.  The agency may establish a preferred drug list as 196 
described in this subsection, and, pursuant to the establishment 197 
of such preferred drug list, negotiate supplemental rebates from 198 
manufacturers that are in addition to those required by Title 199 
XIX of the Social Security Act and at no less than 14 percent of 200     
 
CS/HB 183  	2023 
 
 
 
CODING: Words stricken are deletions; words underlined are additions. 
hb0183-01-c1 
Page 9 of 17 
F L O R I D A H O U S E O F R E P	R E S E N T A T I V E	S 
 
 
 
the average manufacturer price as defined in 42 U.S.C. s. 1936 201 
on the last day of a quarter unless the federal or supplemental 202 
rebate, or both, equals or exceeds 29 percent. There is no upper 203 
limit on the supplemental rebates the agency may negotiate. The 204 
agency may determine that specific products, brand -name or 205 
generic, are competitive at lower rebate percentages. Agreement 206 
to pay the minimum supplemen tal rebate percentage guarantees a 207 
manufacturer that the Medicaid Pharmaceutical and Therapeutics 208 
Committee will consider a product for inclusion on the preferred 209 
drug list. However, a pharmaceutical manufacturer is not 210 
guaranteed placement on the preferre d drug list by simply paying 211 
the minimum supplemental rebate. Agency decisions will be made 212 
on the clinical efficacy of a drug and recommendations of the 213 
Medicaid Pharmaceutical and Therapeutics Committee, as well as 214 
the price of competing products minus f ederal and state rebates. 215 
The agency may contract with an outside agency or contractor to 216 
conduct negotiations for supplemental rebates. For the purposes 217 
of this section, the term "supplemental rebates" means cash 218 
rebates. Value-added programs as a substit ution for supplemental 219 
rebates are prohibited. The agency may seek any federal waivers 220 
to implement this initiative. 221 
 8.a.  The agency may implement a Medicaid behavioral drug 222 
management system. The agency may contract with a vendor that 223 
has experience in operating behavioral drug management systems 224 
to implement this program. The agency may seek federal waivers 225     
 
CS/HB 183  	2023 
 
 
 
CODING: Words stricken are deletions; words underlined are additions. 
hb0183-01-c1 
Page 10 of 17 
F L O R I D A H O U S E O F R E P	R E S E N T A T I V E	S 
 
 
 
to implement this program. 226 
 b.  The agency, in conjunction with the Department of 227 
Children and Families, may implement the Medicaid behavioral 228 
drug management system that is designed to improve the quality 229 
of care and behavioral health prescribing practices based on 230 
best practice guidelines, improve patient adherence to 231 
medication plans, reduce clinical risk, and lower prescribed 232 
drug costs and the ra te of inappropriate spending on Medicaid 233 
behavioral drugs. The program may include the following 234 
elements: 235 
 (I)  Provide for the development and adoption of best 236 
practice guidelines for behavioral health -related drugs such as 237 
antipsychotics, antidepressant s, and medications for treating 238 
bipolar disorders and other behavioral conditions; translate 239 
them into practice; review behavioral health prescribers and 240 
compare their prescribing patterns to a number of indicators 241 
that are based on national standards; and determine deviations 242 
from best practice guidelines. 243 
 (II)  Implement processes for providing feedback to and 244 
educating prescribers using best practice educational materials 245 
and peer-to-peer consultation. 246 
 (III)  Assess Medicaid beneficiaries who are outli ers in 247 
their use of behavioral health drugs with regard to the numbers 248 
and types of drugs taken, drug dosages, combination drug 249 
therapies, and other indicators of improper use of behavioral 250     
 
CS/HB 183  	2023 
 
 
 
CODING: Words stricken are deletions; words underlined are additions. 
hb0183-01-c1 
Page 11 of 17 
F L O R I D A H O U S E O F R E P	R E S E N T A T I V E	S 
 
 
 
health drugs. 251 
 (IV)  Alert prescribers to patients who fail to ref ill 252 
prescriptions in a timely fashion, are prescribed multiple same -253 
class behavioral health drugs, and may have other potential 254 
medication problems. 255 
 (V)  Track spending trends for behavioral health drugs and 256 
deviation from best practice guidelines. 257 
 (VI)  Use educational and technological approaches to 258 
promote best practices, educate consumers, and train prescribers 259 
in the use of practice guidelines. 260 
 (VII)  Disseminate electronic and published materials. 261 
 (VIII)  Hold statewide and regional conferences. 262 
 (IX)  Implement a disease management program with a model 263 
quality-based medication component for severely mentally ill 264 
individuals and emotionally disturbed children who are high 265 
users of care. 266 
 9.  The agency shall implement a Medicaid prescription drug 267 
management system. 268 
 a.  The agency may contract with a vendor that has 269 
experience in operating prescription drug management systems in 270 
order to implement this system. Any management system that is 271 
implemented in accordance with this subparagraph must rely o n 272 
cooperation between physicians and pharmacists to determine 273 
appropriate practice patterns and clinical guidelines to improve 274 
the prescribing, dispensing, and use of drugs in the Medicaid 275     
 
CS/HB 183  	2023 
 
 
 
CODING: Words stricken are deletions; words underlined are additions. 
hb0183-01-c1 
Page 12 of 17 
F L O R I D A H O U S E O F R E P	R E S E N T A T I V E	S 
 
 
 
program. The agency may seek federal waivers to implement this 276 
program. 277 
 b.  The drug management system must be designed to improve 278 
the quality of care and prescribing practices based on best 279 
practice guidelines, improve patient adherence to medication 280 
plans, reduce clinical risk, and lower prescribed drug costs and 281 
the rate of inappropriate spending on Medicaid prescription 282 
drugs. The program must: 283 
 (I)  Provide for the adoption of best practice guidelines 284 
for the prescribing and use of drugs in the Medicaid program, 285 
including translating best practice guidelines into pra ctice; 286 
reviewing prescriber patterns and comparing them to indicators 287 
that are based on national standards and practice patterns of 288 
clinical peers in their community, statewide, and nationally; 289 
and determine deviations from best practice guidelines. 290 
 (II)  Implement processes for providing feedback to and 291 
educating prescribers using best practice educational materials 292 
and peer-to-peer consultation. 293 
 (III)  Assess Medicaid recipients who are outliers in their 294 
use of a single or multiple prescription drugs wi th regard to 295 
the numbers and types of drugs taken, drug dosages, combination 296 
drug therapies, and other indicators of improper use of 297 
prescription drugs. 298 
 (IV)  Alert prescribers to recipients who fail to refill 299 
prescriptions in a timely fashion, are prescr ibed multiple drugs 300     
 
CS/HB 183  	2023 
 
 
 
CODING: Words stricken are deletions; words underlined are additions. 
hb0183-01-c1 
Page 13 of 17 
F L O R I D A H O U S E O F R E P	R E S E N T A T I V E	S 
 
 
 
that may be redundant or contraindicated, or may have other 301 
potential medication problems. 302 
 10.  The agency may contract for drug rebate 303 
administration, including, but not limited to, calculating 304 
rebate amounts, invoicing manufacturers, negotiating disputes 305 
with manufacturers, and maintaining a database of rebate 306 
collections. 307 
 11.  The agency may specify the preferred daily dosing form 308 
or strength for the purpose of promoting best practices with 309 
regard to the prescribing of certain drugs as specified in the 310 
General Appropriations Act and ensuring cost -effective 311 
prescribing practices. 312 
 12.  The agency may require prior authorization for 313 
Medicaid-covered prescribed drugs. The agency may prior -314 
authorize the use of a product: 315 
 a.  For an indication not approved in labeling; 316 
 b.  To comply with certain clinical guidelines; or 317 
 c.  If the product has the potential for overuse, misuse, 318 
or abuse. 319 
 320 
The agency may require the prescribing professional to provide 321 
information about the rationale an d supporting medical evidence 322 
for the use of a drug. The agency shall post prior 323 
authorization, step-edit criteria and protocol, and updates to 324 
the list of drugs that are subject to prior authorization on the 325     
 
CS/HB 183  	2023 
 
 
 
CODING: Words stricken are deletions; words underlined are additions. 
hb0183-01-c1 
Page 14 of 17 
F L O R I D A H O U S E O F R E P	R E S E N T A T I V E	S 
 
 
 
agency's Internet website within 21 days after the prior 326 
authorization and step -edit criteria and protocol and updates 327 
are approved by the agency. For purposes of this subparagraph, 328 
the term "step-edit" means an automatic electronic review of 329 
certain medications subject to prior authorization. 330 
 13.  The agency, in conjunction with the Pharmaceutical and 331 
Therapeutics Committee, may require age -related prior 332 
authorizations for certain prescribed drugs. The agency may 333 
preauthorize the use of a drug for a recipient who may not meet 334 
the age requirement or ma y exceed the length of therapy for use 335 
of this product as recommended by the manufacturer and approved 336 
by the Food and Drug Administration. Prior authorization may 337 
require the prescribing professional to provide information 338 
about the rationale and supporti ng medical evidence for the use 339 
of a drug. 340 
 14.  The agency shall implement a step -therapy prior 341 
authorization approval process for medications excluded from the 342 
preferred drug list. Medications listed on the preferred drug 343 
list must be used within the pre vious 12 months before the 344 
alternative medications that are not listed. The step -therapy 345 
prior authorization may require the prescriber to use the 346 
medications of a similar drug class or for a similar medical 347 
indication unless contraindicated in the Food an d Drug 348 
Administration labeling. The trial period between the specified 349 
steps may vary according to the medical indication. The step -350     
 
CS/HB 183  	2023 
 
 
 
CODING: Words stricken are deletions; words underlined are additions. 
hb0183-01-c1 
Page 15 of 17 
F L O R I D A H O U S E O F R E P	R E S E N T A T I V E	S 
 
 
 
therapy approval process must shall be developed in accordance 351 
with the committee as stated in s. 409.91195(7) and (8). A dr ug 352 
product may be approved or, in the case of a drug product for 353 
the treatment of a serious mental illness, must be approved 354 
without meeting the step -therapy prior authorization criteria if 355 
the prescribing physician provides the agency with additional 356 
written medical or clinical documentation that the product is 357 
medically necessary because: 358 
 a.  There is not a drug on the preferred drug list to treat 359 
the disease or medical condition which is an acceptable clinical 360 
alternative; 361 
 b.  The alternatives have bee n ineffective in the treatment 362 
of the beneficiary's disease; 363 
 c.  The drug product or medication of a similar drug class 364 
is prescribed for the treatment of a serious mental illness 365 
schizophrenia or schizotypal or delusional disorders ; prior 366 
authorization has been granted previously for the prescribed 367 
drug; and the medication was dispensed to the patient during the 368 
previous 12 months; or 369 
 d.  Based on historical evidence and known characteristics 370 
of the patient and the drug, the drug is likely to be 371 
ineffective, or the number of doses have been ineffective. 372 
 373 
The agency shall work with the physician to determine the best 374 
alternative for the patient. The agency may adopt rules waiving 375     
 
CS/HB 183  	2023 
 
 
 
CODING: Words stricken are deletions; words underlined are additions. 
hb0183-01-c1 
Page 16 of 17 
F L O R I D A H O U S E O F R E P	R E S E N T A T I V E	S 
 
 
 
the requirements for written clinical documentation for specific 376 
drugs in limited clinical situations. 377 
 15.  The agency shall implement a return and reuse program 378 
for drugs dispensed by pharmacies to institutional recipients, 379 
which includes payment of a $5 restocking fee for the 380 
implementation and operation of the program. The retu rn and 381 
reuse program shall be implemented electronically and in a 382 
manner that promotes efficiency. The program must permit a 383 
pharmacy to exclude drugs from the program if it is not 384 
practical or cost-effective for the drug to be included and must 385 
provide for the return to inventory of drugs that cannot be 386 
credited or returned in a cost -effective manner. The agency 387 
shall determine if the program has reduced the amount of 388 
Medicaid prescription drugs which are destroyed on an annual 389 
basis and if there are addit ional ways to ensure more 390 
prescription drugs are not destroyed which could safely be 391 
reused. 392 
 Section 3.  Paragraph (a) of subsection (20) of section 393 
409.910, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: 394 
 409.910  Responsibility for payments on behalf of Medica id-395 
eligible persons when other parties are liable. — 396 
 (20)(a)  Entities providing health insurance as defined in 397 
s. 624.603, health maintenance organizations and prepaid health 398 
clinics as defined in chapter 641, and, on behalf of their 399 
clients, third-party administrators, pharmacy benefits managers, 400     
 
CS/HB 183  	2023 
 
 
 
CODING: Words stricken are deletions; words underlined are additions. 
hb0183-01-c1 
Page 17 of 17 
F L O R I D A H O U S E O F R E P	R E S E N T A T I V E	S 
 
 
 
and any other third parties, as defined in s. 409.901(28) s. 401 
409.901(27), which are legally responsible for payment of a 402 
claim for a health care item or service as a condition of doing 403 
business in this the state or providing coverage to residents of 404 
this state, shall provide such records and information as are 405 
necessary to accomplish the purpose of this section, unless such 406 
requirement results in an unreasonable burden. 407 
 Section 4.  The Agency for Health Care Ad ministration is 408 
directed to include the rate impact of this act in the Medicaid 409 
managed medical assistance program and long -term care managed 410 
care program rates that become effective on October 1, 2023. 411 
 Section 5.  This act shall take effect October 1, 2023. 412