Texas 2019 86th Regular

Texas House Bill HB2222 Introduced / Bill

Filed 02/21/2019

                    86R7658 MM-D
 By: Raymond H.B. No. 2222


 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 AN ACT
 relating to the administration and oversight of the Medicaid and
 child health plan programs.
 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 SECTION 1.  Subchapter C, Chapter 531, Government Code, is
 amended by adding Section 531.1133 to read as follows:
 Sec. 531.1133.  PROVIDER NOT LIABLE FOR MANAGED CARE
 ORGANIZATION OVERPAYMENT OR DEBT. (a)  If the commission's office
 of inspector general makes a determination to recoup an overpayment
 or debt from a managed care organization that contracts with the
 commission to provide health care services to Medicaid recipients,
 a provider that contracts with the managed care organization may
 not be held liable for the good faith provision of services under
 the provider's contract with the managed care organization that
 were provided with prior authorization.
 (b)  This section does not:
 (1)  limit the office of inspector general's authority
 to recoup an overpayment or debt from a provider that is owed by the
 provider as a result of the provider's failure to comply with
 applicable law or a contract provision, notwithstanding any prior
 authorization for a service provided; or
 (2)  apply to an action brought under Chapter 36, Human
 Resources Code.
 SECTION 2.  Section 533.00281, Government Code, is
 redesignated as Section 533.0121, Government Code, and amended to
 read as follows:
 Sec. 533.0121 [533.00281].  UTILIZATION REVIEW AND
 FINANCIAL AUDIT PROCESS FOR [STAR + PLUS] MEDICAID MANAGED CARE
 ORGANIZATIONS. (a) The commission's office responsible for [of]
 contract management shall establish an annual utilization review
 and financial audit process for managed care organizations
 participating in the [STAR + PLUS] Medicaid managed care program.
 The commission shall determine the topics to be examined in a [the]
 review [process], except that with respect to a managed care
 organization participating in the STAR+PLUS Medicaid managed care
 program, the review [process] must include a thorough investigation
 of the [each managed care] organization's procedures for
 determining whether a recipient should be enrolled in the STAR+PLUS
 [STAR + PLUS] home and community-based services and supports (HCBS)
 program, including the conduct of functional assessments for that
 purpose and records relating to those assessments.
 (b)  The commission's office responsible for [of] contract
 management shall use the utilization review and financial audit
 process established under this section to review each fiscal year:
 (1)  each managed care organization [every managed care
 organization] participating in the [STAR + PLUS] Medicaid managed
 care program in this state for that organization's first five years
 of participation; [or]
 (2)  each managed care organization providing health
 care services to a population of recipients new to receiving those
 services through a Medicaid [only the] managed care delivery model
 for the first three years that the organization provides those
 services to that population; or
 (3)  managed care organizations that, using a
 risk-based assessment process and evaluation of prior history, the
 office determines have a higher likelihood of contract or financial
 noncompliance [inappropriate client placement in the STAR + PLUS
 home and community-based services and supports (HCBS) program].
 (c)  In addition to the reviews required by Subsection (b),
 the commission's office responsible for contract management shall
 use the utilization review and financial audit process established
 under this section to review each managed care organization
 participating in the Medicaid managed care program at least once
 every five years.
 (d)  In conjunction with the commission's office responsible
 for [of] contract management, the commission shall provide a report
 to the standing committees of the senate and house of
 representatives with jurisdiction over Medicaid not later than
 December 1 of each year. The report must:
 (1)  summarize the results of the [utilization] reviews
 conducted under this section during the preceding fiscal year;
 (2)  provide analysis of errors committed by each
 reviewed managed care organization; and
 (3)  extrapolate those findings and make
 recommendations for improving the efficiency of the Medicaid
 managed care program.
 (e)  If a [utilization] review conducted under this section
 results in a determination to recoup money from a managed care
 organization, the provider protections from liability under
 Section 531.1133 apply [a service provider who contracts with the
 managed care organization may not be held liable for the good faith
 provision of services based on an authorization from the managed
 care organization].
 SECTION 3.  Subchapter A, Chapter 533, Government Code, is
 amended by adding Section 533.0031 to read as follows:
 Sec. 533.0031.  MEDICAID MANAGED CARE PLAN ACCREDITATION.
 (a)  Notwithstanding Section 533.004 or any other law requiring the
 commission to contract with a managed care organization to provide
 health care services to recipients, the commission may contract
 with a managed care organization to provide those services only if
 the managed care plan offered by the organization is accredited by a
 nationally recognized accrediting entity.
 (b)  This section does not apply to a managed care
 organization that contracts with the commission to provide only
 dental or medical transportation services.
 SECTION 4.  Subchapter A, Chapter 533, Government Code, is
 amended by adding Section 533.00611 to read as follows:
 Sec. 533.00611.  STANDARDS FOR DETERMINING MEDICAL
 NECESSITY. (a)  Except as provided by Subsection (b), the
 commission shall establish standards that govern the processes,
 criteria, and guidelines under which managed care organizations
 determine the medical necessity of a health care service covered by
 Medicaid. In establishing standards under this section, the
 commission shall:
 (1)  ensure that each recipient has equal access in
 scope and duration to the same covered health care services for
 which the recipient is eligible, regardless of the managed care
 organization with which the recipient is enrolled;
 (2)  provide managed care organizations with
 flexibility to approve covered medically necessary services for
 recipients that may not be within prescribed criteria and
 guidelines;
 (3)  require managed care organizations to make
 available to providers all criteria and guidelines used to
 determine medical necessity through an Internet portal accessible
 by the providers;
 (4)  ensure that managed care organizations
 consistently apply the same medical necessity criteria and
 guidelines for the approval of services and in retrospective
 utilization reviews; and
 (5)  ensure that managed care organizations include in
 any service or prior authorization denial specific information
 about the medical necessity criteria or guidelines that were not
 met.
 (b)  This section does not apply to or affect the
 commission's authority to:
 (1)  determine medical necessity for home and
 community-based services provided under the STAR+PLUS Medicaid
 managed care program; or
 (2)  conduct utilization reviews of those services.
 SECTION 5.  Section 533.0076, Government Code, is amended by
 amending Subsection (c) and adding Subsection (d) to read as
 follows:
 (c)  The commission shall allow a recipient who is enrolled
 in a managed care plan under this chapter to disenroll from that
 plan and enroll in another managed care plan[:
 [(1)]  at any time for cause in accordance with federal
 law, including because:
 (1)  the recipient moves out of the managed care
 organization's service area;
 (2)  the plan does not, on the basis of moral or
 religious objections, cover the service the recipient seeks;
 (3)  the recipient needs related services to be
 performed at the same time, not all related services are available
 within the organization's provider network, and the recipient's
 primary care provider or another provider determines that receiving
 the services separately would subject the recipient to unnecessary
 risk;
 (4)  for recipients of long-term services or supports,
 the recipient would have to change the recipient's residential,
 institutional, or employment supports provider based on that
 provider's change in status from an in-network to an out-of-network
 provider with the managed care organization and, as a result, would
 experience a disruption in the recipient's residence or employment;
 or
 (5)  of another reason permitted under federal law,
 including poor quality of care, lack of access to services covered
 under the contract, or lack of access to providers experienced in
 dealing with the recipient's care needs[; and
 [(2)     once for any reason after the periods described
 by Subsections (a) and (b)].
 (d)  The commission shall implement a process by which the
 commission verifies that a recipient is permitted to disenroll from
 one managed care plan offered by a managed care organization and
 enroll in another managed care plan, including a plan offered by
 another managed care organization, before the disenrollment
 occurs.
 SECTION 6.  Subchapter A, Chapter 533, Government Code, is
 amended by adding Section 533.0091 to read as follows:
 Sec. 533.0091.  CARE COORDINATION SERVICES. A managed care
 organization that contracts with the commission to provide health
 care services to recipients shall ensure that persons providing
 care coordination services through the organization coordinate
 with hospital discharge planners, who must notify the organization
 of an inpatient admission of a recipient, to facilitate the timely
 discharge of the recipient to the appropriate level of care and
 minimize potentially preventable readmissions, as defined by
 Section 536.001.
 SECTION 7.  Subchapter D, Chapter 62, Health and Safety
 Code, is amended by adding Section 62.1552 to read as follows:
 Sec. 62.1552.  MANAGED CARE PLAN ACCREDITATION. (a)
 Notwithstanding any other law requiring the commission to contract
 with a managed care organization to provide health benefits under
 the child health plan, the commission may contract with a managed
 care organization to provide those benefits only if the managed
 care plan offered by the organization is accredited by a nationally
 recognized accrediting entity.
 (b)  This section does not apply to a managed care
 organization that contracts with the commission to provide only
 dental benefits.
 SECTION 8.  (a)  The Health and Human Services Commission
 shall require that a managed care plan offered by a managed care
 organization with which the commission enters into or renews a
 contract under Chapter 533, Government Code, or Chapter 62, Health
 and Safety Code, as applicable, on or after the effective date of
 this Act complies with Section 533.0031, Government Code, as added
 by this Act, or Section 62.1552, Health and Safety Code, as added by
 this Act, as applicable, not later than September 1, 2022.
 (b)  Notwithstanding Section 533.0031, Government Code, as
 added by this Act, or Section 62.1552, Health and Safety Code, as
 added by this Act, a managed care organization may continue
 providing health care services or health benefits under a contract
 with the Health and Human Services Commission entered into under
 Chapter 533, Government Code, or Chapter 62, Health and Safety
 Code, as applicable, before the effective date of this Act, until
 the earlier of:
 (1)  the termination of the contract; or
 (2)  the third anniversary of the effective date of a
 contract amendment requiring accreditation of the managed care plan
 offered by the managed care organization.
 (c)  Not later than March 31, 2020, the Health and Human
 Services Commission shall seek to amend contracts described by
 Subsection (b) of this section to ensure those contracts comply
 with Section 533.0031, Government Code, as added by this Act, or
 Section 62.1552, Health and Safety Code, as added by this Act, as
 applicable. To the extent of a conflict between Section 533.0031,
 Government Code, as added by this Act, or Section 62.1552, Health
 and Safety Code, as added by this Act, and a provision of a contract
 with a managed care organization entered into before the effective
 date of this Act, the contract provision prevails.
 SECTION 9.  If before implementing any provision of this Act
 a state agency determines that a waiver or authorization from a
 federal agency is necessary for implementation of that provision,
 the agency affected by the provision shall request the waiver or
 authorization and may delay implementing that provision until the
 waiver or authorization is granted.
 SECTION 10.  This Act takes effect September 1, 2019.