28 Tex. Admin. Code § 11.901

Current through Reg. 49, No. 44; November 1, 2024
Section 11.901 - Required and Prohibited Provisions
(a) Physician and provider contracts, subcontracts, and arrangements must include provisions regarding a hold-harmless clause as described in Insurance Code § 843.361 of this title (concerning Enrollees Held Harmless).
(1) A hold-harmless clause is a provision in a physician or health care provider agreement that obligates the physician or provider to look only to the HMO and not its enrollees for payment for covered services (except as described in the evidence of coverage issued to the enrollee).
(2) In compliance with Insurance Code § 843.002 (concerning Definitions) relating to an "uncovered expense," if a physician or health care provider agreement contains a hold-harmless clause, then the costs of the services will not be considered uncovered health care expenses in determining amounts of deposits necessary for insolvency protection under Insurance Code § 843.405 (concerning Deposit with Comptroller).
(3) The following is an example of an approvable hold-harmless clause: "(Physician or Provider) hereby agrees that in no event, including, but not limited to nonpayment by the HMO, HMO insolvency, or breach of this agreement, may (Physician or Provider) bill, charge, collect a deposit from, seek compensation, remuneration, or reimbursement from, or have any recourse against subscriber, enrollee, or persons other than the HMO acting on their behalf for services provided under this agreement. This provision does not prohibit collection of supplemental charges or copayments made in compliance with the terms of (applicable agreement) between HMO and subscriber or enrollee. (Physician or Provider) further agrees that:
(A) this provision will survive the termination of this agreement regardless of the cause giving rise to termination and must be construed to be for the benefit of the HMO subscriber or enrollee; and
(B) this provision supersedes any oral or written contrary agreement now existing or hereafter entered into between (Physician or Provider) and subscriber, enrollee, or persons acting on their behalf. Any modification, addition, or deletion to the provisions of this clause will be effective on a date no earlier than 15 days after the commissioner has received written notice of the proposed changes."
(b) Physician and provider contracts, subcontracts, and arrangements must include provisions:
(1) regarding retaliation as described in Insurance Code § 843.281 (concerning Retaliatory Action Prohibited);
(2) regarding continuity of treatment, if applicable, as described in Insurance Code § 843.309 (concerning Contracts with Physicians or Providers; Notice to Certain Enrollees of Termination of Physician or Provider Participation Plan) and §843.362 (concerning Continuity of Care; Obligation of Health Maintenance Organization);
(3) regarding written notification to enrollees receiving care from a physician or provider of the termination of that physician or provider in compliance with Insurance Code § 843.308 (concerning Notification of Patients of Deselected Physician or Provider) and §843.309 (concerning Contracts With Physicians or Providers: Notice to Certain Enrollees of Termination of Physician or Provider Participation in a Plan);
(4) regarding posting of complaint notices in physician or provider offices as described in Insurance Code § 843.283 (concerning Posting of Information on Complaint Process Required), provided that a representative notice that complies with this requirement may be obtained from the Managed Care Quality Assurance Office, Mail Code 103-6A, Texas Department of Insurance, P.O. Box 149104, Austin, Texas 78714-9104, or the department's website at www.tdi.texas.gov;
(5) regarding indemnification of the HMO as described in Insurance Code § 843.310 (concerning Contracts with Physicians or Providers; Certain Indemnity Clauses Prohibited);
(6) regarding prompt payment of claims as described in Insurance Code Chapter 542, Subchapter B, (concerning Prompt Payment of Claims); §1271.005 (concerning Applicability of Other Law); and all applicable statutes and rules pertaining to prompt payment of clean claims, including Insurance Code Chapter 843, Subchapter J, (concerning Payment of Claims to Physicians and Providers); and Chapter 21, Subchapter T, of this title (relating to Submission of Clean Claims) with respect to payment to the physician or provider for covered services rendered to enrollees;
(7) regarding capitation, if applicable, as described in Insurance Code § 843.315 (concerning Payment of Capitation; Assignment of Primary Care Physician or Provider) and §843.316 (concerning Alternative Capitation System);
(8) regarding selection of a primary care physician or provider, if applicable, as described in Insurance Code § 843.203 (concerning Selection of Primary Care Physician or Provider);
(9) providing that a podiatrist, practicing within the scope of the law regulating podiatry, is permitted to furnish X-rays and non-prefabricated orthotics covered by the evidence of coverage as described in Insurance Code § 843.311 (concerning Contracts with Podiatrists);
(10) regarding the requirements of § 21.3701 of this title (relating to Electronic Claims Filing Requirements) if the contract requires electronic submission of any information described by that section;
(11) requiring the preferred provider to comply with all applicable requirements of Insurance Code § 1661.005 (concerning Refunds of Overpayments); and
(12) requiring a contracting physician or provider to retain in the contracting physician's or provider's records updated information concerning a patient's other health benefit plan coverage.
(c) Physician and provider contracts and arrangements must include provisions entitling the physician or provider, on request, to all information necessary to determine that the physician or provider is being compensated in compliance with the contract. A physician or provider may make the request for information by any reasonable and verifiable means. The information provided must include a level of detail sufficient to enable a reasonable person with sufficient training, experience, and competence in claims processing to determine the payment to be made under the terms of the contract for covered services rendered to enrollees. The HMO may provide the required information by any reasonable method through which the physician or provider can access the information, including email, computer disks, or other electronic storage and transfer technology, paper, or access to an electronic database. Amendments, revisions, or substitutions of any information provided under this paragraph must comply with paragraph (4) of this subsection. The HMO must provide the fee schedules and other required information by the 30th day after the date the HMO receives the physician's or provider's request.
(1) The information provided must include a physician-specific or provider-specific summary and explanation of all payment and reimbursement methodologies that will be used to pay claims submitted by a physician or provider, including at a minimum, the:
(A) fee schedule, including, if applicable, CPT, HCPCS, CDT, ICD-9-CM, ICD-10-CM, and successor codes, and modifiers:
(i) by which the HMO will calculate and pay all claims for covered services submitted by or on behalf of the contracting physician or provider; or
(ii) that pertains to the range of health care services reasonably expected to be delivered under the contract by that contracting physician or provider on a routine basis, along with a toll-free number or electronic address through which the contracting physician or provider may request the fee schedules applicable to any covered services that the physician or provider intends to provide to an enrollee, and any other information required by this subsection, that pertains to the service for which the fee schedule is being requested if the HMO has not previously provided that information to the physician or provider;
(B) all applicable coding methodologies;
(C) all applicable bundling processes, which must be consistent with nationally recognized and generally accepted bundling edits and logic;
(D) all applicable downcoding policies;
(E) a description of any other applicable policy or procedure the HMO may use that affects the payment of specific claims submitted by or on behalf of the contracting physician or provider, including recoupment;
(F) any addenda, schedules, exhibits, or policies used by the HMO in carrying out the payment of claims submitted by or on behalf of the contracting physician or provider that are necessary to provide a reasonable understanding of the information provided under this subsection; and
(G) the published product name and version of any software the HMO uses to determine bundling and unbundling of claims.
(2) In the case of a reference to source information outside the control of the HMO as the basis for fee computation, such as state Medicaid or federal Medicare fee schedules, the information the HMO provides must clearly identify the source and explain the procedure by which the physician or provider may readily access the source electronically, telephonically, or as otherwise agreed to by the parties.
(3) Nothing in this subsection may be construed to require an HMO to provide specific information that would violate any applicable copyright law or licensing agreement. However, the HMO must supply, instead of any information withheld on the basis of copyright law or licensing agreement, a summary of the information that will allow a reasonable person with sufficient training, experience, and competence in claims processing to determine the payment to be made under the terms of the contract for covered services that are rendered to enrollees as required by paragraph (1) of this subsection.
(4) No amendment, revision, or substitution of any of the claims payment procedures or any of the information required to be provided by this subsection will be effective as to the contracting physician or provider, unless the HMO provides at least 90-calendar-days written notice to the contracting physician or provider identifying with specificity the amendment, revision, or substitution. An HMO may not make retroactive changes to claims payment procedures or any of the information required to be provided by this subsection. Where a contract specifies mutual agreement of the parties as the sole mechanism for requiring amendment, revision, or substitution of the information required by this subsection, the written notice specified in this section does not supersede the requirement for mutual agreement.
(5) The HMO must provide the information required by paragraphs (1) - (4) of this subsection to the contracting physician or provider by the 30th day after the date the HMO receives the contracting physician's or provider's request.
(6) A physician or provider receiving information under this subsection may not:
(A) use or disclose the information for any purpose other than:
(i) the physician's or provider's practice management,
(ii) billing activities,
(iii) other business operations, or
(iv) communications with a governmental agency involved in the regulation of health care or insurance;
(B) use the information to knowingly submit a claim for payment that does not accurately represent the level, type, or amount of services that were actually provided to an enrollee or to misrepresent any aspect of the services; or
(C) rely on information provided under this paragraph about a service as a representation that an enrollee is covered for that service under the terms of the enrollee's evidence of coverage.
(7) A physician or provider that receives information under this subsection may terminate the contract on or before the 30th day after the date the physician or provider receives the information without penalty or discrimination in participation in other health care products or plans. The contract between the HMO and physician or provider must provide for reasonable advance notice to enrollees being treated by the physician or provider before the termination consistent with Insurance Code § 843.309.
(8) The provisions of this subsection may not be waived, voided, or nullified by contract.
(d) Physician and provider contracts, subcontracts, and arrangements must include provisions regarding written notification of termination to a physician or provider in compliance with Insurance Code § 843.306 (concerning Termination of Participation; Advisory Review Panel) and §843.307 (concerning Expedited Review Process on Termination or Deselection), including provisions providing that:
(1) the HMO must provide notice of termination by the HMO to the physician or provider at least 90 days before the effective date of the termination;
(2) not later than 30 days following receipt of the written notification of termination, a physician or provider may request a review by the HMO's advisory review panel except in a case involving:
(A) imminent harm to patient health;
(B) an action by a state medical or dental board, another medical or dental licensing board, or another licensing board or government agency that effectively impairs the physician's or provider's ability to practice medicine, dentistry, or another profession; or
(C) fraud or malfeasance; and
(3) within 60 days after receipt of the physician or provider's request for review, the advisory review panel must make its formal recommendation and the HMO must communicate its decision to the physician or provider.
(e) On request by a participating physician or provider, an HMO must include a provision in the physician's or provider's contract providing that the HMO and the HMO's clearinghouse may not refuse to process or pay an electronically submitted clean claim because the claim is submitted together with or in a batch submission with a claim that is deficient. As used in this section, the term "batch submission" means "a group of electronic claims submitted for processing at the same time within a Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) standard ASC X12N 837 Transaction Set and identified by a batch control number." This subsection applies to a contract entered into or renewed on or after the effective date of this subsection. For a contract entered into or renewed before the effective date of this subsection, the law and regulations in effect at the time the contract was entered or renewed, whichever is later, governs.
(f) A contract between an HMO and a dentist may not limit the fee the dentist may charge for a service that is not a covered service under Insurance Code § 843.3115 (concerning Contracts with Dentists).

28 Tex. Admin. Code § 11.901

The provisions of this §11.901 adopted to be effective November 2, 1998, 23 TexReg 11347; amended to be effective October 8, 2002, 27 TexReg 9339; amended to be effective October 5, 2003, 28 TexReg 8626; amended to be effective February 24, 2005, 30 TexReg 854; amended to be effective January 19, 2006, 31 TexReg 291; amended to be effective November 15, 2006, 31 TexReg 9298; Adopted by Texas Register, Volume 42, Number 16, April 21, 2017, TexReg 2246, eff. 8/1/2017