Current through Reg. 49, No. 45; November 8, 2024
Section 19.1731 - Preauthorization Exemption(a) For the purposes of this division, a physician or provider should be identified using the National Provider Identifier (NPI) under which a physician or provider makes preauthorization requests.(b) With respect to a particular health care service for which a physician or provider does not have a preauthorization exemption, an issuer must conduct an evaluation of all preauthorization requests submitted by the physician or provider during the most recent evaluation period that were finalized prior to the evaluation and may not include a request that is pending appeal at the time the data is analyzed. The evaluation must be based on no fewer than five eligible preauthorization requests.(c) With respect to a particular health care service for which a physician or provider has a preauthorization exemption, an issuer may conduct an evaluation, as defined in § 19.1730(4)(B) of this title (relating to Definitions), to determine whether to rescind a preauthorization exemption consistent with Insurance Code § 4201.655, concerning Denial or Rescission of Preauthorization Exemption. In order to determine whether to rescind an exemption, the issuer must conduct a retrospective review of a random sample of at least five and no more than 20 claims submitted during the most recent evaluation period.(d) Other than care ordered by a treating physician or provider that has a preauthorization exemption that is then rendered by a physician or provider that does not have an exemption, a treating physician or provider may not rely on another physician's or provider's preauthorization exemption. If a treating physician or provider does not have a preauthorization exemption and relies on another physician's or provider's preauthorization exemption in violation of this subsection, an issuer may consider the physician or provider who has qualified for the preauthorization exemption as failing to substantially perform the health care service under Insurance Code § 4201.659, concerning Effect of Preauthorization Exemption, and may reduce or deny payment for that service on that basis. It is not a violation of this subsection for a provider, such as a nurse or physician's assistant, who practices under the supervision of a physician, to rely on the supervising physician's exemption, if the provider appropriately orders care and requests preauthorization under the supervising physician's NPI.(e) For care ordered by a treating physician or provider that has a preauthorization exemption that is then rendered by a physician or provider that does not have an exemption, the treating physician or provider must include the name and NPI of the ordering physician or provider on the claim in fields 17 and 17B of CMS Form 1500, in fields 76 - 79 or another appropriate field in Form UB-04, or in the corresponding fields for electronic claims using the ASC X12N 837 format. The issuer may provide coding guidance to physicians and providers to ensure that this information is appropriately captured on the claim. If this information is not included, the issuer may treat the claim as subject to an otherwise applicable preauthorization requirement.28 Tex. Admin. Code § 19.1731
Adopted by Texas Register, Volume 47, Number 34, August 26, 2022, TexReg 5135, eff. 9/1/2022