Bill Text: HI HB1240 | 2013 | Regular Session | Introduced
Bill Title: Workers' Compensation; Repackaged Medications and Compounded Medications
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 1-0)
Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2013-02-12 - The committee(s) on LAB/HLT recommend(s) that the measure be deferred. [HB1240 Detail]
Download: Hawaii-2013-HB1240-Introduced.html
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES |
H.B. NO. |
1240 |
TWENTY-SEVENTH LEGISLATURE, 2013 |
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STATE OF HAWAII |
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A BILL FOR AN ACT
relating to medications.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:
SECTION 1. The legislature finds that regulating reimbursement for repackaged prescription medication and compounded medication would help to mitigate the financial inconsistency between repackaged and non-repackaged medication and to contain unreasonable increases of prescription medication in Hawaii's workers' compensation insurance system. Additionally, regulating the reimbursement for compounded medication would help to contain compounded medication costs in Hawaii's workers' compensation insurance system, where compounded medications are not presently regulated.
The legislature notes that this measure is not intended to deter physicians from dispensing medication to their patients. Physician dispensing serves an important purpose and assists patients in receiving point-of-care comprehensive health care from a single provider.
The purpose of this Act is to prevent prescription medications from becoming an unreasonable health care cost driver by promoting the utilization of therapeutically equivalent, lower cost generic prescription medication where medically appropriate and reasonably restricting reimbursement of repackaged prescription medication and compounded medication to amounts comparable to that of retail pharmacies under state law.
SECTION 2. Section 386-21, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:
"§386‑21 Medical care, services, and supplies. (a) Immediately after a work injury is sustained by an employee and so long as reasonably needed, the employer shall furnish to the employee all medical care, services, medication, and supplies as the nature of the injury requires. The liability for the medical care, services, medication, and supplies shall be subject to the deductible under section 386‑100.
(b) Whenever medical care is needed, the injured employee may select any physician or surgeon who is practicing on the island where the injury was incurred to render medical care. If the services of a specialist are indicated, the employee may select any physician or surgeon practicing in the State. The director may authorize the selection of a specialist practicing outside the State where no comparable medical attendance within the State is available. Upon procuring the services of a physician or surgeon, the injured employee shall give proper notice of the employee's selection to the employer within a reasonable time after the beginning of the treatment. If for any reason during the period when medical care is needed, the employee wishes to change to another physician or surgeon, the employee may do so in accordance with rules prescribed by the director. If the employee is unable to select a physician or surgeon and the emergency nature of the injury requires immediate medical attendance, or if the employee does not desire to select a physician or surgeon and so advises the employer, the employer shall select the physician or surgeon. The selection, however, shall not deprive the employee of the employee's right of subsequently selecting a physician or surgeon for continuance of needed medical care.
(c) The liability of the employer for medical care, services, medication, and supplies shall be limited to the charges computed as set forth in this section. The director shall make determinations of the charges and adopt fee schedules based upon those determinations. Effective January 1, 1997, and for each succeeding calendar year thereafter, the charges shall not exceed one hundred ten per cent of fees prescribed in the Medicare Resource Based Relative Value Scale applicable to Hawaii as prepared by the United States Department of Health and Human Services, except as provided in this subsection. The rates or fees provided for in this section shall be adequate to ensure at all times the standard of services and care intended by this chapter to injured employees.
If the director determines that an allowance under the medicare program is not reasonable or if a medical treatment, accommodation, product, or service existing as of June 29, 1995, is not covered under the medicare program, the director, at any time, may establish an additional fee schedule or schedules not exceeding the prevalent charge for fees for services actually received by providers of health care services, to cover charges for that treatment, accommodation, product, or service. If no prevalent charge for a fee for service has been established for a given service or procedure, the director shall adopt a reasonable rate which shall be the same for all providers of health care services to be paid for that service or procedure.
The director shall update the schedules required by this section every three years or annually, as required. The updates shall be based upon:
(1) Future charges or additions prescribed in the Medicare Resource Based Relative Value Scale applicable to Hawaii as prepared by the United States Department of Health and Human Services; or
(2) A statistically valid survey by the director of prevalent charges for fees for services actually received by providers of health care services or based upon the information provided to the director by the appropriate state agency having access to prevalent charges for medical fee information.
When a dispute exists between an insurer or self-insured employer and a medical services provider regarding the amount of a fee for medical services, the director may resolve the dispute in a summary manner as the director may prescribe; provided that a provider shall not charge more than the provider's private patient charge for the service rendered.
When a dispute exists between an employee and the employer or the employer's insurer regarding the proposed treatment plan or whether medical services should be continued, the employee shall continue to receive essential medical services prescribed by the treating physician necessary to prevent deterioration of the employee's condition or further injury until the director issues a decision on whether the employee's medical treatment should be continued. The director shall make a decision within thirty days of the filing of a dispute. If the director determines that medical services pursuant to the treatment plan should be or should have been discontinued, the director shall designate the date after which medical services for that treatment plan are denied. The employer or the employer's insurer may recover from the employee's personal health care provider qualified pursuant to section 386-27, or from any other appropriate occupational or non-occupational insurer, all the sums paid for medical services rendered after the date designated by the director. Under no circumstances shall the employee be charged for the disallowed services, unless the services were obtained in violation of section 386-98. The attending physician, employee, employer, or insurance carrier may request in writing that the director review the denial of the treatment plan or the continuation of medical services.
(d) Reimbursement for brand name prescription medication shall be the average wholesale price as listed in the American Druggist Red Book plus forty per cent of the average wholesale price, except where the carrier and the specific provider seeking reimbursement have directly contracted between one another for a lower reimbursement amount. If the medication has been repackaged or relabeled, reimbursement shall be calculated by multiplying the number of units dispensed by the average wholesale price set by the original manufacturer of the underlying medication, plus forty per cent.
(e) Reimbursement for generic prescription medication shall be the average wholesale price as listed in the American Druggist Red Book plus sixty per cent of the average wholesale price, except where the carrier and the specific provider seeking reimbursement have directly contracted between one another for a lower reimbursement amount. If the medication has been repackaged or relabeled, reimbursement shall be calculated by multiplying the number of units dispensed by the average wholesale price set by the original manufacturer of the underlying medication, plus sixty per cent.
(f) Compounded medications shall be reimbursed based on the sum of the average wholesale prices due for each medication ingredient having an assigned national drug code that is used in the compounded medication, plus forty per cent.
(g) If information pertaining to the original labeler or manufacturer of the underlying medication product used in repackaged or compounded medications is not provided or is unknown, then reimbursement shall be based on the most reasonable and closely related average wholesale price for the underlying medication product.
[(d)] (h)
The director, with input from stakeholders in the workers' compensation system,
including but not limited to insurers, health care providers, employers, and
employees, shall establish standardized forms for health care providers to use
when reporting on and billing for injuries compensable under this chapter. The
forms may be in triplicate, or in any other configuration so as to minimize, to
the extent practicable, the need for a health care provider to fill out
multiple forms describing the same workers' compensation case to the
department, the injured employee's employer, and the employer's insurer.
[(e)] (i)
If it appears to the director that the injured employee has wilfully refused to
accept the services of a competent physician or surgeon selected as provided in
this section, or has wilfully obstructed the physician or surgeon, or medical,
surgical, or hospital services or supplies, the director may consider such
refusal or obstruction on the part of the injured employee to be a waiver in
whole or in part of the right to medical care, services, medication, and
supplies, and may suspend the weekly benefit payments, if any, to which the
employee is entitled so long as the refusal or obstruction continues.
[(f)] (j)
Any funds as are periodically necessary to the department to implement the
foregoing provisions may be charged to and paid from the special compensation
fund provided by section 386-151.
[(g)] (k)
In cases where the compensability of the claim is not contested by the
employer, the medical [services] provider shall notify or bill the
employer, insurer, or the special compensation fund for services rendered
relating to the compensable injury within two years of the date services were
rendered. Failure to bill the employer, insurer, or the special compensation
fund within the two-year period shall result in the forfeiture of the medical
services provider's right to payment. The medical [services] provider
shall not directly charge the injured employee for treatments relating to the
compensable injury."
SECTION 3. Statutory material to be repealed is bracketed and stricken. New statutory material is underscored.
SECTION 4. This Act shall take effect on July 1, 2013.
INTRODUCED BY: |
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Report Title:
Workers' Compensation; Repackaged Medications and Compounded Medications
Description:
Restricts reimbursement of repackaged prescription drugs and compound medications to amounts comparable to that of retail pharmacies under state law.
The summary description of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.