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Monday, October 15, 2001

States Continue To Endorse Patients' Rights

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North Carolina Gov. Mike Easley signed a patient's bill of rights bill into law today (10/18), making his state the 46th to give more legal power to health care consumers. State officials say the new measure is the toughest in the country. Even so, without congressional action on the issue, up to one-third of Americans are not helped by state managed care laws.

That's because most employer-sponsored health plans are regulated by the federal employee Retirement Security Act, or ERISA, and are exempt from the state mandates.

There's no gold standard for a patient's bill of rights, but measures typically require HMOs to tell patients what services are paid for and let women have direct access to an OB/GYN without a referral.

Patients also get the right to air complaints and challenge refusals to pay for care. California was the first state to enact a patient's bill of rights in 1994.

To date,

  • 48 states prohibit health plans from telling doctors what they can and cannot say to patients,

  • 47 states require plans to pay for emergency care,

  • 41 states give women direct access to an OB/GYN, and

  • 40 states have an appeals process for patients to use if they're not happy with a doctor's decision.

    North Carolina officials looked at other state laws and pending federal bills before deciding what its bill of rights would look like.

    "We extracted the strongest provisions of all the measures and we even added a few new ones," says Alan Hirsch, policy director for Gov. Easley, who unveiled the legislation last February with lawmakers.

    Policymakers decided, for instance, to give doctors more say in prescribing drugs. Right now, many health plans restrict drugs they'll pay for by putting them on a list known as a formulary.

    Under North Carolina's new law, "if a doctor believes a particular drug is needed by a patient, he has the ability to prescribe it" even if it's not on the formulary, says Hirsch.

    Hirsch says in crafting the measure, there wasn't a lot of discussion about potential congressional action. "We're not too terribly concerned that Congress would enact a bill that would lower patient protections. We're reasonably confident our law will stand," he says.

    States are concerned about what will happen to laws already on the books, since some congressional proposals will weaken state mandates.

    "The federal patients bill of rights is weaker than most of what the states have, and federal lawmakers don't want to invalidate some of the really good stuff states have done," says Rachel Morgan of the National Conference of State Legislatures.

    "The biggest impact on states is whether they'll be required to have existing laws certified or whether the feds will grandfather them in," she says.

    There are currently two versions of patient protection bills pending in Congress, so it's unclear whether state laws will be grandfathered in or whether they'll have to undergo federal certification. Morgan says full-fledged certification would require the federal government to create a new agency to review what states have done. "It's a guessing game until Congress gets something in black and white," she says.

    STATEYEAR ENACTEDPROVISIONS
    Alaska1998Ban on gag clauses, direct access, bans financial incentives
    Arizona2000Grievance procedures, direct access, experimental treatment
    Arkansas1997Inpatient care after childbirth, mastectomies, provider credentialing
    California1994Information disclosure, emergency care services, appeals
    Colorado1997Consumer grievance process, ER, prescription mandates
    Connecticut1997Ban on gag clauses, grievance process, medical records, ER
    Delaware1998Bans financial incentives, grievance process, network adequacy
    Florida1997Ban on gag clauses, grievance process, data collection, direct access
    Georgia1996, 1999Disclosure, grievances, confidentiality, independent appeals
    Hawaii1998Ban on gag clauses, ER care, independent review
    Idaho1997Direct access, emergency care, out-of-network providers
    Illinois1999Ban on gag clauses, consumer assistance, emergency care, appeals
    Indiana1998Ban on gag clauses, grievances, medical records, drug formularies
    Iowa1999Disclosure, emergency care, independent appeals, report cards
    Kansas1997Ban on gag clauses, grievance process, ER, direct access
    Kentucky1998, 2000Grievance process, ER, medical records, direct access
    Louisiana1997Consumer grievances, financial disincentives, quality assurance
    Maine1996, 2000Disclosure, reporting, credential, ban gag clauses, ER, experimental treatment
    Maryland1995Oversight of plans, certification standards
    Massachusetts2000External review, ER, grievance process, mandated kids mental health services
    Minnesota1997Ban on gag clauses, disclosure, ER, medical records
    Mississippi1995Certification standards only
    Missouri1997Ban gag clauses, data collection, direct access, ER, medical records
    Montana1997ER, access, provider selection, ban gag clauses, premium rate restrictions
    Nebraska1998Ban gag clauses, grievance process, ER, network adequacy
    Nevada1997Ban gag clauses, disclosure, ER, financial disincentives
    New Hampshire1997Consumer grievance, ban gag clauses, medical records, network adequacy
    New Jersey1997Ban gag clauses, grievance process, financial incentives
    New Mexico1997, 1998Ban gag clauses, grievance process, network adequacy
    New York1996Disclosure, grievance process, direct access, quality of care
    North Carolina2001Grievance process, Rx formulary
    North Dakota1999Ban financial incentives, ER, whistleblower protections
    Ohio1997Consumer grievance process, ER, network adequacy, genetic testing
    Oklahoma1997, 1999Referrals, ER, ban gag clauses, quality of care, consumer grievances
    Oregon1995, 1997Consumer grievances, ER, disclosure, network adequacy
    Pennsylvania1998Ban gag clauses and financial incentives, consumer grievance
    Rhode Island1996Certification, disclosure, confidentiality, ban gag clauses
    South Carolina1998Ban gag clauses, disclosure
    South Dakota1999Network adequacy, quality of care, ban gag clauses, register managed care plans
    Tennessee1998OB/GYN access, eye care, network adequacy, formularies
    Texas1997Ban gag clauses, consumer grievance, ER, quality of service
    Vermont1996Annual review, disclosure, ban gag clauses, quality assurance
    Virginia1995, 1996, 1998, 1999Appeals, emergency care, ban gag clauses, medical records
    Washington1996, 2000Disclosure, ban gag clauses, consumer grievance, direct access
    West Virginia2001Disclosure, financial incentives ban, second medical opinion, grievances
    Wisconsin1998Emergency care, gag clauses, director certification, experimental treatment
    SOURCE: National Conference of State Legislatures


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