28 Tex. Admin. Code § 19.1705 - General Standards of Utilization Review
(a) Review of utilization review plan. The
utilization review plan must be reviewed and approved by a physician licensed
to practice medicine in Texas and conducted under standards developed and
periodically updated with input from both primary and specialty physicians,
doctors, and other health care providers, as appropriate.
(b) Special circumstances.
(1) A utilization review determination must
be made in a manner that takes into account special circumstances of the case
that may require deviation from the norm stated in the screening criteria or
relevant guidelines. Special circumstances include, but are not limited to, an
individual who has a disability, acute condition, or life-threatening
illness.
(2) If coverage is
available for stage-four advanced, metastatic cancer and associated conditions,
as defined by Insurance Code §
1369.211, the URA
cannot require, before coverage of a prescription drug, that the enrollee:
(A) fail to successfully respond to a
different drug; or
(B) prove a
history of failure of a different drug.
(3) Paragraph (2) of this subsection only
applies to a drug the use of which is:
(A)
consistent with best practices for the treatment of stage-four advanced,
metastatic cancer or an associated condition, as defined by Insurance Code §
1369.211;
(B) supported by peer-reviewed,
evidence-based literature; and
(C)
approved by the United States Food and Drug
Administration.
(c) Screening criteria. Each URA must utilize
written screening criteria that are evidence-based, scientifically valid,
outcome-focused, and that comply with the requirements in Insurance Code §
4201.153. The
screening criteria must also recognize that if evidence-based medicine is not
available for a particular health care service provided, the URA must utilize
generally accepted standards of medical practice recognized in the medical
community.
(d) Referral and
determination of adverse determinations. Adverse determinations must be
referred to and may only be determined by an appropriate physician, doctor, or
other health care provider with appropriate credentials under §
19.1706 of this title (relating to
Requirements and Prohibitions Relating to Personnel) to determine the medical
necessity, the appropriateness, or the experimental or investigational nature
of health care services.
(e)
Delegation of review. A URA, including a specialty URA, may delegate the
utilization review to qualified personnel in a hospital or other health care
facility in which the health care services to be reviewed were, or are, to be
provided. The delegation does not relieve the URA of full responsibility for
compliance with this subchapter and Insurance Code Chapter 4201, including the
conduct of those to whom utilization review has been delegated.
(f) Complaint system. The URA must develop
and implement procedures for the resolution of oral or written complaints
initiated by enrollees, individuals acting on behalf of the enrollee, or health
care providers concerning the utilization review. The URA must maintain records
of complaints for three years from the date the complaints are filed. The
complaints procedure must include a requirement for a written response to the
complainant by the agent within 30 calendar days. The written response must
include TDI's address, toll-free telephone number, and a statement explaining
that a complainant is entitled to file a complaint with TDI.
Notes
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