28 Tex. Admin. Code § 3.3505 - Allowable Expenses
(a) If a covered person
advises a plan that all plans covering the person are high-deductible health
plans and the person intends to contribute to a health savings account
established in accord with §
223 of the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986, the primary high-deductible plan's deductible is not an
allowable expense, except for any health care expense incurred that may not be
subject to the deductible as described in §
223(c)(2)(C) of the
Internal Revenue Code of 1986.
(b)
An expense or a portion of an expense that is not covered by any of the plans
is not an allowable expense.
(c)
Any expense that a health care provider or physician is prohibited from
charging a covered person by law or in accord with a contractual agreement is
not an allowable expense.
(d) If a
person is confined in a private hospital room, the difference between the cost
of a semi-private room in the hospital and the private room is not an allowable
expense, unless one of the plans provides coverage for private hospital room
expenses.
(e) If a person is
covered by two or more plans that do not have negotiated fees and that compute
their benefit payments on the basis of usual and customary fees, allowed
amounts, relative value schedule reimbursement, or other similar reimbursement
methodology, any amount charged by the health care provider or physician in
excess of the highest reimbursement amount for a specified benefit is not an
allowable expense.
(f) If a person
is covered by two or more plans that provide benefits or services based on
negotiated fees, any amount in excess of the highest of the negotiated fees is
not an allowable expense.
(g) If a
person is covered by one plan that does not have negotiated fees and that
calculates its benefits or services based on usual and customary fees, allowed
amounts, relative value schedule reimbursement, or other similar reimbursement
methodology and another plan that provides its benefits or services based on
negotiated fees, the primary plan's payment arrangement must be the allowable
expense for all plans. However, if the health care provider or physician has
contracted with the secondary plan to provide the benefit or service for a
specific negotiated fee or payment amount that is different than the primary
plan's payment arrangement and if the health care provider's or physician's
contract permits, that negotiated fee or payment must be the allowable expense
used by the secondary plan to determine its benefits.
(h) The definition of "allowable expense" may
exclude certain types of coverage or benefits such as dental care, vision care,
prescription drugs, or hearing aids. A plan that limits the application of COB
to certain coverages or benefits may limit the definition of "allowable
expenses" in its contract to expenses that are similar to the expenses that it
provides. When COB is restricted to specific coverages or benefits in a
contract, the definition of "allowable expense" must include similar expenses
to which COB applies.
(i) When a
plan provides benefits in the form of services, the reasonable cash value of
each service will be considered as both an allowable expense and a benefit
paid.
(j) The amount of the
reduction of benefits under a primary plan may be excluded from allowable
expense when a covered person's benefits are reduced under a primary plan
because:
(1) the covered person does not
comply with the plan provisions concerning second surgical opinions or prior
authorization of admissions or services; or
(2) the covered person has a lower benefit
because the covered person did not use a preferred health care provider or
preferred physician.
Notes
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