(1) A health benefit plan must cover
"ambulatory patient services." For purposes of determining a plan's actuarial
value, an issuer must classify as ambulatory patient services medically
necessary services delivered to enrollees in settings other than a hospital or
skilled nursing facility, which are generally recognized and accepted for
diagnostic or therapeutic purposes to treat illness or injury, in a
substantially equal manner to the base-benchmark plan.
(a) A health benefit plan must include the
following services, which are specifically covered by the base-benchmark plan,
and classify them as ambulatory patient services:
(i) Home and outpatient dialysis
services;
(ii) Hospice and home
health care, including skilled nursing care as an alternative to
hospitalization consistent with WAC
284-44-500,
284-46-500, and
284-96-500;
(iii) Provider office
visits and treatments, and associated supplies and services, including
therapeutic injections and related supplies;
(iv) Urgent care center visits, including
provider services, facility costs and supplies;
(v) Ambulatory surgical center professional
services, including anesthesiology, professional surgical services, and
surgical supplies and facility costs;
(vi) Diagnostic procedures including
colonoscopies, cardiovascular testing, pulmonary function studies and
neurology/neuromuscular procedures; and
(vii) Provider contraceptive services and
supplies including, but not limited to, vasectomy, tubal ligation and insertion
or extraction of FDA-approved contraceptive devices.
(b) A health benefit plan may, but is not
required to, include the following services as part of the EHB-benchmark
package. These services are specifically excluded by the base-benchmark plan,
and should not be included in establishing actuarial value for this category.
(i) Infertility treatment and reversal of
voluntary sterilization;
(ii)
Routine foot care for those that are not diabetic;
(iii) Coverage of dental services following
injury to sound natural teeth, but not excluding services or appliances
necessary for or resulting from medical treatment if the service is:
(A) Emergency in nature; or
(B) Requires extraction of teeth to prepare
the jaw for radiation treatments of neoplastic disease. Oral surgery related to
trauma and injury must be covered.
(iv) Private duty nursing for hospice care
and home health care, to the extent consistent with state and federal
law;
(v) Adult dental care and
orthodontia delivered by a dentist or in a dentist's office;
(vi) Nonskilled care and help with activities
of daily living;
(vii) Hearing
care, routine hearing examinations, programs or treatment for hearing loss
including, but not limited to, externally worn or surgically implanted hearing
aids, and the surgery and services necessary to implant them, other than for
cochlear implants, which are covered, and for hearing screening tests required
under the preventive services category, unless coverage for these services and
devices are required as part of, and classified to, another essential health
benefits category;
(viii) Obesity
or weight reduction or control other than covered nutritional
counseling.
(c) The
base-benchmark plan establishes specific limitations on services classified to
the ambulatory patient services category that conflict with state or federal
law as of January 1, 2014. The base-benchmark plan limits nutritional
counseling to three visits per lifetime, if the benefit is not associated with
diabetes management. This lifetime limitation for nutritional counseling is not
part of the state EHB-benchmark plan. An issuer may limit this service based on
medical necessity, and may establish an additional reasonable visit limitation
requirement for nutritional counseling for medical conditions when supported by
evidence based medical criteria.
(d) The base-benchmark plan's visit
limitations on services in this category include:
(i) Ten spinal manipulation services per
calendar year without referral;
(ii) Twelve acupuncture services per calendar
year without referral;
(iii)
Fourteen days' respite care on either an inpatient or outpatient basis for
hospice patients, per lifetime;
(iv) One hundred thirty visits per calendar
year for home health care.
(e) State benefit requirements classified to
this category are:
(i) Chiropractic care (RCW
48.44.310);
(ii) TMJ disorder
treatment (RCW 48.21.320, 48.44.460, and 48.46.530);
(iii) Diabetes-related care and supplies (RCW
48.20.391, 48.21.143, 48.44.315, and 48.46.272).
(2) A health benefit plan must
cover "emergency medical services." For purposes of determining a plan's
actuarial value, an issuer must classify care and services related to an
emergency medical condition to the emergency medical services category, in a
substantially equal manner to the base-benchmark plan.
(a) A health benefit plan must include the
following services, which are specifically covered by the base-benchmark plan,
and classify them as emergency services:
(i)
Ambulance transportation to an emergency room and treatment provided as part of
the ambulance service;
(ii)
Emergency room and department-based services, supplies and treatment, including
professional charges, facility costs, and outpatient charges for patient
observation and medical screening exams required to stabilize a patient
experiencing an emergency medical condition;
(iii) Prescription medications associated
with an emergency medical condition, including those purchased in a foreign
country.
(b) The
base-benchmark plan does not specifically exclude services classified to the
emergency medical care category.
(c) The base-benchmark base plan does not
establish specific limitations on services classified to the emergency medical
services category that conflict with state or federal law as of January 1,
2014.
(d) The base-benchmark plan
does not establish visit limitations on services in this category.
(e) State benefit requirements classified to
this category include services necessary to screen and stabilize a covered
person (RCW 48.43.093).
(3) A health benefit plan must cover
"hospitalization." For purposes of determining a plan's actuarial value, an
issuer must classify as hospitalization services the medically necessary
services delivered in a hospital or skilled nursing setting including, but not
limited to, professional services, facility fees, supplies, laboratory, therapy
or other types of services delivered on an inpatient basis, in a substantially
equal manner to the base-benchmark plan.
(a)
A health benefit plan must include the following services which are
specifically covered by the base-benchmark plan and classify them as
hospitalization services:
(i) Hospital
visits, facility costs, provider and staff services and treatments delivered
during an inpatient hospital stay, including inpatient pharmacy
services;
(ii) Skilled nursing
facility costs, including professional services and pharmacy services and
prescriptions filled in the skilled nursing facility pharmacy;
(iii) Transplant services, supplies and
treatment for donors and recipients, including the transplant or donor facility
fees performed in either a hospital setting or outpatient setting;
(iv) Dialysis services delivered in a
hospital;
(v) Artificial organ
transplants based on an issuer's medical guidelines and manufacturer
recommendations;
(vi) Respite care
services delivered on an inpatient basis in a hospital or skilled nursing
facility.
(b) A health
benefit plan may, but is not required to, include the following services as
part of the EHB-benchmark package. These services are specifically excluded by
the base-benchmark plan, and should not be included in establishing actuarial
value:
(i) Hospitalization where mental
illness is the primary diagnosis to the extent that it is classified under the
mental health and substance use disorder benefits category;
(ii) Cosmetic or reconstructive services and
supplies except in the treatment of a congenital anomaly, to restore a physical
bodily function lost as a result of injury or illness, or related to breast
reconstruction following a medically necessary mastectomy;
(iii) The following types of surgery:
(A) Bariatric surgery and supplies;
(B) Orthognathic surgery and supplies unless
due to temporomandibular joint disorder or injury, sleep apnea or congenital
anomaly; and
(C) Sexual
reassignment treatment and surgery;
(iv) Reversal of sterilizations;
(v) Surgical procedures to correct refractive
errors, astigmatism or reversals or revisions of surgical procedures which
alter the refractive character of the eye.
(c) The base-benchmark plan establishes
specific limitations on services classified to the hospitalization category
that conflict with state or federal law as of January 1, 2014. The
base-benchmark plan allows for a transplant waiting period. This waiting period
is not part of the state EHB-benchmark plan.
(d) The base-benchmark plan's visit
limitations on services in this category include:
(i) Sixty inpatient days per calendar year
for illness, injury or physical disability in a skilled nursing
facility;
(ii) Thirty inpatient
rehabilitation service days per calendar year. This benefit may be classified
to this category for determining actuarial value or to the rehabilitation
services category, but not to both.
(e) State benefit requirements classified to
this category are:
(i) General anesthesia and
facility charges for dental procedures for those who would be at risk if the
service were performed elsewhere and without anesthesia (RCW
48.43.185);
(ii) Reconstructive
breast surgery resulting from a mastectomy which resulted from disease, illness
or injury (RCW 48.20.395, 48.21.230, 48.44.330, and 48.46.280);
(iii) Coverage for treatment of
temporomandibular joint disorder (RCW 48.21.320, 48.44.460, and
48.46.530);
(iv) Coverage at a
long-term care facility following hospitalization (RCW 48.43.125).
(4) A health benefit
plan must cover "maternity and newborn" services. For purposes of determining a
plan's actuarial value, an issuer must classify as maternity and newborn
services the medically necessary care and services delivered to women during
pregnancy and in relation to delivery and recovery from delivery, and to
newborn children, in a substantially equal manner to the base-benchmark plan.
(a) A health benefit plan must cover the
following services which are specifically covered by the base-benchmark plan
and classify them as maternity and newborn services:
(i) In utero treatment for the
fetus;
(ii) Vaginal or cesarean
childbirth delivery in a hospital or birthing center, including facility
fees;
(iii) Nursery services and
supplies for newborns, including newly adopted children;
(iv) Infertility diagnosis;
(v) Prenatal and postnatal care and services,
including screening;
(vi)
Complications of pregnancy such as, but not limited to, fetal distress,
gestational diabetes, and toxemia; and
(vii) Termination of pregnancy. Termination
of pregnancy may be included in an issuer's essential health benefits package,
but nothing in this section requires an issuer to offer the benefit, consistent
with
42 U.S.C. 18023 (b)(a)(A)(i) and 45 C.F.R.
156.115.
(b) A health benefit plan may, but is not
required to, include the following service as part of the EHB-benchmark
package. Genetic testing of the child's father is specifically excluded by the
base-benchmark plan, and should not be included in determining actuarial
value.
(c) The base-benchmark plan
establishes specific limitations on services classified to the maternity and
newborn category that conflict with state or federal law as of January 1, 2014.
The state EHB-benchmark plan requirements for these services are:
(i) Maternity coverage for dependent
daughters must be included in the EHB-benchmark plan on the same basis that the
coverage is included for other enrollees;
(ii) Newborns delivered of dependent
daughters must be covered to the same extent, and on the same basis, as
newborns delivered to the other enrollees under the plan.
(d) The base-benchmark plan's limitations on
services in this category include coverage of home birth by a midwife or nurse
midwife only for low risk pregnancy.
(e) State benefit requirements classified to
this category include:
(i) Maternity services
that include diagnosis of pregnancy, prenatal care, delivery, care for
complications of pregnancy, physician services, and hospital services (RCW
48.43.041);
(ii) Newborn coverage
that is not less than the post-natal coverage for the mother, for no less than
three weeks (RCW 48.43.115);
(iii)
Prenatal diagnosis of congenital disorders by screening/diagnostic procedures
if medically necessary (RCW 48.20.430, 48.21.244, 48.44.344, and
48.46.375).
(5) A health benefit plan must cover "mental
health and substance use disorder services, including behavioral health
treatment." For purposes of determining a plan's actuarial value, an issuer
must classify as mental health and substance use disorder services, including
behavioral health treatment, the medically necessary care, treatment and
services for mental health conditions and substance use disorders categorized
in the most recent version of the
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of
Mental Disorders (DSM), including behavioral health treatment for
those conditions, in a substantially equal manner to the base-benchmark plan.
(a) A health benefit plan must include the
following services, which are specifically covered by the base-benchmark plan,
and classify them as mental health and substance use disorder services,
including behavioral health treatment:
(i)
Inpatient, residential and outpatient mental health and substance use disorder
treatment, including partial hospital programs or inpatient services;
(ii) Chemical dependency
detoxification;
(iii) Behavioral
treatment for a DSM category diagnosis;
(iv) Services provided by a licensed
behavioral health provider for a covered diagnosis in a skilled nursing
facility;
(v) Prescription
medication prescribed during an inpatient and residential course of
treatment;
(vi) Acupuncture
treatment visits without application of the visit limitation requirements, when
provided for chemical dependency.
(b) A health benefit plan may, but is not
required to include, the following services as part of the EHB-benchmark
package. These services are specifically excluded by the base-benchmark plan,
and should not be included in establishing actuarial value.
(i) Counseling in the absence of illness,
other than family counseling when the patient is a child or adolescent with a
covered diagnosis and the family counseling is part of the treatment for mental
health services;
(ii) Mental health
treatment for diagnostic codes 302 through 302.9 in the DSM-IV, or for "V code"
diagnoses except for medically necessary services for parent-child relational
problems for children five years of age or younger, neglect or abuse of a child
for children five years of age or younger, and bereavement for children five
years of age or younger, unless this exclusion is preempted by federal
law;
(iii) Not medically necessary
court-ordered mental health treatment.
(c) The base-benchmark plan establishes
specific limitations on services classified to the mental health and substance
abuse disorder services category that conflict with state or federal law as of
January 1, 2014. The state EHB-benchmark plan requirements for these services
are:
(i) Coverage for eating disorder
treatment must be covered when associated with a diagnosis of a DSM categorized
mental health condition;
(ii)
Chemical detoxification coverage must not be uniformly limited to thirty days.
Medical necessity, utilization review and criteria consistent with federal law
may be applied by an issuer in designing coverage for this benefit;
(iii) Mental health services and substance
use disorder treatment must be delivered in a home health setting on parity
with medical surgical benefits, consistent with state and federal
law.
(d) The
base-benchmark plan's visit limitations on services in this category include:
Court ordered treatment only when medically necessary.
(e) State benefit requirements classified to
this category include:
(i) Mental health
services (RCW 48.20.580, 48.21.241, 48.44.341, and 48.46.285);
(ii) Chemical dependency detoxification
services (RCW 48.21.180, 48.44.240, 48.44.245, 48.46.350, and
48.46.355);
(iii) Services
delivered pursuant to involuntary commitment proceedings (RCW 48.21.242,
48.44.342, and 48.46.292).
(f) The Paul Wellstone and Pete Domenici
Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act of 2008 (
Public Law 110-343)
(MHPAEA) applies to a health benefit plan subject to this section. Coverage of
mental health and substance use disorder services, along with any scope and
duration limits imposed on the benefits, must comply with the MHPAEA, and all
rules, regulations and guidance issued pursuant to Section 2726 of the federal
Public Health Service Act (
42 U.S.C. Sec. 300gg-26) where state law is silent,
or where federal law preempts state law.
(6) A health benefit plan must cover
"prescription drug services." For purposes of determining a plan's actuarial
value, an issuer must classify as prescription drug services the medically
necessary prescribed drugs, medication and drug therapies, in a manner
substantially equal to the base-benchmark plan.
(a) A health benefit plan must include the
following services, which are specifically covered by the base-benchmark plan
and classify them as prescription drug services:
(i) Drugs and medications both generic and
brand name, including self-administrable prescription medications, consistent
with the requirements of (b) through (f) of this subsection;
(ii) Prescribed medical supplies, including
diabetic supplies that are not otherwise covered as durable medical equipment
under the rehabilitative and habilitative services category, including test
strips, glucagon emergency kits, insulin and insulin syringes;
(iii) All FDA approved contraceptive methods,
and prescription based sterilization procedures for women with reproductive
capacity;
(iv) Certain preventive
medications including, but not limited to, aspirin, fluoride, and iron, and
medications for tobacco use cessation, according to, and as recommended by, the
United States Preventive Services Task Force, when obtained with a prescription
order;
(v) Medical foods to treat
inborn errors of metabolism.
(b) A health benefit plan may, but is not
required to, include the following services as part of the EHB-benchmark
package. These services are specifically excluded by the base-benchmark plan,
and should not be included in establishing actuarial value for this category:
(i) Insulin pumps and their supplies, which
are classified to and covered under the rehabilitation and habilitation
services category; and
(ii) Weight
loss drugs.
(c) The
base-benchmark plan establishes specific limitations on services classified to
the prescription drug services category that conflict with state or federal law
as of January 1, 2014. The EHB-benchmark plan requirements for these services
are:
(i) Preauthorized tobacco cessation
products must be covered consistent with state and federal law;
(ii) Medication prescribed as part of a
clinical trial, which is not the subject of the trial, must be covered in a
manner consistent with state and federal law.
(d) The base-benchmark plan's visit
limitations on services in this category include:
(i) Prescriptions for self-administrable
injectable medication are limited to thirty day supplies at a time, other than
insulin, which may be offered with more than a thirty day supply. This
limitation is a floor, and an issuer may permit supplies greater than thirty
days as part of its health benefit plan;
(ii) Teaching doses of self-administrable
injectable medications are limited to three doses per medication per
lifetime.
(e) State
benefit requirements classified to this category include:
(i) Medical foods to treat phenylketonuria
(RCW 48.44.440, 48.46.510, 48.20.520, and 48.21.300);
(ii) Diabetes supplies ordered by the
physician (RCW 48.44.315, 48.46.272, 48.20.391, and 48.21.143). Inclusion of
this benefit requirement does not bar issuer variation in diabetic supply
manufacturers under its drug formulary;
(iii) Mental health prescription drugs to the
extent not covered under the hospitalization or skilled nursing facility
services, or mental health and substance use disorders categories (RCW
48.44.341, 48.46.291, 48.20.580, and 48.21.241).
(f) An issuer's formulary is part of the
prescription drug services category. The formulary filed with the commissioner
must be substantially equal to the base-benchmark plan formulary, both as to
U.S. Pharmacopoeia therapeutic category and classes covered and number of drugs
in each class. If the base-benchmark formulary does not cover at least one drug
in a category or class, an issuer must include at least one drug in the
uncovered category or class.
(i) An issuer
must file its formulary quarterly, following the filing instructions defined by
the insurance commissioner in WAC
284-44A-040,
284-46A-050, and
284-58-025.
(ii) An issuer's
formulary does not have to be substantially equal to the base-benchmark plan
formulary in terms of formulary placement.
(7) A health benefit plan must cover
"rehabilitative and habilitative services."
(a) For purposes of determining a plan's
actuarial value, an issuer must classify as rehabilitative services the
medically necessary services that help a person keep, restore or improve skills
and function for daily living that have been lost or impaired because a person
was sick, hurt or disabled, in a manner substantially equal to the
base-benchmark plan.
(b) A health
benefit plan must include the following services, which are specifically
covered by the base-benchmark plan, and classify them as rehabilitative
services:
(i) Cochlear implants;
(ii) In-patient rehabilitation facility and
professional services delivered in those facilities;
(iii) Outpatient physical therapy,
occupational therapy and speech therapy for rehabilitative purposes;
(iv) Braces, splints, prostheses, orthopedic
appliances and orthotic devices, supplies or apparatuses used to support, align
or correct deformities or to improve the function of moving parts;
(v) Durable medical equipment and mobility
enhancing equipment used to serve a medical purpose, including sales
tax.
(c) A health
benefit plan may, but is not required to, include the following services as
part of the EHB-benchmark package. These services are specifically excluded by
the base-benchmark plan, and should not be included in establishing actuarial
value:
(i) Off the shelf shoe inserts and
orthopedic shoes;
(ii) Exercise
equipment for medically necessary conditions;
(iii) Durable medical equipment that serves
solely as a comfort or convenience item; and
(iv) Hearing aids other than cochlear
implants.
(d)
Supplementation: The base-benchmark plan does not cover certain
federally required services under this category. A health benefit plan must
cover habilitative services, but these services are not specifically covered in
the base-benchmark plan. Therefore, this category is supplemented. The state
EHB-benchmark plan requirements for habilitative services are:
(i) For purposes of determining actuarial
value and complying with the requirements of this section, the issuer must
classify as habilitative services and provide coverage for the range of
medically necessary health care services and health care devices designed to
assist an individual in partially or fully developing, keeping or learning age
appropriate skills and functioning within the individual's environment, or to
compensate for a person's progressive physical, cognitive, and emotional
illness.
(ii) As a minimum level of
coverage, an issuer must establish limitations on habilitative services on
parity with those for rehabilitative services. A health benefit plan may
include reference based limitations only if the limitations take into account
the unique needs of the individual and target measurable, and specific
treatment goals appropriate for the person's age, and physical and mental
condition. When habilitative services are delivered to treat a mental health
diagnosis categorized in the most recent version of the DSM, the mental health
parity requirements apply and supersede any rehabilitative services parity
limitations permitted by this subsection.
(iii) A health benefit plan must not limit an
enrollee's access to covered services on the basis that some, but not all of
the services in a plan of treatment are provided by a public or government
program.
(iv) An issuer may
establish utilization review guidelines and practice guidelines for
habilitative services that are recognized by the medical community as
efficacious. The guidelines must not require a return to a prior level of
function.
(v) Habilitative health
care devices may be limited to those that require FDA approval and a
prescription to dispense the device.
(vi) Consistent with the standards in this
subsection, speech therapy, occupational therapy, physical therapy, and aural
therapy are habilitative services. Day habilitation services designed to
provide training, structured activities and specialized assistance to adults,
chore services to assist with basic needs, vocational or custodial services are
not classified as habilitative services.
(vii) An issuer must not exclude coverage for
habilitative services received at a school-based health care center unless the
habilitative services and devices are delivered pursuant to federal Individuals
with Disabilities Education Act of 2004 (IDEA) requirements and included in an
individual educational plan (IEP).
(e) The base-benchmark plan's visit
limitations on services in this category include:
(i) In-patient rehabilitation facility and
professional services delivered in those facilities are limited to thirty
service days per calendar year; and
(ii) Outpatient physical therapy,
occupational therapy and speech therapy are limited to twenty-five outpatient
visits per calendar year, on a combined basis, for rehabilitative
purposes.
(f) State
benefit requirements classified to this category include:
(i) State sales tax for durable medical
equipment; and
(ii) Coverage of
diabetic supplies and equipment (RCW 48.44.315, 48.46.272, 48.20.391, and
48.21.143).
(g) An
issuer must not classify services to the rehabilitative services category if
the classification results in a limitation of coverage for therapy that is
medically necessary for an enrollee's treatment for cancer, chronic pulmonary
or respiratory disease, cardiac disease or other similar chronic conditions or
diseases. For purposes of this subsection, an issuer must establish limitations
on the number of visits and coverage of the rehabilitation therapy consistent
with its medical necessity and utilization review guidelines for
medical/surgical benefits. Examples of these are, but are not limited to,
breast cancer rehabilitation therapy, respiratory therapy, and cardiac
rehabilitation therapy. Such services may be classified to the ambulatory
patient or hospitalization services categories for purposes of determining
actuarial value.
(8) A
health plan must cover "laboratory services." For purposes of determining
actuarial value, an issuer must classify as laboratory services the medically
necessary laboratory services and testing, including those performed by a
licensed provider to determine differential diagnoses, conditions, outcomes and
treatment, and including blood and blood services, storage and procurement, and
ultrasound, X ray, MRI, CAT scan and PET scans, in a manner substantially equal
to the base-benchmark plan.
(a) A health
benefit plan must include the following services, which are specifically
covered by the base-benchmark plan, and classify them as laboratory services:
(i) Laboratory services, supplies and tests,
including genetic testing;
(ii)
Radiology services, including X ray, MRI, CAT scan, PET scan, and ultrasound
imaging;
(iii) Blood, blood
products, and blood storage, including the services and supplies of a blood
bank.
(b) A health
benefit plan may, but is not required to, include the following services as
part of the EHB-benchmark package. An enrollee's not medically indicated
procurement and storage of personal blood supplies provided by a member of the
enrollee's family is specifically excluded by the base-benchmark plan, and
should not be included by an issuer in establishing a health benefit plan's
actuarial value.
(9) A
health plan must cover "preventive and wellness services, including chronic
disease management." For purposes of determining a plan's actuarial value, an
issuer must classify as preventative and wellness services, including chronic
disease management, the services that identify or prevent the onset or
worsening of disease or disease conditions, illness or injury, often
asymptomatic, services that assist in the multidisciplinary management and
treatment of chronic diseases, services of particular preventive or early
identification of disease or illness of value to specific populations, such as
women, children and seniors, in a manner substantially equal to the
base-benchmark plan.
(a) A health benefit
plan must include the following services as preventive and wellness services:
(i) Immunizations recommended by the Centers
for Disease Control's Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices;
(ii) Screening and tests with A and B
recommendations by the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force for prevention and
chronic care, for recommendations issued on or before the applicable plan
year;
(iii) Services, tests and
screening contained in the U.S. Health Resources and Services Administration
Bright Futures guidelines as set forth by the American Academy of
Pediatricians;
(iv) Services,
tests, screening and supplies recommended in the U.S. Health Resources and
Services Administration women's preventive and wellness services
guidelines;
(v) Chronic disease
management services, which typically include, but are not limited to, a
treatment plan with regular monitoring, coordination of care between multiple
providers and settings, medication management, evidence-based care, measuring
care quality and outcomes, and support for patient self-management through
education or tools; and
(vi)
Wellness services.
(b)
The base-benchmark plan does not exclude any services that could reasonably be
classified to this category.
(c)
The base-benchmark plan does not apply any limitations or scope restrictions
that conflict with state or federal law as of January 1, 2014.
(d) The base-benchmark plan does not
establish visit limitations on services in this category.
(e) State benefit requirements classified in
this category are:
(i) Colorectal cancer
screening as set forth in RCW 48.43.043;
(ii) Mammogram services, both diagnostic and
screening (RCW 48.21.225, 48.44.325, and 48.46.275);
(iii) Prostate cancer screening (RCW
48.20.392, 48.21.227, 48.44.327, and 48.46.277).
(10) State benefit requirements
that are limited to those receiving pediatric services, but that are classified
to other categories for purposes of determining actuarial value, are:
(a) Neurodevelopmental therapy to age six,
consisting of physical, occupational and speech therapy and maintenance to
restore or improve function based on developmental delay, which cannot be
combined with rehabilitative services for the same condition (RCW 48.44.450,
48.46.520, and 48.21.310). This state benefit requirement may be classified to
ambulatory patient services or mental health and substance abuse disorder
including behavioral health categories;
(b) Congenital anomalies in newborn and
dependent children (RCW 48.20.430, 48.21.155, 48.44.212, and 48.46.250). This
state benefit requirement may be classified to hospitalization, ambulatory
patient services or maternity and newborn categories.
(11) This section expires on December 31,
2016.