28 Tex. Admin. Code § 3.3704

Current through Reg. 49, No. 43; October 25, 2024
Section 3.3704 - Freedom of Choice; Availability of Preferred Providers
(a) Fairness requirements. A preferred provider benefit plan is not considered unjust under Insurance Code Chapter 1701, concerning Policy Forms, or to unfairly discriminate under Insurance Code Chapter 542, Subchapter A, concerning Unfair Claim Settlement Practices, or Chapter 544, Subchapter B, concerning Other General Prohibitions Against Discrimination by Insurers, or to violate Insurance Code Chapter 1451, Subchapter A, concerning General Provisions; Subchapter B, concerning Designation of Practitioners Under Accident and Health Insurance Policy; or Subchapter C, concerning Selection of Practitioners, provided that:
(1) in accordance with Insurance Code §§ 1251.005, concerning Payment of Benefits; 1251.006, concerning Policy May Not Specify Service Provider; 1301.003, concerning Preferred Provider Benefit Plans and Exclusive Provider Benefit Plans Permitted, 1301.006, concerning Availability of and Accessibility to Health Care Services; 1301.051, concerning Designation as Preferred Provider; 1301.053, concerning Appeal Relating to Designation as Preferred Provider; 1301.054, concerning Notice to Practitioners of Preferred Provider Benefit Plan; 1301.055, concerning Complaint Resolution; 1301.057 - 1301.062, concerning Termination of Participation; Expedited Review Process, Economic Profiling, Quality Assessment, Compensation on Discounted Fee Basis, Preferred Provider Networks, and Preferred Provider Contracts Between Insurers and Podiatrists; 1301.064, concerning Contract Provisions Relating to Payment of Claims; 1301.065, concerning Shifting of Insurer's Tort Liability Prohibited; 1301.151, concerning Insured's Right to Treatment; 1301.156, concerning Payment of Claims to Insured; and 1301.201, concerning Contracts with and Reimbursement for Nurse First Assistants, the preferred provider benefit plan does not require that a service be rendered by a particular hospital, physician, or practitioner;
(2) insureds are provided with direct and reasonable access to all classes of physicians and practitioners licensed to treat illnesses or injuries and to provide services covered by the preferred provider benefit plan;
(3) insureds have the right to treatment and diagnostic techniques as prescribed by a physician or other health care provider included in the preferred provider benefit plan;
(4) insureds have the right to continuity of care as set forth in Insurance Code §§ 1301.152 - 1301.154, concerning Continuing Care in General, Continuity of Care, and Obligation for Continuity of Care of Insurer, respectively;
(5) insureds have the right to emergency care services as set forth in Insurance Code § 1301.0053, concerning Exclusive Provider Benefit Plans: Emergency Care; and §1301.155, concerning Emergency Care; and § 3.3708 of this title (relating to Payment of Certain Out-of-Network Claims and Related Disclosures);
(6) the out-of-network (basic) level of coverage, excluding a reasonable difference in deductibles, is not more than 50% less than the higher level of coverage, except as provided under an exclusive provider benefit plan. A reasonable difference in deductibles is determined considering the benefits of each individual policy;
(7) the rights of an insured to exercise full freedom of choice in the selection of a physician or provider, or in the selection of a preferred provider under an exclusive provider benefit plan, are not restricted by the insurer, including by requiring an insured to select a primary care physician or provider or obtain a referral before seeking care;
(8) if the insurer is issuing other health insurance policies in the service area that do not provide for the use of preferred providers, the out-of-network level of coverage of a plan that is not an exclusive provider benefit plan is reasonably consistent with other health insurance policies offered by the insurer that do not provide for a different level of coverage for use of a preferred provider;
(9) any actions taken by an insurer engaged in utilization review under a preferred provider benefit plan are taken under Insurance Code Chapter 4201, concerning Utilization Review Agents, and Chapter 19, Subchapter R, of this title (relating to Utilization Reviews for Health Care Provided Under a Health Benefit Plan or Health Insurance Policy) and the insurer does not penalize an insured solely on the basis of a failure to obtain a preauthorization;
(10) a preferred provider benefit plan that is not an exclusive provider benefit plan may provide for a different level of coverage for use of a nonpreferred provider if the referral is made by a preferred provider only if full disclosure of the difference is included in the plan and the written description as required by § 3.3705(b) of this title (relating to Nature of Communications with Insureds; Readability, Mandatory Disclosure Requirements, and Plan Designations);
(11) both preferred provider benefits and out-of-network level benefits are reasonably available to all insureds within a designated service area; and
(12) if medically necessary covered services are not reasonably available through preferred physicians or providers, insureds have the right to receive care from a nonpreferred provider in accordance with Insurance Code § 1301.005, concerning Availability of Preferred Providers, and §1301.0052, concerning Exclusive Provider Benefit Plans: Referrals for Medically Necessary Services, and § 3.3708 of this title, as applicable.
(b) Notwithstanding subsection (a)(11) of this section, an exclusive provider benefit plan is not considered unjust under Insurance Code Chapter 1701; or to unfairly discriminate under Insurance Code Chapter 542, Subchapter A, or Chapter 544, Subchapter B; or to violate Insurance Code Chapter 1451, Subchapter C, provided that:
(1) the exclusive provider benefit plan complies with subsection (a)(1) - (10) and (12) of this section; and
(2) for the purposes of subsection (a)(11) of this section, an exclusive provider benefit plan must only ensure that preferred provider benefits are reasonably available to all insureds within a designated service area.
(c) Payment of nonpreferred providers. Payment by the insurer must be made for covered services of a nonpreferred provider in the same prompt and efficient manner as to a preferred provider.
(d) Retaliatory action prohibited. An insurer is prohibited from engaging in retaliatory action against an insured, including cancellation of or refusal to renew a policy, because the insured or a person acting on behalf of the insured has filed a complaint with the department or the insurer against the insurer or a preferred provider or has appealed a decision of the insurer.
(e) Steering and tiering. An insurer that uses steering or a tiered network to encourage an insured to obtain a health care service from a particular provider, as defined under Insurance Code Chapter 1458, concerning Provider Network Contract Arrangements, must do so in a manner that complies with the requirements of the Insurance Code, including the fiduciary duty imposed by Insurance Code § 1458.101(i), concerning Contract Requirements, to act only for the primary benefit of the insured or policyholder. For the purposes of this section:
(1) "steering" refers to offering incentives to encourage enrollees to use specific providers;
(2) a "tiered network" refers to a network of preferred providers in which an insurer assigns preferred providers to tiers within the network that are associated with different levels of cost sharing; and
(3) violations of the fiduciary duty under Insurance Code § 1458.101(i) will be determined by TDI based on assessment of the insurer's conduct. Examples of conduct that would violate the insurer's fiduciary duty include, but are not limited to:
(A) using a steering approach or a tiered network to provide a financial incentive as an inducement to limit medically necessary services, to encourage receipt of lower quality medically necessary services, or in violation of state or federal law;
(B) failing to implement reasonable processes to ensure that the preferred providers that insureds are encouraged to use within any steering approach or tiered network are not of a materially lower quality as compared with preferred providers that insureds are not encouraged to use;
(C) failing to implement reasonable processes to ensure that the insurer does not make materially false statements or representations about a physician's or health care provider's quality of care or costs; or
(D) failing to use objectively and verifiably accurate and valid information as the basis of any encouragement or incentive under this subsection.
(f) Network requirements.
(1) Each preferred provider benefit plan must include a health care service delivery network that complies with:
(A) Insurance Code § 1301.005;
(B) Insurance Code § 1301.0055, concerning Network Adequacy Standards;
(C) Insurance Code § 1301.00553, concerning Maximum Travel Time and Distance Standards by Preferred Provider Type, which applies maximum travel time in minutes and maximum distance in miles for a county based on the county's classification as specified in the network compliance and waiver request form available at www.tdi.texas.gov;
(D) Insurance Code § 1301.00554, concerning Other Maximum Distance Standard Requirements; Commissioner Authority;
(E) Insurance Code § 1301.00555, concerning Maximum Appointment Wait Time Standards, effective for a policy delivered, issued for delivery, or renewed on or after September 1, 2025; and
(F) Insurance Code § 1301.006.
(2) An adequate network must, for each insured residing in the service area, ensure that all insureds can access a choice of at least two preferred providers for each physician specialty and each class of health care provider within the time and distance standards specified in Insurance Code § 1301.00553 and § 1301.00554.
(3) To provide a sufficient number of the specified types of preferred providers with the specialty and diagnostic types listed in Insurance Code § 1301.0055(b)(4), a network must include at least two preferred physicians for each applicable specialty and diagnostic type at each preferred hospital, ambulatory surgical center, or freestanding emergency medical care facility that credentials the particular specialty.
(4) For specialty care and specialty hospitals for which time and distance standards are not otherwise specified in Insurance Code § 1301.00553, an adequate network must ensure that all insureds residing in the service area can access a choice of at least two preferred providers within a distance not greater than 75 miles.
(g) Network monitoring and corrective action. Insurers must monitor compliance with subsection (f) of this section on an ongoing basis, taking any needed corrective action as required to ensure that the network is adequate. Consistent with Insurance Code § 1301.0055, an insurer must report any material deviation from the network adequacy standards to the department within 30 days of the date the material deviation occurred, by submitting a network configuration filing as specified in §3.3712 of this title (relating to Network Configuration Filings). Unless there are no uncontracted licensed physicians or providers within the service area to meet the standard in the affected county, or the insurer requests a waiver, the insurer must promptly take corrective action to ensure that the network is compliant not later than the 90th day after the date the material deviation occurred.
(h) Service areas. For purposes of this subchapter, a preferred provider benefit plan may have one or more contiguous or noncontiguous service areas, but may not divide a county. Any service areas that are smaller than statewide must be defined in terms of one or more Texas counties.

28 Tex. Admin. Code § 3.3704

The provisions of this §3.3704 adopted to be effective July 1, 1986, 11 TexReg 2810; amended to be effective December 28, 1990, 15 TexReg 7183; amended to be effective December 6, 1995, 20 TexReg 9697; amended to be effective June 1, 1996, 21 TexReg 2465; amended to be effective July 15, 1999, 24 TexReg 5204; amended to be effective December 6, 2011, 36 TexReg 3411; amended to be effective February 21, 2013, 38 TexReg 827; Amended by Texas Register, Volume 49, Number 16, April 19, 2024, TexReg 2518, eff. 4/25/2024