EXHIBIT 10.2
The Puerto Rico Health Insurance
Contract
North
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October 1, 2001- June 30, 2002
[ASES LOGO] [TRIPLE-S LOGO]
ASEGURANDO TU SALUD
TABLE OF CONTENTS
TERMS AND CONDITIONS PAGE
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I Definitions 2
II Eligibility and Enrollment 8
III Right to Choose 14
IV Secondary Payor 16
V Emergencies 17
VI Access to Benefits 19
VII Contracts with HCO's and All Participating Providers 23
VIII Subscription Process and Identification Cards 28
IX Summary Plan Description Booklet 29
X Grievance Procedure 32
XI Health Care Organizations 35
XII Guarantee of Payment 37
XIII Utilization Review and Quality Assurance 40
XIV Compliance and Agreement for Inspection of Records 44
XV Information Systems and Reporting Requirements 47
XVI Financial Requirements 55
XVII Plan Compliance Evaluation Program 56
XVIII Payment of Premiums 63
XIX Actuarial Requirements 66
XX Preventive Medicine Program 67
XXI Mental Health Program 70
XXII Benefits 70
XXIII Conversion Clause 71
XXIV Transactions with the Insurer 73
XXV Non-Cancellation Clause 74
XXVI Applicable Law 74
XXVII Effective Date and Term 74
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TERMS AND CONDITIONS PAGE
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XXVIII Conflict of Interest 74
XXIX Income Taxes 75
XXX Advance Directives 75
XXXI Ownership and Third Party Transactions 75
XXXII Modification of the Contract 75
XXXIII Termination of Agreement 76
XXXIV Phase-Out Clause 77
XXXV Third Party Disclaimer 77
XXXVI Penalties Sanctions Clauses 77
XXXVII Hold Harmless Clause 80
XXXVIII Center of Medicare and Medicaid Services
Contract Requirements 81
XXXIX Force Majeure 81
XL Year 2000 Clause 81
XXLI Federal Government Approval 81
XLII Acknowledgement as to Insurer 82
XLIII Entire Agreement 82
ADDENDA:
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Addendum I Benefits Coverage-Formulary
Addendum II PRHIA Instructions to Insurers for Orientation and
Subscription Process- Beneficiaries Manual
Addendum III Insurer Grievance Procedure
Addendum IV Proposed Information Requirements
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CONTRACT
This Agreement entered into this 14TH DAY OF SEPTEMBER, 2001, at San
Xxxx, Puerto Rico, by and between PUERTO RICO HEALTH INSURANCE ADMINISTRATION,
a public instrumentality of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, organized under
Law 72 approved on September 7, 1993, hereinafter referred to as the
"ADMINISTRATION", represented by its Executive Director, XXXXX XXXXXX BOTTEY,
and TRIPLE-S, INC., a domestic corporation duly -organized and doing business
under the laws of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, with employer social
security number 00-0000000, hereinafter referred to as the "INSURER",
represented by its Chief Executive Officer, XXXXXX XXXXXXX XXXXXX.
WITNESSETH
In consideration of the mutual covenants and agreements hereinafter
set forth, the parties, their. personal representatives and successors, agree
as follows:
FIRST: The ADMINISTRATION has the responsibility to seek, negotiate,
and contract with public and private insurers, health care insurance programs
that eventually will be capable of providing all citizens that reside in the
island of Puerto Rico access to quality health care services, regardless of
their economic condition and capacity to pay.
SECOND: Law 72 of September 7,1993 dictates the express policy that
empowers the ADMINISTRATION to seek, negotiate and contract health insurance
programs that will allow its beneficiaries access to quality health services,
in particular the medically indigent and the public employees of the Central
Government and pensioners.
THIRD: The ADMINISTRATION published a Request For Proposals for the
North, Metro-North, East, Southeast, West, Southwest, San Xxxx, Northwest,
Northeast and Central Health Area/Region, seeking to provide health insurance
coverage to all eligible beneficiaries in said health Area/Region, by
contracting with private insurers
FOURTH: Pursuant to the terms of the aforementioned Request For
Proposals, published on June 3-4, 2001, four different private health insurers
submitted to the ADMINISTRATION proposals to underwrite the health insurance
for the Health Area/Region.
FIFTH: The proposals submitted by the proposing insurers were
thoroughly evaluated by a Evaluation Committee, as well as an Administrative
Evaluation Committee within the ADMINISTRATION, as a result of which, a
recommendation was presented to the Board of Directors of the ADMINISTRATION.
SIXTH: The Board of Directors of the ADMINISTRATION, after a careful
and complete analysis of all technical and administrative elements of the
proposals, decided
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to award the INSURER the contract to underwrite and administer the health
insurance for the NORTH Health Area/Region, composed of the municipalities of
ARECIBO, BARCELONETA, CAMUY, CIALES, FLORIDA, HATILLO, LARES, MANATI, MOROVIS,
QUEBRADILLAS, UTUADO, AND XXXX BAJA.
SEVENTH; The benefits to be provided under the plan offered by the
INSURER are divided in three types of coverage: 1) the Basic Coverage that
includes preventive, medical, hospital, surgical, diagnostic tests, clinical
laboratory tests, x-rays, emergency room, ambulance, maternity and prescription
drug services; 2) Dental Coverage based on the free choice of participating
dentists from INSURER's network, and 3) the Special Coverage that includes
benefits for catastrophic conditions, expensive procedures and specialized
diagnostic tests. Benefits shall be provided by the INSURER in strict
compliance with Law Number 72 of September 7, 1993, as amended, which is made
part of this contract, the terms and conditions contained in Addenda I, II,
III, and IV of this contract, and subject to the following:
TERMS AND CONDITIONS
ARTICLE I
DEFINITIONS
ACCESS: Adequate availability of all necessary health care services included in
the plan being contracted to fulfill the needs of the beneficiaries of the
program.
ADMINISTRATION: Puerto Rico Health Insurance Administration.
ADVANCE DIRECTIVES: A written instruction such as a living will or durable
power of attorney for health care, recognized under the laws, of the
Commonwealth of Puerto Rico (whether statutory or as recognized by the courts
of the Commonwealth, relating to the provision of health care when the
individual is incapacitated.
ANCILLARY SERVICES (Ancillary Charges): Supplemental services, including
laboratory, radiology, physical therapy, and inhalation therapy, which are
provided in conjunction with medical or hospitals care.
ASSMCA - Mental Health and Substance Abuse Administration: Spanish acronym for
the Puerto Rico Mental Health and Substance Abuse Administration, the state
agency that has been delegated the responsibility for the planning,
establishment of mental and substance abuse policies and procedures, the
coordination, development and monitoring of all mental health and substance
abuse services rendered to beneficiaries under the Puerto Rico Health Insurance
Program.
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BENEFICIARY: Any person that under Law 72 of September 7, 1993 is determined
eligible to receive services, is reported as such to the INSURER by the
ADMINISTRATION, and is enrolled in the plan.
CAPITATION: That portion of the premium paid to the INSURER which is disbursed
to the HCO in payment for all the benefits provided under the Basic Coverage to
the beneficiaries who have selected said HCO, as hereinafter defined.
CO-INSURANCE: Percentage based participation of the beneficiary on each loss or
portion of the cost of receiving a service.
CONTRACT: The present contractual relationship between the ADMINISTRATION and
the INSURER, and to which, 1) Law 72 of September 7, 1993, 2) the Request For
Proposal, 3) the INSURER's Proposal documents, 4) the representations and
assurances provided at the clarification meeting held on June 11, 2001
contained in the transcript of the meeting, and 5) all other certifications
issued by the INSURER following said clarification meeting, are herein
incorporated by reference. All of the five (5) preceding set of documents are
integral parts of this contract.
CONTRACT TERM: Period of nine (9) consecutive months beginning on the date the
contract is effective. The coverage shall end at the conclusion of the contract
term, unless extended pursuant to Article XXVII.
CMS: Acronym for the Center of Medicare and Medicaid Services.
DEDUCTIBLE: A fixed amount that the beneficiary has to pay to the provider as
part of the cost of receiving a health care service, as provided in ADDENDUM I
of this contract.
ELECTIVE SURGERY: A surgical procedure that, even though medically necessary
and prescribed by a physician, does not need to be performed immediately
because no imminent risk to life, permanent damage of a vital organ or
permanent impairment is present, and which therefore can be scheduled.
EMERGENCY MEDICAL CONDITION: (Prudent Layperson Standard) a medical condition
presenting symptoms of sufficient severity that a person with average knowledge
of health and medicine would reasonably expect the absence of immediate medical
attention to result in (i) placing their health or the health of an unborn
child in immediate jeopardy, (ii) serious impairment of bodily functions, or
(iii) serious dysfunction of any bodily organ or part.
ENCOUNTER: A contact between a patient and health professional during which a
service is provided. An encounter form records selected identifying, diagnostic
and related information describing an encounter.
FAMILY CONTRACT: The benefits provided to the following eligible beneficiaries;
1) principal subscriber; and 2) his or her spouse (legally married or common
law); and 3)
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his or her children (legally, adopted, xxxxxx or step children) under 21 years
old that depend on the principal subscriber for subsistence; and 4) individuals
under 21 years of age who have no children and live in common law with one of
the eligible children in the same household; and 5) his or her dependents, of
any age, who are blind or permanently disabled and live in the same household.
Female beneficiaries (except spouse.) covered under family contract who become
pregnant shall constitute a separate subscriber under an individual contract as
of the first day of the month the pregnancy is diagnosed and reported to the
INSURER.
HEALTH CARE ORGANIZATION / HCO: A health care entity supported by a network of
providers and which is based on a managed care system and accessed through a
primary care physician (gatekeeper). Said entity has contracted with the
insurer to provide, in adequate facilities, the benefits provided for within
the Basic Coverage or the Basic and Special Coverage of the health insurance
contract. For the purpose of this contract the HCO will be identified by its
descriptive name such as Primary Care Center, Physician Hospital Organization
(PHO), Independent Practice Association (IPA), Primary Provider Group (PPG), or
any other model. The INSURER is responsible for the availability of all
necessary providers to cover both the basic and the special coverage.
HEALTH AREA/REGION: The NORTH Health Area/Region as defined by the
ADMINISTRATION, composed of the municipalities of ARECIBO, BARCELONETA, CAMUY,
CIALES, FLORIDA, HATILLO, LARES, MANATI, MOROVIS, QUEBRADILLAS, UTUADO, AND
XXXX BAJA. HIPAA: The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act is
federal legislation (Public law 104-191) approved by Congress in August 21,1996
regulating the continuity and portability of health plans, mandating the
adoption and implementation of administrative simplification standards to
prevent, fraud, abuse, improve health plan overall operations and guarantee the
privacy and confidentiality of individually identifiable health information.
INDIVIDUAL CONTRACT: The benefits provided to eligible subscribers that are: 1)
unmarried single adults without minor dependents; or 2) married adults whose
spouse and/or dependents are not eligible for coverage under this program; or
3) Female beneficiaries (except spouse) covered under family contract who
become pregnant as of the first day of the month the pregnancy is diagnosed and
reported to the INSURER.
INDIVIDUAL PRACTICE ASSOCIATION (IPA): A managed care delivery model in which
the INSURER contracts with a physician organization which, in turn, contracts
with individual physicians. The IPA physicians practice in their own offices
and continue to see their fee-for-service patients. This type of system
combines prepayment with the traditional means of delivering health care, a
physician office/private practice. For the purpose of this contract, an IPA
will be considered a Health Care Organization (HCO).
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INSURER: TRIPLE-S, INC., is a private entity which meets the definition of a
managed care organization (MCO), previously known as a state defined HMO, has a
comprehensive risk contract primarily for the purpose of providing health care
services, making the services it provides accessible (in terms of timeliness,
amount, duration and scope) as those services are to other Medicaid recipients
within the Area/Region served by the entity and meets the solvency standards
under the law as a state licensed risk-bearing entity.
MANAGED BEHAVIORAL HEALTH ORGANIZATION (MBHO): An entity constituted by Mental
Health Participating Providers and organized with the purpose of negotiating
contracts to provide mental health and substance abuse services..
MEDICARE: Federal health insurance program for people 65 or older, people of
any age with permanent kidney failure, and certain disabled people according to
Title XVIII of the Social Security Act. Medicare has two parts: Part A and Part
B. Part A is the hospital insurance that includes inpatient hospital care and
certain follow up care. Part B is medical insurance that includes doctor
services and many other medical services and items. A Medicare recipient is a
person who has either Part A or Part A and B insurance.
MEDICARE BENEFICIARY: Any person who is a Medicare recipient of Part A or Part
A and B and complies with the definition of beneficiary established in this
article.
MEDICALLY NECESSARY SERVICES: shall mean services or supplies provided by an
institution, physician, or other providers that are required to identify or
treat a beneficiary's illness, disease, or injury and which are:
a. Consistent with the symptoms or diagnosis and treatment of
the enrollee's illness, disease, or injury; and
b. Appropriate with regard to standards of good medical
practice; and
c. Not solely for the convenience of an enrollee, physician,
institution or other provider; and
d. The most appropriate supply or level of services which can
safely be provided to the enrollee. When applied to the care
of an inpatient, it further means that services for the
enrollee's medical symptoms or condition require that the
services cannot be safely provided to the enrollee as an
outpatient; and
e. When applied to enrollees under 21 years of age, services
shall be provided in accordance with EPSDT requirements
including federal regulations as described in 42 CFR Part
441, Subpart B, and the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of
1989.
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MENTAL HEALTH FACILITIES: Any premises (a) owned, leased, used or operated
directly or indirectly by or for the Managed Behavioral Health Organization
(MBHO) or its affiliates for purposes related to this Agreement; or (b)
maintained by a subcontractor or provider to provide mental health services on
behalf of the Managed Behavioral Health Organization.
MENTAL HEALTH CARVE-OUT: Specified psychiatric, behavioral, and substance abuse
services covered under the Puerto Rico Health Insurance Plan provided through a
contract with a separate entity. NON-PARTICIPATING PROVIDER: All health care
services providers that do not have a contract in effect with the INSURER. Said
provider is barred from providing services under this contract. PARTICIPATING
PHYSICIAN: A doctor of medicine that is legally authorized to practice medicine
and surgery within the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico and has a contract in effect
with the INSURER.
PARTICIPATING PROVIDER: All health care services providers that have a contract
in effect with the INSURER.
PERSON WITH AN OWNERSHIP OR CONTROL INTEREST: A person or corporation that:
owns, directly or indirectly five percent (5%) or more of the insurer's capital
or stock or receives five percent (5%) or more of its profits; has an interest
in any mortgage, deed of trust, note, or other obligations secured in whole or
in part by the insurer or by its property or assets, and that interest is equal
to or exceeds five percent (5%) of the total property and assets of the
insurer; or is an officer or director of the INSURER.
PHYSICIAN INCENTIVE PLAN: Any compensation arrangements between INSURER and
physician or. physician groups that may directly or indirectly have the effect
of reducing or limiting services furnished to Medicaid recipients enrolled with
the insurer.
PRE-AUTHORIZATION: A written or electronic approval by the INSURER to the
beneficiary granting authorization for a benefit to be provided under the
Special Coverage of the program. The beneficiary is responsible for obtaining
the preauthorization for coverage in order to receive covered benefits that
require it. Failure to obtain pre-authorization precludes coverage.
Notwithstanding the aforementioned, the INSURER has the option of not requiring
pre-authorization for all services received within a particular HCO.
PREMIUM: The monthly amount that the ADMINISTRATION agrees to pay to the
INSURER as a result of having assumed the financial risk for providing the
benefits to the beneficiaries covered. Method of payment is referred to
hereunder as per member per month (PMPM).
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PRIMARY CARE PHYSICIAN (GATEKEEPER): A doctor of medicine legally authorized to
practice medicine and surgery within the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, who
initially evaluates and provides treatment to beneficiaries. He/she is
responsible for determining the services required by the beneficiaries,
provides continuity of care, and refers the beneficiaries to specialized
services if deemed medically necessary. Primary physicians will be considered
those professionals accepted as such in the local and federal jurisdictions.
The following are considered primary care physicians: Pediatricians,
Obstetrician/Gynecologist, Family Physicians, Internists and General
Practitioners. Each female beneficiary with a pregnancy factor has to select an
obstetrician-gynecologist as her primary care physician. Once the pregnant
woman completes her maternity care period, she will be allowed to continue with
her primary care physician.
PROVIDER: An individual or entity that is authorized under the laws of the
Commonwealth of Puerto Rico to provide health care services.
PRICO: Acronym for the Puerto Rico Insurance Commissioner's Office, the state
agency responsible for regulating, fiscalizing, and licensing insurance
business in Puerto Rico.
SECOND MEDICAL OPINION: A consultation with a peer requested by the
beneficiary, the HCO, a Participating Physician or the INSURER to assess the
appropriateness of a previous recommendation for surgery or medical treatment.
SECONDARY or SPECIALTY PHYSICIAN: A physician such as a dermatologist,
urologist or cardiologist, who provides professional services on a referral
from a Primary Care Provider SUBSCRIBER: The beneficiary covered under the
individual coverage of the plan or the principal beneficiary who grants
eligibility to all those beneficiaries included under the family coverage.
SUPPORT PARTICIPATING PROVIDERS: Health care service providers who are needed
to complement and provide support services to the Primary Care Physicians and
who have a contract with the INSURER to provide said services. A referral from
the Gatekeeper is necessary. The following will be considered support
participating providers, among others: Pharmacies, Hospitals, Health Related
Professionals, Clinical Laboratories, Radiological Facilities, Podiatrists,
Optometrists, and all those participating providers that may be needed to
provide services under the basic and special coverage considering the specific
health problems of the Area/Region.
SUPPORT PARTICIPATING PHYSICIANS: Doctors of Medicine legally authorized to
practice medicine and surgery within Puerto Rico who are needed to complement
and provide support services to the Primary Care Physicians and who have a
contract with the INSURER to provide said services. A referral from the
Gatekeeper is necessary.
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QUALITY IMPROVEMENT (QI): The ongoing process of responding to data gathered
through quality monitoring efforts, in such a way as to improve the quality of
health care delivered to individuals. This process necessarily involves
follow-up. studies of the measures taken to effect change in order to
demonstrate that the desired change has occurred.
UTILIZATION MANAGEMENT (UM): The process of evaluating necessity
appropriateness and efficiency of healthcare services through the revision of
information about hospital, service or procedure from patients and/or providers
to determine whether it meets established guidelines and criteria approved by
the MCO.
ORGANIZATION AND ADMINISTRATION
INSURER must maintain the organizational and administrative capacity
and capabilities to carry out all duties and responsibilities under this
contract.
INSURER must maintain assigned staff with the capacity and capability
to provide all services to all Beneficiaries under this contract.
INSURER must maintain an administrative office in the service area
(local office). The local office must comply with the American with
Disabilities Act (ADA) requirements for public buildings..
INSURER must provide training and development programs to all assigned
staff to ensure they know and understand the service requirements under this
contract including the reporting requirements, the policies and procedures,
cultural and linguistic requirements and the scope of services to be provided.
The training and development plan must be submitted to THE ADMINISTRATION.
INSURER must notify THE ADMINISTRATION immediately no later than 30
days after the effective date of this contract of any changes in its
organizational chart as previously submitted to THE ADMINISTRATION.
INSURER must notify THE ADMINISTRATION immediately within fifteen (15)
working days of any change in regional or office managers. This information
must be updated whenever there is a significant change in organizational
structure or personnel.
ARTICLE II
ELIGIBILITY AND ENROLLMENT
1. Eligibility shall be determined according to Article VI, Section 5 of
Law 72. of September 7, 1993 and the federal laws and regulations
governing eligibility requirements for the Medicaid Program.
2. The INSURER shall provide coverage for all the eligible beneficiaries
as provided in the prior section.
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3. The INSURER shall inform beneficiaries, who are also Medicare
recipients with Part A or Part A and B, at the time of enrollment that
if they choose to become beneficiaries under the contracted health
insurance, the benefits provided under said contract will be accessed
exclusively through the primary care physician. In this situation:
a) bad debt reimbursement, as a result of non-payment of
deductibles and/or coinsurance, for covered Part A services
and Part B services provided in hospital setting, other than
physician services;
b) payment for covered Part A services;
c) payment for Part B outpatient services provided in a hospital
setting; and
d) all covered Part B services,
will continue to be recognized as a covered reimbursable Medicare
Program cost. Medicare beneficiaries with either Part A or Part A and
B can choose to access their Part A or Part B services from the
Medicare's providers list except that in this case the INSURER will
not cover the payment of any benefits provided through this contract.
4. The INSURER represents that neither the capitated amount paid to each
HCO nor the fee for service amount paid to all providers includes
payment for services covered under the Medicare Federal Program, The
primary care physicians, the participating providers or any other
physician contracted on a salary basis cannot receive duplicate
payments for those beneficiaries that have Medicare Part A or Part B
coverage. The INSURER further represents that it will audit and review
its billing data to avoid duplicate payment with the Medicare Program.
The INSURER shall report its findings to the ADMINISTRATION on a
quarterly basis. The ADMINISTRATION will audit and review Medicare
billing data for Part A or Part B payment for beneficiaries eligible
to said Federal Program.
5. Co-insurance and deductible for Part B services provided on an
outpatient basis to hospital clinics, other than physician services,
will be considered as a covered bad debt reimbursement item under the
Medicare program cost. In this instance, the INSURER will pay for the
co-insurance and deductibles related to the physician services
provided as a Part B service through the amount paid to the HCO.
6. The INSURER guarantees to maintain adequate services for the Health
Area/Region for the prompt enrollment of all eligible beneficiaries on
a daily basis and in the order of their application. The INSURER shall
maintain sufficient facilities within the Area/Region as needed. The
subscriber shall be responsible for visiting the designated facility
in order to complete all requirements towards enrollment. The INSURER
shall enroll the beneficiary(ies) and issue the official
identification cards) on the same day that the subscriber completes
the enrollment requirements. Initial orientation and enrollment will
be conducted
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pursuant to the Instructions to Insurers for Implementation of
Orientation and Subscription Process contained in ADDENDUM II.
The INSURER shall be responsible to provide the subscriber with
specific information allowing for the prompt and reliable enrollment
of all eligible individuals.
7. The ADMINISTRATION shall notify the INSURER on a daily basis of all
beneficiaries who have become eligible, as well as those who have
ceased to be eligible. The INSURER shall guarantee the maintenance,
functionality, and reliability of all necessary systems to allow
enrollment or disenrollment of subscribers.
8. The beneficiary becomes eligible for enrollment as of the date
specified in the ADMINISTRATION's notification to the INSURER.
9. The beneficiary ceases to be eligible as of the disenrollment date
specified in the ADMINISTRATION's notification to the INSURER. If the
ADMINISTRATION notifies the INSURER that the beneficiary ceased to be
eligible on or before the last working day of the month in which
eligibility ceases, the disenrollment will be effective on the first
day of the following month. Disenrollment will be effected exclusively
by a notification issued by the ADMINISTRATION.
10. If, following disenrollment, a beneficiary's contract is reinstated
and the beneficiary is re-enrolled on the same month of disenrollment,
the contract will be reinstated as of the date of re-enrollment and
the ADMINISTRATION will pay premiums on a pro-rata basis for that
month.
11. The INSURER agrees to maintain active enrollment for those
beneficiaries reported eligible by the ADMINISTRATION. Notification of
eligible persons will be made through electronic transmissions or
machine readable media. The ADMINISTRATION will forward this data to
the INSURER in the format agreed by both parties in accordance with
the Daily Update/Carrier Eligibility File Format as required in the
RFP.
12. Coverage under the plan shall begin the day that the enrollment
process has been completed. The INSURER will guarantee that it will be
ready to notify the ADMINISTRATION of all newly enrolled beneficiaries
through electronic or magnetic media on a daily basis upon the
Administration's request. This notification will include all new
beneficiaries as of the day before the notification is issued and will
be sent to the ADMINISTRATION no later than the following working day
after the enrollment process has been completed. Premiums shall be
paid on a pro-rata basis as of the: date that the enrollment process
was completed and the official identification card has been issued, to
the end of the month, as specified in the INSURER's notification to
the ADMINISTRATION. Premium payments, if applicable, for newborn of
beneficiaries will accrue as of
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the date of birth of the child in the event that the enrollment
process of said new beneficiary is completed. Premium payments shall
be paid retroactively to the INSURER upon enrollment of the newborn.
The insurer will pay the providers for the services rendered to that
newborn. Nevertheless the newborn will be considered an insured
beneficiary under his mother's coverage during the neonatal period,
thirty (30) days.
13. In case that an individual has been certified as eligible by the
Department of Health but has not completed the enrollment process, and
he/she or his/her dependents need emergency services, the
ADMINISTRATION shall verify the eligibility status of the individual.
If the individual is eligible as a beneficiary, emergency services
will be provided as if the individual is a beneficiary and
arrangements for the issuance of the identification card will be made
immediately after the notification of eligibility is made by the
ADMINISTRATION to the INSURER. The premium in this instance will be
paid to the INSURER on a pro-rata basis from the moment the emergency
services needed are provided or the identification card is issued,
whichever is first. For the purpose of this situation, the enrollment
process is the process that commences at the time that the
ADMINISTRATION gives notice to the INSURER of the beneficiaries
eligibility status, and results in a letter to said beneficiary
establishing the date and location for the completion of the
enrollment documents and selection of the HCO. Said process ends when
the beneficiary has selected an HCO from those available in the Health
Area/Region and has received an identification card.
Nothing provided in this section is intended to affect a provider's
obligation to screen and stabilize an individual arriving at its
facilities for emergency treatment as defined by EMTALA and the
applicable Commonwealth laws.
14. Coverage shall end effective on the date of disenrollment. Premiums
will be paid until the effective date of disenrollment. In the event
of disenrollment while the beneficiary is an inpatient of a hospital
on the last day of the month of coverage, and continues to be an
inpatient of a hospital during the month following his disenrollment,
the ADMINISTRATION will cover the payment of the premium for that
following month. If the beneficiary remains hospitalized in subsequent
months, the conversion clause will apply for the months after the one
being paid by the ADMINISTRATION it being the INSURER's responsibility
to assure that premiums are paid. Disenrollment will be effected
exclusively by a notification issued by the ADMINISTRATION.
15. The INSURER shall not in any way discriminate nor terminate coverage
of any beneficiary(ies) for reasons due to adverse change in
recipient's health, or based on expectations that an enrollee will
require high cost care, or need of health services, or any reason
whatsoever, except for non-payment of premiums or fraudulent use of
benefits or participation of fraudulent acts, after prior notification
and consultation with the ADMINISTRATION.
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16. The INSURER agrees to maintain an Enrollment Data Base which:
a) includes each subscriber and all beneficiaries;
b) contains for each subscriber and beneficiary the information
technically defined in the (Carrier Response Billing
File/Carrier Eligibility File) formats required in RFP.
17. The INSURER will secure on the date of enrollment a signed statement
from the subscriber authorizing the Federal Government, the INSURER,
the ADMINISTRATION and/or their designees to review the medical record
of the subscriber and other beneficiaries, in order to determine
quality, appropriateness, timeliness and cost of services performed
under this contract. The terms, content and specifications of said
authorization shall be consistent with the standards set forth in
45CFR 164.508 et seq., part of the regulations of the Health Insurance
Portability and Accountability Act.
18. All individually identified information of services related to
beneficiaries which is obtained by the INSURER shall be confidential
and shall be used or disclosed by the INSURER, the HCO and/or its
participating providers only for purposes directly connected with
performance of all obligations contained in this contract. Medical
records and management information data concerning any beneficiary
enrolled pursuant to this contract shall be confidential and shall be
disclosed within the INSURER's organization or to other persons, as
authorized by the ADMINISTRATION, only as necessary to provide medical
care and quality, peer or grievance review of such medical care under
the terms of this contract and in coordination with the mental health
carve-out contract subscribed by AS SMCA. The confidentiality
provisions herein contained shall survive the termination of this
contract and shall bind the INSURER, its HCOs and the INSURER's
participating providers as long as they maintain any individually
identifiable information relating to beneficiaries as provided in the
implementation of the HIPAA regulation schedule to be set forth by the
Federal Government, 45 CFR 164.102 et. seq. Any request for
information which is made by third parties not related to this
contract will be forwarded to the ADMINISTRATION for consideration,
review and decision as to the pertinence of the request and the
authorization for disclosure.
Nothing in this section shall limit or affect the ADMINISTRATION's,
the INSURER and for providers obligations regarding protected
individually identifiable health information as provided in 45 CFR
164.102 et seq. (HIPAA) regulations.
Disclosure of individually identifiable health information to any
business associate as defined in 45 CFR 164.504(e) of the HIPAA
regulations by the INSURER shall entail the legal obligations set
forth therein.
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19. The INSURER agrees to notify the ADMINISTRATION immediately of any
change in the place of residence of the subscriber, insofar as the
subscriber makes the change known to the INSURER. Address changes will
be forwarded through electronic and/or machine-readable media as
referred in paragraph sixteen.
20. The INSURER agrees to implement a program whereby eligible
beneficiaries are properly advised of the date of termination of their
eligibility so as to assure that they complete the recertification
process prior to said date. Said program should provide for an initial
notice of the termination date at least ninety (90) days prior to the
effective date of the eligibility termination.
21. The INSURER hereby commits to comply with the electronic transactions,
security and privacy requirements of the HIPAA regulations as provided
in 45CFR 160 and 142 et seq. within the implementation dates set forth
therein or by subsequent regulations schedule.
22. DISENROLLMENT
The INSURER has a limited right to request a beneficiary be
disenrolled from INSURER without the beneficiary's consent. THE
ADMINISTRATION must approve any INSURER request for disenrolling a
beneficiary for cause.
Disenrollment of a beneficiary may be permitted under the following
circumstances:
(a) Beneficiary misuses or loans its membership card to another
person to obtain services.
(b) Beneficiary is disruptive, unruly, threatening or
uncooperative to the extent that beneficiary's membership
seriously impairs INSURER's or provider's ability to provide
services to beneficiaries or to obtain new beneficiaries, and
beneficiary's behavior is not caused by a physical or other
mental health condition.
The INSURER must take reasonable measures to improve a beneficiary's behavior
prior to requesting disenrollment and must notify beneficiary of its intent to
disenroll. Reasonable measure may include providing education and counseling
regarding the offensive acts or behavior.
INSURER must notify the beneficiary of the INSURER's decision to disenroll
after reasonable measures have failed to remedy the problem.
If the beneficiary disagrees with the decision to disenroll the beneficiary
from INSURER, INSURER MUST notify the beneficiary of the availability of the
complaint of Grievance Procedure and THE ADMINISTRATION's Fair Hearing process.
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If the beneficiary disagrees with the decision to disenroll, INSURER must
notify the Beneficiary of the availability of the complaint procedure and
compliance with Fair Hearing Process, or as provided by Law 72 of September 7,
1993, as amended.
ARTICLE III
RIGHT TO CHOOSE
1. Each principal subscriber shall have the right to select an HCO from
those available in the health Area/Region which at no time will be
less than two (2) HCOs at each municipality, one of which has to be a
privatized or non-privatized government or municipal facility if
available, and subject to compliance with INSURER's requirements for
HCO's. The selection of the HCO or primary care physician will be made
by the beneficiaries at the insurance regional offices.
The right of beneficiaries to transfer or change from an HCO shall be
made at any time without cause during the first 90 days following the
date of the beneficiary's initial enrollment or the date of enrollment
notice is sent, whichever is later, and at most once every twelve (12)
months thereafter, and for any of the causes of disenrollment set
forth on 42 CFR 438.56 at any time.
2. Each HCO will have available at least one of each specialist
considered a primary care physician and shall meet the specification
of the ratio specified in Article VI, and will have a sufficient
number of primary care physicians to provide health care services to
all beneficiaries according to the ratio specified in Article VI.
Furthermore, the INSURER will provide to each HCO a network with a
sufficient number of participating providers to render all services
included under the basic, special and dental coverage to beneficiaries
pursuant to the ratio specified in Article VI.
3. The beneficiary shall have the right to choose his or her primary care
physician from those available within the HCO selected by the
principal subscriber. Said right also encompasses the change of the
selected primary physician at any time by making the proper
administrative arrangements within the HCO in conformity with the
HCO's established policy. The selected primary care physician or the
substitute on-duty primary care physician within the HCO must be
available on a 24 hour basis for emergencies and/or telephone
consultations. Each HCO must have available all of the primary care
physicians (family physicians, internists, general practitioners,
pediatricians and obstetrician-gynecologist) subject to waivers in
case of unavailability of a specific provider.
4. A primary care physician can only act as such in only one (1)
municipality within the Health Area/Region subject of this contract
and must be available to attend the health care needs of the
beneficiary on a twenty four (24) hour basis, seven (7) days a week.
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5. A primary care physician can only act as such in only one (1) HCO
within the Health Area/Region subject of this contract and must be
available to attend the health care needs of the beneficiary on a
twenty four (24) hour basis, seven (7) days a week.
6. Each female beneficiary may select (i) primary care physician, or (ii)
primary care physician and obstetrician-gynecologist as her primary
care physician. If the female is pregnant, the
obstetrician-gynecologist automatically will become the primary care
physician; if one is not previously selected, she will then have to
choose an obstetrician-gynecologist as her primary care physician.
Once the pregnant woman completes her maternity care period, she will
be allowed to continue with her original primary care physician.
7. Any subscriber may change the selected HCO subject to the provisions
of Section 1, above. If the request for an HCO change is filed with
the INSURER on or before the fifth day of each month the change of HCO
will become effective on the first day of the next month. If the
change is filed after the fifth day of the month, the change in HCO
will be effective on the first day of the second succeeding month.
Selection guidelines are contemplated in Article VI, paragraph 3 of
this contract.
8. The beneficiary shall have the right to choose the provider to be
referred to from those participating providers within the HCO's
network that are under contract with the INSURER's for benefits
covered under the Basic and Special Coverage.
9. Dental services will be provided through the INSURER's network of
dentists for the health insurance services contracted. Each subscriber
will have the right to select a dentist within the INSURER's network
to receive dental services. The accepted dentist/beneficiary ratio is
one (1) dentist for each one thousand three hundred fifty (1,350)
beneficiaries.
10. In the event that HCOs under 330 Projects of the Rural Health
Initiative have contracts with specialists, support participating
providers, or support participating physicians, either on a
fee-for-service basis or on a salary basis, the INSURER will be
responsible for gathering and reporting all required data including
the payment of services described in Article VII, Section five (5),
Article XV, sections four (4) and eight (8), and the Record of Service
File Layout formats as required in the RFP.
11. The INSURER will provide to each principal subscriber a complete list
of all participating physicians and participating providers, with
addresses and specialties or health related services offered, in order
to allow the beneficiary to choose among them.
12. The beneficiary shall also have the right to choose the pharmacy
according to applicable PBM guidelines established by the
ADMINISTRATION and any other participating providers among those
contracted by the ADMINISTRATION for basic and/or special coverage
services, said guidelines to become effective sixty (60) days after
notice to INSURER. The ADMINISTRATION will determine the
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acceptable pharmacy/beneficiary ratio in order to assure access to the
pharmacy benefits. The right to choose requires the availability of
sufficient number of pharmacies in each municipality of residence of
the beneficiaries. .
13. The INSURER will develop and effectively disseminate an education and
orientation program in order to insure that all eligible beneficiaries
are aware of their rights under this contract, including their right
to choose physicians and providers. The ADMINISTRATION reserves the
right to make changes, modifications and recommendations to said
program in coordination and agreement with the INSURER. This program
shall be subject to approval by the ADMINISTRATION prior to its
implementation and in compliance with the marketing guidelines and
prohibitions referred in Article IX.
14. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the ADMINISTRATION shall preserve the
right in coordination with INSURER, to expand, limit or otherwise
amend the provision of services as provided for herein and/or to
negotiate in coordination with the INSURER, cost saving and efficiency
improvement measures. In those cases in which the ADMINISTRATION acts
on its own, changes to the provision of services shall be notified to
the INSURER no later than 30 days prior to implementation. Said
modifications will take place after consultation and cost negotiation
with the INSURER.
ARTICLE IV
SECONDARY PAYOR
1. The INSURER shall be a secondary payor to any other party liable in
any claim for services to a beneficiary, including but not limited to:
the INSURER itself, Medicare, other insurers or health maintenance
organizations, non-profit INSURER's operating under law 152 approved
May 9, 1942 as amended, Asociacion de Maestros de Puerto Rico, medical
plans sponsored by employee organizations, labor unions, and any other
entity that results liable for the benefits claimed against the
INSURER for coverage to beneficiaries.
2. It shall be the responsibility of the INSURER to ascertain that the
aforementioned provisions of Law 72 of September 7, 1993 are enforced
and that the INSURER .acts as secondary payor to any other medical
insurance.
3. The ADMINISTRATION and the INSURER will cooperate in the exchange of
third parties health insurance benefits information. To this effect
the INSURER will comply fully with the Carta Normativa Numero
N-E-5-95-98 issued by the Office of the Insurance Commissioner of
Puerto Rico and the HIPAA regulations provisions cited elsewhere in
this contract.
4. The INSURER will make diligent efforts to determine if beneficiaries
have third party coverage and will attempt to utilize such coverage
when applicable. The INSURER, will be permitted to retain 100% of the
collections from subrogation.
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The plan's experience will be credited with the amount collected from
said primary payor.
5. The INSURER must report quarterly to the ADMINISTRATION the amounts
collected from third parties for health services provided. Said
reports must provide a detailed description of the beneficiary's name,
contract number, third party payor name and address, date of service,
diagnosis and provider's name and address and identification number.
6. The INSURER must report quarterly to the ADMINISTRATION the amounts
collected from third parties for health services provided according
with standard format to be adopted by the ADMINISTRATION. Said reports
must provide a detailed description of the beneficiary's name,
contract number, third party payor name and address, date of service,
diagnosis and provider's name and address and identification number.
7. The INSURER shall develop specific procedures for the exchange of
information, collections and reporting of other primary payor sources
and is required to verify its own eligibility files for information on
whether or not the beneficiary has private health insurance within the
INSURER.
8. The INSURER must implement and execute, an effective and diligent
mechanism in order to assure the collection from primary payors of all
benefits covered under this contract. Said program, mechanisms and
method of implementation shall be reported to the ADMINISTRATION as of
the first date of the effectiveness of this contract.
9. Failure of the INSURER to comply with this Article may, at the
discretion of the ADMINISTRATION, because for the application of the
provisions under Article XXXIII.
ARTICLE V
EMERGENCIES
1. In cases of emergency or immediate need of medical care within the
Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the INSURER will be responsible for the
payment of emergency service provided to beneficiaries when the
emergency or immediate need of medical care occurs within its network
or outside of its network or the geographical Area/Region of the
selected HCO's emergency care facility. Such services must be paid by
the INSURER regardless of whether the entity that furnishes the
service has contracted with the INSURER and no prior authorization
shall be required by the INSURER for the provision of emergency
services. The INSURER will assume the payment of the medical
screening examinations or other medically necessary emergency
services, whether or not the patients meets the prudent layperson
standard, in the event
17
that the beneficiary's PCP or any INSURER representative or provider
instructs them to seek emergency care within or out of its network
area/region.
Such services shall consist of whatever is necessary to stabilize the
patient's condition, unless the expected medical benefits of a
transfer outweigh the risk of not undertaking the transfer, and the
transfer conforms with all applicable requirements. The stabilization
services includes all treatment that may be necessary to assure within
reasonable medical probability, that no material deterioration of the
patients condition is likely to result from or occur during discharge
of the patient or transfer of patient to another facility.
In the event of a disagreement with the provider concerning whether a
patient is stable enough in order to be discharged or transferred or
whether the medical benefits outweight the risk, the judgement of the
attending physician caring for the enrollee will prevail and oblige
the INSURER. Such services shall be provided in such a manner as to
allow the subscriber to be stable for discharge or transfer as defined
by EMTALA, in order to safely return the subscriber to the
corresponding HCO, or to an appropriate participating provider for
continuation of treatment.
2. Since emergency care is of utmost concern to the ADMINISTRATION, the
INSURER shall require that adequate ambulance transportation and
emergency medical care are available. Each municipality shall have
access to an emergency care system composed of ground, air and
maritime ambulance transportation as necessary, and emergency medical
care.
3. Ambulance transportation and emergency care will be subject to
periodic reviews by applicable governmental agencies to ensure. the
highest quality of services.
4. All participating providers shall provide immediate emergency care
services to beneficiaries when requested.
5. Emergency care services as well as ambulance transportation services
shall exist in each municipality comprising the health area/region,
24 hours a day, and 365 days yearly, operated by an HCO, or by other
participating providers.
6. The INSURER and each HCO is required to provide access to emergency
care and ambulance transportation services within their own
facilities, through their contracted, participating providers or
through contract with third parties that guarantee said emergency care
and ambulance transportation twenty four (24) hours a day, seven (7)
days a week.
7. The INSURER will assure that each HCO makes the necessary arrangements
to have readily available ambulance services in good mechanical
condition and properly equipped, in order to assure a prompt and
effective ambulance transportation service.
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8. The INSURER or the HCO will establish Urgent Care Centers within the
Health Area/Region. These include physician offices and clinics with
extended hours. These Urgent Care Centers may complement emergency
care services but at no time will they substitute the requirement to
have emergency care services and ambulance transportation available at
each municipality 24 hours a day, 7 days a week and 365 days yearly.
9. The INSURER will provide beneficiaries access to a 24-hour-a-day
toll-free hotline with licensed qualified professionals to help
beneficiaries with questions about particular medical conditions and
to guide them to appropriate facilities (emergency rooms, urgent care
centers, among others). Notwithstanding, the aforementioned statement,
the beneficiary will have the right to choose to attend an emergency
room if he believes his condition is an emergency medical condition,
as defined in this contract, without prior need of authorization or
certification.
ARTICLE VI
ACCESS TO BENEFITS
1. The INSURER will contract all available private providers that meet
its credentialing process and agree to its contractual terms, in order
to assure sufficient participating providers, to satisfy the demand of
covered services by the beneficiaries enrolled in the program. The
physician/beneficiary ratio accepted is one (1) primary care physician
for each eight hundred and fifty (850) beneficiaries; one (1)
specialist (not primary care) for each one thousand one hundred
(1,100) beneficiaries; and, one (1) physician (all) for each eight
hundred (800) beneficiaries. These ratio does not take into account
the expected mix between private patients and beneficiaries which
could increase the physicians capacity to 1:1,700 for primary care
physicians; 1:2,200 for specialists and 1:1,600 for all physicians. In
the event that the HCOs provides services only to beneficiaries under
this contract, the physician/beneficiary ratio will be the same to
that applicable when there is a mix between private patients and
beneficiaries. The INSURER will assure compliance with said
physician/beneficiary ratio.
2. The INSURER shall be responsible to contract all the necessary health
care services and participating providers to insure that all the
benefits covered under the Basic, Dental and Special Coverage of the
plan are rendered, through the INSURER's participating providers with
the timeliness, amount, duration and scope as those services are
rendered to non-enrolled Medicaid recipients within the area/region
served.
3. Every subscriber shall be able to select from at least two (2) HCOs
with sufficient enrollment capacity in his or her municipality, one of
which will be a privatized government facility, if available and
subject to compliance with INSURER's requirements for HCOs. Each
subscriber shall also be able to choose a HCO
19
outside his or her municipality of domicile as provided for in Article
III, paragraph 1 of this contract.
4. A primary care physician can only act as such in only one (1)
municipality within the Health Area/Region subject of this contract
and must be available to attend the health care needs of the
beneficiary on a twenty four (24) hour basis, seven (7) days a week.
5. Contracts between the INSURER and HCOs and between the INSURER and its
participating providers shall be independent contracts specifically
designed to cover all terms and conditions contained in this contract.
Coverage afforded to beneficiaries under this contract constitutes a
direct obligation on the part of the INSURER's participating
providers: to comply with all terms and conditions contained herein.
6. HCO enrollment shall be conditioned on the availability of adequate
health care services. It shall be the INSURER's responsibility to
maintain a constant assessment of the enrollment capacity of each HCO.
Adequate health care services will be those determined acceptable
under the ADMINISTRATION's Compliance Evaluation Program as outlined
in Article XVII of this contract.
7. That INSURER shall be responsible for communicating to its
participating providers the public policy that prohibits provider
inquiries with the purpose of determining if the beneficiary is
subject to the benefits provided under Law 72 of September 7, 1993.
8. The INSURER is responsible for the development and maintenance of an
adequate system for referrals of health services under this contract.
It shall audit all systems and processes related to referrals of
services that the HCO'S or participating providers implement. In no
way the INSURER, HCO'S or any provider's Referral Committee may
interfere, prohibit, or restrict any health care professional's advice
within their scope of practice. The referral system must be approved
by the Administration.
9. All referral systems must comply with timeframes established in
paragraph (23). If the system developed by the INSURER is by
electronic means, it must be installed at all primary care offices. It
is unacceptable to force the beneficiary to move to another facility
to obtain referrals.
10. The INSURER assures the ADMINISTRATION that no HCO'S or participating
providers will impose limit quotas or restrain services to
subcontracted providers for the services medically needed (e.g.
laboratory, pharmacies, or other services).
11. The INSURER shall expedite access to benefits of beneficiaries
diagnosed with conditions under the Special Coverage. The
identification of these beneficiaries
20
will allow rapid access of the medical services covered under our
Special Coverage.
12. Any denial, unreasonable delay or rationing of services to the
beneficiaries is expressly prohibited. The INSURER shall require
strict compliance with this prohibition by its participating providers
or any other entity related to the rendering of medical care services
to the beneficiaries. Any action in violation of this prohibition
shall be subject to the provisions of Article VI, Section 6 of Law 72
of September 7, -1993. Furthermore, the INSURER shall be responsible
for posting information at every HCO, addressed to the beneficiaries,
stating the policy that prohibits denying, unreasonably delaying or
rationing services by participating providers or any other entity
related to the rendering of medical care services to the
beneficiaries, and providing information on procedures for filing a
grievance on the subject. The INSURER shall notify the HCOs and
participating providers that they must comply with the policy that
prohibits the denial, the unreasonable delay or the rationing of
services by participating providers or any other entity rendering
medical services to beneficiaries, and further that they must provide
information on procedures for filing a grievance. The INSURER shall
comply with the performance measures established and scheduled by the
ADMINISTRATION.
13. The INSURER will ensure that HCOs and participating providers have a
mix of patients distributed between private and eligible beneficiaries
so as to avoid any possibility of discrimination by reason of medical
indigence, whenever feasible.
14. No participating provider, or its agents, may deny a beneficiary
access to medically necessary health care services, except for the
reasons specified in Article VI, section 6 of Law 72 of September 7,
1993.
15. The INSURER is responsible for having an adequate number of
participating physicians and providers to supply all the benefits
offered in the Basic, Dental and the Special Coverage of the
contracted health insurance. The benefits under the Basic, Special and
Dental coverage will be provided to the beneficiaries at the location
of the participating providers.
16. The INSURER is responsible to have available all participating
providers needed in order to render all the medically necessary
services required to provide the beneficiaries with the benefits
included in the Basic, Dental and Special Coverage of the contracted
health insurance as specified in ADDENDUM I of this contract.
17 The INSURER agrees to require compliance by all participating
physicians and providers with all provisions contained in this
contract.
18. The INSURER has a continuous legal responsibility toward the
ADMINISTRATION to assure that all activities under this contract are
carried out.
21
INSURER will use its best efforts to prevent unauthorized actions by
HCOs or participating providers. INSURER will take appropriate
measures to ensure that all activities under this Contract are carried
out. Failure to properly discharge the obligation to assure, by all
means necessary and appropriate, full compliance with said activities,
shall result in the termination of this contract as provided in
Article XXXIII hereof.
19. Pursuant to the Health Reform Concept of 1993, the INSURER shall
contract as participating providers those Commonwealth owned
facilities that have been privatized in the Health Area/Region by
virtue of Laws 103 of July 12, 1985, and 190 of September 5, 1996, the
330 and 339 Projects of the Rural Health Initiatives, those State
owned facilities not privatized, as well as the privatized or non
privatized municipally owned facilities in the different
areas/regions and regions which will complement access to covered
medical services, subject to its credentialing requirements and
contractual terms.
20. The INSURER assures the ADMINISTRATION that physician and providers of
services under this contract will provide the full range medical
counseling that is appropriate for beneficiaries condition. In no way
the INSURER or any of its contractors may interfere, prohibit, or
restrict any health care professional's advice within their scope of
practice, regardless of whether a care or treatment is covered under
the contract.
21. The INSURER assures the ADMINISTRATION that its Physician Incentive
Plan does not in any way compensate directly or indirectly physicians,
individual physicians, group of physicians or subcontractors as an
inducement to reduce or limit medically necessary services furnished
to individual enrollee and that it meets the stop-loss protection and
enrollee survey and disclosure requirements under the Social Security
Act. The INSURER shall ensure that at the intermediate level all
physician providers groups are afforded with adequate stoploss
protection within the required thresholds under the Medicaid Program
regulations.
22. If the Insurer's Physician Incentive Plan in any respect places
physicians at substantial financial risk, INSURER assures that
adequate stop-loss insurance will be maintained to protect physicians
from loss beyond the risk thresholds established under sections 42CFR
422.208. In the event, INSURER places physicians at substantial risk
it shall conduct enrollee/disenrollee surveys not later than one year
after the effective date of the contract and at least annually
thereafter.
23. Timeframes for Access Requirements. INSURER must have sufficient
network of providers and must establish procedures to ensure
beneficiaries have access to routine, urgent, and emergency services;
telephone appointments; advice and Beneficiaries service lines. These
services must be accessible to beneficiaries within the following
timeframes:
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- Urgent Care within 24 hours of request;
- Routine care within 2 weeks of request;
- Physical/Wellness Exams for adults must be provided within 8
to 10 weeks of the request;
- Referrals: Appointments of referrals must be delivered and
notified to beneficiaries within five (5) days from the date
prescribed by the provider.
24. INSURER must establish policies and procedures to ensure access to
EPSDT Checkups be provided within ninety (90) days of new enrollment,
except that newborn beneficiaries should be seen within two (2) weeks
of enrollment, and that in all cases, and for all beneficiaries such
policies and procedures be consistent with the American Academy of
Pediatrics and EPSDT periodicity schedule which is based on the
American Academy of Pediatrics schedule and the guidelines established
by the ADMINISTRATION. The INSURER must advice the beneficiary of his
right to have a checkup.
ARTICLE VII
CONTRACTS WITH HCOS AND ALL PARTICIPATING PROVIDERS
1. All services necessary to provide beneficiaries the benefits of the
Basic, Special and Dental Coverage shall be contracted in writing with
all participating providers. The INSURER will ensure that all
provisions and requirements contained in this contract are properly
included in the contracts with the HCOs and with all participating
providers and that they are carried out by said HCOs and participating
providers. Such provisions and requirements made part of these
contracts will be properly notified to the ADMINISTRATION. Coverage
afforded to beneficiaries under this contract constitutes a direct
obligation on the part of the INSURER's participating providers to
comply with all terms and conditions contained herein.
2. The INSURER may not discriminate with respect to participation,
reimbursement or indemnification as to any provider who is acting
within the scope of the provider's license or certification under
applicable Commonwealth.
3. The INSURER agrees to draft, execute and enforce a specific contract
between the INSURER and the HCO and between the INSURER and its-
participating providers that will include all applicable provisions
contained in this contract. The INSURER will insure that said
applicable provisions are properly complied with by the HCOs and its
network of participating providers.
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To this effect, the Insurer also agrees to certify or attest that none
of his contractors, subcontractors or providers of services: (1)
consults, employs or procures services from any individual that has
been debarred or suspended from any federal agency; or (2) has a
director, partner or employee with a beneficial ownership of more than
a 5% on their organization's equity who has been debarred or suspended
by any federal agency, or (3) procures self-referral of services to
any provider in which it may have directly or indirectly any economic
or proprietary interest.
The INSURER will certify and attest that it has provided all HCOs,
complete written instructions describing procedures to be used for the
compliance with all duties and obligations arising under this
contract. These instructions will include the following information:
provider selection by beneficiaries, covered services, reporting
requirements, record- keeping requirements, grievance procedures,
deductibles and co-payment amounts, confidentiality, and prohibitions
against denial or rationing of services. Copy of these instructions
will be submitted to the ADMINISTRATION, who reserves the right to
request modifications or amendments to said instructions following
consultation with the INSURER.
4. The INSURER agrees to incorporate in its contracts with HCOs and in
those between the INSURER and its participating providers, the
following provisions, among others, contained in this contract:
a. A payment time schedule to pay the HCOs for services rendered
and for payment for services rendered by the participating
providers to the HCOs, the schedules will not exceed the time
limitation standards required by the Administration under
this contract to assure prompt payments of sums due to
providers.
b. A warranty by the HCO insuring that the method and system
used to pay for the services rendered by the HCO's network of
participating providers are reasonable and that the
negotiated terms do not jeopardize or infringe upon the
quality of the services provided.
c. A procedure that establishes how the HCO's network of
participating providers can recover from the INSURER monies
owed for services rendered and not paid by the HCO, after the
HCO's participating provider has demanded payment from the
HCO.
d. That payments received for services rendered under the health
insurance plan shall constitute full and complete payment
except for: (i) the deductibles contained in ADDENDUM I of
this contract, and (ii) that the benefits or services
rendered is not covered. The INSURER will insure compliance
with Article XVIII, paragraphs (6) and (7) of this contract.
e. a release clause authorizing access by the ADMINISTRATION to
the participating providers' Medicare billing data for
beneficiaries covered by this contract who are also Part A
and Part A and B Medicare beneficiaries, provided that such
access is authorized by CMS and other related statutory or
regulatory provisions thereof. Access by the
24
ADMINISTRATION shall be at all times subject to all HIPAA
regulations requirements mentioned elsewhere in this
contract.
f. That INSURER will cover the payment of Medicare Part B
deductibles and co-insurance for services received by a
beneficiary under Medicare Part B, accessed through the HCO's
primary care provider, with primary care physician's
authorization their network of participating providers and
the participating providers of the INSURER for the basic
and/or special coverage.
g. Co-insurance and deductible for Part B services provided on
an outpatient basis to hospital clinics and other
institutional care providers, other than physician services,
will be considered as a covered bad debt reimbursement item
under the Medicare program cost. In this instance, the
INSURER will pay for the co-insurance and deductibles related
to the physician services provided as a Part B service.
h. That the only Part A deductible and co-insurance, and Part B
deductible and co-insurance for outpatient services provided
in a hospital clinic and other institutional care providers,
other that physician services, will be the one billed to
Medicare as bad debt. No other amount will be charged to
these beneficiaries. The INSURER will neither cover the
payment of Medicare Part A deductibles and co-insurance for
services received by a beneficiary under Medicare Part A nor
the Part B deductible and co-insurance for services provided
in hospital clinics, other than physician services. The
INSURER will cover the deductibles and co-insurances of all
Part B services including Part B deductibles and co-insurance
for physician services provided in an outpatient basis to
hospital clinics.
i. That coverage afforded to beneficiaries under this contract
constitutes a direct obligation on the part of the INSURER's
participating providers to comply with all terms and
conditions contained herein.
j. The INSURER will establish directives for psychotropic
prescription dispatchment by providers in accordance with the
applicable agreement with the pharmacy benefit managers
(PBM). The ADMINISTRATION is evaluating an alternative
arrangement for pharmacy benefit management, (PBM), which if
agreeable to the parties will be implemented according to
Article XXXII of this Contract.
5. The INSURER agrees to provide to the ADMINISTRATION a detailed
description of the payment methodology used to pay for services
rendered by the HC0s, HCO's network of providers (primary care
physicians and other providers), and other participating providers.
Said description of the payment methodology will also address the
methodology used by the HCOs in the distribution within their own
group of the capitation payments, fee for services or other basis for
payment of services to provider HCOs. The INSURER will submit to the
ADMINISTRATION a monthly report detailing all payments made to the
HCO, HCO's network of participating providers and to the INSURER's
participating providers classified by specialty.
25
6. The INSURER represents that neither the premium or the capitated
payments or capitated payments with a fee-for-service component for
services, made to HCOs, to HCO's network of participating providers,
as well as to the INSURER's participating providers, include payment
of services covered under the Medicare Federal Program.
7. As part of the terms and conditions contained in the contracts with
participating providers, the INSURER will include in those with
privatized government facilities (to include those under management
contract, that have been sold or are under lease), a provision that
will authorize the INSURER upon the written request of the Department
of Health, to withhold a determined amount from the monthly payments
to said participating providers for services rendered under this
contract. Said amount will be determined by the Department of Health
on the basis of the payments contractually agreed to between the
Department of Health of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico and said
participating providers on account of the management fee, sale price
or lease fee, as well as 50% of the employees' payroll which the
participating providers are required to reimburse the Department of
Health. The INSURER will remit said withheld amounts directly to the
Department of Health.
8. The INSURER shall provide all reasonable means necessary to ensure
that the contracting practices between its participating HCO and
providers are in compliance with federal anti-fraud provisions and
particularly, in conformity with the limitations and prohibitions of
the False Claims Act, the Anti-kickback statute and regulations and
Xxxxx II Law and regulations prohibiting self-referral to designated
medical services by participating medical providers.
9. To the extent feasible within INSURER'S existing claims processing
systems, INSURER should have a single or central address to which
providers must submit claims. If a central processing center is not
possible within INSURER's existing claims processing system, INSURER
must provide each network provider a complete list of all entities to
whom the providers must submit claims for processing and/or
adjudication. The list must include the name of the entity, the
address to which claims must be sent, explanation for determination of
the correct claims payer based on services rendered, and a phone
number the provider may call to make claims inquiries. INSURER must
notify providers in writing of any changes in the claims filing list
at least 30 days prior to effective date of change. If INSURER is
unable to provide 30 days notice, providers must be given a 30-day
extension on their claims filing deadline to ensure claims are routed
to correct processing center.
10. The Administration and the Department of Health Medicaid Fraud Control
Unit must be allowed to conduct private interviews of providers and
the providers' employees, contractors, and patients. Requests for
information must be complied with, in the form and language requested.
Providers and their employees and contractors must cooperate fully in
making themselves available
26
in person for interviews, consultation, grand jury proceedings,
pre-trial conference, hearings, trial and in any other process,
including investigations.
11. PROVIDER MANUAL AND PROVIDER TRAINING
INSURER must prepare and issue a Provider Manual(s), including any
necessary specialty manuals to the providers in the INSURER network
and to newly contracted providers in the INSURER network within five
(5) working days from inclusion of the provider into the network. The
Provider Manual must contain sections relating to special
requirements.
INSURER must provide training to all network providers and their staff
regarding the requirements of THE ADMINISTRATION/INSURER contract and
special needs of beneficiaries under this contract.
INSURER training for all providers must be completed no later than 30
days after placing a newly contracted provider on active status.
INSURER must provide ongoing training to new and existing providers as
required by INSURER or THE ADMINISTRATION to comply with this
contract.
INSURER must maintain and make available upon request enrollment or
attendance rosters dated and signed by each attendee or other written
evidence of training of each network provider and their staff.
12. PROVIDER QUALIFICATIONS - GENERAL
The providers in INSURER network must meet the following
qualifications:
FQHC A Federally Qualified Health Center meets the standards
established by federal rules and procedures. The FQHC must
also be an eligible provider enrolled in the Medicaid
program.
Physician An individual who is licensed to practice medicine as an M.D.
or a D.O. in Puerto Rico either as a primary care provider or
in the area of specialization under which they will provide
medical services under contract with INSURER; who is a
provider enrolled in the Medicaid program; and who has a
valid Drug Enforcement Agency registration number and a
Puerto Rico Controlled Substance Certificate, if either is
required in their practice.
Hospital An institution licensed as a general or special hospital by
the Puerto Rico Health Department under Chapter 241 of the
Health and Safety Code and Private Psychiatric Hospitals
under Chapter 577 of the Health and Safety Code (or is a
provider which is a component part of a State or local
government entity which does not require a
27
license under the laws of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico),
which is enrolled as a provider in the Puerto Rico Medicaid
Program.
Non-Physician An individual holding a license issued by the applicable
Practitioner licensing agency of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico who is
Provider enrolled in the Puerto Rico Medicaid Program or an
individual properly trained to provide health support
services who practices under the direct supervision of an
appropriately licensed professional.
Clinical An entity having a current certificate issued under the
Laboratory Federal Clinical Laboratory Improvement Act (CLIA), and
enrolled in the Puerto Rico Medicaid Program.
Rural Health An institution which meets all of the criteria for
Clinic (RHC) designation as a rural health clinic, and enrolled in the
Puerto Rico Medicaid Program. (330, 329)
Local Health A local health department established pursuant to Health and
Department Safety Code, Title 2, Local Public Health Reorganization Act
ss.121.031ff.
Non-Hospital A provider of health care services which is licensed and
Facility credentialed to provide services, and enrolled in our
Provider program.
School Based Clinics located at school campuses that provide on-site
Health Clinic and primary preventive care to children and adolescents.
(SBHC)
ARTICLE VIII
SUBSCRIPTION PROCESS AND IDENTIFICATION CARDS
1. The INSURER agrees to comply and implement in full all instructions
and guidelines contained in the Administration's Instructions to
Insurers for Implementation of Orientation and Subscription Process.
(Addendum II)
2. The INSURER shall issue to each beneficiary a card of durable plastic
material that provides proper identification to access the benefits
covered under this contract.
3. This card shall be similar to those the INSURER issues to the rest of
their subscribers and shall not contain information that may identify
the cardholder as medically indigent.
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4. The INSURER shall be responsible to assure delivery of the cards at a
location accessible to the beneficiaries in each municipality.
5. The INSURER shall deliver the card on the same day that the
beneficiary completes, the enrollment process.
6. The identification cards shall contain the following information:
a) Name of Beneficiary
b) INSURER's Group Number
c) Subscriber's Social Security Number
d) Relationship of beneficiary with subscriber (if applicable)
e) HCO name and number
f) Issue Date
g) Type of Contract (individual or family)
h) Coverage effective date
i) Other Insurance code
j) Medicare Part A and/or Part A and B deductible code.
7. The INSURER will replace lost, stolen, mutilated cards and will have
the right to charge the beneficiaries one dollar ($1.00) for each card
replaced.
8. The INSURER will replace free of charge the identification card
whenever a change of HCO is made.
9. Identification cards are the property of the INSURER and they shall be
returned by the beneficiary upon losing eligibility to the plan or
when a change of HCO is made.
10. The INSURER shall be responsible for notifying each beneficiary that
the identification card is for the personal identification of the
beneficiary to whom it has been issued, and that lending, transferring
or in any other way consenting to the use of the card by any other
person constitutes a fraudulent act.
11. Identification Card contents and layout are subject to the prior
approval of the ADMINISTRATION to be in accordance with Law 72 of
September 7, 1993.
ARTICLE IX
SUMMARY PLAN DESCRIPTION BOOKLET AND ORIENTATION PROGRAMS
MARKETING PROVISIONS
1. The INSURER shall be responsible for the preparation, printing and
distribution, at its own cost, of booklets, in the Spanish language,
that describe the plan and the benefits covered therein. The Insurer
agrees to submit before the effective date of the contract a
translated copy of the beneficiaries booklet in the English
29
language by the proper revision of federal authorities. These booklets
will be delivered to each subscriber upon enrollment, along with the
required identification card(s)
2.
3. The booklets shall serve as guarantee of the benefits to be provided
and shall contain the following information:
a) Schedule of benefits covered, all services and items that are
available and that are covered either directly or through
methods of referral and/or prior authorization, a written
description of how and where the services that have been
available through the plan services may be obtained.
b) Benefit's exclusions and limitations. For benefits that
enrollees are entitled to but are not available through the
MCO, a written description on how and where to obtain
benefits; description of procedures for requesting
disenrollments/changes.
c) Beneficiary's rights and responsibilities, in accordance with
specific rights and requirements to be afforded in accordance
with Medical Program regulations 42 CFR 438.100 as amended,
Puerto Rico Patient Xxxx of Rights Law 194, Puerto Rico
Mental Health Code, August 25, 2000, as implemented by
regulation, and Law 11 which creates the Office of Patients
Solicitor General of April 11, 2001.
d) Instructions on how to access benefits, including a list of
(1) available HCO's and its participating providers, PCP or
Specialists (its locations and qualifications), (2) providers
from which to obtain benefits under the Special Coverage.
Said list can be provided in a separate booklet.
e) Official grievances and appeal filing procedures.
f) In the event a Physician Incentive Plan affects the use of
referral services and/or places physicians at substantial
risk, the INSURER shall provide the following information
upon beneficiaries requests: the type of incentive
arrangements, whether stop-loss insurance is provided and the
survey results of any enrollee/disenrollee surveys that will
have to be conducted by INSURER.
g) Unless otherwise specified, subscription materials must be
written at the 4th-6th grade reading comprehension level.
4. The booklets shall be approved by the ADMINISTRATION prior to
printing, distribution, and dissemination in compliance with
provisions of Article IX.
5. The INSURER shall also be responsible for the preparation, printing
and distribution, at its own cost, of an Informative Bulletin, in the
Spanish language, that describes the plan, services and benefits
covered therein as well as the managed care concept. This Informative
Bulletin will be distributed among the HCOs, HCO's network of
participating providers and the INSURER's participating providers.
30
6. The INSURER shall be responsible to conduct and assure the
participation of all providers under this contract to diverse seminars
to be held throughout the Health Area/Region in order to properly
orient and familiarize said providers with all aspects and
requirements related to the Preventive Medicine Program, Benefits and
Coverage under this contract, and the Managed Care concept. Said
seminars will be organized, scheduled, conducted and offered at the
expense of the INSURER. The curriculum for said seminars will be
coordinated with and approved by the ADMINISTRATION Healthcare
Coordinators.
7. All participating providers are mandatorily required to receive yearly
during the contract term at least four (4) hours of orientation,
education and familiarization with different aspects related to this
contract on/or before the expiration of the first four and a half
(4 1/2) months of the contract term. Failure to comply with this
requirement will be sufficient grounds to exclude from the Health
Insurance Program the participating provider. If, at the expiration of
the first four and half (4 1/2) of the contract term, the
participating provider has not fully complied with this requirement,
it will be excluded as participating provider for subsequent periods
of the contract or the contract term. At the discretion of the
ADMINISTRATION, and for good cause the excluded provider may be
authorized to be contracted as a participating provider if it
subsequently complies with the requirement.
8. The ADMINISTRATION will monitor and evaluate all marketing activities
by the INSURER, its contractor, sub-contractors or any provider of
services under this contract.
9. Any marketing material addressed to enrollees can not contain false or
misleading information. All oral, written or audiovisual information
addressed to enrollees should be accurate and sufficient for
beneficiaries to make an informed consent decision whether or not to
enroll and will have to be pre-approved by the ADMINISTRATION.
10. The INSURER, contractor or subcontractor or any providers of services
must distribute the material to its entire service area/region. In the
event the INSURER or any of its contractors develop new and revised
materials they shall submit them to the ADMINISTRATION for prior
approval.
11. The ADMINISTRATION will appoint an Advisory Committee, with
representation of at least: a board certified physician, a beneficiary
of a consumer advocate organization that includes Medicaid recipients
a health related professional related with the medical needs of
low-income population and a Director of a Welfare Department that does
not head a medicaid agency.
31
12. The Advisory Committee will assist the ADMINISTRATION in the
evaluation and the review of any marketing or informational material
addressed to assist medicaid recipients in the provision of health
services under this contract.
All the marketing activities and the information which shall be
allowed will be limited to the following:
a) Clear description of health care benefits coverage and
exclusions to enrollees;
b) Explain how, when, where benefits are available to enrollees;
c) Explain how to access emergency, family-planning services,
services that do or do not require referrals and
authorizations;
d) Explain any benefits enrollees are entitled to, that are not
available through the MCO and how to obtain them;
e) Enrollees rights and responsibilities;
f) Grievance and appeal procedures.
13. The INSURER, its agents, any contractor or sub-contractor party under
this contract shall not engage in cold call marketing that is,
unsolicited personal contact with potential enrollees for the purpose
of influencing them to enroll with any of its contractors. Also
telephone, door-to-door or telemarketing for the same purposes is
hereby prohibited.
14. Neither the INSURER, its contractor, subcontractor or any provider may
put into effect a plan under which compensation, reward, gift or
opportunity are offered to enrollees as an inducement to enroll other
than to offer health care benefits. The INSURER its contractor,
subcontractor or provider is prohibited from influencing an individual
enrollment with the sale of any other insurance.
15. In the event of a final determination reached by the ADMINISTRATION
that the INSURER, its agents, any of its contractor or subcontractors,
has failed to comply with any of the provisions set forth on this
article, the ADMINISTRATION in compliance with due process guarantees
and remedies available under its regulations; Law 72 of September
7, 1993; the Social Security and Balance Budget Act, will proceed to
enforce the compliance of these provisions by pursuing within its
empowered authority the sanctions established in Article XXXV1.
ARTICLE X
GRIEVANCE PROCEDURE
1. The INSURER represents that it has established an effective procedure
that assures the filing, receipt, and prompt handling and resolution
of all grievances and complaints made by the beneficiaries and the
participating providers. The INSURER will prepare a grievance form
that must be approved by the ADMINISTRATION. The approved grievance
form shall be made available to all
32
beneficiaries, HCOs, HCO's network of participating providers and the
INSURER's participating providers. The parties will make whatever
adjustments are necessary to reconcile their grievance procedure with
provisions of Law 194 of August 25, 2000 (known as "Patient Xxxx of
Rights") or those contained in Law 11 of April 11, 2001 (known as "Law
Creating the Office of Patient's Solicitor General") as implemented by
regulation.
2. Any written or telephone communication from a beneficiary or
participating provider, which expresses dissatisfaction with an action
or decision arising under the health insurance contracted, shall be
promptly and properly handled and resolved through a routine complaint
procedure to be implemented by the INSURER, after prior approval from
the ADMINISTRATION. The INSURER shall be responsible for documenting
in writing all aspects and details of said complaints.
3. The routine complaint procedure which must be implemented by the
INSURER must provide for (i) the availability of complaint forms to
document oral complaints; (ii) for the proper handling of the
complaints; and (iii) for the disposition by notice to the complainant
of the action taken. This notice shall advise the complainant of the
INSURER's official Grievance Procedure. The INSURER will submit to the
ADMINISTRATION, on a monthly basis a written report detailing all
grievances and routine complaints received, solved and pending
solution and/or copies of the complaint forms with the notation of the
action taken. All grievance files and complaint forms must be made
available to the ADMINISTRATION for auditing. All grievance documents
and related information shall be considered as containing individually
identifiable health information, and shall be treated in accordance
with the HIPAA regulations cited elsewhere.
4. The Grievance Procedure shall assure the participation of persons with
authority to require corrective action.
5. The INSURER's Grievance Procedure shall contain all the necessary
provisions that assure the affected parties right to due process of
law. In the event that changes are made to the existing Grievance
Procedure, a copy of the proposed changes will be made available to
the ADMINISTRATION for approval prior to its implementation. A copy of
the INSURER's Grievance Procedure is attached hereto as ADDENDUM III
and incorporated as part of this contract. The INSURER acknowledges
that the arbitration process contemplated in the Grievance Procedure
shall not be applicable to disputes between the ADMINISTRATION and the
INSURER.
6. Pursuant to Law 72 of September 7, 1993, any decision issued by the
INSURER is subject to appeal before the ADMINISTRATION. Such appeal
shall be regulated by the ADMINISTRATION's regulations and the Uniform
Administrative Procedure Act, Law 170 of August 12, 1988, as amended
and as applicable,
33
provided however, that subscribers grievances shall be expeditiously
solved and that INSURER shall therefore fully cooperate with the
prompt solutions of any such grievance.
7. The decision issued by the ADMINISTRATION is subject to review before
the Circuit Court of Appeals of the San Xxxx Panel of the Commonwealth
of Puerto Rico.
8. INSURER must have written policies and procedures for receiving,
tracking, reviewing, and reporting and resolving of Beneficiaries
complaints. The procedures, must be reviewed and approved in writing
by THE ADMINISTRATION. Any changes or modifications to the procedures
must be submitted to THE ADMINISTRATION for approval thirty (30) days
prior to the effective date of the amendment.
9. INSURER must designate an officer of INSURER who has primary
responsibility for ensuring that complaints are resolved in compliance
with written policy and within the time required. An "officer" of
INSURER means a president, vice president, secretary, treasurer, or
chairperson of the Board of Directors of a corporation, the sole
proprietor, the managing general partner of a partnership, or a person
having similar executive authority in the organization.
10. INSURER must have a routine process to detect patterns of complaints
and disenrollments and involve management and supervisory staff to
develop policy and procedural improvements to address the complaints.
INSURER must cooperate with THE ADMINISTRATION in beneficiaries'
complaints relating to enrollment and disenrollment. INSURER's
complaints procedures must be provided to beneficiaries in writing and
in alternative communication formats. A written description of
INSURER's complaints procedures must be in appropriate languages and
easy for beneficiaries to understand. INSURER must include a written
description in the beneficiaries Handbook. INSURER must maintain at
least one local and one toll-free telephone number for making
complaints.
11. INSURER's process must require that every complaint received in
person, by telephone or in writing, is recorded in a written record
and is logged with the following details: date; identification of the
individual filing the complaint; identification of the individual
recording the complaint; nature of the complaint; disposition of the
complaint; corrective action required; and date resolved.
12. The INSURER Grievance Procedures must comply with the minimum
standards for prompt resolution of grievances and time frames set
forth in 45 CFR 438.400-424.
34
ARTICLE XI
HEALTH CARE ORGANIZATIONS
1. All Health Care Organizations (HCOs) shall have a sufficient number of
primary care physicians as specified in Article VI to attend to the
medical needs of the beneficiaries. All specialties specified in this
section have to be available at each HCO. The following are considered
primary care physicians (gatekeepers):
a) General Practitioners
b) Internists
c) Family Physicians
d) Pediatricians
e) Obstetricians and Gynecologists
2. The INSURER shall have available and under contract a sufficient
number of the following types of support participating providers to
render services to all beneficiaries:
a) Optometrists
b) Podiatrists
c) Clinical laboratories- (The INSURER shall insure that all
laboratory testing sites providing services under this
contract have either a clinical laboratory improvement
amendment (CLIA) certificate with the registration and (CLIA)
identification number or a waiver certification).
d) Radiological facilities
e) Health Related Professionals
f) Hospitals
g) Pharmacies
h) All those participating providers that may be needed to
provide services under the basic, special and dental coverage
considering the specific health problems of an area/region.
The INSURER may not discriminate with respect to participation,
reimbursement or indemnification as to any provider who is acting
within the scope of the provider's license or certification under
applicable state law.
3. The INSURER shall enter into adequate arrangements to provide its
beneficiaries with the services provided for under the dental and
pharmacy coverage, as contractually agreed to between the dentists and
pharmacies and
35
the INSURER. These arrangements will provide for an adequate number of
dentists and pharmacies that guarantee the right to choose of the
beneficiaries.
4. The INSURER shall have available and under contract a sufficient
number of the following types of support participating physicians to
provide services to all beneficiaries:
a) Ophthalmologists
b) Radiologists
c) All those physicians that may be necessary and are available
considering the morbidity and mortality rates of the specific
health area/region, and those needed to provide all the
benefits contained in the Basic Coverage of the plan.
5.
6. The physician/beneficiary ratio accepted is one (1) primary care
physician for each eight hundred and fifty (850) beneficiaries; one
(1) specialist (not primary care) for each one thousand one hundred
(1,100) beneficiaries; and, one (1) physician (all) for each eight
hundred (800) beneficiaries. These ratio does not take into account
the expected mix between private patients and beneficiaries which
could increase the physicians capacity to 1:1,700 for primary care
physicians; 1:2,200 for specialists and 1:1,600 for all physicians. In
the event that the HCOs provides services only to beneficiaries under
this contract, the physician/beneficiary ratio will be the same to
that applicable when there is a mix between private patients and
beneficiaries.
7. The INSURER shall not have, directly or indirectly, any conflict of
interest through economic participation in any HCO, participating
provider, its subsidiaries, or affiliates.
8. The INSURER shall enforce upon each HCO strict quality assurance and
utilization review programs as described in this contract, the
Request for Proposals, the INSURER's proposal and its Operations
Manual.
9. The INSURER shall contract and have available all the participating
providers required to provide to the beneficiaries, in a prompt and
efficient manner, the benefits included in the Basic, Special and
Dental Coverage as specified in ADDENDUM I of this contract.
10. The INSURER agrees to enforce and assure compliance by the HCOs with
all provisions contained in this contract.
11. The INSURER will prepare, and provide to all HCOs, complete written
instructions describing procedures to be used for the compliance with
all duties and obligations arising under this contract. These
instructions will cover at least
36
the following topics: provider selection by beneficiaries, covered
services, instructions and coordination of access to mental health
services through the mental carve-out contractors, reporting
requirements, record keeping requirements, grievance procedures,
deductibles and co-payment amounts, confidentiality, and the
prohibition against denial or rationing of services. A copy of these
instructions will be submitted to the ADMINISTRATION, who reserves the
right to request modifications or amendments to said instructions
following consultation with the INSURER.
ARTICLE XII
GUARANTEE OF PAYMENT
1. The INSURER expressly guarantees payment for all medically necessary
services rendered to beneficiaries by any and all participating
providers.
2. The insolvency, liquidation, bankruptcy or breach of contract of an
HCO, or of a contracted participating provider does not release the
INSURER from its obligation and guarantee to pay for all services
rendered as authorized under this health insurance contract.
The nature of INSURER's obligations to guarantee payment to all HCOs,
providers or subcontractors for services rendered under this health
insurance contract is solidary, subject to complying with whatever
established claim proceedings require. As such, the INSURER will
respond directly to the ADMINISTRATION as principal obligor to comply
in its entirety with all the contract terms.
3. In accordance with the payments rights guaranteed under paragraph (4)
and (5), the provider shall claim direct payments due by a
HCO/Contractor, to the INSURER. The INSURER shall deduct any amount
payable directly to a provider from the capitation payments owed to an
HCO or other contractor.
4. The INSURER agrees to pay all monies due to the HCOs and/or
participating providers according to the agreed payment schedule in
the contracts with said parties. The INSURER represents as of the date
of this contract that payment to HCO's, HCO's network of participating
providers and INSURER's participating providers will be made no later
than forty-five (45) days or as provided by legislation from the date
that a full, complete and ready to process claim is received at the
INSURER, when received within sixty (60) days of date of service. The
INSURER expressly commits to implement all internal systems necessary
to promptly pay its HCO's and providers all full, complete and ready
to process claims within the term provided in this section, and to
avoid unjustifiable delay in payment by submitting said claims to
audits and evaluation of contested claims; said practice is expressly
prohibited, and may result in the remedies set forth at Article XXXVI
or termination as provided in Article XXXIII. A complete and
37
ready to process claim (clean claim) is a claim received by the
INSURER for adjudication, and which requires no further information,
adjustment, or alteration by the provider of the services in order to
be processed and paid by the INSURER.
5. In the event that, following the receipt of the claim, the same is
totally or partially contested by the INSURER or HCO, the
participating provider shall be notified in writing within thirty (30)
days that the claim is contested with the contested portion identified
and provided the reasons thereof. Upon receipt of a new or
supplemented claim, the INSURER or the HCO, shall pay or deny the
contested claim or portion of the contested claim within thirty (30)
days. Upon expiration of any of the aforementioned periods of time,
the overdue payments shall bear interest at the prevailing rate for
personal loans as determined by the Financial Board of the Office of
the Commissioner of Financial Institutions.
6. Checks for capitated payments to HCO's, HCO's network of participating
providers and INSURER's participating providers are to be regularly
issued by the INSURER on the 15th day of each month. The INSURER
further represents that it has contracted with the HCO the payment of
the corresponding capitation no later than the last day of the month
to which said capitation corresponds.
7. The INSURER agrees and warrants that it will be the central payor for
all valid claims that will be generated throughout their contracted
participating provider network for the health insurance contract for
the Health Region/Area.
8. All payments distribution within the capitated services will be made
by INSURER. In the event that participating providers in their
arrangements with the HCOs consent to the disbursement of the payment
checks directly to the HCOs, the INSURER will assure and require the
HCOs to provide on a monthly basis a schedule of the amount of the
payments made to said participating providers. In any event, the
INSURER will provide the ADMINISTRATION with a detailed monthly report
listing by providers the monthly payment distribution. The claim for
services rendered will be generated and forwarded by the participating
providers directly to the INSURER. The claims submitted by the
participating providers will comply with the requirements contained in
Article XV, Sections four (4) and eight (8).
9. The INSURER agrees and warrants that the method and system used to pay
for the services rendered to and by the HCOs and all participating
providers is reasonable and that the amount paid does not jeopardize
or infringe upon the quality of the services provided.
10. The guarantee of payment contained in this article will be reinforced
through the establishment of different alternatives in order to insure
that HCOs, HCO's participating providers and INSURER's participating
providers are paid in full for
38
contracted services in accordance with established budgets. Said
alternatives will be submitted to the ADMINISTRATION for approval
prior to its implementation.
11. Inasmuch as the INSURER will be the central payor for all payments for
valid claims for, services rendered by the HCOs, HCO's network of
participating providers and INSURER's participating providers the
INSURER agrees to incorporate in the contracts with the HCOs, and to
require the HCOs to incorporate in their arrangements with their
participating providers a provision whereby the INSURER is authorized
to adjudicate and determine the validity of any claim or dispute
between the HCO and its participating providers regarding a
controversy surrounding the validity of the claims of services
submitted by said participating provider. Said provision will assure
that the HCO's network of participating providers payment for a valid
claim for services is not improperly withheld and that in no event
payment in this situation is made more than sixty (60) days from the
date that the claim or dispute is received by the INSURER. It will be
the INSURER's responsibility to verify the terms of the arrangements
between the HCO and its network of participating providers, the
rendering of the services, the reasonableness of the claim and that
payment has not been made.
12. The guarantee of payment and the representations as to the payment
schedule to HCO's and participating providers will be enforceable and
not set aside or altered in the event that the INSURER is notified of
the expiration of the term of this contract or of its termination.
13. The INSURER agrees to provide the ADMINISTRATION, on a monthly basis,
and through electronic or magnetic media format, a detailed report
containing all payments made to HCOs, to HCO's network of
participating providers, and to the INSURER's participating providers
during the month immediately preceding the report. Said report will
also include a list of all claims received on account of those
payments during the preceding month by the INSURER from the HCOs, the
HCO's network of participating providers as well as a detail as to all
claims received but not paid by reason of accounting or administrative
objections. The INSURER further agrees to make available to the
ADMINISTRATION for auditing purposes any and all records or financial
data related to claims submitted but not paid by reason of accounting
or administrative objections. The intention of this clause is for the
ADMINISTRATION to be able to determine on a monthly basis the amount
of money paid to each participating provider, the amount billed by and
not paid to each participating provider and the reasons for
non-payment in order to keep track of the regularity of payments of
the Insurer and the HCOs and their compliance with this contract.
14. The INSURER also agrees to provide to HCO's, on a monthly basis, and
through electronic or machine readable media format, a detailed report
classified by beneficiaries, by providers, by diagnosis, by procedure,
by date of service and by its real cost of all payments made by the
INSURER which entails a deduction
39
from the gross monthly payment to said HCO's. Copy of said report will
be made available to the ADMINISTRATION each month.
15. Each HCO must report each encounter to the INSURER on a monthly basis
classified by each participating provider within the HCO, as well as
the real cost of the services of each encounter of service. The
INSURER must submit to the ADMINISTRATION the distribution of the
capitation within each HCO as established on the Actuarial Reports
formats required in the RFP.
16. The INSURER will abide with the ADMINISTRATION efforts to implement
cost reduction measures and the future implementation payments methods
based on fee schedules or diagnosis related groups that may be
established.
ARTICLE XIII
UTILIZATION REVIEW AND QUALITY ASSURANCE
1. The INSURER will establish a Quality of Care Program with the
following guidelines:
a) PHYSICIAN-CREDENTIALING: The INSURER shall follow strict
provider screening procedures before contracting. In order to
assure quality health services for the medically indigent,
the INSURER will follow stringent physician selection and
credentialing process for this plan as per the INSURER's
Proposal. The ADMINISTRATION may review participating
providers credentials at any time and submit its findings to
the INSURER for consideration by the INSURER if necessary.
The INSURER shall notify the ADMINISTRATION quarterly of all
accepted and non-accepted providers.
b) PROVIDER CONTRACTING: The INSURER will assure that all
hospitals facilities, doctors, dentists, and all health care
providers are appropriately licensed and in good standing
with all their governing bodies and accrediting agencies and
meet all practice requirements established by law, the
Department of Health, the ADMINISTRATION and other governing
agencies, as described in the INSURER's Proposal. The
ADMINISTRATION may review participating provider credentials
at any time and submit its findings to the INSURER for
consideration by the INSURER if necessary. The INSURER shall
notify the ADMINISTRATION quarterly of all accepted and
non-accepted providers.
c) INSPECTION OF ALL FACILITIES: The INSURER will insure that
all providers' physical facilities are safe, sanitary and
follow sound operating procedures, as described in the
INSURER's Proposal and that all laboratory testing site
providing services under this contract have their
40
duly CILIA certification along with their identification
number or waiver certificate. The ADMINISTRATION may review
participating provider facilities at any time and submit its
findings to the INSURER for consideration by the INSURER if
necessary. The INSURER shall notify the ADMINISTRATION
quarterly of all inspections done.
d) MEDICAL RECORD REVIEW: The INSURER will establish a program
to monitor the appropriateness of care being provided, the
adequacy and consistency of record keeping, and completeness
of records, as described in the INSURER's Proposal. The
INSURER shall notify the ADMINISTRATION on a quarterly basis
of all findings in the Medical Record Review Program. The
ADMINISTRATION may review and/or audit Program records and
reports at any time.
e) CLINICAL DATABASE SYSTEM: The HCOs will provide the INSURER
with statistical records of utilization of medical services
by beneficiaries, as described in the INSURER's Proposal. The
INSURER shall notify the ADMINISTRATION on a quarterly basis
of all findings in the Clinical Database System. The
ADMINISTRATION may review and/or audit the Clinical Database
System records and reports at any time.
f) RETROSPECTIVE REVIEW: The INSURER will establish a
Retrospective review Program that will address quality and
utilization problems that may arise, as described in the
INSURER's Proposal. The INSURER shall notify the
ADMINISTRATION on a quarterly basis of all findings in the
Retrospective Review Program. The ADMINISTRATION may review
and/or audit the program findings at any time.
g) OUTCOME REVIEW: The INSURER will establish an Outcome Review
Program to assess the quality of inpatient and ambulatory
care management provided by the primary health care
providers, as described in the INSURER's Proposal. The
INSURER shall notify the ADMINISTRATION on a quarterly basis
of all findings in the Outcome Review Program. The
ADMINISTRATION may review and/or audit the program findings
at any time.
h) QUALITY OF CARE COMMITTEE: The INSURER will establish a
Quality of Care Committee to insure provider's compliance
with the INSURER's quality of care program, as described in
the INSURER's Proposal. The INSURER shall submit a report to
the ADMINISTRATION on a quarterly basis of all findings in
the Quality of Care Committee. The ADMINISTRATION may review
and/or audit the program findings and reports at any time.
2. The INSURER will establish cost containment and utilization review
programs as follows:
41
a) HOSPITAL ADMISSION AND STAY REVIEW: The INSURER will
establish programs to reduce unnecessary hospital use and
to review hospital admissions through the following programs,
as described in the INSURER's Proposal:
(1) CONCURRENT REVIEW: The INSURER will establish a
program to review hospital admissions to guarantee
adequacy and duration of stay.
(2) RETROSPECTIVE REVIEW: The INSURER will establish a
program to determine medical necessity and service
adequacy after the service has been rendered or
paid to providers or physicians.
(3) PROSPECTIVE REVIEW: The INSURER will establish a
program to determine appropriate lengths of stay at
the hospital prior to admission for elective or
non-emergency hospitalizations.
b) UTILIZATION REVIEW PROGRAM: The INSURER will establish a
program to identify patterns of medical practice and their
effect in the care being provided, as described in the
INSURER's Proposal, and through the following:
(1) PRE-PAYMENT REVIEW: The INSURER will establish a
program to prevent inappropriate billing of services
prior to claims payment and to evaluate questionable
practices, problematic coding, inappropriate level
of care, excessive tests and services.
(2) POST PAYMENT REVIEW: The INSURER will establish a
program to review service claims for purposes of
creating a provider profiling system.
The INSURER shall submit a report to the ADMINISTRATION on a
quarterly basis of all findings under the Utilization Review
Programs. The ADMINISTRATION may review and/or audit the
programs' findings and reports at any time.
c) SECOND SURGICAL OPINION: The INSURER will establish a program
to allow beneficiaries to obtain a second surgical opinion
for elective surgical procedures on a voluntary basis, as
described in the INSURER's Proposal.
d) INDIVIDUAL CASE MANAGEMENT PROGRAM: The INSURER will
establish a program to identify and manage cases that involve
high health care costs, as described in the INSURER's
Proposal. The INSURER shall
42
submit a report to the ADMINISTRATION on a quarterly basis of
all findings in the Individual Case Management Program. The
ADMINISTRATION may review and/or audit the program findings
and reports at any time.
e)
f) FRAUD AND ABUSE: The INSURER will establish a program to
assure reasonable levels of utilization and quality of care,
as described in the INSURER's Proposal. The INSURER shall
submit a report to the ADMINISTRATION on a quarterly basis of
all findings in the Fraud and Abuse Program. The Fraud and
Abuse Reports must include:
(1) the number of complaints of fraud and abuse
made to the Commonwealth that warrant a preliminary
investigation, and,
(2) for each case of suspected fraud and abuse
warranting a full investigation, the INSURER must
report the following information:
(i) the provider's name and number;
(ii) the source of the complaint;
(iii) the type of provider;
(iv) the nature of the complaint;
(v) the approximate range of dollars
involved, and,
(vi) the legal and administrative
disposition or status of the case.
g) COORDINATION OF BENEFITS PROGRAM: The INSURER will establish
a program to identify beneficiaries with other insurance in
order to coordinate health insurance benefits from other
carriers, as described in the INSURER's Proposal. The INSURER
shall submit a report to the ADMINISTRATION on a quarterly
basis of all findings in the Coordination of Benefits
Program. The ADMINISTRATION may review and/or audit the
program findings and reports at any time.
3. DENTAL SERVICES UTILIZATION REVIEW PROGRAM: The INSURER agrees to
maintain a program to determine that the services provided to
beneficiaries are in accordance to established quality parameters by
the dental community as provided for in the INSURER's Proposal. The
INSURER shall notify the ADMINISTRATION quarterly of all findings of
said review program. The ADMINISTRATION may review and/or audit the
program findings at any time.
4. EPSDT AND MIGRANT SERVICES PROGRAM: The INSURER will implement a
program that addresses EPSDT screening and Migrant services indicators
for preventive diagnostic tests according to age in all areas/regions
and shall notify the ADMINISTRATION on a monthly basis all findings of
said program.
43
INSURER assures the compliance with Section 1905(r) of the Social
Security Act and the applicable protocols adopted by the Department of
Health for the implementation of these Programs.
5. The INSURER shall continue to submit the ADMINISTRATION on a monthly
basis a report that includes all services rendered by diagnosis and
procedures identified by all specialties, by place of service
including those under dental coverage, and procedures in laboratories
and X-rays. It will be reported beginning with the most common
diagnosis and procedures until reaching the least common. The INSURER
shall be required to provide the ADMINISTRATION on a monthly basis
data in and electronic form that includes all of the specified fields
and elements described in ADDENDUM IV, whenever said reporting system
can be implemented.
6. All services rendered shall be identified by Current Procedure
Terminology, International Classification of Diseases, Clinical
Modifications Diagnostic Statistic Manual and American Dental
Association's Current Dental Terminology, as applicable.
7. The ADMINISTRATION and the INSURER will agree on the required format
in order to comply with the reporting requirements in this section and
which will be accomplished through electronic or magnetic media.
8. All the required programs, processes and reports heretofore referred
to, will also be an obligation on the part of the INSURER's
participating providers, HCOs and HCO's participating providers. The
INSURER will assure compliance therewith on the part of said INSURER's
participating providers, HCOs and HCO's participating providers.
9. The ADMINISTRATION reserves the right to require the INSURER to
implement additional specific cost and utilization controls, subject
to prior consultation and cost negotiation with the INSURER if
necessary.
ARTICLE XIV
COMPLIANCE AND AGREEMENT
FOR INSPECTION OF RECORDS
1. Since funds from the Commonwealth Plan under Title XIX of the Social
Security Act Medical Assistance Program (Medicaid) as well as from
Title V of the Social Security Act and Mental Health Block Grants are
used to finance this project in part the INSURER shall agree to comply
with the requirements and conditions of the Center of Medicare and
Medicaid Services (CMS), the Comptroller General of the United States,
the Comptroller of Puerto Rico and this ADMINISTRATION, as to the
maintenance of records related to this contract and audit rights
thereof, as well as all other legal obligations attendant thereto,
including, but not limited
44
to, non-discrimination, coverage benefit eligibility as provided by
the Puerto Rico State Plan and Law 72 of 1993, anti-fraud and
anti-kickback laws, and those terms and provisions of the SSA as
applicable. All disclosure obligations and access requirements set
forth in this Article or any other Article shall be subject at all
times and to the extent mandated by law and regulation, to the HIPAA
regulations described elsewhere in this agreement.
2. The INSURER shall require from the HCO's and all participating
providers that they maintain an appropriate record system for services
rendered to beneficiaries, including separate medical files and
records for each beneficiary as is necessary to record all clinical
information pertaining to said beneficiaries, including notations of
personal contacts, primary care visits, diagnostic studies and all
other services. The INSURER shall also maintain records to document
fiscal activities and expenditures relating to compliance under this
agreement. The INSURER and all participating providers shall preserve,
and retain in readily accessible form, the records mentioned herein
during the term of this contract and for the period of six (6) years
thereafter.
3. At all times during the term of this contract and for a period of six
(6) years thereafter, the INSURER and all participating providers will
provide the ADMINISTRATION, CMS, the Comptroller of Puerto Rico, the
Comptroller General of the United States of America and/or their
authorized representatives, access to all records relating to the
INSURER's compliance under this contract for the purpose of
examination, audit or copying of such records. The audits of such
records include examination and review of the sources and applications
of funds under this contract. The INSURER shall also furnish access to
and permit inspection and audit by the ADMINISTRATION, CMS, the
Comptroller of Puerto Rico, the Comptroller General of the United
States of America and/or their authorized representatives to any
financial records relating to the capacity of the INSURER or its HCOs,
if relevant, to bear the risk of potential financial losses.
4. The INSURER shall ensure that the HCO's. and all participating
providers and their subcontractors furnish to the Peer Review
Organization (PRO) or to the ADMINISTRATION on-site access to, or
copies of patient care records as needed to evaluate quality of care.
5. The ADMINISTRATION and CMS shall have the right to inspect, evaluate,
copy and audit any pertinent books, documents, papers and records of
the INSURER related to this contract and those of any HCO or
participating provider in order to evaluate the services performed,
determination of amounts payable, reconciliation of benefits,
liabilities and compliance with this contract.
6. The INSURER shall provide for the review of services (including both
in-patient and out-patient services) covered by the plan for the
purpose of determining whether such services meet professional
recognized standards of health care, including whether appropriate
services have not been provided or have been
45
provided in inappropriate settings. It shall also provide for
review, by random sampling, by the ADMINISTRATION, of written
complaints, and the results thereof, filed by beneficiaries
or their representatives as to the quality of services
provided.
7. The INSURER agrees that the ADMINISTRATION and CMS may conduct
inspections and evaluations, at all reasonable times, through on-site
audits, systems tests, assessments, performance review and regular
reports to assure the quality, appropriateness, timeliness and cost of
services furnished to the beneficiaries.
8. The ADMINISTRATION and CMS shall have the right to inspect all of the
INSURER's financial records related to this contract, that may be
necessary to assure that the ADMINISTRATION pays no more than its fair
share of general overhead costs as contracted. The ADMINISTRATION and
CMS shall have the right to inspect all the HCOs' financial records
related to this contract.
9. The INSURER agrees that the ADMINISTRATION may evaluate, through
inspection or other means, the facilities of the INSURER's
participating providers, HCO's and its participating providers. All
facilities shall comply with the applicable licensing and
certification requirements as established by regulations of the
Department of Health of Puerto Rico. It shall be the INSURER
responsibility to take all necessary measures to ascertain that all
facilities contracting with INSURER comply with the required licensing
and certification regulations of the Puerto Rico Health Department,
and to terminate the contract of any facility not in compliance with
said provisions.
Failure to adequately monitor the licensing and certification of the
facilities may result in the termination of this contract as provided
in Article XXXIII.
10. The INSURER agrees and also will require all HCOs and participating
providers to agree that the ADMINISTRATION's right to inspect,
evaluate, copy and audit, will survive the termination of this contract
for a period of six (6) years from said termination date unless:
a) The ADMINISTRATION determines there is a special need to
retain a particular record or group of records for a longer
period and notifies the INSURER at least thirty (30) days
before the normal disposition date;
b) There has been a termination, dispute, fraud, or similar
fault by the INSURER, in which case the retention may be
extended to three (3) years from the date of any resulting
final settlement; or
c) The ADMINISTRATION determines that there is a reasonable
possibility of fraud, in which case it may reopen a final
settlement at any time;
d) There has been an audit intervention by CMS, the office of
the Comptroller of Puerto Rico, the Comptroller General of
the United States or the
46
ADMINISTRATION, in which case the retention may be extended
until the conclusion of the audit and publication of the final
report.
11. The INSURER agrees to require all HCO's and participating providers to
permit the ADMINISTRATION to review and audit all aspects related to
quality, appropriateness, timeliness and cost of services rendered, and
to demonstrate that the services for which payment was made were
actually provided.
ARTICLE XV
INFORMATION SYSTEMS AND
REPORTING REQUIREMENTS
1. The INSURER agrees to comply with the reporting and information systems
requirements as provided for in the Request for Proposals and the
Proposal submitted by the INSURER. Accordingly the INSURER must submit
to the ADMINISTRATION a detailed Systems Requirements Inventory Report
which details the following:
a) Plan's compliance with each information system requirement:
b) action plan of INSURER's response to the requirements;
c) actual date that each system requirement will be completely
operational, not to exceed the effective date of coverage
under this contract.
2. The INSURER agrees to submit to the ADMINISTRATION the System Inventory
Report for final approval not later than the date of the signing of
this contract.
3. All Management Information Systems Requirements included in the Request
for Proposal and those included in the INSURER's Proposal must commence
implementation as of the date of the signing of this contract and shall
be fully operational as of the first day of coverage under this
contract. Material non compliance with this requirement shall be enough
reason to cancel the contract herein, with prior written notification
by the ADMINISTRATION to the INSURER according to the time set in
Article XXXIII.
4. The INSURER shall be responsible for the data collection and other
statistics of all services provided including, but not limited, to
encounter and real cost of each one, claims services and any other
pertinent data from all HCOs, participating providers or any other
entity which provide services to beneficiaries under the program, said
data to be classified by provider, by beneficiary, by diagnosis, by
procedure and by the date the service is rendered. The data collected
must then be forwarded to the ADMINISTRATION on a monthly basis in an
electronic or on machine readable media format. The data fields and
specific data elements required to be transmitted are contained in the
RFP's Record of Service File Layout format. The ADMINISTRATION reserves
the right to modify, expand or delete the requirements contained
therein or issue new requirements, subject to
47
consultation with the INSURER and cost negotiation, if necessary.
Failure to comply with the requirements contained herein will be
sufficient cause for the imposition against the INSURER of the penalty
provided for in Article XXXVI of this contract.
5. The INSURER agrees that all required data and information needs to be
collected and reported through electronic or machine readable media
commencing with the effective date of coverage of this contract.
6. The information systems of all HCOs shall be compatible with the
systems in use at all by INSURER.
7. The INSURER shall supply to the HCOs and, upon request, to all
participating providers with eligibility information on a daily basis.
Said information shall be secured through on-line access with the
INSURER.
8. The INSURER agrees to submit to the ADMINISTRATION within twenty-five
(25) days of the closing of each month, in such form and detail as
indicated in the Record of Service File Layout format and any other
formats the ADMINISTRATION requires in the RFP, the following
information:
a) Data pertaining to health insurance claims, and encounter for
all services provided to beneficiaries.
b) Statistical data on providers, medical services and any other
services;
c) Enrollment database;
d) Any and all data and information as required in the Request
for Proposals and in the Proposal submitted;
e) Any other reports or data that the ADMINISTRATION may require
after consultation with the INSURER and cost negotiation, if
necessary.
Failure to comply with the requirements contained herein will be
sufficient cause for the imposition against the INSURER of the penalty
provided for in Article XXXVI of this contract.
9. The INSURER agrees to provide to the ADMINISTRATION, on a regular
basis-as needed, any and all data, information, reports, and
documentation that will permit Governmental Agencies, the compilation
of statistical data to substantiate the need for, and the appropriate
use of federal funds for federally financed health programs.
10. The INSURER agrees to report to the ADMINISTRATION on a daily basis all
information pertaining to enrollment, disenrollment, and other
subscriber or beneficiary transactions as required by the
ADMINISTRATION. All records shall be transmitted: 1) through approved
ADMINISTRATION systems contractor; or 2) over data transmission lines
directly to the ADMINISTRATION; or 3) on machine readable media. All
machine readable media or electronic
48
transmissions shall be consistent with the relevant ADMINISTRATION's
record layouts and specifications.
11. The INSURER will submit to the ADMINISTRATION on a monthly basis
reports and data generated electronically that allows the
ADMINISTRATION:
a. Evaluation of the effectiveness of the delivery of services by
providers and the adequacy of these services.
b. Monitoring and evaluation of the efficiency and propriety of
the services that are being received by the beneficiaries and
their dependents.
c. Comparison of experience with that of other providers.
d. Comparison of the utilization of health care and the cost
tendencies within the community and the group that renders
service.
e. Demonstration of how the quality of care is being improved for
the insured and their dependents.
f. Comparison of the administrative measures taken by the INSURER
with reference points to be able to evaluate the progress
towards constant improvement.
g. Compliance with the information requirements and reports of
the Federal Programs such as: Title II of the Health Insurance
Portability and Accountability Act; Title IV-B Part 1 and 2,
Title IV-E, Title V, Title XIX, Title and Title XXI of the
Social Security Act; the applicable state laws as( the Child
Abuse Act, "Ley de Maltrato de Menores" Public Law 75 of May
28,1980; the Protection and Assistance to Victims and Witness
Act, "Ley de Proteccion y Asistencia a Victimas de Delitos y
Testigos", Public Law 77 of July 9,1986), and any other
information requirements which in the future are mandated by
federal and state programs.
h. Evaluation of each service provided with separate
identification by beneficiary, by provider, by diagnosis, by
diagnostic code, by procedure code and by date and place of
service. The provider must be identified by his/her provider's
identification number or his/her social security account
number.
These reporting requirements will be discontinued when the new
reporting system contained in ADDENDUM IV is implemented. Failure to
comply with the requirements contained herein will be sufficient cause
for the imposition against the INSURER of the penalty provided for in
Article XXXVI of this contract.
12. The INSURER will provide the ADMINISTRATION with a uniform system for
data collection.
13. The INSURER'S Information Systems must provide a continuous flow of
information to measure the quality of services rendered to the
beneficiaries and their dependents. The purpose of these systems must
be to help the ADMINISTRATION and the INSURER in the process of
achieving continuous
49
improvement in the quality of services rendered to beneficiaries and
their dependents within a cost effective system.
14. The INSURER will prepare the necessary reports requested herein for the
administration of the health insurance contract. Daily reports are due
by the end of the following business day. Weekly reports are due on the
first business day of the following week. Monthly reports are due
twenty-five (25) days after the end of each month. Quarterly reports
are due thirty (30) days after the end of each quarter.
15. The INSURER must inform to the Administration on a monthly basis all
cancellation and disenrollment of providers.
16. The INSURER must provide the ADMINISTRATION on a monthly basis with the
updated version of the Providers Directory.
17. The INSURER will coordinate the enrollment of beneficiaries.
18. The INSURER will assure adequate and efficient functioning for the term
of the contract that includes an insurance against economic loss due to
system failure or data loss.
19. As an additional measure to guarantee quality and adequacy of the
medical health services, the INSURER will conduct periodical statistics
analysis of the medical services rendered to the beneficiaries and
will compare them with the primary physician practice profile of their
regular health insurance plan. Quarterly reports as to the analysis and
comparison statistics will be submitted to the ADMINISTRATION.
20. In order to insure that all subscriber encounters are registered and
recorded, the INSURER will conduct audits of statistical samples and
unannounced personal audits of the HCOs and participating provider's
facilities to assure that the medical records reconcile with the
encounter reported, and corrective measures will be taken in case of
any violation of the INSURER's regulations regarding the registration
and reporting of encounters. The INSURER will provide quarterly reports
to the ADMINISTRATION covering all the findings and corrective
measures, if any, taken regarding any violation of said regulations.
21. The INSURER, as a minimum must guarantee the following:
a. The security and integrity of the information and
communication systems through:
1. Regular Backups on a daily basis
2. Controlled Access to the physical plant
3. Control logical access to information systems.
4. Verification of the accuracy of the data and
information
50
b. The continuity of services through:
1. Regular maintenance of the systems, programs and
equipment
2. A staff of duly trained personnel
3. An established and proven system of Disaster Recovery
4. Cost Effective systems.
c. Identification of the beneficiary via the use of plastic
cards.
d. Automated system of communication with statistics of the
management of calls (Occurrence of busy lines, etc.)
f. A comprehensive health insurance claim processing system to
handle receiving process and payment of claims and encounters.
g. Analysis/Control of utilization (The INSURER must provide said
analysis to the ADMINISTRATION on a monthly basis in the
format outlined by the ADMINISTRATION):
1. by patient/family
2. by region, area/region town, (zip code)
3. by provider (provider's identification number or
social security account numbers)
4. by diagnosis
5. by procedure or service
6. by date of service
Failure to comply with the requirements contained herein will be
sufficient cause for the imposition against the INSURER of the penalty
provided for in Article XXXVI of this contract.
j. Financial and Actuarial reports
k. System of Control and claims payment that includes payment
history.
l. Computerized pharmacy system that permits its integration to
the payment procedures to the providers.
m. Outcome Analysis
n. Electronic creation of data files related to mortality,
morbidity, and vital statistics.
o. Integration to central systems
1. Procedures and communications Protocol
Compatibility;
2. Ability to transmit reports, and or files
via electronic means.
p. Electronic Handling of:
1. The process of Admission to hospitals and ambulatory
services
2. Verification of eligibility and subscription to the
plan.
3. Verification of benefits
4. Verification of Financial information (Deductibles,
Co-payments, etc.)
51
5. Verification of individual demographic data
6. Coordination of Benefits.
q. Computerized applications for general accounting.
r. As to HCOs and all Participating Providers the information
system shall provide for:
1. On line access to service history for each
beneficiary.
2. Register of diagnosis and procedures for each service
rendered.
3. Complete demography on line, including the aspect of
coverage and financial responsibility of the patient.
4. Individual and family transactions
5. Annotations on line (General notes such as allergies,
reminders or other clinical aspects (free form)
6. Analysis of activity by:
a. department
b. provider
c. diagnosis
d. procedures
e. age
f. sex
g. origin
h. others, as mutually agreed upon.
7. Diagnosis history by patient with multiple codes per
service.
8. AD Hoc Reports
9. Referrals Control
10. Electronic Billing
11. Pharmacy system
12: Dental system
13. Ability to handle requirements of the Medicare
programs such as RBRVS (Relative Base Relative Value
System).
14. Ability to collect data as to the quarter in which
the pregnant female beneficiary commences her ob-gyn
treatment. The format for. the collection of this
data shall be approved by the ADMINISTRATION prior to
its implementation.
22. The INSURER agrees to report all procedure and diagnostic information
using the current versions of Current Procedural Terminology,
International Classification of Diseases, Clinical Modification,
Diagnostic Statistic Manual and American Dental Association's Current
Dental Terminology, respectively. This does not prevent the adoption by
INSURER of the ANSI X-12 electronic transactions for standards set
forth in the HIPAA regulations; which shall be implemented on or before
October 2002, unless modified by XXXX.
00
00. Non compliance with any of the Information Systems and Reporting
Requirements; with any requirements related to the electronic standards
transactions to be implemented within the schedule set forth by the
HIPAA regulations, or with other requirements contained herein, shall
be subject to the provisions of Articles XXXIII and XXXVI of this
contract, as well as to Article IV, Section 2(n) of Law 72 of September
7, 1993, which provides the right of the ADMINISTRATION to enforce
compliance through the Circuit Court of Appeal Puerto Rico, Part of San
Xxxx.
24. The INSURER shall provide the ADMINISTRATION with one or more telephone
numbers of dial-in data lines, and a minimum of three user's ID's and
passwords that will allow the ADMINISTRATION's authorized personnel
access to the INSURER's on-line computer applications, Such access will
allow the ADMINISTRATION use of the same systems and access to the same
information as used by the INSURER and enable the inquiry on
beneficiaries, providers, and statistics files related to this
contract.
25. As per the INSURER's proposal, INSURER shall provide to each HCOs, HCO
s network of participating providers and INSURER's participating
providers in the Health Area/Region, as well as to those outside of the
area/region who provide services to beneficiaries from within the
area/region, the necessary hardware and software to maintain on-line
communication with the INSURER's Information System to document all
encounters and services rendered to beneficiaries. Said hardware and
software will be provided at a reasonable cost for the implementation
and servicing.
26. The INSURER agrees to submit to the ADMINISTRATION reports as to the
data and information gathered through the use of the Health Plan
Employer Data and Information Set (HEDIS) and the work plan required in
the RFP formats, as per Article XVII, Section VII.
27. The INSURER must disclose to the ADMINISTRATION the following
information on provider incentive plans in sufficient detail to
determine whether their incentive plan complies with the regulatory
requirements set forth on 42 CFR 434.70(a) and 422.10:
a) Whether services not furnished by the physician or physician
group are covered by the incentive plan. If only the services
furnished by the physician or physician group are covered by
the incentive plan, disclosure of other aspects of the plan
need not be made.
b) The type of incentive arrangement (i.e., withhold, bonus,
capitation).
c) A determination on the percent of payment under the contract
that is based on the use of referral services. If the
incentive plan involves a withholding or bonus, the percent of
the withholding of bonus. If the calculated amount is 25% or
less, disclosure of the remaining elements in this list is not
required and there is no substantial risk.
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d) Proof that the physician or physician group has adequate
stop-loss protection, including the amount and type of
stop-loss protection.
e) The panel size and; if patients are pooled, the method used.
f) In the case of those prepaid plans that are required to
conduct beneficiary surveys, the survey's results.
The information items (a) through (e) above, must be disclosed to the
ADMINISTRATION: (1) prior to approval of its initial contracts or agreements,
upon the contract or agreements anniversary or renewal effective date or upon
request by the Administration or CMS. The disclosure item (f) is due 3 months
after the end of the contract year or upon request by CMS.
If the contract with the INSURER is an initial Medicaid contract, but the
INSURER has operated previously in the commercial or Medicare markets,
information on physician incentive plans for the year preceding the initial
contract period must be disclosed. If the contract is an initial contract with
INSURER, but the INSURER has not operated previously in the commercial or
Medicare markets, the INSURER should provide assurance that the provider
agreements that they sign will meet CMS and Commonwealth requirements (i.e.
there is no Physician Incentive Plan (PIP); there is a PIP but no Substantial
Financial Risk (SFR); there is a PIP and SFR so stop-loss and survey
requirements will be met). For contracts being renewed or extended, the INSURER
must provide PIP disclosure information for the prior contracting period's
contracts.
The INSURER must update PIP disclosures annually and must disclose to
administration whether PIP arrangements have changed from the previous year.
Where arrangements have not changed, a written assurance that there has not been
a change is sufficient. This also applies when INSURER analyze the PIP
arrangements in their direct and downstream contracts to determine which
disclosure items are due from their contractors. INSURER is expected to maintain
the current written assurances and the prior periods' documentation so that the
materials are available during on-site reviews.
28. INSURER TELEPHONE ACCESS REQUIREMENTS
INSURER must have adequately-staffed telephone lines available.
Telephone personnel must receive customer service telephone training.
INSURER must ensure that telephone staffing is adequate to fulfill the
standards of promptness and quality listed below:
1. 80% of all telephone calls must be answered within an average
of 30 seconds;
2. The lost (abandonment) rate must not exceed 5%;
3. INSURER cannot impose maximum call duration limits but must
allow calls to be of sufficient length to ensure adequate
information is provided to the Beneficiaries or Provider.
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29. The INSURER shall abide with the present Information Systems and
Reporting Requirements established and shall cooperate with the
Administration's Proposed Plans to implement new and revised
requirement as set forth in ADDENDUM IV.
ARTICLE XVI
FINANCIAL REQUIREMENTS
1. The INSURER shall notify the ADMINISTRATION of any loans and other
special financial arrangements which are made between the INSURER and
any HCO's or participating provider or related parties. Any such loans
shall strictly conform with the legal requirements of the anti-fraud
and anti-kickback laws and regulations.
2. The INSURER shall provide to the ADMINISTRATION copies of audited
financial statements following Generally Accepted Accounting Principles
(GAAP) and of the report to the Insurance Commissioner in the format
agreed to by the National ASSOCIATION of Insurance Commissioners
(NAIC), for the year ending on December 31, 2000, and subsequently
thereafter for the contract term not later than March 15 of each
subsequent year. Unaudited GAAP financial statements for each quarter
during the contract term shall be presented to the ADMINISTRATION not
later than forty five (45) days after the closing of each quarter.
3. The INSURER will maintain adequate procedures and controls to insure
that any payments pursuant to this contract are properly made. In
establishing and maintaining such procedures the INSURER will provide
for separation of the functions of certification and disbursement.
4. The INSURER is required to establish a cash reserve, in accordance with
the Insurance Code of Puerto Rico, to insure that outstanding claims
can be satisfied in the event of insolvency.
5. The INSURER agrees to provide to the ADMINISTRATION, upon the
expiration of each period of twelve (12) consecutive months of the
contract year, and not later than ninety (90) days thereafter, audited
financial statements following Generally Accepted Accounting Principles
(GAAP) which exclusively present the operational financial situation
related to the execution of this contract. The ADMINISTRATION reserves
the right to request interim audited financial statements not to exceed
two (2) during the contract term.
6. The INSURER agrees to provide and make available to the ADMINISTRATION
or any accounting firm contracted by the ADMINISTRATION any and all
working papers of its external auditors related to this contract.
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ARTICLE XVII
PLAN COMPLIANCE EVALUATION PROGRAM
1. The ADMINISTRATION shall conduct periodical evaluations of the
INSURER's compliance with all terms and conditions of this contract
including, but not limited to, quality, appropriateness, timeliness and
reasonableness of cost and administrative expenses, said evaluation to
be defined as the Plan Compliance Evaluation Program.
2. Said program will evaluate compliance of the following aspects in each
areas/regions:
a) Eligibility and enrollment
b) Services to beneficiaries and participating providers
c) Coverage of benefits
d) Reporting
e) Financial requirements
f) Rules and Regulations
g) Plan initiatives
h) Quality, appropriateness, timeliness and cost of services
i) Utilization
j) Fraud and abuse
k) Accessibility
l) Grievances and Complaint handling
m) Information Systems
n) Electronic standards, security and privacy compliance as
provided by HIPAA to include review of timetables for
compliance and implementation plans
o) Such aspects which the ADMINISTRATION considers necessary in
order to evaluate full compliance with this contract.
3. The evaluation process will be performed throughout the contract year
using specific evaluating parameters. All parameters will be derived
exclusively from the Request for Proposals, the INSURER's Proposal and
this contract. Each area/region will contain several parameters with
each parameter having a specific numeric value adding up a subtotal per
area/region and a total for the aggregate of all area/regions of
evaluation. Results will be presented in a Plan Compliance Evaluation
Report. The evaluating parameters will be presented to the INSURER
prior to commencement of the evaluation process.
4. The INSURER shall comply with the penalties set for each parameter
within the range of values predetermined by the ADMINISTRATION.
5. Compliance with the Plan Compliance Evaluation Program is of essence to
this contract and will be a determining factor in the renewal of this
contract. Failure to
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comply with compliance requirements or parameters may also result in
the termination of the contract as provided in Article XXXIII.
6. The ADMINISTRATION agrees to furnish the INSURER with the required Plan
Performance Evaluation Program prior to its implementation.
7. The INSURER, as an additional tool to assure the evaluation of the
insurance contract, agrees to abide, implement and develop the Health
Plan-Employer Data and Information Set (Hedis), as revised and
recommended by NCQA and in accordance with the time schedule, work plan
and other requirements established in Addendum XI of the RFP referring
to HEDIS DATA.
8. DEFAULT AND REMEDIES under PIan Compliance Program.
REMEDIES AVAILABLE TO THE ADMINISTRATION UNDER THE PLAN COMPLIANCE
PROGRAM FOR INSURER'S DEFAULTS
All of the listed remedies below may be exercised by the ADMINISTRATION
and are in addition to all other remedies available to the
ADMINISTRATION under this contract, by law or in equity, are joint and
several, and may be exercised concurrently or consecutively. Exercise
of any remedy in whole or in part does not limit the ADMINISTRATION in
exercising all or part of any remaining remedies.
Any particular default listed under subparagraph (a) to Q) below (which
is not intended to be exhaustive) may be subject, when applicable, to
any one or more of the following remedies:
- Terminate the contract if the applicable conditions set forth
in Section 10.1 are met;
- Suspend payment to INSURER;
- Recommend to CMS that sanctions be taken against INSURER as
set out in Section 10.7;
- Remove the EPSDT's component from the capitation paid to
INSURER if the benchmarks(s) missed is for EPSDT's;
- Assess civil monetary penalties as set out in section 10.8;
and/or
- Withhold premium payment.
DEFAULTS BY INSURER
a. FAILURE TO PERFORM AN ADMINISTRATIVE FUNCTION
Failure of INSURER to perform an administrative function is a default
under this contract. Administrative functions are any requirements
under this contract that are not direct delivery of health care
services. Administrative functions include
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claims payment; encounter data submission; filing any report when due;
cooperating in good faith with THE ADMINISTRATION, an entity acting on
behalf of THE ADMINISTRATION, or an agency authorized by statute or
law to require the cooperation of INSURER in carrying out an
administrative, investigative, or prosecutorial function of the
program; providing or producing records upon request; or entering into
contracts or implementing procedures necessary to carry out contract
obligations.
b. ADVERSE ACTION AGAINST INSURER BY PRICO
Termination or suspension of INSURER's PRICO Certificate of Authority
or any adverse action taken by PRICO that THE ADMINISTRATION determines
will affect the ability of INSURER to provide health care services to
beneficiaries is a default under this contract.
c. INSOLVENCY
Failure of INSURER to comply with Commonwealth solvency standards or
incapacity of INSURER to meet its financial obligations as they come
due is a default under this contract.
d. FAILURE TO COMPLY WITH FEDERAL LAWS AND REGULATIONS
Failure of INSURER to comply with the federal requirements for
Medicaid, including, but not limited to, federal law regarding
misrepresentation, fraud, or abuse; and, by incorporation, Medicare
standards, requirements, or prohibitions, is a default under this
contract.
The following events are defaults under this contract pursuant to 42
U.S.C. 1396b(m)(5), 1396u-2(e)(1)(A):
INSURER's substantial failure to provide medically necessary items and
services that are required under this contract to be provided to
beneficiaries;
INSURER's imposition of premiums or charges on beneficiaries in excess
of the premiums or charge permitted by federal law;
INSURER's acting to discriminate among beneficiaries on the basis of
their health status or requirements for health care services, including
expulsion or refusal to enroll an individual, except as permitted by
federal law, or engaging in any practice that would reasonably be
expected to have the effect of denying or discouraging enrollment with
INSURER by eligible individuals whose medical condition or history
indicates a need for substantial future medical services;
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INSURER's misrepresentation or falsification of information that is
furnished to CMS, THE ADMINISTRATION, a beneficiary, a potential
beneficiary, or a health care provider; .
INSURER's failure to comply with the physician incentive requirements
under 42 U.S.C. 1396b(m)(2)(A)(x); or
INSURER's distribution, either directly or through any agent or
independent contractor, of marketing materials that contain false or
misleading information, excluding materials previously approved by THE
ADMINISTRATION.
e. MISREPRESENTATION OR FRAUD
INSURER's misrepresentation or fraud with respect of any provision of
this contract is a default under this contract.
f. EXCLUSION FROM PARTICIPATION IN MEDICARE OR MEDICAID
Exclusion of INSURER or any of the managing employees or persons with
an ownership interest whose disclosure is required by Section 1124(x)
of the Social Security Act (the Act) from the Medicaid or Medicare
program under the provisions of Section 1128(x) and/or (b) of the Act
is a default under this contract.
Exclusion of any provider or subcontractor or any of the managing
employees or persons with an ownership interest of the provider or
subcontractor whose disclosure is required by Section 1124(x) of the
Social Security Act (the Act) from the Medicaid or Medicare program
under the provisions of Section 1128(x) and/or (b) of the Act is a
default under this contract if the exclusion will materially affect
INSURER's performance under this contract.
g. FAILURE TO MAKE PAYMENTS TO NETWORK PROVIDERS AND SUBCONTRACTORS
INSURER's failure to make timely and appropriate payments to network
providers and subcontractors is a default under this contract.
h. FAILURE TO MONITOR AND/OR SUPERVISE ACTIVITIES OF CONTRACTORS OR
NETWORK PROVIDERS
Failure of INSURER to audit, monitor, supervise, or enforce functions
delegated by contract to another entity that results in a default under
this contract or constitutes a violation of state or federal laws,
rules, or regulations is a default under this contract.
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Failure of INSURER to properly credential its providers, conduct
reasonable utilization review, or conduct quality monitoring is a
default under this contract.
Failure of INSURER to require providers and contractors to provide
timely and accurate encounter, financial, statistical and utilization
data is default under this contract.
i. PLACING THE HEALTH AND SAFETY OF BENEFICIARIES IN JEOPARDY
INSURER's placing the health and safety of the beneficiaries in
jeopardy is a default under this contract.
j. FAILURE TO MEET ESTABLISHED BENCHMARK
Failure of INSURER to repeatedly meet any benchmark established by THE
ADMINISTRATION under this contract is a default under this contract.
9. NOTICE OF DEFAULT AND CURE OF DEFAULT WHEN APPLICABLE
THE ADMINISTRATION will provide INSURER with written notice of default
(Notice of Default) under this contract. The Notice of Default may be
given by any means that provides verification of receipt. The Notice of
Default must contain the following information:
(i) A clear and concise statement of the circumstances or
conditions that constitute a default under this contract;
(ii) The contract provisions) under which default is being
declared;
(iii) A clear and concise statement of how and/or whether the
default may be cured;
(iv) A clear and concise statement of the time period during which
INSURER, when applicable, may cure the default;
(v) The remedy or remedies THE ADMINISTRATION is electing to
pursue and when the remedy or remedies will take effect;
(vi) If THE ADMINISTRATION is electing to impose civil monetary
penalties, the amount that THE ADMINISTRATION intends to
withhold or impose and the factual basis on which THE
ADMINISTRATION. is imposing the chosen remedy or remedies;
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(vii) Whether any part of a civil monetary penalty, if THE
ADMINISTRATION elects to pursue these remedy, may be passed through
to an individual or entity who is or may be responsible for the act
or omission for which default is declared;
(viii) Whether failure to cure the default within the given time
period, if any, will result in THE ADMINISTRATION pursuing an
additional remedy or remedies, including, but not limited to,
additional sanctions, referral for investigation or action by
another agency, and/or termination of the contract.
10. EXPLANATION OF REMEDIES
10.1 TERMINATION
10.1.1 TERMINATION BY THE ADMINISTRATION
THE ADMINISTRATION may terminate this contract if:
10.1.1.1 INSURER substantially fails or refuses to provide payment for or
access to medically necessary services and items that are required
under this contract to be provided to beneficiaries after notice
and opportunity to cure;
10.1.1.2 INSURER substantially fails or refuses to perform administrative
functions under this contract after notice and opportunity to cure;
10.1.1.3 INSURER materially defaults under any of the provisions of Article
XVI;
10.1.1.4 Federal or Commonwealth funds for the Medicaid program are no
longer available; or
10.1.1.5 THE ADMINISTRATION has a reasonable belief that INSURER has placed
the health or welfare of beneficiaries in jeopardy.
10.1.2 THE ADMINISTRATION must give INSURER 30 days written notice of
intent to terminate this contract if termination is the result of
INSURER's substantial failure or refusal to perform administrative
functions or a material default as established in Article XXXIII.
10.1.3 THE ADMINISTRATION may, when termination is due to INSURER's
substantial failure or refusal to provide payment for or access to
medically necessary services and items, notify INSURER's
beneficiaries of any hearing requested by INSURER. Additionally, if
THE ADMINISTRATION terminates for this reason, THE ADMINISTRATION
may enroll
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INSURER's beneficiaries with another INSURER or permit INSURER's
beneficiaries to receive Medicaid-covered services other than from
an INSURER.
10.1.4 INSURER must continue to perform services under the transition plan
described in Section 10.2.1 if the termination is for any reason
other than THE ADMINISTRATION's reasonable belief that INSURER is
placing the health and safety of the beneficiaries in jeopardy. If
termination is due to this reason, THE ADMINISTRATION may prohibit
INSURER's further performance of services under the contract.
10.1.5 If THE ADMINISTRATION terminates this contract, INSURER may appeal
the termination under Article VI Section 12 Law 72 September 7,
1993, as amended.
10.1.9 TERMINATION BY MUTUAL CONSENT
This contract may be terminated at any time by mutual consent of
both INSURER and THE ADMINISTRATION.
10.2 DUTIES OF CONTRACTING PARTIES UPON TERMINATION BY REASON OF DEFAULT
When termination of the contract occurs by reason of default, THE
ADMINISTRATION and INSURER must meet the following obligations:
10.2.1 THE ADMINISTRATION and INSURER must prepare a transition plan,
which is acceptable to and approved by THE ADMINISTRATION, to
ensure that beneficiaries are reassigned to other plans without
interruption of services. That transition plan will be implemented
during the 90-day period between receipt of notice and the
termination date unless termination is the result of THE
ADMINISTRATION's reasonable belief that INSURER is placing the
health or welfare of beneficiaries in jeopardy.
10.2.2.2 INSURER is responsible for all expenses related to giving notice
to beneficiaries; and
10.2.2.3 INSURER is responsible for all expenses incurred by THE
ADMINISTRATION in implementing the transition plan.
10.2.2.4 If the contract is terminated by mutual consent:
10.2.3.1 THE INSURER is responsible for notifying all beneficiaries of the
date of termination and how beneficiaries can continue to receive
contract services and the provisions of Article XXXIV shall apply.
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10.3-10.6
10.7 RECOMMENDATION TO CMS THAT SANCTIONS BE TAKEN AGAINST INSURER
10.7.1 If CMS determines that INSURER has violated federal law or
regulations and that federal payments will be withheld, THE
ADMINISTRATION will deny and withhold payments for new enrollees of
INSURER.
10.7.2 INSURER must be given notice and opportunity to appeal a decision
of THE ADMINISTRATION and CMS pursuant to 42 CFR 434.67.
10.8 CIVIL MONETARY PENALTIES
10.8.1 The Administration may impose monetary penalties according to
Article XXXVI, Section 4.
10.9
10.10 REVIEW OF REMEDY OR REMEDIES TO BE IMPOSED
10.10.1 INSURER may dispute the notice by the ADMINISTRATION that
ADMINISTRATION intends to impose any sanction under this contract.
INSURER may notify THE ADMINISTRATION of its objections by filing a
written response to the Notice of Default, clearly stating the
reason INSURER disputes the proposed sanction. With the written
response, INSURER must submit to THE ADMINISTRATION any
documentation that supports INSURER's position. INSURER must file
the review within fifteen (15) days from INSURER's receipt of the
Notice of Default as provided in Article XXXIII, subparagraph 2.
Filing a dispute in a written response to the Notice of Default
suspends imposition of the proposed sanction.
10.10.2 INSURER and THE ADMINISTRATION must attempt to informally resolve
the dispute. If INSURER and THE ADMINISTRATION are unable to
informally resolve the dispute THE ADMINISTRATION will make the
remedy final.
ARTICLE XVIII
PAYMENT OF PREMIUMS
1. The payment for the first month of coverage under this contract will be
made upon the certification by the INSURER that it has complied with
all the terms and conditions contained in this contract to the
satisfaction of the ADMINISTRATION.
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For subsequent months the ADMINISTRATION shall pay to the INSURER the
corresponding monthly premium within the first five (5) working days of
the month of coverage, upon submission by the INSURER of an invoice
containing the list of the beneficiaries enrolled for the month of the
invoice.
2. The monthly premium calculation for beneficiaries not enrolled for the
full month shall be determined on a pro-rata basis by dividing the
corresponding monthly premium amount by the number of days in the month
and multiplying the result by the number of days the beneficiary was
actually enrolled.
3. The monthly premiums for the months comprised within the contract term
and covered by this contract are as follows:
a) For all beneficiaries including all those who are sixty-five
(65) years and older who are Medicare beneficiaries with Part
A or Parts A and B and those who are sixty-five years and
older who are not Medicare recipients:
1) Per member per month rate (PMPM) (Beneficiary)
established at FIFTY FIVE DOLLARS AND TWENTY FIVE
CENTS ($55.25).
4. The per member per month rate (PMPM) herein agreed provides far:
a) The billing by providers to Medicare for services rendered to
beneficiaries who are also Medicare recipients. The INSURER
will not cover deductibles or co-insurance of Part A, but will
cover deductibles and co-insurance of Part B of Medicare,
except for deductibles and co-insurance for outpatient
services provided in hospital setting, other than physician
services.
b) The recognition as a covered reimbursable Medicare Program
cost as bad debts by reason of non-payment of Part A
deductibles and/or coinsurance, and for deductibles and
co-insurance for outpatient services provided in hospital
setting under Medicare Part B, other than physician services.
c) Pharmacy coverage for beneficiaries who are also Part A and
Part A and B Medicare recipients, as long as the benefits are
accessed through the PCP, HCOs, HCO's network of participating
providers or the INSURER's participating providers and the
prescription is issued by a participating provider of the
INSURER.
d) Dental coverage for beneficiaries who are also Part A and Part
A and B Medicare recipients, the INSURER's participating
providers.
e) All benefits included in ADDENDUM I that are not covered under
Medicare Part A or Part B.
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5. The INSURER shall not, at any time, increase the rate agreed in the
contract nor reduce the benefits agreed to as defined in ADDENDUM I of
this contract.
6. The INSURER guarantees the ADMINISTRATION that the rate and any
applicable deductibles or co-payments constitute full payment for the
benefits contracted under the plan, and that participating providers
cannot collect any additional amount from the beneficiaries. Balance
billing is expressly prohibited.
Upon a determination made by the ADMINISTRATION that the INSURER or its
agents that the INSURER has engaged in balance billing, the
ADMINISTRATION will proceed to enforce provisions as established in
Article XXXVI.
7. The INSURER understands that the payment of premium by the
ADMINISTRATION and the INSURER's payments to its HCOs, HCO's network of
participating providers and INSURER's participating providers, shall be
considered as full and complete payment for all services rendered
except for the deductibles established in ADDENDUM I of the contract
herein.
8. For those Medicare beneficiaries with Part A, any recovery by the
provider for Part A deductibles and/or co-insurance will be made
exclusively through the Medicare Part A Program as bad debts. In this
instance, beneficiaries would neither pay any reimbursement for
rendered services to a participating provider nor pay the deductibles
included IN ADDENDUM 1 of this contract.
9. For those Medicare beneficiaries with Part B, any recovery by the
participating provider for Part B deductibles and/or co-insurance,
other than services provided on an outpatient basis to hospital
clinics, will be made through the INSURER and/or the HCOs. In this
instance, beneficiaries would neither pay any reimbursement for
rendered services to a participating provider nor pay the deductibles
included in ADDENDUM I of this contract.
10. Co-insurance and deductible for Part B services provided on an
outpatient basis to hospital clinics, other than physician services,
will be considered as a covered bad debt reimbursement item under the
Medicare program cost. In this instance, the INSURER will pay for the
co-insurance and deductibles related to the physician services
provided as a Part B service, through the capitation paid to the HCO.
11. Newborns shall be immediately covered by the INSURER if born to an
eligible individual and/or family unit as defined herein the Medicaid
Commonwealth Plan, the law and its regulations.
12. The INSURER understands that if the Federal Government submits an
alternative to the agreement hereof that is more cost effective and for
the benefit of the Government of Puerto Rico, the ADMINISTRATION along
with the
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INSURER shall renegotiate the coverage for Medicare beneficiaries with
Part A or Part A and B.
13. The INSURER certifies that the monthly billing submitted to the
ADMINISTRATION includes all beneficiaries, who have been issued an
identification card and for which payment of premiums are due either on
a monthly or pro-rated basis. The ADMINISTRATION will not accept any
new billing once the monthly billing is submitted by the INSURER to the
ADMINISTRATION, unless there is a justifiable reason for the omission.
14. If any differences arise in the ADMINISTRATION's payment of premiums to
the INSURER, the latter will proceed to analyze the differences between
the original billing submitted by the INSURER and the amount paid by
the ADMINISTRATION. The INSURER will proceed, after proper analysis, to
submit to the ADMINISTRATION a diskette as well as all relevant
documentation that supports and details the INSURER's claim not later
than thirty (30) working days after payment is made to the INSURER by
the ADMINISTRATION. Once this term has ended, the INSURER waives its
right to claim any amounts from differences arising from the monthly
payment made by the ADMINISTRATION and releases the ADMINISTRATION from
any and all obligation to pay any additional premiums, including
differences to billing by more than one insurer. During the following
one hundred and twenty (120) days the ADMINISTRATION will confirm the
validity of the claim and make payment thereof.
ARTICLE XIX
ACTUARIAL REQUIREMENTS
1. For the purpose of determining future premiums, the loss experience of
this contract shall be based exclusively on the results of the cost of
health care services provided to the beneficiaries covered under this
contract. The INSURER shall maintain all the utilization and financial
data related to this contract duly segregated from its regular
accounting system including, but not limited to the General Ledger and
the necessary Accounting Registers classified by the Area/Region
subject to this contract.
2. Administrative expenses to be included in determining the experience of
the program are those directly related to this contract. Separate
allocations of expenses from the INSURER's regular business, INSURER's
related companies, INSURER's parent company or other entities will be
reflected or made a part of the financial and accounting records
described in the preceding section.
3. Any pooling of operating expenses with other of the INSURER's groups,
cost shifting, financial consolidation or the implementation of other
combined financial measures is expressly forbidden.
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4. Amounts paid for claims or encounters resulting from services
determined to be medically unnecessary by the INSURER will not be
considered in the contract's experience.
5. The INSURER shall provide the ADMINISTRATION every month with a Premium
Disbursement Illustration. Said illustration shall present the
distribution of the capitation, claim expenses by coverage, reserves,
administrative expenses and premium distributions as referred and
contained in the RFP's Actuarial Reports formats. Failure to comply
with the requirements contained herein will be sufficient cause for the
imposition against the INSURER of the penalty provided for in Article
XXXVI of this contract.
6. The determination by the INSURER as to the payment of the capitation
fee and as to any other payments by virtue of this contract will be
computed on an actuarially sound basis.
7. The INSURER will provide to the ADMINISTRATION, on a monthly basis, the
actuarial data, premium distribution, and reports as contained in the
RFP's Actuarial Report formats. Failure to comply with the requirements
contained herein will be sufficient cause for the imposition against
the INSURER of the penalty provided for in Article XXXVI of this
contract.
ARTICLE XX
PREVENTIVE MEDICINE PROGRAM
1. The Department of Health will provide for and effectively implement a
preventive medicine program with primary emphasis on public health
education which will include, but will not be limited to, guidance on
lifestyles, AIDS, drug abuse, cancer and mother and child care. This is
typically referred to as Primary Prevention. The INSURER will
collaborate with the Department of Health and provide for a preventive
medicine program with primary emphasis on the provision of clinical
services in support of the Preventive Medicine Program, including but
not limited to, screening and education of individual patients, such as
PAP Smears, colorectal screening mammograms and cholesterol screening
as indicated by the best practices of medicine.
In cooperation with the INSURER, the Department of Health will develop
a surveillance methodology to identify compliance with this program.
2. The INSURER, through its secondary and tertiary Preventive Program,
will address, analyze and implement measures to provide effective
clinical and educational activities seeking to combat the specific
causes of morbidity and mortality in the Area/Region.
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3. The INSURER will develop and effectively implement a case management
system in order to monitor high risk cases and attend to the covered
health care needs of the beneficiaries, and dependents within said
category.
4. The INSURER represents that under its Preventive Program it will
contract, sufficient medical specialists and specialized teams in order
to combine the resources of the HCOs and the professional staff of the
HCOs, including but not limited to, health educators, nutritionists,
dieticians, nurses, other trained personnel and physicians who will act
as the team's educator, manager and coordinator.
5. The INSURER will be responsible to direct to a network of other
agencies and community resources serving each municipality within the
Area/Region so as to guarantee that participating providers and
beneficiaries are aware of and understand the available services in
their community and the process by which to access them.
6. The INSURER will assure that discharge of the mother and her baby from
the hospital is based upon sound clinical judgment determined by the
clinician.
7. The responsibilities of the INSURER in the Preventive Program will
include the following
a) A disease management program developed by the INSURER in
collaboration with the Department of Health which shall
develop standardized processes to address major public health
programs such as Asthma, Diabetes, Hypertension and Congestive
Heart Failure, among others. This program shall include
identification treatment protocols/guidelines and
surveillance/monitoring. In cooperation with the Department of
Health and the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) annual
reports will be published detailing the results.
b) A case management program which initially will be under the
responsibility of a nurse. Case management will not be limited
to the physician's offices or a determined center.
Coordination of the services provided is required within the
community and at the home of the beneficiary, if necessary.
c) An outreach program shall be developed in collaboration with
the Department of Health to target specific clinical issues as
identified by the Department of Health, for those
beneficiaries who cannot access those services. The clinical
standard shall conform to the published HEDIS measures. These
measures can be modified or supplemented by the Department of
Health.
d) The INSURER will assure that all pregnant women are screened
for alcohol use following the Department of Health Guidelines.
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e) The INSURER will assure that all pregnant women will obtain
counseling for the HIV test. All pregnant women who accept the
HIV test will be referred to the HIV Prevention and Detection
Program of the Department of Health. The participant provider
shall coordinate all referrals with the Department of Health.
Pre-natal care and HIV testing will continue to be covered
benefits under this contract.
f) The INSURER will assure that all pregnant women, following
the administration of the HIV test that reports a positive
result, are allowed to be treated under the guidelines for the
utilization of ZDV in pregnant women and neonatal infants to
reduce the risk of mother-infant HIV transmission, published
by the Department of Health.
g) The INSURER will assure that all pregnant women are properly
educated about the WIC Program. Those eligible individuals
will be referred to the WIC Program of the Department of
Health. It will be the immediate responsibility of the
participating providers to comply with all requirements in
order to arrange the referral to the WIC Program without any
cost to the patient.
h) The INSURER will assure that all providers comply with the
EPSDT (Early Periodic Screening Diagnosis and Treatment)
Program and the Guidelines for Adolescent Preventive Services
(GAPS) from the American Medical Association. The itinerary of
services that have to be rendered by providers will comply
with the EPSDT Itinerary Services Formats.
i) The INSURER will be responsible to develop and demonstrate its
strategy to meet the appropriate prevention program guidelines
as required by the Department of Health.
j) The INSURER will provide the ADMINISTRATION monthly reports
detailing all services rendered to mother and child classified
by age groups and listing the numbers of pregnant women that
have: (i) received prenatal care on each month in the
reporting period; (ii) counseled as to HIV testing; (iii)
referred to the HIV Prevention and Detection Program of the
Department of Health; and (iv) referred to the WIC Program.
k) The INSURER agrees to comply and assure that all participating
providers will comply with the federal and local laws referred
in Article XV paragraph (11) (g) of this contract. The INSURER
will assure the submission by the participating provider of
all the protocols and formats requested by the Department of
Health, Department of the Family, Department of Education and
Department of Justice as contained in the RFP formats.
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8. The INSURER will develop and effectively implement incentive-based
programs whereby the providers are motivated toward compliance with all
requirements of their Preventive Medicine Program such as EPSDT,
Immunizations, Prenatal care, reduction in cesarean sections, and other
related services.
9. The ADMINISTRATION shall evaluate these preventive programs through
HEDIS and other applicable performance standards.
10. The INSURER will provide the ADMINISTRATION quarterly reports needed by
the Department of Health detailing services rendered in the Preventive
Program described below.
11. The ADMINISTRATION shall have the right to audit the compliance with
these requirements as needed. Non-compliance shall be a determining
factor in non-renewal of this contract or breach thereof as defined in
Article of XXXIII.
ARTICLE XXI
MENTAL HEALTH PROGRAM
1. The INSURER shall direct beneficiaries to access Mental Health and
Substance Abuse benefits in coordination with the Mental Behavior
Healthcare Organization in the health region contracted by the
ADMINISTRATION and ASSMCA. The ASSMCA will monitor the Mental Health
and Substance Abuse Program provided through the MBHO contracted in the
Health Region/Area with sufficient specificity effectiveness in order
to provide for all mental health and substance abuse needs for all
eligible beneficiaries residing within the municipalities forming part
of said area.
2. The INSURER will abide with the ADMINISTRATION and ASSMCA's guidelines
for expediting access of beneficiaries to the mental health and
substance abuse benefits covered under the Health Insurance Program.
ARTICLE XXII
BENEFITS
1. The INSURER agrees to provide to the enrolled beneficiaries the
benefits included in ADDENDUM I of this contract. The benefits to be
provided under the program are divided in three types of coverage: 1)
the Basic Coverage that includes preventive, medical, hospital,
surgical, diagnostic tests, clinical laboratory tests, x-rays,
emergency room, ambulance, maternity and prescription drug services, 2)
Dental Coverage based on the right to choose one of the participating
dentists from the INSURER's network and 3) the Special Coverage that
includes benefits for catastrophic conditions, expensive procedures and
specialized diagnostic tests.
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2. The INSURER may not modify, change, limit, reduce, or otherwise alter
said benefits nor the agreed terms and conditions for their delivery
without the express written consent of the ADMINISTRATION.
3. The coverage for Medicare beneficiaries is established as follows:
(a) Beneficiaries with Part A of Medicare- The INSURER
will pay for all services not included in Part A of
Medicare, and included in the contract herein. The
INSURER will not pay the applicable Part A
deductibles and coinsurance.
(b) Beneficiaries with Part A and Part B of Medicare- The
INSURER will pay for prescription drugs prescribed by
PCP and dental coverage. The INSURER will not cover
the payment of the applicable Part A deductibles and
coinsurance, but will cover the payment of the
applicable Part B deductible and co-insurance.
(c) Access to services contemplated herein will be
through a selected HCO. Beneficiaries with Part A can
select from the Medicare's providers list, in which
case the benefits under this contract would not be
covered.
4. The Medicare beneficiary can select a Part A provider from the Medicare
Part A providers list, but has to select a HCO for Part B services for
beneficiaries with Part B services or Part B equivalent services for
beneficiaries without Part B of Medicare.
ARTICLE XXIII
CONVERSION CLAUSE
1. If during the term of this contract, the insurance coverage for a
beneficiary terminates because the beneficiary ceases to be eligible
and is dis-enrolled, such person has the right to receive a direct
payment policy from INSURER without submitting evidence of eligibility.
The direct payment policy will be issued by the INSURER without taking
into consideration pre-existing conditions or waiting periods. The
written request for a direct payment policy must be made, and the first
premium submitted to INSURER on or before thirty-one (31) days after
the date of disenrollment, bearing in mind that:
a) The direct payment policy should be an option of such person,
through any of the means which at that date INSURER has
currently made available according to the age and benefits
requested. It will be subject to the terms and conditions of
the direct payment policy.
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b) The premium for the direct payment policy will be in
accordance with the rate then in effect at INSURER, applicable
to the form and benefits of the direct payment policy, in
accordance with the risk category the person falls in at the
moment, and the age reached on the effective date of the
direct payment policy. The health condition at the moment of
conversion will have no bearing in the eligibility nor will it
be an acceptable base for the risk classification.
c) The direct payment policy should also provide for coverage to
any other individual, if these were considered eligible
beneficiaries at the termination date of the health insurance
under this contract. Under option by INSURER, a separate
direct payment policy may be issued to cover the other
individuals who formerly were eligible beneficiaries.
d) The direct payment policy will be effective upon termination
of coverage under the health insurance contracted.
e) INSURER will not be obligated to issue a direct payment policy
covering a person who has the right to receive similar
services provided by any insurance coverage or under the
Medicare Program of the Federal Social Security legislation,
as subsequently amended, if such benefits, jointly provided
under the direct payment policy, result in an excess of
coverage (over insurance), according to the standards of the
INSURER.
2. When coverage under this contract terminates due to the expiration of
its term, all persons formerly considered eligible beneficiaries, who
have been insured for a period of three (3) years prior to the
termination date, will be eligible for a INSURER direct payment policy,
subject to the conditions and limitations stipulated in clause 1 of
this section.
3. Subject to the conditions and limitations stipulated in clause 1 of
this section, the conversion privilege will be granted:
a) to all eligible beneficiaries whose coverage under the health
insurance contracted is terminated because they cease to be
eligible beneficiaries and are disenrolled.
b) to any eligible beneficiary whose coverage under the health
insurance contracted ceases because he no longer qualifies as
an eligible beneficiary, regardless of the fact that the
principal subscriber and/or any other eligible beneficiary
continues covered by said health insurance coverage under this
contract.
4. In case an eligible beneficiary under this contract suffers a loss
covered by the direct payment policy, described in clause 1 of this
section, during the period he/she would have qualified for a direct
payment policy and before the said direct
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payment policy is in effect, the benefits which he/she would have a
right to collect under such direct payment policy will be paid as a
claim under the direct payment policy, subject to having requested the
direct payment policy and the payment of the first premium.
5. If any eligible beneficiary under this contract subsequently acquires
the right to obtain a direct payment policy, under the terms and
conditions of the INSURER's policies without providing evidence of
qualifications for such insurance, subject to the request and payment
of the first premium during the period specified in the policy; and if
this person is not notified of the existence of this right, at least
fifteen (15) days prior to the expiration of such period, such person
will be granted an additional period during which time he/she can claim
his/her right, none of the above implying the continuation of a policy
for a period longer than stipulated in said policy. The additional
period will expire fifteen (15) days after the person is notified, but
in no case will it be extended beyond sixty (60) days after the
expiration date of the policy. Written notification handed to the
person or mailed to the last known address of the person, as
acknowledged by the policy holder, will be considered as notification,
for the purposes of this paragraph. If an additional period is granted
for the right of conversion as hereby provided, and if the written
application for direct payment, enclosed with the first premium
payment, is made during the additional period, the effective date of
the direct payment policy will be the termination of the health
insurance coverage under this contract.
6. Subject to the other conditions expressed before, the eligible
beneficiaries will have the right to conversion, up to one of the
following dates:
a) date of termination of his/her eligibility under this
contract; or
b) termination date of this contract; or
c) date of amendment of this contract, if said amendment in any
way eliminates the beneficiaries' eligibility.
ARTICLE XXIV
TRANSACTIONS WITH THE INSURER
1. All transactions between the ADMINISTRATION and the INSURER shall be
handled according to the terms and conditions set forth in this
contract.
2. The INSURER shall appoint a person that shall be responsible for all
transactions with the ADMINISTRATION.
3. All eligibility transactions shall be coordinated on a daily basis.
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ARTICLE XXV
NON-CANCELLATION CLAUSE
The INSURER may not cancel this contract, or make modifications to it for any
reason, or otherwise change, restrict or reduce the insurance or the benefits,
except for nonpayment of premiums.
ARTICLE XXVI
APPLICABLE LAW
The Request for Proposal that originated this contract, the Proposal submitted
by the INSURER, this contract and/or any other document or provision
incorporated to it by reference, shall be interpreted and construed according to
the laws of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico. If any controversy may arise
regarding the interpretation or performance of this contract, the parties
voluntary submit for its resolution to the jurisdiction of the Superior Court of
the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, San Xxxx Part.
ARTICLE XXVII
EFFECTIVE DATE AND TERM
1. This contract shall be in effect for nine months, starting at 12:01 AM,
Puerto Rico time on October 1, 2001, the first day that coverage begins
and payment of the premium is due.
2. This contract may not be assigned, transferred or pledged by the
INSURER without the express written consent of the ADMINISTRATION.
3. This contract may be extended by the ADMINISTRATION, upon acceptance by
the INSURER, for any subsequent period of time if deemed in the best
interest of the beneficiaries, the ADMINISTRATION, and the Government
of Puerto Rico.
ARTICLE XXVIII
CONFLICT OF INTEREST
Any officer, director, employee or agent of the ADMINISTRATION, the Government
of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, its municipalities or corporations cannot be
part of this contract or derive any economic benefit that may arise from its
execution.
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ARTICLE XXIX
INCOME TAXES
The INSURER certifies and guarantees that at the time of execution of this
contract, 1) it is a corporation duly authorized to conduct business in Puerto
Rico and that has filed income tax returns for the previous five (5) years; 2)
that it complied with and paid unemployment insurance tax, disability insurance
tax (Law 139), social security for drivers ("seguro social choferil"), if
applicable); 3) filed State Department reports, during the five (5) years
preceding this contract and 4) that it does not owe any kind of taxes to the
Commonwealth of Puerto Rico.
ARTICLE XXX
ADVANCE DIRECTIVES
The INSURER agrees to enforce and require compliance by all applicable
participating providers with 42 CFR 434, Part 489, Subpart I relating to
maintaining written policies and procedures respecting advance directives. This
requirement includes provisions to inform and distribute written information to
adult individuals concerning policies on advance directives, including a
description of applicable Commonwealth law.
ARTICLE XXXI
OWNERSHIP AND THIRD PARTY TRANSACTIONS
The INSURER shall report ownership, control interest, and related information to
the ADMINISTRATION, and upon request, to the Secretary of the Department of
Health and Human Services, the Inspector General of the Department of Health and
Human Services, and the Comptroller General of the United States, in accordance
with Sections 1124 and 1903 (m)(4) of the Federal Social Security Act.
ARTICLE XXXII
MODIFICATION OF CONTRACT
If the ADMINISTRATION finds that, because of amendments to Law 72 of September
7, 1993, or by reason of other subsequent Federal or local legislative changes
that affect this contract, or because of any reasons deemed by the
ADMINISTRATION to be in the best interest of the Government of Puerto Rico in
carrying out the provisions of Law 72 of September 7, 1993, or in order to
perform experiments and demonstration projects pursuant to legislative
enactment, modification of this contract is necessary, the ADMINISTRATION may
modify any of the requirements, terms and conditions, functions, part thereof or
any other services to be performed by the INSURER. Prior to any such
modification, the ADMINISTRATION shall afford the INSURER an opportunity to
consult and participate in planning for adjustments which might be necessary and
thereafter provide the INSURER written notice that the modification is to be
made within
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ninety (90) days after a date specified in the notice. Said modifications will
take place after consultation and cost negotiation with the INSURER.
ARTICLE XXXIII
TERMINATION OF AGREEMENT
1. If the ADMINISTRATION finds, after reasonable notice and opportunity
for a hearing to the INSURER the INSURER has failed substantially to
carry out the material terms and conditions of this contract, the
ADMINISTRATION may terminate this contract at any time, as provided in
Section 10.1, above.
2. In the event that there is non-compliance by the INSURER with any
specific clause of this contract, the ADMINISTRATION will notify the
INSURER in writing, indicating the area/region(s) of non-compliance.
The INSURER will be granted the opportunity to present and discuss its
position regarding the issue within fifteen (15) days from the date of
the notification. After considering the allegations presented by the
INSURER following adequate hearing and the opportunity to present all
necessary evidence in support of its position, and the ADMINISTRATION
formally determines that there is a non-compliance, at the discretion
of the ADMINISTRATION, this contract may be cancelled by giving thirty
(30) days prior written notice before the effective date of
cancellation.
3. In the event that the INSURER does not remedy, correct or cure the
material deficiencies noted in the Plan Compliance Evaluation Report,
as provided for in Article XVII of this contract, and following the
opportunity of an adequate hearing and the presentation of evidence in
support of its position, and the ADMINISTRATION confirms the
deficiency, then at the discretion of the ADMINISTRATION this contract
may be cancelled by giving thirty (30) days prior notice.
4. If the INSURER were to be declared insolvent, files for bankruptcy or
is placed under liquidation, the ADMINISTRATION shall have the option
to cancel and immediately terminate this contract. In the event of this
happening an enrollee will not be liable for payments under this
contract.
5. In the event that this contract is terminated, the INSURER shall
promptly provide the ADMINISTRATION all necessary information for the
reimbursement of any pending and outstanding Claims. The INSURER hereby
recognizes that in the event of termination under this Article it shall
be bound to provide reasonable cooperation to the ADMINISTRATION beyond
the date of termination in order to properly effect the transition to
the new INSURER taking over the region covered by this Contract. This
obligation to reasonably cooperate shall survive the date of said
effective termination provided, at the ADMINISTRATION' discretion.
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6. The INSURER agrees and recognizes that in the event there are no
sufficient enough funds designated for the payment of premium, the
ADMINISTRATION reserves the right to terminate this contract, effective
ninety (90) days after prior written notification.
ARTICLE XXXIV
PHASE-OUT CLAUSE
In the event that the contract is terminated, the INSURER will continue to
provide services for a reasonable term to guarantee the continuance of services
until the ADMINISTRATION has made adequate arrangements to continue the
rendering of health care benefits to beneficiaries. The duration of such term
will not exceed sixty (60) days and the PMPM shall be agreed upon by the INSURER
and the ADMINISTRATION.
Upon the expiration of the contract, the INSURER will provide the ADMINISTRATION
with the historical/utilization data of services rendered to beneficiaries in
the area/region, in order to prevent fraud and double billing of services by the
incoming INSURER.
Any INSURER phasing out of a Health Region will guarantee payment for services
rendered to beneficiaries under the previous contract. Failure to do so, shall
entail in accordance with the fair hearing process established on Article
XXXIII, the retention of a determined amount of premium payment of INSURER's
Health Region Contract. The amount to be retained shall be sufficient to cover
the amount owed.
ARTICLE XXXV
THIRD PARTY DISCLAIMER
None of the obligations, covenants, duties, and responsibilities incurred or
assumed under the present Contract, the Request For Proposal, Proposal, the
representations and assurances provided at the clarification meeting held on
June 11, 2001, by either: (I) the INSURER towards the ADMINISTRATION and any
governmental agencies, or (ii) the ADMINISTRATION towards the INSURER, shall be
deemed as the assumption by the INSURER or the ADMINISTRATION, as the case might
be, of any legal liability or responsibility towards a third party in the event
that a negligent or intentional injury, malpractice, damage or wrongdoing, or
any harm whatsoever is incurred by or caused by the HCOs, the HCO's network of
participating providers and/or the INSURER's participating providers.
ARTICLE XXXVI
PENALTIES AND SANCTIONS CLAUSES
1. In the event that the INSURER does not furnish the ADMINISTRATION with
any kind of monthly reports related to the gathering and reporting of
encounter information, the ADMINISTRATION may retain one monthly
premium for each
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month in default said retention to be effective for the subsequent
month after the default. Once the INSURER complies with said
requirement, the amount retained will be fully paid to the INSURER,
within five days after receiving the required reports for the
subsequent month.
2. In the event that the INSURER does not comply with its obligation
related to the monthly gathering and accurate reporting of encounter
information, according to Article XV of this contract, the
ADMINISTRATION may retain one monthly premium payable to the INSURER
for each month in default, provided:
a. the ADMINISTRATION gives, within ten (10) working days after
receipt of the monthly report, written notification by
certified mail, or personally hand delivers said notification
to the INSURER of the non-compliance and the reasons thereof;
and
b. the ADMINISTRATION grants ten (10) working days for the
INSURER to cure the default; and
c. the INSURER fails to correct it within said term.
Whenever as the above events take place, the ADMINISTRATION may retain
one monthly premium payment for each month in default. Retention will
be effective ten (10) working days after the notice of non-compliance.
Once the INSURER corrects the problem, at the satisfaction of the
ADMINISTRATION and according to Article XV of this contract, the amount
retained will be fully paid to the INSURER, within five days after
receiving full and complete reports for the subsequent month.
3. For the purpose of subparagraphs 1 and 2, above, default is defined as
the non-compliance by the INSURER of the reporting requirements
established for the gathering and reporting of encounter information as
established in Article XV of this contract, or when the INSURER does
not submit the reports within the established term set in this
contract.
4. A. Civil Monetary Penalties: In the event that there is a
non-compliance with Article VI, XII, XVI, XVII and/or with any specific
clause of this contract or the INSURER engages in any of the following
practices:
(a) Fails to substantially provide medically necessary
services to enrollees under this contract;
(b) imposes on enrollees premiums and charges in excess
of the ones permitted under this contract;
(c) discriminates, among enrollees on the basis of their
health status or requirements for health care (such
as terminating an enrollment or refusing to reenroll)
except as permitted under the Program or engages in
practices to discourage enrollment by recipients
whose medical condition or history indicates need for
substantial medical services;
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(d) misrepresents or falsifies information that is
furnished to CMS, to the ADMINISTRATION, to an
enrollee, potential enrollee or provider of services;
(e) distributes, directly or indirectly through any
agent, independent contractor, marketing material not
approved by the ADMINISTRATION, or that contains
false or misleading information;
(f) Fails to comply with the requirements for physician
incentive plans in section 1876 (i) (8) of the Social
Security Act, and at 42 CFR 417.479, or fails to
submit to the ADMINISTRATION its physician incentive
plans as requested in 42 CFR 434.70
The ADMINISTRATION will notify the INSURER in writing, the findings of
the violation and the impending intention to impose intermediate
sanctions for each violation which could consist of: monetary penalties
at the discretion of the Administration may range from five hundred
dollars $500 to twenty five thousand dollars $25,000; or the resolution
of the contract and temporary management; suspension, and/or
with-holding of premium payments, which may range from a percent
amount, or more than one monthly premium payments. The imposition of
sanctions will depend on the extent and severity of the actions.
At the sole discretion of the ADMINISTRATION and after affording the
INSURER due process to submit a corrective action as established in
paragraph (B), below, the ADMINISTRATION will deduct any amount it may
deem adequate from the premium payments or any other administrative
items of said payments.
The Office of the Inspector General may impose civil money penalties of
up to $25,000.00 in addition to, or in lieu of each determination by
the ADMINISTRATION, or CMS, for non-compliance conduct as set forth on
subparagraphs(a) through (f).
The Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services may seek the
enforcement of felony charges, for violation regarding subparagraph (b), above.
B. The INSURER will have the right to present and discuss its
position regarding the ADMINISTRATION'S finding within
thirty(30) days from the receipt of the notification. After
such period expires the Administration will issue its decision
regarding the contemplated sanctions which could be (i) let
stand the initial determination, (ii) modify the sanction or
(iii) eliminate the sanction if the Insurer has taken
affirmative corrective actions. Upon notifying the INSURER of
the final decision, if in disagreement, the INSURER will have
(30) days to request a hearing- before the Administration.
Upon the expiration of the thirty (30) days without invoking a
formal hearing, or after the celebration of a hearing and
after issuance of findings and recommendations of the hearing
examiner, the decision
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will then become final, subject to the appeal process provided
in section 12, Art. VI of Law 72, September 7,1993, as
amended.
C. The ADMINISTRATION, shall appoint temporary management only if
it finds that the INSURER has egregiously or repeatedly
engaged in any of the stated practices on paragraph (A) of
this article; or places a substantial risk on the health of
enrollees; or there is a need to assure the health of an
organization's enrollees during an orderly termination,
reorganization of the Insurer or while improvements are being
made to correct violations. The temporary management may not
be removed until the INSURER assures the ADMINISTRATION that
the violations will not recur.
5. If a contractor is found to be in non-compliance with the provisions
on ARTICLE VII concerning affiliation with debarred or suspended
individuals, the ADMINISTRATION:
a) Shall notify the Secretary of non-compliance;
b) May continue the existing contract with the Insurer, unless
the Secretary (in consultation with the Inspector General of
the Department of Health Services directs otherwise); and,
c) May not review or otherwise extend the duration of an existing
contract with the INSURER unless the Secretary (in
consultation with the Inspector General of the DHHS) provides
to the ADMINISTRATION and to Congress a written statement
describing compelling reasons that exist for renewing or
extending the contract.
6. Notwithstanding the provisions set in this Article, the
ADMINISTRATION reserves the right to terminate this contract, as
established in Article XXXIII.
ARTICLE XXXVII
HOLD HARMLESS CLAUSE
1. The INSURER warrants and agrees to indemnify and save harmless the
ADMINISTRATION from and against any loss or expense by reason of any
liability imposed by law upon the ADMINISTRATION and from and against
claims against the ADMINISTRATION for damages because of bodily
injuries, including death, at any time resulting therefrom, accidents
sustained by any person or persons on account of damage to property
arising out of or in consequence of the performance of this contract,
whether such injuries to persons or damage to property are due or
claimed to be due to any negligence of the INSURER, the INSURER's
participating providers, the HCOs, the HCO's network of participating
providers, their agents, servants, or employees or of any other person.
3. The INSURER warrants and agrees to purchase insurance coverage to
include Contractual Liability Coverage incorporating the obligations
herein assumed by
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the INSURER with limits of liability which shall not be less than one
(1) million dollars with said insurance coverage providing for the
INSURER's obligation and the insurance company of INSURER to defend
and appear on behalf of the ADMINISTRATION in any and all claims or
suits which may be brought against the ADMINISTRATION on account of the
obligations herein assumed by the INSURER.
ARTICLE XXXVIII
CENTER OF MEDICARE AND MEDICAID SERVICES CONTRACT
REQUIREMENTS
The ADMINISTRATION and INSURER agree and recognize that guidance and directives
from the Center of Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) are incorporated in
contracts subject to its approval, such as the present one, and that they
constitute binding obligations on the part of the INSURER.
ARTICLE XXXIX
FORCE MAJEURE
Whenever a period of time is herein prescribed for action to be taken by the
INSURER, the INSURER shall not be liable or responsible for, and there shall be
excluded from the computation for any such period of time, any delays due to
strikes, acts of God, shortages of labor or materials, war, terrorism,
governmental laws, regulations or restrictions or any other causes of any kind
whatsoever which are beyond the control of the INSURER.
ARTICLE XL
YEAR 2000 CLAUSE
The parties hereby assure that all hardware and software that it uses with
respect to this Agreement are Year 2000 Compliant in accordance to CMS's Year
Compliance definitions as stated in the RFP. The Parties acknowledge that this
provision is an essential condition to this Agreement.
ARTICLE XXLI
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT APPROVAL
Inasmuch as it is a requirement that the Center of Medicare and Medicaid
Services (CMS) approves this contract in order to authorize the use of federal
funds to finance the health insurance contracted, the same may be subject to
modifications in order to incorporate or modify the terms and conditions of this
contract.
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2. Any provision of this contract which is in conflict with any Federal
Laws, Federal Medicaid Statutes, Health Insurance Portability and
Accountability Act, Federal Regulations, or CMS policy guidance, as
applicable, is hereby amended to conform to the provisions of those
laws, regulations, and Federal policy. Such amendment of the contract
will be effective on the effective date of the statutes or regulations
necessitating it, and will be binding on the parties even though such
amendment may not have been reduced to writing and formally agreed upon
and executed by the parties.
ARTICLE XLII
ACKNOWLEDGMENT AS TO INSURER
1. All responsibilities, obligations, assurances and representations,
made, taken, and assumed by the INSURER under this contract will be
fully, solely, and entirely assumed by the INSURER. Notwithstanding,
the ADMINISTRATION acknowledges that Triple-C will carry out the
responsibilities as to the administration and operational management of
the Health Insurance subject of this contract and that its officers are
authorized to represent Triple-S, Inc. in matters related to be carried
out.
2. The ADMINISTRATION acknowledges that the INSURER is in a corporate
reorganizational process. The INSURER will notify the ADMINISTRATION
the date when the reorganizational process is completed. The INSURER
represents that the reorganizational process shall not constituted an
assignment of this Contract.
ARTICLE XLIII
ENTIRE AGREEMENT
The parties agree that they accept, consent and promise to abide by each and
every one of the clauses contained in this contract and that the contract
contains the entire agreement between the parties and in order to acknowledge
so, they initial the margin of each of the pages and affix below their
respective signatures, in San Xxxx, Puerto Rico, this 14TH DAY OF SEPTEMBER,
2001.
PUERTO RICO HEALTH PLANS TRIPLE-S, INC
INSURANCE ADMINISTRATION
By /s/ XXXXX XXXXXX BOTTEY By /s/ XXXXXX XXXXXXX XXXXXX
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XXXXX XXXXXX BOTTEY XXXXXX XXXXXXX XXXXXX
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER
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