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The Florida Senate

1998 Florida Statutes

SECTION 51
Quality assurance program; second medical opinion requirement.

641.51  Quality assurance program; second medical opinion requirement.--

(1)  The organization shall ensure that the health care services provided to subscribers shall be rendered under reasonable standards of quality of care consistent with the prevailing standards of medical practice in the community.

(2)  Each organization shall have an ongoing internal quality assurance program for its health care services. The program shall include, but not be limited to, the following:

(a)  A written statement of goals and objectives which stress health outcomes as the principal criteria for the evaluation of the quality of care rendered to subscribers;

(b)  A written statement describing how state-of-the-art methodology has been incorporated into an ongoing system for monitoring of care which is individual case oriented and, when implemented, can provide interpretation and analysis of patterns of care rendered to individual patients by individual providers;

(c)  Written procedures for taking appropriate remedial action whenever, as determined under the quality assurance program, inappropriate or substandard services have been provided or services which should have been furnished have not been provided;

(d)  A written plan for providing review of physicians and other licensed medical providers which includes ongoing review within the organization.

(3)  The professional judgment of a physician licensed under chapter 458, chapter 459, chapter 460, or chapter 461 concerning the proper course of treatment of a subscriber shall not be subject to modification by the organization or its board of directors, officers, or administrators, unless the course of treatment prescribed is inconsistent with the prevailing standards of medical practice in the community. However, this subsection shall not be considered to restrict a utilization management program established by an organization.

(4)(a)  Each organization shall give the subscriber the right to a second medical opinion in any instance in which the subscriber disputes the organization's or the physician's opinion of the reasonableness or necessity of surgical procedures or is subject to a serious injury or illness.

(b)  The second opinion, if requested, is to be provided by a physician chosen by the subscriber who may select:

1.  A contract or employed physician listed in a directory that shall be provided by the organization; or

2.  A noncontract physician located in the same geographical service area of the organization.

(c)  For second opinions provided by contract physicians the organization is prohibited from charging a fee to the subscriber in an amount in excess of the subscriber fees established by contract for referral contract physicians. The organization shall pay the amount of all charges, which are usual, reasonable, and customary in the community, for second opinion services performed by a physician not under contract with the organization, but may require the subscriber to be responsible for up to 40 percent of such amount. The organization may require that any tests deemed necessary by a noncontract physician shall be conducted by the organization. The organization may deny reimbursement rights granted under this section in the event the subscriber seeks in excess of three such referrals per year if such subsequent referral costs are deemed by the organization to be evidence that the subscriber has unreasonably overutilized the second opinion privilege. A subscriber thus denied reimbursement under this section shall have recourse to grievance procedures as specified in ss. 1408.7056, 641.495, and 641.511. The organization's physician's professional judgment concerning the treatment of a subscriber derived after review of a second opinion shall be controlling as to the treatment obligations of the health maintenance organization. Treatment not authorized by the health maintenance organization shall be at the subscriber's expense.

(5)  Each organization shall develop and maintain a policy to determine when exceptional referrals to out-of-network specially qualified providers should be provided to address the unique medical needs of a subscriber. All financial arrangements for the provision of these services shall be agreed to prior to the services being rendered.

(6)  Each organization shall develop and maintain written policies and procedures for the provision of standing referrals to subscribers with chronic and disabling conditions which require ongoing specialty care.

(7)  Each organization shall allow subscribers to continue care for 60 days with a terminated treating provider when medically necessary, provided the subscriber has a life-threatening condition or a disabling and degenerative condition. Each organization shall allow a subscriber who is in the third trimester of pregnancy to continue care with a terminated treating provider until completion of postpartum care. The organization and the provider shall continue to be bound by the terms of the contract for such continued care. This subsection shall not apply to treating providers who have been terminated by the organization for cause.

(8)  Each organization shall release to the agency data which are indicators of access and quality of care. The agency shall develop rules specifying data-reporting requirements for these indicators. The indicators shall include the following characteristics:

(a)  They must relate to access and quality of care measures.

(b)  They must be consistent with data collected pursuant to accreditation activities and standards.

(c)  They must be consistent with frequency requirements under the accreditation process.

The agency shall develop by rule a uniform format for publication of the data for the public which shall contain explanations of the data collected and the relevance of such data. The agency shall publish such data no less frequently than every 2 years.

(9)  Each organization shall conduct a standardized customer satisfaction survey, as developed by the agency by rule, of its membership at intervals specified by the agency. The survey shall be consistent with surveys required by accrediting organizations and may contain up to 10 additional questions based on concerns specific to Florida. Survey data shall be submitted to the agency, which shall make comparative findings available to the public.

(10)  Each organization shall adopt recommendations for preventive pediatric health care consistent with early periodic screening, diagnosis, and treatment requirements developed for the Medicaid program. Each organization shall establish goals to achieve 80-percent compliance by July 1, 1998, and 90-percent compliance by July 1, 1999, for their enrolled pediatric population.

History.--ss. 21, 27, ch. 87-236; ss. 187, 188, ch. 91-108; ss. 85, 91, ch. 91-282; s. 4, ch. 91-429; s. 7, ch. 97-159.

1Note.--Substituted by the editors for a reference to s. 641.311 to conform to the transfer of s. 641.311 to s. 408.7056 pursuant to s. 76, ch. 93-129.