BILL REQ. #: H-3330.1
State of Washington | 63rd Legislature | 2014 Regular Session |
Read first time 01/20/14. Referred to Committee on Health Care & Wellness.
AN ACT Relating to pharmacies; and adding a new chapter to Title 48 RCW.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON:
NEW SECTION. Sec. 1 The definitions in this section apply
throughout this chapter unless the context clearly requires otherwise.
(1) "Claim" means a request from a pharmacy or pharmacist to be
reimbursed for the cost of filling or refilling a prescription for a
drug or for providing a medical supply or service.
(2) "Insurer" has the same meaning as in RCW 48.01.050.
(3) "Pharmacist" has the same meaning as in RCW 18.64.011.
(4) "Pharmacy" has the same meaning as in RCW 18.64.011.
(5)(a) "Pharmacy benefit manager" means a person that contracts
with pharmacies on behalf of an insurer, a third-party payor, or the
prescription drug purchasing consortium established under RCW 70.14.060
to:
(i) Process claims for prescription drugs or medical supplies or
provide retail network management for pharmacies or pharmacists;
(ii) Pay pharmacies or pharmacists for prescription drugs or
medical supplies; or
(iii) Negotiate rebates with manufacturers for drugs paid for or
procured as described in this subsection.
(b) "Pharmacy benefit manager" does not include a health care
service contractor as defined in RCW 48.44.010.
(6) "Third-party payor" means a person licensed under RCW
48.39.005.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 2 (1) To conduct business in this state, a
pharmacy benefit manager must register with the office of the insurance
commissioner and annually renew the registration.
(2) To register under this section, a pharmacy benefit manager
must:
(a) Submit an application to the office on a form prescribed by the
office by rule;
(b) Pay a registration fee, not to exceed two hundred dollars,
adopted by the office by rule.
(3) To renew a registration under this section, a pharmacy benefit
manager must pay a renewal fee, not to exceed two hundred dollars,
adopted by the office by rule.
(4) The office shall deposit all moneys collected under this
section into the insurance commissioner's regulatory account created in
RCW 48.02.190.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 3 As used in sections 3 through 9 of this act:
(1) "Audit" means an on-site or remote review of the records of a
pharmacy by or on behalf of an entity.
(2) "Clerical error" means a minor error:
(a) In the keeping, recording, or transcribing of records or
documents or in the handling of electronic or hard copies of
correspondence;
(b) That does not result in financial harm to an entity; and
(c) That does not involve dispensing an incorrect dose, amount or
type of medication, or dispensing a prescription drug to the wrong
person.
(3) "Entity" includes:
(a) A pharmacy benefit manager;
(b) An insurer;
(c) A third-party payor;
(d) A state agency; or
(e) A person that represents or is employed by one of the entities
described in this subsection.
(4) "Fraud" means knowingly and willfully executing or attempting
to execute a scheme, in connection with the delivery of or payment for
health care benefits, items, or services, that uses false or misleading
pretenses, representations, or promises to obtain any money or property
owned by or under the custody or control of any person.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 4 An entity that audits claims or an
independent third party that contracts with an entity to audit claims:
(1) Must establish, in writing, a procedure for a pharmacy to
appeal the entity's findings with respect to a claim and must provide
a pharmacy with a notice regarding the procedure, in writing or
electronically, prior to conducting an audit of the pharmacy's claims;
(2) May not conduct an audit of a claim more than twenty-four
months after the date the claim was adjudicated by the entity;
(3) Must give at least fifteen days' advance written notice of an
on-site audit to the pharmacy or corporate headquarters of the
pharmacy;
(4) May not conduct an on-site audit during the first five days of
any month without the pharmacy's consent;
(5) Must conduct the audit in consultation with a pharmacist who is
licensed by this or another state if the audit involves clinical or
professional judgment;
(6) May not conduct an on-site audit of more than two hundred fifty
unique prescriptions of a pharmacy in any twelve-month period except in
cases of alleged fraud;
(7) May not conduct more than one on-site audit of a pharmacy in
any twelve-month period;
(8) Must audit each pharmacy under the same standards and
parameters that the entity uses to audit other similarly situated
pharmacies;
(9) Must pay any outstanding claims of a pharmacy no more than
forty-five days after the earlier of the date all appeals are concluded
or the date a final report is issued under section 8(3) of this act;
(10) May not include dispensing fees or interest in the amount of
any overpayment assessed on a claim unless the overpaid claim was for
a prescription that was not filled correctly;
(11) May not recoup costs associated with:
(a) Clerical errors; or
(b) Other errors that do not result in financial harm to the entity
or a consumer; and
(12) May not charge a pharmacy for a denied or disputed claim until
the audit and the appeals procedure established under subsection (1) of
this section are final.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 5 An entity's finding that a claim was
incorrectly presented or paid must be based on identified transactions
and not based on probability sampling, extrapolation, or other means
that project an error using the number of patients served who have a
similar diagnosis or the number of similar prescriptions or refills for
similar drugs.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 6 An entity that contracts with an independent
third party to conduct audits may not:
(1) Agree to compensate the independent third party based on a
percentage of the amount of overpayments recovered; or
(2) Disclose information obtained during an audit except to the
contracting entity, the pharmacy subject to the audit, or the holder of
the policy or certificate of insurance that paid the claim.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 7 For purposes of sections 3 through 9 of this
act, an entity, or an independent third party that contracts with an
entity to conduct audits, must allow as evidence of validation of a
claim:
(1) An electronic or physical copy of a valid prescription if the
prescribed drug was, within fourteen days of the dispensing date:
(a) Picked up by the patient or the patient's designee;
(b) Delivered by the pharmacy to the patient; or
(c) Sent by the pharmacy to the patient using the United States
postal service or other common carrier;
(2) Point of sale electronic register data showing purchase of the
prescribed drug, medical supply, or service by the patient or the
patient's designee; or
(3) Electronic records, including electronic beneficiary signature
logs, electronically scanned and stored patient records maintained at
or accessible to the audited pharmacy's central operations, and any
other reasonably clear and accurate electronic documentation that
corresponds to a claim.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 8 (1)(a) After conducting an audit, an entity
must provide the pharmacy that is the subject of the audit with a
preliminary report of the audit. The preliminary report must be
received by the pharmacy no later than forty-five days after the date
on which the audit was completed and must be sent:
(i) By mail or common carrier with a return receipt requested; or
(ii) Electronically with electronic receipt confirmation.
(b) An entity shall provide a pharmacy receiving a preliminary
report under this subsection no fewer than forty-five days after
receiving the report to contest the report or any findings in the
report in accordance with the appeals procedure established under
section 4(1) of this act and to provide additional documentation in
support of the claim. The entity shall consider a reasonable request
for an extension of time to submit documentation to contest the report
or any findings in the report.
(2) If an audit results in the dispute or denial of a claim, the
entity conducting the audit shall allow the pharmacy to resubmit the
claim using any commercially reasonable method, including facsimile,
mail, or electronic mail.
(3) An entity must provide a pharmacy that is the subject of an
audit with a final report of the audit no later than sixty days after
the later of the date the preliminary report was received or the date
the pharmacy contested the report using the appeals procedure
established under section 4(1) of this act. The final report must
include a final accounting of all moneys to be recovered by the entity.
(4) Recoupment of disputed funds from a pharmacy by an entity or
repayment of funds to an entity by a pharmacy, unless otherwise agreed
to by the entity and the pharmacy, shall occur after the audit and the
appeals procedure established under section 4(1) of this act are final.
If the identified discrepancy for an individual audit exceeds forty
thousand dollars, any future payments to the pharmacy may be withheld
by the entity until the audit and the appeals procedure established
under section 4(1) of this act are final.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 9 Sections 3 through 9 of this act do not:
(1) Preclude an entity from instituting an action for fraud against
a pharmacy;
(2) Apply to an audit of pharmacy records when fraud or other
intentional and willful misrepresentation is evidenced by physical
review, review of claims data or statements, or other investigative
methods; or
(3) Apply to a state agency that is conducting audits or a person
that has contracted with a state agency to conduct audits of pharmacy
records for prescription drugs paid for by the state medical assistance
program.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 10 (1) As used in this section:
(a) "List" means the list of drugs for which maximum allowable
costs have been established.
(b) "Maximum allowable cost" means the maximum amount that a
pharmacy benefit manager will reimburse a pharmacy for the cost of a
drug.
(c) "Multiple source drug" means a therapeutically equivalent drug
that is available from at least two manufacturers.
(d) "Network pharmacy" means a retail drug outlet licensed as a
pharmacy under RCW 18.64.043 that contracts with a pharmacy benefit
manager.
(e) "Therapeutically equivalent" has the same meaning as in RCW
69.41.110.
(2) A pharmacy benefit manager:
(a) May not place a drug on a list unless there is at least one
therapeutically equivalent multiple source drug generally available for
purchase by network pharmacies from national or regional wholesalers;
(b) Shall ensure that all drugs on a list are generally available
for purchase by pharmacies in this state from national or regional
wholesalers;
(c) Shall ensure that all drugs on a list are not obsolete;
(d) Shall make available to each network pharmacy at the beginning
of the term of a contract, and upon renewal of a contract, the sources
utilized to determine the maximum allowable cost pricing of the
pharmacy benefit manager;
(e) Shall make a list available to a network pharmacy upon request
in a format that is readily accessible to and usable by the network
pharmacy;
(f) Shall update each list maintained by the pharmacy benefit
manager every seven business days and make the updated lists, including
all changes in the price of drugs, available to network pharmacies in
a readily accessible and usable format;
(g) Shall ensure that dispensing fees are not included in the
calculation of maximum allowable cost.
(3) A pharmacy benefit manager must establish a process by which a
network pharmacy may appeal its reimbursement for a drug subject to
maximum allowable cost pricing. A network pharmacy may appeal a
maximum allowable cost if the reimbursement for the drug is less than
the net amount that the network pharmacy paid to the supplier of the
drug. An appeal requested under this section must be completed within
thirty calendar days of the pharmacy making the claim for which an
appeal has been requested.
(4) A pharmacy benefit manager must provide as part of the appeals
process established under subsection (3) of this section:
(a) A telephone number at which a network pharmacy may contact the
pharmacy benefit manager and speak with an individual who is
responsible for processing appeals;
(b) A final response to an appeal of a maximum allowable cost
within seven business days; and
(c) If the appeal is denied, the reason for the denial and the
national drug code of a drug that may be purchased by similarly
situated pharmacies at a price that is equal to or less than the
maximum allowable cost.
(5)(a) If an appeal is upheld under this section, the pharmacy
benefit manager shall make an adjustment on the date that the pharmacy
benefit manager makes the determination. The pharmacy benefit manager
shall make the adjustment effective for all similarly situated
pharmacies in this state that are within the network.
(b) If the request for an adjustment has come from a critical
access pharmacy, as defined by the state health care authority by rule
for purposes related to the prescription drug purchasing consortium
established under RCW 70.14.060, the adjustment approved under (a) of
this subsection shall apply only to critical access pharmacies.
(6) This section does not apply to the state medical assistance
program.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 11 Sections 1 through 10 of this act
constitute a new chapter in Title