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Public Act 100-1117 |
SB0904 Enrolled | LRB100 06276 SMS 16313 b |
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AN ACT concerning regulation.
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Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
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represented in the General Assembly:
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Section 5. The Workers' Compensation Act is amended by |
changing Sections 8.2 and 8.2a as follows: |
(820 ILCS 305/8.2)
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Sec. 8.2. Fee schedule.
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(a) Except as provided for in subsection (c), for |
procedures, treatments, or services covered under this Act and |
rendered or to be rendered on and after February 1, 2006, the |
maximum allowable payment shall be 90% of the 80th percentile |
of charges and fees as determined by the Commission utilizing |
information provided by employers' and insurers' national |
databases, with a minimum of 12,000,000 Illinois line item |
charges and fees comprised of health care provider and hospital |
charges and fees as of August 1, 2004 but not earlier than |
August 1, 2002. These charges and fees are provider billed |
amounts and shall not include discounted charges. The 80th |
percentile is the point on an ordered data set from low to high |
such that 80% of the cases are below or equal to that point and |
at most 20% are above or equal to that point. The Commission |
shall adjust these historical charges and fees as of August 1, |
2004 by the Consumer Price Index-U for the period August 1, |
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2004 through September 30, 2005. The Commission shall establish |
fee schedules for procedures, treatments, or services for |
hospital inpatient, hospital outpatient, emergency room and |
trauma, ambulatory surgical treatment centers, and |
professional services. These charges and fees shall be |
designated by geozip or any smaller geographic unit. The data |
shall in no way identify or tend to identify any patient, |
employer, or health care provider. As used in this Section, |
"geozip" means a three-digit zip code based on data |
similarities, geographical similarities, and frequencies. A |
geozip does not cross state boundaries. As used in this |
Section, "three-digit zip code" means a geographic area in |
which all zip codes have the same first 3 digits. If a geozip |
does not have the necessary number of charges and fees to |
calculate a valid percentile for a specific procedure, |
treatment, or service, the Commission may combine data from the |
geozip with up to 4 other geozips that are demographically and |
economically similar and exhibit similarities in data and |
frequencies until the Commission reaches 9 charges or fees for |
that specific procedure, treatment, or service. In cases where |
the compiled data contains less than 9 charges or fees for a |
procedure, treatment, or service, reimbursement shall occur at |
76% of charges and fees as determined by the Commission in a |
manner consistent with the provisions of this paragraph. |
Providers of out-of-state procedures, treatments, services, |
products, or supplies shall be reimbursed at the lesser of that |
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state's fee schedule amount or the fee schedule amount for the |
region in which the employee resides. If no fee schedule exists |
in that state, the provider shall be reimbursed at the lesser |
of the actual charge or the fee schedule amount for the region |
in which the employee resides. Not later than September 30 in |
2006 and each year thereafter, the Commission shall |
automatically increase or decrease the maximum allowable |
payment for a procedure, treatment, or service established and |
in effect on January 1 of that year by the percentage change in |
the Consumer Price Index-U for the 12 month period ending |
August 31 of that year. The increase or decrease shall become |
effective on January 1 of the following year. As used in this |
Section, "Consumer Price Index-U" means the index published by |
the Bureau of Labor Statistics of the U.S. Department of Labor, |
that measures the average change in prices of all goods and |
services purchased by all urban consumers, U.S. city average, |
all items, 1982-84=100. |
(a-1) Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (a) and |
unless otherwise indicated, the following provisions shall |
apply to the medical fee schedule starting on September 1, |
2011: |
(1) The Commission shall establish and maintain fee |
schedules for procedures, treatments, products, services, |
or supplies for hospital inpatient, hospital outpatient, |
emergency room, ambulatory surgical treatment centers, |
accredited ambulatory surgical treatment facilities, |
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prescriptions filled and dispensed outside of a licensed |
pharmacy, dental services, and professional services. This |
fee schedule shall be based on the fee schedule amounts |
already established by the Commission pursuant to |
subsection (a) of this Section. However, starting on |
January 1, 2012, these fee schedule amounts shall be |
grouped into geographic regions in the following manner: |
(A) Four regions for non-hospital fee schedule |
amounts shall be utilized: |
(i) Cook County; |
(ii) DuPage, Kane, Lake, and Will Counties; |
(iii) Bond, Calhoun, Clinton, Jersey, |
Macoupin, Madison, Monroe, Montgomery, Randolph, |
St. Clair, and Washington Counties; and |
(iv) All other counties of the State. |
(B) Fourteen regions for hospital fee schedule |
amounts shall be utilized: |
(i) Cook, DuPage, Will, Kane, McHenry, DeKalb, |
Kendall, and Grundy Counties; |
(ii) Kankakee County; |
(iii) Madison, St. Clair, Macoupin, Clinton, |
Monroe, Jersey, Bond, and Calhoun Counties; |
(iv) Winnebago and Boone Counties; |
(v) Peoria, Tazewell, Woodford, Marshall, and |
Stark Counties; |
(vi) Champaign, Piatt, and Ford Counties; |
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(vii) Rock Island, Henry, and Mercer Counties; |
(viii) Sangamon and Menard Counties; |
(ix) McLean County; |
(x) Lake County; |
(xi) Macon County; |
(xii) Vermilion County; |
(xiii) Alexander County; and |
(xiv) All other counties of the State. |
(2) If a geozip, as defined in subsection (a) of this |
Section, overlaps into one or more of the regions set forth |
in this Section, then the Commission shall average or |
repeat the charges and fees in a geozip in order to |
designate charges and fees for each region. |
(3) In cases where the compiled data contains less than |
9 charges or fees for a procedure, treatment, product, |
supply, or service or where the fee schedule amount cannot |
be determined by the non-discounted charge data, |
non-Medicare relative values and conversion factors |
derived from established fee schedule amounts, coding |
crosswalks, or other data as determined by the Commission, |
reimbursement shall occur at 76% of charges and fees until |
September 1, 2011 and 53.2% of charges and fees thereafter |
as determined by the Commission in a manner consistent with |
the provisions of this paragraph. |
(4) To establish additional fee schedule amounts, the |
Commission shall utilize provider non-discounted charge |
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data, non-Medicare relative values and conversion factors |
derived from established fee schedule amounts, and coding |
crosswalks. The Commission may establish additional fee |
schedule amounts based on either the charge or cost of the |
procedure, treatment, product, supply, or service. |
(5) Implants shall be reimbursed at 25% above the net |
manufacturer's invoice price less rebates, plus actual |
reasonable and customary shipping charges whether or not |
the implant charge is submitted by a provider in |
conjunction with a bill for all other services associated |
with the implant, submitted by a provider on a separate |
claim form, submitted by a distributor, or submitted by the |
manufacturer of the implant. "Implants" include the |
following codes or any substantially similar updated code |
as determined by the Commission: 0274 |
(prosthetics/orthotics); 0275 (pacemaker); 0276 (lens |
implant); 0278 (implants); 0540 and 0545 (ambulance); 0624 |
(investigational devices); and 0636 (drugs requiring |
detailed coding). Non-implantable devices or supplies |
within these codes shall be reimbursed at 65% of actual |
charge, which is the provider's normal rates under its |
standard chargemaster. A standard chargemaster is the |
provider's list of charges for procedures, treatments, |
products, supplies, or services used to bill payers in a |
consistent manner. |
(6) The Commission shall automatically update all |
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codes and associated rules with the version of the codes |
and rules valid on January 1 of that year. |
(a-2) For procedures, treatments, services, or supplies |
covered under this Act and rendered or to be rendered on or |
after September 1, 2011, the maximum allowable payment shall be |
70% of the fee schedule amounts, which shall be adjusted yearly |
by the Consumer Price Index-U, as described in subsection (a) |
of this Section. |
(a-3) Prescriptions filled and dispensed outside of a |
licensed pharmacy shall be subject to a fee schedule that shall |
not exceed the Average Wholesale Price (AWP) plus a dispensing |
fee of $4.18. AWP or its equivalent as registered by the |
National Drug Code shall be set forth for that drug on that |
date as published in Medispan. |
(b) Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (a), if
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the Commission finds that there is a significant limitation on
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access to quality health care in either a specific field of
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health care services or a specific geographic limitation on
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access to health care, it may change the Consumer Price Index-U
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increase or decrease for that specific field or specific
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geographic limitation on access to health care to address that
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limitation. |
(c) The Commission shall establish by rule a process to |
review those medical cases or outliers that involve |
extra-ordinary treatment to determine whether to make an |
additional adjustment to the maximum payment within a fee |
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schedule for a procedure, treatment, or service. |
(d) When a patient notifies a provider that the treatment, |
procedure, or service being sought is for a work-related |
illness or injury and furnishes the provider the name and |
address of the responsible employer, the provider shall bill |
the employer or its designee directly. The employer or its |
designee shall make payment for treatment in accordance with |
the provisions of this Section directly to the provider, except |
that, if a provider has designated a third-party billing entity |
to bill on its behalf, payment shall be made directly to the |
billing entity. Providers and providers shall submit bills and |
records in accordance with the provisions of this Section. |
(1) All payments to providers for treatment provided |
pursuant to this Act shall be made within 30 days of |
receipt of the bills as long as the bill claim contains |
substantially all the required data elements necessary to |
adjudicate the bill bills . |
(2) If the bill claim does not contain substantially |
all the required data elements necessary to adjudicate the |
bill, or the claim is denied for any other reason, in whole |
or in part, the employer or insurer shall provide written |
notification to the provider in the form of an explanation |
of benefits , explaining the basis for the denial and |
describing any additional necessary data elements , to the |
provider within 30 days of receipt of the bill. The |
Commission, with assistance from the Medical Fee Advisory |
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Board, shall adopt rules detailing the requirements for the |
explanation of benefits required under this subsection. |
(3) In the case (i) of nonpayment to a provider within |
30 days of receipt of the bill which contained |
substantially all of the required data elements necessary |
to adjudicate the bill , (ii) of or nonpayment to a provider |
of a portion of such a bill , or (iii) where the provider |
has not been issued an explanation of benefits for a bill |
up to the lesser of the actual charge or the payment level |
set by the Commission in the fee schedule established in |
this Section , the bill, or portion of the bill up to the |
lesser of the actual charge or the payment level set by the |
Commission in the fee schedule established in this Section , |
shall incur interest at a rate of 1% per month payable by |
the employer to the provider. Any required interest |
payments shall be made by the employer or its insurer to |
the provider not later than within 30 days after payment of |
the bill . |
(4) If the employer or its insurer fails to pay |
interest required pursuant to this subsection (d), the |
provider may bring an action in circuit court to enforce |
the provisions of this subsection (d) against the employer |
or its insurer responsible for insuring the employer's |
liability pursuant to item (3) of subsection (a) of Section |
4. Interest under this subsection (d) is only payable to |
the provider. An employee is not responsible for the |
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payment of interest under this Section. The right to |
interest under this subsection (d) shall not delay, |
diminish, restrict, or alter in any way the benefits to |
which the employee or his or her dependents are entitled |
under this Act. |
The changes made to this subsection (d) by this amendatory |
Act of the 100th General Assembly apply to procedures, |
treatments, and services rendered on and after the effective |
date of this amendatory Act of the 100th General Assembly. |
(e) Except as provided in subsections (e-5), (e-10), and |
(e-15), a provider shall not hold an employee liable for costs |
related to a non-disputed procedure, treatment, or service |
rendered in connection with a compensable injury. The |
provisions of subsections (e-5), (e-10), (e-15), and (e-20) |
shall not apply if an employee provides information to the |
provider regarding participation in a group health plan. If the |
employee participates in a group health plan, the provider may |
submit a claim for services to the group health plan. If the |
claim for service is covered by the group health plan, the |
employee's responsibility shall be limited to applicable |
deductibles, co-payments, or co-insurance. Except as provided |
under subsections (e-5), (e-10), (e-15), and (e-20), a provider |
shall not bill or otherwise attempt to recover from the |
employee the difference between the provider's charge and the |
amount paid by the employer or the insurer on a compensable |
injury, or for medical services or treatment determined by the |
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Commission to be excessive or unnecessary. |
(e-5) If an employer notifies a provider that the employer |
does not consider the illness or injury to be compensable under |
this Act, the provider may seek payment of the provider's |
actual charges from the employee for any procedure, treatment, |
or service rendered. Once an employee informs the provider that |
there is an application filed with the Commission to resolve a |
dispute over payment of such charges, the provider shall cease |
any and all efforts to collect payment for the services that |
are the subject of the dispute. Any statute of limitations or |
statute of repose applicable to the provider's efforts to |
collect payment from the employee shall be tolled from the date |
that the employee files the application with the Commission |
until the date that the provider is permitted to resume |
collection efforts under the provisions of this Section. |
(e-10) If an employer notifies a provider that the employer |
will pay only a portion of a bill for any procedure, treatment, |
or service rendered in connection with a compensable illness or |
disease, the provider may seek payment from the employee for |
the remainder of the amount of the bill up to the lesser of the |
actual charge, negotiated rate, if applicable, or the payment |
level set by the Commission in the fee schedule established in |
this Section. Once an employee informs the provider that there |
is an application filed with the Commission to resolve a |
dispute over payment of such charges, the provider shall cease |
any and all efforts to collect payment for the services that |
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are the subject of the dispute. Any statute of limitations or |
statute of repose applicable to the provider's efforts to |
collect payment from the employee shall be tolled from the date |
that the employee files the application with the Commission |
until the date that the provider is permitted to resume |
collection efforts under the provisions of this Section. |
(e-15) When there is a dispute over the compensability of |
or amount of payment for a procedure, treatment, or service, |
and a case is pending or proceeding before an Arbitrator or the |
Commission, the provider may mail the employee reminders that |
the employee will be responsible for payment of any procedure, |
treatment or service rendered by the provider. The reminders |
must state that they are not bills, to the extent practicable |
include itemized information, and state that the employee need |
not pay until such time as the provider is permitted to resume |
collection efforts under this Section. The reminders shall not |
be provided to any credit rating agency. The reminders may |
request that the employee furnish the provider with information |
about the proceeding under this Act, such as the file number, |
names of parties, and status of the case. If an employee fails |
to respond to such request for information or fails to furnish |
the information requested within 90 days of the date of the |
reminder, the provider is entitled to resume any and all |
efforts to collect payment from the employee for the services |
rendered to the employee and the employee shall be responsible |
for payment of any outstanding bills for a procedure, |
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treatment, or service rendered by a provider. |
(e-20) Upon a final award or judgment by an Arbitrator or |
the Commission, or a settlement agreed to by the employer and |
the employee, a provider may resume any and all efforts to |
collect payment from the employee for the services rendered to |
the employee and the employee shall be responsible for payment |
of any outstanding bills for a procedure, treatment, or service |
rendered by a provider as well as the interest awarded under |
subsection (d) of this Section. In the case of a procedure, |
treatment, or service deemed compensable, the provider shall |
not require a payment rate, excluding the interest provisions |
under subsection (d), greater than the lesser of the actual |
charge or the payment level set by the Commission in the fee |
schedule established in this Section. Payment for services |
deemed not covered or not compensable under this Act is the |
responsibility of the employee unless a provider and employee |
have agreed otherwise in writing. Services not covered or not |
compensable under this Act are not subject to the fee schedule |
in this Section. |
(f) Nothing in this Act shall prohibit an employer or
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insurer from contracting with a health care provider or group
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of health care providers for reimbursement levels for benefits |
under this Act different
from those provided in this Section. |
(g) On or before January 1, 2010 the Commission shall |
provide to the Governor and General Assembly a report regarding |
the implementation of the medical fee schedule and the index |
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used for annual adjustment to that schedule as described in |
this Section.
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(Source: P.A. 97-18, eff. 6-28-11.) |
(820 ILCS 305/8.2a) |
Sec. 8.2a. Electronic claims. |
(a) The Director of Insurance shall adopt rules to do all |
of the following: |
(1) Ensure that all health care providers and |
facilities submit medical bills for payment on |
standardized forms. |
(2) Require acceptance by employers and insurers of |
electronic claims for payment of medical services. |
(3) Ensure confidentiality of medical information |
submitted on electronic claims for payment of medical |
services. |
(4) Ensure that health care providers have an |
opportunity to comply with requests for records by |
employers and insurers for the authorization of the payment |
of workers' compensation claims. |
(5) Ensure that health care providers are responsible |
for supplying only those medical records pertaining to the |
provider's own claims that are minimally necessary under |
the federal Health Insurance Portability and |
Accountability Act of 1996. |
(6) Provide that any electronically submitted bill |
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determined to be complete but not paid or objected to |
within 30 days shall be subject to interest pursuant to |
item (3) of subsection (d) of Section 8.2. |
(7) Provide that the Department of Insurance shall |
impose an administrative fine if it determines that an |
employer or insurer has failed to comply with the |
electronic claims acceptance and response process. The |
amount of the administrative fine shall be no greater than |
$1,000 per each violation, but shall not exceed $10,000 for |
identical violations during a calendar year. |
(b) To the extent feasible, standards adopted pursuant to |
subdivision (a) shall be consistent with existing standards |
under the federal Health Insurance Portability and |
Accountability Act of 1996 and standards adopted under the |
Illinois Health Information Exchange and Technology Act. |
(c) The rules requiring employers and insurers to accept |
electronic claims for payment of medical services shall be |
proposed on or before January 1, 2012, and shall require all |
employers and insurers to accept electronic claims for payment |
of medical services on or before June 30, 2012. The Director of |
Insurance shall adopt rules by January 1, 2019 to implement the |
changes to this Section made by this amendatory Act of the |
100th General Assembly. The Commission, with assistance from |
the Department and the Medical Fee Advisory Board, shall |
publish on its Internet website a companion guide to assist |
with compliance with electronic claims rules. The Medical Fee |
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Advisory Board shall periodically review the companion guide. |
(d) The Director of Insurance shall by rule establish |
criteria for granting exceptions to employers, insurance |
carriers, and health care providers who are unable to submit or |
accept medical bills electronically.
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(Source: P.A. 97-18, eff. 6-28-11.)
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Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon |
becoming law.
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