American College of Rheumatology Releases Position Statement on Prior Authorization
"In addition to creating additional hoops for patients and providers to jump through, prior authorization diverts valuable time away from caring for patients and towards repetitive and time-consuming administrative tasks." said
The ACR emphasizes the need to modernize and simplify the prior authorization process with these five key areas of improvement to ensure access to care for patients:
* Reduce the number of rheumatologists and rheumatology professionals subject to prior authorization requirements by not requiring prior authorizations if they are already meeting performance measures, adhering to evidence-based practices, and/or participating in a value-based agreement with a health insurance provider.
* Reduce the number of services and medications that require prior authorization by regularly reviewing and eliminating requirements that are no longer warranted.
* Improve transparency and channels of communication between health insurance providers, health care professionals and patients to minimize delays in care and ensure requests are reviewed by qualified personnel with specialty-specific credentials. Further, rationales for denials should be provided in a timely and transparent manner.
* Protect the continuity of care when there are changes in coverage, health insurance providers or prior authorization requirements. The goal is to ensure there is no interruption of care for patients who are on an ongoing, active treatment or a stable treatment regimen.
* Accelerate industry adoption of national electronic standards for prior authorization and improve transparency around formulary decisions and coverage restrictions at the point of care.
Prior authorization is used by insurance companies to control plan members' access to specific pharmaceuticals and medical services. There is no uniformity in the prior authorization requirements between different insurers, and the process frequently involves manually filling out multi-page forms for each patient for whom the provider has - via shared decision making with the patient - determined that a particular pharmaceutical or service is the best treatment option.
A national survey of over 1,000 practicing physicians conducted by the
According to an analysis of patient registry data conducted by the ACR, approximately 15 percent of patients in a typical rheumatology practice have rheumatoid arthritis and are treated with a medication requiring prior authorization. For each of these patients, a rheumatologist or rheumatology professional must go through the prior authorization process at least once per year due to insurance plan requirements that continuation of therapy be renewed annually.
"It is crucial that these improvements be made with careful, deliberate attention to each targeted area so that patients can receive the treatment they need without unnecessary delays,"
Efforts to improve some elements of prior authorization are already underway in
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