Pa. bill could ease insurance OK for new treatments
The 67-page bill, which mostly applies to private insurers, would remove prior authorization for emergency care, standardize timelines for insurers to approve or deny a request for treatment, and guarantee that doctors can request that plans cover medications without a patient first trying a cheaper drug.
Supporters say the bill will allow medical providers to spend more time on care rather than fighting with insurance companies, and give patients more clarity and flexibility when deciding on their treatment options.
But changes to a topic as complicated as state insurance law, even when a bill has bipartisan backing, can get messy quick — and threading the needle among a number of well-heeled lobbies has kept similar changes from passing for more than a decade.
Industry groups for insurers, hospitals, and doctors all have a strong lobbying presence in the
"It's a big bill. Details count," said
The bill has the backing of over 70 condition-specific organizations, including those representing diabetes, arthritis, and multiple sclerosis patients, among other chronic ailments. They argue that the bill will provide patients with quicker access to health care.
At the core of the proposal is an effort to change two key components of the American health care system — prior authorization and step therapy.
Prior authorization empowers an insurance company to decide whether a medical procedure or treatment is medically necessary before it decides to cover it. Step therapy is a specific form of prior authorization for medications, in which an insurer, as a cost-saving measure, asks a patient to try one medication and see proof it isn't working before they approve the patient's preferred treatment.
The bill would not completely eliminate either practice. It would instead require insurers to offer exemptions for both, and create a standardized process for doctors to apply for approval or request an exemption, and for patients to appeal an insurance company's decision.
It would do so by creating standardized electronic forms to apply for approval, setting a statutory timeline for responding to requests (72 hours for urgent requests and 14 days for nonemergency services), requiring written notice from insurers explaining the denial, and giving the state
The bill would also allow physicians to dispute an insurer's decision directly with a doctor employed by the insurer — a process known as peer-to-peer review — rather than someone who may not have a medical degree.
All told, this "creates a new and more effective process for prior authorization of medical services, and it keeps everything consistent and transparent, from start to finish," said Sen.
Private insurers defend their review powers as a necessary cost control method to keep insurance rates down. But advocates for patients and providers argue these administrative steps favor insurance companies and diminish their ability to make important health care decisions.
"It would be like having a pipe burst in your home, and being told that you can't call a plumber and try to mop first,"
He's seen patients who changed insurance providers and were asked to go off a drug they took for years because the new plan wouldn't cover their medication until they tried a cheaper alternative. The bill would specifically allow for an exemption to step therapy in such a situation.
Lopatin's experience is not unique. A 2021
"Scientific breakthroughs [and] medical advancements mean that in many cases, a diagnosis can now be managed and treated," said
In some cases, the bill would only bring state insurance law, last rewritten in 1998, in line with federal law. The proposed ban on prior authorization for emergency care, for instance, matches a federal law passed in late 2020. However, medical providers have since challenged that law in court.
Changes to the state insurance law have been considered for years, but have never reached the governor's desk.
The current proposal passed the Republican-controlled state
Her committee approved an amendment on
Pickett said she anticipates more conversations with stakeholders before the bill can come up for a final vote.
Both Gov.
In an email, Wolf spokesperson
The bill now awaits a floor vote in the state House, and the state
Spotlight PA is an independent, nonpartisan newsroom powered by
Spotlight PA is funded by foundations and readers committed to accountability journalism that gets results.
Additional defendant pleads guilty in staged automobile collision scheme
Ethos Launches Life Insurance Offering through AIP Marketing Alliance
Advisor News
Annuity News
Health/Employee Benefits News
Life Insurance News