Lawmaker seeks greater HMO disclosure.Just days before last week's deadline to submit new legislation for the 1996 session, Sen. Herschel Rosenthal, D-Los Angeles, introduced two bills that would grant consumers considerably more leverage when dealing with health maintenance organizations. SB 1732 would require HMOs to disclose to the state Department of Corporations details of any complaints lodged against them and how they spend premium dollars. The DOC See doc file and docs. 1. Doc - Directed Oc 2. doc - /dok/ Common spoken and written shorthand for "documentation". Often used in the plural "docs" and in the construction "doc file" (i.e. documentation available on-line). would then publish those details in an annual "report card" of health plans. The report would also be available through the Internet, an interlinking in·ter·link tr.v. in·ter·linked, in·ter·link·ing, in·ter·links To link together or join (one) with another: The policies, though distinct, are interlinked. Adj. 1. series of computer networks and information storage sites accessible by modem. Private organizations - such as the California Medical Association and the Pacific Business Group on Health - publish such information using data provided by the DOC, which oversees HMOs that operate in California. But the DOC itself does not publish the information in an easy-to-read format. SB 1936 would require the department to establish an ombudsman ombudsman (äm`bədzmən) [Swed.,=agent or representative], public official appointed to deal with individual complaints against government acts. department that would handle grievances from consumers having trouble receiving treatment from their HMOs. Those plans would also be proscribed PROSCRIBED, civil law. Among the Romans, a man was said to be proscribed when a reward was offered for his head; but the term was more usually applied to those who were sentenced to some punishment which carried with it the consequences of civil death. Code, 9; 49. from taking disciplinary action against any of its employees or network physicians who provides information to the DOC pertaining per·tain intr.v. per·tained, per·tain·ing, per·tains 1. To have reference; relate: evidence that pertains to the accident. 2. to a grievance griev·ance n. 1. a. An actual or supposed circumstance regarded as just cause for complaint. b. A complaint or protestation based on such a circumstance. See Synonyms at injustice. 2. . Giving out useful info "HMO HMO health maintenance organization. HMO n. A corporation that is financed by insurance premiums and has member physicians and professional staff who provide curative and preventive medicine within certain financial, patients often lack adequate information and assistance regarding their rights to health care and their remedies in the event they have a grievance," said Rosenthal, who is chairman of the Senate Insurance Committee. The state's two major trade groups that monitor health care legislation, the California Healthcare Association, which represents physician groups and hospitals, and the California Association of HMOs, have yet to take positions on the legislation. Sources have indicated HMOs will likely fight to kill or revise both pieces of legislation. SB 1732 was spurred on in part by a recent state-by-state study by the Los Angeles-based consumer advocacy group Center for Health Care Rights, according to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. Rosenthal's office. State leads The study concluded that health plans and their regulatory bodies may be hesitant hes·i·tant adj. Inclined or tending to hesitate. hes i·tant·ly adv. to expand publication of data pertaining to complaints and
financial performance.
"Overall, California is ahead of most states (in terms of regulation)," said Peter Lee, director of the center's HMO consumer protection project. "They have more on the books, but whether something is enforced or not is a separate question." Lee added that the DOC's consumer complaint hotline established late last year - and created by another piece of Rosenthal legislation, SB 689 - is not enough protection. "The hotline does not provide any assistance in trying to choose a health plan, and it does not provide any help for someone filing a grievance either," Lee observed. "Instead, it serves only as an adjudicatory body, and is only for those who have been in their health plan grievance process for more than 60 days without a resolution." Lee's group also supports the creation of an ombudsman system for consumers, but not through the DOC. Instead, SB 1936 has the backing of another HMO watchdog, the San Francisco-based western regional office of Consumers Union. |
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