4616.
(a) (1) An insurer, employer, or entity that provides physician network services may establish or modify a medical provider network for the provision of medical treatment to injured employees. The network shall include physicians primarily engaged in the treatment of occupational injuries. The administrative director shall encourage the integration of occupational and nonoccupational providers. Subject to Section 3209.11, the number of physicians in the medical provider network shall be sufficient to enable treatment for injuries or conditions to be provided in a timely manner. The provider network shall include an adequate number and type of physicians, as described in Section 3209.3, or other providers, as described in Section 3209.5, to treat common injuries experienced by injured employees based on the
type of occupation or industry in which the employee is engaged, and the geographic area where the employees are employed.(2) Medical treatment for injuries shall be readily available at reasonable times to all employees. To the extent feasible, all medical treatment for injuries shall be readily accessible to all employees. With respect to availability and accessibility of treatment, the administrative director shall consider the needs of rural areas, specifically those in which health facilities are located at least 30 miles apart and areas in which there is a health care shortage.
(3) A treating physician shall be included in the network only if, at the time of entering into or renewing an agreement by which the physician would be in the network, the physician, or an authorized employee of the physician or the physician’s office, provides a separate written acknowledgment in
which the physician affirmatively elects to be a member of the network. Copies of the written acknowledgment shall be provided to the administrative director upon the administrative director’s request. This paragraph shall not apply to a physician who is a shareholder, partner, or employee of a medical group that elects to be part of the network.
(4) (A) (i) Commencing July 1, 2021, every Every medical provider network shall post on its internet website a roster of all participating providers, which includes all physicians and ancillary service providers in the medical provider network, and shall update the roster at least
quarterly. Every network shall provide to the administrative director the internet website address of the network and of its roster of participating providers. The roster of participating providers shall include, at a minimum, the name of each individual provider and their office address
and office telephone number. If the ancillary service is provided by an entity rather than an individual, then that entity’s name, address, and telephone number shall be listed. physician and their telephone number and address. The roster of participating providers may include persons or entities that provide or contract with persons or entities that provide ancillary services, or medical, surgical, and hospital treatment, as specified in Section 3209.5 and 4600, or that provide management services, schedule, or coordinate patient care, including treatment by physicians.
(ii) The administrative director shall post, on the division’s internet website, the internet website address of every approved medical provider network.
(B) Every medical provider network shall
post on its internet website information about how to contact the medical provider network contact and medical access assistants, and information about how to obtain a copy of any notification regarding the medical provider network that is required to be given to an employee by regulations adopted by the administrative director. If regulations of the administrative director require the medical provider network to notify an employee that an injury is subject to a medical provider network or an employee with an existing injury is required to transfer treatment to a medical provider network, the injured employee may request that a copy of the notification be provided to the treating physician or other designee of the injured employee by
electronic means. authorize their initial primary treating physician to request an electronic copy of the notification.
(5) Every medical provider network shall provide one or more persons within the United States to serve as medical access assistants to help an injured employee find an available physician of the employee’s choice, and subsequent physicians if necessary, under Section 4616.3. Medical access assistants shall have a toll-free telephone number that injured employees may use and shall be available at least from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. Pacific standard time, Monday through Saturday, to respond to injured employees, contact physicians’ offices during regular business hours, and schedule appointments. The administrative director shall promulgate regulations governing the provision of medical access assistants.
(b) (1) An insurer, employer, or entity that provides physician network services shall submit a plan for the medical provider network to the administrative director for approval. The administrative director shall approve the plan for a period of four years if the administrative director determines that the plan meets the requirements of this section. If the administrative director does not act on the plan within 60 days of submitting the plan, it shall be deemed approved. Commencing January 1, 2014, existing approved plans shall be deemed approved for a period of four years from the approval date of the most recent application or modification submitted prior to 2014. Plans for reapproval for medical provider networks shall be submitted at least six months before the expiration of the four-year approval period. An existing approved plan for a
medical provider network shall remain valid and in effect during the review and reapproval process of its timely submitted reapproval plan.
Commencing January 1, 2016, a modification that updates an entire medical provider network plan to bring the plan into full compliance with all current statutes and regulations shall be deemed approved for a period of four years from the modification approval date. An approved modification that does not update an entire medical provider network plan to bring the plan into full compliance with all current statutes and regulations shall not alter the expiration of the medical provider network’s four-year approval period. Upon a showing that the medical provider network was approved or deemed approved by the administrative director, there shall be a conclusive presumption on the part of the appeals board that the medical provider network was validly formed.
(2) If the administrative director determines that a plan submitted for approval or reapproval
of a medical provider network contains deficiencies, or is disapproved, the administrative director shall notify the applicant and shall identify the additional documents or other materials required to complete and approve the plan. The administrative director shall allow the applicant 45 calendar days after notice is provided to the applicant to submit the requested information and materials and respond to any identified deficiencies.
(3) Within 30 calendar days after receiving any additional documents or other materials from the applicant, the administrative director shall respond to the applicant in writing, stating whether the additional documents or materials submitted are sufficient, or whether each deficiency has been addressed, making the plan for approval or reapproval of a medical provider network complete. If the administrative
director determines that the plan is complete and in compliance with this section, they shall approve the plan. If the administrative director determines that the response is inadequate, they may request additional information, materials, or clarification from the applicant or deny the application.
(2)
(4) Every medical provider network shall establish and follow procedures to continuously review the quality of care, performance of medical personnel, utilization of services and facilities, and costs.
(3)
(5) Every medical provider network shall submit geocoding of its network for reapproval to establish that the number and geographic location of physicians in the network meets the required access standards.
(4)
(6) Approval of a plan may be denied, revoked, or suspended if the medical provider network fails to meet the requirements of this article. Any person contending that a medical provider network is not validly constituted may petition the administrative director to suspend or revoke the
approval of the medical provider network. The administrative director may adopt regulations establishing a schedule of administrative penalties not to exceed five thousand dollars ($5,000) per violation, or probation, or both, in lieu of revocation or suspension for less severe violations of the requirements of this article. Penalties, probation, suspension, or revocation shall be ordered by the administrative director only after notice and opportunity to be heard. Unless suspended or revoked by the administrative director, the administrative director’s approval of a medical provider network shall be binding on all persons and all courts. A determination of the administrative director may be reviewed only by an appeal of the determination of the administrative director filed as an original proceeding before the reconsideration unit of the workers’ compensation appeals board on the same grounds and within the same time limits after issuance of the determination as would be applicable to a petition for
reconsideration of a decision of a workers’ compensation administrative law judge.
(c) Physician compensation may not be structured in order to achieve the goal of reducing, delaying, or denying medical treatment or restricting access to medical treatment.
(d) If the employer or insurer meets the requirements of this section, the administrative director may not withhold approval or disapprove an employer’s or insurer’s medical provider network based solely on the selection of providers. In developing a medical provider network, an employer or insurer shall have the exclusive right to determine the members of their network.
network, including, but not limited to, the following:
(1) A physician, as defined in Section 3209.3, so long as the physician is duly licensed by California state law and within the scope of their practice as defined by law.
(2) A person or entity that provides ancillary or other services specified in subparagraph (A) of paragraph (4) of subdivision (a), regardless of whether the person or entity is doing business in the state as a sole proprietorship, partnership, corporation, or any other business entity.
(e) All treatment provided shall be provided in accordance
with the medical treatment utilization schedule established pursuant to Section 5307.27.
(f) Only a licensed physician who is competent to evaluate the specific clinical issues involved in the medical treatment services, when these services are within the scope of the physician’s practice, may modify, delay, or deny requests for authorization of medical treatment.
(g) Every contracting agent that sells, leases, assigns, transfers, or conveys its medical provider networks and their contracted reimbursement rates to an insurer, employer, entity that provides physician network services, or another contracting agent shall, upon entering or renewing a provider contract, disclose to the provider whether the medical provider network may be sold, leased, transferred, or conveyed to other insurers, employers, entities that provide physician network services, or another contracting agent,
and specify whether those insurers, employers, entities that provide physician network services, or contracting agents include workers’ compensation insurers.
(h) On or before November 1, 2004, the administrative director, in consultation with the Department of Managed Health Care, shall adopt regulations implementing this article. The administrative director shall develop regulations that establish procedures for purposes of making medical provider network modifications.
(i) The administrative director has the authority and discretion to investigate complaints, conduct random reviews, and take enforcement action against medical provider networks, an entity that provides ancillary services, or an entity providing services for or on behalf of the medical provider network or its providers regarding noncompliance with the requirements of this section or Section 4603.2 or
4610.