Key: (1) language to be deleted (2) new language
Laws of Minnesota 1993
CHAPTER 246-S.F.No. 782
An act relating to health; expanding medical
assistance coverage to include nutritional
supplementation products; amending Minnesota Statutes
1992, section 256B.0625, subdivision 13, and by adding
a subdivision.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF MINNESOTA:
Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 1992, section 256B.0625,
subdivision 13, is amended to read:
Subd. 13. [DRUGS.] (a) Medical assistance covers drugs if
prescribed by a licensed practitioner and dispensed by a
licensed pharmacist, or by a physician enrolled in the medical
assistance program as a dispensing physician. The commissioner,
after receiving recommendations from the Minnesota Medical
Association and the Minnesota Pharmacists Association, shall
designate a formulary committee to advise the commissioner on
the names of drugs for which payment is made, recommend a system
for reimbursing providers on a set fee or charge basis rather
than the present system, and develop methods encouraging use of
generic drugs when they are less expensive and equally effective
as trademark drugs. The commissioner shall appoint the
formulary committee members no later than 30 days following July
1, 1981. The formulary committee shall consist of nine members,
four of whom shall be physicians who are not employed by the
department of human services, and a majority of whose practice
is for persons paying privately or through health insurance,
three of whom shall be pharmacists who are not employed by the
department of human services, and a majority of whose practice
is for persons paying privately or through health insurance, a
consumer representative, and a nursing home representative.
Committee members shall serve two-year terms and shall serve
without compensation.
(b) The commissioner shall establish a drug formulary. Its
establishment and publication shall not be subject to the
requirements of the administrative procedure act, but the
formulary committee shall review and comment on the formulary
contents. The formulary committee shall review and recommend
drugs which require prior authorization. The formulary
committee may recommend drugs for prior authorization directly
to the commissioner, as long as opportunity for public input is
provided. Prior authorization may be requested by the
commissioner based on medical and clinical criteria before
certain drugs are eligible for payment. Before a drug may be
considered for prior authorization at the request of the
commissioner:
(1) the drug formulary committee must develop criteria to
be used for identifying drugs; the development of these criteria
is not subject to the requirements of chapter 14, but the
formulary committee shall provide opportunity for public input
in developing criteria;
(2) the drug formulary committee must hold a public forum
and receive public comment for an additional 15 days; and
(3) the commissioner must provide information to the
formulary committee on the impact that placing the drug on prior
authorization will have on the quality of patient care and
information regarding whether the drug is subject to clinical
abuse or misuse. Prior authorization may be required by the
commissioner before certain formulary drugs are eligible for
payment. The formulary shall not include:
(i) drugs or products for which there is no federal
funding;
(ii) over-the-counter drugs, except for antacids,
acetaminophen, family planning products, aspirin, insulin,
products for the treatment of lice, vitamins for adults with
documented vitamin deficiencies, and vitamins for children under
the age of seven and pregnant or nursing women; or any other
over-the-counter drug identified by the commissioner, in
consultation with the drug formulary committee, as necessary,
appropriate, and cost-effective for the treatment of certain
specified chronic diseases, conditions or disorders, and this
determination shall not be subject to the requirements of
chapter 14, the administrative procedure act;
nutritional products, except for those products needed for
treatment of phenylketonuria, hyperlysinemia, maple syrup urine
disease, a combined allergy to human milk, cow milk, and soy
formula, or any other childhood or adult diseases, conditions,
or disorders identified by the commissioner as requiring a
similarly necessary nutritional product;
(iii) anorectics; and
(iv) drugs for which medical value has not been established.
Nutritional products needed for the treatment of a combined
allergy to human milk, cow's milk, and soy formula require prior
authorization. Separate payment shall not be made for
nutritional products for residents of long-term care facilities;
payment for dietary requirements is a component of the per diem
rate paid to these facilities. Payment to drug vendors shall
not be modified before the formulary is established except that
the commissioner shall not permit payment for any drugs which
may not by law be included in the formulary, and the
commissioner's determination shall not be subject to chapter 14,
the administrative procedure act. The commissioner shall
publish conditions for prohibiting payment for specific drugs
after considering the formulary committee's recommendations.
(b) (c) The basis for determining the amount of payment
shall be the lower of the actual acquisition costs of the drugs
plus a fixed dispensing fee established by the commissioner, the
maximum allowable cost set by the federal government or by the
commissioner plus the fixed dispensing fee or the usual and
customary price charged to the public. Actual acquisition cost
includes quantity and other special discounts except time and
cash discounts. The actual acquisition cost of a drug may be
estimated by the commissioner. The maximum allowable cost of a
multisource drug may be set by the commissioner and it shall be
comparable to, but no higher than, the maximum amount paid by
other third party payors in this state who have maximum
allowable cost programs. Establishment of the amount of payment
for drugs shall not be subject to the requirements of the
administrative procedure act. An additional dispensing fee of
$.30 may be added to the dispensing fee paid to pharmacists for
legend drug prescriptions dispensed to residents of long-term
care facilities when a unit dose blister card system, approved
by the department, is used. Under this type of dispensing
system, the pharmacist must dispense a 30-day supply of drug.
The National Drug Code (NDC) from the drug container used to
fill the blister card must be identified on the claim to the
department. The unit dose blister card containing the drug must
meet the packaging standards set forth in Minnesota Rules, part
6800.2700, that govern the return of unused drugs to the
pharmacy for reuse. The pharmacy provider will be required to
credit the department for the actual acquisition cost of all
unused drugs that are eligible for reuse. Over-the-counter
medications must be dispensed in the manufacturer's unopened
package. The commissioner may permit the drug clozapine to be
dispensed in a quantity that is less than a 30-day supply.
Whenever a generically equivalent product is available, payment
shall be on the basis of the actual acquisition cost of the
generic drug, unless the prescriber specifically indicates
"dispense as written - brand necessary" on the prescription as
required by section 151.21, subdivision 2. Implementation of
any change in the fixed dispensing fee that has not been subject
to the administrative procedure act is limited to not more than
180 days, unless, during that time, the commissioner initiates
rulemaking through the administrative procedure act.
(c) (d) Until January 4, 1993, or the date the Medicaid
Management Information System (MMIS) upgrade is implemented,
whichever occurs last, a pharmacy provider may require
individuals who seek to become eligible for medical assistance
under a one-month spend-down, as provided in section 256B.056,
subdivision 5, to pay for services to the extent of the
spend-down amount at the time the services are provided. A
pharmacy provider choosing this option shall file a medical
assistance claim for the pharmacy services provided. If medical
assistance reimbursement is received for this claim, the
pharmacy provider shall return to the individual the total
amount paid by the individual for the pharmacy services
reimbursed by the medical assistance program. If the claim is
not eligible for medical assistance reimbursement because of the
provider's failure to comply with the provisions of the medical
assistance program, the pharmacy provider shall refund to the
individual the total amount paid by the individual. Pharmacy
providers may choose this option only if they apply similar
credit restrictions to private pay or privately insured
individuals. A pharmacy provider choosing this option must
inform individuals who seek to become eligible for medical
assistance under a one-month spend-down of (1) their right to
appeal the denial of services on the grounds that they have
satisfied the spend-down requirement, and (2) their potential
eligibility for the health right program or the children's
health plan.
Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 1992, section 256B.0625, is
amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 32. [NUTRITIONAL PRODUCTS.] (a) Medical assistance
covers nutritional products needed for nutritional
supplementation because solid food or nutrients thereof cannot
be properly absorbed by the body or needed for treatment of
phenylketonuria, hyperlysinemia, maple syrup urine disease, a
combined allergy to human milk, cow's milk, and soy formula, or
any other childhood or adult diseases, conditions, or disorders
identified by the commissioner as requiring a similarly
necessary nutritional product. Nutritional products needed for
the treatment of a combined allergy to human milk, cow's milk,
and soy formula require prior authorization. Separate payment
shall not be made for nutritional products for residents of
long-term care facilities. Payment for dietary requirements is
a component of the per diem rate paid to these facilities.
(b) The commissioner shall designate a nutritional
supplementation products advisory committee to advise the
commissioner on nutritional supplementation products for which
payment is made. The committee shall consist of nine members,
one of whom shall be a physician, one of whom shall be a
pharmacist, two of whom shall be registered dieticians, one of
whom shall be a public health nurse, one of whom shall be a
representative of a home health care agency, one of whom shall
be a provider of long-term care services, and two of whom shall
be consumers of nutritional supplementation products. Committee
members shall serve two-year terms and shall serve without
compensation.
(c) The advisory committee shall review and recommend
nutritional supplementation products which require prior
authorization. The commissioner shall develop procedures for
the operation of the advisory committee so that the advisory
committee operates in a manner parallel to the drug formulary
committee.
Presented to the governor May 14, 1993
Signed by the governor May 17, 1993, 3:12 p.m.
Official Publication of the State of Minnesota
Revisor of Statutes