Cal. Code Regs. Tit. 8, § 9773 - Treatment Standards
(a) HCOs shall provide all HCO enrollees with
access to all medical, surgical, chiropractic, and hospital treatment which is
reasonably required to cure or relieve the effects of an injury in accordance
with Section
4600 of the Labor Code. This
treatment must be provided without payment of any co-payment, deductible, or
premium share by an HCO enrollee. HCOs must provide a description of the method
for providing treatment required under the code, including a list of its
physical facilities. The description must include the occupational health care
delivery capabilities of the HCO, including the number of primary treating
physicians and specialists, the number and types of licensed or state-certified
health care support staff, the number of hospital beds, and the arrangements
and the methods by which occupational health care services will be provided,
which shall include the following:
(1)
Provider services, including consultation and referral. HCOs must identify the
total number of full time equivalent physicians and providers of each different
specialty type available to provide treatment for work injuries or illnesses on
a regular basis.
(2) Inpatient
hospital services, which shall include acute hospital services, general nursing
care, use of operating room and related facilities, intensive care unit and
services, diagnostic laboratory and x-ray services, special duty nursing as
medically necessary, physical therapy, respiratory therapy, administration of
blood and blood products, and other diagnostic, therapeutic and rehabilitative
services as medically reasonable or medically necessary, and coordinated
discharge planning including planning of such continuing care as may be
necessary, both medically and as a means of preventing possible
rehospitalization.
(3) Ambulatory
care services, (including outpatient hospital services) which shall include
diagnostic and treatment services, physical therapy, speech therapy,
occupational therapy services as appropriate, and those hospital services which
can reasonably be provided on an ambulatory basis.
(4) Emergency services, including ambulance
services and out-of-area coverage for emergency care.
(5) Diagnostic laboratory services,
diagnostic and therapeutic radiological services, and other diagnostic
services.
(6) Home health service,
which shall include, where medically appropriate, health services provided at
the home of an HCO enrollee as provided or prescribed by a physician or
osteopath licensed to practice in California. Such home health services shall
be provided in the home, including nursing care, performed by a registered
nurse, public health nurse, licensed vocational nurse or licensed home health
aide.
(b) HCOs shall
provide a description of the times, places and manner of providing services
under the HCO, including a description of the geographical service area. The
geographical service area shall be designated by a list of the postal zip codes
in the service area, and a map indicating the type and number of facilities
within the service area. The following requirements must be met unless the HCO
shows that a lack of a type of provider exists in an area and that the minimum
number is not available:
(1) At least one
full-time equivalent primary treating physician shall be available within the
geographical proximity specified in paragraph (2) for every 1,200 expected
injuries or illnesses. The HCO shall provide information on expected case-load
and the methodology, data and assumptions used in the calculations.
(2) HCO enrollees must have a residence or
workplace within 30 minutes or 15 miles of (i) a primary treating physician or
(ii) a contracting or HCO-operating hospital, or if separate from such
hospital, a contracting or HCO-operated provider of all emergency health care
services. Enrollees must have a residence or workplace within 60 minutes or 30
miles of all other occupational health services listed in subdivision
(a).
(3) The HCO must provide a
description of how access to any of the basic health services listed in
subdivision (a) will be provided to HCO enrollees who reside outside the HCO's
geographical service area such that the requirements of this subdivision are
met.
(4) Initial treatment for
non-emergency services must be made available by an HCO within 24 hours of the
HCO's receipt of a request for treatment.
(5) The HCO must describe how treatment is
initiated and how an HCO enrollee is assigned a primary treating
physician.
(6) Enrollees shall be
entitled to at least one change of physician for an injury. The HCO shall
provide the employee, within five days of a request by an HCO enrollee, with a
choice of any other available participating provider in the appropriate
specialty.
(7) HCO enrollees shall
be provided with a second opinion, upon request, from a participating
provider.
(8) The HCO must describe
how it will make available interpreter's services, as required, for the
treatment or evaluation of patients.
(9) The HCO must describe how the HCO will
treat an injury or illness pending a claims administrator's decision concerning
liability for treatment.
(10) HCOs
must maintain and make available or insure that their contracted medical
providers maintain and make available medical records to treating or evaluating
physicians in a timely manner.
(c) The HCO shall describe its process for
coordinating all aspects of medical treatment, including the coordination and
monitoring of referrals to consultants, therapeutic or diagnostic facilities,
reporting of treatment, being responsive to the HCO patient's request for
change of physician or physician referrals as may be required by this article,
and for ensuring timeliness of referrals and timely response to the primary
treating physician.
(d) The HCO
must include at least one full-time equivalent board-certified occupational
medicine employed or contracting physician to provide expertise on workplace
health and safety issues and prevention and treatment of occupational injuries
and illnesses. The HCO shall describe its ongoing educational program to ensure
that all primary treating physicians receive education, training or experience
in occupational medicine and workers compensation, including but not limited
to, the following:
(1) The regulatory
requirements for primary treating physicians in workers'
compensation;
(2) Familiarity with
workplace hazards, causes of workplace injury, work restrictions, and
vocational rehabilitation;
(3) The
requirements of medical-legal reports in workers
compensation,
Notes
Note: Authority cited: Sections 133, 4600.5, 4603.5 and 5307.3, Labor Code. Reference: Sections 3209.3, 4600 and 4600.5, Labor Code.
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