28 Tex. Admin. Code § 127.140 - Disqualifying Associations
(a) Definition. A
disqualifying association is any association that may reasonably be perceived
as having potential to influence the conduct or decision of a designated
doctor. Disqualifying associations may include:
(1) receipt of income, compensation, or
payment of any kind not related to health care the doctor provides;
(2) shared investment or ownership
interest;
(3) contracts or
agreements that provide incentives, such as referral fees, payments based on
volume or value, and waiver of beneficiary coinsurance and deductible
amounts;
(4) contracts or
agreements for space or equipment rentals, personnel services, management
contracts, referral services, billing services agents, documentation management
or storage services or warranties, or any other services related to managing or
operating the doctor's practice;
(5) personal or family
relationships;
(6) a contract with
the same workers' compensation health care network certified under Insurance
Code Chapter 1305 or a contract with the same political subdivision or
political subdivision health plan under Labor Code §
504.053(b)(2)
that is responsible for providing medical benefits to the injured employee;
or
(7) any other financial
arrangement that would require disclosure under the Labor Code, the Insurance
Code, or applicable rules, or any other association with the injured employee,
the employer, or insurance carrier that may give the appearance of preventing
the designated doctor from rendering an unbiased opinion.
(b) Disqualification of agent. A designated
doctor also has a disqualifying association relevant to an examination or claim
if an agent of the designated doctor has an association relevant to the claim
that would constitute a disqualifying association under subsection (a) of this
section.
(c) Prohibition. A
designated doctor must not perform an examination if that doctor has a
disqualifying association relevant to that claim.
(1) If a designated doctor learns of a
disqualifying association relevant to a claim after accepting the examination,
the designated doctor must notify the division of that disqualifying
association within two working days of learning of the disqualifying
association.
(2) A designated
doctor who performs an examination even though the doctor has a disqualifying
association relevant to that claim commits an administrative
violation.
(d) Notice
required. Within five days of receiving the division's order of designated
doctor examination under §
127.5(b) of this
title (relating to Scheduling Designated Doctor Appointments), insurance
carriers must notify the division of any disqualifying associations between the
designated doctor and injured employee because of the network affiliations
described under subsection (a)(6) of this section.
(e) Effect of disqualifying association. If
the division determines that a designated doctor with a disqualifying
association performed a designated doctor examination, all reports produced by
that designated doctor as a result of that examination are stripped of their
presumptive weight.
(f) Disputes
about disqualifying associations. A party that seeks to dispute the selection
of a designated doctor for a particular examination based on a disqualifying
association or dispute the presumptive weight of a designated doctor's report
based on a disqualifying association must do so through the division's dispute
resolution processes in Labor Code Chapter 410 and Chapters 140-144 and 147 of
this title (relating to dispute resolution processes, proceedings, and
procedures).
Notes
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