Current through Register Vol. 63, No. 11, November 1, 2024
Section 410-141-3555 - Resolving Disputes between Health Care Entities and CCOs that Concern CCO Contact Award(1) The dispute resolution process described in this rule applies only when, under ORS 414.635: (a) An entity is applying to the Authority for contract award as a CCO (applicant);(b) A Health Care Entity (HCE) and the applicant (together, the "parties" for purposes of this rule) have failed to agree upon terms for a contract; and(c) One or more of the following occurs: (A) The applicant states that the HCE is necessary for the applicant to qualify as a CCO;(B) An HCE states that its inclusion is necessary for the applicant to be awarded a CCO; or(C) In reviewing the applicant's information, the Authority identifies the HCE as necessary for the applicant to qualify as a CCO.(2) If an applicant and HCE disagree about whether the HCE is necessary for the successful award of a contract to the applicant as a CCO, the applicant or HCE may request the Authority to review the issue.(3) If the Authority determines the HCE is not necessary for the applicant's award of a contract, the process described in this rule does not apply.(4) If the Authority determines or the parties agree the HCE is necessary for the applicant's award of a contract, the following applies: (a) The HCE and the applicant shall participate in good faith contract negotiations. The parties shall take the following actions in an attempt to reach a good faith resolution: (A) The applicant shall provide a written offer of terms and conditions to the HCE. The HCE shall explain the area of disagreement to the applicant;(B) The applicant's or HCE's chief financial officer, chief executive officer, or an individual authorized to make decisions on behalf of the HCE or applicant shall have at least one face-to-face meeting in a good faith effort to resolve the disagreement.(b) The applicant or HCE may request the Authority to provide technical assistance. The Authority also may offer technical assistance, with or without a request. The Authority's technical assistance is limited to clarifying the CCO contracting process, criteria, and other program requirements.(5) Pursuant to ORS 414.635, if the applicant and HCE cannot reach agreement on contract terms within 10 calendar days of the face-to-face meeting, either party may request arbitration. The requesting party shall notify the other party in writing to initiate a referral to an independent third-party arbitrator for an HCE's refusal to contract with the CCO or the termination, extension, or renewal of a HCE's contract with a CCO. The party initiating the referral shall provide a copy of the notification to the Authority.(6) After notification that one party-initiated arbitration, the parties shall attempt to agree upon the selection of the arbitrator and complete the paperwork required to secure the arbitrator's services. If the parties are unable to agree, each party shall appoint an arbitrator, and these arbitrators shall select the final arbitrator.(7) The parties shall pay for all arbitration costs. In consideration of potentially varied financial resources between the parties, which may pose a barrier to the use of this process, the parties may ask the arbitrator to allocate costs between the parties based on ability to pay.(8) Within 10 calendar days of a referral to an arbitrator, the applicant and HCE shall submit to each other and to the arbitrator the following:(a) The most reasonable contract offers; or(b) The HCE's statement that a contract is not desirable and an explanation of why this is reasonable.(9) Within 10 calendar days of receiving the other party's offer or the HCE's statement that a contract is not desirable, each party shall submit to the arbitrator and the other party the advocacy briefs regarding whether the HCE is reasonably or unreasonably refusing to contract with the applicant.(10) The arbitrator shall apply the following standards when making a determination about whether an HCE reasonably or unreasonably refused to contract with the applicant: (a) An HCE may reasonably refuse to contract when an applicant's reimbursement to an HCE for a health service is below the reasonable cost to provide the service. The arbitrator shall apply federal or state statutes or regulations that establish specific reimbursements, such as payments to federally qualified health centers, rural health centers, and tribal health centers; and(b) An HCE may reasonably refuse to contract if that refusal is justified in fact or by circumstances, taking into consideration the health system transformation legislative policies. Facts or circumstances outlining what is a reasonable or unreasonable refusal to contract include, but are not limited to: (A) Whether contracting with the applicant would impose demands that the HCE cannot reasonably meet without significant negative impact on HCE costs, obligations, or structure while considering the proposed reimbursement arrangement or other CCO requirements. Some of the requirements include:(i) Use of electronic health records;(ii) Service delivery requirements, or(iii) Quality or performance requirements.(B) Whether the HCE's refusal affects access to covered services in the applicant's community. This factor alone cannot result in a finding that the refusal to contract is unreasonable; however, the HCE and applicant shall make a good faith effort to work out differences in order to achieve beneficial community objectives and health system transformation policy objectives;(C) Whether the HCE has entered into a binding obligation to participate in the network of a different CCO or applicant and that participation significantly reduces the HCE's capacity to contract with the applicant.(11) The following outlines the arbitrator determination and the parties' final opportunity to settle: (a) The arbitrator shall evaluate the final offers or statement of refusal to contract and the advocacy briefs from each party and issue a determination within 15 calendar days of the receipt of the parties' information;(b) The arbitrator shall provide the determination to the parties. The arbitrator and the parties may not disclose the determination to the Authority for 10 calendar days to allow the parties an opportunity to resolve the issue themselves. If the parties resolve the issue no later than the end of the tenth day, the arbitrator may not release the determination to the Authority;(c) If the parties have not reached an agreement after 10 calendar days, the arbitrator shall provide its decision to the Authority. After submission to the Authority, the arbitrator's determination becomes a public record, subject to protection of trade secret information if identified by one of the parties prior to the arbitrator's submission of the determination.(12) If the parties cannot agree, the Authority shall evaluate the arbitrator's determination and may take the following actions:(a) The Authority may award a contract to an applicant if the arbitrator determined the applicant made a reasonable attempt to contract with the HCE or the HCE's refusal to contract was unreasonable;(b) The Authority may refuse to award a contract to an applicant when the arbitrator determined the applicant did not reasonably attempt to contract with the HCE or the HCE's refusal to contract was reasonable, and the Authority determines that participation from the HCE remains necessary for applicant's award of a contract as a CCO;(c) The Authority may not pay fee-for-service reimbursements to an HCE if the arbitrator determined the HCE unreasonably refused to contract with the applicant. This applies to health services available through a CCO;(d) In any circumstance within the scope of this rule when the parties have failed to agree, the current statutes regarding reimbursement to non-participating providers shall apply to CCOs that hold contracts with OHA and the HCE, consistent with ORS 414.743 for hospitals and consistent with Authority rules for other providers.(13) To be qualified to resolve disputes under this rule, the arbitrator shall: (a) Be a knowledgeable and experienced arbitrator;(b) Be familiar with health care provider contracting matters;(c) Be familiar with health system transformation; and(d) Follow the terms and conditions specified in this rule for the arbitration process.Or. Admin. Code § 410-141-3555
DMAP 30-2019, temporary adopt filed 08/07/2019, effective 8/7/2019 through 2/2/2020; DMAP 55-2019, adopt filed 12/17/2019, effective 1/1/2020; DMAP 78-2022, minor correction filed 09/30/2022, effective 9/30/2022Statutory/Other Authority: ORS 413.042, 414.615, 414.625, 414.635 & 414.651
Statutes/Other Implemented: ORS 414.610 - 414.685