Legislators consider tough medicine for HMSA
The state Legislature has waded into a dispute between the Hawaii Medical Service Association and physicians over diagnostic imaging exams — but perhaps it’s in too deep.
House Bill 2740 would hold health insurance companies liable for causing “undue delay” in medical treatment or services by requiring pre-authorization of medical tests. Its intent is a good one, taken in response to HMSA’s recent decision to cancel pre-authorization waivers that doctors used to expedite certain scans and tests. After protests by doctors and a story by Star-Advertiser reporter Kristen Consillio, HMSA said no worries — the policy change is only temporary.
Let’s hope so. The voluntary and permanent restoration of waivers would work better than a legal standard in which “undue delays,” broadly defined, could bloom into a sea of lawsuits. But if HMSA drags its feet, it will be inviting stronger regulation.
2 responses to “Legislators consider tough medicine for HMSA”
Leave a Reply
You must be logged in to post a comment.
lets make the HMSA officers, directors, and medical directors liable That will get people to take this seriously
its a shame that Hawaii has to be held hostage to this when Hawaii has been proven to be Ahead of the mainland in conserving resources and not over ordering medical tests.
Put real teeth in this bill
How about “any delay”?