Court Opinion

ID: 3900047
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 09:30:38.62855+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:15:46.873897
License: Public Domain

Mr. A.W. Pogue Commissioner State Board of Insurance 1110 San Jacinto Austin, Texas 78701-1998
Re: Status of insurance programs in which applicants are referred, for a fee, to a single health care provider (RQ-1867)
Dear Commissioner Pogue:
You ask "whether referral programs that `arrange for' services of health care providers to enrollees at a discount in return for a referral fee are subject to regulation as a health maintenance organization."
Insurance Code article 20A.03 provides in part that "no person shall establish or operate a health maintenance organization in this state . . . without obtaining a certificate of authority under this Act," and that "any person may apply to the commissioner [of insurance] for and obtain a certificate of authority to establish and operate a health maintenance organization in compliance with this Act." (The "Act" referred to in the quoted portions of article 20A.03 is the Health Maintenance Organization Act, codified as chapter 20A of the Insurance Code. See Ins. Code art. 20A.01.)
You say that the referral programs about which you are concerned have `arrangements' with single service health care providers such as dentists, optometrists, and chiropractors either verbally or in writing which provide that each participating provider will offer discounted services to enrollees of the programs. Thereafter, the referral programs target and market prospective enrollees through agents and literature.
The plans offered to prospective enrollees are such that a referral fee is charged, whether an initial amount up front, monthly, quarterly or annually, and said enrollees either receive an I.D. card and/or a listing of participating providers which honor discounts on services.
The referral fees are received by the referral programs from enrollees [but] do not appear to be shared with the providers. The incentive for providers to participate is the potential for increased volume. Thus, enrollees make another payment to the providers directly. Often times, visits to providers are not at any additional cost to enrollees.
You ask first whether a payment by an enrollee in such a referral program in exchange for a list of single health care service providers who offer services at a discount constitutes "prepayment" within the meaning of subpart (s) of article 20A.02, which provision defines "single" health care service plan."
  "Health maintenance organization" is defined in subpart (j) of article 20A.02 as any person who arranges for or provides a health care plan or a single health care service plan to enrollees on a prepaid basis. (Emphasis added.)
  "Single health care service" is defined in subpart (r) of article 20A.02 as a health care service that an enrolled population may reasonably require in order to be maintained in good health with respect to a particular health care need for the purpose of preventing, alleviating, curing, or healing human illness or injury of a single specified nature and that is to be provided by one or more persons each of whom is licensed by the state to provide that specific health care service.1
  "Single health care service plan" is in turn defined in subpart (s) of article 20A.02 as a plan under which any person undertakes to provide, arrange for, pay for, or reimburse any part of the cost of a single health care service, provided, that a part of the plan consists of arranging for or the provision of the single health care service, as distinguished from an indemnification against the cost of that service, on a prepaid basis through insurance or otherwise and that no part of that plan consists of arranging for the provision of more than one health care need of a single specified nature. (Emphasis added.)
We think that the definition of "single health care service plan" in subpart (s) indicates that under such a plan the provision of single health care services is, at least in part, paid for in advance. The referral programs you describe charge a fee for "referring" enrollees to a list of single health care service providers, but do not, as you describe them, pay any part of that fee to the providers for the latter's provision of health care services to the enrollees. Under this scenario, there is no prepayment for the actual health care services eventually provided. Those programs thus do not involve the "arranging for or the provision of the single health care service . . . on a prepaid basis" under the definitional provisions of article 20A.02, subpart (s), and thus do not constitute "single health care service plans."
We understand your second question to be essentially the same question as the one described above. Our answer is the same.
You ask finally: if the referral programs do not come within the definition of "single health care service plans," and the programs are thus not "health maintenance organizations" under chapter 20A and subject to regulation as such by the commissioner and the State Board of Insurance, which agencies, if any, have regulatory authority or jurisdiction over such programs? We cannot give an exhaustive answer to this question; however, we can point out some relevant provisions.
In addition to health maintenance organizations, the State Board of Insurance has authority generally over the business of insurance in this state. See, e.g., Ins. Code arts. 1.10, 1.14, 1.14-1. However, the referral plans you describe appear to lack the feature of "risk distribution." See 45 Tex.Jur.3d Insurance Contracts and Coverage § 1 (and authorities cited there); see also Attorney General Opinions MW-455 (1982); H-344 (1974); WW-1475 (1962); O-4986-A (1943) (and authorities cited in those opinions). Having concluded that a referral program such as you describe is not a health maintenance organization subject to regulation by the State Board of Insurance under chapter 20A, we also conclude that neither does such a program constitute an insurance business under the Insurance Code. Such programs are thus not subject to regulation by the State Board of Insurance.
Of course the programs would be generally subject to state laws — for example, the Deceptive Trade Practices and Consumer Protection Act. Bus.  Com. Code § 17.41 et seq. If they are corporations, they must comply with the laws applicable thereto. See, e.g., Bus.Corp. Act art. 3.03 (filing of articles of incorporation with the secretary of state). Also, the health care service providers to whom the referral programs refer their enrollees would be subject to regulation by their respective licensing agencies, and to laws governing their professions. See, e.g., V.T.C.S. art. 4552-1.01 et seq. (the Texas Optometry Act).
Although you do not raise, and we consequently do not address in detail here, any other issues with respect to the lawfulness of such referral practices, we note finally that provisions of law other than those in the Health Maintenance Organization Act may, depending on the facts of the particular case, restrict such operations. See generally V.T.C.S. art. 4505a (prohibits health care practitioners from employing any person to secure patients).
 SUMMARY
Referral programs that "arrange for" services of single health care service providers at a discount to enrollees in return for a referral fee are not "single health care service plans" under the Insurance Code article 20A.02, relating to health maintenance organizations, where there is no prepayment for the actual single health care services provided.
Very truly yours,
  Jim Mattox Attorney General of Texas
  Mary Keller First Assistant Attorney General
  Judge Zollie Steakley Special Assistant Attorney General
  Renea Hicks Special Assistant Attorney General
  Rick Gilpin Chairman Opinion Committee
  Prepared by William Walker Assistant Attorney General
1 Also, "health care services" is defined in subpart (i) of article 20A.02 as
  any services, including the furnishing to any individual of medical or dental care, or hospitalization or incident to the furnishing of such care or hospitalization, as well as the furnishing to any person of any and all other services for the purpose of preventing, alleviating, curing or healing human illness or injury or a single health care service plan.