The Illinois Department of Insurance (IDOI) announced a $1.25 million fine for Celtic Insurance Company, a subsidiary of Centene Corporation, for violating the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act (MHPAEA) and the Network Adequacy and Transparency Act (NATA), as revealed in the Department's comprehensive market conduct examination of the company.
MHPAEA is a federal law that requires health insurance plans to have equivalent levels of coverage for mental health and substance use disorder care as for medical or surgical care, and Illinois law further expands upon those requirements. NATA mandates that health insurance carriers maintain an adequate network of providers.
"The fine makes clear our commitment to ensuring that Illinoisans seeking treatment for mental health or substance use disorder receive equitable coverage from their health insurance plans," said Governor JB Pritzker. "Healthcare is a right, not a privilege, and this administration will continue to hold health insurance companies accountable when they fall short of their obligations to consumers."
"We know the importance of having health insurance coverage for mental health and substance use disorder treatment, particularly since the pandemic has impacted so many people," said IDOI Director Dana Popish Severinghaus. "In Illinois, parity is the law and companies cannot create a barrier to treatment for patients in need. Our comprehensive market conduct exam revealed Celtic did just that, and we will continue to hold insurers accountable under the law to help improve equity and access to health insurance coverage."
Comprehensive market conduct examinations focus on a wide scope of issues that may include consumer complaints, claims practices, rating of policies, underwriting of policies for acceptability, and marketing for all areas of the company's operations.
IDOI's comprehensive market conduct exam, performed from 2018-2020 and posted on October 18, 2022, revealed that Celtic had the following violations involving parity.
The company:
• Created a barrier to treatment by imposing prior authorization for all substance use disorder claims.
• Failed to utilize American Society of Addiction Medicine (ASAM) medical necessity criteria for substance use disorder benefit determinations.
• Failed to sufficiently complete Non-Quantitative Treatment Limitation (NQTL) comparative analysis to prove adherence to Illinois and federal laws.
• Created consumer access barriers (prior authorization) to ADHD medications, anti-depressants, antipsychotics, flumazenil (treats drug overdose), Vivitrol (helps prevent relapse into drug or alcohol abuse), Lucemyra (alleviates opioid withdraw symptoms), buprenorphine/ naloxone tablets, buprenorphine tablets for pregnancy, and Fetzima/Trintellix/Viibryd (antidepressants).
• Created a quantity limitation barrier to Anti-Anxiety, Antipsychotic, Risperidone TBDP (schizophrenia treatment), Smoking Cessation Medications, Evzio (overdose treatment), Latuda (schizophrenia treatment), probuphine and sublocade (addiction treatment medications similar to buprenorphine), buprenorphine/naloxone/suboxone films, and HIV/AID medications.
• Placed certain commonly prescribed medications on non-preferred medication tiers or non-formulary, ADHD medication, antidepressant medications, and substance abuse medications-Antabuse, Zyban, and Suboxone films.
• Created a barrier to treatment for consumers by denying step therapy exception requests.
Original source can be found here.