(a) Confidentiality requirements. To ensure confidentiality,
a URA must, when contacting a physician's, doctor's, or other health
care provider's office, provide its certification number, name, and
professional qualifications.
(1) If requested by the physician, doctor, or other
health care provider, the URA must present written documentation that
it is acting as an agent of the insurance carrier for the relevant
injured employee.
(2) Medical records and injured employee specific information
must be maintained by a URA in a secure area with access limited to
essential personnel only.
(3) A URA must retain information generated and obtained
by the URA in the course of utilization review for at least four years.
(4) A URA's charges for providing a copy of recorded
personal information to individuals may not exceed 10 cents per page
and may not include any costs that are otherwise recouped as part
of the charge for utilization review.
(b) Written procedures on confidentiality.
(1) A URA must specify in writing the procedures the
URA will implement pertaining to confidentiality of information received
from the injured employee, the injured employee's representative,
and the physician, doctor, or other health care provider and the information
exchanged between the URA and third parties for conducting utilization
review. These procedures must specify that:
(A) specific information received from the injured
employee, the injured employee's representative, and the physician,
doctor, or other health care provider and the information exchanged
between the URA and third parties for the purpose of conducting reviews
will be considered confidential, be used by the review agent solely
for utilization review, and be shared by the URA with only those third
parties who have authority to receive the information, for example,
the claim administrator; and
(B) the URA has procedures in place to address confidentiality,
and that the URA agrees to abide by any federal and state laws governing
the issue of confidentiality.
(2) Summary data which does not provide sufficient
information to allow identification of individual injured employees,
physicians, doctors, or other health care providers is not considered
confidential.
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