The Right to Information
about Your Plan and How it Works
- The right to information on what health care services are covered
and any limitations on that coverage
- The right to obtain a current directory of doctors within the network
- The right to know how your managed care plan pays its doctors so
you know if financial incentives or disincentives are tied to medical
decisions
The Right to Ask Questions and to File Complaints,
Appeals and Lawsuits
- The right to no "gag rules"-doctors are allowed to discuss
all treatment options even if they are not covered services
- The right to know the reason your managed care plan denied a covered
service requested by you or your doctor
- The right to file appeals with the managed care plan concerning
denials or limitations of a covered service
- The right to file complaints with the managed care plan regarding
any aspect of the plan's health care services, including quality of
care, choice, accessibility of providers and network adequacy
- The right to receive no retaliation against you or your doctor for
filing complaints or appeals
- The right to independent review of the plan's decision to deny or
limit covered services; if you have exhausted the managed care plan's
internal appeal process, you have the right to appeal that decision
through the Independent Health Care Appeals Program (see Appeals
and Complaints for more details)
- The right to sue your managed care plan for losses if you or a covered
member of your family sustain serious injury or death that you believe
is the result of the managed care plan’s denial or delay of approval
of medically necessary covered services
The Right to Appropriate Treatment
- The right to have a doctor-not an administrator-make the decision
to deny or limit coverage
- The right to change primary care providers without having to wait
more than two weeks
- The right to access a primary care provider 24 hours a day, 365
days a year for urgent care
- The right to call 911 in a potentially life-threatening situation
without prior approval
- The right to go to an emergency room without first contacting the
HMO when it appears to the member that serious harm could result from
not obtaining immediate medical treatment
- The right to coverage of a medical screening exam in a hospital
emergency room to determine whether an emergency medical condition
exists
- The right to a choice of participating specialists when getting
an authorized referral
- The right of a consumer with a chronic disability to be referred
to an experienced specialist
- The right to coverage of certain preventive care, including childhood
immunizations, lead screening, certain cancer screenings, testing for glaucoma,
cholesterol and blood glucose levels
- The right to a minimum amount of time in the hospital after giving
birth or having a mastectomy
- The right to receive continued coverage from a doctor who stops
being part of the network for up to four months and longer for certain medical
conditions
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