California Welfare and Institutions Code 14125 – (a) The purpose of this article is to establish provider …
(a) The purpose of this article is to establish provider reimbursement rates for incontinence medical supplies covered by the Medi-Cal program. Reimbursement for incontinence medical supplies shall consist of the negotiated contract prices within each product category, plus a markup fee equal to 38 percent of the contract price.
(b) (1) In establishing the list of incontinence medical supplies, the department may enter into exclusive or nonexclusive contracts on a bid or negotiated basis with manufacturers, distributors, dispensers, or suppliers of incontinence medical supplies.
Terms Used In California Welfare and Institutions Code 14125
- Contract: A legal written agreement that becomes binding when signed.
- Department: means the State Department of Health Services. See California Welfare and Institutions Code 14125.1
- Incontinence medical supplies: means disposable medical supplies that are covered benefits under the Medi-Cal program pursuant to subdivision (s) of Section 14132 when prescribed by a physician for the treatment of individuals who are incontinent. See California Welfare and Institutions Code 14125.1
- Manufacturer: means any person, partnership, or corporation who assembles or combines the components of incontinence supplies into a final product sold to dealers. See California Welfare and Institutions Code 14125.1
- Markup: The process by which congressional committees and subcommittees debate, amend, and rewrite proposed legislation.
- Medi-Cal: means the California Medical Assistance Program. See California Welfare and Institutions Code 14063
(2) To ensure that the health needs of Medi-Cal beneficiaries are met, the department shall, when evaluating a decision to execute a contract, and when evaluating incontinence medical supplies for retention on, addition to, or deletion from, the list of incontinence medical supplies, consider all of the following criteria:
(A) The safety of the product.
(B) The effectiveness of the product.
(C) The essential need for the product.
(D) The potential for misuse of the product.
(E) The immediate or long-term cost-effectiveness of the product.
(3) The deficiency of a product when measured by one of the criteria specified in paragraph (2) may be sufficient to support a decision that the product should be deleted from, should not be added to, or should not be retained on, the list of medical supplies. However, the superiority of a product under one criterion may be sufficient to warrant the addition or retention of the product, notwithstanding a deficiency in another criterion.
(4) In the evaluation of the effectiveness of a product, the department may require the manufacturer, distributor, dispenser, or supplier to submit their products to testing by an independent laboratory. For the purposes of this section, “independent laboratory” means an analytical laboratory that is not a subsidiary of, affiliated with, or on retainer for, the manufacturer, distributor, dispenser, or supplier.
(c) The department may use Healthcare Common Procedure Code System codes or Universal Product Number codes for the processing and payment of incontinence medical supplies.
(Amended by Stats. 2007, Ch. 188, Sec. 78. Effective August 24, 2007.)