(a) A health care professional or health care provider shall be provided a remittance advice, which must include an explanation of a recoupment or offset taken by an insurer, health maintenance organization, independent practice association, or physician hospital organization, if any. The recoupment explanation shall, at a minimum, include the name of the patient; the date of service; the service code or if no service code is available a service description; the recoupment amount; and the reason for the recoupment or offset. In addition, an insurer, health maintenance organization, independent practice association, or physician hospital organization shall provide with the remittance advice, or with any demand for recoupment or offset, a telephone number or mailing address to initiate an appeal of the recoupment or offset together with the deadline for initiating an appeal. Such information shall be prominently displayed on the remittance advice or written document containing the demand for recoupment or offset. Any appeal of a recoupment or offset by a health care professional or health care provider must be made within 60 days after receipt of the remittance advice.
     (b) It is not a recoupment when a health care professional or health care provider is paid an amount prospectively or concurrently under a contract with an insurer, health maintenance organization, independent practice association, or physician hospital organization that requires a retrospective reconciliation based upon specific conditions outlined in the contract.

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Terms Used In Illinois Compiled Statutes 215 ILCS 5/368d

  • Appeal: A request made after a trial, asking another court (usually the court of appeals) to decide whether the trial was conducted properly. To make such a request is "to appeal" or "to take an appeal." One who appeals is called the appellant.
  • Contract: A legal written agreement that becomes binding when signed.
  • Fraud: Intentional deception resulting in injury to another.

     (c) No recoupment or offset may be requested or withheld from future payments 12 months or more after the original payment is made, except in cases in which:
         (1) a court, government administrative agency, other
    
tribunal, or independent third-party arbitrator makes or has made a formal finding of fraud or material misrepresentation;
        (2) an insurer is acting as a plan administrator for
    
the Comprehensive Health Insurance Plan under the Comprehensive Health Insurance Plan Act;
        (3) the provider has already been paid in full by any
    
other payer, third party, or workers’ compensation insurer; or
        (4) an insurer contracted with the Department of
    
Healthcare and Family Services is required by the Department of Healthcare and Family Services to recoup or offset payments due to a federal Medicaid requirement.
No contract between an insurer and a health care professional or health care provider may provide for recoupments in violation of this Section. Nothing in this Section shall be construed to preclude insurers, health maintenance organizations, independent practice associations, or physician hospital organizations from resolving coordination of benefits between or among each other, including, but not limited to, resolution of workers’ compensation and third-party liability cases, without recouping payment from the provider beyond the 18-month time limit provided in this subsection (c).