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Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100.A Part D plan must have enough contracted retail pharmacies in its network to ensure that enrollees have adequate access to covered prescription drugs. Access to covered drugs from an out-of-network pharmacy is required when enrollees: (1) cannot reasonably be expected to obtain such drugs at a network pharmacy and (2) do not access covered drugs at out-of-network pharmacies on a routine basis. A plan is required to establish reasonable rules to appropriately limit out-of-network access to covered prescription drugs. 42 CFR Sections 423.120(a) and 423.124; Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Manual, Chapter 5, Section 60.1.If a plan sponsor does not have all of the information it needs to make a decision, the plan sponsor should make reasonable and diligent efforts to obtain the missing information within the standard timeframe for making a decision and notifying the enrollee of the decision (i.e., within 72 hours after receiving the request or physician's or other prescriber's supporting statement). When a plan sponsor could acquire missing information, such as a National Drug Code (NDC) number, by contacting the enrollee's pharmacist, physician, or other prescriber, it should do so instead of relying on the enrollee to provide the information. Prescription Drug Benefit Manual, Chapter 18, ?30.3.2.Occasionally, a plan sponsor will have enough information to determine that a reimbursement request is payable, but not enough to determine the exact amount. When this situation occurs, the plan sponsor could issue a favorable decision within the 72-hour timeframe (the plan sponsor is not required to say how much the payment will be in its notice to the enrollee), and utilize the remainder of the 30-day payment period described in ??40.2 and 130.1 of this chapter to determine how much the enrollee should be reimbursed and make payment. If a plan sponsor chooses to send the payment within the 30-day timeframe after notifying the enrollee of the favorable decision within the 72-hour timeframe, the initial notice to the enrollee must include the following information: 1) the plan sponsor is approving the request; 2) payment will be sent within 30 days after the request was received; 3) if the enrollee does not agree with the amount received, he or she can request an appeal with the plan sponsor; and 4) briefly explain that the member may not receive the entire amount he or she paid out-of-pocket because certain items (e.g., co-payment amounts) are not reimbursable, and include a brief summary of items that are generally subtracted. Prescription Drug Benefit Manual, Chapter 18, ?30.3.2.The Plan will generally cover prescriptions only if they are filled at a Plan network pharmacy. Prescriptions filled at an out-of-network pharmacy may only be covered when a network pharmacy is not available. The Plan will typically cover prescriptions filled at an out-of-network pharmacy when the prescription is for a medical emergency or urgent care, when there are no 24-hour network pharmacies within a reasonable driving distance or when the prescription is for a drug that is out of stock at an accessible network pharmacy. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
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"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100.An enrollee in a Part D plan may be subject to annual deductibles, coinsurance, and copayments (including tiered copayments) specified by the plan. 42 CFR Section 423.104.The Part D Plan enrollee may pay part of the cost of a covered drug during the initial coverage period as a copayment or coinsurance. The amount of the copayment or coinsurance will vary depending on the drug's tier and place of purchase. Tamsulosin HCL 0.4 mg is on Tier 1 of the Plan's 2020 Formulary. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100.An enrollee in a Part D plan may be subject to annual deductibles, coinsurance, and copayments (including tiered copayments) specified by the plan. 42 CFR Section 423.104.The Part D Plan enrollee may pay part of the cost of a covered drug during the initial coverage period as a copayment or coinsurance. The amount of the copayment or coinsurance will vary depending on the drug's tier and place of purchase. Temazepam 30 mg is on Tier 1 of the Plan's 2020 Formulary. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100.An enrollee in a Part D plan may be subject to annual deductibles, coinsurance, and copayments (including tiered copayments) specified by the plan. 42 CFR Section 423.104.The Part D Plan enrollee may pay part of the cost of a covered drug during the initial coverage period as a copayment or coinsurance. The amount of the copayment or coinsurance will vary depending on the drug's tier and place of purchase. Lisinopril 10 mg is on Tier 1 of the Plan's 2020 Formulary. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100.For a drug to be covered under Medicare Part D, it must meet the definition of a Part D drug. The Social Security Act generally defines a Part D drug as a drug product that meets the following requirements:- It requires a prescription for dispensing; and - It is approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for safety and effectiveness; and - It is prescribed for a medically accepted indication; and - It is not otherwise excluded from coverage under Part D law and rules. See Social Security Act, Sections 1860D-2(e)(1) and 1927(k)(2)(A)(i)-(iii); and Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Manual, Chapter 6, Section 10.1. Medicare rules state that the definition of a Part D drug includes medical supplies directly associated with the injection of insulin, including syringes, needles, alcohol swabs, gauze, and insulin injection delivery devices not otherwise covered under Medicare Part B, such as insulin pens, pen supplies, and needle-free syringes. Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Manual, Chapter 6, Section 10.5.The Plan does not cover drugs/items excluded from Medicare Part D coverage. If you purchase drugs/items that are excluded, you must pay for them yourself. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100.Medicare law defines a covered prescription drug as a drug available only by prescription, approved by the FDA, used and sold in the United States, and used for a medically accepted indication. In general, for Part D drugs used in an anticancer chemotherapeutic regimen, a 'medically accepted indication' means a use that is:-Approved by the FDA, or -Supported by citation in one of several specified drug compendia, including the American Hospital Formulary Service-Drug Information (AHFS-DI), National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) Drugs and Biologics Compendium, Thomson Micromedex DrugDex, and Clinical Pharmacology; or -Supported by clinical research that appears in the peer reviewed medical literature, specifically in journals or publications as specified by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS). Social Security Act, Sections 1860D-2(e)(1) and 1861(t)(2)(B); and Medicare Benefit Policy Manual, Chapter 15, Section 50.4.5. A Part D plan is permitted to use a number of different tools to manage its formulary. One of these tools is known as prior authorization. This process requires an enrollee to obtain coverage approval for a drug before the drug is dispensed and covered by the plan. 70 Federal Register No. 18, issued January 28, 2005 (Preamble to Final Rule).The Part D Plan can only cover drugs prescribed for a medically accepted indication. The Plan requires prior approval (also called prior authorization) before covering some prescription drugs. If prior approval is not obtained, the Plan may not cover the drug. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100.A Part D plan must grant an exception for a drug that is not on its formulary whenever it determines that the drug is medically necessary, consistent with the prescriber's statement, and that the drug would be covered but for the fact that it is not on the formulary. The statement must show that all of the covered drugs on any tier of the plan's formulary for treatment of the enrollee's condition would not be as effective as the non-formulary drug or would have adverse effects for the enrollee. 42 CFR Sections 423.578(b) and 423.578(b)(5)(i).If a drug is not on the formulary (drug list), an enrollee can ask the Plan to make an exception and cover the drug. The Plan will make an exception for coverage if it determines that the requested drug is medically necessary, consistent with the prescriber's statement. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). For a drug to be covered under Medicare Part D, it must meet the definition of a Part D drug. The Social Security Act generally defines a Part D drug as a drug product that meets the following requirements:-It requires a prescription for dispensing; and -It is approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for safety and effectiveness; and -It is prescribed for a medically accepted indication; and -It is not otherwise excluded from coverage under Part D law and rules. See Social Security Act, Sections 1860D-2(e)(1) and 1927(k)(2)(A)(i)-(iii); and Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Manual, Chapter 6, Section 10.1. The definition of a Part D drug includes only those prescription drugs that are approved by the FDA for safety and effectiveness. For a drug to be approved by the FDA, the manufacturer of the drug must file a New Drug Application (NDA) or Abbreviated New Drug Application (ANDA) with the FDA's Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (CDER). Medicare Part D does not pay for drugs that are not FDA approved prescription drugs. See Social Security Act, Sections 1860D-2(e)(1), 1927(k)(2), and 1927(b)(3). The Plan does not cover drugs/items excluded from Medicare Part D coverage. If you purchase drugs/items that are excluded, you must pay for them yourself. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100.Medicare law defines those drugs that may be covered under Part D. A covered prescription drug must be used for a medically accepted indication. A medically accepted indication means a use that is approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), or a use supported by one or more citations in the drug compendia approved by Medicare. Medically accepted indications do not include uses in research or uses described in peer-reviewed medical literature. Please refer to Social Security Act, Sections 1860D-2(e)(1) and 1927(k)(6); and 42 CFR Section 423.100.A Part D Plan must grant an exception for a drug that is not on its formulary whenever it determines that the drug is medically necessary, consistent with the prescriber's statement, and that the drug would be covered but for the fact that it is not on the formulary. The statement must show that all of the covered drugs on any tier of the plan's formulary for treatment of the enrollee's condition would not be as effective as the non-formulary drug or would have adverse effects for the enrollee. 42 CFR Section 423.578(b).If a drug is not on the formulary (drug list), an enrollee can ask the Plan to make an exception and cover the drug. The Plan will make an exception for coverage if it determines that the requested drug is medically necessary, consistent with the prescriber's statement. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100.For a drug to be covered under Medicare Part D, it must meet the definition of a Part D drug. The Social Security Act generally defines a Part D drug as a drug product that meets the following requirements:-It requires a prescription for dispensing; and -It is approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for safety and effectiveness; and -It is prescribed for a medically accepted indication; and -It is not otherwise excluded from coverage under Part D law and rules.See Social Security Act, Sections 1860D-2(e)(1) and 1927(k)(2)(A)(i)-(iii); and Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Manual, Chapter 6, Section 10.1.The definition of a Part D drug includes only those prescription drugs that are approved by the FDA for safety and effectiveness. For a drug to be approved by the FDA, the manufacturer of the drug must file a New Drug Application (NDA) or Abbreviated New Drug Application (ANDA) with the FDA's Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (CDER). Medicare Part D does not pay for drugs that are not FDA approved prescription drugs. See Social Security Act, Sections 1860D-2(e)(1), 1927(k)(2), and 1927(b)(3).The Plan does not cover drugs/items excluded from Medicare Part D coverage. If you purchase drugs/items that are excluded, you must pay for them yourself. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100.A Part D Plan may establish tiered cost-sharing for drugs on its formulary. The Plan groups covered drugsinto different cost-sharing levels or tiers. Medicare rules permit an enrollee to request a tiering exception tocover a higher cost-sharing tiered drug at a lower cost-sharing tier level so long as there is a drug on alower cost-sharing tier that is approved for treating the same condition that the requested higher costsharingtiered drug is being used to treat. However, Medicare rules also permit a Plan to design its tieringexception procedures so that a Plan does not have to grant a tiering exception for brand or biologic drugs ifthe lower cost-sharing tier or tiers only contain generic drugs approved for treating the same condition. 42CFR Sections 423.4; 423.578(a); 423.578(a)(6); 423.578(c)(3)(ii); Parts C & D Grievances,Organization/Coverage Determinations, and Appeals Guidance Manual, Section 40.5.1.The prescription drug benefit offered by the Part D Plan must meet criteria requirements pertaining to theannual deductible, the initial coverage limit, the coverage gap and catastrophic coverage. For the initialcoverage limit, the rules provide for a benefit of shared coverage of costs between the enrollee and Plan.An enrollee in a Part D Plan may be subject to annual deductibles, coinsurance and copayments (includingtiered copayments) specified by the Plan. 42 CFR Section 423.104.Each drug on the Plan's formulary is assigned to a cost-sharing tier. The Part D Plan contract allows an enrollee to request an exception to the Plan's cost-sharing structure to pay less for a drug. This is called a tiering exception. The prescriber must provide medical reasons to support a tiering exception. The Plan cannot grant a tiering exception for any drug in the specialty cost-sharing tier. The Plan cannot grant a tiering exception for a non-formulary drug being covered under an exception to the formulary. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100.A Part D Plan must grant an exception for a drug that is not on its formulary whenever it determines that the drug is medically necessary, consistent with the prescriber's statement, and that the drug would be covered but for the fact that it is not on the formulary. The statement must show that all of the covered drugs on any tier of the plan's formulary for treatment of the enrollee's condition would not be as effective as the non-formulary drug or would have adverse effects for the enrollee. 42 CFR Sections 423.578(b) and 423.578(b)(5)(i).A Part D Plan is permitted to use dose restriction to manage its formulary. This process limits the number of doses that may be dispensed during a specific period of time (usually per month). A plan must grant an exception to its dose restriction rules if it determines that the requested dosage is medically necessary, consistent with the prescriber's statement. The statement must show that the number of doses available under a dose restriction has been or is likely to be ineffective in treating the enrollee or adversely impacts the drug's effectiveness or patient compliance. 42 CFR Sections 423.578(a), 423.578(b), and 423.578(b)(B)(iii).If a drug is not on the formulary (drug list), an enrollee can ask the Plan to make an exception and cover the drug. The Plan will make an exception for coverage if it determines that the requested drug is medically necessary, consistent with the prescriber's statement. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC).The Part D Plan may cover limited quantities of some drugs. However, the Plan allows an exception for a greater amount of the drug if it determines that the requested dosage is medically necessary, consistent with the prescriber's statement. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100.Medicare law defines those drugs that are eligible to be covered under the prescription drug benefit. Medicare law specifically excludes coverage for any drug for which payment would be available under Parts A or B of Medicare for that individual. Social Security Act, Section 1860D-2(e)(2)(B). Coverage is available under Medicare Part B for prescription drugs used in immunosuppressive therapy furnished to a beneficiary who has received an organ transplant, provided the beneficiary receiving the drug was enrolled in Medicare Part A at the time of the organ transplant. 42 CFR Section 410.30; Medicare Benefit Policy Manual, Chapter 15, Section 50.5.1. Medicare Part B local policy states that prescription drugs used in immunosuppressive therapy are covered if I) they are prescribed following a Heart transplant, II) the transplant met Medicare coverage criteria in effect with respect to the facility being approved for Heart transplant, III) the patient was enrolled in Medicare Part A at the time of the transplant, IV) the patient is enrolled in Medicare Part B at the time the drugs are dispensed and V) the drugs are furnished on or after the date of discharge. Assuming criteria I, II and III are met, a transplant is considered a covered transplant for purposes of this Medicare policy whether payment for the transplant was made by Medicare or another insurer. You can find this rule at Noridian Healthcare Solutions, LLC, Policy Article for Immunosuppressive Drugs (A52474) or CGS Administrators, LLC, Policy Article for Immunosuppressive Drugs (A52474).The Part D Plan contract states that the Plan cannot cover drugs that would be covered under Medicare Part A or Part B. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100.A Part D Plan must grant an exception for a drug that is not on its formulary whenever it determines that the drug is medically necessary, consistent with the prescriber's statement, and that the drug would be covered but for the fact that it is not on the formulary. The statement must show that all of the covered drugs on any tier of the plan's formulary for treatment of the enrollee's condition would not be as effective as the non-formulary drug or would have adverse effects for the enrollee. 42 CFR Sections 423.578(b) and 423.578(b)(5)(i).For a drug to be covered under Medicare Part D, it must meet the definition of a Part D drug. The Social Security Act generally defines a Part D drug as a drug product that meets the following requirements:-It requires a prescription for dispensing; and -It is approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for safety and effectiveness; and -It is prescribed for a medically accepted indication; and -It is not otherwise excluded from coverage under Part D law and rules. See Social Security Act, Sections 1860D-2(e)(1) and 1927(k)(2)(A)(i)-(iii); and Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Manual, Chapter 6, Section 10.1.The definition of a Part D drug does not include over-the-counter (OTC) products. OTC drug products are those drugs that are available to consumers without a prescription. The FDA's Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (CDER) is the entity that oversees the designation and marketing of OTC drugs. Medicare Part D does not pay for OTC drug products. See rules noted above; and Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Manual, Chapter 6, Section 10.10 and Chapter 7, Section 60.2.If a drug is not on the formulary (drug list), an enrollee can ask the Plan to make an exception and cover the drug. The Plan will make an exception for coverage if it determines that the requested drug is medically necessary, consistent with the prescriber's statement. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC).The Plan does not cover drugs/items excluded from Medicare Part D coverage. If you purchase drugs/items that are excluded, you must pay for them yourself. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100.Medicare law defines those drugs that are eligible to be covered under the prescription drug benefit. Medicare law specifically excludes coverage for any drug for which payment would be available under Parts A or B of Medicare for that individual. Social Security Act, Section 1860D-2(e)(2)(B). Medicare Part B pays for services and supplies incident to the service of a physician (or other practitioner). Services and supplies must be furnished in a noninstitutional setting to noninstitutional patients; an integral, though incidental, part of the service of a physician in the course of diagnosis or treatment of an injury or illness; commonly furnished without charge or included in the bill of a physician; of a type that are commonly furnished in the office or clinic of a physician; and furnished under the direct supervision of the physician. In order to meet all the general requirements for coverage under the incident-to provision, an FDA approved drug or biological must be of a form that is not usually self-administered. 42 CFR Section 410.26(b); Medicare Benefit Policy Manual, Chapter 15, Section 50.3. Medicare law says that Medicare Part B pays for services and supplies (including drug and biologicals which are not usually self-administered) that are furnished incident to a physician's or other practitioner's services, are commonly included in the physician's or practitioner's bills, and for which payment is not made under a separate benefit category. Diagnostic tests are subject to their own coverage requirements, and, depending on the particular test, the supervision requirement for diagnostic tests or other services may be more or less stringent than supervision requirements for services and supplies furnished incident to a physician's or other practitioner's services. Diagnostic tests need not also meet the incident to requirement. 42 CFR Section 410.26; Medicare Benefit Policy Manual, Chapter 15, Section 60(A).The Part D Plan contract states that the Plan cannot cover drugs that would be covered under Medicare Part A or Part B. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
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"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100.Medicare law defines those drugs that are eligible to be covered under the prescription drug benefit. Medicare law specifically excludes coverage for any drug for which payment would be available under Parts A or B of Medicare for that individual. Social Security Act, Section 1860D-2(e)(2)(B). Parenteral nutrition is covered under the Prosthetic Device benefit (Social Security Act, Section 1861(s)(8)). Parenteral nutrition is covered for a beneficiary with permanent, severe pathology of the alimentary tract which does not allow absorption of sufficient nutrients to maintain weight and strength commensurate with the beneficiary's general condition. The beneficiary must have a permanent impairment. Permanence does not require a determination that there is no possibility that the beneficiary's condition may improve sometime in the future. If the judgment of the attending physician, substantiated in the medical record, is that the condition is of long and indefinite duration (ordinarily at least 3 months), the test of permanence is considered met. The beneficiary must have a condition involving the small intestine and/or its exocrine glands which significantly impairs the absorption of nutrients OR a disease of the stomach and/or intestine which is a motility disorder and impairs the ability of nutrients to be transported through the Gastrointestinal system. There must be objective evidence supporting the clinical diagnosis. If the coverage requirements for parenteral nutrition are met, medically necessary nutrients, administration supplies, and equipment are covered. You can find these rules at Noridian Administrative Services OR CGS Administrators, LLC Local Coverage Article for Parenteral Nutrition (A52515).The Part D Plan contract states that the Plan cannot cover drugs that would be covered under Medicare Part A or Part B. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
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"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100.Medicare law defines those drugs that are eligible to be covered under the prescription drug benefit. Medicare law specifically excludes coverage for any drug for which payment would be available under Parts A or B of Medicare for that individual. Social Security Act, Section 1860D-2(e)(2)(B). Medicare Part B pays for durable medical equipment (DME) if the equipment is used in the patient's home or in an institution that is used as a home. Payment may be made for supplies necessary for the effective use of DME. Such supplies include those drugs and biologicals which must be put directly into the equipment in order to achieve the therapeutic benefit of the DME. 42 CFR Section 410.38; Medicare Benefit Policy Manual, Chapter 15, Section 110.3. Medicare Part B local policy states that an external infusion pump is covered for administration of continuous subcutaneous insulin for the treatment of diabetes mellitus if criterion A or B is met and if criterion C or D is met:A. C-peptide testing requirement - must meet criterion 1 or 2 and criterion 3: 1. C-peptide level is less than or equal to 110 percent of the lower limit of normal of the laboratory's measurement method. 2. For beneficiaries with renal insufficiency and a creatinine clearance (actual or calculated from age, weight, and serum creatinine) less than or equal to 50 ml/minute, a fasting C-peptide level is less than or equal to 200 per cent of the lower limit of normal of the laboratory's measurement method. 3. A fasting blood sugar obtained at the same time as the C-peptide level is less than or equal to 225 mg/dl.B. Beta cell autoantibody test is positive. C. The beneficiary has completed a comprehensive diabetes education program, has been on a program of multiple daily injections of insulin (i.e., at least 3 injections per day) with frequent self-adjustments of insulin dose for at least 6 months prior to initiation of the insulin pump, and has documented frequency of glucose self-testing an average of at least 4 times per day during the 2 months prior to initiation of the insulin pump, and meets one or more of the following criteria (1 -5) while on the multiple injection regimen:1. Glycosylated hemoglobin level (HbA1C) greater than 7 percent 2. History of recurring hypoglycemia 3. Wide fluctuations in blood glucose before mealtime 4. Dawn phenomenon with fasting blood sugars frequently exceeding 200 mg/dL 5. History of severe glycemic excursionsD. The beneficiary has been on an external insulin infusion pump prior to enrollment in Medicare and has documented frequency of glucose self-testing an average of at least 4 times per day during the month prior to Medicare enrollment. If criterion A or B is not met, the pump and related accessories, supplies, and insulin will be denied as not reasonable and necessary. If criterion C or D is not met, the pump and related accessories, supplies, and insulin will be denied as not reasonable and necessary. Continued coverage of an external insulin pump and supplies requires that the beneficiary be seen and evaluated by the treating practitioner at least every 3 months. In addition, the external insulin infusion pump must be ordered and follow-up care rendered by a practitioner who manages multiple beneficiaries on continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion therapy and who works closely with a team including nurses, diabetic educators, and dieticians who are knowledgeable in the use of continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion therapy. You can find this rule at Noridian Healthcare Solutions, LLC, or CGS Administrators, LLC, Local Coverage Determination (LCD) for External Infusion Pumps (L33794) and Local Coverage Article (LCA) for External Infusion Pumps (A52507).The Part D Plan contract states that the Plan cannot cover drugs that would be covered under Medicare Part A or Part B. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
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Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100.A Part D plan is permitted to use a number of different tools to manage its formulary. One of these tools is known as prior authorization. This process requires an enrollee to obtain coverage approval for a drug before the drug is dispensed and covered by the plan. 70 Federal Register No. 18, issued January 28, 2005 (Preamble to Final Rule).Formulary use includes the application of cost utilization tools, including step-therapy, dosage limitations and therapeutic substitution. 42 CFR Section 423.578(b)(iii). The exceptions process extends to coverage requests to set aside cost utilization rules for non-formulary drugs. A Part D plan must grant an exception whenever it determines that the drug is medically necessary, consistent with the prescriber's statement, and that the drug would be covered but for the fact that it is subject to cost utilization rules. 42 CFR Section 423.578(b). The statement must show that all of the covered drugs on any tier of the plan's formulary for treatment of the enrollee's condition would not be as effective as the drug at issue, or would have adverse effects for the enrollee. Parts C & D Enrollee Grievances, Organization/Coverage Determinations, and Appeals Guidance Manual, Section 40.5.3.The Part D Plan can only cover drugs prescribed for a medically accepted indication. The Plan requires prior approval (also called prior authorization) before covering some prescription drugs. If prior approval is not obtained, the Plan may not cover the drug. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage. | [
"medicare",
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"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
NA-PRRCitations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100.A Part D Plan is permitted to use a number of different tools to manage its formulary. One of these tools is known as prior authorization. This process requires an enrollee to obtain coverage approval for a drug before the drug is dispensed and covered by the plan. 70 Federal Register No. 18, issued January 28, 2005 (Preamble to Final Rule). Formulary use includes the application of cost utilization tools, including step-therapy, dosage limitations and therapeutic substitution. 42 CFR Section 423.578(b)(iii). The exceptions process extends to coverage requests to set aside cost utilization rules for non-formulary drugs. A Part D plan must grant an exception whenever it determines that the drug is medically necessary, consistent with the prescriber's statement, and that the drug would be covered but for the fact that it is subject to cost utilization rules. 42 CFR Section 423.578(b). The statement must show that all of the covered drugs on any tier of the plan's formulary for treatment of the enrollee's condition would not be as effective as the drug at issue, or would have adverse effects for the enrollee. Parts C & D Enrollee Grievances, Organization/Coverage Determinations, and Appeals Guidance Manual, Section 40.5.3.The Part D Plan can only cover drugs prescribed for a medically accepted indication. The Plan requires prior approval (also called prior authorization) before covering some prescription drugs. If prior approval is not obtained, the Plan may not cover the drug. A Plan must grant an exception to prior approval rules if it determines that the requested drug is medically necessary, consistent with the prescriber's statement. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100.Medicare law defines those drugs that may be covered under Part D. A covered prescription drug must be used for a medically accepted indication. A medically accepted indication means a use that is approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), or a use supported by one or more citations in the drug compendia approved by Medicare. Medically accepted indications do not include uses in research or uses described in peer-reviewed medical literature. Please refer to Social Security Act, Sections 1860D-2(e)(1) and 1927(k)(6); and 42 CFR Section 423.100.A Part D Plan is permitted to use a number of different tools to manage its formulary. One of these tools is known as prior authorization. This process requires an enrollee to obtain coverage approval for a drug before the drug is dispensed and covered by the plan. 70 Federal Register No. 18, issued January 28, 2005 (Preamble to Final Rule).Formulary use includes the application of cost utilization tools, including step-therapy, dosage limitations and therapeutic substitution. 42 CFR Section 423.578(b)(iii). The exceptions process extends to coverage requests to set aside cost utilization rules for non-formulary drugs. A Part D plan must grant an exception whenever it determines that the drug is medically necessary, consistent with the prescriber's statement, and that the drug would be covered but for the fact that it is subject to cost utilization rules. 42 CFR Section 423.578(b). The statement must show that all of the covered drugs on any tier of the plan's formulary for treatment of the enrollee's condition would not be as effective as the drug at issue, or would have adverse effects for the enrollee. Parts C & D Enrollee Grievances, Organization/Coverage Determinations, and Appeals Guidance Manual, Section 40.5.3.A Part D Plan may establish tiered cost-sharing for drugs on its formulary. The Plan groups covered drugs into different cost-sharing levels or tiers. Medicare rules permit an enrollee to request a tiering exception to cover a higher cost-sharing tiered drug at a lower cost-sharing tier level so long as there is a drug on a lower cost-sharing tier that is approved for treating the same condition that the requested higher cost-sharing tiered drug is being used to treat. However, Medicare rules also permit a Plan to design its tiering exception procedures so that a Plan does not have to grant a tiering exception for brand or biologic drugs if the lower cost-sharing tier or tiers only contain generic drugs approved for treating the same condition. 42 CFR Sections 423.4; 423.578(a); 423.578(a)(6); 423.578(c)(3)(ii); Parts C & D Grievances, Organization/Coverage Determinations, and Appeals Guidance Manual, Section 40.5.1. The prescription drug benefit offered by the Part D Plan must meet criteria requirements pertaining to the annual deductible, the initial coverage limit, the coverage gap and catastrophic coverage. For the initial coverage limit, the rules provide for a benefit of shared coverage of costs between the enrollee and Plan. An enrollee in a Part D Plan may be subject to annual deductibles, coinsurance and copayments (including tiered copayments) specified by the Plan. 42 CFR Section 423.104.The Part D Plan can only cover drugs prescribed for a medically accepted indication. The Plan requires prior approval (also called prior authorization) before covering some prescription drugs. If prior approval is not obtained, the Plan may not cover the drug. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC).Each drug on the Plan's formulary is assigned to a tier. Generally drugs in higher tiers have higher copays than drugs in lower tiers. The Part D Plan contract allows an enrollee to request an exception to the Plan's cost-sharing structure to pay less for a drug. This is called a tiering exception. The prescriber must provide medical reasons to support a tiering exception. The Plan cannot grant a tiering exception for any drug in the specialty tier. The Plan cannot grant a tiering exception for a non-formulary drug being covered under an exception to the formulary. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage. | [
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] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100.An enrollee in a Part D plan may be subject to annual deductibles, coinsurance, and copayments (including tiered copayments) specified by the plan. 42 CFR Section 423.104.The Part D Plan enrollee may pay part of the cost of a covered drug during the initial coverage period as a copayment or coinsurance. The amount of the copayment or coinsurance will vary depending on the drug's tier and place of purchase. Doxepin 50 mg is on Tier 2 of the Plan's 2020 Formulary. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100.The prescription drug benefit offered by the Part D Plan must meet certain requirements pertaining to the annual deductible, the initial coverage limit, the coverage gap and catastrophic coverage. For the initial coverage limit, the rules provide for a benefit of shared coverage of costs between the enrollee and plan. An enrollee in a Part D Plan may be subject to annual deductibles, coinsurance, and copayments (including tiered copayments) specified by the plan. 42 CFR Section 423.104.The Part D Plan enrollee may pay part of the cost of a covered drug during the initial coverage period as a copayment or coinsurance. The amount of the copayment or coinsurance will vary depending on the drug's tier and place of purchase. If an enrollee pays the full cost of a prescription, the enrollee may submit a request for reimbursement with proof of payment to ask the Plan to pay its share of the cost. The Plan required a $54 copayment for up to a 90 day supply of a Tier 2 drug purchased in 2020 from a standard retail pharmacy. Hydralazine HCL 100 mg is on the Plan's 2020 formulary and was classified as a Tier 2 drug. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC) and formulary. | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will findabbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100.A Plan may exclude from qualified prescription drug coverage any covered part D drug--(A) for whichpayment would not be made if Section 1862(a) applied to this part; or (B) which is not prescribed inaccordance with the plan or this part. Such exclusions are determinations subject to reconsideration andappeal pursuant to subsections (g) and (h), respectively, of Section 1860D-4. Social Security Act, Section1860D-2(e)(3)(A).Notwithstanding any other provision of this title, no payment may be made under part A or part B for anyexpenses incurred for items or services--(1)(A) which, except for items and services described in asucceeding subparagraph, are not reasonable and necessary for the diagnosis or treatment of illness orinjury or to improve the functioning of a malformed body member,... Social Security Act, Section1862(a)(1)(A).The following actions by a Part D plan are coverage determinations: (1) A decision not to provide or payfor a Part D drug (including a decision not to pay because the drug is not on the plan's formulary, becausethe drug is determined not to be medically necessary, because the drug is furnished by an out-of-networkpharmacy, or because the Part D plan sponsor determines that the drug is otherwise excludable undersection 1862(a) of the Act if applied to Medicare Part D) that the enrollee believes may be covered by theplan. 42 CFR Section 423.566(b)(1).Each Part D plan must have established, for covered Part D drugs furnished through a Part D plan, a drugutilization management program, quality assurance measures and systems, and a Medication TherapyManagement Program (MTMP). 42 CFR Section 423.153(a).A Part D plan must have established a reasonable and appropriate drug utilization management programthat addresses the following: incentives to reduce costs when medically appropriate; policies and systems toassist in preventing over-utilization and under-utilization of prescribed medications; providing CMS withinformation concerning the procedures and performance of its drug utilization management program,according to guidelines specified by CMS. 42 CFR Section 423.153(b).A Part D plan must have established quality assurance measures and systems to reduce medication errorsand adverse drug interactions and improve medication use that include all of the following--(1)Representation that network providers are required to comply with minimum standards for pharmacypractice as established by the States. (2) Concurrent drug utilization review systems, policies, andprocedures designed to ensure that a review of the prescribed drug therapy is performed before eachprescription is dispensed to an enrollee in a sponsor's Part D plan, typically at the point-of-sale or point ofdistribution. The review must include, but not be limited to: Screening for potential drug therapy problemsdue to therapeutic duplication; Age/gender-related contraindications; Over-utilization and under-utilization;Drug-drug interactions; Incorrect drug dosage or duration of drug therapy; Drug-allergy contraindications;Clinical abuse/misuse. 42 CFR Section 423.153(c).A Part D sponsor must have established a MTMP that--(i) Is designed to ensure that covered Part D drugs prescribed to targeted beneficiaries described in paragraph (d)(2) of this section are appropriately used to optimize therapeutic outcomes through improved medication use. (ii) Is designed to reduce the risk of adverse events, including adverse drug interactions, for targeted beneficiaries described in paragraph (d)(2) of this section. (iii) May be furnished by a pharmacist or other qualified provider. (iv) May distinguish between services in ambulatory and institutional settings. (v) Must enroll targeted beneficiaries using an opt-out method of enrollment only. (vi) Must target beneficiaries for enrollment in the MTMP at least quarterly during each plan year. (vii) Must offer a minimum level of medication therapy management services for each beneficiary enrolled in the MTMP... 42 CFR Section 423.153(d). In accordance with Section 1860D-2(e)(3) of the Act, a Part D plan may exclude from qualified prescription drug coverage any Part D drug: 1) For which payment would not be made if items and services are not reasonable and necessary for the diagnosis or treatment of illness or injury or to improve the functioning of a malformed body member (except for Part D vaccines); or 2) Which is not prescribed in accordance with the Part D plan. Such exclusions are coverage determinations subject to reconsideration and appeal. Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Manual, Chapter 6, Section 20.4.Medicare law defines those drugs that may be covered under Part D. A covered prescription drug must be used for a medically accepted indication. A medically accepted indication means a use that is approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), or a use supported by one or more citations in the drug compendia approved by Medicare. Medically accepted indications do not include uses in research or uses described in peer-reviewed medical literature. Please refer to Social Security Act, Sections 1860D-2(e)(1) and 1927(k)(6); and 42 CFR Section 423.100.The Plan conducts drug use reviews for enrollees to help make sure that they are getting safe and appropriate care. These reviews are especially important for enrollees who have more than one provider who prescribes their drugs. The Plan does a review each time an enrollee fills a prescription. During these reviews, the Plan looks for potential problems such as possible medication errors, drugs that may not be necessary because the enrollee is taking another drug to treat the same medical condition, drugs that may not be safe or appropriate due to the enrollee's age or gender, certain combinations of drugs that could harm the enrollee if taken at the same time, prescriptions written for drugs that have ingredients the enrollee is allergic to, or possible errors in the amount (dosage) of a drug the enrollee is taking. Please refer to Chapter 3 of the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC).The Part D Plan can only cover drugs prescribed for a medically accepted indication. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
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"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will findabbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100.The prescription drug benefit offered by the Part D Plan must meet certain requirements pertaining to theannual deductible, the initial coverage limit, the coverage gap and catastrophic coverage. For the initialcoverage limit, the rules provide for a benefit of shared coverage of costs between the enrollee and plan. Anenrollee in a Part D Plan may be subject to annual deductibles, coinsurance, and copayments (includingtiered copayments) specified by the plan. 42 CFR Section 423.104.The Part D Plan enrollee may pay part of the cost of a covered drug during the initial coverage period as acopayment or coinsurance. The amount of the copayment or coinsurance will vary depending on the drug'stier and place of purchase. If an enrollee pays the full cost of a prescription, the enrollee may submit arequest for reimbursement with proof of payment to ask the Plan to pay its share of the cost. The Planrequired a $3 copayment for up to a 90 day supply of a Tier 1 drug purchased in 2020 from a mail-orderpharmacy. The Plan required a $120 copayment for up to a 90 day supply of a Tier 3 drug purchased in2020 from a mail-order pharmacy. Synthroid 50 mcg is on the Plan's 2020 formulary and was classified asa Tier 3 drug. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC) and formulary. | [
"medicare",
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"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100.Medicare Part D does not cover a (1) drug used for anorexia, weight loss or weight gain; (2) drug used to promote fertility; (3) drug used for cosmetic purposes or to promote hair growth; (4) drug used for the symptomatic relief of coughs and colds; (5) prescription vitamin and mineral product; (6) non-prescription or over-the-counter drug; (7) drug subject to manufacturer tying arrangements; and (8) drug used to treat sexual or erectile dysfunction or (9) sexual or erectile dysfunction drug used to treat a condition other than sexual or erectile dysfunction for which the drug has not been approved by the FDA. Social Security Act, Sections 1860D-2(e)(2)(A), 1927(d)(2) and 1927(d)(4)(C).The prescription drug benefit offered by the Part D Plan must meet certain requirements pertaining to the annual deductible, the initial coverage limit, the coverage gap and catastrophic coverage. For the initial coverage limit, the rules provide for a benefit of shared coverage of costs between the enrollee and plan. An enrollee in a Part D Plan may be subject to annual deductibles, coinsurance, and copayments (including tiered copayments) specified by the plan. 42 CFR Section 423.104.The Part D Plan does not cover those drugs excluded from Medicare Part D coverage. In addition, the Plan does not offer supplemental (additional) coverage for it. If you purchase drugs that are excluded, you must pay for them yourself. The deductible stage is the first payment stage of the enrollee's drug coverage. During the deductible stage, the Plan requires that the enrollee pays the full cost of Tier 4 and Tier 5 drugs before the Plan will pay a share of the cost. Once the enrollee has met the deductible amount of [please enter deductible amount $150, the enrollee moves into the initial coverage stage. If an enrollee pays the full cost of a prescription, the enrollee may submit a request for reimbursement with proof of payment to ask the Plan to pay its share of the cost. Drugs that are not on the Formulary, that the Plan agrees to pay coverage for will be covered at the Tier 4 coverage level. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC) and formulary. | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100.The prescription drug benefit offered by the Part D Plan must meet certain requirements pertaining to the annual deductible, the initial coverage limit, the coverage gap and catastrophic coverage. For the initial coverage limit, the rules provide for a benefit of shared coverage of costs between the enrollee and plan. An enrollee in a Part D Plan may be subject to annual deductibles, coinsurance, and copayments (including tiered copayments) specified by the plan. 42 CFR Section 423.104.The Plan will pay its share of the cost for covered drugs and the enrollee will pay the other part during the initial coverage stage. The amount of the copayment or coinsurance will vary depending on the drug's tier and place of purchase. During the deductible stage, the enrollee is responsible for the full cost of the drugs. The enrollee remains in the deductible stage until drug payments total $435. Once the enrollee has met the deductible amount of $435, the enrollee moves into the initial coverage stage. Symbicort 80-4.5 mcg is on Tier 3 of the Plan's 2020 formulary with a $141 copayment amount for up to a 90 day supply when purchased from an in-network pharmacy. Once total drug costs reach $4,020, the enrollee enters the coverage gap stage. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
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"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100.The prescription drug benefit offered by the Part D Plan must meet certain requirements pertaining to the annual deductible, the initial coverage limit, the coverage gap and catastrophic coverage. For the initial coverage limit, the rules provide for a benefit of shared coverage of costs between the enrollee and plan. An enrollee in a Part D Plan may be subject to annual deductibles, coinsurance, and copayments (including tiered copayments) specified by the plan. 42 CFR Section 423.104.The deductible stage is the first payment stage of the enrollee's drug coverage. During the deductible stage, the Plan requires that the enrollee pays the full cost of Tier 3, Tier 4 and Tier 5 drugs before the Plan will pay a share of the cost. Once the enrollee has met the deductible amount of 435, the enrollee moves into the initial coverage stage. If an enrollee pays the full cost of a prescription, the enrollee may submit a request for reimbursement with proof of payment to ask the Plan to pay its share of the cost. Bupropion HCL ER (XL) 150 mg is on the Plan's 2020 formulary and was classified as a Tier 3 drug. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC) and formulary. | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100.A Part D plan must have enough contracted retail pharmacies in its network to ensure that enrollees have adequate access to covered prescription drugs. Access to covered drugs from an out-of-network pharmacy is required when enrollees: (1) cannot reasonably be expected to obtain such drugs at a network pharmacy and (2) do not access covered drugs at out-of-network pharmacies on a routine basis. A plan is required to establish reasonable rules to appropriately limit out-of-network access to covered prescription drugs. 42 CFR Sections 423.120(a) and 423.124; Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Manual, Chapter 5, Section 60.1.The Plan will generally cover prescriptions only if they are filled at a Plan network pharmacy. Prescriptions filled at an out-of-network pharmacy may only be covered when a network pharmacy is not available. The Plan will typically cover prescriptions filled at an out-of-network pharmacy when the prescription is for a medical emergency or urgent care, when there are no 24-hour network pharmacies within a reasonable driving distance or when the prescription is for a drug that is out of stock at an accessible network pharmacy. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC).For a drug to be covered under Medicare Part D, it must meet the definition of a Part D drug. The Social Security Act generally defines a Part D drug as a drug product that meets the following requirements:-It requires a prescription for dispensing; and -It is approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for safety and effectiveness; and -It is prescribed for a medically accepted indication; and -It is not otherwise excluded from coverage under Part D law and rules. See Social Security Act, Sections 1860D-2(e)(1) and 1927(k)(2)(A)(i)-(iii); and Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Manual, Chapter 6, Section 10.1.The definition of a Part D drug does not include over-the-counter (OTC) products. OTC drug products are those drugs that are available to consumers without a prescription. The FDA's Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (CDER) is the entity that oversees the designation and marketing of OTC drugs. Medicare Part D does not pay for OTC drug products. See rules noted above; and Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Manual, Chapter 6, Section 10.10 and Chapter 7, Section 60.2.The Plan does not cover drugs/items excluded from Medicare Part D coverage. If you purchase drugs/items that are excluded, you must pay for them yourself. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100.For a drug to be covered under Medicare Part D, it must meet the definition of a Part D drug. The Social Security Act generally defines a Part D drug as a drug product that meets the following requirements:- It requires a prescription for dispensing; and - It is approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for safety and effectiveness; and - It is prescribed for a medically accepted indication; and - It is not otherwise excluded from coverage under Part D law and rules. See Social Security Act, Sections 1860D-2(e)(1) and 1927(k)(2)(A)(i)-(iii); and Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Manual, Chapter 6, Section 10.1.A Part D drug is a prescription drug that is approved by the FDA for safety and effectiveness. For a drug to be approved by the FDA, the manufacturer of the drug must file a New Drug Application (NDA) or Abbreviated New Drug Application (ANDA) with the FDA's Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (CDER). Current FDA law requires a manufacturer to prove that its drug is both safe and effective. Some drugs currently on the market were FDA approved for safety only. These drugs were approved prior to the passing of current FDA law. The FDA reviews these drugs to determine which are less than effective (LTE) for their labeled indications. This review process is known as the Drug Efficacy Study Implementation (DESI) program. This program has resulted in the FDA classifying some of these drugs as LTE DESI drugs. Medicare Part D does not pay for prescription drug products classified by the FDA's DESI program as LTE for their labeled indications. Medicare Part D also does not pay for prescription drug products that are Identical, Related or Similar (IRS) to drugs that are classified as LTE drugs. See Social Security Act, Sections 1860D-2(e)(1) and 1927(k)(2)(A)(i)-(iii); and Prescription Drug Benefit Manual, Chapter 6, Section 10.9.The Plan does not cover drugs/items excluded from Medicare Part D coverage. If you purchase drugs/items that are excluded, you must pay for them yourself. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100.An enrollee in a Part D plan may be subject to annual deductibles, coinsurance, and copayments (including tiered copayments) specified by the plan. 42 CFR Section 423.104.The prescription drug benefit offered by the Part D Plan must meet certain requirements pertaining to the annual deductible, the initial coverage limit, the coverage gap and catastrophic coverage. For the initial coverage limit, the rules provide for a benefit of shared coverage of costs between the enrollee and plan. An enrollee in a Part D Plan may be subject to annual deductibles, coinsurance, and copayments (including tiered copayments) specified by the plan. 42 CFR ?423.104.Part D sponsors are required to coordinate with other providers of prescription drug coverage with respect to the payment of premiums and coverage, as well as coverage supplementing the benefits available under Part D. The Medicare Modernization Act (MMA) specified that these coordination requirements must relate to the following elements: (1) enrollment file sharing; (2) claims processing and payment; (3) claims reconciliation reports; (4) application of the protection against high out-of-pocket expenditures by tracking true out-of-pocket (TrOOP) expenditures; and (5) other processes that CMS determines. Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Manual (CMS Pub. 100-18) Chapter 14, ?20.The Part D Plan enrollee may pay part of the cost of a covered drug during the initial coverage period as a copayment or coinsurance. The amount of the copayment or coinsurance will vary depending on the drug's tier and place of purchase. If an enrollee pays the full cost of a prescription, the enrollee may submit a request for reimbursement with proof of payment to ask the Plan to pay its share of the cost.The Plan contract states that they are required to follow rules set by Medicare to make sure that the enrollee is using all of their coverage in combination when they get covered drugs from the Plan. This is called coordination of benefits because it involves coordinating the drug benefits the enrollee gets from the Plan with any other drug benefits available. When the enrollee has additional coverage, how the Plan will coordinate depends on the situation. Sometimes, a group health plan must provide health benefits to the enrollee before the Part D Plan will provide benefits. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage. | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
NA-PRRCitations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100.Medicare law defines those drugs that may be covered under Part D. A covered prescription drug must be used for a medically accepted indication. A medically accepted indication means a use that is approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), or a use supported by one or more citations in the drug compendia approved by Medicare. Medically accepted indications do not include uses in research or uses described in peer-reviewed medical literature. Please refer to Social Security Act, Sections 1860D-2(e)(1) and 1927(k)(6); and 42 CFR Section 423.100.The Part D Plan can only cover drugs prescribed for a medically accepted indication. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100.Medicare law defines those drugs that are eligible to be covered under the prescription drug benefit. Medicare law specifically excludes coverage for any drug for which payment would be available under Parts A or B of Medicare for that individual. Social Security Act, Section 1860D-2(e)(2)(B). Coverage is available under Medicare Part B for prescription drugs used in immunosuppressive therapy furnished to a beneficiary who has received an organ transplant, provided the beneficiary receiving the drug was enrolled in Medicare Part A at the time of the organ transplant. 42 CFR Section 410.30; Medicare Benefit Policy Manual, Chapter 15, Section 50.5.1. Medicare Part B local policy states that prescription drugs used in immunosuppressive therapy are covered if I) they are prescribed following a [[CASE/DECISION_TREE/DRUG_NAME]] transplant, II) the transplant met Medicare coverage criteria in effect with respect to the facility being approved for [[CASE/DECISION_TREE/DRUG_NAME]] transplant, III) the patient was enrolled in Medicare Part A at the time of the transplant, IV) the patient is enrolled in Medicare Part B at the time the drugs are dispensed and V) the drugs are furnished on or after the date of discharge. Assuming criteria I, II and III are met, a transplant is considered a covered transplant for purposes of this Medicare policy whether payment for the transplant was made by Medicare or another insurer. You can find this rule at Noridian Healthcare Solutions, LLC, Policy Article for Immunosuppressive Drugs (A52474) or CGS Administrators, LLC, Policy Article for Immunosuppressive Drugs (A52474).The Part D Plan contract states that the Plan cannot cover drugs that would be covered under Medicare Part A or Part B. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100.A Part D Plan may establish tiered cost-sharing for drugs on its formulary. The Plan groups covered drugs into different cost-sharing levels or tiers. Medicare rules permit an enrollee to request a tiering exception to cover a higher cost-sharing tiered drug at a lower cost-sharing tier level so long as there is a drug on a lower cost-sharing tier that is approved for treating the same condition that the requested higher cost-sharing tiered drug is being used to treat. However, Medicare rules also permit a Plan to design its tiering exception procedures so that a Plan does not have to grant a tiering exception for brand or biologic drugs if the lower cost-sharing tier or tiers only contain generic drugs approved for treating the same condition. 42 CFR Sections 423.4; 423.578(a); 423.578(a)(6); 423.578(c)(3)(ii); Parts C & D Grievances, Organization/Coverage Determinations, and Appeals Guidance Manual, Section 40.5.1. The prescription drug benefit offered by the Part D Plan must meet criteria requirements pertaining to the annual deductible, the initial coverage limit, the coverage gap and catastrophic coverage. For the initial coverage limit, the rules provide for a benefit of shared coverage of costs between the enrollee and Plan. An enrollee in a Part D Plan may be subject to annual deductibles, coinsurance and copayments (including tiered copayments) specified by the Plan. 42 CFR Section 423.104.Each drug on the Plan's formulary is assigned to a cost-sharing tier. The Part D Plan contract allows an enrollee to request an exception to the Plan's cost-sharing structure to pay less for a drug. This is called a tiering exception. The Plan does not provide tiering exceptions for brand or biologic drugs if the lower cost-sharing tier or tiers contain only generic drugs approved for treating the same condition. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC).Medicare Part D does not cover a (1) drug used for anorexia, weight loss or weight gain; (2) drug used to promote fertility; (3) drug used for cosmetic purposes or to promote hair growth; (4) drug used for the symptomatic relief of coughs and colds; (5) prescription vitamin and mineral product; (6) non-prescription or over-the-counter drug; (7) drug subject to manufacturer tying arrangements; and (8) drug used to treat sexual or erectile dysfunction or (9) sexual or erectile dysfunction drug used to treat a condition other than sexual or erectile dysfunction for which the drug has not been approved by the FDA. Social Security Act, Sections 1860D-2(e)(2)(A), 1927(d)(2) and 1927(d)(4)(C).The Part D Plan does not cover those drugs excluded from Medicare Part D coverage. In addition, the Plan does not offer supplemental (additional) coverage for it. If you purchase drugs that are excluded, you must pay for them yourself. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
=Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100.Medicare law defines those drugs that may be covered under Part D. A covered prescription drug must be used for a medically accepted indication. A medically accepted indication means a use that is approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), or a use supported by one or more citations in the drug compendia approved by Medicare. Medically accepted indications do not include uses in research or uses described in peer-reviewed medical literature. Please refer to Social Security Act, Sections 1860D-2(e)(1) and 1927(k)(6); and 42 CFR Section 423.100.The Part D Plan can only cover drugs prescribed for a medically accepted indication. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100.For a drug to be covered under Medicare Part D, it must meet the definition of a Part D drug. The Social Security Act generally defines a Part D drug as a drug product that meets the following requirements:-It requires a prescription for dispensing; and-It is approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for safety and effectiveness; and-It is prescribed for a medically accepted indication; and-It is not otherwise excluded from coverage under Part D law and rules.See Social Security Act, Sections 1860D-2(e)(1) and 1927(k)(2)(A)(i)-(iii); and Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Manual, Chapter 6, Section 10.1.The definition of a Part D drug includes only those prescription drugs that are approved by the FDA for safety and effectiveness. For a drug to be approved by the FDA, the manufacturer of the drug must file a New Drug Application (NDA) or Abbreviated New Drug Application (ANDA) with the FDA's Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (CDER). Medicare Part D does not pay for drugs that are not FDA approved prescription drugs. See Social Security Act, Sections 1860D-2(e)(1), 1927(k)(2), and 1927(b)(3).The definition of a Part D drug does not include over-the-counter (OTC) products. OTC drug products are those drugs that are available to consumers without a prescription. The FDA's Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (CDER) is the entity that oversees the designation and marketing of OTC drugs. Medicare Part D does not pay for OTC drug products. See rules noted above; and Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Manual, Chapter 6, Section 10.10 and Chapter 7, Section 60.2.A Part D plan is permitted to use a number of different tools to manage its formulary, including prior authorization, step therapy and dose restriction, or quantity limits. 70 Federal Register No. 18, issued January 28, 2005 (Preamble to Final Rule); 42 CFR Section 423.578(b).A Part D plan must have enough contracted retail pharmacies in its network to ensure that enrollees have adequate access to covered prescription drugs. Access to covered drugs from an out-of-network pharmacy is required when enrollees: (1) cannot reasonably be expected to obtain such drugs at a network pharmacy and (2) do not access covered drugs at out-of-network pharmacies on a routine basis. A plan is required to establish reasonable rules to appropriately limit out-of-network access to covered prescription drugs. 42 CFR Sections 423.120(a) and 423.124; Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Manual, Chapter 5, Section 60.1.Compounded prescription drug products can contain (1) all Part D drug product components; (2) some Part D drug product components; or (3) no Part D drug product components. Only costs associated with those components that satisfy the definition of a Part D drug are allowable costs under Part D because the compounded products as a whole do not satisfy the definition of a Part D drug. The labor costs associated with mixing a compounded product that contains at least one Part D drug component can be included in the dispensing fee (as defined in 423.100). Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Manual, Chapter 6, ?? 10 (Definition of a Part D drug).For certain drugs, the Part D Plan has additional requirements for coverage or limits on its coverage. These additional requirements include prior authorization, step therapy and quantity limits. The Plan will generally cover prescriptions only if they are filled at a Plan network pharmacy. Prescriptions filled at an out-of-network pharmacy may only be covered when a network pharmacy is not available. The Plan will typically cover prescriptions filled at an out-of-network pharmacy when the prescription is for a medical emergency or urgent care, when there are no 24-hour network pharmacies within a reasonable driving distance or when the prescription is for a drug that is out of stock at an accessible network pharmacy. The Plan does not cover drugs/items excluded from Medicare Part D coverage. If you purchase drugs/items that are excluded, you must pay for them yourself. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will findabbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100.The prescription drug benefit offered by the Part D Plan must meet certain requirements pertaining to theannual deductible, the initial coverage limit, the coverage gap and catastrophic coverage. For the initialcoverage limit, the rules provide for a benefit of shared coverage of costs between the enrollee and plan. Anenrollee in a Part D Plan may be subject to annual deductibles, coinsurance, and copayments (includingtiered copayments) specified by the plan. 42 CFR Section 423.104.The deductible stage is the first payment stage of the enrollee's drug coverage. During the deductible stage,the Plan requires that the enrollee pays the full cost of drugs before the Plan will pay a share of the cost.Once the enrollee has met the deductible amount of $435, the enrollee moves into the initial coverage stage.If an enrollee pays the full cost of a prescription, the enrollee may submit a request for reimbursement withproof of payment to ask the Plan to pay its share of the cost. Irbersartan and Simvastatin purchasedFebruary 26, 2020 and May 11, 2020 at the Pharmacy are on the Plan's 2020 formulary and are classifiedas Tier 1 and Tier 2 drugs. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC) and formulary. | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100.The prescription drug benefit offered by the Part D Plan must meet certain requirements pertaining to the annual deductible, the initial coverage limit, the coverage gap and catastrophic coverage. For the initial coverage limit, the rules provide for a benefit of shared coverage of costs between the enrollee and plan. An enrollee in a Part D Plan may be subject to annual deductibles, coinsurance, and copayments (including tiered copayments) specified by the plan. 42 CFR Section 423.104.The deductible stage is the first payment stage of the enrollee's drug coverage. During the deductible stage, the Plan requires that the enrollee pays the full cost of Tier 3, Tier 4 and Tier 5 drugs before the Plan will pay a share of the cost. Once the enrollee has met the deductible amount of $300, the enrollee moves into the initial coverage stage. If an enrollee pays the full cost of a prescription, the enrollee may submit a request for reimbursement with proof of payment to ask the Plan to pay its share of the cost. Shingrix Vaccine was on the Plan's 2020 formulary and was classified as a Tier 3 drug. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC) and formulary. | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100.For a drug to be covered under Medicare Part D, it must meet the definition of a Part D drug. The Social Security Act generally defines a Part D drug as a drug product that meets the following requirements: -It requires a prescription for dispensing; and -It is approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for safety and effectiveness; and -It is prescribed for a medically accepted indication; and -It is not otherwise excluded from coverage under Part D law and rules. See Social Security Act, Sections 1860D-2(e)(1) and 1927(k)(2)(A)(i)-(iii); and Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Manual, Chapter 6, Section 10.1. The definition of a Part D drug includes only those prescription drugs that are approved by the FDA for safety and effectiveness. For a drug to be approved by the FDA, the manufacturer of the drug must file a New Drug Application (NDA) or Abbreviated New Drug Application (ANDA) with the FDA's Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (CDER). Medicare Part D does not pay for drugs that are not FDA approved prescription drugs. See Social Security Act, Sections 1860D-2(e)(1), 1927(k)(2), and 1927(b)(3). The definition of a Part D drug does not include over-the-counter (OTC) products. OTC drug products are those drugs that are available to consumers without a prescription. The FDA's Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (CDER) is the entity that oversees the designation and marketing of OTC drugs. Medicare Part D does not pay for OTC drug products. See rules noted above; and Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Manual, Chapter 6, Section 10.10 and Chapter 7, Section 60.2. Medicare law defines those drugs that may be covered under Part D. A covered prescription drug must be used for a medically accepted indication. A medically accepted indication means a use that is approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), or a use supported by one or more citations in the drug compendia approved by Medicare. Medically accepted indications do not include uses in research or uses described in peer-reviewed medical literature. Please refer to Social Security Act, Sections 1860D-2(e)(1) and 1927(k)(6); and 42 CFR Section 423.100.Compounded prescription drug products can contain (1) all Part D drug product components; (2) some Part D drug product components; or (3) no Part D drug product components. Only costs associated with those components that satisfy the definition of a Part D drug are allowable costs under Part D because the compounded products as a whole do not satisfy the definition of a Part D drug. The labor costs associated with mixing a compounded product that contains at least one Part D drug component can be included in the dispensing fee (as defined in 423.100). Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Manual, Chapter 6, ?? 10 (Definition of a Part D drug).The Part D Plan can only cover drugs prescribed for a medically accepted indication. The Plan does not cover drugs/items excluded from Medicare Part D coverage. If you purchase drugs/items that are excluded, you must pay for them yourself. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
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"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100.The prescription drug benefit offered by the Part D Plan must meet certain requirements pertaining to the annual deductible, the initial coverage limit, the coverage gap and catastrophic coverage. For the initial coverage limit, the rules provide for a benefit of shared coverage of costs between the enrollee and plan. An enrollee in a Part D Plan may be subject to annual deductibles, coinsurance, and copayments (including tiered copayments) specified by the plan. 42 CFR Section 423.104.For a drug to be covered under Medicare Part D, it must meet the definition of a Part D drug. The Social Security Act generally defines a Part D drug as a drug product that meets the following requirements:- It requires a prescription for dispensing; and- It is approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for safety and effectiveness; and- It is prescribed for a medically accepted indication; and- It is not otherwise excluded from coverage under Part D law and rules.See Social Security Act, Sections 1860D-2(e)(1) and 1927(k)(2)(A)(i)-(iii); and Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Manual, Chapter 6, Section 10.1.The Part D Plan enrollee may pay part of the cost of a covered drug during the initial coverage period as a copayment or coinsurance. The amount of the copayment or coinsurance will vary depending on the drug's tier and place of purchase. If an enrollee pays the full cost of a prescription, the enrollee may submit a request for reimbursement with proof of payment to ask the Plan to pay its share of the cost. The Plan required a $7 copayment for up to a 30 day supply of a Tier 2 drug purchased in 2020 from an in-network pharmacy. Triamcinolone 0.1% Cream is on the Plan's 2020 formulary and was classified as a Tier 2 drug. The Plan required a $47 copayment for up to a 30 day supply of a Tier 3 drug purchased in 2020 from an in-network pharmacy. Diclofenac 1% Gel is on the Plan's 2020 formulary and was classified as a Tier 2 drug. The Plan required a $100 copayment for up to a 30 day supply of a Tier 4 drug purchased in 2020 from an in-network pharmacy. Dutasteride 0.5 mg and Myrbetriq ER 24 mg are on the Plan's 2020 formulary and were classified as Tier 4 drugs. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC) and formulary.The Part D Plan limits coverage to drugs covered under Medicare Part D. | [
"medicare",
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"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
.Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100.Medicare law defines those drugs that may be covered under Part D. A covered prescription drug must be used for a medically accepted indication. A medically accepted indication means a use that is approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), or a use supported by one or more citations in the drug compendia approved by Medicare. Medically accepted indications do not include uses in research or uses described in peer-reviewed medical literature. Please refer to Social Security Act, Sections 1860D-2(e)(1) and 1927(k)(6); and 42 CFR Section 423.100.The Part D Plan can only cover drugs prescribed for a medically accepted indication. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100.Medicare law defines those drugs that are eligible to be covered under the prescription drug benefit. Medicare law specifically excludes coverage for any drug for which payment would be available under Parts A or B of Medicare for that individual. Social Security Act, Section 1860D-2(e)(2)(B). Coverage is available under Medicare Part B for prescription drugs used in immunosuppressive therapy furnished to a beneficiary who has received an organ transplant, provided the beneficiary receiving the drug was enrolled in Medicare Part A at the time of the organ transplant. 42 CFR Section 410.30; Medicare Benefit Policy Manual, Chapter 15, Section 50.5.1. Medicare Part B local policy states that prescription drugs used in immunosuppressive therapy are covered if I) they are prescribed following a heart transplant, II) the transplant met Medicare coverage criteria in effect with respect to the facility being approved for heart transplant, III) the patient was enrolled in Medicare Part A at the time of the transplant, IV) the patient is enrolled in Medicare Part B at the time the drugs are dispensed and V) the drugs are furnished on or after the date of discharge. Assuming criteria I, II and III are met, a transplant is considered a covered transplant for purposes of this Medicare policy whether payment for the transplant was made by Medicare or another insurer. You can find this rule at Noridian Healthcare Solutions, LLC, Policy Article for Immunosuppressive Drugs (A52474) or CGS Administrators, LLC, Policy Article for Immunosuppressive Drugs (A52474).The Part D Plan contract states that the Plan cannot cover drugs that would be covered under Medicare Part A or Part B. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
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"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100.For a drug to be covered under Medicare Part D, it must meet the definition of a Part D drug. The Social Security Act generally defines a Part D drug as a drug product that meets the following requirements: -It requires a prescription for dispensing; and -It is approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for safety and effectiveness; and -It is prescribed for a medically accepted indication; and -It is not otherwise excluded from coverage under Part D law and rules. See Social Security Act, Sections 1860D-2(e)(1) and 1927(k)(2)(A)(i)-(iii); and Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Manual, Chapter 6, Section 10.1. The definition of a Part D drug includes only those prescription drugs that are approved by the FDA for safety and effectiveness. For a drug to be approved by the FDA, the manufacturer of the drug must file a New Drug Application (NDA) or Abbreviated New Drug Application (ANDA) with the FDA's Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (CDER). Medicare Part D does not pay for drugs that are not FDA approved prescription drugs. See Social Security Act, Sections 1860D-2(e)(1), 1927(k)(2), and 1927(b)(3).Medicare law defines those drugs that may be covered under Part D. A covered prescription drug must be used for a medically accepted indication. A medically accepted indication means a use that is approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), or a use supported by one or more citations in the drug compendia approved by Medicare. Medically accepted indications do not include uses in research or uses described in peer-reviewed medical literature. Please refer to Social Security Act, Sections 1860D-2(e)(1) and 1927(k)(6); and 42 CFR Section 423.100.The Part D Plan can only cover drugs prescribed for a medically accepted indication. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will findabbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100.Medicare law defines those drugs that may be covered under Part D. A covered prescription drug must be used for a medically accepted indication. A medically accepted indication; means a use that is approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), or a use supported by one or more citations in the drug compendia approved by Medicare. Medically accepted indications do not include uses in research or uses described in peer-reviewed medical literature. Please refer to Social Security Act, Section 1860D-2(e)(1) and 1927(k)(6); and 42 CFR Section 423.100.The Part D Plan can only cover drugs prescribed for a medically accepted indication. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100.Medicare law defines those drugs that may be covered under Part D. A covered prescription drug must be used for a medically accepted indication. A medically accepted indication means a use that is approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), or a use supported by one or more citations in the drug compendia approved by Medicare. Medically accepted indications do not include uses in research or uses described in peer-reviewed medical literature. Please refer to Social Security Act, Sections 1860D-2(e)(1) and 1927(k)(6); and 42 CFR Section 423.100.For a drug to be covered under Medicare Part D, it must meet the definition of a Part D drug. The Social Security Act generally defines a Part D drug as a drug product that meets the following requirements:-It requires a prescription for dispensing; and-It is approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for safety and effectiveness; and-It is prescribed for a medically accepted indication; and-It is not otherwise excluded from coverage under Part D law and rules.See Social Security Act, Sections 1860D-2(e)(1) and 1927(k)(2)(A)(i)-(iii); and Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Manual, Chapter 6, Section 10.1.The definition of a Part D drug includes only those prescription drugs that are approved by the FDA for safety and effectiveness. For a drug to be approved by the FDA, the manufacturer of the drug must file a New Drug Application (NDA) or Abbreviated New Drug Application (ANDA) with the FDA's Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (CDER). Medicare Part D does not pay for drugs that are not FDA approved prescription drugs. See Social Security Act, Sections 1860D-2(e)(1), 1927(k)(2), and 1927(b)(3).The Part D Plan can only cover drugs prescribed for a medically accepted indication. The Plan does not cover drugs/items excluded from Medicare Part D coverage. If you purchase drugs/items that are excluded, you must pay for them yourself. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100.Medicare law defines those drugs that are eligible to be covered under the prescription drug benefit. Medicare law specifically excludes coverage for any drug for which payment would be available under Parts A or B of Medicare for that individual. Social Security Act, Section 1860D-2(e)(2)(B). Coverage is available under Medicare Part B for prescription drugs used in immunosuppressive therapy furnished to a beneficiary who has received an organ transplant, provided the beneficiary receiving the drug was enrolled in Medicare Part A at the time of the organ transplant. 42 CFR Section 410.30; Medicare Benefit Policy Manual, Chapter 15, Section 50.5.1. Part D specifies that a drug prescribed to a Part D eligible individual cannot be considered a covered Part D drug if payment for such drug ...is available (or would be available but for the application of a deductible) under part A or B for that individual. CMS interprets this to mean that if payment could be available under Part A or Part B to the individual for such drug, then it will not be covered under Part D. Consequently, drugs covered under Parts A and B are considered available (and excluded from Part D) even if a beneficiary chooses not to pay premiums or if a beneficiary has enrolled in Part B but that coverage has not yet taken effect. Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Manual, Chapter 6, Section 20.2. Medicare Part B local policy states that prescription drugs used in immunosuppressive therapy are covered if I) they are prescribed following a kidney transplant, II) the transplant met Medicare coverage criteria in effect with respect to the facility being approved for kidney transplant, III) the patient was enrolled in Medicare Part A at the time of the transplant, IV) the patient is enrolled in Medicare Part B at the time the drugs are dispensed and V) the drugs are furnished on or after the date of discharge. Assuming criteria I, II and III are met, a transplant is considered a covered transplant for purposes of this Medicare policy whether payment for the transplant was made by Medicare or another insurer. You can find this rule at Noridian Healthcare Solutions, LLC, Policy Article for Immunosuppressive Drugs (A52474) or CGS Administrators, LLC, Policy Article for Immunosuppressive Drugs (A52474).The Part D Plan contract states that the Plan cannot cover drugs that would be covered under Medicare Part A or Part B. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100.Medicare law defines those drugs that are eligible to be covered under the prescription drug benefit. Medicare law specifically excludes coverage for any drug for which payment would be available under Parts A or B of Medicare for that individual. Social Security Act, Section 1860D-2(e)(2)(B). Medicare Part B pays for durable medical equipment (DME) if the equipment is used in the patient's home or in an institution that is used as a home. Payment may be made for supplies necessary for the effective use of DME. Such supplies include those drugs and biologicals which must be put directly into the equipment in order to achieve the therapeutic benefit of the DME. 42 CFR Section 410.38; Medicare Benefit Policy Manual, Chapter 15, Section 110.3. Medicare Part B local policy states that an external infusion pump is covered for administration of continuous subcutaneous insulin for the treatment of diabetes mellitus if criterion A or B is met and if criterion C or D is met: A. C-peptide testing requirement - must meet criterion 1 or 2 and criterion 3: 1. C-peptide level is less than or equal to 110 percent of the lower limit of normal of the laboratory's measurement method. 2. For beneficiaries with renal insufficiency and a creatinine clearance (actual or calculated from age, weight, and serum creatinine) less than or equal to 50 ml/minute, a fasting C-peptide level is less than or equal to 200 per cent of the lower limit of normal of the laboratory's measurement method. 3. A fasting blood sugar obtained at the same time as the C-peptide level is less than or equal to 225 mg/dl. B. Beta cell autoantibody test is positive. C. The beneficiary has completed a comprehensive diabetes education program, has been on a program of multiple daily injections of insulin (i.e., at least 3 injections per day) with frequent self-adjustments of insulin dose for at least 6 months prior to initiation of the insulin pump, and has documented frequency of glucose self-testing an average of at least 4 times per day during the 2 months prior to initiation of the insulin pump, and meets one or more of the following criteria (1 -5) while on the multiple injection regimen: 1. Glycosylated hemoglobin level (HbA1C) greater than 7 percent 2. History of recurring hypoglycemia 3. Wide fluctuations in blood glucose before mealtime 4. Dawn phenomenon with fasting blood sugars frequently exceeding 200 mg/dL 5. History of severe glycemic excursions D. The beneficiary has been on an external insulin infusion pump prior to enrollment in Medicare and has documented frequency of glucose self-testing an average of at least 4 times per day during the month prior to Medicare enrollment.If criterion A or B is not met, the pump and related accessories, supplies, and insulin will be denied as not reasonable and necessary. If criterion C or D is not met, the pump and related accessories, supplies, and insulin will be denied as not reasonable and necessary. Continued coverage of an external insulin pump and supplies requires that the beneficiary be seen and evaluated by the treating practitioner at least every 3 months. In addition, the external insulin infusion pump must be ordered and follow-up care rendered by a practitioner who manages multiple beneficiaries on continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion therapy and who works closely with a team including nurses, diabetic educators, and dieticians who are knowledgeable in the use of continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion therapy. You can find this rule at Noridian Healthcare Solutions, LLC, or CGS Administrators, LLC, Local Coverage Determination (LCD) for External Infusion Pumps (L33794) and Local Coverage Article (LCA) for External Infusion Pumps (A52507).The Part D Plan contract states that the Plan cannot cover drugs that would be covered under Medicare Part A or Part B. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
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"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will findabbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100.Medicare law defines those drugs that are eligible to be covered under the prescription drug benefit.Medicare law specifically excludes coverage for any drug for which payment would be available underParts A or B of Medicare for that individual. Social Security Act, Section 1860D-2(e)(2)(B).Coverage is available under Medicare Part B for prescription drugs used in immunosuppressive therapyfurnished to a beneficiary who has received an organ transplant, provided the beneficiary receiving the drugwas enrolled in Medicare Part A at the time of the organ transplant. 42 CFR Section 410.30; MedicareBenefit Policy Manual, Chapter 15, Section 50.5.1.Medicare Part B local policy states that prescription drugs used in immunosuppressive therapy are coveredif I) they are prescribed following a lung and kidney transplant, II) the transplant met Medicare coveragecriteria in effect with respect to the facility being approved for lung and kidney transplant, III) the patientwas enrolled in Medicare Part A at the time of the transplant, IV) the patient is enrolled in Medicare Part Bat the time the drugs are dispensed and V) the drugs are furnished on or after the date of discharge.Assuming criteria I, II and III are met, a transplant is considered a covered transplant for purposes of thisMedicare policy whether payment for the transplant was made by Medicare or another insurer. You canfind this rule at Noridian Healthcare Solutions, LLC, Policy Article for Immunosuppressive Drugs(A52474) or CGS Administrators, LLC, Policy Article for Immunosuppressive Drugs (A52474).The Part D Plan contract states that the Plan cannot cover drugs that would be covered under Medicare PartA or Part B. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100.For a drug to be covered under Medicare Part D, it must meet the definition of a Part D drug. The Social Security Act generally defines a Part D drug as a drug product that meets the following requirements: - It requires a prescription for dispensing; and - It is approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for safety and effectiveness; and - It is prescribed for a medically accepted indication; and - It is not otherwise excluded from coverage under Part D law and rules. See Social Security Act, Sections 1860D-2(e)(1) and 1927(k)(2)(A)(i)-(iii); and Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Manual, Chapter 6, Section 10.1. Prescription Drug Plans cannot include coverage for drugs that do not satisfy the definition of Part D drug. A Part D drug is defined, in part, as a drug that may be dispensed only upon a prescription. Consequently, methadone is not a Part D drug when used for treatment of opioid dependence because it cannot be dispensed for this purpose upon a prescription at a retail pharmacy. Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Manual, Chapter 6, Section 10.8.The Plan does not cover drugs/items excluded from Medicare Part D coverage. If you purchase drugs/items that are excluded, you must pay for them yourself. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Medicare law defines those drugs that may be covered under Part D. A covered prescription drug must be used for a "medically accepted indication." A "medically accepted indication" means a use that is approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), or a use supported by one or more citations in the drug compendia approved by Medicare. Medically accepted indications do not include uses in research or uses described in peer-reviewed medical literature. Please refer to Social Security Act, Section 1860D-2(e)(1) and 1927(k)(6); and 42 CFR Section 423.100. | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100.A Part D plan must have enough contracted retail pharmacies in its network to ensure that enrollees have adequate access to covered prescription drugs. Access to covered drugs from an out-of-network pharmacy is required when enrollees: (1) cannot reasonably be expected to obtain such drugs at a network pharmacy and (2) do not access covered drugs at out-of-network pharmacies on a routine basis. A plan is required to establish reasonable rules to appropriately limit out-of-network access to covered prescription drugs. 42 CFR Sections 423.120(a) and 423.124; Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Manual, Chapter 5, Section 60.1.The Plan will generally cover prescriptions only if they are filled at a Plan network pharmacy. Prescriptions filled at an out-of-network pharmacy may only be covered when a network pharmacy is not available. The Plan will typically cover prescriptions filled at an out-of-network pharmacy when the prescription is for a medical emergency or urgent care, when there are no 24-hour network pharmacies within a reasonable driving distance or when the prescription is for a drug that is out of stock at an accessible network pharmacy. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC).For a drug to be covered under Medicare Part D, it must meet the definition of a Part D drug. The Social Security Act generally defines a Part D drug as a drug product that meets the following requirements:-It requires a prescription for dispensing; and-It is approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for safety and effectiveness; and-It is prescribed for a medically accepted indication; and-It is not otherwise excluded from coverage under Part D law and rules.See Social Security Act, Sections 1860D-2(e)(1) and 1927(k)(2)(A)(i)-(iii); and Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Manual, Chapter 6, Section 10.1.The definition of a Part D drug does not include over-the-counter (OTC) products. OTC drug products are those drugs that are available to consumers without a prescription. The FDA's Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (CDER) is the entity that oversees the designation and marketing of OTC drugs. Medicare Part D does not pay for OTC drug products. See rules noted above; and Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Manual, Chapter 6, Section 10.10 and Chapter 7, Section 60.2.The Plan does not cover drugs/items excluded from Medicare Part D coverage. If you purchase drugs/items that are excluded, you must pay for them yourself. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
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] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100.Medicare law defines those drugs that are eligible to be covered under the prescription drug benefit. Medicare law specifically excludes coverage for any drug for which payment would be available under Parts A or B of Medicare for that individual. Social Security Act, Section 1860D-2(e)(2)(B). Coverage is available under Medicare Part B for prescription drugs used in immunosuppressive therapy furnished to a beneficiary who has received an organ transplant, provided the beneficiary receiving the drug was enrolled in Medicare Part A at the time of the organ transplant. 42 CFR Section 410.30; Medicare Benefit Policy Manual, Chapter 15, Section 50.5.1. Part D specifies that a drug prescribed to a Part D eligible individual cannot be considered a covered Part D drug if payment for such drug ...is available (or would be available but for the application of a deductible) under part A or B for that individual. CMS interprets this to mean that if payment could be available under Part A or Part B to the individual for such drug, then it will not be covered under Part D. Consequently, drugs covered under Parts A and B are considered available (and excluded from Part D) even if a beneficiary chooses not to pay premiums or if a beneficiary has enrolled in Part B but that coverage has not yet taken effect. Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Manual, Chapter 6, Section 20.2. Medicare Part B local policy states that prescription drugs used in immunosuppressive therapy are covered if I) they are prescribed following a Kidney transplant, II) the transplant met Medicare coverage criteria in effect with respect to the facility being approved for Kidney transplant, III) the patient was enrolled in Medicare Part A at the time of the transplant, IV) the patient is enrolled in Medicare Part B at the time the drugs are dispensed and V) the drugs are furnished on or after the date of discharge. Assuming criteria I, II and III are met, a transplant is considered a covered transplant for purposes of this Medicare policy whether payment for the transplant was made by Medicare or another insurer. You can find this rule at Noridian Healthcare Solutions, LLC, Policy Article for Immunosuppressive Drugs (A52474) or CGS Administrators, LLC, Policy Article for Immunosuppressive Drugs (A52474).The Part D Plan contract states that the Plan cannot cover drugs that would be covered under Medicare Part A or Part B. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
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"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
For a drug to be covered under Medicare Part D, it must meet the definition of a Part D drug. The Social Security Act generally defines a Part D drug as a drug product that meets the following requirements: -It requires a prescription for dispensing; and -It is approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for safety and effectiveness; and -It is prescribed for a medically accepted indication; and -It is not otherwise excluded from coverage under Part D law and rules. See Social Security Act, Sections 1860D-2(e)(1) and 1927(k)(2)(A)(i)-(iii); and Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Manual, Chapter 6, Section 10.1. The definition of a Part D drug includes only those prescription drugs that are approved by the FDA for safety and effectiveness. For a drug to be approved by the FDA, the manufacturer of the drug must file a New Drug Application (NDA) or Abbreviated New Drug Application (ANDA) with the FDA's Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (CDER). Medicare Part D does not pay for drugs that are not FDA approved prescription drugs. See Social Security Act, Sections 1860D-2(e)(1), 1927(k)(2), and 1927(b)(3).The Plan does not cover drugs/items excluded from Medicare Part D coverage. If you purchase drugs/items that are excluded, you must pay for them yourself. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100.Medicare law defines those drugs that are eligible to be covered under the prescription drug benefit. Medicare law specifically excludes coverage for any drug for which payment would be available under Parts A or B of Medicare for that individual. Social Security Act ?1860D-2(e)(2)(b) and 42 CFR ?423.100.Coverage is available under Medicare Part B for prescription drugs used in immunosuppressive therapy furnished to a beneficiary who has received an organ transplant, provided the beneficiary receiving the drug was enrolled in Medicare Part A at the time of the organ transplant. 42 CFR ?410.30; Medicare Benefit Policy Manual, Chapter 15, ?50.5.1.Medicare Part B local policy states that prescription drugs used in immunosuppressive therapy are covered if I) they are prescribed following a transplant, II) the transplant met Medicare coverage criteria in effect with respect to the facility being approved for transplant, III) the patient was enrolled in Medicare Part A at the time of the transplant, IV) the patient is enrolled in Medicare Part B at the time the drugs are dispensed and V) the drugs are furnished on or after the date of discharge. Assuming criteria I, II and III are met, a transplant is considered a covered transplant for purposes of this Medicare policy whether payment for the transplant was made by Medicare or another insurer. You can find this rule at Noridian Healthcare Solutions, LLC, Policy Article for Immunosuppressive Drugs (A52474) or CGS Administrators, LLC, Policy Article for Immunosuppressive Drugs (A52474).Medicare Part B local policy states that immunosuppressive drugs are covered only for the specific labeledindications and approval for marketing by the FDA (bp 102 c15, ?50.5.1). Parenteral Belatacept (Nulojix) is not proven to be safe when administered in the home setting and therefore will be denied as not medically necessary when provided in that setting. CGS Administrators, LLC, Local Coverage Determination for Immunosuppressive Drugs (L33824).A Part D plan must grant an exception for a drug that is not on its formulary whenever it determines that the drug is medically necessary, consistent with the prescriber's statement, and that the drug would be covered but for the fact that it is not on the formulary. The statement must show that all of the covered drugs on any tier of the plan's formulary for treatment of the enrollee's condition would not be as effective as the non-formulary drug or would have adverse effects for the enrollee. 42 CFR Sections 423.578(b) and 423.578(b)(5)(i).If a drug is not on the formulary (drug list), an enrollee can ask the Plan to make an exception and cover the drug. The Plan will make an exception for coverage if it determines that the requested drug is medically necessary, consistent with the prescriber's statement. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100.Medicare law defines those drugs that may be covered under Part D. A covered prescription drug must be used for a medically accepted indication. A medically accepted indication means a use that is approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), or a use supported by one or more citations in the drug compendia approved by Medicare. Medically accepted indications do not include uses in research or uses described in peer-reviewed medical literature. Please refer to Social Security Act, Sections 1860D-2(e)(1) and 1927(k)(6); and 42 CFR Section 423.100. A Part D Plan is permitted to use a number of different tools to manage its formulary. One of these tools is known as prior authorization. This process requires an enrollee to obtain coverage approval for a drug before the drug is dispensed and covered by the plan. 70 Federal Register No. 18, issued January 28, 2005 (Preamble to Final Rule). Formulary use includes the application of cost utilization tools, including step-therapy, dosage limitations and therapeutic substitution. 42 CFR Section 423.578(b)(iii). The exceptions process extends to coverage requests to set aside cost utilization rules for non-formulary drugs. A Part D plan must grant an exception whenever it determines that the drug is medically necessary, consistent with the prescriber's statement, and that the drug would be covered but for the fact that it is subject to cost utilization rules. 42 CFR Section 423.578(b). The statement must show that all of the covered drugs on any tier of the plan's formulary for treatment of the enrollee's condition would not be as effective as the drug at issue or would have adverse effects for the enrollee. Parts C & D Enrollee Grievances, Organization/Coverage Determinations, and Appeals Guidance Manual, Section 40.5.3.The Part D Plan can only cover drugs prescribed for a medically accepted indication. The Plan requires prior approval (also called prior authorization) before covering some prescription drugs. If prior approval is not obtained, the Plan may not cover the drug. A Plan must grant an exception to prior approval rules if it determines that the requested drug is medically necessary, consistent with the prescriber's statement. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100.Medicare law defines those drugs that may be covered under Part D. A covered prescription drug must be used for a medically accepted indication. A medically accepted indication means a use that is approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), or a use supported by one or more citations in the drug compendia approved by Medicare. Medically accepted indications do not include uses in research or uses described in peer-reviewed medical literature. Please refer to Social Security Act, Sections 1860D-2(e)(1) and 1927(k)(6); and 42 CFR Section 423.100.A Part D Plan is permitted to use a number of different tools to manage its formulary, including prior authorization, step therapy and dose restriction, or quantity limits. 70 Federal Register No. 18, issued January 28, 2005 (Preamble to Final Rule); 42 CFR Section 423.578(b).A Part D Plan may establish tiered cost-sharing for drugs on its formulary. The Plan groups covered drugs into different cost-sharing levels or tiers. Medicare rules permit an enrollee to request a tiering exception to cover a higher cost-sharing tiered drug at a lower cost-sharing tier level so long as there is a drug on a lower cost-sharing tier that is approved for treating the same condition that the requested higher cost-sharing tiered drug is being used to treat. However, Medicare rules also permit a Plan to design its tiering exception procedures so that a Plan does not have to grant a tiering exception for brand or biologic drugs if the lower cost-sharing tier or tiers only contain generic drugs approved for treating the same condition. 42 CFR Sections 423.4; 423.578(a); 423.578(a)(6); 423.578(c)(3)(ii); Parts C & D Grievances, Organization/Coverage Determinations, and Appeals Guidance Manual, Section 40.5.1. The prescription drug benefit offered by the Part D Plan must meet criteria requirements pertaining to the annual deductible, the initial coverage limit, the coverage gap and catastrophic coverage. For the initial coverage limit, the rules provide for a benefit of shared coverage of costs between the enrollee and Plan. An enrollee in a Part D Plan may be subject to annual deductibles, coinsurance and copayments (including tiered copayments) specified by the Plan. 42 CFR Section 423.104.The Part D Plan can only cover drugs prescribed for a medically accepted indication. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage.For certain drugs, the Part D Plan has additional requirements for coverage or limits on its coverage. These additional requirements include prior authorization, step therapy and quantity limits. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC).Each drug on the Plan's formulary is assigned to a cost-sharing tier. The Part D Plan contract allows an enrollee to request an exception to the Plan's cost-sharing structure to pay less for a drug. This is called a tiering exception. The prescriber must provide medical reasons to support a tiering exception. The Plan cannot grant a tiering exception for any drug in the specialty cost-sharing tier. The Plan cannot grant a tiering exception for a non-formulary drug being covered under an exception to the formulary. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100.A Part D Plan is permitted to use a number of different tools to manage its formulary. One of these tools is known as prior authorization. This process requires an enrollee to obtain coverage approval for a drug before the drug is dispensed and covered by the plan. 70 Federal Register No. 18, issued January 28, 2005 (Preamble to Final Rule).Formulary use includes the application of cost utilization tools, including step-therapy, dosage limitations and therapeutic substitution. 42 CFR Section 423.578(b)(iii). The exceptions process extends to coverage requests to set aside cost utilization rules for non-formulary drugs. A Part D plan must grant an exception whenever it determines that the drug is medically necessary, consistent with the prescriber's statement, and that the drug would be covered but for the fact that it is subject to cost utilization rules. 42 CFR Section 423.578(b). The statement must show that all of the covered drugs on any tier of the plan's formulary for treatment of the enrollee's condition would not be as effective as the drug at issue, or would have adverse effects for the enrollee. Parts C & D Enrollee Grievances, Organization/Coverage Determinations, and Appeals Guidance Manual, Section 40.5.3.The Part D Plan can only cover drugs prescribed for a medically accepted indication. The Plan requires prior approval (also called prior authorization) before covering some prescription drugs. If prior approval is not obtained, the Plan may not cover the drug. A Plan must grant an exception to prior approval rules if it determines that the requested drug is medically necessary, consistent with the prescriber's statement. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100. Medicare law defines those drugs that may be covered under Part D. A covered prescription drug must be used for a medically accepted indication. A medically accepted indication means a use that is approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), or a use supported by one or more citations in the drug compendia approved by Medicare. Medically accepted indications do not include uses in research or uses described in peer-reviewed medical literature. Please refer to Social Security Act, Sections 1860D-2(e)(1) and 1927(k)(6); and 42 CFR Section 423.100. A Part D plan is permitted to use a number of different tools to manage its formulary. One of these tools is known as prior authorization. This process requires an enrollee to obtain coverage approval for a drug before the drug is dispensed and covered by the plan. 70 Federal Register No. 18, issued January 28, 2005 (Preamble to Final Rule). Formulary use includes the application of cost utilization tools, including step-therapy, dosage limitations and therapeutic substitution. 42 CFR Section 423.578(b)(iii). The exceptions process extends to coverage requests to set aside cost utilization rules for non-formulary drugs. A Part D plan must grant an exception whenever it determines that the drug is medically necessary, consistent with the prescriber's statement, and that the drug would be covered but for the fact that it is subject to cost utilization rules. 42 CFR Section 423.578(b). The statement must show that all of the covered drugs on any tier of the plan?s formulary for treatment of the enrollee?s condition would not be as effective as the drug at issue, or would have adverse effects for the enrollee. Parts C & D Enrollee Grievances, Organization/Coverage Determinations, and Appeals Guidance Manual, Section 40.5.3. The Part D Plan can only cover drugs prescribed for a medically accepted indication. The Plan requires prior approval (also called prior authorization) before covering some prescription drugs. If prior approval is not obtained, the Plan may not cover the drug. A Plan must grant an exception to prior approval rules if it determines that the requested drug is medically necessary, consistent with the prescriber's statement. Please refer to the Plan?s Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100. The Medicare Part D law states that an enrollee is not allowed to request a tiering exception for a drug being covered under the non-formulary exception rules. 42 CFR Section 423.578(c)(4)(iii). The Part D Plan contract states that the Plan does not provide tiering exceptions for off-formulary drugs which it has approved coverage for through a formulary exception. Please refer to the Plan?s Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100.Medicare law defines those drugs that may be covered under Part D. A covered prescription drug must be used for a medically accepted indication. A medically accepted indication means a use that is approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), or a use supported by one or more citations in the drug compendia approved by Medicare. Medically accepted indications do not include uses in research or uses described in peer-reviewed medical literature. Please refer to Social Security Act, Sections 1860D-2(e)(1) and 1927(k)(6); and 42 CFR Section 423.100.A Part D Plan may establish tiered cost-sharing for drugs on its formulary. The Plan groups covered drugs into different cost-sharing levels or tiers. Medicare rules permit an enrollee to request a tiering exception to cover a higher cost-sharing tiered drug at a lower cost-sharing tier level so long as there is a drug on a lower cost-sharing tier that is approved for treating the same condition that the requested higher cost-sharing tiered drug is being used to treat. However, Medicare rules also permit a Plan to design its tiering exception procedures so that a Plan does not have to grant a tiering exception for brand or biologic drugs if the lower cost-sharing tier or tiers only contain generic drugs approved for treating the same condition. 42 CFR Sections 423.4; 423.578(a); 423.578(a)(6); 423.578(c)(3)(ii); Parts C & D Grievances, Organization/Coverage Determinations, and Appeals Guidance Manual, Section 40.5.1. The prescription drug benefit offered by the Part D Plan must meet criteria requirements pertaining to the annual deductible, the initial coverage limit, the coverage gap and catastrophic coverage. For the initial coverage limit, the rules provide for a benefit of shared coverage of costs between the enrollee and Plan. An enrollee in a Part D Plan may be subject to annual deductibles, coinsurance and copayments (including tiered copayments) specified by the Plan. 42 CFR Section 423.104.Each drug on the Plan's formulary is assigned to a cost-sharing tier. The Part D Plan contract allows an enrollee to request an exception to the Plan's cost-sharing structure to pay less for a drug. This is called a tiering exception. The prescriber must provide medical reasons to support a tiering exception. The Plan cannot grant a tiering exception for any drug in the specialty cost-sharing tier. The Plan cannot grant a tiering exception for a non-formulary drug being covered under an exception to the formulary. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC).The Part D Plan can only cover drugs prescribed for a medically accepted indication. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100. A Part D plan must grant an exception for a drug that is not on its formulary whenever it determines that the drug is medically necessary, consistent with the prescriber's statement, and that the drug would be covered but for the fact that it is not on the formulary. The statement must show that all of the covered drugs on any tier of the plan's formulary for treatment of the enrollee's condition would not be as effective as the non-formulary drug or would have adverse effects for the enrollee. 42 CFR Sections 423.578(b) and 423.578(b)(5)(i). If a drug is not on the formulary (drug list), an enrollee can ask the Plan to make an exception and cover the drug. The Plan will make an exception for coverage if it determines that the requested drug is medically necessary, consistent with the prescriber's statement. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100.A Part D plan must grant an exception for a drug that is not on its formulary whenever it determines that the drug is medically necessary, consistent with the prescriber's statement, and that the drug would be covered but for the fact that it is not on the formulary. The statement must show that all of the covered drugs on any tier of the plan's formulary for treatment of the enrollee's condition would not be as effective as the non-formulary drug or would have adverse effects for the enrollee. 42 CFR Sections 423.578(b) and 423.578(b)(5)(i).If a drug is not on the formulary (drug list), an enrollee can ask the Plan to make an exception and cover the drug. The Plan will make an exception for coverage if it determines that the requested drug is medically necessary, consistent with the prescriber's statement. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100.Medicare law defines those drugs that may be covered under Part D. A covered prescription drug must be used for a medically accepted indication. A medically accepted indication means a use that is approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), or a use supported by one or more citations in the drug compendia approved by Medicare. Medically accepted indications do not include uses in research or uses described in peer-reviewed medical literature. Please refer to Social Security Act, Sections 1860D-2(e)(1) and 1927(k)(6); and 42 CFR Section 423.100. The Part D Plan can only cover drugs prescribed for a medically accepted indication. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100. A Part D plan is permitted to use a number of different tools to manage its formulary. One of these tools is known as prior authorization. This process requires an enrollee to obtain coverage approval for a drug before the drug is dispensed and covered by the plan. 70 Federal Register No. 18, issued January 28, 2005 (Preamble to Final Rule). Formulary use includes the application of cost utilization tools, including step-therapy, dosage limitations and therapeutic substitution. 42 CFR Section 423.578(b)(iii). The exceptions process extends to coverage requests to set aside cost utilization rules for non-formulary drugs. A Part D plan must grant an exception whenever it determines that the drug is medically necessary, consistent with the prescriber's statement, and that the drug would be covered but for the fact that it is subject to cost utilization rules. 42 CFR Section 423.578(b). The statement must show that all of the covered drugs on any tier of the plan's formulary for treatment of the enrollee's condition would not be as effective as the drug at issue, or would have adverse effects for the enrollee. Parts C & D Enrollee Grievances, Organization/Coverage Determinations, and Appeals Guidance Manual, Section 40.5.3. The Part D Plan can only cover drugs prescribed for a medically accepted indication. The Plan requires prior approval (also called prior authorization) before covering some prescription drugs. If prior approval is not obtained, the Plan may not cover the drug. A Plan must grant an exception to prior approval rules if it determines that the requested drug is medically necessary, consistent with the prescriber's statement. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100. A Part D Plan may establish tiered cost-sharing for drugs on its formulary. The Plan groups covered drugs into different cost-sharing levels or tiers. Medicare rules permit an enrollee to request a tiering exception to cover a higher cost-sharing tiered drug at a lower cost-sharing tier level so long as there is a drug on a lower cost-sharing tier that is approved for treating the same condition that the requested higher cost-sharing tiered drug is being used to treat. However, Medicare rules also permit a Plan to design its tiering exception procedures so that a Plan does not have to grant a tiering exception for brand or biologic drugs if the lower cost-sharing tier or tiers only contain generic drugs approved for treating the same condition. 42 CFR Sections 423.4; 423.578(a); 423.578(a)(6); 423.578(c)(3)(ii); Parts C & D Grievances, Organization/Coverage Determinations, and Appeals Guidance Manual, Section 40.5.1. The prescription drug benefit offered by the Part D Plan must meet criteria requirements pertaining to the annual deductible, the initial coverage limit, the coverage gap and catastrophic coverage. For the initial coverage limit, the rules provide for a benefit of shared coverage of costs between the enrollee and Plan. An enrollee in a Part D Plan may be subject to annual deductibles, coinsurance and copayments (including tiered copayments) specified by the Plan. 42 CFR Section 423.104. Each drug on the Plan's formulary is assigned to a cost-sharing tier. The Part D Plan contract allows an enrollee to request an exception to the Plan's cost-sharing structure to pay less for a drug. This is called a tiering exception. The prescriber must provide medical reasons to support a tiering exception. The Plan cannot grant a tiering exception for any drug in the specialty cost-sharing tier. The Plan cannot grant a tiering exception for a non-formulary drug being covered under an exception to the formulary. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100. Medicare law defines those drugs that may be covered under Part D. A covered prescription drug must be used for a medically accepted indication. A medically accepted indication means a use that is approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), or a use supported by one or more citations in the drug compendia approved by Medicare. Medically accepted indications do not include uses in research or uses described in peer-reviewed medical literature. Please refer to Social Security Act, Sections 1860D-2(e)(1) and 1927(k)(6); and 42 CFR Section 423.100. The Part D Plan can only cover drugs prescribed for a medically accepted indication. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100. Medicare law defines those drugs that may be covered under Part D. A covered prescription drug must be used for a medically accepted indication. A medically accepted indication means a use that is approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), or a use supported by one or more citations in the drug compendia approved by Medicare. Medically accepted indications do not include uses in research or uses described in peer-reviewed medical literature. Please refer to Social Security Act, Sections 1860D-2(e)(1) and 1927(k)(6); and 42 CFR Section 423.100. The Part D Plan can only cover drugs prescribed for a medically accepted indication. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100. Medicare law defines those drugs that are eligible to be covered under the prescription drug benefit. Medicare law specifically excludes coverage for any drug for which payment would be available under Parts A or B of Medicare for that individual. Social Security Act, Section 1860D-2(e)(2)(B). Medicare Part B pays for durable medical equipment (DME) if the equipment is used in the patient's home or in an institution that is used as a home. Payment may be made for supplies necessary for the effective use of DME. Such supplies include those drugs and biologicals which must be put directly into the equipment in order to achieve the therapeutic benefit of the DME. 42 CFR Section 410.38(a); Medicare Benefit Policy Manual, Chapter 15, Section 110.3. Medicare Part B local policy states that a small volume nebulizer and related compressor are considered for coverage when medically necessary to administer albuterol, arformoterol (Brovana), budesonide, cromolyn, formoterol, ipratropium, levalbuterol, metaproterenol or revefenacin for the management of obstructive pulmonary disease (Refer to Group 8 Codes in the LCD-related Policy Article for applicable diagnoses). You can find this rule at Noridian Healthcare Solutions, LLC, Local Coverage Determination (LCD) for Nebulizers (L33370) or CGS Administrators, LLC, Local Coverage Determination (LCD) for Nebulizers (L33370) and Local Coverage Article (LCA) for Nebulizers (A52466). The Part D Plan contract states that the Plan cannot cover drugs that would be covered under Medicare Part A or Part B. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100. The Medicare Part D law states that an enrollee is not allowed to request a tiering exception for a drug being covered under the non-formulary exception rules. 42 CFR Section 423.578(c)(4)(iii). The Part D Plan contract states that the Plan does not provide tiering exceptions for off-formulary drugs which it has approved coverage for through a formulary exception. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100. A Part D Plan may establish tiered cost-sharing for drugs on its formulary. The Plan groups covered drugs into different cost-sharing levels or tiers. Medicare rules permit an enrollee to request a tiering exception to cover a higher cost-sharing tiered drug at a lower cost-sharing tier level so long as there is a drug on a lower cost-sharing tier that is approved for treating the same condition that the requested higher cost-sharing tiered drug is being used to treat. However, Medicare rules also permit a Plan to design its tiering exception procedures so that a Plan does not have to grant a tiering exception for brand or biologic drugs if the lower cost-sharing tier or tiers only contain generic drugs approved for treating the same condition. 42 CFR Sections 423.4; 423.578(a); 423.578(a)(6); 423.578(c)(3)(ii); Parts C & D Grievances, Organization/Coverage Determinations, and Appeals Guidance Manual, Section 40.5.1. The prescription drug benefit offered by the Part D Plan must meet criteria requirements pertaining to the annual deductible, the initial coverage limit, the coverage gap and catastrophic coverage. For the initial coverage limit, the rules provide for a benefit of shared coverage of costs between the enrollee and Plan. An enrollee in a Part D Plan may be subject to annual deductibles, coinsurance and copayments (including tiered copayments) specified by the Plan. 42 CFR Section 423.104. Each drug on the Plan's formulary is assigned to a cost-sharing tier. The Part D Plan contract allows anenrollee to request an exception to the Plan's cost-sharing structure to pay less for a drug. This is called atiering exception. The prescriber must provide medical reasons to support a tiering exception. The Plancannot grant a tiering exception for any drug in the specialty cost-sharing tier. The Plan cannot grant atiering exception for a non-formulary drug being covered under an exception to the formulary. Please referto the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
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"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100. Medicare law defines those drugs that may be covered under Part D. A covered prescription drug must be used for a medically accepted indication. A medically accepted indication means a use that is approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), or a use supported by one or more citations in the drug compendia approved by Medicare. Medically accepted indications do not include uses in research or uses described in peer-reviewed medical literature. Please refer to Social Security Act, Sections 1860D-2(e)(1) and 1927(k)(6); and 42 CFR Section 423.100.The Part D Plan can only cover drugs prescribed for a medically accepted indication. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100. A Part D Plan may establish tiered cost-sharing for drugs on its formulary. The Plan groups covered drugs into different cost-sharing levels or tiers. Medicare rules permit an enrollee to request a tiering exception to cover a higher cost-sharing tiered drug at a lower cost-sharing tier level so long as there is a drug on a lower cost-sharing tier that is approved for treating the same condition that the requested higher cost-sharing tiered drug is being used to treat. However, Medicare rules also permit a Plan to design its tiering exception procedures so that a Plan does not have to grant a tiering exception for brand or biologic drugs if the lower cost-sharing tier or tiers only contain generic drugs approved for treating the same condition. 42 CFR Sections 423.4; 423.578(a); 423.578(a)(6); 423.578(c)(3)(ii); Parts C & D Grievances, Organization/Coverage Determinations, and Appeals Guidance Manual, Section 40.5.1. The prescription drug benefit offered by the Part D Plan must meet criteria requirements pertaining to the annual deductible, the initial coverage limit, the coverage gap and catastrophic coverage. For the initial coverage limit, the rules provide for a benefit of shared coverage of costs between the enrollee and Plan. An enrollee in a Part D Plan may be subject to annual deductibles, coinsurance and copayments (including tiered copayments) specified by the Plan. 42 CFR Section 423.104. Each drug on the Plan's formulary is assigned to a cost-sharing tier. The Part D Plan contract allows an enrollee to request an exception to the Plan's cost-sharing structure to pay less for a drug. This is called a tiering exception. The Plan does not provide tiering exceptions for brand or biologic drugs if the lower cost-sharing tier or tiers contain only generic drugs approved for treating the same condition. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100. Medicare law defines those drugs that may be covered under Part D. A covered prescription drug must beused for a medically accepted indication. A medically accepted indication means a use that is approvedby the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), or a use supported by one or more citations in the drugcompendia approved by Medicare. Medically accepted indications do not include uses in research or usesdescribed in peer-reviewed medical literature. Please refer to Social Security Act, Sections 1860D-2(e)(1)and 1927(k)(6); and 42 CFR Section 423.100. The Part D Plan can only cover drugs prescribed for a medically accepted indication. Please refer to thePlan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100. For a drug to be covered under Medicare Part D, it must meet the definition of a Part D drug. The Social Security Act generally defines a Part D drug as a drug product that meets the following requirements: - It requires a prescription for dispensing; and - It is approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for safety and effectiveness; and - It is prescribed for a medically accepted indication; and - It is not otherwise excluded from coverage under Part D law and rules. See Social Security Act, Sections 1860D-2(e)(1) and 1927(k)(2)(A)(i)-(iii); and Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Manual, Chapter 6, Section 10.1. The Part D Plan limits coverage to drugs covered under Medicare Part D. | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100. Medicare law defines those drugs that may be covered under Part D. A covered prescription drug must beused for a medically accepted indication. A medically accepted indication means a use that is approvedby the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), or a use supported by one or more citations in the drugcompendia approved by Medicare. Medically accepted indications do not include uses in research or usesdescribed in peer-reviewed medical literature. Please refer to Social Security Act, Sections 1860D-2(e)(1)and 1927(k)(6); and 42 CFR Section 423.100. A Part D plan is permitted to use a number of different tools to manage its formulary. One of these tools is known as prior authorization. This process requires an enrollee to obtain coverage approval for a drug before the drug is dispensed and covered by the plan. 70 Federal Register No. 18, issued January 28, 2005 (Preamble to Final Rule). The Part D Plan can only cover drugs prescribed for a medically accepted indication. The Plan requires prior approval (also called prior authorization) before covering some prescription drugs. If prior approval is not obtained, the Plan may not cover the drug. Please refer to the Plan?s Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100.Medicare law defines those drugs that are eligible to be covered under the prescription drug benefit. Medicare law specifically excludes coverage for any drug for which payment would be available under Parts A or B of Medicare for that individual. Social Security Act, Section 1860D-2(e)(2)(B).Effective January 1, 2011, Medicare law requires that all drugs and biologicals used in the treatment of end stage renal disease (ESRD) be included in the ESRD prospective payment system (PPS) payment bundle, including drugs formerly paid under Medicare Part D. The law identifies categories of drugs that either are, or may be, ESRD-related. Drugs that are always considered ESRD-related include access management drugs, anemia management drugs, anti-infectives to treat site access infection, bone and mineral metabolism drugs and cellular management drugs. Social Security Act, Section 1881(b)(14); 42 CFR Section 413.171; Medicare Benefit Policy Manual, Chapter 11, Section 20.3; and 75 Federal Register No. 155, issued August 12, 2010 (Preamble to Final Rule).Effective February 20, 2018, Medicare law also provides coverage of related drugs under the PPS bundle for treatment of acute kidney injury (AKI). Medicare Benefit Policy Manual, Chapter 11, Section 100.6.For drugs that are always considered ESRD-related, it is important to note that the ESRD bundle includes all ESRD-related drugs and biologicals, regardless of whether or not these are furnished by a dialysis facility. Thus, effective January 1, 2011, any claims for a drug included in the five categories of drugs that are always considered renal dialysis drugs when furnished to an ESRD patient and used as specified in Table 4 of the Preamble to the Final Rule would not be payable under Part D when the beneficiary is an ESRD patient in dialysis, regardless of why the drug is being furnished. Medicare Program; End-Stage Renal Disease Prospective Payment System, 75 Fed. Reg. 49030, 49050 (August 12, 2010); CMS memo: Clarification of Exclusion of Part D Payment for Drugs included in the End-Stage Renal Disease Prospective Payment dated February 17, 2011.The Part D Plan contract states that its Part D drug coverage cannot cover a drug that would be covered under Medicare Part A or Part B. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage. | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100. Medicare law defines those drugs that are eligible to be covered under the prescription drug benefit. Medicare law specifically excludes coverage for any drug for which payment would be available under Parts A or B of Medicare for that individual. Social Security Act, Section 1860D-2(e)(2)(B). Medicare Part B pays for durable medical equipment (DME) if the equipment is used in the patient's home or in an institution that is used as a home. Payment may be made for supplies necessary for the effective use of DME. Such supplies include those drugs and biologicals which must be put directly into the equipment in order to achieve the therapeutic benefit of the DME. 42 CFR Section 410.38(a); Medicare Benefit Policy Manual, Chapter 15, Section 110.3. Medicare Part B local policy states that a small volume nebulizer and related compressor are considered for coverage when medically necessary to administer albuterol, arformoterol (Brovana), budesonide, cromolyn, formoterol, ipratropium, levalbuterol, metaproterenol or revefenacin for the management of obstructive pulmonary disease (Refer to Group 8 Codes in the LCD-related Policy Article for applicable diagnoses). You can find this rule at Noridian Healthcare Solutions, LLC, Local Coverage Determination (LCD) for Nebulizers (L33370) or CGS Administrators, LLC, Local Coverage Determination (LCD) for Nebulizers (L33370) and Local Coverage Article (LCA) for Nebulizers (A52466). The Part D Plan contract states that the Plan cannot cover drugs that would be covered under Medicare Part A or Part B. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100.Medicare law defines those drugs that are eligible to be covered under the prescription drug benefit. Medicare law specifically excludes coverage for any drug for which payment would be available under Parts A or B of Medicare for that individual. Social Security Act, Section 1860D-2(e)(2)(B). Medicare Part B local policy states that oral anti-emetic drugs that are used as full replacement for intravenous dosage forms of a cancer regimen are covered under the following conditions:- Coverage is provided only for oral drugs approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for use as anti-emetics - The oral anti-emetic must either be administered by the treating physician or in accordance with a written order from the physician as part of a cancer chemotherapy regimen; - Oral anti-emetic drugs administered with a particular chemotherapy treatment must be initiated within two hours of the administration of the chemotherapeutic agent and may be continued for a period not to exceed 48 hours from that time - The oral anti-emetic drugs provided must be used as a full therapeutic replacement for the intravenous anti-emetic drugs that would have otherwise been administered at the time of the chemotherapy treatment. Medicare Benefit Policy Manual, Chapter 15, Section 50.5.4.A 3-drug combination regimen consisting of an NK-1 antagonist, a 5HT3 antagonist and dexamethasone is covered when all of the criteria above are met and all 3 drugs are given in combination. If the NK-1 antagonist and/or dexamethasone is given as an oral anti-emetic outside of the 3-drug regimen, claims will be denied as statutorily non-covered, no benefit. There are three NK-1 antagonists approved for this use, Aprepitant (J8501), rolapitant (J8670) and netupitant/palonosetron (multiple codes). Covered 3-drug regimens are Aprepitant (J8501) or rolapitant (J8670) are covered when given as part of a 3-drug regimen that includes a 5HT3 antagonist (Q0162, Q0166, or Q0180) and dexamethasone (J8540). Netupitant/palonosetron is covered when given in conjunction with dexamethasone (J8540). A separate 5HT3 antagonist is not needed. Netupitant/palonosetron has had multiple HCPCS codes assigned, depending on the date of service. If all of the above criteria are met, the quantity of oral anti-emetic drugs covered for each episode of chemotherapy cannot exceed the initial loading dose plus 48 hours of therapy. However, for the drugs granisetron (Q0166) and dolasetron (Q0180), the quantity of drugs covered for each episode of chemotherapy is limited to the initial loading dose plus 24 hours of therapy. Quantities of drugs in excess of these amounts are non-covered. You can find this rule at Noridian Administrative Services, Policy Article for Oral Antiemetic Drugs (A52480) or CGS Administrators, LLC, Policy Article for Oral Antiemetic Drugs (A52480).The Part D Plan contract states that the Plan cannot cover drugs that would be covered under Medicare Part A or Part B. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100. A Part D plan must have enough contracted retail pharmacies in its network to ensure that enrollees have adequate access to covered prescription drugs. Access to covered drugs from an out-of-network pharmacy is required when enrollees: (1) cannot reasonably be expected to obtain such drugs at a network pharmacy and (2) do not access covered drugs at out-of-network pharmacies on a routine basis. A plan is required to establish reasonable rules to appropriately limit out-of-network access to covered prescription drugs. 42 CFR Sections 423.120(a) and 423.124; Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Manual, Chapter 5, Section 60.1. If a plan sponsor does not have all of the information it needs to make a decision, the plan sponsor should make reasonable and diligent efforts to obtain the missing information within the standard timeframe for making a decision and notifying the enrollee of the decision (i.e., within 72 hours after receiving the request or physician's or other prescriber's supporting statement). When a plan sponsor could acquire missing information, such as a National Drug Code (NDC) number, by contacting the enrollee's pharmacist, physician, or other prescriber, it should do so instead of relying on the enrollee to provide the information. Prescription Drug Benefit Manual, Chapter 18, ?30.3.2. Occasionally, a plan sponsor will have enough information to determine that a reimbursement request is payable, but not enough to determine the exact amount. When this situation occurs, the plan sponsor could issue a favorable decision within the 72-hour timeframe (the plan sponsor is not required to say how much the payment will be in its notice to the enrollee), and utilize the remainder of the 30-day payment period described in ??40.2 and 130.1 of this chapter to determine how much the enrollee should be reimbursed and make payment. If a plan sponsor chooses to send the payment within the 30-day timeframe after notifying the enrollee of the favorable decision within the 72-hour timeframe, the initial notice to the enrollee must include the following information: 1) the plan sponsor is approving the request; 2) payment will be sent within 30 days after the request was received; 3) if the enrollee does not agree with the amount received, he or she can request an appeal with the plan sponsor; and 4) briefly explain that the member may not receive the entire amount he or she paid out-of-pocket because certain items (e.g., co-payment amounts) are not reimbursable, and include a brief summary of items that are generally subtracted. Prescription Drug Benefit Manual, Chapter 18, ?30.3.2. The Plan will generally cover prescriptions only if they are filled at a Plan network pharmacy. Prescriptions filled at an out-of-network pharmacy may only be covered when a network pharmacy is not available. The Plan will typically cover prescriptions filled at an out-of-network pharmacy when the prescription is for a medical emergency or urgent care, when there are no 24-hour network pharmacies within a reasonable driving distance or when the prescription is for a drug that is out of stock at an accessible network pharmacy. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
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"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100. For a drug to be covered under Medicare Part D, it must meet the definition of a Part D drug. The Social Security Act generally defines a Part D drug as a drug product that meets the following requirements: -It requires a prescription for dispensing; and -It is approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for safety and effectiveness; and -It is prescribed for a medically accepted indication; and -It is not otherwise excluded from coverage under Part D law and rules. See Social Security Act, Sections 1860D-2(e)(1) and 1927(k)(2)(A)(i)-(iii); and Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Manual, Chapter 6, Section 10.1. The definition of a Part D drug includes only those prescription drugs that are approved by the FDA for safety and effectiveness. For a drug to be approved by the FDA, the manufacturer of the drug must file a New Drug Application (NDA) or Abbreviated New Drug Application (ANDA) with the FDA's Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (CDER). Medicare Part D does not pay for drugs that are not FDA approved prescription drugs. See Social Security Act, Sections 1860D-2(e)(1), 1927(k)(2), and 1927(b)(3). The Plan does not cover drugs/items excluded from Medicare Part D coverage. If you purchase drugs/items that are excluded, you must pay for them yourself. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
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"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100. For a drug to be covered under Medicare Part D, it must meet the definition of a Part D drug. The Social Security Act generally defines a Part D drug as a drug product that meets the following requirements: -It requires a prescription for dispensing; and -It is approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for safety and effectiveness; and -It is prescribed for a medically accepted indication; and -It is not otherwise excluded from coverage under Part D law and rules. See Social Security Act, Sections 1860D-2(e)(1) and 1927(k)(2)(A)(i)-(iii); and Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Manual, Chapter 6, Section 10.1. The definition of a Part D drug does not include over-the-counter (OTC) products. OTC drug products are those drugs that are available to consumers without a prescription. The FDA's Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (CDER) is the entity that oversees the designation and marketing of OTC drugs. Medicare Part D does not pay for OTC drug products. See rules noted above; and Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Manual, Chapter 6, Section 10.10 and Chapter 7, Section 60.2. A Part D plan must have enough contracted retail pharmacies in its network to ensure that enrollees have adequate access to covered prescription drugs. Access to covered drugs from an out-of-network pharmacy is required when enrollees: (1) cannot reasonably be expected to obtain such drugs at a network pharmacy and (2) do not access covered drugs at out-of-network pharmacies on a routine basis. A plan is required to establish reasonable rules to appropriately limit out-of-network access to covered prescription drugs. 42 CFR Sections 423.120(a) and 423.124; Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Manual, Chapter 5, Section 60.1. The Plan does not cover drugs/items excluded from Medicare Part D coverage. If you purchase drugs/items that are excluded, you must pay for them yourself. The Plan will generally cover prescriptions only if they are filled at a Plan network pharmacy. Prescriptions filled at an out-of-network pharmacy may only be covered when a network pharmacy is not available. The Plan will typically cover prescriptions filled at an out-of-network pharmacy when the prescription is for a medical emergency or urgent care, when there are no 24-hour network pharmacies within a reasonable driving distance or when the prescription is for a drug that is out of stock at an accessible network pharmacy. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100. Medicare law defines those drugs that may be covered under Part D. A covered prescription drug must be used for a medically accepted indication. A medically accepted indication means a use that is approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), or a use supported by one or more citations in the drug compendia approved by Medicare. Medically accepted indications do not include uses in research or uses described in peer-reviewed medical literature. Please refer to Social Security Act, Sections 1860D-2(e)(1) and 1927(k)(6); and 42 CFR Section 423.100. The Part D Plan can only cover drugs prescribed for a medically accepted indication. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100. The Medicare Part D law states that an enrollee is not allowed to request a tiering exception for a drug being covered under the non-formulary exception rules. 42 CFR Section 423.578(c)(4)(iii). The Part D Plan contract states that the Plan does not provide tiering exceptions for off-formulary drugs which it has approved coverage for through a formulary exception. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100. Medicare law defines those drugs that are eligible to be covered under the prescription drug benefit. Medicare law specifically excludes coverage for any drug for which payment would be available under Parts A or B of Medicare for that individual. Social Security Act, Section 1860D-2(e)(2)(B). Medicare Part B pays for services and supplies incident to the service of a physician (or other practitioner). Services and supplies must be furnished in a noninstitutional setting to noninstitutional patients; an integral, though incidental, part of the service of a physician in the course of diagnosis or treatment of an injury or illness; commonly furnished without charge or included in the bill of a physician; of a type that are commonly furnished in the office or clinic of a physician; and furnished under the direct supervision of the physician. In order to meet all the general requirements for coverage under the incident-to provision, an FDA approved drug or biological must be of a form that is not usually self-administered. 42 CFR Section 410.26(b); Medicare Benefit Policy Manual, Chapter 15, Section 50.3. The Part D Plan contract states that the Plan cannot cover drugs that would be covered under Medicare Part A or Part B. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100. An enrollee in a Part D plan may be subject to annual deductibles, coinsurance, and copayments (including tiered copayments) specified by the plan. 42 CFR Section 423.104. The Part D Plan enrollee may pay part of the cost of a covered drug during the initial coverage period as a copayment or coinsurance. The amount of the copayment or coinsurance will vary depending on the drug's tier and place of purchase. Please refer to the Plan?s Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100. A Part D plan must have enough contracted retail pharmacies in its network to ensure that enrollees have adequate access to covered prescription drugs. Access to covered drugs from an out-of-network pharmacy is required when enrollees: (1) cannot reasonably be expected to obtain such drugs at a network pharmacy and (2) do not access covered drugs at out-of-network pharmacies on a routine basis. A plan is required to establish reasonable rules to appropriately limit out-of-network access to covered prescription drugs. 42 CFR Sections 423.120(a) and 423.124; Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Manual, Chapter 5, Section 60.1. The Plan will generally cover prescriptions only if they are filled at a Plan network pharmacy. Prescriptions filled at an out-of-network pharmacy may only be covered when a network pharmacy is not available. The Plan will typically cover prescriptions filled at an out-of-network pharmacy when the prescription is for a medical emergency or urgent care, when there are no 24-hour network pharmacies within a reasonable driving distance or when the prescription is for a drug that is out of stock at an accessible network pharmacy. If an enrollee must use an out-of-network pharmacy, the enrollee will generally have to pay the full cost when the prescription is filled. The enrollee may submit a request for reimbursement with proof of payment to ask the Plan to pay its share of the cost. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage. | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100. Medicare law defines those drugs that may be covered under Part D. A covered prescription drug must be used for a medically accepted indication. A medically accepted indication means a use that is approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), or a use supported by one or more citations in the drug compendia approved by Medicare. Medically accepted indications do not include uses in research or uses described in peer-reviewed medical literature. Please refer to Social Security Act, Sections 1860D-2(e)(1) and 1927(k)(6); and 42 CFR Section 423.100.The Part D Plan can only cover drugs prescribed for a medically accepted indication. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100. A Part D plan must grant an exception for a drug that is not on its formulary whenever it determines that the drug is medically necessary, consistent with the prescriber's statement, and that the drug would be covered but for the fact that it is not on the formulary. The statement must show that all of the covered drugs on any tier of the plan's formulary for treatment of the enrollee's condition would not be as effective as the non-formulary drug or would have adverse effects for the enrollee. 42 CFR Sections 423.578(b) and 423.578(b)(5)(i).If a drug is not on the formulary (drug list), an enrollee can ask the Plan to make an exception and cover the drug. The Plan will make an exception for coverage if it determines that the requested drug is medically necessary, consistent with the prescriber's statement. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100. A Part D Plan may establish tiered cost-sharing for drugs on its formulary. The Plan groups covered drugs into different cost-sharing levels or tiers. Medicare rules permit an enrollee to request a tiering exception for a higher cost-sharing tiered drug to be covered at the cost-sharing level that applies for lower cost-sharing tiered drugs. If a Part D Plan maintains a formulary tier in which it places very high costs and unique items (i.e., specialty tier), the Part D Plan may design its exception process so that very high cost or unique drugs are not eligible for a tiering exception. 42 CFR Section 423.4; Parts C & D Grievances, Organization/Coverage Determinations, and Appeals Guidance Manual, Section 40.5.1. Each drug on the Plan's formulary is assigned to a tier. The Part D Plan contract allows an enrollee to request an exception to the Plan's cost-sharing structure to pay less for a drug. This is called a tiering exception. The Plan does not allow a tiering exception for any drug in the specialty tier. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100. Medicare law defines those drugs that may be covered under Part D. A covered prescription drug must beused for a medically accepted indication. A medically accepted indication means a use that is approvedby the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), or a use supported by one or more citations in the drugcompendia approved by Medicare. Medically accepted indications do not include uses in research or usesdescribed in peer-reviewed medical literature. Please refer to Social Security Act, Sections 1860D-2(e)(1)and 1927(k)(6); and 42 CFR Section 423.100.The Part D Plan can only cover drugs prescribed for a medically accepted indication. Please refer to thePlan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100. A Part D Plan must grant an exception for a drug that is not on its formulary whenever it determines that the drug is medically necessary, consistent with the prescriber's statement, and that the drug would be covered but for the fact that it is not on the formulary. The statement must show that all of the covered drugs on any tier of the plan's formulary for treatment of the enrollee's condition would not be as effective as the non-formulary drug or would have adverse effects for the enrollee. 42 CFR Sections 423.578(b) and 423.578(b)(5)(i).If a drug is not on the formulary (drug list), an enrollee can ask the Plan to make an exception and cover the drug. The Plan will make an exception for coverage if it determines that the requested drug is medically necessary, consistent with the prescriber's statement. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100. For a drug to be covered under Medicare Part D, it must meet the definition of a Part D drug. The Social Security Act generally defines a Part D drug as a drug product that meets the following requirements: -It requires a prescription for dispensing; and -It is approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for safety and effectiveness; and -It is prescribed for a medically accepted indication; and -It is not otherwise excluded from coverage under Part D law and rules. See Social Security Act, Sections 1860D-2(e)(1) and 1927(k)(2)(A)(i)-(iii); and Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Manual, Chapter 6, Section 10.1. The definition of a Part D drug includes only those prescription drugs that are approved by the FDA for safety and effectiveness. For a drug to be approved by the FDA, the manufacturer of the drug must file a New Drug Application (NDA) or Abbreviated New Drug Application (ANDA) with the FDA?s Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (CDER). Medicare Part D does not pay for drugs that are not FDA approved prescription drugs. See Social Security Act, Sections 1860D-2(e)(1), 1927(k)(2), and 1927(b)(3). The Plan does not cover drugs/items excluded from Medicare Part D coverage. If you purchase drugs/items that are excluded, you must pay for them yourself. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100. A Part D Plan must grant an exception for a drug that is not on its formulary whenever it determines thatthe drug is medically necessary, consistent with the prescriber's statement, and that the drug would becovered but for the fact that it is not on the formulary. The statement must show that all of the covereddrugs on any tier of the plan's formulary for treatment of the enrollee's condition would not be as effectiveas the non-formulary drug or would have adverse effects for the enrollee. 42 CFR Sections 423.578(b) and423.578(b)(5)(i).If a drug is not on the formulary (drug list), an enrollee can ask the Plan to make an exception and cover thedrug. The Plan will make an exception for coverage if it determines that the requested drug is medicallynecessary, consistent with the prescriber's statement. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage(EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100. A Part D plan must grant an exception for a drug that is not on its formulary whenever it determines thatthe drug is medically necessary, consistent with the prescriber's statement, and that the drug would becovered but for the fact that it is not on the formulary. The statement must show that all of the covereddrugs on any tier of the plan's formulary for treatment of the enrollee's condition would not be as effectiveas the non-formulary drug or would have adverse effects for the enrollee. 42 CFR Sections 423.578(b) and423.578(b)(5)(i). If a drug is not on the formulary (drug list), an enrollee can ask the Plan to make an exception and cover thedrug. The Plan will make an exception for coverage if it determines that the requested drug is medicallynecessary, consistent with the prescriber's statement. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage(EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100. Medicare law defines a covered prescription drug as a drug available only by prescription, approved by the FDA, used and sold in the United States, and used for a medically accepted indication. In general, for Part D drugs used in an anticancer chemotherapeutic regimen, a 'medically accepted indication' means a use that is: -Approved by the FDA, or -Supported by citation in one of several specified drug compendia, including the American Hospital Formulary Service-Drug Information (AHFS-DI), National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) Drugs and Biologics Compendium, Thomson Micromedex DrugDex, and Clinical Pharmacology; or -Supported by clinical research that appears in the peer reviewed medical literature, specifically in journals or publications as specified by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS). Social Security Act, Sections 1860D-2(e)(1) and 1861(t)(2)(B); and Medicare Benefit Policy Manual, Chapter 15, Section 50.4.5. The Part D Plan can only cover drugs prescribed for a medically accepted indication. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100. A Part D plan must grant an exception for a drug that is not on its formulary whenever it determines that the drug is medically necessary, consistent with the prescriber's statement, and that the drug would be covered but for the fact that it is not on the formulary. The statement must show that all of the covered drugs on any tier of the plan's formulary for treatment of the enrollee's condition would not be as effective as the non-formulary drug or would have adverse effects for the enrollee. 42 CFR Sections 423.578(b) and 423.578(b)(5)(i). If a drug is not on the formulary (drug list), an enrollee can ask the Plan to make an exception and cover the drug. The Plan will make an exception for coverage if it determines that the requested drug is medically necessary, consistent with the prescriber's statement. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100.Medicare Part D does not cover a (1) drug used for anorexia, weight loss or weight gain; (2) drug used to promote fertility; (3) drug used for cosmetic purposes or to promote hair growth; (4) drug used for the symptomatic relief of coughs and colds; (5) prescription vitamin and mineral product; (6) non-prescription or over-the-counter drug; (7) drug subject to manufacturer tying arrangements; and (8) drug used to treat sexual or erectile dysfunction or (9) sexual or erectile dysfunction drug used to treat a condition other than sexual or erectile dysfunction for which the drug has not been approved by the FDA. Social Security Act, Sections 1860D-2(e)(2)(A), 1927(d)(2) and 1927(d)(4)(C).A Part D plan must have enough contracted retail pharmacies in its network to ensure that enrollees have adequate access to covered prescription drugs. Access to covered drugs from an out-of-network pharmacy is required when enrollees: (1) cannot reasonably be expected to obtain such drugs at a network pharmacy and (2) do not access covered drugs at out-of-network pharmacies on a routine basis. A plan is required to establish reasonable rules to appropriately limit out-of-network access to covered prescription drugs. 42 CFR Sections 423.120(a) and 423.124; Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Manual, Chapter 5, Section 60.1.The Part D Plan does not cover those drugs excluded from Medicare Part D coverage. In addition, the Plan does not offer supplemental (additional) coverage for it. If you purchase drugs that are excluded, you must pay for them yourself. The Plan will generally cover prescriptions only if they are filled at a Plan network pharmacy. Prescriptions filled at an out-of-network pharmacy may only be covered when a network pharmacy is not available. The Plan will typically cover prescriptions filled at an out-of-network pharmacy when the prescription is for a medical emergency or urgent care, when there are no 24-hour network pharmacies within a reasonable driving distance or when the prescription is for a drug that is out of stock at an accessible network pharmacy. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100. Medicare rules set forth the requirements and limitations for payments by and on behalf of low-income Medicare beneficiaries who enroll in a Part D Plan. In general, an individual that meets requirements under Medicare?s low income subsidy (LIS) rules is entitled to a reduction or elimination in the premium, a reduction or elimination in the annual deductible, a reduction in cost-sharing for all covered Part D drugs below the out-of-pocket limit, and a reduction or elimination in cost-sharing for covered Part D drugs above the out-of-pocket limit. The extent of reduction in these benefits depends on an individual?s income and resources. Determinations of eligibility for subsidies are made either by the State (if the individual applies with the Medicaid agency) or by the Social Security Administration (if the individual applies with that agency). 42 CFR ?423.771 to 42 CFR ?423.782. According to enrollment records from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), you were determined to be entitled to a low-income subsidy (LIS), copay level 2, effective January 1, 2020 through December 31, 2020. For copay level 2, there is no deductible and an enrollee is required to pay $1.30 and $3.90 in 2020. An enrollee in a Part D plan may be subject to annual deductibles, coinsurance, and copayments (including tiered copayments) specified by the plan. 42 CFR ?423.104. If a plan sponsor does not have all of the information it needs to make a decision, the plan sponsor should make reasonable and diligent efforts to obtain the missing information within the standard timeframe for making a decision and notifying the enrollee of the decision (i.e., within 72 hours after receiving the request or physician's or other prescriber's supporting statement). When a plan sponsor could acquire missing information, such as a National Drug Code (NDC) number, by contacting the enrollee's pharmacist, physician, or other prescriber, it should do so instead of relying on the enrollee to provide the information. Prescription Drug Benefit Manual, Chapter 18, ?30.3.2. Occasionally, a plan sponsor will have enough information to determine that a reimbursement request is payable, but not enough to determine the exact amount. When this situation occurs, the plan sponsor could issue a favorable decision within the 72-hour timeframe (the plan sponsor is not required to say how much the payment will be in its notice to the enrollee), and utilize the remainder of the 30-day payment period described in ??40.2 and 130.1 of this chapter to determine how much the enrollee should be reimbursed and make payment. If a plan sponsor chooses to send the payment within the 30-day timeframe after notifying the enrollee of the favorable decision within the 72-hour timeframe, the initial notice to the enrollee must include the following information: 1) the plan sponsor is approving the request; 2) payment will be sent within 30 days after the request was received; 3) if the enrollee does not agree with the amount received, he or she can request an appeal with the plan sponsor; and 4) briefly explain that the member may not receive the entire amount he or she paid out-of-pocket because certain items (e.g., co-payment amounts) are not reimbursable, and include a brief summary of items that are generally subtracted. Prescription Drug Benefit Manual, Chapter 18, ?30.3.2. The Part D Plan contract states that Medicare provides extra help to pay prescription drug costs forpeople who have limited income and resources. If you qualify you will get help paying for any Medicaredrug Plan's prescription copayments. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage. | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100. For a drug to be covered under Medicare Part D, it must meet the definition of a Part D drug. The Social Security Act generally defines a Part D drug as a drug product that meets the following requirements: - It requires a prescription for dispensing; and - It is approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for safety and effectiveness; and - It is prescribed for a medically accepted indication; and - It is not otherwise excluded from coverage under Part D law and rules. See Social Security Act, Sections 1860D-2(e)(1) and 1927(k)(2)(A)(i)-(iii); and Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Manual, Chapter 6, Section 10.1. Medicare rules state that the definition of a Part D drug includes medical supplies directly associated with the injection of insulin, including syringes, needles, alcohol swabs, gauze, and insulin injection delivery devices not otherwise covered under Medicare Part B, such as insulin pens, pen supplies, and needle-free syringes. Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit Manual, Chapter 6, Section 10.5. The Plan does not cover drugs/items excluded from Medicare Part D coverage. If you purchase drugs/items that are excluded, you must pay for them yourself. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100. A Part D plan is permitted to use a number of different tools to manage its formulary. One of these tools is known as prior authorization. This process requires an enrollee to obtain coverage approval for a drug before the drug is dispensed and covered by the plan. 70 Federal Register No. 18, issued January 28, 2005 (Preamble to Final Rule). Formulary use includes the application of cost utilization tools, including step-therapy, dosage limitations and therapeutic substitution. 42 CFR Section 423.578(b)(iii). The exceptions process extends to coverage requests to set aside cost utilization rules for non-formulary drugs. A Part D plan must grant an exception whenever it determines that the drug is medically necessary, consistent with the prescriber's statement, and that the drug would be covered but for the fact that it is subject to cost utilization rules. 42 CFR Section 423.578(b). The statement must show that all of the covered drugs on any tier of the plan's formulary for treatment of the enrollee's condition would not be as effective as the drug at issue, or would have adverse effects for the enrollee. Parts C & D Enrollee Grievances, Organization/Coverage Determinations, and Appeals Guidance Manual, Section 40.5.3. The Part D Plan can only cover drugs prescribed for a medically accepted indication. The Plan requires prior approval (also called prior authorization) before covering some prescription drugs. If prior approval is not obtained, the Plan may not cover the drug. A Plan must grant an exception to prior approval rules if it determines that the requested drug is medically necessary, consistent with the prescriber's statement. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100. A Part D Plan is permitted to use a number of different tools to manage its formulary. One of these tools is known as prior authorization. This process requires an enrollee to obtain coverage approval for a drug before the drug is dispensed and covered by the plan. 70 Federal Register No. 18, issued January 28, 2005 (Preamble to Final Rule). Formulary use includes the application of cost utilization tools, including step-therapy, dosage limitations and therapeutic substitution. 42 CFR Section 423.578(b)(iii). The exceptions process extends to coverage requests to set aside cost utilization rules for non-formulary drugs. A Part D plan must grant an exception whenever it determines that the drug is medically necessary, consistent with the prescriber's statement, and that the drug would be covered but for the fact that it is subject to cost utilization rules. 42 CFR Section 423.578(b). The statement must show that all of the covered drugs on any tier of the plan's formulary for treatment of the enrollee's condition would not be as effective as the drug at issue or would have adverse effects for the enrollee. Parts C & D Enrollee Grievances, Organization/Coverage Determinations, and Appeals Guidance Manual, Section 40.5.3. The Part D Plan can only cover drugs prescribed for a medically accepted indication. The Plan requires prior approval (also called prior authorization) before covering some prescription drugs. If prior approval is not obtained, the Plan may not cover the drug. A Plan must grant an exception to prior approval rules if it determines that the requested drug is medically necessary, consistent with the prescriber's statement. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |
Citations used in this letter come from Section 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations which you will find abbreviated as 42 CFR with the corresponding section numbers, i.e., 42 CFR Sections 423.578, 423.100. A Part D Plan may establish tiered cost-sharing for drugs on its formulary. The Plan groups covered drugs into different cost-sharing levels or tiers. Medicare rules permit an enrollee to request a tiering exception to cover a higher cost-sharing tiered drug at a lower cost-sharing tier level so long as there is a drug on a lower cost-sharing tier that is approved for treating the same condition that the requested higher cost-sharing tiered drug is being used to treat. However, Medicare rules also permit a Plan to design its tiering exception procedures so that a Plan does not have to grant a tiering exception for brand or biologic drugs if the lower cost-sharing tier or tiers only contain generic drugs approved for treating the same condition. 42 CFR Sections 423.4; 423.578(a); 423.578(a)(6); 423.578(c)(3)(ii); Parts C & D Grievances, Organization/Coverage Determinations, and Appeals Guidance Manual, Section 40.5.1. The prescription drug benefit offered by the Part D Plan must meet criteria requirements pertaining to the annual deductible, the initial coverage limit, the coverage gap and catastrophic coverage. For the initial coverage limit, the rules provide for a benefit of shared coverage of costs between the enrollee and Plan. An enrollee in a Part D Plan may be subject to annual deductibles, coinsurance and copayments (including tiered copayments) specified by the Plan. 42 CFR Section 423.104. Each drug on the Plan's formulary is assigned to a cost-sharing tier. The Part D Plan contract allows an enrollee to request an exception to the Plan's cost-sharing structure to pay less for a drug. This is called a tiering exception. The Plan does not provide tiering exceptions for brand or biologic drugs if the lower cost-sharing tier or tiers contain only generic drugs approved for treating the same condition. Please refer to the Plan's Evidence of Coverage (EOC). | [
"medicare",
"part-d",
"independent-medical-review",
"case-description",
"coverage-explanation"
] | 2024-02-03 | https://qic.cms.gov/api/1/datastore/query/8152455d-179d-4455-9d09-e5dfc516be10/0/download?redirect=false&ACA=fgCeroIxj9&format=csv | 44124e33664f775b7b0985f6ae206368 | ./data/processed/medicare_qic/part_d.jsonl | unknown | unknown |