The
legislature finds that diabetes imposes a significant health risk
and tremendous financial burden on the citizens and government of
the state of Washington, and that access to the medically
accepted standards of care for diabetes, its treatment and
supplies, and self-management training and education is crucial
to prevent or delay the short and long-term complications of
diabetes and its attendant costs.
(1) The definitions in this subsection apply throughout this
section unless the context clearly requires otherwise.
(a) "Person with diabetes" means a person diagnosed by a
health care provider as having insulin using diabetes, noninsulin
using diabetes, or elevated blood glucose levels induced by
pregnancy; and
(b) "Health care provider" means a health care provider as
defined in RCW 48.43.005.
(2) All group disability insurance contracts and blanket
disability insurance contracts providing health care services,
issued or renewed after January 1, 1998, shall provide benefits
for at least the following services and supplies for persons with
diabetes:
(a) For group disability insurance contracts and blanket
disability insurance contracts that include coverage for pharmacy
services, appropriate and medically necessary equipment and
supplies, as prescribed by a health care provider, that includes
but is not limited to insulin, syringes, injection aids, blood
glucose monitors, test strips for blood glucose monitors, visual
reading and urine test strips, insulin pumps and accessories to
the pumps, insulin infusion devices, prescriptive oral agents for
controlling blood sugar levels, foot care appliances for
prevention of complications associated with diabetes, and
glucagon emergency kits; and
(b) For all group disability insurance contracts and blanket
disability insurance contracts providing health care services,
outpatient self-management training and education, including
medical nutrition therapy, as ordered by the health care
provider. Diabetes outpatient self-management training and
education may be provided only by health care providers with
expertise in diabetes. Nothing in this section prevents the
insurer from restricting patients to seeing only health care
providers who have signed participating provider agreements with
the insurer or an insuring entity under contract with the
insurer.
(3) Coverage required under this section may be subject to
customary cost-sharing provisions established for all other
similar services or supplies within a policy.
(4) Health care coverage may not be reduced or eliminated
due to this section.
(5) Services required under this section shall be covered
when deemed medically necessary by the medical director, or his
or her designee, subject to any referral and formulary
requirements.
(6) The insurer need not include the coverage required in
this section in a group contract offered to an employer or other
group that offers to its eligible enrollees a self-insured health
plan not subject to mandated benefits status under this title
that does not offer coverage similar to that mandated under this
section.
(7) This section does not apply to the health benefit plan
that provides benefits identical to the schedule of services
covered by the basic health plan.
[2004 c 244 § 10; 1997 c 276 § 3.]
NOTES:
Application -- 2004 c 244: See note following RCW 48.21.045.
Effective date -- 1997 c 276: See note following RCW 41.05.185.