1.    Health care insurers may issue policies or subscriber agreements which provide for incentives for covered persons to use the health care services of preferred providers.

Terms Used In North Dakota Code 26.1-47-03

  • Contract: A legal written agreement that becomes binding when signed.
  • following: when used by way of reference to a chapter or other part of a statute means the next preceding or next following chapter or other part. See North Dakota Code 1-01-49
  • Person: means an individual, organization, government, political subdivision, or government agency or instrumentality. See North Dakota Code 1-01-49

These policies or subscriber agreements must contain all of the following provisions:

a. A provision that if a covered person receives emergency care and cannot reasonably reach a preferred provider that care will be reimbursed as though the covered person had been treated by a preferred provider.

b.    A provision that if covered services are not available through a preferred provider, reimbursement for those services will be made as though the covered person had been treated by a preferred provider.

c.    A provision which clearly discloses differentials between benefit levels for health care services of preferred providers and benefit levels for health care services of other providers.

d.    A provision that entitles the covered person, if any health care services covered under the health benefit plan are not available through a preferred provider within fifty miles [80.47 kilometers] of the policyholder’s legal residence, to the provision of those covered services under the health benefit plan by a health care provider not under contract with the health care insurer and located within fifty miles [80.47 kilometers] of the policyholder’s legal residence. For the covered person to be eligible for benefits under this subdivision, the health care provider not under contract with the health care insurer must furnish the health care services at the same cost or less that would have been incurred had the covered person secured the health care services through a preferred provider.

2.    If the policy or subscriber agreement provides differences in benefit levels payable to preferred providers compared to other providers, the differences may not unfairly deny payment for covered services and may be no greater than necessary to provide a reasonable incentive for covered persons to use the preferred provider.