N.M. Stat. Ann. § 59A-23-12.1
A. Each group or blanket health insurance policy, health care plan and certificate of health insurance delivered or issued for delivery in this state that provides a prescription drug benefit for which any step therapy protocols are required shall establish clinical review criteria for those step therapy protocols. The clinical review criteria shall be based on clinical practice guidelines that:
(2) are developed and endorsed by an interdisciplinary panel of experts that manages conflicts of interest among the members of the panel of experts by:
(4) are created pursuant to an explicit and transparent process that:
(5) take into account the needs of atypical patient populations and diagnoses.
B. In the absence of clinical guidelines that meet the requirements of Subsection A of this section, peer-reviewed publications may be substituted.
C. When a health insurance policy, health care plan or certificate of insurance restricts coverage of a prescription drug for the treatment of any medical condition through the use of a step therapy protocol, an insured and the practitioner prescribing the prescription drug shall have access to a clear, readily accessible and convenient process to request a step therapy exception determination. An insurer may use its existing medical exceptions process in accordance with the provisions of Subsections D through I of this section to satisfy this requirement. The process shall be made easily accessible for insureds and practitioners on the insurer's publicly accessible website.
D. An insurer shall expeditiously grant an exception to the health insurance policy's, health care plan's or certificate of insurance's step therapy protocol, based on medical necessity and a clinically valid explanation from the patient's prescribing practitioner as to why a drug on the health insurance policy's, health care plan's or certificate of insurance's formulary that is therapeutically equivalent to the prescribed drug should not be substituted for the prescribed drug, if:
(4) the prescription drug required pursuant to the step therapy protocol is not in the best interest of the patient, based on clinical appropriateness, because the patient's use of the prescription drug is expected to:
(c) decrease the patient's ability to achieve or maintain reasonable functional ability in performing daily activities.
E. Upon the granting of an exception to a health insurance policy's, health care plan's or certificate of insurance's step therapy protocol, an insurer shall authorize coverage for the prescription drug that is the subject of the exception request.
F. An insurer shall respond with its decision on an insured's exception request within seventy-two hours of receipt. In cases where exigent circumstances exist, an insurer shall respond within twenty-four hours of receipt of the exception request. In the event the insurer does not respond to an exception request within the time frames required pursuant to this subsection, the exception request shall be granted.
G. An insurer's denial of a request for an exception for step therapy protocols shall be subject to review and appeal pursuant to the Patient Protection Act [Chapter 59A, Article 57 NMSA 1978].
H. After an insured has made an exception request in accordance with the provisions of this section, an insurer shall authorize continued coverage of a prescription drug that is the subject of the exception request pending the determination of the exception request.
I. The provisions of this section shall not be construed to prevent:
(2) a practitioner from prescribing a prescription drug that the practitioner has determined to be medically necessary.
J. The provisions of this section shall apply only to a health insurance policy, health care plan or certificate of insurance delivered, issued for delivery or renewed on or after January 1, 2019.
K. The superintendent shall promulgate rules as may be necessary to appropriately implement the provisions of this section.
L. Nothing in this section shall be interpreted to interfere with the superintendent's authority to regulate prescription drug coverage benefits under other state and federal law.
M. As used in this section, "medical necessity" or "medically necessary" means health care services determined by a practitioner, in consultation with the insurer, to be appropriate or necessary, according to:
History: Laws 2018, ch. 9, § 4.
Effective dates. — Laws 2018, ch. 9 contained no effective date provision, but, pursuant to N.M. Const., art. IV, § 23, was effective May 16, 2018, 90 days after the adjournment of the legislature.