- Mental disorders affect 1.2 billion people worldwide: 5 things to know
- New Hampshire hospital expands Afib care with 2 new programs
- UHS behavioral health president resigns
- Tennessee system plans $23M ASC after joint venture falls through
- Travel nurse market shows signs of stabilization: Survey
- CareSource pauses behavioral health Medicaid clawbacks
- Anesthesiologist to lead Illinois physician society
- Trump’s health tech agenda: 6 recent moves
- 10 highest-paying states for dental assistants
- Lee Health names clinical chief
- Pomona Valley Hospital Medical Center clears its surgical backlog in 90 days with predictive scheduling
- California hospital taps new CFO
- 15 dentists making headlines
- CVS sues Tennessee over PBM law
- How Texas Oncology’s San Antonio Region increased infusion volume 16% without adding staff or chairs
- Cottage Hospital CEO’s tough decision reversed a -16% margin
- 10 best, worst cities to raise a family
- How much are ASCs actually worth right now?
- Smile Partners USA enters Massachusetts, its 7th market
- California multispecialty specialty MSO inks deal with AI platform
- Listen to the Latest ‘KFF Health News Minute’
- DME fraud cases mount as federal scrutiny intensifies
- Staffing the Modern ASC: Managing Complexity, Expertise and Performance
- Radiopharmaceutical outfit Lantheus mulls potential $7B takeover by Curium: Bloomberg
- Antibiotics Won't Help Ease Asthma-Linked Wheezing in Kids
- Everyone Has A Family Doc, But Can You Get An Appointment?
- Yoga Eases Insomnia And Anxiety In Cancer Survivors, Study Finds
- Many U.S. College Students With Psychosis Are Not Receiving Treatment
- Dust Yields Clues to Viral Outbreaks, Study Finds
- SK bioscience links up with Colombia to enable local production of varicella vaccine
- After prior FDA manufacturing snub, Gilead's hepatitis D med Hepcludex nabs US nod
- 3 Medical Routines That Older People May Not Need
- Cheaper, Alternative Health Plans Are Having a Moment, but Critics Urge Caution
- Acadia boosts ‘More To Parkinson's’ campaign with Ryan Reynolds, Parkinson’s voices
- Niowave kicks off construction of $75M radiopharmaceutical isotope plant in Michigan
- Journalists Distill News on Ebola, Licensing Midwives, and California’s Budget
- Trump Bought Stock in Eli Lilly as His Policies Gave the Drugmaker a Big Boost, Documents Show
- 40% lower physician distress, 245% more violence reporting: Workforce retention strategies gaining traction
- 15 new behavioral health study findings to know
- APRN charged in $1.35M Medicare fraud scheme
- Florida woman faces charges of practicing unlicensed dentistry
- GI of the Rockies launches AI-powered care program
- The instability compounding the anesthesiologist shortage
- ADA proposes standards on dental cartridges, water quality
- 4 dental insurance updates to know
- Federal appeals court overturns EPA fluoride ruling: 5 notes
- Dental Medicaid disenrollment could cause $86M in added costs
- Park Dental opens Minnesota practice
- Tennessee orthodontic practice opens 2 locations
- Justice Department charges autism care providers in $46.6M fraud case
- 14.2% of Medicaid patients received mental health ED follow-up: 4 notes
- Acting NIAID Chief Steps Down Amid Ebola, Hantavirus Concerns
- US overdose deaths decline for 3rd straight year: What it means for healthcare
- Sunscreen Confusion Puts More Americans At Risk For Melanoma
- ACAP warns final ACA rule adds further uncertainty to a market in flux
- AbbVie plots 85 summer layoffs tied to Allergan unit in California
- Quorum Health transitioning to nonprofit for financial pickup
- Women's Health Capitol Hill Day: Advocates lobby to advance budget priorities
- Europe's CHMP gives thumbs up to AZ's breast cancer drug after thumbs down from FDA adcomm
- Swoop acquires prescription fulfillment platform Nimble to support independent pharmacies
- AstraZeneca, Daiichi beat Gilead to first-line TNBC with FDA nod for Datroway
- Industry Voices—From claims to compassion: Reclaiming patient advocacy in revenue cycle
- 1 In 10 U.S. Surgeons Quit Practice, Study Warns Of Shortage
- Video Game Can Detect Depression In Minutes, Study Says
- Quitting Smoking Might Lower Your Dementia Risk
- Severe Asthma Often Comes With Other Serious Health Problems
- AbbVie, GSK race up patient reputation leaderboard in the UK
- Efforts To Understand The Nation's Drugged Driving Problem Stall Under Trump
- Trump’s $50B Rural Health Bet Meets a Healthcare Desert in North Carolina
- 3 Medical Routines That Older People May Not Need
- Fierce Pharma Asia—Merck-Kelun ADC’s triple wins; Tools in China licensing deals; Takeda’s $885M antitrust loss
- Tyra creates awareness day with patient advocates to shine light on a rare cancer
- Machine learning-guided lifestyle plans reduce depression symptoms: 3 study notes
- Innovaccer picks up CaduceusHealth to offer end-to-end revenue cycle management
- Acadia psychiatric hospital faces abuse lawsuits
- Massachusetts behavioral health clinics to pay $1.4M to settle fraud allegations
- Hospitals allege contracted CVS Health subsidiaries pocketed their 340B savings
- RFK Jr. Fires Two Leaders Of Major U.S. Health Task Force
- Ksana Health awarded $17.9M to build behavioral health foundation model
- Lilly accuses church-linked pharmacies, wholesalers and more of running $200M+ rebate fraud scheme
- Study: Brokers increasingly recommending ICHRA to employers
- ASCO: Merck, Kelun's sac-TMT ADC combo beats Keytruda by 65% on progression in first-line lung cancer
- Common Food Preservatives Linked to Major Heart Problems
- Health Tech Weekly Rundown: Prime Healthcare expands virtual sitting tech; CVS Health studies seniors' digital health needs
- Amgen's Tavneos, facing liver injury scrutiny, gets label update in Japan as patient starts resume
- Gilead pledges 400K AmBisome doses to fight visceral leishmaniasis in expanded WHO collab
- With Voxzogo under pressure, BioMarin touts trial win in label expansion bid
- Migraine With Aura Linked To Middle-Age Stroke Risk
- Nicotine Vapes Triple Smokers' Odds Of Quitting Tobacco
- Fatty Liver Disease Increases Heart Attack Risk, Study Says
- Religious Anti-Abortion Center Finds Opportunity In Town Without OB-GYNs
- CPAP Insurance Rules Too Stringent, Deny Device Coverage To Sleep Apnea Patients Who Would Benefit
- ICE Arrests Are Separating Families. Here’s How To Plan Ahead.
- Colorado Charts Its Own Course on Vaccines Amid Federal Pullback
- OpenEvidence launches hands-free voice AI feature, expands hospital footprint with Cedars-Sinai tie-up
- Inside agency view: Ogilvy Health on AI’s ‘light speed,’ nano influencers and the rise of Ria
- Fixing Eligibility at the Point of Care: The Missing Link in Medical Device Reimbursement Integrity
- Fixing Eligibility at the Point of Care: The Missing Link in Medical Device Reimbursement Integrity
- The failure of the ‘usual suspects’ approach to life science recruitment
- The failure of the ‘usual suspects’ approach to life science recruitment
- Kennedy dismisses leaders of US Preventive Services Task Force
- Statement on Novel Exchange-Traded Funds (ETFs)
- CMS proposes rule aimed at limiting Medicaid state-directed payments
- WTW: Employers aiming to bulk up AI use for health and benefits
- Freestanding EDs, urgent care acquisition opportunities abound for HCA Healthcare
- Value, Focus, and the Future of MedTech: M&A and Divestitures are Rewriting the Strategic Playbook.
- Value, Focus, and the Future of MedTech: M&A and Divestitures are Rewriting the Strategic Playbook.
- Rollback of PFAS Drinking Water Standards Raises Safety Fears
- 'Missed risk': Women's Heart Health Summit explores gaps in research, treatment
- House and Senate Democrats move to overturn CMS’ WISeR AI prior auth pilot
- Designing an agentic, future‑ready tech roadmap for emerging pharma
- Judi Health taps Clear for its identity verification tech
- Canvas Medical unveils Canvas Studio, a customizable EMR workflow tool for clinicians
- The Boston Children’s Experience: Hidden ICU Risk and AI-Driven De-escalation
- The Boston Children’s Experience: Hidden ICU Risk and AI-Driven De-escalation
- How specialty practices can get more out of technology investments
- Artivion Completes Endospan Acquisition, Expands Aortic Arch Portfolio With FDA-Approved NEXUS System
- Artivion Completes Endospan Acquisition, Expands Aortic Arch Portfolio With FDA-Approved NEXUS System
- Your Handwriting Could Be a Window Into Your Aging Brain
- Ipsen details growing pains as teens transition to adult care
- Real-World Evidence in the AI Era: What You Can Unlock Depends on What You Build On
- Lilly, AbbVie, J&J, AZ lead an uptick in Big Pharma Q1 growth, with Novo again bringing up the rear
- MetroHealth partners with Artisight on smart hospital platform rollout
- How Do Caffeine, Alcohol, Weed, Nicotine Affect MS Symptoms?
- Once-A-Day Pill Effective In Treating Sleep Apnea Without CPAP, Clinical Trial Says
- Teens Turning To Creatine, Not Steroids, For 'Looksmaxxing'
- Childhood Trauma Tied to Higher Obesity Risk, But One Caring Adult Can Make A Difference
- Eroding ACA Enrollment Portends Higher Insurance Rates
- Religious Anti-Abortion Center Finds Opportunity in Town Without OB-GYNs
- Watch: The Tug-of-War Over Taxpayer Dollars
- Statement on Proposing Registered Offering Reform and Enhancement of Emerging Growth Company Accommodations and Simplification of Filer Status for Reporting Companies
- American Aid Worker Tests Positive for Ebola After DRC Exposure
- Eliminating KRAS: Why targeted protein degraders could redefine what’s possible in cancer
- Headache Medicine: Statement on Proposing Releases for Registered Offering Reform and Enhancement of Emerging Growth Company Accommodations and Simplification of Filer Status for Reporting Companies
- More Kids Seeking Anxiety Help at Routine Doctor Visits, Study Finds
- Statement on Proposing Releases for Enhancement of Emerging Growth Company Accommodations and Simplification of Filer Status for Reporting Companies, and Registered Offering Reform
- Global MedTech Contract Manufactures Finalize Merger
- Global MedTech Contract Manufactures Finalize Merger
- Carl Zeiss Meditec Plans Up to 1,000 Job Cuts Amid Restructuring Effort
- Carl Zeiss Meditec Plans Up to 1,000 Job Cuts Amid Restructuring Effort
- Signatera CDx Gets FDA Nod as Companion Diagnostic for Muscle-Invasive Bladder Cancer
- Signatera CDx Gets FDA Nod as Companion Diagnostic for Muscle-Invasive Bladder Cancer
- Boston Scientific announces strategic investment in MiRus LLC
- Boston Scientific announces strategic investment in MiRus LLC
- Weed/Opioid Combo Doesn't Help Knee Arthritis Pain
- Losing A Parent Can Dent An Adult's Earning Power
- Ticks Can Creepy-Crawl Your House For Weeks Before Dying, Study Shows
- Kids Keep Getting Stuck in Hospitals, Even After Being Cleared For Discharge
- Short, Intense Radiation Therapy Safe For Prostate Cancer Patients
- Somewhere Between Cacophony and Euphony
Laws pass with many promises, but after all the fanfare and effort from lobbies like the Michigan State Medical Society, who checks to see if the results good, bad, or indifferent?
A definition and overview of Gold Card Laws in Michigan and other states comes from the quirky site, Center for Genius Authoritative Answers (CGAA).
In 2021, Texas enacted a law that allows clinicians with a strong track record of prior authorization approvals to receive an exemption from payer-imposed prior authorization requirements. This law is often referred to as a "gold card" law.
Louisiana and Michigan have also followed Texas's lead, enacting gold-carding bills in 2022. These bills aim to reduce the administrative burden on clinicians and improve patient care.
Pennsylvania and Michigan overhauled their prior authorization processes in 2022, reducing the time insurers have to respond to prior authorization requests and requiring insurers to provide an online method for prior authorization submission. ...
However, these are claims without evidence.
MedPage provides the gold with an in-depth retrospective of this state health policy tweak.
https://www.medpagetoday.com/practicemanagement/practicemanagement/113331
State 'Gold Card' Laws Sound Good -- But Are They Working?
— A Texas law to exempt providers from prior authorization hasn't worked out as hoped
Have you wished you could be exempt from prior authorizations, especially because your procedures or prescriptions are almost always approved?That's the idea behind "gold card" laws some states have implemented, but the laws have not always worked out quite the way supporters have envisioned.
Take Texas, for example. Under that state's gold card law, passed in 2021, "a health maintenance organization or an insurer that uses a preauthorization process for healthcare services may not require a physician or provider to obtain preauthorization for a particular healthcare service if, in the most recent 6-month evaluation period, the health maintenance organization or insurer has approved or would have approved not less than 90% of the preauthorization requests submitted by the physician or provider for the particular healthcare service." As with other gold card laws, the privilege is supposed to be automatically granted, without the provider having to do anything.
Although that 90% figure may sound like an easy bar to clear, only 3% of the state's healthcare providers have so far received a gold card, according to a January 2023 survey from the Texas Department of Insurance. "We do not have any data to indicate that the percentage will increase," a spokesperson for the department said in an email.
Granular CPT Codes
Zeke Silva, MD, chair of the Council on Legislation at the Texas Medical Association (TMA), said that in getting the law passed, "we had hoped if a physician did a procedure that was common for them, that was in their sphere of expertise, and for which they almost always received prior authorization approval, going forward, they would no longer have to go through the process. So the goal was very logical."
However, "it's become difficult for physicians in that circumstance to satisfy the threshold to earn a gold card," he continued, noting that a physician must have a particular service approved a minimum of five times during the 6-month period being considered. "While that sounds like it wouldn't be hard to achieve, CPT [Current Procedural Terminology] coding is very granular."
For example, in radiology -- Silva's specialty -- "there's a different CPT code for a chest CT without contrast, with contrast, and then with and without contrast, which is good because it allows you to report what you're doing in a fairly granular fashion," he said. "The downside is, if you're a pulmonologist and you're trying to get prior authorization for a chest CT, some of your patients might need contrast, some may not, and some may need both," so getting five approvals for a particular CPT code suddenly becomes more complicated. The same is true for accumulating prior authorizations for the same medication with different dosages and different therapeutic regimens.
He added that there's another problem, and that's lack of transparency from the insurers about how they're awarding the gold cards. "There's no transparency on the data for anyone to specifically know" why so few providers are receiving them, he noted. "We thought the plans were going to be forthright in how they're evaluating physicians ... Without seeing the data, we certainly can't correct [the problem]."
Hoping for Change
The TMA is hoping to persuade the state legislature to make several changes to the law, Silva said. One change would be to do away with the five-case minimum. "We take a position even as few as one, if they're approved, that number should be sufficient."
The TMA also would like to see the duration of the gold card exemption -- currently lasting for 6 months -- to change to 1 year, "so that physicians aren't constantly having to engage or think about this process," he said. And finally, the TMA would like more transparency from health insurers regarding what services are being reviewed and how decisions are being made.
The association has had some other successes regarding prior authorization, he added, including getting the legislature to exempt treatment of autoimmune conditions from prior authorization requirements. "We had always focused on relieving the physician burden, but that bill was interesting because it was patient-focused," he said. "We're thinking about going into the next [legislative] session expanding on that mindset," and getting the legislature to exempt patients undergoing cancer treatment or treatment for a chronic disease.
In addition to Texas, other states with gold card laws include Arkansas, Colorado, Louisiana, Montana, and West Virginia, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures. Louisiana's law applies only to prior authorization for drugs to treat mental health conditions.
Colorado's law, which was passed this year, is a little different from the others, requiring health insurers and pharmacy benefit managers to "adopt a program, developed in consultation with providers participating with the carrier, to eliminate or substantially modify prior authorization requirements in a manner that removes the administrative burden for qualified providers as defined under the program, and their patients for certain prescription drugs and related drug benefits based on certain criteria." The deadline for implementing the program is Jan. 1, 2026.
Gold Card Laws' Evolution
Gold card laws have been undergoing an evolution, said Emily Donaldson, principal at the consulting firm Avalere in Washington, D.C. "When we first saw gold carding legislation being discussed, it was more on the medical services side, and as the legislation has evolved, we have now seen states also apply gold carding to prior authorization for medicines, or subsets of medicines," she said during an interview with a public relations person present. "I think those of us who follow health policy understand that there is no silver bullet or one solution to a problem, and that includes some of the challenges patients and providers face with prior authorization."
Donaldson said she wasn't surprised at how few providers in Texas have gotten gold cards. "If you look at the legislative text itself, there is fairly broad discretion given to the health plans and how they design their gold card programs," she said. "And so that may be a factor in why you see these differences between programs, when maybe some plans have more providers receiving a gold card than others, and why maybe it's not working the way that providers thought it might work when the legislation was initially passed."
She said she has seen an uptick in states looking at gold card laws -- "even if states haven't passed something, they may have proposed something that hasn't made it through the legislative process." She said she thought states would learn from the experience of states like Texas and use that information when they're developing their own legislation.
An insurer organization did not respond by press time to a request for comment on the gold card issue.
The root cause here is that insurance companies hold the money, and therefore make the rules.
Is there evidence that results in Michigan are any better than in Texas? If so, how long before those who hold the gold (insurance companies) simply make more rules?
In fact, Optum revised their Michigan rules going into 2024, and UHC did the same for 2025.
Patients and clinicians cannot win at this game. They need to reset the board with rules that eliminate third-party payers. DPC, savings accounts, and sharing memberships are all options to consider.
Get MHF Insights
News and tips for your healthcare freedom.
We never spam you. One-step unsubscribe.














