HF4783
Health care; technical corrections made.
Legislative Session 94 (2025-2026)
AI Generated Summary
Purpose
- This bill would allow a state health agency to run a demonstration project that contracts for all dental services using a prospective per-capita (capitated) payment model. The goal is to improve access to dental care for people enrolled in medical assistance and MinnesotaCare in designated areas, and to pursue necessary federal waivers to run the program.
Main Provisions
Demonstration project structure
- The commissioner can contract with organizations licensed under chapters 62C, 62D, or 62N to provide all dental care services under medical assistance and MinnesotaCare, starting July 1, 1994 (or when waivers are granted, if later).
- The commissioner must identify geographic areas (including both urban and rural) where access to dental services is inadequate to carry out the project.
- The commissioner must seek any necessary federal waivers or approvals from the federal Secretary of Health and Human Services.
Participation and enrollment
- The commissioner may exclude from participation any groups currently excluded from the prepaid medical assistance program.
- In designated areas, all eligible medical assistance recipients (and MinnesotaCare enrollees, if applicable) must enroll in a dental plan to receive dental services, with exceptions for emergency services or out-of-plan services approved by the dental plan.
- Recipients must receive services from providers within the dental plan’s network, unless an exception is authorized (emergency or out-of-plan).
Plan selection and management
- The commissioner can choose either multiple dental plans or a single dental plan for a designated area.
- A dental plan under contract must serve medical assistance recipients in the designated area and may serve MinnesotaCare recipients.
- The commissioner may limit the number of plans in a designated area, considering factors such as the number of recipients, potential contractors, provider network size, services offered, qualifications, accessibility, confidentiality, marketing/enrollment activities, plan compliance, and performance. The aim is to provide the most economical care while maintaining high standards.
Definitions and terminology
- The bill defines a “dental plan” as an organization licensed under chapters 62C, 62D, or 62N that contracts with the department to provide covered dental services on a prepaid capitation basis.
- It defines “emergency services” as the term used in another statute (section 256B.0625, subdivision 4).
- It defines “multiple dental plan area” as a designated area with more than one dental plan.
- It defines “participating provider” as a dentist or dental clinic contracted with a dental plan to provide services.
- It defines “single dental plan area” as a designated area with only one dental plan available.
Significant Changes to Existing Law
- Adds a formal framework to create and operate a demonstration project for dental services paid on a prepaid capitation basis.
- Requires targeted enrollment of eligible MA and MinnesotaCare recipients into a dental plan within designated geographic areas.
- Establishes authority to designate one or more dental plans per area and to limit the number of plans based on various practical considerations.
- Introduces explicit network-based service delivery requirements and definitions for dental plans, participating providers, and plan areas.
- Includes mechanisms for waivers from federal authorities to implement the project.
Potential Impacts
- For recipients: access to organized dental care through a network of contracted dental plans, with services routed through plan providers. Recipients in designated areas may have to enroll in a dental plan and use network providers, with exceptions for emergencies or plan-approved out-of-network services.
- For providers: participation through contract with a dental plan to deliver services on a capitation basis; consideration of geographic coverage and network adequacy in plan selection.
- For the administration: a structured, potentially more centralized approach to dental benefits within MA and MinnesotaCare, with attention to cost control, quality standards, and recipient confidentiality.
Practical Implications
- The program emphasizes achieving cost-effective, high-quality dental care by using prepaid caps and defined networks, while targeting areas with inadequate access to dental services and seeking federal approvals to implement the approach.
Relevant Terms - demonstration project - prospective per capita payment / prepaid capitation - dental plan - organization licensed under 62C / 62D / 62N - medical assistance (MA) - MinnesotaCare - geographic areas (designated areas) - waivers (federal approvals) - emergency services - out-of-plan services - dental plan provider network - participating provider - multiple dental plan area - single dental plan area - enrollment / enrollment requirement - prepaid medical assistance program (section 256B.69) - Section 256B.037 subdivision 1 (legal reference in the amendment) - access to dental services - cost-effectiveness / economical care - plan selection criteria (network size, accessibility, confidentiality, marketing/enrollment, compliance, performance)
Actions
| Date | Chamber | Where | Type | Name | Committee Name |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| March 26, 2026 | House | Action | Introduction and first reading, referred to | Health Finance and Policy | |
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Progress through the legislative process
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