MMP EOC SC V4

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Molina Healthcare

PDF SC-2021-MMP-EOC-EN-508
Molina Dual Options
Medicare-Medicaid Plan
2021 | Member Handbook
South Carolina H2533-001 Serving Abbeville, Aiken, Allendale, Anderson, Bamberg, Barnwell, Berkeley, Calhoun, Charleston, Cherokee, Chester, Chesterfield, Clarendon, Colleton, Dillon, Edgefield, Fairfield, Florence, Georgetown, Greenville, Greenwood, Hampton, Jasper, Kershaw, Laurens, Lee, Lexington, Marion, Marlboro, McCormick, Newberry, Oconee, Orangeburg, Pickens, Richland, Saluda, Spartanburg, Union, Williamsburg Counties

H2533_21_16907_001_SCMMPMbrHbk Approved
Molina Dual Options Medicare-Medicaid Plan Member Handbook
01/01/2021 ­12/31/2021
Your Health and Drug Coverage under the Molina Dual Options Medicare-Medicaid Plan
Member Handbook Introduction
This handbook tells you about your coverage under Molina Dual Options through 12/31/2021. It explains health care services, behavioral health coverage, prescription drug coverage, and long-term services and supports. Long-term services and supports provide you with the help you need, whether you get services at home or in a nursing home. Key terms and their definitions appear in alphabetical order in the last chapter of the Member Handbook.
This is an important legal document. Please keep it in a safe place.
This Molina Dual Options plan is offered by Molina Healthcare of South Carolina. When this Member Handbook says "we," "us," or "our," it means Molina Healthcare of South Carolina. When it says "the plan" or "our plan," it means Molina Dual Options.
ATENCIÓN: Si habla español, tiene a su disposición servicios gratuitos de asistencia lingüística. Llame al (855) 735-5831, servicio TTY al 711, los 7 días a la semana, de 8:00 a. m. a 8:00 p. m., hora local. La llamada es gratuita.
You can get this document for free in other formats, such as large print, braille, or audio. Call (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week, 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free.
You can ask that we always send you information in the language or format you need. This is called a standing request. We will keep track of your standing request so you do not need to make separate requests each time we send you information. To get this document in an alternate format or a language other than English, please contact Member Services at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week, 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. If you prefer to receive documents like this in the future in a language other than English, please contact the State at (888) 549-0820, TTY: 711, Monday ­ Friday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., local time to update your record with the preferred language. A representative can help you make or change a standing request. You can also contact your Care Coordinator for help with standing requests.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

1

Molina Dual Options MEMBER HANDBOOK

2021 Molina Dual Options Table of Contents

Chapter 1. Chapter 2. Chapter 3. Chapter 4. Chapter 5. Chapter 6.
Chapter 7. Chapter 8. Chapter 9.
Chapter 10. Chapter 11. Chapter 12.

Getting started as a member ...................................................................................... 4 Important phone numbers and resources ................................................................. 12 Using the plan's coverage for your health care and other covered services ............ 26 Benefits Chart ...........................................................................................................42 Getting your outpatient prescription drugs through the plan ..................................... 89 What you pay for your Medicare and Healthy Connections Medicaid prescription drugs .......................................................................................................................105 Asking us to pay a bill you have gotten for covered services or drugs ................... 110 Your rights and responsibilities ............................................................................... 114 What to do if you have a problem or complaint (coverage decisions, appeals, complaints) ..............................................................................................................130 Ending your membership in our Medicare-Medicaid Plan ...................................... 170 Legal notices ...........................................................................................................176 Definitions of important words ................................................................................. 178

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Molina Dual Options MEMBER HANDBOOK
Disclaimers Coverage under Molina Dual Options is qualifying health coverage called minimum essential coverage. It satisfies the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act's (ACA) individual shared responsibility requirement. Visit the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) website at www.irs.gov/ Affordable-Care-Act/Individuals-and-Families for more information on the individual shared responsibility requirement. Molina Dual Options Medicare-Medicaid Plan is a health plan that contracts with both Medicare and South Carolina Healthy Connections Medicaid to provide benefits of both programs to enrollees. Molina Healthcare complies with applicable Federal civil rights laws and does not discriminate on the basis of race, ethnicity, national origin, religion, gender, sex, age, mental or physical disability, health status, receipt of healthcare, claims experience, medical history, genetic information, evidence of insurability, geographic location.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

3

Molina Dual Options MEMBER HANDBOOK
Chapter 1: Getting started as a member
Introduction
This chapter includes information about Molina Dual Options, a health plan that covers all your Medicare and Healthy Connections Medicaid services, and your membership in it. It also tells you what to expect and what other information you will get from Molina Dual Options. Key terms and their definitions appear in alphabetical order in the last chapter of the Member Handbook.
Table of Contents
A. Welcome to Molina Dual Options ................................................................................................. 5 B. Information about Medicare and Medicaid ................................................................................... 5
B1. Medicare .................................................................................................................................5 B2. Medicaid .................................................................................................................................5 C. Advantages of this plan ................................................................................................................6 D. Molina Dual Options' service area ................................................................................................ 6 E. What makes you eligible to be a plan member ............................................................................. 7 F. What to expect when you first join a health plan .......................................................................... 7 G. Your Care Plan .............................................................................................................................8 H. Molina Dual Options monthly plan premium ................................................................................. 8 I. The Member Handbook ................................................................................................................8 J. Other information you will get from us .......................................................................................... 9 J1. Your Molina Dual Options Member ID Card ........................................................................... 9 J2. Provider and Pharmacy Directory ........................................................................................... 9 J3. List of Covered Drugs ...........................................................................................................10 J4. The Explanation of Benefits .................................................................................................. 10 K. How to keep your membership record up to date ....................................................................... 11 K1. Privacy of personal health information (PHI) ........................................................................ 11

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Molina Dual Options MEMBER HANDBOOK

Chapter 1: Getting started as a member

A. Welcome to Molina Dual Options
Molina Dual Options is a Medicare-Medicaid Plan in the Healthy Connections Prime program. A Medicare-Medicaid plan is an organization made up of doctors, hospitals, pharmacies, providers of long-term services and supports, and other providers. It also has Care Coordinators and care teams to help you manage all your providers and services. They all work together to provide the care you need. Molina Dual Options was approved by the State of South Carolina and the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) to provide you services as part of Healthy Connections Prime. Healthy Connections Prime is a demonstration program jointly run by South Carolina and the federal government to provide better health care for people who have both Medicare and Medicaid. Under this demonstration, the state and federal government want to test new ways to improve how you get your Medicare and Medicaid health care services. Our mission is to provide quality health services to financially vulnerable families and individuals covered by government programs. As a member, you are eligible for all your Medicare and Healthy Connections Medicaid benefits plus a 24-hour Nurse Advice Line service available to answer your health questions. This handbook is your guide to your Molina Dual Options benefits. It will tell you about the things you need to do as a member. It tells you how to get the most benefit from your health care services. It tells you about the extra benefits that you get as a member. If you need help, it tells you who to call.
B. Information about Medicare and Medicaid
B1. Medicare Medicare is the federal health insurance program for:
People 65 years of age or older, Some people under age 65 with certain disabilities, and People with end-stage renal disease (kidney failure).
B2. Medicaid Medicaid is a program run by the federal government and the state that helps people with limited incomes and resources pay for long-term services and supports and medical costs. It covers extra services and drugs not covered by Medicare. In South Carolina, Medicaid is called Healthy Connections Medicaid. Each state decides:
what counts as income and resources who qualifies which services are covered, and the cost of those services.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Molina Dual Options MEMBER HANDBOOK

Chapter 1: Getting started as a member

States can decide how to run their programs, as long as they follow the federal rules. Medicare and South Carolina must approve Molina Dual Options each year. You can get Medicare and Healthy Connections Medicaid services through our plan as long as:
we choose to offer the plan, and Medicare and the State of South Carolina approve the plan. Even if our plan stops operating in the future, your eligibility for Medicare and Healthy Connections Medicaid services will not be affected.
C. Advantages of this plan
You will now get all your covered Medicare and Healthy Connections Medicaid services from Molina Dual Options, including prescription drugs. You do not pay extra to join this health plan. Molina Dual Options will help make your Medicare and Healthy Connections Medicaid benefits work better together and work better for you. Some of the advantages include:
You will be able to work with one health plan for all of your health insurance needs. You will have a care team that you helped put together. Your care team may include doctors, nurses, counselors, or other health professionals who are there to help you get the care you need. You will have a Care Coordinator. This is a person who works with you, with Molina Dual Options, and with your care providers to make sure you get the care you need. You will be able to direct your own care with help from your care team and Care Coordinator. The care team and Care Coordinator will work with you to come up with a care plan specifically designed to meet your health needs. The care team will be in charge of coordinating the services you need. This means, for example:
Your care team will make sure your doctors know about all medicines you take so they can reduce any side effects. Your care team will make sure your test results are shared with all your doctors and other providers.
D. Molina Dual Options' service area
Our service area includes these counties in South Carolina: Abbeville, Aiken, Allendale, Anderson, Bamberg, Barnwell, Berkeley, Calhoun, Charleston, Cherokee, Chester, Chesterfield, Clarendon, Colleton, Dillon, Edgefield, Fairfield, Florence, Georgetown, Greenville, Greenwood, Hampton, Jasper, Kershaw, Laurens, Lee, Lexington, Marion, Marlboro, McCormick, Newberry, Oconee, Orangeburg, Pickens, Richland, Saluda, Spartanburg, Union and Williamsburg. Only people who live in our service area can get Molina Dual Options. If you move outside of our service area, you cannot stay in this plan. See Chapter 8, for more information about the effects of moving out of our service area.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Molina Dual Options MEMBER HANDBOOK

Chapter 1: Getting started as a member

E. What makes you eligible to be a plan member
You are eligible for our plan as long as you: live in our service area; and are age 65 or older at the time of enrollment; and have Medicare Parts A, B, and D; and are eligible for full Healthy Connections Medicaid benefits; and are a United States citizen or are lawfully present in the United States.
Even if you meet the above criteria, you are not eligible for our plan if you: are part of the Healthy Connections Medicaid spend-down population; or have Comprehensive Third Party Insurance; or live in an Intermediate Care Facility for people with Intellectual Disabilities (ICF/IID) or Nursing Facility at the time of eligibility determination; or are in a hospice program or are getting End-Stage Renal Disease (ESRD) services at the time of eligibility determination; or are participating in a community long-term care waiver program other than the Community Choices Waiver, HIV/AIDS Waiver, or Mechanical Ventilation Waiver.
You may choose to either enroll or remain in Molina Dual Options if you: are currently enrolled in a Medicare Advantage plan or in Program of All-inclusive Care for the Elderly (PACE). Enrolling in Healthy Connections Prime will automatically disenroll you from your existing program and any Medicare Part D plan; or transition from a Nursing Facility or ICF/IID into the community; or are already enrolled in this plan but later enter a Nursing Facility; or are enrolled in this plan but enter a hospice program or become eligible for ESRD services.
F. What to expect when you first join a health plan
When you first join the plan, you will get an initial health screen within the first 30 days to collect information about your medical and social history and needs. You will also get a comprehensive assessment within the first 60 or 90 days depending on your health needs. The comprehensive assessment will take a deeper look at your medical needs, social needs, and capabilities. We will get information from you, your providers, and family/caregivers when appropriate. This assessment will be done by qualified and trained health professionals, such as nurses, social workers, and Care Coordinator. We may combine your initial health screen and comprehensive assessment into one assessment that is done within the first 60 days. Generally, people who are enrolled in certain Healthy Connections Medicaid waiver programs (like the Mechanical Ventilator Dependent Waiver, HIV/AIDS Waiver or the Community Choices Waiver), or who appear to have many medical and social needs based on the

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Molina Dual Options MEMBER HANDBOOK

Chapter 1: Getting started as a member

information we have about them, will get the combined initial health screen and comprehensive assessment.
If your comprehensive assessment shows you have very high health needs, you may be required to complete a Long Term Care Assessment with a registered nurse. The Long Term Care Assessment determines whether you need additional care in a nursing facility or through a community-based waiver.
If Molina Dual Options is new for you, you can keep seeing the doctors you go to now and keep your current service authorizations for 180 days after you first enroll. During this time period, you will continue to have access to the same medically necessary items, services, and prescription drugs as you do today. You will also still have access to your medical, mental health and Long Term Services and Supports (LTSS) providers.
Many of your doctors and other providers are in our network already, but if they are not, after 180 days in our plan, you will need to see doctors and other providers in our network. We may help you transition to a network provider in less than 180 days once we have completed your comprehensive assessment, developed a transition plan, and only if you agree. A network provider is a provider who works with the health plan. See Chapter 3 for more information on getting care.
G. Your Care Plan
Your care plan is the plan for what health services you will get and how you will get them.
After your comprehensive assessment, your care team will meet with you to talk about what health services you need and want. Together, you and your care team will make your care plan.
Every year, your care team will work with you to update your care plan if the health services you need and want change.
H. Molina Dual Options monthly plan premium
Molina Dual Options does not have a monthly plan premium.
I. The Member Handbook
This Member Handbook is part of our contract with you. This means that we must follow all of the rules in this document. If you think we have done something that goes against these rules, you may be able to appeal or challenge our action. For information about how to appeal, see Chapter 9, or call 1-800-MEDICARE (1-800-633-4227).
You can ask for a Member Handbook by calling Member Services at the phone number at the bottom of the page. You can also see the Member Handbook at www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals or download it from this website.
The contract is in effect for the months you are enrolled in Molina Dual Options between 01/01/2021 and 12/31/2021.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Molina Dual Options MEMBER HANDBOOK

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J. Other information you will get from us
You should have already gotten a Molina Dual Options Member ID Card, information about how to access a Provider and Pharmacy Directory, and information about how to access a List of Covered Drugs.
J1. Your Molina Dual Options Member ID Card
Under our plan, you will have one card for your Medicare and Healthy Connections Medicaid services, including long-term services and supports and prescriptions. You must show this card when you get any services or prescriptions. Here's a sample card to show you what yours will look like:

If your card is damaged, lost, or stolen, call Member Services right away and we will send you a new card.
As long as you are a member of our plan, you do not need to use your red, white, and blue Medicare card or your Healthy Connections Medicaid card to get services. Keep those cards in a safe place, in case you need them later. If you show your Medicare card instead of your Molina Dual Options Member ID Card, the provider may bill Medicare instead of our plan, and you may get a bill. See Chapter 7 to see what to do if you get a bill from a provider.
J2. Provider and Pharmacy Directory
The Provider and Pharmacy Directory lists the providers and pharmacies in the Molina Dual Options network. While you are a member of our plan, you must use network providers to get covered services. There are some exceptions when you first join our plan (see page 7).
You can ask for a Provider and Pharmacy Directory by calling Member Services at the number at the bottom of the page. You can also see the Provider and Pharmacy Directory on our website listed at the bottom of the page or download it from this website.
You can also see the Provider and Pharmacy Directory at www.molinahealthcare.com/SCMMPMaterials, or download it from this website. Both Member Services and the website can give you the most up-to-date information about changes in our network providers.
Definition of network providers
Molina Dual Options' network providers include:

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Molina Dual Options MEMBER HANDBOOK

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Doctors, nurses, and other health care professionals that you can go to as a member of our plan;
Clinics, hospitals, nursing facilities, and other places that provide health services in our plan; and
Home health agencies, durable medical equipment suppliers, waiver services providers, long-term services and supports providers, and others who provide goods and services that you get through Medicare or Healthy Connections Medicaid.
Network providers have agreed to accept payment from our plan for covered services as payment in full.
Definition of network pharmacies
Network pharmacies are pharmacies (drug stores) that have agreed to fill prescriptions for our plan members. Use the Provider and Pharmacy Directory to find the network pharmacy you want to use.
Except during an emergency, you must fill your prescriptions at one of our network pharmacies if you want our plan to help you pay for them.
Call Member Services at the number at the bottom of the page for more information. Both Member Services and Molina Dual Options' website can give you the most up-to-date information about changes in our network pharmacies and providers.
J3. List of Covered Drugs
The plan has a List of Covered Drugs. We call it the "Drug List" for short. It tells which prescription drugs are covered by Molina Dual Options.
The Drug List also tells you if there are any rules or restrictions on any drugs, such as a limit on the amount you can get. See Chapter 5 for more information on these rules and restrictions.
Each year, we will send you information about how to access the Drug List, but some changes may occur during the year. To get the most up-to-date information about which drugs are covered, visit our website using the information at the bottom of the page or call Member Services at the number at the bottom of the page.
J4. The Explanation of Benefits
When you use your Part D prescription drug benefits, we will send you a summary report to help you understand and keep track of payments for your Part D prescription drugs. This summary report is called the Explanation of Benefits (or EOB).
The EOB tells you the total amount you or others on your behalf have spent on your Part D prescription drugs and the total amount we have paid for each of your Part D prescription drugs during the month. The EOB has more information about the drugs you take. Chapter 6 gives more information about the EOB and how it can help you keep track of your drug coverage.
An EOB is also available when you ask for one. To get a copy, contact Member Services.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Molina Dual Options MEMBER HANDBOOK

Chapter 1: Getting started as a member

K. How to keep your membership record up to date
You can keep your membership record up to date by letting us know when your information changes. The plan's network providers and pharmacies need to have the right information about you. They use your membership record to know what services and drugs you get and how much it will cost you. Most services are free, but it is very important that you help us keep your information up-to-date. Let us know the following:
Changes to your name, your address, or your phone number Changes in any other health insurance coverage, such as from your employer, your spouse's employer, or workers' compensation Any liability claims, such as claims from an automobile accident Admission to a nursing facility or hospital Care in an out-of-area or out-of-network hospital or emergency room Changes in who your caregiver (or anyone responsible for you) is You are part of or become part of a clinical research study If any information changes, please let us know by calling Member Services at the number at the bottom of the page.
K1. Privacy of personal health information (PHI) The information in your membership record may include personal health information (PHI). Laws require that we keep your PHI private. We make sure that your PHI is protected. For more information about how we protect your PHI, see Chapter 8.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

11

Molina Dual Options MEMBER HANDBOOK
Chapter 2: Important phone numbers and resources
Introduction
This chapter gives you contact information for important resources that can help you answer your questions about Molina Dual Options and your health care benefits. You can also use this chapter to get information about how to contact your care coordinator and other people who can help you. Key terms and their definitions appear in alphabetical order in the last chapter of the Member Handbook.
Table of Contents
A. How to contact Molina Dual Options Member Services ............................................................. 13 A1. When to contact Member Services ....................................................................................... 13
B. How to contact your Care Coordinator ....................................................................................... 16 B1. When to contact your Care Coordinator ............................................................................... 16
C. How to contact the Nurse Advice Call Line ................................................................................ 17 C1. When to contact the Nurse Advice Call Line ........................................................................ 17
D. How to contact the State Health Insurance Assistance Program (SHIP) ................................... 17 D1. When to contact I-CARE .......................................................................................................18
E. How to contact the Quality Improvement Organization (QIO) .................................................... 18 E1. When to contact KEPRO ......................................................................................................18
F. How to contact Medicare ............................................................................................................19 G. How to contact Healthy Connections Medicaid .......................................................................... 20 H. How to contact the Healthy Connections Prime Advocate ......................................................... 21 I. How to contact the South Carolina Long Term Care Ombudsman ............................................ 22 J. Other resources ..........................................................................................................................22

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

12

Molina Dual Options MEMBER HANDBOOK

Chapter 2: Important phone numbers and resources

A. How to contact Molina Dual Options Member Services

CALL
TTY FAX WRITE

(855) 735-5831 This call is free. 7 days a week, 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time Assistive technologies, including self-service and voicemail options, are available on holidays, after regular business hours and on Saturdays and Sundays. We have free interpreter services for people who do not speak English.
711 This call is free. 7 days a week, 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time
For Member Services/For Healthy Connections Medicaid Drugs (non-Part D): Fax: (843) 740-1749 For Part D Prescription Services: Fax: (866) 290-1309
For Member Services: P.O. Box 40309 North Charleston, SC 29423-0309 For Healthy Connections Medicaid Drugs (non-Part D): P.O. Box 40309 North Charleston, SC 29423-0309 For Part D Prescription Services: 7050 Union Park Center, Suite 200 Midvale, UT 84047

WEBSITE

www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals

A1. When to contact Member Services Questions about the plan Questions about claims, billing or Member ID Cards Coverage decisions about your health care A coverage decision about your health care is a decision about: your benefits and covered services, or the amount we will pay for your health services. Call us if you have questions about a coverage decision about health care. To learn more about coverage decisions, see Chapter 9. Appeals about your health care

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Molina Dual Options MEMBER HANDBOOK

Chapter 2: Important phone numbers and resources

An appeal is a formal way of asking us to review a decision we made about your coverage and asking us to change it if you think we made a mistake.
To learn more about making an appeal, see Chapter 9.
Complaints about your health care
You can make a complaint about us or any provider (including a non-network or network provider). A network provider is a provider who works with the health plan. You can also make a complaint about the quality of the care you got to either us or the Quality Improvement Organization (see Section F below).
If your complaint is about a coverage decision about your health care, you can make an appeal (see the section above).
You can send a complaint about Molina Dual Options right to Medicare. You can use an online form at www.medicare.gov/MedicareComplaintForm/home.aspx. Or you can call 1-800-MEDICARE (1-800-633-4227) to ask for help.
To learn more about making a complaint about your health care, see Chapter 9.
Coverage decisions about your drugs
A coverage decision about your drugs is a decision about:
your benefits and covered drugs, or
the amount we will pay for your drugs.
This applies to your Medicare prescription drugs, Healthy Connections Medicaid prescription drugs, and Healthy Connections Medicaid over-the-counter drugs.
For more on coverage decisions about your prescription drugs, see Chapter 9.
Appeals about your drugs
An appeal is a formal way to ask us to change a coverage decision.
To appeal a coverage decision about a drug, call Member Services or submit your appeal in writing:

If your appeal is about Here's what to do: a:

You'll receive a decision

For Appeals on Part D drugs, mail to:

Part D drug

You must file an appeal within 60 days of the coverage decision.

within:

Medicare Pharmacy

7 calendar days

7050 Union Park Center Suite 200

For fast appeals, we will Midvale, UT 84047

give you our answer within 72 hours after we

Fax to:

get your appeal, or

866-290-1309

sooner if your health

requires it.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Molina Dual Options MEMBER HANDBOOK

Chapter 2: Important phone numbers and resources

If your appeal is about Here's what to do:

You'll receive a

For Appeals on

a:

decision

Medicaid drugs, mail

You must file an appeal within:

Non-Part D drug (these within 60 days of the

have an asterisk next to coverage decision. them in the Drug List)

15 calendar days

to:
Molina Healthcare Appeals Department P.O. Box 40309 North Charleston, SC

29423-0309 For fast appeals, we will give you our answer Fax to:

within 72 hours after we 877-823-5961

get your appeal, or

sooner if your health

requires it.

For more on making an appeal about your prescription drugs, see Chapter 9.
Complaints about your drugs
You can make a complaint about us or any pharmacy. This includes a complaint about your prescription drugs.
If your complaint is about a coverage decision about your prescription drugs, you can make an appeal. (See the section above).
You can send a complaint about Molina Dual Options right to Medicare. You can use an online form at www.medicare.gov/MedicareComplaintForm/home.aspx. Or you can call 1-800-MEDICARE (1-800-633-4227) to ask for help.
For more on making a complaint about your prescription drugs, see Chapter 9.
Payment for health care or drugs you already paid for
For more on how to ask us to pay you back, or to pay a bill you got, see Chapter 7.
If you ask us to pay a bill and we deny any part of your request, you can appeal our decision. See Chapter 9 for more on appeals.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Molina Dual Options MEMBER HANDBOOK

Chapter 2: Important phone numbers and resources

B. How to contact your Care Coordinator

The Molina Dual Options Care Coordinator is your main contact. This person helps you manage all of your providers, services and helps you get what you need. The member and/or caregiver may request a change in the Care Coordinator assigned, as needed by calling the Care Coordinator or Member Services. Additionally, Molina staff may make changes to the member's Care Coordinator assignment based upon the member`s needs (cultural / linguistic / physical / behavioral health) or location. Contact Member Services for more information.

CALL TTY WRITE

(855) 735-5831 This call is free. Monday - Friday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., local time We have free interpreter services for people who do not speak English.
711 This call is free. Monday - Friday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., local time
P.O. Box 40309 North Charleston, SC 29423-0309

WEBSITE

www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals

B1. When to contact your Care Coordinator Questions about your health care Help with scheduling appointments Questions about getting behavioral health services, transportation, and long-term services and supports (LTSS)
Sometimes you can get help with your daily health care and living needs. Contact your Care Coordinator if you have any questions about obtaining the below services. You might be able to get these services:
Personal care attendant Behavioral Health Services Home health care Adult day care Transportation Companion services Speech therapy Medical social services

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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C. How to contact the Nurse Advice Call Line
You can call Molina Healthcare's Nurse Advice Line 24 hours a day, 365 days a year. The service connects you to a qualified nurse who can give you health care advice in your language and help direct you to where you can get the care that is needed. Our Nurse Advice Line is available to provide services to all Molina Healthcare Members across the United States. The Nurse Advice Line is a URAC-accredited health call center and has been since 2007. The URAC accreditation means that our nurse line has demonstrated a complete commitment to quality care, improved processes and better patient results. Our Nurse Advice line is also certified since 2010, by the National Committee for Quality Assurance (NCQA) in Health Information Products (HIP) for our 24 hours Health Information Line.

CALL TTY

(844) 800-5155 This call is free. After dialing, press 3 then press 2 to reach the Nurse Advice Call Line 24 hours a day, 7 days a week We have free interpreter services for people who do not speak English. 711 This call is free. 24 Hours a day, 7 days a week

C1. When to contact the Nurse Advice Call Line Questions about your health care

D. How to contact the State Health Insurance Assistance Program (SHIP)

The State Health Insurance Assistance Program (SHIP) gives free health insurance counseling to people with Medicare. In South Carolina, the SHIP is called the Insurance Counseling Assistance and Referrals for Elders (I-CARE) program. I-CARE is not connected with any insurance company or health plan.
Information about the I-CARE program is available through the Department on Aging.

CALL

1-800-868-9095 This call is free. Office hours are Monday through Friday from 8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

TTY WRITE

TTY: 711 This call is free.
This number is for people who have hearing or speaking problems. You must have special telephone equipment to call it.
Department on Aging 1301 Gervais Street, Suite 350 Columbia, SC 29201

EMAIL WEBSITE

askus@aging.sc.gov aging.sc.gov

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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D1. When to contact I-CARE Questions about your Medicare health insurance I-CARE counselors can help you: answer your questions about changing to a new plan; understand your rights, understand your plan choices, make complaints about your health care or treatment, and straighten out problems with your bills.

E. How to contact the Quality Improvement Organization (QIO)

The QIO is a group of doctors and other health care professionals who help improve the quality of care for people with Medicare. In South Carolina, the QIO is a company called KEPRO. KEPRO is not connected with our plan.

CALL

1-888-317-0751 This call is free.
KEPRO team members are available 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Monday through Friday and from 11:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. on Saturdays, Sundays, and holidays. You can also leave a message 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.
Translation services are available for members and caregivers who do not speak English

TTY WRITE

1-855-843-4776 This call is free.
This number is for people who have hearing or speaking problems.
You must have special telephone equipment to call it.
KEPRO 5201 W. Kennedy Blvd., Suite 900 Tampa, FL 33609

WEBSITE

www.keproqio.com/

E1. When to contact KEPRO Questions about your health care You can make a complaint about the care you got if you: have a problem with the quality of care, think your hospital stay is ending too soon, or

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Chapter 2: Important phone numbers and resources

think your home health care, skilled nursing facility care, or comprehensive outpatient rehabilitation facility (CORF) services are ending too soon.

F. How to contact Medicare

Medicare is the federal health insurance program for people 65 years of age or older, some people under age 65 with disabilities, and people with end-stage renal disease (permanent kidney failure requiring dialysis or a kidney transplant).
The federal agency in charge of Medicare is the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, or CMS.

CALL TTY WEBSITE

1-800-MEDICARE (1-800-633-4227)
Calls to this number are free, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.
1-877-486-2048 This call is free.
This number is for people who have hearing or speaking problems. You must have special telephone equipment to call it.
www.medicare.gov
This is the official website for Medicare. It gives you up-to-date information about Medicare. It also has information about hospitals, nursing homes, physicians, home health agencies, and dialysis facilities. It includes booklets you can print right from your computer. You can also find Medicare contacts in your state by selecting "Forms, Help & Resources" and then clicking on "Phone numbers & websites."
The Medicare website has the following tool to help you find plans in your area:
Medicare Plan Finder: Provides personalized information about Medicare prescription drug plans, Medicare health plans, and Medigap (Medicare Supplement Insurance) policies in your area. Select "Find plans."
If you don't have a computer, your local library or senior center may be able to help you visit this website using its computer. Or, you can call Medicare at the number above and tell them what you are looking for. They will find the information on the website, print it out, and send it to you.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Chapter 2: Important phone numbers and resources

G. How to contact Healthy Connections Medicaid

Healthy Connections Medicaid helps with medical and long-term services and supports costs for people with limited incomes and resources.
You are enrolled in Medicare and in Healthy Connections Medicaid. If you have questions about the help you get from Healthy Connections Medicaid, call Healthy Connections Medicaid.

CALL TTY WRITE

1-888-549-0820 This call is free.
This number is available Monday through Friday from 8:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.
1-888-842-3620 This call is free
This number is for people who have hearing or speaking problems. You must have special telephone equipment to call it.
South Carolina Department of Health and Human Services P.O. Box 8206 Columbia, SC 29202

WEBSITE

www.scdhhs.gov

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Chapter 2: Important phone numbers and resources

H. How to contact the Healthy Connections Prime Advocate

The Healthy Connections Prime Advocate is the ombudsman for people enrolled in Healthy Connections Prime. An ombudsman is an office in your state that works as an advocate on your behalf. They can answer questions if you have a problem or complaint and can help you understand what to do. The Healthy Connections Prime Advocate also helps people enrolled in Healthy Connections Prime with service or billing problems. They are not connected with our plan or with any insurance company or health plan. Their services are free.

CALL TTY
FAX WRITE

1-844-477-4632
Office hours are Monday through Friday from 8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
TTY: 711 This call is free.
This number is for people who have hearing or speaking problems. You must have special telephone equipment to call it.
1-803-734-4534
Healthy Connections Prime Advocate Department on Aging 1301 Gervais Street, Suite 350 Columbia, SC 29201

EMAIL WEBSITE

primeadvocate@aging.sc.gov healthyconnectionsprimeadvocate.com

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Chapter 2: Important phone numbers and resources

I. How to contact the South Carolina Long Term Care Ombudsman

The South Carolina Long Term Care Ombudsman is an ombudsman program that helps people learn about nursing homes and other long-term care settings. It also helps solve problems between these settings and residents or their families.
Information about the South Carolina Long Term Care Ombudsman is available through the Department on Aging.

CALL WRITE

1-800-868-9095 This call is free.
Office hours are Monday through Friday from 8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Long Term Care Ombudsman Department on Aging 1301 Gervais St., Suite 350 Columbia, SC 29201

EMAIL WEBSITE

ltcombudsman@aging.sc.gov aging.sc.gov

J. Other resources
Ombudsman Regional Contacts
Region 1: Appalachia Greenville, SC Phone: 864-242-9733 Serving: Anderson, Cherokee, Greenville, Oconee, Pickens, and Spartanburg 1-800-434-4036 (outside Greenville County)
Region 2: Upper Savannah Greenwood, SC Phone: 864-941-8070 Serving: Abbeville, Edgefield, Greenwood, Laurens, McCormick, and Saluda 1-800-922-7729 (outside Greenwood County)
Region 3: Catawba York, SC Phone: 803-329-9670 Serving: Chester, Lancaster, York, and Union 1-800-662-8330 (outside York County)
Region 4: Central Midlands Columbia, SC Phone: 803-376-5389 Serving: Fairfield, Lexington, Newberry, and Richland 1-866-394-4166 (outside Richland County)

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Region 5: Lower Savannah Aiken, SC Phone: 803-649-7981 Serving: Aiken, Allendale, Bamberg, Barnwell, Calhoun, and Orangeburg 1-866-845-1550 (outside Aiken County)
Region 6: Santee-Lynches Sumter, SC Phone: 803-775-7381 Serving: Clarendon, Kershaw, Lee and Sumter 1-800-948-1042 (outside Sumter County)
Region 7: Pee Dee Hartsville, SC Phone: 843-383-8632 Serving: Chesterfield, Darlington, Dillon, Florence, Marion, and Marlboro 1-866-505-3331 (outside Darlington County)
Region 8: Waccamaw Georgetown, SC Phone: 843-546-4231 Serving: Georgetown, Horry and Williamsburg 1-888-302-7550 (outside Georgetown County)
Region 9: Trident Charleston, SC Phone: 843-554-2280 Serving: Berkeley, Charleston and Dorchester 1-800-864-6446 (outside Charleston County)
Region 10: Lowcountry Yemassee, SC Phone: 843-726-5536 Serving: Beaufort, Colleton, Hampton, and Jasper 1-877-846-8148 (outside Jasper County)
State Long Term Care Ombudsman's Office Lt. Governor's Office on Aging 1301 Gervais St., Suite 200 Columbia, SC 29201 Phone: 803-734-9900 1-800-868-9095 (outside Richland County)

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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There are ten Area Agencies on Aging spread around South Carolina. They are excellent resources for local community issues as well. They can be found at:
AAA -Region I (Anderson, Cherokee, Greenville, Oconee, Pickens and Spartanburg) Appalachia Area Agency SC Appalachian Council of Governments 30 Century Drive Greenville, SC 29606 864-242-9733
AAA -Region II (Abbeville, Edgefield, Greenwood, Laurens, McCormick and Saluda) Upper Savannah Area Agency Upper Savannah Council of Governments 222 Phoenix Avenue Greenwood, SC 29648 800-922-7729 (toll-free) 864-941-8053
AAA -Region III (Chester, Lancaster, York and Union) Catawba Area Agency Catawba Area Agency on Aging 2051 Ebenezer Road, Ste. B Post Office Box 4618 Rock Hill, SC 29732 803-329-9670 800-662-8330 (toll free) www.catawba-aging.com
AAA -Region IV (Fairfield, Lexington, Newberry, Richland) Central Midlands Area Agency Central Midlands Council of Governments 236 Stoneridge Drive Columbia, SC 29210 803-376-5390 866-394-4166 (toll free)
AAA -Region V (Aiken, Allendale, Bamberg, Barnwell, Calhoun and Orangeburg) Lower Savannah Area Lower Savannah Council of Governments 2748 Wagener Road Aiken, SC 29801 803-649-7981
AAA -Region VI (Clarendon, Kershaw, Lee and Sumter) Santee-Lynches Area Agency Santee-Lynches Regional Council of Governments 36 West Liberty, Sumter, SC 29151 803-775-7381

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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AAA -Region VII (Chesterfield, Darlington, Dillon, Florence, Marion, and Marlboro) Pee Dee Area Agency Vantage Point Hartsville, SC 29551 843-383-8632
AAA -Region VIII (Georgetown, Horry, and Williamsburg) Waccamaw Area Agency Waccamaw Regional Council of Governments 1230 Highmarket Street Georgetown, SC 29440 843-546-4231
AAA -Region IX (Berkeley, Charleston, and Dorchester) Trident Area Agency 4450 Leeds Place West, Suite B North Charleston, SC 29405 843-554-2275
AAA -Region X (Beaufort, Colleton, Hampton, and Jasper) Lowcountry Area Agency Lowcountry Council of Governments I-95 Exit 33 Hwy. 17 Point South, SC 29945-0098 843-726-5536

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Molina Dual Options MEMBER HANDBOOK

Chapter 3: Using the plan's coverage for your health care and other covered services
Introduction
This chapter has specific terms and rules you need to know to get health care and other covered services with Molina Dual Options. It also tells you about your Care Coordinator, how to get care from different kinds of providers and under certain special circumstances (including from out-of-network providers or pharmacies), what to do when you are billed directly for services covered by our plan, and the rules for owning Durable Medical Equipment (DME). Key terms and their definitions appear in alphabetical order in the last chapter of the Member Handbook.
Table of Contents
A. Information about "services," "covered services," "providers," and "network providers" ............ 28
B. Rules for getting your health care, behavioral health services, and long-term services and supports (LTSS) covered by the plan ......................................................................................... 28
C. Information about your Care Coordinator ................................................................................... 29 C1. What a Care Coordinator is .................................................................................................. 29 C2. How you can contact your Care Coordinator ........................................................................ 29 C3. How you can change your Care Coordinator ....................................................................... 30
D. Care from primary care providers, specialists, other network providers, and out-of-network providers .....................................................................................................................................30
D1. Care from a primary care provider (PCP) ............................................................................. 30 D2. Care from specialists and other network providers .............................................................. 31 D3. What to do when a provider leaves our plan ........................................................................ 32 D4. How to get care from out-of-network providers .................................................................... 33
E. How to get behavioral health services ........................................................................................ 33
F. How to get long-term services and supports (LTSS) .................................................................. 33
G. How to get self-directed care ......................................................................................................34 G1. What self-directed care is .....................................................................................................34 G2. Who can get self-directed care (Note: This is limited to waiver populations, per the Plan Benefit Package.) .................................................................................................................34 G3. How to get help in employing personal care providers (if applicable) .................................. 35

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Molina Dual Options MEMBER HANDBOOK
H. How to get transportation services ............................................................................................. 35 I. How to get covered services when you have a medical emergency or urgent need for care,
or during a disaster .....................................................................................................................35 I1. Care when you have a medical emergency ......................................................................... 35 I2. Urgently needed care ...........................................................................................................36 I3. Care during a disaster ..........................................................................................................37 J. What to do if you are billed directly for services covered by our plan ........................................ 37 J1. What to do if services are not covered by our plan .............................................................. 37 K. Coverage of health care services when you are in a clinical research study ............................. 38 K1. Definition of a clinical research study ................................................................................... 38 K2. Payment for services when you are in a clinical research study .......................................... 38 K3. Learning more about clinical research studies ..................................................................... 39 L. How your health care services are covered when you get care in a religious non-medical
health care institution ..................................................................................................................39 L1. Definition of a religious non-medical health care institution .................................................. 39 L2. Getting care from a religious non-medical health care institution ......................................... 39 M. Durable medical equipment (DME) ............................................................................................ 40 M1. DME as a member of our plan .............................................................................................. 40 M2. DME ownership when you switch to Original Medicare or Medicare Advantage ................. 40 M3. Oxygen equipment benefits as a member of our plan .......................................................... 41 M4. Oxygen equipment when you switch to Original Medicare or Medicare Advantage ............. 41

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Chapter 3: Using the plan's coverage for your health care and other covered services

A. Information about "services," "covered services," "providers," and "network providers"
Services are health care, long-term services and supports (LTSS), supplies, behavioral health services, prescription and over-the-counter drugs, equipment and other services. Covered services are any of these services that our plan pays for. Covered health care and LTSS are listed in the Benefits Chart in Chapter 4.
Providers are doctors, nurses, and other people who give you services and care. The term providers also includes hospitals, home health agencies, clinics, and other places that give you health care services, medical equipment, and long-term services and supports.
Network providers are providers who work with the health plan. These providers have agreed to accept our payment as full payment. Network providers bill us directly for care they give you. When you see a network provider, you usually pay nothing for covered services.
B. Rules for getting your health care, behavioral health services, and long-term services and supports (LTSS) covered by the plan
Molina Dual Options covers all services covered by Medicare and Healthy Connections Medicaid. This includes behavioral health and LTSS.
Molina Dual Options will generally pay for the health care and services you get if you follow plan rules. To be covered by our plan:
The care you get must be a plan benefit. This means that it must be included in the plan's Benefits Chart. (The chart is in Chapter of this handbook).
The care must be medically necessary. Medically necessary means that the services are reasonable and necessary:
For the diagnosis or treatment of your illness or injury; or
To improve the functioning of a malformed body member; or
Otherwise medically necessary under Medicare law.
In accordance with Healthy Connections Medicaid law and regulation, services must be:
Essential to prevent, diagnose, prevent the worsening of, alleviate, correct, or cure medical conditions that endanger life, cause suffering or pain, cause physical deformity or malfunction, threaten to cause or aggravate a handicap, or result in illness or infirmity;
Provided at an appropriate facility at the appropriate level of care for the treatment of your medical condition; and
Provided in accordance with generally accepted standards of medical practice.
You must have a network primary care provider (PCP) who has ordered the care or has told you to see another doctor. As a plan member, you must choose a network provider to be your PCP.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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In most cases, your network PCP must give you approval before you can see someone that is not your PCP or use other providers in the plan's network. This is called a referral. If you don't get approval, Molina Dual Options may not cover the services. You don't need a referral to see certain specialists, such as women's health specialists.To learn more about referrals, see page 30.
You do not need a referral from your PCP for emergency care or urgently needed care or to see a woman's health provider. You can get other kinds of care without having a referral from your PCP. To learn more about this, see page 30.
To learn more about choosing a PCP, see page 30.
You must get your care from network providers. Usually, the plan will not cover care from a provider who does not work with the health plan. Here are some cases when this rule does not apply:
The plan covers emergency or urgently needed care from an out-of-network provider. To learn more and to see what emergency or urgently needed care means, see Section I, page 35.
If you need care that our plan covers and our network providers cannot give it to you, you can get the care from an out-of-network provider. Molina Dual Options requires a prior authorization and decision that the care is medically necessary before you get care from an out of network provider. In this situation, we will cover the care at no cost to you. To learn about getting approval to see an out-of-network provider, see Section D, page 30.
The plan covers kidney dialysis services when you are outside the plan's service area for a short time. You can get these services at a Medicare-certified dialysis facility.
When you first join the plan, you can continue seeing the providers you see now for 180 days or until we have completed your comprehensive assessment and created a transition plan that you agree with. If you need to continue seeing your out-of-network providers after your first 180 days in our plan, we will only cover that care if the provider enters a single case agreement with us. If you are getting ongoing treatment from an out-of-network provider and think they may need a single case agreement in order to keep treating you, contact Member Services at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week, 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time.
C. Information about your Care Coordinator
C1. What a Care Coordinator is
A Molina DualOptionsCareCoordinator isone main personfor you to contact. This personhelps manage all your providersand services and makes sure you get what you need.
C2. How you can contact your Care Coordinator
If you want to contact your Care Coordinator, please call Member Services at (855) 735-5831, 7 days a week, 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. TTY: 711. Or, visit www.molinahealthcare.com/ duals.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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C3. How you can change your Care Coordinator
The member and/or caregiver may request a change in the Care Coordinator assigned, as needed by calling your Care Coordinator or Member Services. Molina Dual Options staff may make changes to member Care Coordinator assignments based on member needs (cultural/language/physical/ behavioral health) or location.
D. Care from primary care providers, specialists, other network providers, and out-of-network providers
D1. Care from a primary care provider (PCP)
You must choose a PCP to provide and manage your care.
Definition of a "PCP," and what the PCP does do for you
A Primary Care Provider (PCP) is a physician, nurse practitioner, or health care professional and/or medical home or clinic (Federally Qualified Health Centers -FQHC) who gives you routine health care. Molina Dual Options maintains a network of specialty providers to care for its members. Referrals from a Molina Dual Options PCP may be required for a member to receive some specialty services. Members are allowed to directly access women health specialists for routine and preventive health without a referral. Your PCP will provide most of your care but your Care Coordinator will help you arrange or coordinate the rest of the covered services you get as a member of our plan. This includes:
Your X-rays
Laboratory tests
Therapies
Care from doctors who are specialists
Hospital admissions
Follow-up care
"Coordinating" your services includes checking or consulting with other network providers about your care and how it is going. If you need certain types of covered services or supplies, you must get approval in advance from your PCP (such as giving you a referral to see a specialist). In some cases, your PCP will need to get prior authorization (prior approval) from us. You should also have your past medical records sent to your PCP's office.
Your choice of PCP
Your relationship with your PCP is an important one. We strongly recommend that you choose a PCP close to home. Having your PCP nearby makes receiving medical care and developing a trusting and open relationship easier. For a copy of the most current Provider/Pharmacy Directory, or to seek additional assistance in choosing a PCP, please contact Member Services. If there is a particular specialist or hospital that you want to use, check first to be sure your PCP makes referrals to that specialist, or uses that hospital. Once you have chosen your PCP, we recommend that you have all your medical records transferred to his or her office. This will provide your PCP access to your medical history and make him or her aware of any existing health care conditions you may have. Your PCP is now responsible for all

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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your routine health care services, so he or she should be the first one you call with any health concerns. The name and office telephone number of your PCP is printed on your membership card.
Option to change your PCP
You may change your PCP for any reason, at any time. Also, it's possible that your PCP might leave our plan's network. We can help you find a new PCP if the one you have now leaves our network.
All changes made will be in effect on the first day of the following month, with the following exceptions: 1. If the member is calling from the provider's office, the effective date will be the date of the phone call, 2. If the member is in their first month of enrollment, the effective date will be the first day of the current month. However, we recommend that you first visit your doctor to get to know your PCP before changing. You can call Member Services if you want more information about any of our Molina Healthcare providers. For some providers, you may need a referral from your PCP (except for emergent and out of area urgent care services).
Services you can get without first getting approval from your PCP
In most cases, you will need approval from your PCP before seeing other providers. This approval is called a referral. You can get services like the ones listed below without first getting approval from your PCP:
Emergency services from network providers or out-of-network providers.
Urgently needed care from network providers.
Urgently needed care from out-of-network providers when you can't get to network providers (for example, when you are outside the plan's service area).
Kidney dialysis services that you get at a Medicare-certified dialysis facility when you are outside the plan's service area. (Please call Member Services before you leave the service area. We can help you get dialysis while you are away.)
Flu shots, hepatitis B vaccinations, and pneumonia vaccinations as long as you get them from a network provider.
Routine women's health care and family planning services. This includes breast exams, screening mammograms (x-rays of the breast), Pap tests, and pelvic exams as long as you get them from a network provider.
Additionally, if you are eligible to get services from Indian health providers, you may see these providers without a referral.
D2. Care from specialists and other network providers
A specialist is a doctor who provides health care for a specific disease or part of the body. There are many kinds of specialists. Here are a few examples:
Oncologists care for patients with cancer.
Cardiologists care for patients with heart problems.
Orthopedists care for patients with bone, joint, or muscle problems.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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While the PCP you choose will likely use certain hospitals and have specialists to whom they typically refer patients, as a member you are not limited or restricted to only these specific specialists. Molina Dual Options maintains a network of specialty providers to care for its members and we will assist you in getting services from others, if or when needed. Referrals from your PCP may be required to receive specialty services, but members are allowed to directly access women's health specialists for routine and preventive health without a referral. For some services and drugs, you may be required to get a Prior Authorization. You or your PCP may request a prior authorization from Molina Healthcare's Utilization Management Department by telephone, fax, or mail based on the urgency of the requested service.
For Medical Services: PO Box 40309 North Charleston, SC 29423-0309 Phone: (855) 735-5831 (SC MMP Member Call Center) Fax: (866) 423-3889
For Healthy Connections Medicaid Drugs (non-Part D): 4105 Faber Place Drive, Suite 470 North Charleston, SC 29405 Phone: (855) 735-5831 Fax: (855) 571-3011
For Part D Prescription Services: 7050 Union Park Center, Suite 200 Midvale, UT 84047 Phone: (855) 735-5831 Fax: (866) 290-1309
Please refer to the Benefits Chart in Chapter 4 for information about which services require prior authorization.
D3. What to do when a provider leaves our plan
A network provider you are using might leave our plan. If one of your providers does leave our plan, you have certain rights and protections that are summarized below:
Even though our network of providers may change during the year, we must give you uninterrupted access to qualified providers.
We will make a good faith effort to give you at least 30 days' notice so that you have time to select a new provider.
We will help you select a new qualified provider to continue managing your health care needs.
If you are undergoing medical treatment, you have the right to ask for, and we will work with you to ensure, that the medically necessary treatment you are getting is not interrupted.
If you believe we have not replaced your previous provider with a qualified provider or that your care is not being appropriately managed, you have the right to file an appeal of our decision.
If you find out one of your providers is leaving our plan, please contact us so we can assist you in finding a new provider and managing your care. Please contact Member Services at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week, 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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D4. How to get care from out-of-network providers
If you need medical care that our plan is required to cover and the providers in our network cannot provide this care, including Long Term Services and Supports, you can get this care from an out-ofnetwork provider. Out-of-network services require a prior authorization. You or your provider can ask for this prior authorization. Please contact Member Services for assistance. If you obtain routine care from out-of-network provider without prior authorization, neither Medicare/Healthy Connections Medicaid nor the Plan will be responsible for the costs.
If you go to an out-of-network provider, the provider must be eligible to participate in Medicare and/or Healthy Connections Medicaid.
We cannot pay a provider who is not eligible to participate in Medicare and/or Healthy Connections Medicaid.
If you go to a provider who is not eligible to participate in Medicare, you must pay the full cost of the services you get.
Providers must tell you if they are not eligible to participate in Medicare.
E. How to get behavioral health services
You will have access to medically necessary behavioral health services that are covered by Medicare and Healthy Connections Medicaid.
Molina Dual Options provides access to many mental health and substance abuse providers, including Community Mental Health Centers. A list of providers can be located on the Molina Dual Options member website or by calling Member Services. For a copy of the most current Provider/ Pharmacy Directory, or to seek additional assistance in choosing a behavioral health provider, please contact Member Services. For some services you may be required to get a Prior Authorization. You or your Behavioral Health Provider or your PCP may request a prior authorization from Molina Healthcare's Utilization Management Department by telephone, fax, or mail based on the urgency of the requested service. Molina Dual Options 4105 Faber Place Drive, Suite 470 North Charleston, SC 29405 Phone: (855) 735-5831 Fax: (866) 423-3889
Please refer to the Benefits Chart in Chapter 4 for information about which services require prior authorization. The care must be determined necessary. By necessary, we mean you need services to prevent, diagnose, or treat your condition or to maintain your current mental health status. This includes care that keeps you from going into a hospital or nursing home. It also means the services, supplies, or drugs meet accepted standards of behavioral health and medical practice. You can call member services to request assistance.
F. How to get long-term services and supports (LTSS)
Long-term services and supports (LTSS) help meet your daily needs for assistance and help improve the quality of your life. LTSS can help you with everyday tasks like taking a bath, getting dressed, and

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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making food. Most of these services are provided in your home or in your community, but they could also be provided in a nursing home or hospital.
LTSS are available to members who are on certain waiver programs operated by the Community Long Term Care (CLTC) division of Healthy Connections Medicaid. Those waivers are:
Community Choices waiver
HIV/AIDS waiver
Mechanical Ventilator Dependent waiver
Members on different waivers can get different kinds and amounts of LTSS. If you think you need LTSS, you can talk to your Care Coordinator about how to access them and whether you can join one of these waivers. Your Care Coordinator can give you information about how to apply for an appropriate waiver, and all of the resources available to you under the plan.
See the Provider and Pharmacy Directory for more information about these programs.
You may still qualify for some LTSS if you are not a waiver participant. You can receive these benefits through us if they are medically necessary. Your Care Coordinator will help you understand your options and your waiver program if you are on one. To find out more about any of these program services, please contact Member Services at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week, 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time.
G. How to get self-directed care
G1. What self-directed care is
Self-directed care means that should you need, and qualify for, personal care attendant services, you may be able to recruit, hire, train, direct and terminate providers that provide these services to you. The workers who may provide these personal care attendant services could include friends, neighbors, relatives or agency providers.
G2. Who can get self-directed care (Note: This is limited to waiver populations, per the Plan Benefit Package.)
Personal Care Attendant Services are available to members who are on certain waiver programs operated by the Community Long Term Care (CLTC) division of Healthy Connections Medicaid. Those waivers are:
Community Choices waiver
HIV/AIDS waiver
Mechanical Ventilator Dependent waiver

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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G3. How to get help in employing personal care providers (if applicable) Your Care Coordinator will help you understand this program. To find out more about this program, please contact Member Services at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week, 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time.
H. How to get transportation services
Medical non-ambulance transportation is provided to eligible Members who cannot obtain transportation on their own or through other means such as family, friends, or community resources. Member Services can assist in arranging your transportation. You can also call the state-approved transportation provider ModivCare at the listed phone numbers below to arrange or cancel transportation if you are qualified for these services.
(866) 910-7688
(866) 445-6860
(866) 445-9954
For more information on ModivCare, visit at http://memberinfo.logisticare.com/scmember.
I. How to get covered services when you have a medical emergency or urgent need for care, or during a disaster
I1. Care when you have a medical emergency Definition of a medical emergency A medical emergency is a medical condition with symptoms such as severe pain or serious injury. The condition is so serious that, if it doesn't get immediate medical attention, you or anyone with an average knowledge of health and medicine could expect it to result in:
serious risk to your health; or serious harm to bodily functions; or serious dysfunction of any bodily organ or part. What to do if you have a medical emergency If you have a medical emergency: Get help as fast as possible. Call 911 or go to the nearest emergency room or hospital. Call for an ambulance if you need it. You do not need to get approval or a referral first from your PCP. As soon as possible, make sure that you tell our plan about your emergency. We need to follow up on your emergency care. You or your Care Coordinator should call to tell us about your emergency care, usually within 48 hours. However, you will not have to pay for emergency services because of a delay in telling us. You can find the number to Member Services on the back of Molina Dual Options' Member ID card.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Covered services in a medical emergency
Medicare and Healthy Connections Medicaid do not provide coverage for emergency medical care outside the United States and its territories except under limited circumstances. Contact the plan for details.
You may get covered emergency care whenever you need it, anywhere in the United States or its territories. If you need an ambulance to get to the emergency room, our plan covers that. To learn more, see the Benefits Chart in Chapter 4.
If you have an emergency, we will talk with the doctors who give you emergency care. Those doctors will tell us when your medical emergency is over.
After the emergency is over, you may need follow-up care to be sure you get better. Your follow-up care will be covered by our plan. If you get your emergency care from out-of-network providers, we will try to get network providers to take over your care as soon as possible. Molina Dual Options will cover Post-Stabilization Services that are provided by an in-network or out-of-network Provider in any of the following situations:
the plan has authorized such services
services you received to maintain and stabilize your condition
What to do if you have a behavioral health emergency
If you are having a behavioral health emergency, dial 911 or go to your nearest emergency facility.
Getting emergency care if it wasn't an emergency after all
Sometimes it can be hard to know if you have a medical or behavioral health emergency. You might go in for emergency care and have the doctor say it wasn't really an emergency. As long as you reasonably thought your health was in serious danger, we will cover your care.
However, after the doctor says it was not an emergency, we will cover your additional care only if:
you go to a network provider, or
the additional care you get is considered "urgently needed care" and you follow the rules for getting this care. (See the next section.)
I2. Urgently needed care
Definition of urgently needed care
Urgently needed care is care you get for a sudden illness, injury, or condition that isn't an emergency but needs care right away. For example, you might have a flare-up of an existing condition and need to have it treated.
Urgently needed care when you are in the plan's service area
In most situations, we will cover urgently needed care only if:
you get this care from a network provider, and
you follow the other rules described in this chapter.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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However, if you can't get to a network provider, we will cover urgently needed care you get from an out-of-network provider.
When network providers are temporarily unavailable or inaccessible, urgent care can be accessed using any available urgent care center. You may also call the 24 hour Nurse Advice Line at (888) 275-8750. TTY users should call 711.
Urgently needed care when you are outside the plan's service area
When you are outside the plan's service area, you might not be able to get care from a network provider. In that case, our plan will cover urgently needed care you get from any provider.
Our plan does not cover urgently needed care or any other care that you get outside the United States.
I3. Care during a disaster
If the Governor of your state, the U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services, or the President of the United States declares a state of disaster or emergency in your geographic area, you are still entitled to care from Molina Dual Options.
Please visit our website for information on how to obtain needed care during a declared disaster: www. MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.
During a declared disaster, if you cannot use a network provider, we will allow you to get care from out-of-network providers at no cost to you. If you cannot use a network pharmacy during a declared disaster, you will be able to fill your prescription drugs at an out-of-network pharmacy. Please see Chapter 5 for more information.
J. What to do if you are billed directly for services covered by our plan
Molina Dual Options cannot reimburse you for services you pay for out of pocket that are Healthy Connections Medicaid covered services. Therefore it is important that you do not pay directly for services that are covered under your Healthy Connections Medicaid benefits. If you pay for them directly, we will not be able to reimburse you. You will have to seek reimbursement directly from the provider. Instead of paying, ask your provider to call us regarding payment.
Do not pay directly for services that Healthy Connections Medicaid covers.
If a provider sends you a bill instead of sending it to our plan, you can ask us to pay the bill.
If you pay the provider, we can't pay you back, but the provider will. Member Services or the Healthy Connections Prime Advocate can help you contact the provider's office. See the bottom of the page and Chapter 2 for their phone numbers.
You should not pay the bill yourself. If you do, our plan may not be able to pay you back.
If you have paid for your covered services or if you have gotten a bill for covered medical services, see Chapter 7 to learn what to do.
J1. What to do if services are not covered by our plan
Molina Dual Options covers all services:
that are medically necessary, and

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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that are listed in the plan's Benefits Chart (see Chapter 4), and
that you get by following plan rules.
If you get services that aren't covered by our plan, you must pay the full cost yourself.
If you want to know if we will pay for any medical service or care, you have the right to ask us. You also have the right to ask for this in writing. If we say we will not pay for your services, you have the right to appeal our decision.
Chapter 9 explains what to do if you want the plan to cover a medical item or service. It also tells you how to appeal the plan's coverage decision. You may also call Member Services to learn more about your appeal rights.
We will pay for some services up to a certain limit. If you go over the limit, you will have to pay the full cost to get more of that type of service. Call Member Services to find out what the limits are and how close you are to reaching them.
K. Coverage of health care services when you are in a clinical research study
K1. Definition of a clinical research study
A clinical research study (also called a clinical trial) is a way doctors test new types of health care or drugs. They ask for volunteers to help with the study. This kind of study helps doctors decide whether a new kind of health care or drug works and whether it is safe.
Once Medicare approves a study you want to be in, someone who works on the study will contact you. That person will tell you about the study and see if you qualify to be in it. You can be in the study as long as you meet the required conditions. You must also understand and accept what you must do for the study.
While you are in the study, you may stay enrolled in our plan. That way you continue to get care not related to the study.
If you want to participate in a Medicare-approved clinical research study, you do not need to get approval from us or your primary care provider. The providers that give you care as part of the study do not need to be network providers.
You do need to tell us before you start participating in a clinical research study. If you plan to be in a clinical research study, you or your Care Coordinator should contact Member Services to let us know you will be in a clinical trial.
K2. Payment for services when you are in a clinical research study
If you volunteer for a clinical research study that Medicare approves, you will pay nothing for the services covered under the study and Medicare will pay for services covered under the study as well as routine costs associated with your care. Once you join a Medicare-approved clinical research study, you are covered for most items and services you get as part of the study. This includes:
Room and board for a hospital stay that Medicare would pay for even if you weren't in a study.
An operation or other medical procedure that is part of the research study.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Treatment of any side effects and complications of the new care. If you are part of a study that Medicare has not approved, you will have to pay any costs for being in the study.
K3. Learning more about clinical research studies You can learn more about joining a clinical research study by reading "Medicare & Clinical Research Studies" on the Medicare website (www.medicare.gov/Pubs/pdf/02226-Medicare-and-Clinical-ResearchStudies.pdf). You can also call 1-800-MEDICARE (1-800-633-4227), 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. TTY users should call 1-877-486-2048.
L. How your health care services are covered when you get care in a religious non-medical health care institution
L1. Definition of a religious non-medical health care institution A religious non-medical health care institution is a place that provides care you would normally get in a hospital or skilled nursing facility. If getting care in a hospital or a skilled nursing facility is against your religious beliefs, we will cover care in a religious non-medical health care institution. You may choose to get health care at any time for any reason. This benefit is only for Medicare Part A inpatient services (non-medical health care services). Medicare will only pay for non-medical health care services provided by religious non-medical health care institutions.
L2. Getting care from a religious non-medical health care institution To get care from a religious non-medical health care institution, you must sign a legal document that says you are against getting medical treatment that is "non-excepted."
"Non-excepted" medical treatment is any care that is voluntary and not required by any federal, state, or local law. "Excepted" medical treatment is any care that is not voluntary and is required under federal, state, or local law. To be covered by our plan, the care you get from a religious non-medical health care institution must meet the following conditions: The facility providing the care must be certified by Medicare. Our plan's coverage of services is limited to non-religious aspects of care. If you get services from this institution that are provided to you in a facility, the following applies:
You must have a medical condition that would allow you to get covered services for inpatient hospital care or skilled nursing facility care. You must get approval from our plan before you are admitted to the facility or your stay will not be covered.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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After you have reached the limits of your Medicare Inpatient Hospital coverage, you will use your Healthy Connections Medicaid hospital limits. You do not have the same limits for Inpatient Hospital coverage with Healthy Connections Medicaid that you do for Medicare. Medicare Inpatient Hospital coverage limits apply. (See the Benefits Chart in Chapter 4).
M. Durable medical equipment (DME)
M1. DME as a member of our plan
DME means certain items ordered by a provider for use in your own home. Examples of these items are wheelchairs, crutches, powered mattress systems, diabetic supplies, hospital beds ordered by a provider for use in the home, intravenous (IV) infusion pumps, speech generating devices, oxygen equipment and supplies, nebulizers, and walkers.
You will always own certain items, such as prosthetics.
In this section, we discuss DME you must rent. As a member of Molina Dual Options, our plan will rent most DME items for you for a maximum of 10 months. In some cases, it may be 13 months. At the end of the rental period, our plan will transfer ownership of the DME item to you, and it is considered purchased. Our plan may pay for maintenance fees. Call Member Services to find out more.
M2. DME ownership when you switch to Original Medicare or Medicare Advantage
If you are renting DME, there are extra things for you to consider if you decide to switch to Original Medicare or a Medicare Advantage plan.
In the Original Medicare program, people who rent certain types of DME own it after 13 months. In a Medicare Advantage plan, the plan can set the number of months people must rent certain types of DME before they own it.
Note: You can find definitions of Original Medicare and Medicare Advantage Plans in Chapter 12. You can also find more information about them in the Medicare & You 2021 handbook. If you don't have a copy of this booklet, you can get it at the Medicare website (www.medicare.gov) or by calling 1-800-MEDICARE (1-800-633-4227), 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. TTY users should call 1-877-486-2048.
You will have to make 13 payments in a row under Original Medicare, or you will have to make the number of payments in a row set by the Medicare Advantage plan, to own the DME item if:
you did not become the owner of the DME item while you were in our plan, and
you leave our plan and get your Medicare benefits outside of any health plan in the Original Medicare program or a Medicare Advantage plan.
If you made payments for the DME item under Original Medicare or a Medicare Advantage plan before you joined our plan, those Original Medicare or Medicare Advantage plan payments do not count toward the payments you need to make after leaving our plan.
You will have to make 13 new payments in a row under Original Medicare or a number of new payments in a row set by the Medicare Advantage plan to own the DME item.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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There are no exceptions to this case when you return to Original Medicare or a Medicare Advantage plan.
M3. Oxygen equipment benefits as a member of our plan If you qualify for oxygen equipment covered by Medicare and you are a member of our plan, we will cover the following:
Rental of oxygen equipment Delivery of oxygen and oxygen contents Tubing and related accessories for the delivery of oxygen and oxygen contents Maintenance and repairs of oxygen equipment Oxygen equipment must be returned to the owner when it's no longer medically necessary for you or if you leave our plan.
M4. Oxygen equipment when you switch to Original Medicare or Medicare Advantage When oxygen equipment is medically necessary and you leave our plan and switch to Original Medicare, you will rent it from a supplier for 36 months. Your monthly rental payments cover the oxygen equipment and the supplies and services listed above. If oxygen equipment is medically necessary after you rent it for 36 months:
your supplier must provide the oxygen equipment, supplies, and services for another 24 months. your supplier must provide oxygen equipment and supplies for up to 5 years if medically necessary. If oxygen equipment is still medically necessary at the end of the 5-year period: your supplier no longer has to provide it, and you may choose to get replacement equipment from any supplier. a new 5-year period begins. you will rent from a supplier for 36 months. your supplier must then provide the oxygen equipment, supplies, and services for another 24 months. a new cycle begins every 5 years as long as oxygen equipment is medically necessary. When oxygen equipment is medically necessary and you leave our plan and switch to a Medicare Advantage plan, the plan will cover at least what Original Medicare covers. You can ask your Medicare Advantage plan what oxygen equipment and supplies it covers and what your costs will be.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Chapter 4: Benefits Chart
Introduction
This chapter tells you about the services Molina Dual Options covers and any restrictions or limits on those services. It also tells you about benefits not covered under our plan. Key terms and their definitions appear in alphabetical order in the last chapter of the Member Handbook.
Table of Contents
A. Your covered services ................................................................................................................43 B. Rules against providers charging you for services ..................................................................... 43 C. Our plan's Benefits Chart ...........................................................................................................43 D. The Benefits Chart ......................................................................................................................44 E. Waiver Services Operated by Community Long Term Care (CLTC) that Our Plan Pays
For ..............................................................................................................................................84 F. Benefits covered outside of Molina Dual Options ....................................................................... 86
F1. Hospice Care ........................................................................................................................86 F2. Dental services .....................................................................................................................87 F3. Non-emergency medical transportation ................................................................................ 87 G. Benefits not covered by Molina Dual Options, Medicare, or Healthy Connections Medicaid ..... 87

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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A. Your covered services
This chapter tells you what services Molina Dual Options pays for. You can also learn about services that are not covered. Information about drug benefits is in Chapter 5.This chapter also explains limits on some services.
Because you get assistance from Healthy Connections Medicaid, you pay nothing for your covered services as long as you follow the plan's rules. See Chapter 3 for details about the plan's rules.
If you need help understanding what services are covered, call your Care Coordinator and/or Member Services at the number at the bottom of the page.
B. Rules against providers charging you for services
We do not allow Molina Dual Options providers to bill you for covered services. We pay our providers directly, and we protect you from any charges. This is true even if we pay the provider less than the provider charges for a service.
You should never get a bill from a provider for covered services. If you do, see Chapter 7 or call Member Services.
C. Our plan's Benefits Chart
The Benefits Chart in Section D tells you which services the plan pays for. It lists categories of services in alphabetical order and explains the covered services.
We will pay for the services listed in the Benefits Chart only when the following rules are met. You do not pay anything for the services listed in the Benefits Chart, as long as you meet the coverage requirements described below.
Your Medicare and Healthy Connections Medicaid covered services must be provided according to the rules set by Medicare and Healthy Connections Medicaid.
The services (including medical care, services, supplies, equipment, and drugs) must be medically necessary. Medically necessary means services that are reasonable and necessary for the diagnosis or treatment of your illness or injury, to improve the functioning of a malformed body member, or otherwise medically necessary under Medicare law. In accordance with Healthy Connections Medicaid law and regulation, services must be to prevent, diagnose, or treat a medical condition or to maintain your current health status. This includes care that keeps you from going into a hospital or nursing home. It also means the services, supplies, or drugs meet accepted standards of medical practice. The services must also be provided in an appropriate facility for your medical condition and follow generally accepted standards of medical care.
You get your care from a network provider. A network provider is a provider who works with the health plan. In most cases, the plan will not pay for care you get from an out-of-network provider. Chapter 3 has more information about using network and out-of-network providers.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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You have a primary care provider (PCP) or a care team that is providing and managing your care. In most cases, your PCP must give you approval before you can see someone that is not your PCP or use other providers in the plan's network. This is called a referral. Chapter 3 has more information about getting a referral and explains when you do not need a referral.
When you first join the plan, you can continue seeing the providers you see now for 180 days or until we have completed your comprehensive assessment and created a transition plan that you agree with. If you need to continue seeing your out-of-network providers after your first 180 days in our plan, we will only cover that care if the provider enters a single case agreement with us. A single case agreement is an exception to treat the provider as an in-network provider. If you are getting ongoing treatment from an out-of-network provider and think they may need a single case agreement in order to keep treating you, contact Member Services at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week, 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time.
Some of the services listed in the Benefits Chart are covered only if your doctor or other network provider gets approval from us first. This is called prior authorization. Covered services that need prior authorization are marked in the Benefits Chart by an asterisk (*). In addition, you must get prior authorization for the following services that are not listed in the Benefits Chart:
Genetic counseling or testing
Hyperbaric oxygen therapy
Pain management procedures
Sleep studies
Admission to a Rehabilitation or Long Term Acute Care facility
Your well-being and ability to live independently matter. As a plan, we will work with you and your providers to help you balance all your health care needs, including long-term care, behavioral health, and physical health services.
All preventive services are free. You will see this apple next to preventive services in the Benefits Chart.

D. The Benefits Chart

General services that our plan pays for

What you must pay

Abdominal aortic aneurysm screening

$0

A one-time screening ultrasound for people at risk. The plan only covers this screening if you have certain risk factors and if you get a referral for it from your physician, physician assistant, nurse practitioner, or clinical nurse specialist.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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General services that our plan pays for

What you must pay

Acupuncture for chronic low back pain

$0

The plan will pay for up to 12 visits in 90 days if you have chronic low back pain, defined as:

lasting 12 weeks or longer;

not specific (having no systemic cause that can be identified, such as not associated with metastatic, inflammatory, or infectious disease); and

not associated with surgery.

The plan will pay for an additional 8 sessions if you show improvement. You may not get more than 20 acupuncture treatments each year.

Acupuncture treatments must be stopped if you don't get better or if you get worse.

Medicare-Covered Acupuncture services are administered by American Specialty Health (ASH Group). All members must use providers within the ASH Group network.

Alcohol misuse screening and counseling

$0

The plan will pay for one alcohol-misuse screening for adults who misuse alcohol but are not alcohol dependent.

If you screen positive for alcohol misuse, you can get up to four brief, face-to-face counseling sessions each year (if you are able and alert during counseling) with a qualified primary care provider or practitioner in a primary care setting.

You can also get rehabilitative and recovery services focused on coping skills which will help you manage your symptoms and behaviors. These services may be in an individual or group setting.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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General services that our plan pays for

What you must pay

Ambulance services*

$0

Covered ambulance services include fixed-wing, rotary-wing, and ground ambulance services. The ambulance will take you to the nearest place that can give you care.

Your condition must be serious enough that other ways of getting to a place of care could risk your life or health. Ambulance services for other cases must be approved by the plan.

In cases that are not emergencies, the plan may pay for an ambulance. Your condition must be serious enough that other ways of getting to a place of care could risk your life or health.

Prior authorization required for non-emergent ambulance only.

Annual wellness visit

$0

If you have been in Medicare Part B for more than 12 months, you can get an annual checkup. This is to make or update a prevention plan based on your current risk factors. The plan will pay for this once every 12 months.

Note: You cannot have your first annual checkup within 12 months of your "Welcome to Medicare" preventive visit. You will be covered for annual checkups after you have had Part B for 12 months. You do not need to have had a "Welcome to Medicare" visit first.

Bone mass measurement

$0

The plan will pay for certain procedures for members who qualify (usually, someone at risk of losing bone mass or at risk of osteoporosis). These procedures identify bone mass, find bone loss, or find out bone quality.

The plan will pay for the services once every 24 months, or more often if they are medically necessary. The plan will also pay for a doctor to look at and comment on the results.

Breast cancer screening (mammograms)

$0

The plan will pay for the following services:

One screening mammogram every 12 months for women age 40 and older

Clinical breast exams once every 24 months

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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General services that our plan pays for

What you must pay

Cardiac (heart) rehabilitation services*

$0

The plan will pay for cardiac rehabilitation services such as exercise, education, and counseling. Members must meet certain conditions with a doctor's order.

The plan also covers intensive cardiac rehabilitation programs, which are more intense than cardiac rehabilitation programs.

Cardiovascular (heart) disease risk reduction visit (therapy for $0 heart disease)
The plan pays for one visit a year with your primary care provider to help lower your risk for heart disease. During this visit, your doctor may:
Discuss aspirin use,
Check your blood pressure, or
Give you tips to make sure you are eating well.

Cardiovascular (heart) disease testing

$0

The plan pays for blood tests to check for cardiovascular disease once every five years (60 months). These blood tests also check for defects due to high risk of heart disease.

Cervical and vaginal cancer screening

$0

The plan will pay for the following services:

For all women: Pap tests and pelvic exams once every 24 months

For women who are at high risk of cervical or vaginal cancer: one Pap test every 12 months

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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General services that our plan pays for

What you must pay

Chiropractic services

$0

The plan will pay for the following services:

Adjustments of the spine to correct alignment

The plan will only pay for other chiropractic services that are medically necessary.

For other chiropractic services to be covered, you must have a significant health problem in the form of a neuromuscular condition.

Chiropractic services for diseases not directly related to your spine, such as rheumatoid arthritis, muscular dystrophy, multiple sclerosis (MS), pneumonia, and emphysema, are not covered.

Molina Dual Options will only reimburse for spinal subluxation.

Colorectal cancer screening

$0

The plan will pay for the following services:

Flexible sigmoidoscopy (or screening barium enema) every 48 months

Fecal occult blood test, every 12 months

Guaiac-based fecal occult blood test or fecal immunochemical test, every 12 months

DNA based colorectal screening, every 3 years

For people at high risk of colorectal cancer, the plan will pay for one screening colonoscopy (or screening barium enema) every 24 months.

For people not at high risk of colorectal cancer, the plan will pay for one screening colonoscopy every ten years (but not within 48 months of a screening sigmoidoscopy).

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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General services that our plan pays for

What you must pay

Counseling to stop smoking or tobacco use

$0

If you use tobacco but do not have signs or symptoms of tobacco-related disease:

The plan will pay for two counseling quit attempts in a 12 month period as a preventive service. This service is free for you. Each counseling attempt includes up to four face-to-face visits.

If you use tobacco and have been diagnosed with a tobacco-related disease or are taking medicine that may be affected by tobacco:

The plan will pay for two counseling quit attempts within a 12 month period. Each counseling attempt includes up to four face-to-face visits.

You may also call the S.C. Tobacco Quitline, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week at 1-800-784-8669 to get one on one coaching and a personalized quit plan developed.

The plan offers 8 counseling sessions to stop smoking or tobacco use in addition to your Medicare benefit.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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General services that our plan pays for

What you must pay

Dental services*

$0

Molina Dual Options will pay for the following services:

Emergency medical procedures performed by oral surgeons.

Dental procedures related to the following:

Organ transplants

Oncology

Radiation of the head and/or neck for cancer treatment

Chemotherapy for cancer treatment

Total joint replacement

Heart valve replacement

Trauma treatment performed in a hospital or ambulatory surgical center

Preventive dental services do not require prior authorization. Molina Dual Options offers the following preventive dental benefits:

- 2 oral exams every year

- 2 cleanings every year

- 2 fluoride treatments every year

Molina Dual Options also covers additional preventive services and pays up to $1,000 every year for comprehensive dental services.* Plan covered dental services are offered in addition to your Healthy Connections Medicaid dental benefits. Contact the plan for more information.

Depression screening

$0

The plan will pay for one depression screening each year. The screening must be done in a primary care setting that can give follow-up treatment and referrals.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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General services that our plan pays for

What you must pay

Diabetes screening

$0

The plan will pay for this screening (includes fasting glucose tests) if you have any of the following risk factors:

High blood pressure (hypertension)

History of abnormal cholesterol and triglyceride levels (dyslipidemia)

Obesity

History of high blood sugar (glucose)

Tests may be covered in some other cases, such as if you are overweight and have a family history of diabetes.

Depending on the test results, you may qualify for up to two diabetes screenings every 12 months

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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General services that our plan pays for

What you must pay

Diabetic self-management training, services, and supplies

$0

The plan will pay for the following services for all people who have diabetes (whether they use insulin or not):

Supplies to monitor your blood glucose, including the following:*

A blood glucose monitor

Blood glucose test strips

Lancet devices and lancets

Glucose-control solutions for checking the accuracy of test strips and monitors

We cover diabetic supplies from a preferred manufacturer without a prior authorization. We will cover other brands if you get a prior authorization from us.

For people with diabetes who have severe diabetic foot disease, the plan will pay for the following:*

One pair of therapeutic custom-molded shoes (including inserts) and two extra pairs of inserts each calendar year, or

One pair of depth shoes and three pairs of inserts each year (not including the non-customized removable inserts provided with such shoes)

The plan will also pay for fitting the therapeutic custom-molded shoes or depth shoes.

The plan will pay for training to help you manage your diabetes, in some cases.

You are eligible for Diabetes Management Services if your provider determines this will help you.

You are limited to 10 hours of diabetes education in your lifetime.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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General services that our plan pays for

What you must pay

Durable medical equipment (DME) and related supplies*

$0

You must talk to your provider and get a referral.

(For a definition of "Durable medical equipment (DME)," see Chapter 12 of this handbook.)

The following items are covered:

Wheelchairs

Crutches

Powered mattress systems

Diabetic supplies

Hospital beds ordered by a provider for use in the home

Intravenous (IV) infusion pumps

Speech generating devices

Oxygen equipment and supplies

Nebulizers

Walkers

Other items may be covered.

We will pay for all medically necessary DME that Medicare and Healthy Connections Medicaid usually pay for. If our supplier in your area does not carry a particular brand or maker, you may ask them if they can special-order it for you.

As a member of Molina Dual Options, our plan will rent most DME items for you for a maximum of 10 months. In some cases, it may be 13 months. At the end of the rental period, our plan will transfer ownership of the DME item to you, and it is considered purchased. Our plan may pay for maintenance fees.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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General services that our plan pays for

What you must pay

Emergency care

$0

Emergency care means services that are:
given by a provider trained to give emergency services, and
needed to treat a medical emergency.
A medical emergency is a medical condition with severe pain or serious injury. The condition is so serious that, if it doesn't get immediate medical attention, anyone with an average knowledge of health and medicine could expect it to result in:
serious risk to your health; or
serious harm to bodily functions; or
serious dysfunction of any bodily organ or part.
Emergency services are only covered when you get them within the U.S.

If you get emergency care at an out-of-network hospital and need inpatient care after your emergency is stabilized, you should obtain care at an in- network hospital or facility. If not, your treating provider or primary care provider will determine when you are stable enough to be moved or have care provided in network hospital or care facility. Your doctor can call Molina Dual Options or your Care Coordinator for assistance.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Chapter 4: Benefits Chart

General services that our plan pays for

What you must pay

Family planning services

$0

The law lets you choose any provider to get certain family planning services from. This means any doctor, clinic, hospital, pharmacy, or family planning office.

The plan will pay for the following services:

Family planning exam and medical treatment

Family planning lab and diagnostic tests

Family planning methods

Family planning supplies with prescription (condoms)

Counseling and testing for sexually transmitted infections (STIs), AIDS, and other HIV-related conditions

Treatment for sexually transmitted infections (STIs)

Voluntary sterilization (You must be age 21 or older, and you must sign a federal sterilization consent form. At least 30 days, but not more than 180 days, must pass between the date that you sign the form and the date of surgery.)

The plan will also pay for some other family planning services. However, you must see a provider in the plan's network for the following services:

Treatment for medical conditions of infertility

Treatment for AIDS and other HIV-related conditions

Genetic testing*

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Chapter 4: Benefits Chart

General services that our plan pays for

What you must pay

Health and wellness education programs

$0

The plan has a range of health and wellness education programs activities for members, their family members, and other informal caregivers. Some examples of topics that may be covered are:

Self-management for chronic conditions

Quitting smoking

Preventing falls

Caregiver support

Nutrition

Alcohol and drug abuse

Managing your medications

Fitness

Disease planning

Preparing for emergencies

We offer many programs that focus on certain health conditions. These include:

Health Education

Nutritional/Dietary Benefit ­ Up to 12 nutritional counseling sessions over the phone, between 30 - 60 minutes each. Individual telephonic nutrition counseling upon request.

Enhanced Disease Management

Telemonitoring Services

Nursing Hotline

In-Home Safety Assessment

Post discharge In-Home Medication Reconciliation

Disease Management

If you are living with a chronic health condition, Molina Dual Options can help. These programs are offered at no cost to you. They include learning materials, advice, and care tips.

Molina Dual Options' disease management programs are especially helpful if you have difficulty controlling a medical condition that requires extra attention.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Chapter 4: Benefits Chart

General services that our plan pays for

What you must pay

Hearing services

$0

The plan pays for hearing and balance tests done by your provider. These tests tell you whether you need medical treatment. They are covered as outpatient care when you get them from a physician, audiologist, or other qualified provider.

Routine hearing exam (1 every year)

Hearing aid fitting/evaluation (1 every two years)

Molina Dual Options pays up to $1500 every one years for hearing aids.*

For Hearing aid services: Member must contact HearUSA for hearing tests and hearing aids. To find a participating HearUSA provider call (855) 823-4632, TTY: 711, or visit www.hearusa.com.

If you have a cochlear implant or a surgically implanted hearing device, the plan pays for replacement parts.

HIV screening

$0

The plan pays for one HIV screening exam every 12 months for people who:

ask for an HIV screening test, or

are at increased risk for HIV infection.

Members who have HIV or AIDS can get extra services by joining a Community Long Term Care (CLTC) waiver program. See Chapter 4, Section E for more information about services for members who qualify.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Chapter 4: Benefits Chart

General services that our plan pays for

What you must pay

Home health agency care*

$0

Before you can get home health services, a doctor must tell us you need them, and they must be provided by a home health agency.

The plan will pay for the following services, and maybe other services not listed here:

Part-time or intermittent skilled nursing and home health aide services (To be covered under the home health care benefit, your skilled nursing and home health aide services combined must total fewer than 8 hours per day and 35 hours per week).

Physical therapy, occupational therapy, and speech therapy

Medical and social services

Medical equipment and supplies (including, but not limited to, incontinence supplies)

Home infusion therapy

$0

The plan will pay for home infusion therapy, defined as drugs or

biological substances administered into a vein or applied under the

skin and provided to you at home. The following are needed to

perform home infusion:

The drug or biological substance, such as an antiviral or immune globulin;

Equipment, such as a pump; and

Supplies, such as tubing or a catheter.

The plan will cover home infusion services that include but are not limited to:

Professional services, including nursing services, provided in accordance with your care plan;

Member training and education not already included in the DME benefit;

Remote monitoring; and

Monitoring services for the provision of home infusion therapy and home infusion drugs furnished by a qualified home infusion therapy supplier.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Chapter 4: Benefits Chart

General services that our plan pays for

What you must pay

Hospice care

$0

You can get care from any hospice program certified by Medicare. You have the right to elect hospice if your provider and hospice medical director determine you have a terminal prognosis. This means you have a terminal illness and are expected to have six months or less to live. Your hospice doctor can be a network provider or an out-of-network provider.
The plan will pay for the following while you are getting hospice services:
Drugs to treat symptoms and pain

When you are in a hospice program certified by Medicare, your hospice services and your Medicare Part A and B services related to your terminal illness are paid for by Medicare. Molina Dual Options does not pay for your services.

Short-term respite care

Home care

Hospice services and services covered by Medicare Part A or B are billed to Medicare:

See Section G of this chapter for more information.

For services covered by Molina Dual Options but not covered by Medicare Part A or B:

Molina Dual Options will cover plan-covered services not covered under Medicare Part A or B. The plan will cover the services whether or not they are related to your terminal prognosis. You pay nothing for these services.

For drugs that may be covered by Molina Dual Options' Medicare Part D benefit:

Drugs are never covered by both hospice and our plan at the same time. For more information, please see Chapter 5.

Note: If you need non-hospice care, you should call your Care Coordinator to arrange the services. Non-hospice care is care that is not related to your terminal prognosis. If you have any questions, contact Member Services at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week, 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Chapter 4: Benefits Chart

General services that our plan pays for

What you must pay

Immunizations

$0

The plan will pay for the following services:

Pneumonia vaccine

Flu shots, once each flu season, in the fall and winter, with additional flu shots if medically necessary

Hepatitis B vaccine if you are at high or intermediate risk of getting hepatitis B

Other vaccines if you are at risk and they meet Medicare Part B coverage rules

The plan will pay for other vaccines that meet the Healthy Connections Medicaid or Medicare Part D coverage rules. Read Chapter 6 to learn more.

Incontinence supplies*

$0

The plan will pay for incontinence supplies if your doctor believes

you need them. The quantities and frequencies of supplies are

determined by your level of incontinence.

Infusion therapy*

$0

The plan covers infusion pumps (and some medicines used in

infusion pumps) that a doctor prescribes for use in your home.

If you don't want to get infusion therapy in a doctor's office or hospital, you can use an infusion center. See the Provider/Pharmacy Directory for a list of infusion centers. You can get the following services at an infusion center:

Chemotherapy

Hydration

Intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG)

Blood and blood products

Antibiotics

Intrathecal/lumbar puncture

Inhalation

Therapeutic phlebotomy A doctor will be on-site at the infusion center in case there are medical emergencies.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Chapter 4: Benefits Chart

General services that our plan pays for

What you must pay

Inpatient hospital care*

$0

The plan will pay for the following services, and maybe other services not listed here:
Semi-private room (or a private room if it is medically necessary)
Meals, including special diets

You must get approval from the plan to keep getting inpatient care at an out-of-network hospital after your emergency is under control.

Regular nursing services

Costs of special care units, such as intensive care or coronary care units

Drugs and medications

Lab tests

X-rays and other radiology services

Needed surgical and medical supplies

Appliances, such as wheelchairs

Operating and recovery room services

Physical, occupational, and speech therapy

Inpatient substance abuse services

Blood, including storage and administration

Physician services

In some cases, the following types of transplants: corneal, kidney, kidney/pancreatic, heart, liver, lung, heart/lung, bone marrow, stem cell, and intestinal/multivisceral.

Our plan also covers 60 "lifetime reserve days." These are "extra" days that we cover. If your hospital stay is longer than 90 days, you can use these extra days. But once you have used up these extra 60 days, your inpatient hospital coverage will be limited to 90 days.

This benefit is continued on the next page

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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General services that our plan pays for

What you must pay

Inpatient hospital care* (continued)
If you need a transplant, a Medicare-approved transplant center will review your case and decide whether you are a candidate for a transplant.
If Molina Dual Options provides transplant services outside the pattern of care for your community and if you are approved by Molina Dual Options to get your transplant there, we will arrange or pay for lodging and travel costs for you and one other person.

Inpatient mental health care*

$0

You must talk to your provider and get a referral for institution for

Mental Diseases (IMD) services.

The plan will pay for mental health care services that require a hospital stay.

There is a 190-day lifetime limit for inpatient mental health care in a psychiatric hospital. The 190-day limit does not apply to inpatient mental health services provided in a psychiatric unit of a general hospital.

After you use your 190 days, these services are available at an Institution for Mental Diseases (IMD).

An IMD is defined as an institution primarily engaged in providing diagnosis, treatment, or care of persons with mental diseases, including medical attention, nursing care, and related services.

Whether a facility is an IMD is determined by its overall character as that of a facility established and maintained primarily for the care and treatment of individuals with mental diseases.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Chapter 4: Benefits Chart

General services that our plan pays for

What you must pay

Inpatient stay: Covered services in a hospital or skilled nursing facility (SNF) during a non-covered inpatient stay*
You must talk to your provider and get a referral.
If your inpatient stay is not reasonable and necessary, the plan will not pay for it.
However, in some cases the plan will pay for services you get while you are in the hospital or a nursing home. The plan will pay for the following services, and maybe other services not listed here:

$0 for most items
$0 for prosthetics, orthotic devices, and medical supplies covered only by Healthy Connections Medicaid

Doctor services

Diagnostic tests, like lab tests

X-ray, radium, and isotope therapy, including technician materials and services

Surgical dressings

Splints, casts, and other devices used for fractures and dislocations

Prosthetics and orthotic devices, other than dental, including replacement or repairs of such devices. These are devices that:

replace all or part of an internal body organ (including contiguous tissue), or

replace all or part of the function of an inoperative or malfunctioning internal body organ.

Leg, arm, back, and neck braces, trusses, and artificial legs, arms, and eyes. This includes adjustments, repairs, and replacements needed because of breakage, wear, loss, or a change in the patient's condition

Physical therapy, speech therapy, and occupational therapy

Institution for Mental Disease (IMD) Services for Individuals 65 $0 or Older You must talk to your provider and get a referral. An institution for mental disease (IMD) is defined as an institution primarily engaged in providing diagnosis, treatment, or care of persons with mental diseases, including medical attention, nursing care, and related services. Whether a facility is an IMD is determined by its overall character as that of a facility established and maintained primarily for the care and treatment of individuals with mental diseases.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Chapter 4: Benefits Chart

General services that our plan pays for

What you must pay

Kidney disease services and supplies

$0

The plan will pay for the following services:

Kidney disease education services to teach kidney care and help members make good decisions about their care. You must have stage IV chronic kidney disease, and your doctor must refer you. The plan will cover up to six sessions of kidney disease education services.

Outpatient dialysis treatments, including dialysis treatments when temporarily out of the service area, as explained in Chapter 3.

Inpatient dialysis treatments if you are admitted as an inpatient to a hospital for special care

Self-dialysis training, including training for you and anyone helping you with your home dialysis treatments

Home dialysis equipment and supplies

Certain home support services, such as necessary visits by trained dialysis workers to check on your home dialysis, to help in emergencies, and to check your dialysis equipment and water supply

Your Medicare Part B drug benefit pays for some drugs for dialysis. For information, please see "Medicare Part B prescription drugs" in this chart.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Chapter 4: Benefits Chart

General services that our plan pays for

What you must pay

Long-term services and supports (LTSS)*

$0

LTSS benefits are offered to all plan members as medically necessary. Authorization rules may apply. Contact your Care Coordinator for information about accessing these services and the providers available in your community. You should talk to your provider and get a referral. These services include:

Adult day health care and nursing

Case management and coordination of these waiver services

Companion services

Home delivered meals

Minor home adaptations (for example, ramp, pest control, bath safety equipment)

Personal and attendant care

Personal emergency response system

Prescription drugs

Private duty nursing

Some nutritional supplements

Specialized medical equipment and supplies

Temporary relief for your caregiver (in a nursing facility or at your home)

Temporary relief for your caregiver in a Community Residential Care Facility (CRCF) or an in-patient facility (nursing facility or hospital)

Transportation to adult day health care

Lung cancer screening

$0

The plan will pay for lung cancer screening every 12 months if you:

Are aged 55-77, and

Have a counseling and shared decision-making visit with your doctor or other qualified provider, and

Have smoked at least one pack a day for 30 years with no signs or symptoms of lung cancer or smoke now or have quit within the last 15 years.

After the first screening, the plan will pay for another screening each year with a written order from your doctor or other qualified provider.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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General services that our plan pays for

What you must pay

Medical nutrition therapy

$0

This benefit is for people with diabetes or kidney disease without dialysis. It is also for after a kidney transplant when ordered by your doctor.

The plan will pay for three hours of one-on-one counseling services during your first year that you get medical nutrition therapy services under Medicare. (This includes our plan, any other Medicare Advantage plan, or Medicare.) We pay for two hours of one-on-one counseling services each year after that. If your condition, treatment, or diagnosis changes, you may be able to get more hours of treatment with a doctor's order. A doctor must prescribe these services and renew the order each year if your treatment is needed in the next calendar year.

Medicare Diabetes Prevention Program (MDPP)

$0

The plan will pay for MDPP services. MDPP is designed to help you increase healthy behavior. It provides practical training in:

long-term dietary change, and

increased physical activity, and

ways to maintain weight loss and a healthy lifestyle.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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General services that our plan pays for

What you must pay

Medicare Part B prescription drugs*

$0

These drugs are covered under Part B of Medicare. Molina Dual Options will pay for the following drugs:

Drugs you don't usually give yourself and are injected or infused while you are getting doctor, hospital outpatient, or ambulatory surgery center services

Drugs you take using durable medical equipment (such as nebulizers) that were authorized by the plan

Clotting factors you give yourself by injection if you have hemophilia

Immunosuppressive drugs, if you were enrolled in Medicare Part A at the time of the organ transplant

Osteoporosis drugs that are injected. These drugs are paid for if you are homebound, have a bone fracture that a doctor certifies was related to post-menopausal osteoporosis, and cannot inject the drug yourself

Antigens

Certain oral anti-cancer drugs and anti-nausea drugs

Certain drugs for home dialysis, including heparin, the antidote for heparin (when medically necessary), topical anesthetics, and erythropoiesis-stimulating agents (such as Procrit®, or Epoetin Alfa)

IV immune globulin for the home treatment of primary immune deficiency diseases

We also cover some vaccines under our Medicare Part B and Part D prescription drug benefit.

Chapter 5 explains the outpatient prescription drug benefit. It explains rules you must follow to have prescriptions covered.

Chapter 6 explains what you pay for your outpatient prescription drugs through our plan.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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General services that our plan pays for

What you must pay

Nursing home care* You must talk to your provider and get a referral. Your plan will cover the following services:
Nursing services: all nursing services to meet the total needs of the resident.

Please contact your Care Coordinator to learn if you will need to contribute toward your nursing home care.

Special services: assistance from social workers, planned activities, and various therapies

Personal services: assistance with eating, dressing, toilet functions, baths, etc.

Room and board: semi-private or ward accommodations

Safety and treatment equipment: wheelchairs, infusion equipment, bedside commode, etc.

Medications: over-the counter medications (except for insulin)

Medical supplies and oxygen: oxygen, equipment for inhalation therapy, catheters, dressings, etc.

Services that are not covered include physician services, lab/x-ray, inpatient and outpatient hospital services, prescription drugs, etc.

Please note that skilled nursing facility (SNF) care is covered under its own category in this chart.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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General services that our plan pays for

What you must pay

Nursing home transition services*

$0

You must talk to your provider and get a referral.

Nursing home transition services are available if you are in a nursing home and want to move back into your community. The services help if you have a disability or mental health condition. The following services are available:

Appliance services which provide necessary appliances

Furniture to establish a home in the community

One-time assistance with rent or utilities

The Home Again program is designed to help people who have lived in a nursing home and wish to return to the community. If you lived in a nursing facility for at least 90 days, you may qualify for the program and get the following services:

Transition coordination

Crisis intervention

Expanded employment services

Expanded assistive devices

Expanded goods and services

Wireless sensors

Community living services

Guided care nurse

Service animals If you think you qualify for the program, talk to your Care Coordinator.

Obesity screening and therapy to keep weight down

$0

If you have a body mass index of 30 or more, the plan will pay for counseling to help you lose weight. You must get the counseling in a primary care setting. That way, it can be managed with your full prevention plan. Talk to your primary care provider to find out more.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Chapter 4: Benefits Chart

General services that our plan pays for

What you must pay

Opioid treatment services

$0

The plan will pay for the following services to treat opioid use disorder:

Medications approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and, if applicable, managing and giving you these medications

Substance use counseling

Individual and group therapy

Testing for drugs or chemicals in your body (toxicology testing)

Outpatient diagnostic tests and therapeutic services and

$0

supplies

The plan will pay for the following services, and maybe other services not listed here:

X-rays

Radiation (radium and isotope) therapy, including technician materials and supplies*

Surgical supplies, such as dressings*

Splints, casts, and other devices used for fractures and dislocations*

Lab tests

Blood, including storage and administration

Other outpatient diagnostic tests*

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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General services that our plan pays for

What you must pay

Outpatient hospital services*

$0

The plan pays for medically necessary services you get in the outpatient department of a hospital for diagnosis or treatment of an illness or injury.

The plan will pay for the following services, and maybe other services not listed here:

Services in an emergency department or outpatient clinic, such as outpatient surgery or observation services

Observation services help your doctor know if you need to be admitted to the hospital as an "inpatient."

Sometimes you can be in the hospital overnight and still be an "outpatient."

You can get more information about being an inpatient or an outpatient in this fact sheet: www.medicare.gov/sites/ default/files/2018-09/11435-Are-You-an-Inpatient-orOutpatient.pdf

Labs and diagnostic tests billed by the hospital

Mental health care, including care in a partial-hospitalization program, if a doctor certifies that inpatient treatment would be needed without it

X-rays and other radiology services billed by the hospital

Medical supplies, such as splints and casts

Preventive screenings and services listed throughout the Benefits Chart

Some drugs that you can't give yourself

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Chapter 4: Benefits Chart

General services that our plan pays for

What you must pay

Outpatient mental health care

$0

The plan will pay for mental health services provided by:

a state-licensed psychiatrist or doctor,

a clinical psychologist,

a clinical social worker,

a clinical nurse specialist,

a nurse practitioner,

a physician assistant,

a licensed marriage and family therapist,

a licensed professional counselor, or

any other Medicare-qualified mental health care professional as allowed under applicable state laws.

The plan will pay for the following services, and maybe other services not listed here:

Clinic services

Day treatment

Psychosocial rehab services

Inpatient, day treatment and psychosocial rehab services require approval by Molina Dual Options. Please call Molina Dual Options at (855)735-5831 for more information.

Outpatient rehabilitation services*

$0

The plan will pay for physical therapy, occupational therapy, and speech therapy. Physical therapy services must improve or restore your physical function and prevent injury, impairments, and disabilities after a disease, injury, or loss of a body part.

You can get outpatient rehabilitation services from hospital outpatient departments, independent therapist offices, comprehensive outpatient rehabilitation facilities (CORFs), and other facilities.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Chapter 4: Benefits Chart

General services that our plan pays for

What you must pay

Outpatient substance abuse services

$0

Molina Dual Options pays for outpatient alcohol and drug (A&D) rehabilitative services. These services are available through the South Carolina Department for Alcohol and Other Drug Abuse Services (DAODAS). Crisis Management is also available for you if are experiencing emotional, physical, and/or psychological trauma. Medicare Part B helps pay for outpatient substance abuse treatment services from a clinic or hospital outpatient department.

Covered services include, but are not limited to:

Psychotherapy

Patient education

Follow-up care after you leave the hospital

Prescription drugs during a hospital stay or injected at a doctor's office.

Preventive screening and counseling

Outpatient surgery*

$0

The plan will pay for outpatient surgery and services at hospital outpatient facilities and ambulatory surgical centers.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Chapter 4: Benefits Chart

General services that our plan pays for

What you must pay

Over-the-counter (OTC) items (Supplemental)

$0

Your coverage includes non-prescription OTC health and wellness items like vitamins, sunscreen, pain relievers, cough and cold medicine, and bandages.
You can order:

You have $100 every quarter (3 months) to spend on plan-approved OTC items.

Online ­ visit MolinaHealthcareOTC.com
By Phone ­ call an OTC Advocate toll-free at (866) 420-4010 (TTY/TDD: 711), Monday to Friday, 8 a.m. to 11 p.m. (Eastern Standard Time), excluding holidays
By Mail ­ fill out and return the OTC Order Form in the OTC Product Catalog

Quarterly OTC benefit periods are January-March, April-June, July-September, and October-December.

By Mobile Application (Mobile App) ­ download our new OTC-Anywhere mobile app and access the app from your smartphone or tablet to place your order. There is no charge to download or use the app. This new app works on mobile devices using Apple or Android operating systems.
By Debit Card/Retail ­ call an OTC Advocate toll-free at number listed above to request for an OTC Debit Card. Your OTC Debit Card, along with activation instructions, will be mailed to you. You may use your OTC Debit Card to purchase approved OTC products at any Walmart store.
When you order online, by phone, by mail, or by mobile application, your order will be shipped to the address you give when ordering. Shipping will not cost you anything.
Refer to your 2021 OTC Product Catalog for a complete list of plan-approved OTC items or call an OTC Advocate for more information. You will find important information you should keep in mind (order guidelines) in the 2021 OTC Product Catalog.

If you don't use all of your quarterly OTC benefit amount when you order, the remaining balance will rollover to the next OTC benefit period, giving you more to spend the next time you order.
Be sure to spend any unused OTC benefit amount by the end of the year as it will expire on December 31 of the benefit year.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Chapter 4: Benefits Chart

General services that our plan pays for

What you must pay

Palliative care*

$0

You must talk to your provider and get a referral.

Palliative care is specialized medical care for people with serious illnesses. This type of care is focused on providing patients with relief from the symptoms, pain, and stress of a serious illness. The goal is to improve quality of life for both the patient and the family.

Palliative care is provided by a team that may include doctors, nurses, social workers, chaplains, and others who work with a patient's other doctors to provide an extra layer of support. The team will:

Talk to members about what matters most to them

Assess and manage pain and other symptoms

Address psychological and spiritual needs of members and their family

Offer support to help members live as fully as possible

Offer a support system to help the family cope during the member's illness Palliative care is appropriate at any age and at any stage in a serious illness, and it can be provided together with curative treatment.

Partial hospitalization services*

$0

Partial hospitalization is a structured program of active psychiatric treatment. It is offered as a hospital outpatient service or by a community mental health center. It is more intense than the care you get in your doctor's or therapist's office. It can help keep you from having to stay in the hospital.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Chapter 4: Benefits Chart

General services that our plan pays for

What you must pay

Physician/provider services, including doctor's office visits $0
The plan will pay for the following services:
Medically necessary health care or surgery services given in places such as:
physician's office
certified ambulatory surgical center*
hospital outpatient department*
Consultation, diagnosis, and treatment by a specialist. Please see your primary care provider for a referral first before going to see a specialist
Basic hearing and balance exams given by your specialist, if your doctor orders it to see whether you need treatment
Certain telehealth services, including primary care provider
You have the option of getting these services through an in-person visit or by telehealth. If you choose to get one of these services by telehealth, you must use a network provider who offers the service by telehealth.
Virtual medical visits are medical visits delivered to you outside of medical facilities by virtual providers that use online technology and live audio/video capabilities. Visit www.Teladoc.com/Molina/SCMMP to access virtual visits 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.
Some telehealth services including consultation, diagnosis, and treatment by a physician or practitioner, for members in certain rural areas or other places approved by Medicare
Telehealth services for monthly end-stage renal disease (ESRD) related visits for home dialysis members in a hospital-based or critical access hospital-based renal dialysis center, renal dialysis facility, or the member's home
Telehealth services to diagnose, evaluate, or treat symptoms of a stroke
This benefit is continued on the next page

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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General services that our plan pays for

What you must pay

Physician/provider services, including doctor's office visits (continued)
Virtual check-ins (for example, by phone or video chat) with your doctor for 5-10 minutes if:
you're not a new patient and
the check-in isn't related to an office visit in the past 7 days and
the check-in doesn't lead to an office visit within 24 hours or the soonest available appointment
Evaluation of video and/or images you send to your doctor and interpretation and follow-up by your doctor within 24 hours if:
you're not a new patient and
the evaluation isn't related to an office visit in the past 7 days and
the evaluation doesn't lead to an office visit within 24 hours or the soonest available appointment
Consultation your doctor has with other doctors by phone, the Internet, or electronic health record if you're not a new patient
Note: Not all medical conditions can be treated through virtual visits. The virtual visit doctor will identify if you need to see an in-person doctor for treatment.
Second opinion by another network provider before a medical procedure
Non-routine dental care*. Covered services are limited to:
surgery of the jaw or related structures,
setting fractures of the jaw or facial bones,
pulling teeth before radiation treatments of neoplastic cancer, or
services that would be covered when provided by a physician.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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General services that our plan pays for

What you must pay

Podiatry services

$0

The plan will pay for the following services:

Diagnosis and medical or surgical treatment of injuries and diseases of the foot (such as hammer toe or heel spurs)

Routine foot care for members with conditions affecting the legs, such as diabetes.

Prostate cancer screening exams

$0

For men, the plan will pay for the following services once every 12 months:

A digital rectal exam

A prostate specific antigen (PSA) test

Prosthetic devices and related supplies*

$0

Prosthetic devices replace all or part of a body part or function. The plan will pay for the following prosthetic devices, and maybe other devices not listed here if your provider gets prior approval:

Colostomy bags and supplies related to colostomy care

Pacemakers

Braces

Prosthetic shoes

Artificial arms and legs

Breast prostheses (including a surgical brassiere after a mastectomy)

The plan will also pay for some supplies related to prosthetic devices. They will also pay to repair or replace prosthetic devices.

The plan offers some coverage after cataract removal or cataract surgery. See "Vision Care" later in this section for details.

The plan will not pay for prosthetic dental devices.

Pulmonary rehabilitation services

$0

The plan will pay for pulmonary rehabilitation programs for members who have moderate to very severe chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). The member must have an order for pulmonary rehabilitation from the doctor or provider treating the COPD.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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General services that our plan pays for

What you must pay

Sexually transmitted infections (STIs) screening and counseling $0
The plan will pay for screenings for chlamydia, gonorrhea, syphilis, and hepatitis B. These screenings are covered for some people who are at increased risk for an STI. A primary care provider must order the tests. We cover these tests once every 12 months.
The plan will also pay for up to two face-to-face, high-intensity behavioral counseling sessions each year for sexually active adults at increased risk for STIs. Each session can be 20 to 30 minutes long. The plan will pay for these counseling sessions as a preventive service only if they are given by a primary care provider. The sessions must be in a primary care setting, such as a doctor's office.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Chapter 4: Benefits Chart

General services that our plan pays for

What you must pay

Skilled nursing facility (SNF) care*

$0

You must talk to your provider and get a referral.

Our plan covers Medicare and non-Medicare stays in a SNF with no prior hospitalization required.

The plan will pay for the following services, and maybe other services not listed here:

A semi-private room, or a private room if it is medically necessary

Meals, including special diets

Nursing services

Physical therapy, occupational therapy, and speech therapy

Drugs you get as part of your plan of care, including substances that are naturally in the body, such as blood-clotting factors

Blood, including storage and administration

Medical and surgical supplies given by nursing facilities

Lab tests given by nursing facilities

X-rays and other radiology services given by nursing facilities

Appliances, such as wheelchairs, usually given by nursing facilities

Physician/provider services

You will usually get your care from network facilities. However, you may be able to get your care from a facility not in our network. You can get care from the following places if they accept our plan's amounts for payment:

A nursing home or continuing care retirement community where you lived before you went to the hospital (as long as it provides nursing facility care)

A nursing facility where your spouse lives at the time you leave the hospital

Please note that nursing home care is covered under its own category in this chart.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Chapter 4: Benefits Chart

General services that our plan pays for

What you must pay

Supervised exercise therapy (SET)*

$0

The plan will pay for SET for members with symptomatic peripheral

artery disease (PAD). The plan will pay for:

Up to 36 sessions during a 12-week period if all SET requirements are met

An additional 36 sessions over time if deemed medically necessary by a health care provider

The SET program must be:

30 to 60-minute sessions of a therapeutic exercise-training program for PAD in members with leg cramping due to poor blood flow (claudication)

In a hospital outpatient setting or in a physician's office

Delivered by qualified personnel who make sure benefit exceeds harm and who are trained in exercise therapy for PAD

Under the direct supervision of a physician, physician assistant, or nurse practitioner/clinical nurse specialist trained in both basic and advanced life support techniques

Targeted Case Management (TCM) TCM activities make sure that your medical, social, educational and other service needs are addressed on an ongoing basis to help you become more self-sufficient.
To get TCM, you have to be in one of the following groups:
Individuals with Intellectual and Related Disabilities
Adults with Serious and Persistent Mental Illness
Individuals with Psychoactive Substance Disorder

$0 No referral or authorization required to be enrolled in TCM. Some services provided to members under TCM may require authorization and referral. Contact Member Services for details.

Adults with Functional Impairments

Individuals with Sensory Impairments

Individuals with Head and Spinal Cord Injuries and Related Disabilities

TCM is only available for the last 180 days that you are in an institution and are moving to a community setting. Individuals who are moving into a waiver are not eligible for TCM. Talk to your Care Coordinator or PCP about getting TCM services.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Chapter 4: Benefits Chart

General services that our plan pays for

What you must pay

Telemedicine

$0

You must talk to your provider and get a referral.

The plan covers some medical or health services using real-time audio or video with a provider who isn't at your location.

These services are available in some rural areas, under certain conditions, and only if you're located at one of the following places: a doctor's office, hospital, rural health clinic, federally-qualified health center, hospital-based dialysis facility, skilled nursing facility (SNF), or community mental health center.

The following services are covered using a telecommunication system:

Consultation

Office visits

Individual psychotherapy

Prescription management

Psychiatric diagnostic interview exams and testing

Services such as telephone conversations, e-mail messages and video cell phone calls are not covered. Tele-psychiatry is only provided on a limited basis through the Department of Mental Health in partnership with over 20 hospital emergency rooms in the state.

Urgently needed care

$0

Urgently needed care is care given to treat:

a non-emergency, or

a sudden medical illness, or

an injury, or

a condition that needs care right away.

If you require urgently needed care, you should first try to get it from a network provider. However, you can use out-of-network providers when you cannot get to a network provider.

Urgent care is only covered when you get the services in the U.S.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Chapter 4: Benefits Chart

General services that our plan pays for

What you must pay

Vision care

$0

The plan will pay for outpatient doctor services for the diagnosis and treatment of diseases and injuries of the eye. For example, this includes annual eye exams for diabetic retinopathy for people with diabetes and treatment for age-related macular degeneration. Medicare does not cover regular eye exams for glasses or contacts.

Healthy Connections Medicaid covers the following services:

Treatment for an illness or injury to the eye

Initial replacement of the lens due to cataract surgery

For people at high risk of glaucoma, the plan will pay for one glaucoma screening each year. People at high risk of glaucoma include:

people with a family history of glaucoma,

people with diabetes,

African-Americans who are age 50 and older, and

Hispanic Americans who are 65 or older.

The plan will pay for one pair of glasses or contact lenses after each cataract surgery when the doctor inserts an intraocular lens. (If you have two separate cataract surgeries, you must get one pair of glasses after each surgery. You cannot get two pairs of glasses after the second surgery, even if you did not get a pair of glasses after the first surgery.)

The plan will pay for routine eye care. That care includes:

One routine eye exam per year

Up to $150 every two years for frames and lenses

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Chapter 4: Benefits Chart

General services that our plan pays for

What you must pay

"Welcome to Medicare" Preventive Visit

$0

The plan covers the one-time "Welcome to Medicare" preventive visit. The visit includes:

a review of your health,

education and counseling about the preventive services you need (including screenings and shots), and

referrals for other care if you need it.

Note: We cover the "Welcome to Medicare" preventive visit only during the first 12 months that you have Medicare Part B. When you make your appointment, tell your doctor's office you want to schedule your "Welcome to Medicare" preventive visit.

E. Waiver Services Operated by Community Long Term Care (CLTC) that Our Plan Pays For
Long-term services and supports (LTSS) help meet your daily needs for assistance and help improve the quality of your life. LTSS can help you with everyday tasks like taking a bath, getting dressed, and making food. Most of these services are provided in your home or in your community, but they could also be provided in a nursing home or hospital.
LTSS are available to members who are on certain waiver programs operated by the Community Long Term Care (CLTC) division of Healthy Connections Medicaid. The type and amounts of LTSS depend on the waiver you are on. If you think you need LTSS, you can talk to your Care Coordinator about how to access them and whether you can join one of these waivers.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Waiver services operated by Community and Long Term Care

(CLTC) that our plan pays for

What you must pay

Community Choices Waiver services*

$0

Some services may require getting a referral from your provider.

The plan provides extra services for members on the Community Choices Waiver. These services include:

Adult day health care and nursing

Transportation to adult day health care

Case management and coordination of these waiver services

Companion services

Home delivered meals

Minor home adaptations (for example, ramp, pest control, bath safety equipment)

Personal and attendant care

Personal emergency response system

Some nutritional supplements

Specialized medical equipment and supplies

Temporary relief for your caregiver in a Community Residential Care Facility (CRCF) or an in-patient facility (nursing facility or hospital)

HIV/AIDS Waiver services*

$0

Some services may require getting a referral from your provider.

The plan provides extra services for members on the HIV/AIDS Waiver. These services include:

Case management and coordination of these waiver services

Companion services

Home delivered meals

Minor home adaptations (for example, ramp, pest control, bath safety equipment) Personal and attendant care Private duty nursing Some nutritional supplements

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Waiver services operated by Community and Long Term Care

(CLTC) that our plan pays for

What you must pay

Mechanical Ventilator Dependent Waiver services*

$0

Some services may require getting a referral from your provider.

The plan provides extra services for members on the Mechanical Ventilator Dependent Waiver. These services include:

Case management and coordination of these waiver services

Home delivered meals

Minor home adaptations (for example, ramp, pest control, bath safety equipment)

Personal and attendant care

Personal emergency response system

Private duty nursing

Some nutritional supplements

Specialized medical equipment and supplies

Temporary relief for your caregiver (in a nursing facility or at your home)

F. Benefits covered outside of Molina Dual Options
Some of the following services are not covered by Molina Dual Options but are available through Medicare. You can get these services in the same way that you do today.
F1. Hospice Care
You can get care from any hospice program certified by Medicare. You have the right to elect hospice if your provider and hospice medical director determine you have a terminal prognosis. This means you have a terminal illness and are expected to have six months or less to live. Your hospice doctor can be a network provider or an out-of-network provider.
See the Benefits Chart in Section D of this chapter for more information about what Molina Dual Options pays for while you are getting hospice care services.
For hospice services and services covered by Medicare Part A or B that relate to your terminal prognosis:
The hospice provider will bill Medicare for your services. Medicare will pay for hospice services related to your terminal prognosis. You pay nothing for these services.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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For services covered by Medicare Part A or B that are not related to your terminal prognosis (except for emergency care or urgently needed care):
The provider will bill Medicare for your services. Medicare will pay for the services covered by Medicare Part A or B. You pay nothing for these services. For drugs that may be covered by Molina Dual Options' Medicare Part D benefit: Drugs are never covered by both hospice and our plan at the same time. For more information, please see Chapter 5. Note: If you need non-hospice care, you should call your Care Coordinator to arrange the services. Non-hospice care is care that is not related to your terminal prognosis. Some services are not covered by Molina Dual Options but are available through Healthy Connections Medicaid. You can get these services in the same way that you do today.
F2. Dental services Through Healthy Connections Medicaid you are still eligible for Diagnostics (oral evaluation and x-rays), preventive care (annual cleaning), restorative care (fillings), and surgical care (extractions/removals) on a fee-for-service basis with a $3.40 copay. Also, Molina Dual Options covers preventive and comprehensive benefits in addition to your Healthy Connections Medicaid dental coverage. Please contact your Care Coordinator for more information.
F3. Non-emergency medical transportation Transportation assistance is available to and from any medical appointment with a $0 copay. The type of assistance will depend of the member's medical situation. Requests for urgent or same day requests (such as transportation assistance for routine hospital discharges) will be verified with health care providers to confirm that the short timing is medically necessary. Any member needing emergency transportation should call 911. For more information, please contact your Care Coordinator or see the member brochure located at the website of ModivCare, who is the transportation broker: memberinfo.logisticare.com/scmember/ Downloads. If you have additional questions, please contact ModivCare using the contact information for your region in the member brochure.
G. Benefits not covered by Molina Dual Options, Medicare, or Healthy Connections Medicaid
This section tells you what kinds of benefits are excluded by the plan. Excluded means that the plan does not pay for these benefits. Medicare and Healthy Connections Medicaid will not pay for them either. The list below describes some services and items that are not covered by the plan under any conditions and some that are excluded by the plan only in some cases.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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The plan will not pay for the excluded medical benefits listed in this section (or anywhere else in this Member Handbook) except under the specific conditions listed. If you think that we should pay for a service that is not covered, you can file an appeal. For information about filing an appeal, see Chapter 9.
In addition to any exclusions or limitations described in the Benefits Chart, the following items and services are not covered by our plan:
Chiropractic care, other than manual manipulation of the spine consistent with Medicare coverage guidelines.
Cosmetic surgery or other cosmetic work, unless it is needed because of an accidental injury or to improve a part of the body that is not shaped right. However, the plan will pay for reconstruction of a breast after a mastectomy and for treating the other breast to match it.
However, dental care required to treat illness or injury may be covered as inpatient or outpatient care
Elective or voluntary enhancement procedures or services (including weight loss, hair growth, sexual performance, athletic performance, cosmetic purposes, anti-aging and mental performance), except when medically necessary.
Experimental medical and surgical treatments, items, and drugs, unless covered by Medicare or under a Medicare-approved clinical research study or by our plan. See Chapter 3 for more information on clinical research studies. Experimental treatment and items are those that are not generally accepted by the medical community.
Radial keratotomy, LASIK surgery, and other low-vision aids. However, the plan will pay for glasses after cataract surgery.
Full-time nursing care in your home.
Naturopath services (the use of natural or alternative treatments).
Non-prescription contraceptive supplies.
Orthopedic shoes, unless the shoes are part of a leg brace and are included in the cost of the brace, or the shoes are for a person with diabetic foot disease. Supportive devices for the feet, except for orthopedic or therapeutic shoes for people with diabetic foot disease.
Personal items in your room at a hospital or a nursing home, such as a telephone or a television.
Private room in a hospital, except when it is medically necessary.
Routine foot care, except for the limited coverage provided according to Medicare guidelines.
Services considered not "reasonable and necessary," according to the standards of Medicare and Healthy Connections Medicaid, unless these services are listed by our plan as covered services.
Services provided to veterans in Veterans Affairs (VA) facilities. However, when a veteran gets emergency services at a VA hospital and the VA cost sharing is more than the cost sharing under our plan, we will reimburse the veteran for the difference. Members are still responsible for their cost sharing amounts.
Surgical treatment for morbid obesity, except when it is medically necessary and Medicare pays for it.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Introduction
This chapter explains rules for getting your outpatient prescription drugs. These are drugs that your provider orders for you that you get from a pharmacy or by mail order. They include drugs covered under Medicare Part D and Healthy Connections Medicaid. Key terms and their definitions appear in alphabetical order in the last chapter of the Member Handbook. Molina Dual Options also covers the following drugs, although they will not be discussed in this chapter:
Drugs covered by Medicare Part A. These include some drugs given to you while you are in a hospital or nursing home. Drugs covered by Medicare Part B. These include some chemotherapy drugs, some drug injections given to you during an office visit with a doctor or other provider, and drugs you are given at a dialysis clinic. To learn more about what Medicare Part B drugs are covered, see the Benefits Chart in Chapter 4. Rules for the plan's outpatient drug coverage The plan will usually cover your drugs as long as you follow the rules in this section. 1. You must have a doctor or other provider write your prescription. This person often is your primary care provider (PCP). It could also be another provider if your PCP has referred you for care. 2. You generally must use a network pharmacy to fill your prescription. 3. Your prescribed drug must be on the plan's List of Covered Drugs. We call it the "Drug List" for short. If it is not on the Drug List, we may be able to cover it by giving you an exception. See Chapter 9 to learn about asking for an exception. 4. Your drug must be used for a medically accepted indication. This means that the use of the drug is either approved by the Food and Drug Administration or supported by certain medical references.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Table of Contents
A. Getting your prescriptions filled .................................................................................................. 92 A1. Filling your prescription at a network pharmacy ................................................................... 92 A2. Using your Member ID Card when you fill a prescription ..................................................... 92 A3. What to do if you change to a different network pharmacy .................................................. 92 A4. What to do if your pharmacy leaves the network .................................................................. 92 A5. Using a specialized pharmacy .............................................................................................. 92 A6. Using mail-order services to get your drugs ......................................................................... 93 A7. Getting a long-term supply of drugs ...................................................................................... 94 A8. Using a pharmacy that is not in the plan's network .............................................................. 94 A9. Paying you back if you pay for a prescription ....................................................................... 95
B. The plan's Drug List ....................................................................................................................95 B1. Drugs on the Drug List ..........................................................................................................95 B2. How to find a drug on the Drug List ...................................................................................... 95 B3. Drugs that are not on the Drug List ....................................................................................... 95 B4. Drug List tiers ........................................................................................................................96
C. Limits on some drugs .................................................................................................................96 D. Reasons your drug might not be covered ................................................................................... 98
D1. Getting a temporary supply ...................................................................................................98 D2. Asking for a temporary supply .............................................................................................. 99 D3. Asking for an exception ......................................................................................................100 E. Changes in coverage for your drugs ........................................................................................ 100 F. Drug coverage in special cases ................................................................................................ 101 F1. If you are in a hospital or a skilled nursing facility for a stay that is covered by the plan .... 101 F2. If you are in a long-term care facility ................................................................................... 102 F3. If you are in a Medicare-certified hospice program ............................................................ 102

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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G. Programs on drug safety and managing drugs ........................................................................ 102 G1. Programs to help members use drugs safely ..................................................................... 102 G2. Programs to help members manage their drugs ................................................................ 103 G3. Drug management program to help members safely use their opioid medications ........... 103

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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A. Getting your prescriptions filled
A1. Filling your prescription at a network pharmacy In most cases, the plan will pay for prescriptions only if they are filled at the plan's network pharmacies. A network pharmacy is a drug store that has agreed to fill prescriptions for our plan members. You may go to any of our network pharmacies. To find a network pharmacy, you can look in the Provider and Pharmacy Directory, visit our website, or contact Member Services or your Care Coordinator.
A2. Using your Member ID Card when you fill a prescription To fill your prescription, show your Member ID Card at your network pharmacy. The network pharmacy will bill the plan for your covered prescription drug. If you do not have your Member ID Card with you when you fill your prescription, ask the pharmacy to call the plan to get the necessary information. If the pharmacy is not able to get the necessary information, you may have to pay the full cost of the prescription when you pick it up. You can then ask us to pay you back. If you cannot pay for the drug, contact Member Services right away. We will do what we can to help.
To learn how to ask us to pay you back, see Chapter 7. If you need help getting a prescription filled, you can contact Member Services or your Care Coordinator.
A3. What to do if you change to a different network pharmacy If you change pharmacies and need a refill of a prescription, you can either ask to have a new prescription written by a provider or ask your pharmacy to transfer the prescription to the new pharmacy if there are any refills left. If you need help changing your network pharmacy, you can contact Member Services or your Care Coordinator.
A4. What to do if your pharmacy leaves the network If the pharmacy you use leaves the plan's network, you will have to find a new network pharmacy. To find a new network pharmacy, you can look in the Provider and Pharmacy Directory, visit our website, or contact Member Services or your Care Coordinator.
A5. Using a specialized pharmacy Sometimes prescriptions must be filled at a specialized pharmacy. Specialized pharmacies include:
Pharmacies that supply drugs for home infusion therapy. Pharmacies that supply drugs for residents of a long-term care facility, such as a nursing home.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Usually, long-term care facilities have their own pharmacies. If you are a resident of a long-term care facility, we must make sure you can get the drugs you need at the facility's pharmacy.
If your long-term care facility's pharmacy is not in our network or you have any difficulty getting your drugs in a long-term care facility, please contact Member Services.
Pharmacies that serve the Indian Health Service/Tribal/Urban Indian Health Program. Except in emergencies, only Native Americans or Alaska Natives may use these pharmacies.
Pharmacies that supply drugs requiring special handling and instructions on their use.
To find a specialized pharmacy, you can look in the Provider and Pharmacy Directory, visit our website, or contact Member Services or your Care Coordinator.
A6. Using mail-order services to get your drugs
For certain kinds of drugs, you can use the plan's network mail-order services. Generally, the drugs available through mail order are drugs that you take on a regular basis for a chronic or long-term medical condition. The drugs that are not available through the plan's mail-order service are marked with NM in our Drug List.
Our plan's mail-order service allows you to order at least a 30-day supply of the drug and no more than a 90-day supply. A 90-day supply has the same copay as a one-month supply.
Filling my prescriptions by mail
To get order forms and information about filling your prescriptions by mail, please call Member Services at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week, 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time or you can visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.
Usually, a mail-order prescription will get to you within 10 days. Please call Member Services for help in receiving a temporary supply of your prescription at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week, 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time.
Mail-order process
The mail-order service has different procedures for new prescriptions it gets from you, new prescriptions it gets directly from your provider's office, and refills on your mail-order prescriptions:
1. New prescriptions the pharmacy gets from you
The pharmacy will automatically fill and deliver new prescriptions it gets from you.
2. New prescriptions the pharmacy gets directly from your provider's office
After the pharmacy gets a prescription from a health care provider, it will contact you to see if you want the medication filled immediately or at a later time.
This will give you an opportunity to make sure the pharmacy is delivering the correct drug (including strength, amount, and form) and, if needed, allow you to stop or delay the order before it is shipped.
It is important that you respond each time you are contacted by the pharmacy, to let them know what to do with the new prescription and to prevent any delays in shipping.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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3. Refills on mail-order prescriptions
For refills of your drugs, you have the option to sign up for an automatic refill program. Under this program we will start to process your next refill automatically when our records show you should be close to running out of your drug.
The pharmacy will contact you before shipping each refill to make sure you need more medication, and you can cancel scheduled refills if you have enough of your medication or if your medication has changed.
If you choose not to use our auto refill program, please contact your pharmacy 10 days before you think the drugs you have on hand will run out to make sure your next order is shipped to you in time.
To opt out of our program that automatically prepares mail-order refills, please contact us by calling Member Services at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week, 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time.
So the pharmacy can reach you to confirm your order before shipping, please make sure to let the pharmacy know the best ways to contact you. The pharmacy will contact you by phone at the number you have provided. It is important to make sure that our pharmacy has the most current contact information.
A7. Getting a long-term supply of drugs
You can get a long-term supply of maintenance drugs on our plan's Drug List. Maintenance drugs are drugs that you take on a regular basis, for a chronic or long-term medical condition.
Some network pharmacies allow you to get a long-term supply of maintenance drugs. A 90-day supply has the same copay as a one-month supply. The Provider and Pharmacy Directory tells you which pharmacies can give you a long-term supply of maintenance drugs. You can also call Member Services for more information.
For certain kinds of drugs, you can use the plan's network mail-order services to get a long-term supply of maintenance drugs. See the section above to learn about mail-order services.
A8. Using a pharmacy that is not in the plan's network
Generally, we pay for drugs filled at an out-of-network pharmacy only when you are not able to use a network pharmacy. We have network pharmacies outside of our service area where you can get your prescriptions filled as a member of our plan.
We will pay for prescriptions filled at an out-of-network pharmacy in the following cases:
If the prescription is related to urgently needed care
If these prescriptions are related to care for a medical emergency
In these cases, please check first with Member Services to see if there is a network pharmacy nearby.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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A9. Paying you back if you pay for a prescription If you must use an out-of-network pharmacy, you will generally have to pay the full cost when you get your prescription. You can ask us to pay you back. To learn more about this, see Chapter 7.
B. The plan's Drug List
The plan has a Drug List. The drugs on the Drug List are selected by the plan with the help of a team of doctors and pharmacists. The Drug List also tells you if there are any rules you need to follow to get your drugs. We will generally cover a drug on the plan's Drug List as long as you follow the rules explained in this chapter.
B1. Drugs on the Drug List The Drug List includes the drugs covered under Medicare Part D and some prescription and over-the-counter drugs and items covered under your Healthy Connections Medicaid benefits. The Drug List includes both brand-name drugs, for example BYSTOLIC and generic drugs for example metoprolol. Generic drugs have the same active ingredients as brand-name drugs. Generally, they work just as well as brand-name drugs and usually cost less. We will generally cover a drug on the plan's Drug List as long as you follow the rules explained in this chapter. Our plan also covers certain over-the-counter drugs and items. Some over-the-counter drugs cost less than prescription drugs and work just as well. For more information, call Member Services.
B2. How to find a drug on the Drug List To find out if a drug you are taking is on the Drug List, you can:
Check the most recent Drug List we sent you in the mail. Visit our website listed at the bottom of the page. The Drug List on our website is always the most current one. Call Member Services at the number at the bottom of the page to find out if a drug is on the plan's Drug List or to ask for a copy of the list. Ask your Care Coordinator to find out if a drug is on the plan's Drug List.
B3. Drugs that are not on the Drug List The plan does not cover all prescription drugs. Some drugs are not on the Drug List because the law does not allow the plan to cover those drugs. In other cases, we have decided not to include a drug on the Drug List.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Molina Dual Options will not pay for the drugs listed in this section. These are called excluded drugs. If you get a prescription for an excluded drug, you must pay for it yourself. If you think we should pay for an excluded drug because of your case, you can file an appeal. (To learn how to file an appeal, see Chapter 9.)
Here are three general rules for excluded drugs:
1. Our plan's outpatient drug coverage (which includes Part D and Healthy Connections Medicaid drugs) cannot pay for a drug that would already be covered under Medicare Part A or Part B. Drugs covered under Medicare Part A or Part B are covered by Molina Dual Options for free, but they are not considered part of your outpatient prescription drug benefits.
2. Our plan cannot cover a drug purchased outside the United States and its territories.
3. The use of the drug must be either approved by the Food and Drug Administration or supported by certain medical references as a treatment for your condition. Your doctor might prescribe a certain drug to treat your condition, even though it was not approved to treat the condition. This is called off-label use. Our plan usually does not cover drugs when they are prescribed for off-label use.
Also, by law, the types of drugs listed below are not covered by Medicare or Healthy Connections Medicaid.
Drugs used to promote fertility
Drugs used for cosmetic purposes or to promote hair growth Drugs used for the treatment of sexual or erectile dysfunction, such as Viagra®, Cialis®, Levitra®, and Caverject®
Outpatient drugs when the company who makes the drugs says that you have to have tests or services done only by them
B4. Drug List tiers
Every drug on the plan's Drug List is in one of three (3) tiers. A tier is a group of drugs of generally the same type (for example, brand name, generic, or over-the-counter drugs).
Tier 1 drugs are generic drugs. For Tier 1 drugs, you pay nothing.
Tier 2 drugs are brand name drugs. For Tier 2 drugs, you pay nothing.
Tier 3 drugs are Non-Medicare prescriptions/Over-The-Counter (OTC) drugs. For Tier 3 drugs, you pay nothing.
To find out which tier your drug is in, look for the drug in the plan's Drug List.
Chapter 6 tells the amount you pay for drugs in each tier.
C. Limits on some drugs
For certain prescription drugs, special rules limit how and when the plan covers them. In general, our rules encourage you to get a drug that works for your medical condition and is safe and effective. When a safe, lower-cost drug will work just as well as a higher-cost drug, the plan expects your provider to prescribe the lower-cost drug.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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If there is a special rule for your drug, it usually means that you or your provider will have to take extra steps for us to cover the drug. For example, your provider may have to tell us your diagnosis or provide results of blood tests first. If you or your provider think our rule should not apply to your situation, you should ask us to make an exception. We may or may not agree to let you use the drug without taking the extra steps.
To learn more about asking for exceptions, see Chapter 9.
Prior authorization (PA) ­ certain criteria must be met before a drug is covered. For example, diagnosis, lab values, or previous treatments tried and failed.
Step therapy (ST) ­ Certain cost-effective drugs must be used before other more expensive drugs are covered. For example, certain brand-name medications will only be covered if a generic alternative has been tried first.
Quantity limit (QL) ­ Certain drugs have a maximum quantity that will be covered. For example, certain drugs that are approved by the FDA to be taken once daily may have a quantity limit of #30 per 30 days.
Covered under Medicare B or D (B/D) ­ This drug may be covered under Medicare Part B or D depending upon the circumstances.
1. Limiting use of a brand-name drug when a generic version is available
Generally, a generic drug works the same as a brand-name drug and usually costs less. If there is a generic version of a brand-name drug, our network pharmacies will give you the generic version.
We usually will not pay for the brand-name drug when there is a generic version.
However, if your provider has told us the medical reason that neither the generic drug nor other covered drugs that treat the same condition will work for you, then we will cover the brand-name drug.
2. Getting plan approval in advance
For some drugs, you or your doctor must get approval from Molina Dual Options before you fill your prescription. If you don't get approval, Molina Dual Options may not cover the drug.
3. Trying a different drug first
In general, the plan wants you to try lower-cost drugs (that often are as effective) before the plan covers drugs that cost more. For example, if Drug A and Drug B treat the same medical condition, and Drug A costs less than Drug B, the plan may require you to try Drug A first.
If Drug A does not work for you, the plan will then cover Drug B. This is called step therapy.
4. Quantity limits
For some drugs, we limit the amount of the drug you can have. This is called a quantity limit. For example, the plan might limit how much of a drug you can get each time you fill your prescription.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Find out if these rules apply to your drugs To find out if any of the rules above apply to a drug you take or want to take, check the Drug List. For the most up-to-date information, call Member Services at the number at the bottom of the page or check our website listed at the bottom of the page.
D. Reasons your drug might not be covered
We try to make your drug coverage work well for you, but sometimes a drug might not be covered in the way that you would like it to be. For example:
The drug you want to take is not covered by the plan. The drug might not be on the Drug List. A generic version of the drug might be covered, but the brand name version you want to take is not. A drug might be new and we have not yet reviewed it for safety and effectiveness. The drug is covered, but there are special rules or limits on coverage for that drug. As explained in the section above, some of the drugs covered by the plan have rules that limit their use. In some cases, you or your prescriber may want to ask us for an exception to a rule. There are things you can do if your drug is not covered in the way that you would like it to be.
D1. Getting a temporary supply
In some cases, the plan can give you a temporary supply of a drug when the drug is not on the Drug List or when it is limited in some way. This gives you time to talk with your provider about getting a different drug or to ask the plan to cover the drug. To get a temporary supply of a drug, you must meet the two rules below: 1. The drug you have been taking:
is no longer on the plan's Drug List, or was never on the plan's Drug List, or is now limited in some way. 2. You must be in one of these situations: You were in the plan last year.
We will cover a temporary supply of your drug during the first 180 days of the calendar year. This temporary supply will be for up to 60 days. If your prescription is written for fewer days, we will allow multiple refills to provide up to a maximum of 60 days of medication. You must fill the prescription at a network pharmacy. Long-term care pharmacies may provide your prescription drug in small amounts at a time to prevent waste. You are new to the plan. We will cover a temporary supply of your drug during the first 180 days of your membership in the plan.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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This temporary supply will be for up to 60 days.
If your prescription is written for fewer days, we will allow multiple refills to provide up to a maximum of 60 days of medication. You must fill the prescription at a network pharmacy.
Long-term care pharmacies may provide your prescription drug in small amounts at a time to prevent waste.
You have been in the plan for more than 90 days and live in a long-term care facility and need a supply right away.
We will cover one 31-day supply, or less if your prescription is written for fewer days. This is in addition to the above temporary supply.
If you are a new resident of a LTC facility and have been enrolled in our Plan for more than 180 days and need a drug that isn't on our formulary or is subject to other restrictions, such as step therapy or dosage limits, we will cover a temporary 31-day emergency supply of that drug (unless the prescription is for fewer days) while the member pursues a formulary exception. Exceptions are available in situations where you experience a change in the level of care you are receiving that also requires you to transition from one facility or treatment center to another. In such circumstances, you would be eligible for a temporary, one-time fill exception even if you are outside of the first 180 days as a member of the plan. Please note that our transition policy applies only to those drugs that are "Part D drugs" and bought at a network pharmacy. The transition policy can't be used to buy a non-Part D drug or a drug out of network, unless you qualify for out of network access.
D2. Asking for a temporary supply
To ask for a temporary supply of a drug, call Member Services.
When you get a temporary supply of a drug, you should talk with your provider to decide what to do when your supply runs out. Here are your choices:
You can change to another drug.
There may be a different drug covered by the plan that works for you. You can call Member Services to ask for a list of covered drugs that treat the same medical condition. The list can help your provider find a covered drug that might work for you.
OR
You can ask for an exception.
You and your provider can ask the plan to make an exception. For example, you can ask the plan to cover a drug even though it is not on the Drug List. Or you can ask the plan to cover the drug without limits. If your provider says you have a good medical reason for an exception, he or she can help you ask for one.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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D3. Asking for an exception
If a drug you are taking will be taken off the Drug List or limited in some way for next year, we will allow you to ask for an exception before next year.
We will tell you about any change in the coverage for your drug for next year. You can then ask us to make an exception and cover the drug in the way you would like it to be covered for next year.
We will answer your request for an exception within 72 hours after we get your request (or your prescriber's supporting statement).
To learn more about asking for an exception, see Chapter 9.
If you need help asking for an exception, you can contact Member Services or your Care Coordinator.
E. Changes in coverage for your drugs
Most changes in drug coverage happen on January 1, but Molina Dual Options may add or remove drugs on the Drug List during the year. We may also change our rules about drugs. For example, we could:
Decide to require or not require prior approval for a drug. (Prior approval is permission from Molina Dual Options before you can get a drug.)
Add or change the amount of a drug you can get (called quantity limits).
Add or change step therapy restrictions on a drug. (Step therapy means you must try one drug before we will cover another drug.)
For more information on these drug rules, see Section C earlier in this chapter.
If you are taking a drug that was covered at the beginning of the year, we will generally not remove or change coverage of that drug during the rest of the year unless:
a new, cheaper drug comes on the market that works as well as a drug on the Drug List now, or
we learn that a drug is not safe, or
a drug is removed from the market.
To get more information on what happens when the Drug List changes, you can always:
Check Molina Dual Options' up to date Drug List on our website listed at the bottom of the page or
Call Member Services at the number at the bottom of the page
Some changes to the Drug List will happen immediately. For example:
A new generic drug becomes available. Sometimes, a new generic drug comes on the market that works as well as a brand name drug on the Drug List now. When that happens, we may remove the brand name drug and add the new generic drug, but your cost for the new drug will stay the same.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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When we add the new generic drug, we may also decide to keep the brand name drug on the list but change its coverage rules or limits.
We may not tell you before we make this change, but we will send you information about the specific change we made once it happens.
You or your provider can ask for an "exception" from these changes. We will send you a notice with the steps you can take to ask for an exception. Please see Chapter 9, Section 6 of this handbook for more information on exceptions.
A drug is taken off the market. If the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) says a drug you are taking is not safe or the drug's manufacturer takes a drug off the market, we will take it off the Drug List. If you are taking the drug, we will let you know. Contact your prescribing doctor if you receive a notification.
We may make other changes that affect the drugs you take. We will tell you in advance about these other changes to the Drug List. These changes might happen if:
The FDA provides new guidance or there are new clinical guidelines about a drug.
We add a generic drug that is new to the market and
Replace a brand name drug currently on the Drug List or
Change the coverage rules or limits for the brand name drug.
When these changes happen, we will:
Tell you at least 30 days before we make the change to the Drug List or
Let you know and give you a 30-day supply of the drug after you ask for a refill.
This will give you time to talk to your doctor or other prescriber. He or she can help you decide:
If there is a similar drug on the Drug List you can take instead or
Whether to ask for an exception from these changes. To learn more about asking for exceptions, see Chapter 9.
We may make changes that do not affect the drugs you take now. For such changes, if you are taking a drug we covered at the beginning of the year, we generally will not remove or change coverage of that drug during the rest of the year.
For example, if we remove a drug you are taking or limit its use, then the change will not affect your use of the drug for the rest of the year.
F. Drug coverage in special cases
F1. If you are in a hospital or a skilled nursing facility for a stay that is covered by the plan
If you are admitted to a hospital or skilled nursing facility for a stay covered by the plan, we will generally cover the cost of your prescription drugs during your stay. You will not have to pay a copay. Once you

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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leave the hospital or skilled nursing facility, the plan will cover your drugs as long as the drugs meet all of our rules for coverage.
F2. If you are in a long-term care facility Usually, a long-term care facility, such as a nursing home, has its own pharmacy or a pharmacy that supplies drugs for all of its residents. If you are living in a long-term care facility, you may get your prescription drugs through the facility's pharmacy if it is part of our network. Check your Provider and Pharmacy Directory to find out if your long-term care facility's pharmacy is part of our network. If it is not, or if you need more information, please contact Member Services.
F3. If you are in a Medicare-certified hospice program Drugs are never covered by both hospice and our plan at the same time.
If you are enrolled in a Medicare hospice and require a pain medication, anti-nausea, laxative, or antianxiety drug not covered by your hospice because it is unrelated to your terminal prognosis and related conditions, our plan must get notification from either the prescriber or your hospice provider that the drug is unrelated before our plan can cover the drug. To prevent delays in getting any unrelated drugs that should be covered by our plan, you can ask your hospice provider or prescriber to make sure we have the notification that the drug is unrelated before you ask a pharmacy to fill your prescription. If you leave hospice, our plan should cover all of your drugs. To prevent any delays at a pharmacy when your Medicare hospice benefit ends, you should bring documentation to the pharmacy to verify that you have left hospice. See the previous parts of this chapter that tell about the rules for getting drug coverage under Part D. To learn more about the hospice benefit, see Chapter 4.
G. Programs on drug safety and managing drugs
G1. Programs to help members use drugs safely Each time you fill a prescription, we look for possible problems, such as drug errors or drugs that:
May not be needed because you are taking another drug that does the same thing May not be safe for your age or gender Could harm you if you take them at the same time Have ingredients that you are or may be allergic to Have unsafe amounts of opioid pain medications If we see a possible problem in your use of prescription drugs, we will work with your provider to correct the problem.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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G2. Programs to help members manage their drugs
If you take medications for different medical conditions and/or you are in a Drug Management Program to help you use your opioid medications safely, you may be eligible to get services, at no cost to you, through a medication therapy management (MTM) program. This program helps you and your provider make sure that your medications are working to improve your health. A pharmacist or other health professional will give you a comprehensive review of all your medications and talk with you about:
How to get the most benefit from the drugs you take
Any concerns you have, like medication costs and drug reactions
How best to take your medications
Any questions or problems you have about your prescription and over-the-counter medication
You'll get a written summary of this discussion. The summary has a medication action plan that recommends what you can do to make the best use of your medications. You'll also get a personal medication list that will include all the medications you're taking and why you take them. In addition, you'll get information about safe disposal of prescription medications that are controlled substances.
It's a good idea to schedule your medication review before your yearly "Wellness" visit, so you can talk to your doctor about your action plan and medication list. Bring your action plan and medication list with you to your visit or anytime you talk with your doctors, pharmacists, and other health care providers. Also, take your medication list with you if you go to the hospital or emergency room.
Medication therapy management programs are voluntary and free to members that qualify. If we have a program that fits your needs, we will enroll you in the program and send you information. If you do not want to be in the program, please let us know, and we will take you out of the program.
If you have any questions about these programs, please contact Member Services or your Care Coordinator.
G3. Drug management program to help members safely use their opioid medications
Molina Dual Options has a program that can help members safely use their prescription opioid medications and other medications that are frequently misused. This program is called a Drug Management Program (DMP).
If you use opioid medications that you get from several doctors or pharmacies or if you had a recent opioid overdose, we may talk to your doctors to make sure your use is appropriate and medically necessary. Working with your doctors, if we decide your use of proscription opioid or benzodiazepine medications is not safe, we may limit how you can get those medications. Limitations may include:
Requiring you to get all prescriptions for those medications from certain pharmacies and/or from certain doctors
Limiting the amount of those medications we will cover for you
If we think that one or more limitations should apply to you, we will send you a letter in advance. The letter will explain the limitations we think should apply.
You will have a chance to tell us which doctors or pharmacies you prefer to use and any information that you think is important for us to know. If we decide to limit your coverage for these

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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medications after you have a chance to respond, we will send you another letter that confirms the limitations.
If you think we made a mistake, you disagree that you are at risk for prescription drug misuse, or you disagree with the limitation, you and your prescriber can file an appeal. If you file and appeal, we will review your case and give you our decision. If we continue to deny any part of your appeal related to limitations to your access to these medications, we will automatically send your case to an Independent Review Entity (IRE). (To learn how to file and appeal, Chapter 9).
The DMP may not apply to you if you:
have certain medical conditions, such as cancer or sickle cell disease,
are getting hospice, palliative, or end-of-life care, or
live in a long-term care facility.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Chapter 6: What you pay for your Medicare and Healthy Connections Medicaid prescription drugs
Introduction
This chapter tells what you pay for your outpatient prescription drugs. By "drugs," we mean: Medicare Part D prescription drugs, and drugs and items covered under Healthy Connections Medicaid, and drugs and items covered by the plan as additional benefits.
Because you are eligible for Healthy Connections Medicaid, you are getting "Extra Help" from Medicare to help pay for your Medicare Part D prescription drugs.
Extra Help is a Medicare program that helps people with limited incomes and resources reduce Medicare Part D prescription drug costs, such as premiums, deductibles, and copays. Extra Help is also called the "Low-Income Subsidy," or "LIS."
Other key terms and their definitions appear in alphabetical order in the last chapter of the Member Handbook. To learn more about prescription drugs, you can look in these places:
The plan's List of Covered Drugs. We call this the "Drug List." It tells you: Which drugs the plan pays for Which of the three (3) tiers each drug is in Whether there are any limits on the drugs If you need a copy of the Drug List, call Member Services at the number at the bottom of the page. You can also find the Drug List on our website listed at the bottom of the page. The Drug List on our website is always the most current.
Chapter 5 of this Member Handbook. Chapter 5 tells how to get your outpatient prescription drugs through the plan. It includes rules you need to follow. It also tells which types of prescription drugs are not covered by our plan.
The plan's Provider and Pharmacy Directory. In most cases, you must use a network pharmacy to get your covered drugs. Network pharmacies are pharmacies that have agreed to work with us. The Provider and Pharmacy Directory has a list of network pharmacies. You can read more about network pharmacies in Chapter 5.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Table of Contents
A. The Explanation of Benefits (EOB) ........................................................................................... 107 B. How to keep track of your drug costs ....................................................................................... 107 C. You pay nothing for a one-month or long-term supply of drugs ............................................... 108
C1. The plan's cost-sharing tiers ............................................................................................... 108 C2. Your pharmacy choices ......................................................................................................108 C3. Getting a long-term supply of a drug .................................................................................. 108 C4. What you pay ......................................................................................................................109 D. Vaccinations .............................................................................................................................109 D1. What you need to know before you get a vaccination ........................................................ 109

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Chapter 6: What you pay for your Medicare and Healthy Connections Medicaid prescription drugs

A. The Explanation of Benefits (EOB)
Our plan keeps track of your prescription drugs. We keep track of two types of costs: Your out-of-pocket costs. This is the amount of money you or others on your behalf pay for your prescriptions. Your total drug costs. This is the amount of money you or others on your behalf pay for your prescriptions, plus the amount the plan pays.
When you get prescription drugs through the plan, we send you a report called the Explanation of Benefits. We call it the EOB for short. The EOB has more information about the drugs you take. The EOB includes:
Information for the month. The report tells what prescription drugs you got. It shows the total drug costs, what the plan paid, and what you and others paying for you paid. "Year-to-date" information. This is your total drug costs and the total payments made since January 1. We offer coverage of drugs not covered under Medicare. Payments made for these drugs will not count towards your total out-of-pocket costs. To find out which drugs our plan covers, see the Drug List.
B. How to keep track of your drug costs
To keep track of your drug costs and the payments you make, we use records we get from you and from your pharmacy. Here is how you can help us: 1. Use your Member ID Card.
Show your Member ID Card every time you get a prescription filled. This will help us know what prescriptions you fill and what you pay.
2. Make sure we have the information we need. Give us copies of receipts for drugs that you have paid for. You can ask us to pay you back for the drug. Here are some times when you should give us copies of your receipts: When you buy a covered drug at a network pharmacy at a special price or using a discount card that is not part of our plan's benefit When you pay a copay for drugs that you get under a drug maker's patient assistance program When you buy covered drugs at an out-of-network pharmacy When you pay the full price for a covered drug To learn how to ask us to pay you back for the drug, see Chapter 7.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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3. Send us information about the payments others have made for you. Payments made by certain other people and organizations also count toward your out-of-pocket costs. For example, payments made by an AIDS drug assistance program, the Indian Health Service, and most charities count toward your out-of-pocket costs.
4. Check the reports we send you. When you get an Explanation of Benefits in the mail, please make sure it is complete and correct. If you think something is wrong or missing from the report, or if you have any questions, please call Member Services. Be sure to keep these reports. They are an important record of your drug expenses.
C. You pay nothing for a one-month or long-term supply of drugs
With Molina Dual Options, you pay nothing for covered drugs as long as you follow the plan's rules.
C1. The plan's cost-sharing tiers Tiers are groups of drugs on our Drug List. Every drug in the plan's Drug List is in one of three (3) tiers. You have no copays for prescription and Over-The-Counter (OTC) drugs on Molina Dual Options' Drug List. To find the tiers for your drugs, you can look in the Drug List.
Tier 1 drugs are generic drugs. For Tier 1 drugs, you pay nothing. Tier 2 drugs are brand name drugs. For Tier 2 drugs, you pay nothing. Tier 3 drugs are Non-Medicare prescriptions/Over-The-Counter (OTC) drugs. For Tier 3 drugs, you pay nothing.
C2. Your pharmacy choices How much you pay for a drug depends on whether you get the drug from:
a network pharmacy, or an out-of-network pharmacy. In limited cases, we cover prescriptions filled at out-of-network pharmacies. See Chapter 5 to find out when we will do that. To learn more about these pharmacy choices, see Chapter 5 in this handbook and the plan's Provider and Pharmacy Directory.
C3. Getting a long-term supply of a drug For some drugs, you can get a long-term supply (also called an "extended supply") when you fill your prescription. A long-term supply is up to a 90-day supply. There is no cost to you for a long-term supply. For details on where and how to get a long-term supply of a drug, see Chapter 5 or the Provider and Pharmacy Directory.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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C4. What you pay

A network phar- The plan's mail- A network long- An out-of-network

macy

order service

term care pharma- pharmacy

A one-month or up A one-month or up cy

Up to a 31-day

to a 90-day supply to a 90-day supply Up to a 31-day supply. Coverage

supply

is limited to certain

cases. See Chap-

ter 5 for details.

Tier 1

$0

$0

$0

$0

(generic drugs)

Tier 2

$0

$0

$0

$0

(brand names drugs)

Tier 3

$0

$0

$0

$0

(Non-Medicare prescriptions/ Over-TheCounter (OTC) drugs)

For information about which pharmacies can give you long-term supplies, see the plan's Provider and Pharmacy Directory.

D. Vaccinations
Our plan covers Medicare Part D vaccines. There are two parts to our coverage of Medicare Part D vaccinations:
1. The first part of coverage is for the cost of the vaccine itself. The vaccine is a prescription drug.
2. The second part of coverage is for the cost of giving you the vaccine. For example, sometimes you may get the vaccine as a shot given to you by your doctor.
D1. What you need to know before you get a vaccination
We recommend that you call us first at Member Services whenever you are planning to get a vaccination.
We can tell you about how your vaccination is covered by our plan.
We can tell you how to keep your costs down by using network pharmacies and providers. Network pharmacies are pharmacies that have agreed to work with our plan. A network provider is a provider who works with the health plan. A network provider should work with Molina Dual Options to ensure that you do not have any upfront costs for a Part D vaccine.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Chapter 7: Asking us to pay a bill you have gotten for covered services or drugs
Introduction
This chapter tells you how and when to send us a bill to ask for payment. It also tells you how to make an appeal if you do not agree with a coverage decision. Key terms and their definitions appear in alphabetical order in the last chapter of the Member Handbook.
Table of Contents
A. Asking us to pay for your services or drugs .............................................................................. 111 B. Sending a request for payment ................................................................................................ 112 C. Coverage decisions ..................................................................................................................113 D. Appeals .....................................................................................................................................113

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

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Chapter 7: Asking us to pay a bill you have gotten for covered services or drugs

A. Asking us to pay for your services or drugs
You should not get a bill for in-network services or drugs. Our network providers must bill the plan for the services and drugs you already got. A network provider is a provider who works with the health plan.
If you get a bill for health care or drugs, send the bill to us. To send us a bill, see page 146.
If the services or drugs are covered, we will pay the provider directly.
If the services or drugs are covered and you already paid, it is your right to be paid back.
If you paid for services covered by Medicare, we will pay you back.
If you paid for services covered by Healthy Connections Medicaid, we can't pay you back, but the provider will. Member Services or the Healthy Connections Prime Advocate can help you contact the provider's office. See the bottom of the page and Chapter 2 for their phone numbers.
If the services or drugs are not covered, we will tell you.
Contact Member Services or your Care Coordinator if you have any questions. If you get a bill and you do not know what to do about it, we can help. You can also call if you want to tell us information about a request for payment you already sent to us.
Here are examples of times when you may need to ask our plan to pay you back or to pay a bill you got:
1. When you get emergency or urgently needed health care from an out-of-network provider
You should ask the provider to bill the plan.
If you pay the full amount when you get the care, ask us to pay you back. Send us the bill and proof of any payment you made.
You may get a bill from the provider asking for payment that you think you do not owe. Send us the bill and proof of any payment you made.
If the provider should be paid, we will pay the provider directly.
If you have already paid for the service, we will pay you back.
2. When a network provider sends you a bill
Network providers must always bill the plan. Show your Molina Dual Options Member ID Card when you get any services or prescriptions. Improper/inappropriate billing occurs when a provider bills you more than the plan's cost sharing amount for services. Call Member Services if you get any bills you do not understand.
Because Molina Dual Options pays the entire cost for your services, you are not responsible for paying any costs. Providers should not bill you anything for these services.
Whenever you get a bill from a network provider, send us the bill. We will contact the provider directly and take care of the problem.
If you have already paid a bill from a network provider for Medicare-covered services, send us the bill and proof of any payment you made. We will pay you back for your covered services.
3. When you use an out-of-network pharmacy to get a prescription filled

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

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If you go to an out-of-network pharmacy, you will have to pay the full cost of your prescription.
In only a few cases, we will cover prescriptions filled at out-of-network pharmacies. Send us a copy of your receipt when you ask us to pay you back.
Please see Chapter 5 to learn more about out-of-network pharmacies.
4. When you pay the full cost for a prescription because you do not have your Member ID Card with you
If you do not have your Member ID Card with you, you can ask the pharmacy to call the plan or to look up your plan enrollment information.
If the pharmacy cannot get the information they need right away, you may have to pay the full cost of the prescription yourself.
Send us a copy of your receipt when you ask us to pay you back.
5. When you pay the full cost for a prescription for a drug that is not covered
You may pay the full cost of the prescription because the drug is not covered.
The drug may not be on the plan's List of Covered Drugs (Drug List), or it could have a requirement or restriction that you did not know about or do not think should apply to you. If you decide to get the drug, you may need to pay the full cost for it.
If you do not pay for the drug but think it should be covered, you can ask for a coverage decision (see Chapter 9).
If you and your doctor or other prescriber think you need the drug right away, you can ask for a fast coverage decision (see Chapter 9).
Send us a copy of your receipt when you ask us to pay you back. In some situations, we may need to get more information from your doctor or other prescriber in order to pay you back for the drug.
When you send us a request for payment, we will review your request and decide whether the service or drug should be covered. This is called making a "coverage decision." If we decide it should be covered, we will pay for the service or drug. If we deny your request for payment, you can appeal our decision.
To learn how to make an appeal, see Chapter 9.
B. Sending a request for payment
Send us your bill and proof of any payment you have made. Proof of payment can be a copy of the check you wrote or a receipt from the provider. It is a good idea to make a copy of your bill and receipts for your records. You can ask your Care Coordinator for help.
Mail your request for payment together with any bills or receipts to us at this address:
For Medical Services:
Molina Dual Options Attn: Medicare Member Services 200 Oceangate, Ste. 100 Long Beach, CA 90802

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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For Part D Prescription Services: Molina Dual Options 7050 Union Park Center Suite 200 Midvale, UT 84047
You must submit your claim to us within 365 days of the date you got the service and/or item, or within 36 months of the date you got the drug.
C. Coverage decisions
When we get your request for payment, we will make a coverage decision. This means that we will decide whether your health care or drug is covered by the plan. We will also decide the amount, if any, you have to pay for the health care or drug.
We will let you know if we need more information from you.
If we decide that the health care or drug is covered and you followed all the rules for getting it, we will pay for it. If you have already paid for the service or drug, we will mail you a check for what you paid. If you have not paid for the service or drug yet, we will pay the provider directly.
Chapter 3 explains the rules for getting your services covered. Chapter 5 explains the rules for getting your Medicare Part D prescription drugs covered.
If we decide not to pay for the service or drug, we will send you a letter explaining why not. The letter will also explain your rights to make an appeal.
To learn more about coverage decisions, see Chapter 9.
D. Appeals
If you think we made a mistake in turning down your request for payment, you can ask us to change our decision. This is called making an appeal. You can also make an appeal if you do not agree with the amount we pay.
The appeals process is a formal process with detailed procedures and important deadlines. To learn more about appeals, see Chapter 9.
If you want to make an appeal about getting paid back for a health care service, go to page 146.
If you want to make an appeal about getting paid back for a drug, go to page 147.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Chapter 8: Your rights and responsibilities
Introduction
This chapter includes your rights and responsibilities as a member of our plan. We must honor your rights. Key terms and their definitions appear in alphabetical order in the last chapter of the Member Handbook.
Table of Contents
A. Your right to get information in a way that meets your needs .................................................. 115 B. Our responsibility to ensure that you get timely access to covered services and drugs .......... 116 C. Our responsibility to protect your personal health information (PHI) ........................................ 117
C1. How we protect your PHI ....................................................................................................117 C2. You have a right to see your medical records .................................................................... 117 D. Our responsibility to give you information about the plan, its network providers, and your
covered services .......................................................................................................................123 E. Inability of network providers to bill you directly ....................................................................... 124 F. You have the right to leave the plan at any time ...................................................................... 124 G. Your right to make decisions about your health care ............................................................... 125
G1. Your right to know your treatment options and make decisions about your health care .... 125 G2. Your right to say what you want to happen if you are unable to make health care decisions
for yourself ..........................................................................................................................125 G3. What to do if your instructions are not followed .................................................................. 126 H. Your right to have a voice in how the plan is operated ............................................................. 126 I. Your right to make complaints and to ask us to reconsider decisions we have made ............. 127 I1. What to do if you believe you are being treated unfairly or you would like more information
about your rights .................................................................................................................127 J. Your responsibilities as a member of the plan .......................................................................... 127

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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A. Your right to get information in a way that meets your needs
We must tell you about the plan's options, rules, and benefits and your rights in a way that you can understand. We must tell you about your rights each year that you are in our plan.
To get information in a way that you can understand, call Member Services. Our plan has people who can answer questions in different languages.
Our plan can also give you materials for free in Spanish and in formats such as large print, braille, or audio.
You can ask that we always send you information in the language or format you need. This is called a standing request. We will keep track of your standing request so you do not need to make separate requests each time we send you information. To get this document in an alternate format or a language other than English, please contact Member Services at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week, 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. If you prefer to receive documents like this in the future in a language other than English, please contact the State at (888) 549-0820, TTY: 711, Monday ­ Friday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., local time to update your record with the preferred language. A representative can help you make or change a standing request. You can also contact your Care Coordinator for help with standing requests.
If you are having trouble getting information from our plan because of language problems or a disability and you want to file a complaint, call Medicare at 1-800-MEDICARE (1-800-633-4227). You can call 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. TTY users should call 1-877-486-2048.
You can also call Healthy Connections Medicaid directly for help with problems. Here is how to get help from Healthy Connections Medicaid:
Call the Healthy Connections Prime Advocate at 1-844-477-4632. They can help you understand the complaint process and tell you who can help. TTY users should call 711.
A. Usted tiene derecho a recibir información de una manera que cumpla con sus necesidades
Nosotros debemos informarle acerca de las opciones, normas y beneficios del plan, y sus derechos de una manera que usted pueda entender. Debemos informarle sobre sus derechos cada año que usted esté en nuestro plan.
Para obtener información de una manera que pueda entenderla, comuníquese con el Departamento de Servicios para Miembros. Nuestro plan de salud cuenta con personal que puede contestar preguntas en diferentes idiomas.
Nuestro plan también le puede ofrecer gratuitamente materiales en español y en formatos como letra grande, braille o audio. Para hacer una solicitud continua de materiales en un lenguaje diferente al inglés o en un formato alternativo ahora y en el futuro, comuníquese con el Departamento de Servicios para Miembros al (855) 735-5831, TTY al 711, los 7 días de la semana, de 8:00 a. m. a 8:00 p. m., hora local.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Usted puede pedir que le enviemos siempre información en el idioma o formato que necesite. Esto se conoce como solicitud permanente. Mantendremos un seguimiento de su solicitud permanente para que no tenga que hacer solicitudes por separado cada vez que le enviemos información. Para obtener este documento en un formato alternativo o en un idioma que no sea inglés, póngase en contacto con el Departamento de Servicios para Miembros al (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, los 7 días de la semana, de 8:00 a. m. a 8:00 p. m., hora local. Si prefiere recibir documentos como este en el futuro en un idioma que no sea inglés, comuníquese con el Estado al (888) 549-0820, TTY: 711, de lunes a viernes, de 8:00 a. m. a 5:00 p. m., hora local para actualizar su expediente con el idioma que usted prefiere. Un representante puede ayudarle a realizar o cambiar una solicitud permanente. También puede comunicarse con su coordinador de cuidados para obtener ayuda con respecto a la solicitud permanente.
Si tiene dificultades para obtener información de nuestro plan de salud debido a problemas de idioma o una discapacidad y desea presentar una queja, llame a Medicare al 1-800-MEDICARE (1-800-633-4227). Usted puede llamar las 24 horas al día, los siete días de la semana. Los usuarios de TTY deben llamar al 1-877-486-2048.
Para recibir ayuda con problemas, también puede comunicarse directamente con Healthy Connections Medicaid. Instrucciones para obtener ayuda de Healthy Connections Medicaid:
Comuníquese con el Defensor de Healthy Connections Prime al 1-844-477-4632. También le pueden ayudar a entender el proceso para presentar una queja e informarle quién le puede ayudar. Los usuarios de TTY deben llamar al 711.
B. Our responsibility to ensure that you get timely access to covered services and drugs
As a member of our plan:
You have the right to choose a primary care provider (PCP) in the plan's network. A network provider is a provider who works with the health plan. You can find more information about choosing a PCP in Chapter 3.
Call Member Services or look in the Provider and Pharmacy Directory to learn more about network providers and which doctors are accepting new patients.
You have the right to a network of primary care and specialty providers who are capable of meeting your needs such as physical location, communication, and scheduling.
You have the right to go to a women's health specialist without getting a referral. A referral is approval from your PCP to see someone that is not your PCP.
You have the right to get covered services from network providers within a reasonable amount of time.
This includes the right to get timely services from specialists.
If you cannot get services within a reasonable amount of time, we have to pay for out-of-network care.
You have the right to get emergency services or care that is urgently needed without prior approval.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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You have the right to get your prescriptions filled at any of our network pharmacies without long delays. You have the right to know when you can see an out-of-network provider. To learn about out-of-network providers, see Chapter 3. Chapter 9 tells what you can do if you think you are not getting your services or drugs within a reasonable amount of time. Chapter 9 also tells what you can do if we have denied coverage for your services or drugs and you do not agree with our decision.
C. Our responsibility to protect your personal health information (PHI)
We protect your personal health information (PHI) as required by federal and state laws. Your PHI includes the information you gave us when you enrolled in this plan. It also includes your medical records and other medical and health information. You have rights to get information and to control how your PHI is used. We give you a written notice that tells about these rights. The notice is called the "Notice of Privacy Practice." The notice also explains how we protect the privacy of your PHI.
C1. How we protect your PHI We make sure that unauthorized people do not see or change your records. In most situations, we do not give your PHI to anyone who is not providing your care or paying for your care. If we do, we are required to get written permission from you first. Written permission can be given by you or by someone who has the legal power to make decisions for you. There are certain cases when we do not have to get your written permission first. These exceptions are allowed or required by law.
We are required to release PHI to government agencies that are checking on our quality of care. We are required to give Medicare or Healthy Connections Medicaid your PHI. If Medicare or Healthy Connections Medicaid releases your PHI for research or other uses, it will be done according to federal and state laws.
C2. You have a right to see your medical records You have the right to look at your medical records and to get a copy of your records. We are allowed to charge you a fee for making a copy of your medical records. You have the right to ask us to update or correct your medical records. If you ask us to do this, we will work with your health care provider to decide whether the changes should be made. You have the right to know if and how your PHI has been shared with others. If you have questions or concerns about the privacy of your PHI, call Member Services.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Your Privacy Your privacy is important to us. We respect and protect your privacy. Molina uses and shares your information to provide you with health benefits. Molina wants to let you know how your information is used or shared. PHI means protected health information. PHI includes your name, member number, race, ethnicity, language needs, or other things that identify you. Molina wants you to know how we use or share your PHI. Why does Molina use or share our Members' PHI?
To provide for your treatment To pay for your health care To review the quality of the care you get To tell you about your choices for care To run our health plan To use or share PHI for other purposes as required or permitted by law. When does Molina need your written authorization (approval) to use or share your PHI? Molina needs your written approval to use or share your PHI for purposes not listed above. What are your privacy rights? To look at your PHI To get a copy of your PHI To amend your PHI To ask us to not use or share your PHI in certain ways To get a list of certain people or places we have shared your PHI with How does Molina protect your PHI? Molina uses many ways to protect PHI across our health plan. This includes PHI in written word, spoken word, or in a computer. Below are some ways Molina protects PHI: Molina has policies and rules to protect PHI. Molina limits who may see PHI. Only Molina staff with a need to know PHI may use it. Molina staff is trained on how to protect and secure PHI. Molina staff must agree in writing to follow the rules and policies that protect and secure PHI Molina secures PHI in our computers. PHI in our computers is kept private by using firewalls and passwords. What must Molina do by law? Keep your PHI private. Give you written information, such as this on our duties and privacy practices about your PHI.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Follow the terms of our Notice of Privacy Practices.
What can you do if you feel your privacy rights have not been protected?
Call or write Molina and complain.
Complain to the Department of Health and Human Services.
We will not hold anything against you. Your action would not change your care in any way.
The above is only a summary. Our Notice of Privacy Practices has more information about how we use and share our Members' PHI. Our Notice of Privacy Practices is in the following section of this Member Handbook. It is on our web site at www.molinahealthcare.com. You may also get a copy of our Notice of Privacy Practices by calling our Member Services Department at (855) 735-5831, 7 days a week, 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. TTY users, please call 711.
NOTICE OF PRIVACY PRACTICES
MOLINA HEALTHCARE OF SOUTH CAROLINA
THIS NOTICE DESCRIBES HOW MEDICAL INFORMATION ABOUT YOU MAY BE USED AND DISCLOSED AND HOW YOU CAN GET ACCESS TO THIS INFORMATION. PLEASE REVIEW IT CAREFULLY.
Molina Healthcare of South Carolina ("Molina Healthcare", "Molina", "we" or "our") uses and shares protected health information about you to provide your health benefits as a Molina Duals Options member. We use and share your information to carry out treatment, payment and health care operations. We also use and share your information for other reasons as allowed and required by law. We have the duty to keep your health information private and to follow the terms of this Notice. The effective date of this Notice is December 1, 2014
PHI means protected health information. PHI is health information that includes your name, Member number or other identifiers, and is used or shared by Molina.
Why does Molina use or share your PHI?
We use or share your PHI to provide you with health care benefits. Your PHI is used or shared for treatment, payment, and health care operations.
For Treatment
Molina may use or share your PHI to give you, or arrange for, your medical care. This treatment also includes referrals between your doctors or other health care providers. For example, we may share information about your health condition with a specialist. This helps the specialist talk about your treatment with your doctor.
For Payment
Molina may use or share PHI to make decisions on payment. This may include claims, approvals for treatment, and decisions about medical need. Your name, your condition, your treatment, and supplies given may be written on the bill. For example, we may let a doctor know that you have our benefits. We would also tell the doctor the amount of the bill that we would pay.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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For Health Care Operations
Molina may use or share PHI about you to run our health plan. For example, we may use information from your claim to let you know about a health program that could help you. We may also use or share your PHI to solve Member concerns. Your PHI may also be used to see that claims are paid right.
Health care operations involve many daily business needs. It includes but is not limited to, the following:
Improving quality;
Actions in health programs to help Members with certain conditions (such as asthma);
Conducting or arranging for medical review;
Legal services, including fraud and abuse detection and prosecution programs;
Actions to help us obey laws;
Address Member needs, including solving complaints and grievances.
We will share your PHI with other companies ("business associates") that perform different kinds of activities for our health plan. We may also use your PHI to give you reminders about your appointments. We may use your PHI to give you information about other treatment, or other health- related benefits and services.
When can Molina use or share your PHI without getting written authorization (approval) from you?
In addition to treatment, payment and health care operations, the law allows or requires Molina to use and share your PHI for several other purposes including the following:
Required by law
We will use or share information about you as required by law. We will share your PHI when required by the Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). This may be for a court case, other legal review, or when required for law enforcement purposes.
Public Health
Your PHI may be used or shared for public health activities. This may include helping public health agencies to prevent or control disease.
Health Care Oversight
Your PHI may be used or shared with government agencies. They may need your PHI for audits.
Research
Your PHI may be used or shared for research in certain cases, such as when approved by a privacy or institutional review board.
Legal or Administrative Proceedings
Your PHI may be used or shared for legal proceedings, such as in response to a court order.
Law Enforcement
Your PHI may be used or shared with police for law enforcement purposes, such as to help find a suspect, witness or missing person.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Health and Safety
Your PHI may be shared to prevent a serious threat to public health or safety.
Government Functions
Your PHI may be shared with the government for special functions. An example would be to protect the President.
Victims of Abuse, Neglect or Domestic Violence
Your PHI may be shared with legal authorities if we believe that a person is a victim of abuse or neglect.
Workers Compensation
Your PHI may be used or shared to obey Workers Compensation laws.
Other Disclosures
Your PHI may be shared with funeral directors or coroners to help them do their jobs.
When does Molina need your written authorization (approval) to use or share your PHI?
Molina needs your written approval to use or share your PHI for a purpose other than those listed in this Notice. Molina needs your authorization before we disclose your PHI for the following: (1) most uses and disclosures of psychotherapy notes; (2) uses and disclosures for marketing purposes; and (3) uses and disclosures that involve the sale of PHI. You may cancel a written approval that you have given us. Your cancellation will not apply to actions already taken by us because of the approval you already gave to us.
What are your health information rights?
You have the right to:
Request Restrictions on PHI Uses or Disclosures (Sharing of Your PHI)
You may ask us not to share your PHI to carry out treatment, payment or health care operations. You may also ask us not to share your PHI with family, friends or other persons you name who are involved in your health care. However, we are not required to agree to your request. You will need to make your request in writing. You may use Molina's form to make your request.
Request Confidential Communications of PHI
You may ask Molina to give you your PHI in a certain way or at a certain place to help keep your PHI private. We will follow reasonable requests, if you tell us how sharing all or a part of that PHI could put your life at risk. You will need to make your request in writing. You may use Molina's form to make your request.
Review and Copy Your PHI
You have a right to review and get a copy of your PHI held by us. This may include records used in making coverage, claims and other decisions as a Molina Member. You will need to make your request in writing. You may use Molina's form to make your request. We may charge you a reasonable fee for copying and mailing the records. In certain cases we may deny the request. Important Note: We do not have complete copies of your medical records. If you want to look at, get a copy of, or change your medical records, please contact your doctor or clinic.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Amend Your PHI
You may ask that we amend (change) your PHI. This involves only those records kept by us about you as a Member. You will need to make your request in writing. You may use Molina's form to make your request. You may file a letter disagreeing with us if we deny the request.
Receive an Accounting of PHI Disclosures (Sharing of Your PHI)
You may ask that we give you a list of certain parties that we shared your PHI with during the six years prior to the date of your request. The list will not include PHI shared as follows:
for treatment, payment or health care operations;
to persons about their own PHI;
sharing done with your authorization;
incident to a use or disclosure otherwise permitted or required under applicable law;
PHI released in the interest of national security or for intelligence purposes; or
as part of a limited data set in accordance with applicable law.
We will charge a reasonable fee for each list if you ask for this list more than once in a 12- month period. You will need to make your request in writing. You may use Molina's form to make your request.
You may make any of the requests listed above, or may get a paper copy of this Notice. Please call Molina Member Services at (855) 735-5831, 7 days a week, 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. TTY users, please call 711.
What can you do if your rights have not been protected?
You may complain to Molina and to the Department of Health and Human Services if you believe your privacy rights have been violated. We will not do anything against you for filing a complaint. Your care and benefits will not change in any way.
You may file a complaint with us at: Molina Healthcare of South Carolina Attention: Director of Member Services P.O. Box 40309 North Charleston, South Carolina 29423-0309
Phone: (855) 735-5831, 7 days a week, 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. TTY users, call 711.
You may file a complaint with the Secretary of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services at:
U.S. Department of Health & Human Services Office for Civil Rights - Centralized Case Management Operations 200 Independence Ave., S.W. Suite 515F, HHH Building Washington, D.C. 20201
(800) 368-1019; (800) 537-7697 (TTY);
(202) 619-3818 (FAX)

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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What are the duties of Molina?
Molina is required to:
Keep your PHI private;
Give you written information such as this on our duties and privacy practices about your PHI;
Provide you with a notice in the event of any breach of your unsecured PHI;
Not use or disclose your genetic information for underwriting purposes;
Follow the terms of this Notice.
This Notice is Subject to Change
Molina reserves the right to change its information practices and terms of this Notice at any time. If we do, the new terms and practices will then apply to all PHI we keep. If we make any material changes, Molina will post the revised Notice on our web site and send the revised Notice, or information about the material change and how to obtain the revised Notice, in our next annual mailing to our members then covered by Molina. It is on our website at www.molinahealthcare. com/duals.
Contact Information
If you have any questions, please contact the following office: Molina Healthcare of South Carolina Attention: Director of Member Services P.O. Box 40309 North Charleston, South Carolina 29423-0309
Phone: (855) 735-5831, 7 days a week, 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. TTY users, call 711.
D. Our responsibility to give you information about the plan, its network providers, and your covered services
As a member of Molina Dual Options, you have the right to get information from us. If you do not speak English, we have free interpreter services to answer any questions you may have about our health plan. To get an interpreter, just call us at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week, 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. This is a free service. We also have written materials available in Spanish. We can also give you information in large print, braille, or audio. Please contact Member Services at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week, 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time to request materials in a language other than English or in an alternate format.
If you want information about any of the following, call Member Services:
How to choose or change plans
Our plan, including:
Financial information
How the plan has been rated by plan members
The number of appeals made by members

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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How to leave the plan Our network providers and our network pharmacies, including:
How to choose or change primary care providers Qualifications of our network providers and pharmacies How we pay providers in our network For a list of providers and pharmacies in the plan's network, see the Provider and Pharmacy Directory. For more detailed information about our providers or pharmacies, call Member Services, or visit our website listed at the bottom of the page. Covered services and drugs and about rules you must follow, including: Services and drugs covered by the plan Limits to your coverage and drugs Rules you must follow to get covered services and drugs Why something is not covered and what you can do about it, including asking us to: Put in writing why something is not covered Change a decision we made Pay for a bill you got As a member of Molina Dual Options, you have the right to get timely information about any changes to the plan. This includes getting written information listed in your orientation materials once per year and being notified of any major changes in your orientation materials 30 days before those changes happen.
E. Inability of network providers to bill you directly
You have financial rights. Doctors, hospitals, and other providers in our network cannot make you pay for covered services. They also cannot charge you if we pay for less than the provider charged us. To learn what to do if a network provider tries to charge you for covered services, see Chapter 7. You have the right to be protected from paying any fees that Molina Dual Options is responsible for. You have the right to not be charged any cost sharing (copays and deductibles) for Medicare Parts A and B services.
F. You have the right to leave the plan at any time
No one can make you stay in our plan if you do not want to. You have the right to get most of your health care services through Original Medicare or a Medicare Advantage plan. You can get your Medicare Part D prescription drug benefits from a prescription drug plan or from a Medicare Advantage plan.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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If you leave the plan, you will get your Healthy Connections Medicaid benefits the way you used to before you joined. They will be offered through Healthy Connections Medicaid fee-for-service.
See Chapter 10 for more information about when you can join a new Medicare Advantage or prescription drug benefit plan.
G. Your right to make decisions about your health care
G1. Your right to know your treatment options and make decisions about your health care
You have the right to get full information from your doctors and other health care providers when you get services. Your providers must explain your condition and your treatment choices in a way that you can understand. You have the right to:
Know your health status. You have the right to have complete and accurate information about your health status.
Know your choices. You have the right to be told about all the kinds of treatment, regardless of cost or benefit coverage.
Know the risks. You have the right to be told about any risks involved. You must be told in advance if any service or treatment is part of a research experiment. You have the right to refuse experimental treatments.
Get a second opinion. You have the right to see another doctor before deciding on treatment.
Say "no." You have the right to refuse any treatment. This includes the right to leave a hospital or other medical facility, even if your doctor advises you not to. You also have the right to stop taking a drug. If you refuse treatment or stop taking a drug, you will not be dropped from the plan. However, if you refuse treatment or stop taking a drug, you accept full responsibility for what happens to you.
Ask us to explain why a provider denied care. You have the right to get an explanation from us if a provider has denied care that you believe you should get.
Ask us to cover a service or drug that was denied or is usually not covered. This is called a coverage decision. Chapter 9 tells how to ask the plan for a coverage decision.
Be encouraged to involve caregivers and family members in treatment discussions and decisions.
Be told in advance, in writing, if you are transferred to another treatment location and the reason for that transfer.
G2. Your right to say what you want to happen if you are unable to make health care decisions for yourself
You may call Molina Dual Options to get information regarding State law on Advance Directives, and changes to Advance Directive laws. Molina Dual Options updates Advanced Directive information no later than ninety (90) calendar days after receiving notice of changes to State laws.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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For more information, call Molina Dual Options Member Services toll-free at (855) 735-5831, 7 days a week, 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. If you are deaf or hard of hearing, call TTY: 711.
Sometimes people are unable to make health care decisions for themselves. Before that happens to you, you can:
Fill out a written form to give someone the right to make health care decisions for you.
Give your doctors written instructions about how you want them to handle your health care if you become unable to make decisions for yourself.
The legal document that you can use to give your directions is called an advance directive. There are different types of advance directives and different names for them. Examples are a living will and a power of attorney for health care.
You do not have to use an advance directive, but you can if you want to. Here is what to do:
Get the form. You can get a form from your doctor, your Care Coordinator, a lawyer, a legal services agency, or a social worker. Organizations that give people information about Medicare or Healthy Connections Medicaid, such as I-CARE (South Carolina's State Health Insurance Program, or SHIP), may also have advance directive forms. You can also contact Member Services to ask for the forms.
Fill it out and sign the form. The form is a legal document. You should consider having a lawyer help you prepare it.
Give copies to people who need to know about it. You should give a copy of the form to your doctor. You should also give a copy to the person you name as the one to make decisions for you. You may also want to give copies to close friends or family members. Be sure to keep a copy at home. If you are going to be hospitalized and you have signed an advance directive, take a copy of it to the hospital.
The hospital will ask you whether you have signed an advance directive form and whether you have it with you.
If you have not signed an advance directive form, the hospital has forms available and will ask if you want to sign one.
Remember, it is your choice to fill out an advance directive or not.
G3. What to do if your instructions are not followed
If you have signed an advance directive, and you believe that a doctor or hospital did not follow the instructions in it, you may file a complaint with your Care Coordinator or the Healthy Connections Prime Advocate.
H. Your right to have a voice in how the plan is operated
If you have feedback or recommendations on how the plan is operated or the member rights responsibilities policy, please call Member Services at the number at the bottom of the page to let us know.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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I. Your right to make complaints and to ask us to reconsider decisions we have made
Chapter 9 tells what you can do if you have any problems or concerns about your covered services or care. For example, you could ask us to make a coverage decision, make an appeal to us to change a coverage decision, or make a complaint.
You have the right to get information about appeals and complaints that other members have filed against our plan. To get this information, call Member Services.
I1. What to do if you believe you are being treated unfairly or you would like more information about your rights
If you believe you have been treated unfairly - and it is not about discrimination for the reasons listed in Chapter 11 of this handbook - or you would like more information about your rights, you can get help by calling:
Member Services.
I-CARE, the State Health Insurance Assistance Program (SHIP). For details about this organization and how to contact it, see Chapter 2.
The Healthy Connections Prime Advocate. For details about this organization and how to contact it, see Chapter 2.
Medicare at 1-800-MEDICARE (1-800-633-4227), 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. TTY users should call 1-877-486-2048. (You can also read or download "Medicare Rights & Protections," found on the Medicare website at www.medicare.gov/Pubs/pdf/11534-Medicare-Rights-andProtections.pdf.)
Healthy Connections Medicaid at 1-888-549-0820, Monday through Friday from 8:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. TTY users should call 1-888-842-3620.
J. Your responsibilities as a member of the plan
As a member of the plan, you have a responsibility to do the things that are listed below. If you have any questions, call Member Services.
Read the Member Handbook to learn what is covered and what rules you need to follow to get covered services and drugs. For details about your:
Covered services, see Chapters 3 and 4.Those chapters tell you what is covered, what is not covered, what rules you need to follow, and what you pay.
Covered drugs, see Chapters 5 and 6.
Participate in an initial health screen upon enrollment in the plan. For more information, see Chapter 1 or call Member Services.
Participate in a comprehensive assessment within the first 60 or 90 days of enrollment. For more information, see Chapter 1 or call Member Services.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Tell us about any other health or prescription drug coverage you have. We are required to make sure you are using all of your coverage options when you get health care. Please call Member Services if you have other coverage.
Tell your doctor and other health care providers that you are enrolled in our plan. Show your Member ID Card whenever you get services or drugs.
Help your doctors and other health care providers give you the best care.
Give them the information they need about you and your health. Learn as much as you can about your health problems and participate in developing treatment plans with your provider. Follow the treatment plans and instructions that you and your providers agree on.
Make sure your doctors and other providers know about all of the drugs you are taking. This includes prescription drugs, over-the-counter drugs, vitamins, and supplements.
If you have any questions, be sure to ask. Your doctors and other providers must explain things in a way you can understand. If you ask a question and you do not understand the answer, ask again.
Be considerate. We expect all our members to respect the rights of other patients. We also expect you to act with respect in your doctor's office, hospitals, and other providers' offices.
Pay what you owe. As a plan member, you are responsible for these payments:
Medicare Part A and Medicare Part B premiums. For almost all Molina Dual Options members, Healthy Connections Medicaid pays for your Part A premium and for your Part B premium.
If you get any services or drugs that are not covered by our plan, you must pay the full cost.
If you disagree with our decision to not cover a service or drug, you can make an appeal. Please see Chapter 9 to learn how to make an appeal.
Tell us if you move. If you are going to move, it is important to tell us right away. Call Member Services.
If you move outside of our service area, you cannot stay in this plan. Only people who live in our service area can get Molina Dual Options. Chapter 1 tells about our service area.
We can help you figure out whether you are moving outside our service area. During a special enrollment period, you can switch to Original Medicare or enroll in a Medicare health or prescription drug plan in your new location. We can let you know if we have a plan in your new area.
Also, be sure to let Medicare and Healthy Connections Medicaid know your new address when you move. See Chapter 2 for phone numbers for Medicare and Healthy Connections Medicaid.
If you move within our service area, we still need to know. We need to keep your membership record up to date and know how to contact you.
Pay estate recovery amounts after your death
Estate recovery is the amount that certain members owe Healthy Connections Medicaid after their death.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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You will not owe our plan any money, but you may owe money to Healthy Connections Medicaid for services you got before you joined our plan.
The plan is not allowed to collect estate recoveries after your death, but we will notify Healthy Connections Medicaid that you have died.
If you owe Healthy Connections Medicaid money when you die, the state may collect estate recoveries from money or property you leave behind.
Call Member Services for help if you have questions or concerns.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Chapter 9: What to do if you have a problem or complaint (coverage decisions, appeals, complaints)
Introduction
This chapter has information about your rights. Read this chapter to find out what to do if: You have a problem with or complaint about your plan. You need a service, item, or medication that your plan has said it will not pay for. You disagree with a decision that your plan has made about your care. You think your covered services are ending too soon.
If you have a problem or concern, you only need to read the parts of this chapter that apply to your situation. This chapter is broken into different sections to help you easily find what you are looking for.
If you are facing a problem with your health or long-term services and supports
You should get the health care, drugs, and long-term services and supports that your doctor and other providers determine are necessary for your care as a part of your care plan. If you are having a problem with your care, you can call the Healthy Connections Prime Advocate at 1-844-477-4632 for help. TTY users should call 711. This call is free. This chapter explains the different options you have for different problems and complaints, but you can always call the Healthy Connections Prime Advocate to help guide you through your problem. Healthy Connections Prime Advocate is the ombudsman for South Carolina. For additional resources to address your concerns and ways to contact them, see Chapter 2 for more information on ombudsman programs.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Table of Contents
A. What to do if you have a problem ............................................................................................. 133 A1. About the legal terms ..........................................................................................................133
B. Where to call for help ................................................................................................................133 B1. Where to get more information and help ............................................................................ 133
C. Problems with your benefits .....................................................................................................134 C1. Using the process for coverage decisions and appeals or for making a complaint ............ 134
D. Coverage decisions and appeals ............................................................................................. 135 D1. Overview of coverage decisions and appeals .................................................................... 135 D2. Getting help with coverage decisions and appeals ............................................................ 135 D3. Using the section of this chapter that will help you ............................................................. 136
E. Problems about services, items, and drugs (not Part D drugs) ................................................ 137 E1. When to use this section .....................................................................................................137 E2. Asking for a coverage decision ........................................................................................... 138 E3. Level 1 Appeal for services, items, and drugs (not Part D drugs) ...................................... 139 E4. Level 2 Appeal for services, items, and drugs (not Part D drugs) ...................................... 143 E5. Payment problems ..............................................................................................................146
F. Part D drugs ..............................................................................................................................147 F1. What to do if you have problems getting a Part D drug or you want us to pay you back for a Part D drug .................................................................................................................147 F2. What an exception is ..........................................................................................................148 F3. Important things to know about asking for exceptions ........................................................ 149 F4. How to ask for a coverage decision about a Part D drug or reimbursement for a Part D drug, including an exception ...............................................................................................150 F5. Level 1 Appeal for Part D drugs .......................................................................................... 152 F6. Level 2 Appeal for Part D drugs .......................................................................................... 154

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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G. Asking us to cover a longer hospital stay ................................................................................. 155 G1. Learning about your Medicare rights .................................................................................. 155 G2. Level 1 Appeal to change your hospital discharge date ..................................................... 156 G3. Level 2 Appeal to change your hospital discharge date ..................................................... 158 G4. What happens if you miss an appeal deadline ................................................................... 159
H. What to do if you think your home health care, skilled nursing care, or Comprehensive Outpatient Rehabilitation Facility (CORF) services are ending too soon ................................. 160
H1. We will tell you in advance when your coverage will be ending ......................................... 161 H2. Level 1 Appeal to continue your care ................................................................................. 161 H3. Level 2 Appeal to continue your care ................................................................................. 163 H4. What if you miss the deadline for making your Level 1 Appeal? ........................................ 164 I. Taking your appeal beyond Level 2 .......................................................................................... 165 I1. Next steps for Medicare services and items ....................................................................... 165 I2. Next steps for Healthy Connections Medicaid services and items ..................................... 165 J. How to make a complaint .........................................................................................................166 J1. Internal complaints ..............................................................................................................167 J2. External complaints ............................................................................................................168

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Chapter 9: What to do if you have a problem or complaint (coverage decisions, appeals, complaints)

A. What to do if you have a problem
This chapter tells you what to do if you have a problem with your plan or with your services or payment. Medicare and Healthy Connections Medicaid approved these processes. Each process has a set of rules, procedures, and deadlines that must be followed by us and by you.
A1. About the legal terms
There are difficult legal terms for some of the rules and deadlines in this chapter. Many of these terms can be hard to understand, so we have used simpler words in place of certain legal terms. We use abbreviations as little as possible.
For example, we will say:
"Making a complaint" rather than "filing a grievance"
"Coverage decision" rather than "organization determination," "benefit determination," "at-risk determination," or "coverage determination"
"Fast coverage decision" rather than "expedited determination"
Knowing the proper legal terms may help you communicate more clearly, so we provide those too.
B. Where to call for help
B1. Where to get more information and help
Sometimes it can be confusing to start or follow the process for dealing with a problem. This can be especially true if you do not feel well or have limited energy. Other times, you may not have the knowledge you need to take the next step.
You can get help from the Healthy Connections Prime Advocate
If you need help, you can always call the Healthy Connections Prime Advocate. The Healthy Connections Prime Advocate is an ombudsman program that can answer your questions and help you understand what to do to handle your problem. The Healthy Connections Prime Advocate is not connected with us or any insurance company or health plan. They can help you understand which process to use. The phone number for the Healthy Connections Prime Advocate is 1-844-477-4632. TTY users should call 711. This call is free and so are the services. See Chapter 2 for more information on ombudsman programs.
You can get help from the State Health Insurance Assistance Program (SHIP)
You can also call your State Health Insurance Assistance Program (SHIP). SHIP counselors can answer your questions and help you understand what to do to handle your problem. The SHIP is not connected with us or with any insurance company or health plan. The SHIP has trained counselors in every state, and services are free. In South Carolina, the SHIP is known as I-CARE, which stands for Insurance Counseling Assistance and Referrals for Elders. The phone number for I-CARE is 1-800-868-9095. TTY users should call 711. These calls are free and so are the services.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Getting help from Medicare You can call Medicare directly for help with problems. Here are two ways to get help from Medicare:
Call 1-800-MEDICARE (1-800-633-4227), 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. TTY: 1-877-486-2048. The call is free. Visit the Medicare website (www.medicare.gov). Getting help from Healthy Connections Medicaid You can call Healthy Connections Medicaid directly for help with problems. Here are some ways to get help from Healthy Connections Medicaid: Call Healthy Connections Medicaid at 1-888-549-0820, from Monday to Friday from 8:00 am to 6:00 pm. TTY: 1-888-842-3620. The call is free. Visit the Healthy Connections Medicaid website (www.scdhhs.gov). Getting help from other resources You can get help from other resources such as: Protection & Advocacy for People with Disabilities (P&A) toll free at 1-866-275-7273. TTY: 1-866-232-4525. South Carolina Legal Services toll free at 1-888-346-5592. Lt. Governor's Office on Aging toll free at 1-800-868-9095

C. Problems with your benefits
C1. Using the process for coverage decisions and appeals or for making a complaint If you have a problem or concern, you only need to read the parts of this chapter that apply to your situation. The chart below will help you find the right section of this chapter for problems or complaints.
Is your problem or concern about your benefits or coverage? (This includes problems about whether particular medical care or prescription drugs are covered or not, the way in which they are covered, and problems related to payment for medical care or prescription drugs.)

Yes. My problem is about benefits or coverage.
Go to Section D: "Coverage decisions and appeals" on page 135.

No. My problem is not about
benefits or coverage.
Skip ahead to Section J: "How to make a complaint" on page 166.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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D. Coverage decisions and appeals
D1. Overview of coverage decisions and appeals
The process for asking for coverage decisions and making appeals deals with problems related to your benefits and coverage. It also includes problems with payment.
What is a coverage decision?
A coverage decision is an initial decision we make about your benefits and coverage or about the amount we will pay for your medical services, items, or drugs. We are making a coverage decision whenever we decide what is covered for you and how much we pay.
If you or your doctor are not sure if a service, item, or drug is covered by Medicare or Healthy Connections Medicaid, either of you can ask for a coverage decision before the doctor gives the service, item, or drug.
What is an appeal?
An appeal is a formal way of asking us to review our decision and change it if you think we made a mistake. For example, we might decide that a service, item, or drug that you want is not covered or is no longer covered by Medicare or Healthy Connections Medicaid. If you or your doctor disagree with our decision, you can appeal.
D2. Getting help with coverage decisions and appeals
Who can I call for help asking for coverage decisions or making an appeal?
You can ask any of these people for help:
Call Member Services at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week, 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time.
Call the Healthy Connections Prime Advocate for free help. The Healthy Connections Prime Advocate helps people enrolled in Healthy Connections Prime with service or billing problems. The phone number is 1-844-477-4632. TTY users should call 711.
Call the State Health Insurance Assistance Program (SHIP), known as I-CARE in South Carolina, for free help. The SHIP is an independent organization. It is not connected with this plan. The phone number is 1-800-868-9095. TTY users should call 711.
Talk to your doctor or other provider. Your doctor or other provider can ask for a coverage decision or appeal on your behalf.
Talk to a friend or family member and ask him or her to act for you. You can name another person to act for you as your "representative" to ask for a coverage decision or make an appeal.
If you want a friend, relative, or other person to be your representative, call Member Services and ask for the "Appointment of Representative" form. You can also get the form by visiting www.cms.gov/Medicare/CMS-Forms/CMS-Forms/downloads/cms1696.pdf or on our website at www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals. The form gives the person permission to act for you. You must give us a copy of the signed form.
You also have the right to ask a lawyer to act for you. You may call your own lawyer, or get the name of a lawyer from the local bar association or other referral service. Some legal groups

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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will give you free legal services if you qualify. If you want a lawyer to represent you, you will need to fill out the Appointment of Representative form.
However, you do not have to have a lawyer to ask for any kind of coverage decision or to make an appeal.
D3. Using the section of this chapter that will help you
There are four different types of situations that involve coverage decisions and appeals. Each situation has different rules and deadlines. We separate this chapter into different sections to help you find the rules you need to follow. You only need to read the section that applies to your problem:
Section E on page 137 gives you information if you have problems about services, items, and drugs (but not Part D drugs). For example, use this section if:
You are not getting medical care you want, and you believe our plan covers this care.
We did not approve services, items, or drugs that your doctor wants to give you, and you believe this care should be covered.
NOTE: Only use Section E if these are drugs not covered by Part D. Drugs in the List of Covered Drugs, also known as the Drug List, with a (*) are not covered by Part D. See Section F on page 147 for Part D drug appeals.
You got medical care or services you think should be covered, but we are not paying for this care.
You got and paid for medical services or items you thought were covered, and you want to ask us to pay you back.
You are being told that coverage for care you have been getting will be reduced or stopped, and you disagree with our decision.
NOTE: If the coverage that will be stopped is for hospital care, home health care, skilled nursing facility care, or Comprehensive Outpatient Rehabilitation Facility (CORF) services, you need to read a separate section of this chapter because special rules apply to these types of care. See Sections G and H on pages 155 and 160.
Section F on page 147 gives you information about Part D drugs. For example, use this section if:
You want to ask us to make an exception to cover a Part D drug that is not on our Drug List.
You want to ask us to waive limits on the amount of the drug you can get.
You want to ask us to cover a drug that requires prior approval.
We did not approve your request or exception, and you or your doctor or other prescriber thinks we should have.
You want to ask us to pay for a prescription drug you already bought. (This is asking for a coverage decision about payment.)
Section G on page 155 gives you information on how to ask us to cover a longer inpatient hospital stay if you think the doctor is discharging you too soon. Use this section if:

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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You are in the hospital and think the doctor asked you to leave the hospital too soon. Section H on page 160 gives you information if you think your home health care, skilled nursing facility care, and Comprehensive Outpatient Rehabilitation Facility (CORF) services are ending too soon. If you're not sure which section you should use, please call Member Services at the number at the bottom of the page. If you need other help or information, please call the Healthy Connections Prime Advocate at 1-844-477-4632. TTY users should call 711.
E. Problems about services, items, and drugs (not Part D drugs)
E1. When to use this section This section is about what to do if you have problems with your benefits for your medical services, behavioral health services, and long-term services and supports (LTSS). You can also use this section for problems with drugs that are not covered by Part D, including Medicare Part B drugs. Drugs in the Drug List with a (*) are not covered by Part D. Use Section F for Part D drug appeals. This section tells what you can do if you are in any of the five following situations: 1. You think we cover medical services, behavioral health services, or long-term services and supports
(LTSS) you need but are not getting. What you can do: You can ask us to make a coverage decision. Go to Section E2 on page 138 for information on asking for a coverage decision.
2. We did not approve care your doctor wants to give you, and you think we should have. What you can do: You can appeal our decision to not approve the care. Go to Section E3 on page 139 for information on making an appeal.
3. You got services or items that you think we cover, but we will not pay. What you can do: You can appeal our decision not to pay. Go to Section E3 on page 139 for information on making an appeal.
4. You got and paid for services or items you thought were covered, and you want us to reimburse you for the services or items. What you can do: You can ask us to pay you back. Go to Section E5 on page 146 for information on asking us for payment.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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5. We reduced or stopped your coverage for a certain service, and you disagree with our decision. What you can do: You can appeal our decision to reduce or stop the service. Go to Section E3 on page 139 for information on making an appeal. NOTE: If the coverage that will be stopped is for hospital care, home health care, skilled nursing facility care, or Comprehensive Outpatient Rehabilitation Facility (CORF) services, special rules apply. Read Sections G and H on pages 155 and 160 to find out more.
E2. Asking for a coverage decision How to ask for a coverage decision to get medical services, behavioral health services or long-term services and supports (LTSS) To ask for a coverage decision, call, write, or fax us, or ask your representative or doctor to ask us for a decision.
You can call us at: (855) 735-5831, 7 days a week, 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. TTY: 711. You can fax us at: (866) 423-3889 You can write to us at: Molina Dual Options Attn: Health Care Service Department P.O. Box 40309 North Charleston, SC 29423-0309 How long does it take to get a coverage decision? It usually takes up to 14 calendar days after you asked unless your request is for a Medicare Part B prescription drug. If your request is for a Medicare Part B prescription drug, we will give you a decision no more than 72 hours after we receive your request. If we don't give you our decision within 14 calendar days (or 72 hours for a Medicare Part B prescription drug), you can appeal. Sometimes we need more time, and we will send you a letter telling you that we need to take up to 14 more calendar days. The letter will explain why more time is needed. We can't take extra time to give you a decision if your request is for a Medicare Part B prescription drug. Can I get a coverage decision faster? Yes. If you need a response faster because of your health, ask us to make a "fast coverage decision." If we approve the request, we will notify you of our decision within 72 hours (or within 24 hours for a Medicare Part B prescription drug).
The legal term for "fast coverage decision" is "expedited determination."
However, sometimes we need more time, and we will send you a letter telling you that we need to take up to 14 more calendar days. The letter will explain why more time is needed. We can't take extra time to give you a decision if your request is for a Medicare Part B prescription drug.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Asking for a fast coverage decision:
If you request a fast coverage decision, start by calling or faxing our plan to ask us to cover the care you want.
You can call us at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week, 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time or fax us at (866) 432-3889. For details on how to contact us, go to Chapter 2.
You can also have your doctor or your representative call us.
Here are the rules for asking for a fast coverage decision:
You must meet the following two requirements to get a fast coverage decision:
1. You can get a fast coverage decision only if you are asking for coverage for care or an item you have not yet received. (You cannot ask fora fast coverage decision if your request is about payment for medical care or an item you already got.)
2. You can get a fast coverage decision only if the standard 14 calendar day deadline (or the 72 hour deadline for Medicare Part B prescription drugs) could cause serious harm to your health or hurt your ability to function.
If your doctor says that you need a fast coverage decision, we will automatically give you one.
If you ask for a fast coverage decision without your doctor's support, we will decide if you get a fast coverage decision.
If we decide that your health does not meet the requirements for a fast coverage decision, we will send you a letter. We will also use the standard 14 calendar day deadline (or the 72 hour deadline for Medicare Part B prescription drugs) instead.
This letter will tell you that if your doctor asks for the fast coverage decision, we will automatically give a fast coverage decision.
The letter will also tell how you can file a "fast complaint" about our decision to give you a standard coverage decision instead of a fast coverage decision. For more information about the process for making complaints, including fast complaints, see Section J on page 166.
If the coverage decision is No, how will I find out?
If the answer is No, we will send you a letter telling you our reasons for saying No.
If we say No, you have the right to ask us to change this decision by making an appeal. Making an appeal means asking us to review our decision to deny coverage.
If you decide to make an appeal, it means you are going on to Level 1 of the appeals process (read the next section for more information).
E3. Level 1 Appeal for services, items, and drugs (not Part D drugs)
What is an Appeal?
An appeal is a formal way of asking us to review our decision and change it if you think we made a mistake. If you or your doctor or other provider disagree with our decision, you can appeal. In all cases, you must start your appeal at Level 1.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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If you need help during the appeals process, you can call the Healthy Connections Prime Advocate at 1-844-477-4632 (TTY users should call 711). The Healthy Connections Prime Advocate is not connected with us or with any insurance company or health plan.

What is a Level 1 Appeal?

A Level 1 Appeal is the first appeal to our plan. We will review your coverage decision to see if it is correct. The reviewer will be someone who did not make the original coverage decision. When we complete the review, we will give you our decision in writing.
If we tell you after our review that the service or item is not covered, your case can go to a Level 2 Appeal.

At a glance: How to make a Level 1 Appeal
You, your doctor, or your representative may put your request in writing and mail or fax it to us.
Ask within 60 calendar days of the decision you are appealing. If you miss the deadline for a good reason, you may still appeal.

How do I make a Level 1 Appeal?
To start your appeal, you, your doctor, other provider, or your representative must contact us. You can call us at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week, 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. For additional details on how to reach us for appeals, see Chapter 2

If you appeal because we told you that a service you currently get will be changed or stopped, you have fewer days to appeal if you want to keep getting that service while your appeal is processing.
Keep reading this section to learn about what deadline applies to your appeal.

You can ask us for a "standard appeal" or a "fast appeal."

If you are asking for a standard appeal or fast appeal, make your appeal in writing or call us. You can submit a request to the following address:

Molina Dual Options Attn: Grievance and Appeals Dept. P.O. Box 22816 Long Beach, CA 90801-9977 Medicare.AppealsandGrievances@MolinaHealthCare.com

You may also ask for an appeal by calling us at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week, 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time

The legal term for "fast appeal" is "expedited reconsideration."

Can someone else make the appeal for me?
Yes. Your doctor or other provider can make the appeal for you. Also, someone besides your doctor or other provider can make the appeal for you, but first you must complete an Appointment of Representative form. The form gives the other person permission to act for you.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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To get an Appointment of Representative form, call Member Services and ask for one, or visit www.cms. gov/Medicare/CMS-Forms/CMS-Forms/downloads/cms1696.pdf or our website at www.MolinaHealthcare. com/Duals.
If the appeal comes from someone besides you or your doctor or other provider, we must get the completed Appointment of Representative form before we can review the appeal.
How much time do I have to make an appeal?
You must ask for an appeal within 60 calendar days from the date on the letter we sent to tell you our decision.
If you miss this deadline and have a good reason for missing it, we may give you more time to make your appeal. Examples of a good reason are: you had a serious illness, or we gave you the wrong information about the deadline for requesting an appeal. You should explain the reason your appeal is late when yo make your appeal.
NOTE: If you appeal because we told you that a service you currently get will be changed or stopped, you have fewer days to appeal if you want to keep getting that service while your appeal is processing. Read "Will my benefits continue during Level 1 appeals" on page 161 for more information.
Can I get a copy of my case file?
Yes. Ask us for a free copy by calling Member Services at the number at the bottom of the page.
Can my doctor give you more information about my appeal?
Yes, you and your doctor may give us more information to support your appeal.
How will we make the appeal decision?
We take a careful look at all of the information about your request for coverage of medical care. Then, we check to see if we were following all the rules when we said No to your request. The reviewer will be someone who did not make the original decision.
If we need more information, we may ask you or your doctor for it.
When will I hear about a "standard" appeal decision?
We must give you our answer within 15 calendar days after we get your appeal (or within 7 calendar days after we get your appeal for a Medicare Part B prescription drug). We will give you our decision sooner if your health condition requires us to.
However, if you ask for more time or if we need to gather more information, we can take up to 14 more calendar days. If we decide we need to take extra days to make the decision, we will send you a letter that explains why we need more time. We can't take extra time to make a decision if your appeal is for a Medicare Part B prescription drug.
If you believe we should not take extra days, you can file a "fast complaint" about our decision to take extra days. When you file a fast complaint, we will give you an answer to your complaint within 24 hours. For more information about the process for making complaints, including fast complaints, see Section J on page 166.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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If we do not give you an answer to your appeal within 15 calendar days (or within 7 calendar days after we get your appeal for a Medicare Part B prescription drug) or by the end of the extra days (if we took them), we will automatically send your case to Level 2 of the appeals process if your problem is about coverage of a Medicare service or item. You will be notified when this happens. If your problem is about coverage of a Healthy Connections Medicaid service or item, you can file a Level 2 Appeal yourself. For more information about the Level 2 Appeal process, go to Section E4 on page 143.
If our answer is Yes to part or all of what you asked for, we must approve or give the coverage within 15 calendar days after we get your appeal (or within 7 calendar days after we get your appeal for a Medicare Part B prescription drug).
If our answer is No to part or all of what you asked for, we will send you a letter. If your problem is about coverage of a Medicare service or item, the letter will tell you that we sent your case to the Independent Review Entity for a Level 2 Appeal. If your problem is about coverage of a Healthy Connections Medicaid service or item, the letter will tell you how to file a Level 2 Appeal yourself. For more information about the Level 2 Appeal process, go to Section E4 on page 143.
When will I hear about a "fast" appeal decision?
If you ask for a fast appeal, we will give you our answer within 72 hours after we get your appeal. We will give you our answer sooner if your health requires us to do so.
However, if you ask for more time or if we need to gather more information, we can take up to 14 more calendar days. If we decide to take extra days to make the decision, we will send you a letter that explains why we need more time. We can't take extra time to make a decision if your request is for a Medicare Part B prescription drug.
If you believe we should not take extra days, you can file a "fast complaint" about our decision to take extra days. When you file a fast complaint, we will give you an answer to your complaint within 24 hours. For more information about the process for making complaints, including fast complaints, see Section J on page 166.
If we do not give you an answer to your appeal within 72 hours or by the end of the extra days (if we took them), we will automatically send your case to Level 2 of the appeals process if your problem is about coverage of a Medicare service or item. You will be notified when this happens. If your problem is about coverage of a Healthy Connections Medicaid service or item, you can file a Level 2 Appeal yourself. For more information about the Level 2 Appeal process, go to Section E4 on page 143.
If our answer is Yes to part or all of what you asked for, we must authorize or provide the coverage within 72 hours after we get your appeal.
If our answer is No to part or all of what you asked for, we will send you a letter. If your problem is about coverage of a Medicare service or item, the letter will tell you that we sent your case to the Independent Review Entity for a Level 2 Appeal. If your problem is about coverage of a Healthy Connections Medicaid service or item, the letter will tell you how to file a Level 2 Appeal yourself. For more information about the Level 2 Appeal process, go to Section E4 on page 143.
Will my benefits continue during Level 1 appeals?
If we decide to change or stop coverage for a service that was previously approved, we will send you a notice at least 10 calendar days before taking the action. If you disagree with the action, you can file

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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a Level 1 Appeal and ask that we continue your benefits while the appeal is pending. You must make the request on or before the later of the following in order to continue your benefits:
Within 10 calendar days of the mailing date of our notice of action; or
The intended effective date of the action.
If you meet this deadline, you can keep getting the disputed service or item while your appeal is processing.
E4. Level 2 Appeal for services, items, and drugs (not Part D drugs)
If the plan says No at Level 1, what happens next?
If we say No to part or all of your Level 1 Appeal, we will send you a letter. This letter will tell you if the service or item is usually covered by Medicare and/or Healthy Connections Medicaid.
If your problem is about a Medicare service or item, you will automatically get a Level 2 Appeal with the Independent Review Entity (IRE) as soon as the Level 1 Appeal is complete.
If your problem is about a Healthy Connections Medicaid service or item, you can file a Level 2 Appeal yourself with the Division of Appeals and Hearings. The letter will tell you how to do this. Information is also below.
If your problem is about a service or item that could be covered by both Medicare and Healthy Connections Medicaid, you will automatically get a Level 2 Appeal with the IRE for a review regarding Medicare coverage. You can also ask for a Level 2 Appeal with the Division of Appeals and Hearings for a review regarding Medicaid coverage.
What is a Level 2 Appeal?
A Level 2 Appeal is the second appeal, which is done by an independent organization that is not connected to the plan. It is either the Independent Review Entity (IRE) or it is the Division of Appeals and Hearings.
My problem is about a Healthy Connections Medicaid service or item. How can I make a Level 2 Appeal?
A Level 2 Appeal for Healthy Connections Medicaid services and items is called a "State Fair Hearing."
If you want to request a State Fair Hearing, you must contact the Division of Appeals and Hearings in writing. You must ask for a State Fair Hearing within 120 calendar days of the date of our Level 1 decision, unless the Division of Appeals and Hearings extends the deadline for you.
You can ask for a State Fair Hearing by filing your request online at msp.scdhhs.gov/appeals.
You can also deliver your request in person, fax your request to 803-255-8206, or write to: Division of Appeals and Hearings South Carolina Department of Health and Human Services P.O. Box 8206 Columbia, SC 29202-8206
If a hearing is granted, the Division of Appeals and Hearings will mail you a notice giving the time, date, and place of the hearing. During the hearing, an impartial hearing officer will listen to your explanation of why you do not agree with our action. The hearing officer will also listen to our explanation of the

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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action taken. The hearing officer will ask questions to get enough information to decide if your case was handled correctly.
The Division of Appeals and Hearings must give you a hearing decision within 90 calendar days of the date you filed an appeal with the plan.
If you qualify for a fast review, the Division of Appeals and Hearings will give you a hearing decision within 3 business days.
However, if the Division of Appeals and Hearings needs to gather more information that may benefit you, it can take up to 14 more calendar days.
If the Division of Appeals and Hearings needs extra days to make a decision, it will tell you by letter.
My problem is about a Medicare service or item. What will happen at the Level 2 Appeal?
An Independent Review Entity (IRE) will carefully review the Level 1 decision and decide whether it should be changed.
You do not need to request the Level 2 Appeal. We will automatically send any denials (in whole or in part) to the IRE. You will be notified when this happens.
The IRE is hired by Medicare and is not connected with this plan.
You may ask for a copy of your file by calling Member Services at the number at the bottom of the page.
The IRE must give you an answer to your Level 2 Appeal within 30 calendar days of when it gets your appeal (or within 7 calendar days of when it gets your appeal for a Medicare Part B prescription drug). This rule applies if you sent your appeal before getting medical services or items.
However, if the IRE needs to gather more information that may benefit you, it can take up to 14 more calendar days. If the IRE needs extra days to make a decision, it will tell you by letter. The IRE can't take extra time to make a decision if your appeal is for a Medicare Part B prescription drug.
If you had a "fast appeal" at Level 1, you will automatically have a fast appeal at Level 2. The IRE must give you an answer within 72 hours of when it gets your appeal.
However, if the IRE needs to gather more information that may benefit you, it can take up to 14 more calendar days. If the IRE needs extra days to make a decision, it will tell you by letter. The IRE can't take extra time to make a decision if your appeal is for a Medicare Part B prescription drug.
What if my service or item is covered by both Medicare and Healthy Connections Medicaid?
If your problem is about a service or item that could be covered by both Medicare and Healthy Connections Medicaid, we will automatically send your Level 2 Appeal to the Independent Review Entity for a review regarding Medicare coverage. You can also submit a Level 2 Appeal to the Division of Appeals and Hearings for a review regarding Healthy Connections Medicaid coverage. Follow the instructions on page 170.
Will my benefits continue during Level 2 appeals?

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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If we decide to change or stop coverage for a service that was previously approved, you can ask to continue your benefits during Level 2 Appeals in some cases.
If your problem is about a service covered by Medicare, your benefits for that service will not continue during the Level 2 Appeal with the Independent Review Entity.
If your problem is about a service covered by Healthy Connections Medicaid (including a service covered by both Medicare and Healthy Connections Medicaid), you can ask that your benefits for that service continue during the Level 2 Appeal with the Division of Appeals and Hearings. You must make the request on or before the later of the following in order to continue your benefits:
Within 10 calendar days of the plan's Level 1 Appeal decision; or
The intended effective date of the action.
If you meet this deadline, you can keep getting the disputed service while your appeal is processing.
How will I find out about the decision?
If your Level 2 Appeal went to the Division of Appeals and Hearings, they will send you a letter explaining their decision.
If the Division of Appeals and Hearings says Yes to part or all of what you asked for, we must authorize the coverage within 72 hours.
If the Division of Appeals and Hearings says No to part or all of what you asked for, it means they agree with the Level 1 decision. This is called "upholding the decision." It is also called "turning down your appeal."
If your Level 2 Appeal went to the Independent Review Entity (IRE), it will send you a letter explaining its decision.
If the IRE says Yes to part or all of what you asked for in your standard appeal, we must authorize the medical care coverage within 72 hours or give you the service or item within 14 calendar days from the date we get the IRE's decision. If you had a fast appeal, we must authorize the medical care coverage or give you the service or item within 72 hours from the date we get the IRE's decision.
If the IRE says Yes to part or all of what you asked for in your standard appeal for a Medicare Part B prescription drug, we must authorize or provide the Medicare Part B prescription drug within 72 hours after we get the IRE's decision. If you had a fast appeal, we must authorize or provide the Medicare Part B prescription drug within 24 hours from the date we get the IRE's decision.
If the IRE says No to part or all of what you asked for, it means they agree with the Level 1 decision. This is called "upholding the decision." It is also called "turning down your appeal."
What if I appealed to both the Independent Review Entity and the Division of Appeals and Hearings and they have different decisions?
If either the Independent Review Entity or the Division of Appeals and Hearings decides Yes for all or part of what you asked for, we will give you the approved service or item that is closest to what you asked for in your appeal.
If the decision is No for all or part of what I asked for, can I make another appeal?

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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If your Level 2 Appeal went to the Division of Appeals and Hearings, and you do not agree with the hearing officer's decision, you can file an appeal to the Administrative Law Court. You must file this appeal within 30 calendar days of the date you were notified of the decision. There is a fee to appeal.
If your Level 2 Appeal went to the Independent Review Entity (IRE), you can appeal again only if the dollar value of the service or item you want meets a certain minimum amount. The letter you get from the IRE will explain additional appeal rights you may have.
See Section I on page 165 for more information on additional levels of appeal.
E5. Payment problems
We do not allow our network providers to bill you for covered services and items. This is true even if we pay the provider less than the provider charges for a covered service or item. You are never required to pay the balance of any bill.
If you get a bill for covered services and items, send the bill to us. You should not pay the bill yourself. We will contact the provider directly and take care of the problem.
For more information, start by reading Chapter 7: "Asking us to pay a bill you have gotten for covered services or drugs." Chapter 7 describes the situations in which you may need to ask for reimbursement or to pay a bill you got from a provider. It also tells how to send us the paperwork that asks us for payment.
Can I ask you to pay me back for a service or item I paid for?
Remember, if you get a bill for covered services and items, you should not pay the bill yourself. But if you do pay the bill, you can get a refund if you followed the rules for getting services and items.
If you are asking to be paid back, you are asking for a coverage decision. We will see if the service or item you paid for is a covered service or item, and we will check to see if you followed all the rules for using your coverage.
If the service or item you paid for is covered and you followed all the rules, we will send you the payment for the service or item within 60 calendar days after we get your request. If you haven't paid for the service or item yet, we will send the payment directly to the provider. When we send the payment, it's the same as saying Yes to your request for a coverage decision.
If the service or item is not covered, or you did not follow all the rules, we will send you a letter telling you we will not pay for the service or item, and explaining why.
What if we say we will not pay?
If you do not agree with our decision, you can make an appeal. Follow the appeals process described in Section E5 on page 139. When you follow these instructions, please note:
If you make an appeal for reimbursement, we must give you our answer within 60 calendar days after we get your appeal.
If you are asking us to pay you back for a service or item you already got and paid for yourself, you cannot ask for a fast appeal.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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If we answer No to your appeal and the service or item is usually covered by Medicare, we will automatically send your case to the Independent Review Entity (IRE). We will notify you by letter if this happens.
If the IRE reverses our decision and says we should pay you, we must send the payment to you or to the provider within 30 calendar days. If the answer to your appeal is Yes at any stage of the appeals process after Level 2, we must send the payment you asked for to you or to the provider within 60 calendar days. If the IRE says No to your appeal, it means they agree with our decision not to approve your request. (This is called "upholding the decision" or "turning down your appeal.") The letter you get will explain additional appeal rights you may have. You can appeal again only if the dollar value of the service or item you want meets a certain minimum amount. See Section I on page 165 for more information on additional levels of appeal. If we answer No to your appeal and the service or item is usually covered by Healthy Connections Medicaid, you can file a Level 2 Appeal yourself (see Section E4 on page 143).
F. Part D drugs
F1. What to do if you have problems getting a Part D drug or you want us to pay you back for a Part D drug
Your benefits as a member of our plan include coverage for many prescription drugs. Most of these drugs are "Part D drugs." There are a few drugs that Medicare Part D does not cover but that Healthy Connections Medicaid may cover. This section only applies to Part D drug appeals. The Drug List, includes some drugs with a (*). These drugs are not Part D drugs. Appeals or coverage decisions about drugs with (*) symbol follow the process in Section E on page 137. Can I ask for a coverage decision or make an appeal about Part D prescription drugs? Yes. Here are examples of coverage decisions you can ask us to make about your Part D drugs:
You ask us to make an exception such as: Asking us to cover a Part D drug that is not on the plan's Drug List Asking us to waive a restriction on the plan's coverage for a drug (such as limits on the amount of the drug you can get)
You ask us if a drug is covered for you (for example, when your drug is on the plan's Drug List but we require you to get approval from us before we will cover it for you). NOTE: If your pharmacy tells you that your prescription cannot be filled, you will get a notice explaining how to contact us to ask for a coverage decision.
The legal term for a coverage decision about your Part D drugs is "coverage determination."
You ask us to pay for a prescription drug you already bought. This is asking for a coverage decision about payment.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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If you disagree with a coverage decision we have made, you can appeal our decision. This section tells you how to ask for coverage decisions and how to request an appeal.
Use the chart below to help you decide which section has information for your situation:

Which of these situations are you in?

Do you need a drug that isn't on our Drug List or need us to waive a rule or restriction on a drug we cover?

Do you want us to cover a drug on our Drug List and you believe you meet any plan rules or restrictions (such as getting approval in advance) for the drug you need?

Do you want to ask us to pay you back for a drug you already got and paid for?

Have we already told you that we will not cover or pay for a drug in the way that you want it to be covered or paid for?

You can ask us to make an exception. (This is a type of coverage decision.)
Start with Section F2 on page 148. Also see Sections F3 and F4 on pages 149 and 150.

You can ask us for a coverage decision.
Skip ahead to Section F4 on page 150.

You can ask us to pay you back. (This is a type of coverage decision.)
Skip ahead to Section F4 on page 150.

You can make an appeal. (This means you are asking us to reconsider.)
Skip ahead to Section F5 on page 152.

F2. What an exception is
An exception is permission to get coverage for a drug that is not normally on our Drug List or to use the drug without certain rules and limitations. If a drug is not on our Drug List or is not covered in the way you would like, you can ask us to make an "exception."
When you ask for an exception, your doctor or other prescriber will need to explain the medical reasons why you need the exception.
Here are examples of exceptions that you or your doctor or another prescriber can ask us to make:
1. Covering a Part D drug that is not on our Drug List.
You cannot ask for an exception to the copay or coinsurance amount we require you to pay for the drug.
2. Removing a restriction on our coverage. There are extra rules or restrictions that apply to certain drugs on our Drug List (for more information, go to Chapter 5).
The extra rules and restrictions on coverage for certain drugs include:
Being required to use the generic version of a drug instead of the brand name drug.
Getting plan approval before we will agree to cover the drug for you. (This is sometimes called "prior authorization.")

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Being required to try a different drug first before we will agree to cover the drug you are asking for. (This is sometimes called "step therapy.") Quantity limits. For some drugs, we limit the amount of the drug you can have.
The legal term for asking for removal of a restriction on coverage for a drug is sometimes called asking for a "formulary exception."

F3. Important things to know about asking for exceptions
Your doctor or other prescriber must tell us the medical reasons
Your doctor or other prescriber must give us a statement explaining the medical reasons for requesting an exception. Our decision about the exception will be faster if you include this information from your doctor or other prescriber when you ask for the exception.
Typically, our Drug List includes more than one drug for treating a particular condition. These are called "alternative" drugs. If an alternative drug would be just as effective as the drug you are asking for and would not cause more side effects or other health problems, we will generally not approve your request for an exception.
We will say Yes or No to your request for an exception
If we say Yes to your request for an exception, the exception usually lasts until the end of the calendar year. This is true as long as your doctor continues to prescribe the drug for you and that drug continues to be safe and effective for treating your condition.
If we say No to your request for an exception, you can ask for a review of our decision by making an appeal. Section F5 on page 182 tells how to make an appeal if we say No.
The next section tells you how to ask for a coverage decision, including an exception.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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F4. How to ask for a coverage decision about a Part D drug or reimbursement for a Part D drug, including an exception

What to do

Ask for the type of coverage decision you want. Call, write, or fax us to make your request. You, your representative, or your

At a glance: How to ask for a coverage decision about a drug or payment

doctor (or other prescriber) can do this. Call, write, or fax us to ask, or ask your

You can call us at (855) 735-5831, TTY: representative or doctor or other prescriber to

711, 7 days a week, 8 a.m. to 8 p.m.,

ask. We will give you an answer on a standard

local time.

coverage decision within 72 hours. We will give

You or your doctor (or other prescriber) or someone else who is acting on your behalf can ask for a coverage decision.

you an answer on reimbursing you for a Part D drug you already paid for within 14 calendar days.

You can also have a lawyer act on your

If you are asking for an exception, include

behalf.

the supporting statement from your doctor

Read Section D on page 135 to find out

or other prescriber.

how to give permission to someone else

You or your doctor or other prescriber

to act as your representative.

may ask for a fast decision. (Fast

You do not need to give your doctor or

decisions usually come within 24 hours.)

other prescriber written permission to ask

Read this section to make sure you

us for a coverage decision on your behalf.

qualify for a fast decision! Read it also to

If you want to ask us to pay you back for

find information about decision deadlines.

a drug, read Chapter 7 of this handbook.

Chapter 7 describes times when you may

need to ask for reimbursement. It also tells how to send us the paperwork that asks us to pay you

back for our share of the cost of a drug you have paid for.

If you are asking for an exception, provide the "supporting statement." Your doctor or other prescriber must give us the medical reasons for the drug exception. We call this the "supporting statement."

Your doctor or other prescriber can fax or mail the statement to us. Or your doctor or other prescriber can tell us on the phone, and then fax or mail a statement.

If your health requires it, ask us to give you a "fast coverage decision"

We will use the "standard deadlines" unless we have agreed to use the "fast deadlines."

A standard coverage decision means we will give you an answer within 72 hours after we get your doctor's statement.

A fast coverage decision means we will give you an answer within 24 hours after we get your doctor's statement.

The legal term for "fast coverage decision" is "expedited coverage determination."

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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You can get a fast coverage decision only if you are asking for a drug you have not yet received. (You cannot get a fast coverage decision if you are asking us to pay you back for a drug you already bought.)
You can get a fast coverage decision only if using the standard deadlines could cause serious harm to your health or hurt your ability to function.
If your doctor or other prescriber tells us that your health requires a "fast coverage decision," we will automatically agree to give you a fast coverage decision, and the letter will tell you that.
If you ask for a fast coverage decision on your own (without your doctor's or other prescriber's support), we will decide whether you get a fast coverage decision.
If we decide that your medical condition does not meet the requirements for a fast coverage decision, we will use the standard deadlines instead.
We will send you a letter telling you that. The letter will tell you how to make a complaint about our decision to give you a standard decision.
You can file a "fast complaint" and get a response to your complaint within 24 hours. For more information about the process for making complaints, including fast complaints, see Section J on page 166.
Deadlines for a "fast coverage decision"
If we are using the fast deadlines, we must give you our answer within 24 hours. This means within 24 hours after we get your request. Or, if you are asking for an exception, 24 hours after we get your doctor's or prescriber's statement supporting your request. We will give you our answer sooner if your health requires it.
If we do not meet this deadline, we will send your request to Level 2 of the appeals process. At Level 2, an Independent Review Entity will review your request.
If our answer is Yes to part or all of what you asked for, we must give you the coverage within 24 hours after we get your request or your doctor's or prescriber's statement supporting your request.
If our answer is No to part or all of what you asked for, we will send you a letter that explains why we said No. The letter will also explain how you can appeal our decision.
Deadlines for a "standard coverage decision" about a drug you have not yet received
If we are using the standard deadlines, we must give you our answer within 72 hours after we get your request. Or, if you are asking for an exception, after we get your doctor's or prescriber's supporting statement. We will give you our answer sooner if your health requires it.
If we do not meet this deadline, we will send your request on to Level 2 of the appeals process. At Level 2, an Independent Review Entity will review your request.
If our answer is Yes to part or all of what you asked for, we must approve or give the coverage within 72 hours after we get your request or, if you are asking for an exception, your doctor's or prescriber's supporting statement.
If our answer is No to part or all of what you asked for, we will send you a letter that explains why we said No. The letter will also explain how you can appeal our decision.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Deadlines for a "standard coverage decision" about payment for a drug you already bought
We must give you our answer within 14 calendar days after we get your request.
If we do not meet this deadline, we will send your request to Level 2 of the appeals process. At level 2, an Independent Review Entity will review your request.
If our answer is Yes to part or all of what you asked for, we will make payment to you within 14 calendar days.
If our answer is No to part or all of what you asked for, we will send you a letter that explains why we said No. The letter will also explain how you can appeal our decision.

F5. Level 1 Appeal for Part D drugs

To start your appeal, you, your doctor or other prescriber, or your representative must contact us.

At a glance: How to make a Level 1 Appeal

If you are asking for a standard appeal, you can make your appeal by sending a request in writing. You may also ask for an appeal by calling us at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week, 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time.
If you want a fast appeal, you may make your appeal in writing or you may call us.

You, your doctor or prescriber, or your representative may put your request in writing and mail or fax it to us. You may also ask for an appeal by calling us.
Ask within 60 calendar days of the decision you are appealing. If you miss the deadline for a good reason, you may still appeal.

Make your appeal request within 60

You, your doctor or prescriber, or your

calendar days from the date on the

representative can call us to ask for a fast

notice we sent to tell you our decision. If

appeal.

you miss this deadline and have a good reason for missing it, we may give you more time to make you appeal. For example, good reasons for missing the

Read this section to make sure you qualify for a fast decision! Read it also to find information about decision deadlines.

deadline would be if you have a serious

illness that kept you from contacting us

or if we gave you incorrect or incomplete information about the deadline for requesting an appeal.

The legal term for an appeal to the plan about a Part D drug coverage decision is plan "redetermination."

You have the right to ask us for a copy of the information about your appeal. To ask for a copy, call Member Services at the number at the bottom of the page.
If you wish, you and your doctor or other prescriber may give us additional information to support your appeal.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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If your health requires it, ask for a "fast appeal"
If you are appealing a decision our plan made about a drug you have not yet received, you and your doctor or other prescriber will need to decide if you need a "fast appeal."
The legal term for "fast appeal" is "expedited redetermination."
The requirements for getting a "fast appeal" are the same as those for getting a "fast coverage decision" in Section F4 on page 150.
Our plan will review your appeal and give you our decision
We take another careful look at all of the information about your coverage request. We check to see if we were following all the rules when we said No to your request. We may contact you or your doctor or other prescriber to get more information. The reviewer will be someone who did not make the original coverage decision.
Deadlines for a "fast appeal"
If we are using the fast deadlines, we will give you our answer within 72 hours after we get your appeal, or sooner if your health requires it.
If we do not give you an answer within 72 hours, we will send your request to Level 2 of the appeals process. At Level 2, an Independent Review Entity will review your appeal.
If our answer is Yes to part or all of what you asked for, we must give the coverage within 72 hours after we get your appeal.
If our answer is No to part or all of what you asked for, we will send you a letter that explains why we said No.
Deadlines for a "standard appeal"
If we are using the standard deadlines, we must give you our answer within 7 calendar days after we get your appeal, or sooner if your health requires it, except if you are asking us to pay you back for a drug you already bought. If you are asking us to pay you back for a drug you already bought, we must give you our answer within 14 calendar days after we get your appeal. If you think your health requires it, you should ask for a "fast appeal."
If we do not give you a decision within 7 calendar days, or 14 calendar days if you asked us to pay you back for a drug you already bought, we will send your request to Level 2 of the appeals process. At Level 2, an Independent Review Entity will review your appeal.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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If our answer is Yes to part or all of what you asked for:
If we approve a request for coverage, we must give you the coverage as quickly as your health requires, but no later than 7 calendar days after we get your appeal or 14 calendar days if you asked us to pay you back for a drug you already bought.
If we approve a request to pay you back for a drug you already bought, we will send payment to you within 30 calendar days after we get your appeal request.
If our answer is No to part or all of what you asked for, we will send you a letter that explains why we said No and tells how to appeal our decision.

At a glance: How to make a Level 2 Appeal
If you want the Independent Review Entity to review your case, your appeal request must be in writing.
Ask within 60 calendar days of the decision you are appealing. If you miss the deadline for a good reason, you may still appeal.
You, your doctor or other prescriber, or your representative can request the Level 2 Appeal.
Read this section to make sure you qualify for a fast decision! Read it also to find information about decision deadlines.

F6. Level 2 Appeal for Part D drugs
If we say No to part or all of your appeal, you can choose whether to accept this decision or make another appeal. If you decide to go on to a Level 2 Appeal, the Independent Review Entity (IRE) will review our decision.
If you want the IRE to review your case, your appeal request must be in writing. The letter we send about our decision in the Level 1 Appeal will explain how to request the Level 2 Appeal.
When you make an appeal to the IRE, we will send them your case file. You have the right to ask us for a copy of your case file by calling Member Services at the number at the bottom of the page.
You have a right to give the IRE other information to support your appeal.
The IRE is an independent organization that is hired by Medicare. It is not connected with this plan and it is not a government agency.

The legal term for an appeal to the IRE about a Part D drug is "reconsideration."

Reviewers at the IRE will take a careful look at all of the information related to your appeal. The organization will send you a letter explaining its decision.
Deadlines for "fast appeal" at Level 2
If your health requires it, ask the Independent Review Entity (IRE) for a "fast appeal."

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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If the IRE agrees to give you a "fast appeal," it must give you an answer to your Level 2 Appeal within 72 hours after getting your appeal request.
If the IRE says Yes to part or all of what you asked for, we must authorize or give you the drug coverage within 24 hours after we get the decision.
Deadlines for "standard appeal" at Level 2
If you have a standard appeal at Level 2, the Independent Review Entity (IRE) must give you an answer to your Level 2 Appeal within 7 calendar days after it gets your appeal, or 14 calendar days if you asked us to pay you back for a drug you already bought.
If the IRE says Yes to part or all of what you asked for, we must authorize or give you the drug coverage within 72 hours after we get the decision.
If the IRE approves a request to pay you back for a drug you already bought, we will send payment to you within 30 calendar days after we get the decision.
What if the Independent Review Entity says No to your Level 2 Appeal?
No means the Independent Review Entity (IRE) agrees with our decision not to approve your request. This is called "upholding the decision" or "turning down your appeal."
If you want to go to Level 3 of the appeals process, the drugs you are requesting must meet a minimum dollar value. If the dollar value is less than the minimum, you cannot appeal any further. If the dollar value is high enough, you can ask for a Level 3 appeal. The letter you get from the IRE will tell you the dollar value needed to continue with the appeal process.
G. Asking us to cover a longer hospital stay
When you are admitted to a hospital, you have the right to get all hospital services that we cover that are necessary to diagnose and treat your illness or injury.
During your covered hospital stay, your doctor and the hospital staff will work with you to prepare for the day when you leave the hospital. They will also help arrange for any care you may need after you leave.
The day you leave the hospital is called your "discharge date."
Your doctor or the hospital staff will tell you when your discharge date is.
If you think you are being asked to leave the hospital too soon, you can ask for a longer hospital stay. This section tells you how to ask.
G1. Learning about your Medicare rights
Within two days after you are admitted to the hospital, a caseworker or nurse will give you a notice called "An Important Message from Medicare about Your Rights." If you do not get this notice, ask any hospital employee for it. If you need help, please call Member Services at the number at the bottom of the page. You can also call 1-800-MEDICARE (1-800-633-4227), 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. TTY users should call 1-877-486-2048

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Read this notice carefully and ask questions if you don't understand. The "Important Message" tells you about your rights as a hospital patient, including your rights to:
Get Medicare-covered services during and after your hospital stay. You have the right to know what these services are, who will pay for them, and where you can get them.
Be a part of any decisions about the length of your hospital stay.
Know where to report any concerns you have about the quality of your hospital care.
Appeal if you think you are being discharged from the hospital too soon.
You should sign the Medicare notice to show that you got it and understand your rights. Signing the notice does not mean you agree to the discharge date that may have been told to you by your doctor or hospital staff.
Keep your copy of the signed notice so you will have the information in it if you need it.
To look at a copy of this notice in advance, you can call Member Services at the number at the bottom of the page. You can also call 1-800 MEDICARE (1-800-633-4227), 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. TTY users should call 1-877-486-2048. The call is free.
You can also see the notice online at www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-General-Information/BNI/ HospitalDischargeAppealNotices.
If you need help, please call Member Services or Medicare at the numbers listed above.

G2. Level 1 Appeal to change your hospital discharge date

If you want us to cover your inpatient hospital services for a longer time, you must request an appeal. A Quality Improvement Organization will do the Level 1 Appeal review to see if your planned discharge date is medically appropriate for you.

In South Carolina, the Quality Improvement Organization is called KEPRO. To make an appeal to change your discharge date, call KEPRO at 1-888-317-0751 (TTY: 1-855-843-4776).

Call right away!

Call the Quality Improvement Organization before you leave the hospital and no later than your planned discharge date. "An Important Message from Medicare about Your Rights" contains information on how to reach the Quality Improvement Organization.

If you call before you leave, you are allowed to stay in the hospital after your planned discharge date without paying for it while you wait to get the decision on your appeal from the Quality Improvement Organization.

At a glance: How to make a Level 1 Appeal to change your discharge date
Call the Quality Improvement Organization for your state at 1-888-317-0751 and ask for a "fast review".

Call before you leave the hospital and before your planned discharge date.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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If you do not call to appeal, and you decide to stay in the hospital after your planned discharge date, you may have to pay all of the costs for hospital care you get after your planned discharge date.
If you miss the deadline for contacting the Quality Improvement Organization about your appeal, you can make your appeal directly to our plan instead. For details, see Section G4 on page 159.
We want to make sure you understand what you need to do and what the deadlines are.
Ask for help if you need it. If you have questions or need help at any time, please call Member Services at the number at the bottom of the page. You can also call the State Health Insurance Assistance Program (SHIP), known as I-CARE in South Carolina, at 1-800-868-9095. TTY users should call 711. You can also call the Healthy Connections Prime Advocate at 1-844-477-4632. TTY users should call 711.
What is a Quality Improvement Organization?
It is a group of doctors and other health care professionals who are paid by Medicare to check on and help improve the quality of care for people with Medicare. These experts are not part of our plan.
Ask for a "fast review"
The legal term for "fast review" is "immediate review."
You must ask the Quality Improvement Organization for a "fast review" of your discharge. Asking for a "fast review" means you are asking the organization to use the fast deadlines for an appeal instead of using the standard deadlines.
What happens during the fast review?
The reviewers at the Quality Improvement Organization will ask you or your representative why you think coverage should continue after the planned discharge date. You don't have to prepare anything in writing, but you may do so if you wish.
The reviewers will look at your medical record, talk with your doctor, and review all of the information related to your hospital stay.
By noon of the day after the reviewers tell us about your appeal, you will get a letter that gives your planned discharge date. The letter explains the reasons why your doctor, the hospital, and we think it is right for you to be discharged on that date.
The legal term for this written explanation is called the "Detailed Notice of Discharge." You can get a sample by calling Member Services at the number at the bottom of the page. You can also call 1-800-MEDICARE (1-800-633-4227), 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. TTY users should call 1-877-486-2048. Or you can see a sample notice online at www.cms.gov/Medicare/MedicareGeneral-Information/BNI/HospitalDischargeAppealNotices

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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What if the answer is Yes?
If the Quality Improvement Organization says Yes to your appeal, we must keep covering your hospital services for as long as they are medically necessary.
What if the answer is No?
If the Quality Improvement Organization says No to your appeal, they are saying that your planned discharge date is medically appropriate. If this happens, our coverage for your inpatient hospital services will end at noon on the day after the Quality Improvement Organization gives you its answer.
If the Quality Improvement Organization says No and you decide to stay in the hospital, then you may have to pay for your continued stay at the hospital. The cost of the hospital care that you may have to pay begins at noon on the day after the Quality Improvement Organization gives you its answer.
If the Quality Improvement Organization turns down your appeal and you stay in the hospital after your planned discharge date, then you can make a Level 2 Appeal.

G3. Level 2 Appeal to change your hospital discharge date

If the Quality Improvement Organization has turned down your appeal and you stay in the hospital after your planned discharge date, then you can make a Level 2 Appeal. You will need to contact the Quality Improvement Organization again and ask for another review.

Ask for the Level 2 review within 60 calendar days after the day when the Quality Improvement Organization said No to your Level 1 Appeal. You can ask for this review only if you stayed in the hospital after the date that your coverage for the care ended.

In South Carolina, the Quality Improvement Organization is called KEPRO. You can reach KEPRO at 1-888-317-0751 (TTY: 1-855-843-4776).

Reviewers at the Quality Improvement Organization will take another careful look at all of the information related to your appeal.

At a glance: How to make a Level 2 Appeal to change your discharge date

Within 14 calendar days of receipt of your request for a second review, the Quality Improvement Organization reviewers will make a decision.

Call the Quality Improvement Organization for your state at 1-888-317-0751 and ask for another review.

What happens if the answer is Yes?

We must pay you back for our share of the costs of hospital care you got since noon on the day after the date of your first appeal decision. We must continue providing coverage for your inpatient hospital care for as long as it is medically necessary.

You must continue to pay your share of the costs and coverage limitations may apply.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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What happens if the answer is No?
It means the Quality Improvement Organization agrees with the Level 1 decision and will not change it. The letter you get will tell you what you can do if you wish to continue with the appeal process.
If the Quality Improvement Organization turns down your Level 2 Appeal, you may have to pay the full cost for your stay after your planned discharge date.

G4. What happens if you miss an appeal deadline

If you miss appeal deadlines, there is another way to make Level 1 and Level 2 Appeals, called Alternate Appeals. But the first two levels of appeal are different.

Level 1 Alternate Appeal to change your hospital discharge date

If you miss the deadline for contacting the Quality Improvement Organization (which is within 60 days or no later than your planned discharge date, whichever comes first), you can make an appeal to us, asking for a "fast review." A fast review is an appeal that uses the fast deadlines instead of the standard deadlines.

During this review, we look at all of the information about your hospital stay. We check to see if the decision about when you should leave the hospital was fair and followed all the rules.
We will use the fast deadlines rather than the standard deadlines for giving you the answer to this review. This means we will give you our decision within 72 hours after you ask for a "fast review."

At a glance: How to make a Level 1 Alternate Appeal
Call our Member Services at (855) 735-5831 (TTY: 711), 7 days a week, 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. Ask for a "fast review" of your hospital discharge date. The call is free.
We will give you our decision within 72 hours.

If we say Yes to your fast review, it means we agree that you still need to be in the hospital after the discharge date. We will keep covering hospital services for as long as it is medically necessary.

It also means that we agree to pay you back for our share of the costs of care you got since the date when we said your coverage would end.

If we say No to your fast review, we are saying that your planned discharge date was medically appropriate. Our coverage for your inpatient hospital services ends on the day we said coverage would end.

If you stayed in the hospital after your planned discharge date, then you may have to pay the full cost of hospital care you got after the planned discharge date.

To make sure we were following all the rules when we said No to your fast appeal, we will send your appeal to the "Independent Review Entity". When we do this, it means that your case is automatically going to Level 2 of the appeals process.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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The legal term for "fast review" or "fast appeal" is "expedited appeal."

Level 2 Alternate Appeal to change your hospital discharge date

We will send the information for your Level 2 Appeal to the Independent Review Entity (IRE) within 24 hours of when we give you our Level 1 decision. If you think we are not meeting this deadline or other deadlines, you can make a complaint. Section J on page 166 tells how to make a complaint.

During the Level 2 Appeal, the IRE reviews the decision we made when we said No to your "fast review." This organization decides whether the decision we made should be changed.

At a glance: How to make a Level 2 Alternate Appeal

The IRE does a "fast review" of your appeal. The reviewers usually give you an answer within 72 hours.

You do not have to do anything. The plan will automatically send your appeal to the Independent Review Entity.

The IRE is an independent organization that is hired by Medicare. This organization is not connected with our plan and it is not a government agency.

Reviewers at the IRE will take a careful look at all of the information related to your appeal of your hospital discharge.

If the IRE says Yes to your appeal, then we must pay you back for our share of the costs of hospital care you got since the date of your planned discharge. We must also continue our coverage of your hospital services for as long as it is medically necessary.

If the IRE says No to your appeal, it means they agree with us that your planned hospital discharge date was medically appropriate.

The letter you get from the IRE will tell you what you can do if you wish to continue with the review process. It will give you the details about how to go on to a Level 3 Appeal, which is handled by a judge. Please see Section I on page 165 for more information about Level 3 Appeals.

H. What to do if you think your home health care, skilled nursing care, or Comprehensive Outpatient Rehabilitation Facility (CORF) services are ending too soon
This section is about the following types of care only:
Home health care services.
Skilled nursing care in a skilled nursing facility.
Rehabilitation care you are getting as an outpatient at a Medicare-approved Comprehensive Outpatient Rehabilitation Facility (CORF). Usually, this means you are getting treatment for an illness or accident, or you are recovering from a major operation.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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With any of these three types of care, you have the right to keep getting covered services for as long as the doctor says you need it.
When we decide to stop covering any of these, we must tell you before your services end. When your coverage for that care ends, we will stop paying for your care.
If you think we are ending the coverage of your care too soon, you can appeal our decision. This section tells you how to ask for an appeal.
H1. We will tell you in advance when your coverage will be ending
You will get a notice at least two days before we stop paying for your care. This is called the "Notice of Medicare Non-Coverage."
The written notice tells you the date when we will stop covering your care.
The written notice also tells you how to appeal this decision.
You or your representative should sign the written notice to show that you got it. Signing it does not mean you agree with the plan that it is time to stop getting the care.
When your coverage ends, we will stop paying for your care.

H2. Level 1 Appeal to continue your care

If you think we are ending coverage of your care too soon, you can appeal our decision. This section tells you how to ask for an appeal.

Before you start your appeal, understand what you need to do and what the deadlines are.

Meet the deadlines. The deadlines are important. Be sure that you understand and follow the deadlines that apply to things you must do. There are also deadlines our plan must follow. (If you think we are not meeting our deadlines, you can file a complaint. Section J on page 166 tells you how to file a complaint.)

Ask for help if you need it. If you have questions or need help at any time, please call Member Services at the number at the bottom of the page. Or call your State Health Insurance Assistance Program, known as I-CARE in South Carolina, at 1-800-868-9095.

During a Level 1 Appeal, a Quality Improvement Organization will review your appeal and decide whether to change the decision we made. In South Carolina, the Quality Improvement Organization is called KEPRO. You can reach KEPRO at 1-888-317-0751 (TTY: 1-855-843-4776). Information about appealing to the Quality Improvement Organization is also in the "Notice of Medicare Non-Coverage." This is the notice you got when you were told we would stop covering your care.

At a glance: How to make a Level 1 Appeal to ask the plan to continue your care
Call the Quality Improvement Organization for your state at 1-888-317-0751 and ask for a "fast-track appeal."
Call before you leave the agency or facility that is providing your care and before your planned discharge date.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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What is a Quality Improvement Organization? It is a group of doctors and other health care professionals who are paid by Medicare to check on and help improve the quality of care for people with Medicare. These experts are not part of our plan. What should you ask for? Ask them for a "fast-track appeal." This is an independent review of whether it is medically appropriate for us to end coverage for your services. What is your deadline for contacting this organization?
You must contact the Quality Improvement Organization no later than noon of the day after you got the written notice telling you when we will stop covering your care. If you miss the deadline for contacting the Quality Improvement Organization about your appeal, you can make your appeal directly to us instead. For details about this other way to make your appeal, see Section H4 on page 164.
The legal term for the written notice is "Notice of Medicare Non-Coverage."To get a sample copy, call Member Services at the number at the bottom of the page or 1-800-MEDICARE (1-800-633-4227), 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. TTY users should call 1-877-486-2048. Or see a copy online at www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-General-Information/BNI/MAEDNotices
What happens during the Quality Improvement Organization's review? The reviewers at the Quality Improvement Organization will ask you or your representative why you think coverage for the services should continue. You don't have to prepare anything in writing, but you may do so if you wish. When you ask for an appeal, the plan must write a letter to you and the Quality Improvement Organization explaining why your services should end. The reviewers will also look at your medical records, talk with your doctor, and review information that our plan has given to them.
The legal term for the letter explaining why your services should end is "Detailed Explanation of Non-Coverage."
Within one full day after reviewers have all the information they need, they will tell you their decision. You will get a letter explaining the decision. What happens if the reviewers say Yes? If the reviewers say Yes to your appeal, then we must keep providing your covered services for as long as they are medically necessary.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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What happens if the reviewers say No?
If the reviewers say No to your appeal, then your coverage will end on the date we told you. We will stop paying our share of the costs of this care.
If you decide to keep getting the home health care, skilled nursing facility care, or Comprehensive Outpatient Rehabilitation Facility (CORF) services after the date your coverage ends, then you will have to pay the full cost of this care yourself.

H3. Level 2 Appeal to continue your care

If the Quality Improvement Organization said No to the appeal and you choose to continue getting care after your coverage for the care has ended, you can make a Level 2 Appeal.

During the Level 2 Appeal, the Quality Improvement Organization will take another look at the decision they made at Level 1. If they say they agree with the Level 1 decision, you may have to pay the full cost for your home health care, skilled nursing facility care, or Comprehensive Outpatient Rehabilitation Facility (CORF) services after the date when we said your coverage would end.

In South Carolina, the Quality Improvement Organization is called KEPRO. You can reach KEPRO at 1-888-317-0751 (TTY: 1-855-843-4776). Ask for the Level 2 review within 60 calendar days after the day when the Quality Improvement Organization said No to your Level 1 Appeal. You can ask for this review only if you continued getting care after the date that your coverage for the care ended.
Reviewers at the Quality Improvement Organization will take another careful look at all of the information related to your appeal.

At a glance: How to make a Level 2 Appeal to require that the plan cover your care for longer
Call the Quality Improvement Organization for your state at 1-888-317-0751 and ask for another review.
Call before you leave the agency or facility that is providing your care and before your planned discharge date.

The Quality Improvement Organization will make its decision within 14 calendar days of receipt of your appeal request.

What happens if the review organization says Yes?

We must pay you back for our share of the costs of care you got since the date when we said your coverage would end. We must continue providing coverage for the care for as long as it is medically necessary.

What happens if the review organization says No?

It means they agree with the decision they made on the Level 1 Appeal and will not change it.

The letter you get will tell you what to do if you wish to continue with the review process. It will give you the details about how to go on to the next level of appeal, which is handled by a judge.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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H4. What if you miss the deadline for making your Level 1 Appeal?

If you miss appeal deadlines, there is another way to make Level 1 and Level 2 Appeals, called Alternate Appeals. But the first two levels of appeal are different.

Level 1 Alternate Appeal to continue your care for longer

If you miss the deadline for contacting the Quality Improvement Organization, you can make an appeal to us, asking for a "fast review." A fast review is an appeal that uses the fast deadlines instead of the standard deadlines.

During this review, we look at all of the information about your home health care, skilled nursing facility care, or care you are getting at a Comprehensive Outpatient Rehabilitation Facility (CORF). We check to see if the decision about when your services should end was fair and followed all the rules.
We will use the fast deadlines rather than the standard deadlines for giving you the answer to this review. We will give you our decision within 72 hours after you ask for a "fast review."

At a glance: How to make a Level 1 Alternate Appeal
Call our Member Services at (855) 735-5831 (TTY: 711), 7 days a week, 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. Ask for a "fast review." The call is free
We will give you our decision within 72 hours.

If we say Yes to your fast review, it means we agree that we will keep covering your services for as long as it is medically necessary.

It also means that we agree to pay you back for our share of the costs of care you got since the date when we said your coverage would end.

If we say No to your fast review, we are saying that stopping your services was medically appropriate. Our coverage ends as of the day we said coverage would end.

If you continue getting services after the day we said they would stop, you may have to pay the full cost of the services.

The legal term for "fast review" or "fast appeal" is "expedited appeal."

To make sure we were following all the rules when we said No to your fast appeal, we will send your appeal to the "Independent Review Entity." When we do this, it means that your case is automatically going to Level 2 of the appeals process.
Level 2 Alternate Appeal to continue your care for longer
We will send the information for your Level 2 Appeal to the Independent Review Entity (IRE) within 24 hours of when we give you our Level 1 decision. If you think we are not meeting this deadline or other deadlines, you can make a complaint. Section J on page 166 tells how to make a complaint.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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During the Level 2 Appeal, the IRE reviews the decision we made when we said No to your "fast review." This organization decides whether the decision we made should be changed.

At a glance: How to make a Level 2 Appeal to require that the plan continue your care

The IRE does a "fast review" of your appeal. The reviewers usually give you an answer within 72 hours.

You do not have to do anything. The plan will automatically send your appeal to the Independent Review Entity.

The IRE is an independent organization that is hired by Medicare. This organization is not connected with our plan, and it is not a government agency.

Reviewers at the IRE will take a careful look at all of the information related to your appeal.

If the IRE says Yes to your appeal, then we must pay you back for our share of the costs of care. We must also continue our coverage of your services for as long as it is medically necessary.

If the IRE says No to your appeal, it means they agree with us that stopping coverage of services was medically appropriate.

The letter you get from the IRE will tell you what you can do if you wish to continue with the review process. It will give you details about how to go on to a Level 3 Appeal, which is handled by a judge.

I. Taking your appeal beyond Level 2
I1. Next steps for Medicare services and items
If you made a Level 1 Appeal and a Level 2 Appeal for Medicare services or items, and both of your appeals have been turned down, you may have the right to additional levels of appeal. The letter you get from the Independent Review Entity will tell you what to do if you wish to continue the appeals process.
Level 3 of the appeals process is an Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) hearing. The person who makes the decision in a Level 3 appeal is an ALJ or an attorney adjudicator. If you want an ALJ or attorney adjudicator to review your case, the item or medical service you are requesting must meet a minimum dollar amount. If the dollar value is less than the minimum level, you cannot appeal any further. If the dollar value is high enough, you can ask an ALJ or attorney adjudicator to hear your appeal.
If you do not agree with the ALJ or attorney adjudicator's decision, you can go to the Medicare Appeals Council. After that, you may have the right to ask a federal court to look at your appeal.
If you need assistance at any stage of the appeals process, you can contact the Healthy Connections Prime Advocate. The phone number is 1-844-477-4632. TTY users should call 711.

I2. Next steps for Healthy Connections Medicaid services and items
If you made a Level 1 Appeal and a Level 2 Appeal for Healthy Connections Medicaid services or items, and both of your appeals have been turned down, you have the right to additional levels of appeal. If you have questions after your Level 2 Appeal, contact the Healthy Connections Prime Advocate at

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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1-844-477-4632. TTY users should call 711. This advocate will explain your options and will always act in your best interest.
Level 3 of the appeals process is an Administrative Law Court (ALC) hearing. If you want an ALC hearing, start by completing the "Request for Contested Case Hearing" form available at www.scalc.net/pub/ pubRequestForContestedCaseHearing.pdf. You must submit this form within 30 calendar days of the date you were notified of the Level 2 decision. There is a $25 fee to appeal. If you cannot afford the fee, you can file a "Request to Waive Filing Fee." This form can be found at www.scalc.net/pub/ pubRequestToWaiveFilingFee.pdf.
If you are appealing a Level 2 decision made by hearing, you will be responsible for the cost of making a transcript of the hearing. A transcript is a written record of the hearing. The cost of the transcript is approximately $16 for each hour that the transcriptionist spends typing the transcript.
The rules for appealing to the ALC are found at www.scalc.net/rules.aspx. If you do not follow the rules, your appeal may be dismissed.

J. How to make a complaint

J1. What kinds of problems should be complaints?

The complaint process is used for certain types of problems only, such as problems related to quality of care, waiting times, and customer service. Here are examples of the kinds of problems handled by the complaint process.

Complaints about quality

You are unhappy with the quality of care, such as the care you got in the hospital.
Complaints about privacy
You think that someone did not respect your right to privacy, or shared information about you that is confidential.
Complaints about poor customer service
A health care provider or staff was rude or disrespectful to you.

At a glance: How to make a complaint
You can make an internal complaint with our plan and/or an external complaint with an organization that is not connected to our plan.
To make an internal complaint, call Member Services or send us a letter.
There are different organizations that handle external complaints. For more information, read Section J3 on page 168.

Molina Dual Options staff treated you poorly.

You think you are being pushed out of the plan.

Complaints about accessibility

You cannot physically access the health care services and facilities in a doctor or provider's office.

Your provider does not give you a reasonable accommodation you need such as an American Sign Language interpreter.

Complaints about waiting times

You are having trouble getting an appointment, or waiting too long to get it.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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You have been kept waiting too long by doctors, pharmacists, other health professionals, or by Member Services or other plan staff. Complaints about cleanliness You think the clinic, hospital or doctor's office is not clean. Complaints about language access Your doctor or provider does not provide you with an interpreter during your appointment. Complaints about communications from us You think we failed to give you a notice or letter that you should have received. You think the written information we sent you is too difficult to understand. Complaints about the timeliness of our actions related to coverage decisions or appeals You believe that we are not meeting our deadlines for making a coverage decision or answering your appeal. You believe that, after getting a coverage or appeal decision in your favor, we are not meeting the deadlines for approving or giving you the service or paying you back for certain medical services. You believe we did not forward your case to the Independent Review Entity on time.
The legal term for a "complaint" is a "grievance."

The legal term for "making a complaint" is "filing a grievance."
Are there different types of complaints? Yes. You can make an internal complaint and/or an external complaint. An internal complaint is filed with and reviewed by our plan. An external complaint is filed with and reviewed by an organization that is not affiliated with our plan. For more information about internal complaints, read the next section. For more information about external complaints, read Section J3 on page 168 If you need help making an internal and/or external complaint, you can call the Healthy Connections Prime Advocate at 1-844-477-4632. TTY users should call 711.
J1. Internal complaints To make an internal complaint, call Member Services at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week, 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. You can make the complaint at any time unless it is about a Part D drug. If the complaint is about a Part D drug, you must make it within 60 calendar days after you had the problem you want to complain about.
If there is anything else you need to do, Member Services will tell you.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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You can also write your complaint and send it to us. If you put your complaint in writing, we will respond to your complaint in writing.
Complaints are grievances that must be resolved as expeditiously as your case requires, based on your health status, but no later than 30 calendar days after the date the Plan receives the oral or written grievance. Grievances filed orally, may be responded to orally unless the enrollee requests a written response or the grievance concerns quality of care. Molina Dual Options will complete the investigation as expeditiously as the case requires, based on the enrollee's heath status, but no later than 30 days of receipt of the request, or within 24 hours for expedited grievances. Grievances filed in writing must be responded to in writing. Grievances may be filed orally by calling us at (855) 665-4627, TTY: 711, Monday­ Friday, 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time; or in writing by mailing to: Molina Dual Options Appeals and Grievances,PO Box 22816, Long Beach, CA 90801, Fax: (562) 499-0610.

The legal term for "fast complaint" is "expedited grievance."
If possible, we will answer you right away. If you call us with a complaint, we may be able to give you an answer on the same phone call. If your health condition requires us to answer quickly, we will do that.
We answer most complaints within 30 calendar days. If we need more information and the delay is in your best interest, or if you ask for more time, we can take up to 14 more calendar days to answer your complaint. We will tell you in writing why we need more time. If you are making a complaint because we denied your request for a "fast coverage decision" or a "fast appeal," we will automatically give you a "fast complaint" and respond to your complaint within 24 hours. If you are making a complaint because we took extra time to make a coverage decision or appeal, we will automatically give you a "fast complaint" and respond to your complaint within 24 hours. If we do not agree with some or all of your complaint, we will tell you and explain our reasons. We will respond whether we agree with the complaint or not.
J2. External complaints You can tell Medicare about your complaint You can send your complaint to Medicare. The Medicare Complaint Form is available at: www.medicare. gov/MedicareComplaintForm/home.aspx. Medicare takes your complaints seriously and will use this information to help improve the quality of the Medicare program. If you have any other feedback or concerns, or if you feel the plan is not addressing your problem, please call 1-800-MEDICARE (1-800-633-4227). TTY users can call 1-877-486-2048. The call is free.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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You can tell the Healthy Connections Prime Advocate about your complaint
You can call the Healthy Connections Prime Advocate to tell them about your complaint. They are not connected with us or any insurance company or health plan. The phone number for the Healthy Connections Prime Advocate is 1-844-477-4632. TTY users should call 711. This call is free and so are the services. For more information, you can also visit www.healthyconnectionsprimeadvocate.com.
You can file a complaint with the Office for Civil Rights
You can make a complaint to the Department of Health and Human Services' Office for Civil Rights if you think you have not been treated fairly. For example, you can make a complaint about disability access or language assistance. The phone number for the Office for Civil Rights is 1-800-368-1019. TTY users should call 1-800-537-7697. You can also visit www.hhs.gov/ocr for more information.
You may also contact the local Office for Civil Rights office at: Office for Civil Rights U.S. Department of Health & Human Services Sam Nunn Atlanta Federal Center, Suite 16T70 61 Forsyth Street, S.W. Atlanta, GA 30303-8909 Phone: (800) 368-1019; TTY: (800) 537-7697 Fax: (202) 619-3818
You may also have rights under the Americans with Disability Act and under state law. You can contact the Healthy Connections Prime Advocate for assistance. The phone number is 1-844-477-4632. TTY users should call 711.
You can file a complaint with the Quality Improvement Organization
When your complaint is about quality of care, you also have two choices:
You can make your complaint about the quality of care directly to the Quality Improvement Organization (without making the complaint to us).
Or you can make your complaint to us and to the Quality Improvement Organization. If you make a complaint to this organization, we will work with them to resolve your complaint.
The Quality Improvement Organization is a group of practicing doctors and other health care experts paid by the federal government to check and improve the care given to Medicare patients. To learn more about the Quality Improvement Organization, see Chapter 2.
In South Carolina, the Quality Improvement Organization is called KEPRO. The phone number for KEPRO is 1-888-317-0751 (TTY: 1-855-843-4776).

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Chapter 10: Ending your membership in our Medicare-Medicaid Plan
Introduction
This chapter tells you when and how you can end your membership in our plan and what your health coverage options are after you leave our plan. If you leave our plan, you will still be in the Medicare and Healthy Connections Medicaid programs as long as you are eligible. Key terms and their definitions appear in alphabetical order in the last chapter of the Member Handbook.
Table of Contents
A. When you can end your membership in our Medicare-Medicaid Plan ..................................... 171 B. How to end your membership in our plan ................................................................................. 171 C. How to join a different Medicare-Medicaid Plan ....................................................................... 172 D. How to get Medicare and Healthy Connections Medicaid services separately ........................ 172
D1. Ways to get your Medicare services ................................................................................... 172 D2. How to get your Healthy Connections Medicaid services ................................................... 173 E. Keep getting your medical services and drugs through our plan until your membership
ends ..........................................................................................................................................174 F. Other situations when your membership ends ......................................................................... 174 G. Rules against asking you to leave our plan for any health-related reason ............................... 175 H. Your right to make a complaint if we end your membership in our plan ................................... 175 I. How to get more information about ending your plan membership .......................................... 175

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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A. When you can end your membership in our Medicare-Medicaid Plan
You can end your membership in Molina Dual Options Medicare-Medicaid Plan at any time during the year by enrolling in another Medicare Advantage Plan, enrolling in another Medicare-Medicaid Plan, or moving to Original Medicare.
Your membership will end on the last day of the month that we get your request to change your plan. For example, if we get your request on October 18, your coverage with our plan will end on October 31. Your new coverage will begin the first day of the next month (November 1, in this example). If you leave our plan, you can get information about your:
Medicare options in the table on page 172.
Healthy Connections Medicaid services on page 173.
You can get more information about when you can end your membership by calling:
South Carolina Healthy Connections Choices at 1-877-552-4642, Monday through Friday from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. TTY users should call 1-877-552-4670.
State Health Insurance Assistance Program (SHIP), I-CARE, at 1-800-868-9095, Monday through Friday from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. TTY users should call 711.
Medicare at 1-800-MEDICARE (1-800-633-4227), 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. TTY users should call 1-877-486-2048.
NOTE: If you are in a drug management program, you may not be able to change plans. See Chapter 5 for information about drug management programs.
B. How to end your membership in our plan
If you decide to end your membership, tell Healthy Connections Medicaid or Medicare that you want to leave Molina Dual Options:
Call South Carolina Healthy Connections Choices at 1-877-552-4642, Monday through Friday from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. TTY users should call 1-877-552-4670; OR
Call Medicare at 1-800-MEDICARE (1-800-633-4227), 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. TTY users (people who have difficulty hearing, or speaking) should call 1-877-486-2048. When you call 1-800-MEDICARE, you can also enroll in another Medicare health or drug plan. More information on getting your Medicare services when you leave our plan is in the chart on page 172.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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C. How to join a different Medicare-Medicaid Plan
If you want to keep getting your Medicare and Healthy Connections Medicaid benefits together from a single plan, you can join a different Medicare-Medicaid Plan.
To enroll in a different Medicare-Medicaid Plan:
Call South Carolina Healthy Connections Choices at 1-877-552-4642, Monday through Friday from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. TTY users should call 1-877-552-4670. Tell them you want to leave Molina Dual Options and join a different Medicare-Medicaid Plan. If you are not sure what plan you want to join, they can tell you about other plans in your area.
Your coverage with Molina Dual Options end on the last day of the month that we get your request.

D. How to get Medicare and Healthy Connections Medicaid services separately
If you do not want to enroll in a different Medicare-Medicaid Plan after you leave Molina Dual Options, you will go back to getting your Medicare and Healthy Connections Medicaid services separately.
D1. Ways to get your Medicare services
You will have a choice about how you get your Medicare benefits. You have three options for getting your Medicare services. By choosing one of these options, you will automatically end your membership in our plan.

1. You can change to:
A Medicare health plan such as a Medicare Advantage plan, such as a Medicare Advantage plan or a Program of All-inclusive Care for the Elderly (PACE)

Here is what to do:
Call Medicare at 1-800-MEDICARE (1-800-633-4227), 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. TTY users should call 1-877-486-2048.
If you need help or more information:
Call the State Health Insurance Assistance Program (SHIP) at 1-800-868-9095. TTY users should call 711. In South Carolina, the SHIP is called the Insurance Counseling Assistance and Referrals for Elders (I-CARE) program.
You will automatically be disenrolled from Molina Dual Options when your new plan's coverage begins.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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2. You can change to:
Original Medicare with a separate Medicare prescription drug plan

Here is what to do:
Call Medicare at 1-800-MEDICARE (1-800-633-4227), 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. TTY users should call 1-877-486-2048.
If you need help or more information:
Call the State Health Insurance Assistance Program (SHIP) at 1-800-868-9095. TTY users should call 711. In South Carolina, the SHIP is called the Insurance Counseling Assistance and Referrals for Elders (I-CARE) program.
You will automatically be disenrolled from Molina Dual Options when your Original Medicare and prescription drug plan coverage begins.

3. You can change to:
Original Medicare without a separate Medicare prescription drug plan
NOTE: If you switch to Original Medicare and do not enroll in a separate Medicare prescription drug plan, Medicare may enroll you in a drug plan, unless you tell Medicare you don't want to join.
You should only drop prescription drug coverage if you have drug coverage from another source, such as an employer or union. If you have questions about whether you need drug coverage, call Insurance Counseling Assistance and Referrals for Elders (I-CARE) at 1-800-868-9095. TTY users should call 711.

Here is what to do:
Call Medicare at 1-800-MEDICARE (1-800-633-4227), 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. TTY users should call 1-877-486-2048.
If you need help or more information:
Call the State Health Insurance Assistance Program (SHIP) at 1-800-868-9095. TTY users should call 711. In South Carolina, the SHIP is called the Insurance Counseling Assistance and Referrals for Elders (I-CARE) program.
You will automatically be disenrolled from Molina Dual Options when your Original Medicare coverage begins.

D2. How to get your Healthy Connections Medicaid services
If you leave our plan, you will get your Healthy Connections Medicaid services through fee-for-service. This is how most people got Medicaid services before they joined Molina Dual Options.
Your Healthy Connections Medicaid services include most long-term services and supports and behavioral health care.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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If you leave our plan, you can see any provider that accepts Healthy Connections Medicaid.
E. Keep getting your medical services and drugs through our plan until your membership ends
If you leave Molina Dual Options, it may take time before your membership ends and your new Medicare and Healthy Connections Medicaid coverage begins. See page 175 for more information. During this time, you will keep getting your health care and drugs through our plan.
You should use our network pharmacies to get your prescriptions filled. Usually, your prescription drugs are covered only if they are filled at a network pharmacy including through our mail-order pharmacy services. If you are hospitalized on the day that your membership ends, your hospital stay will usually be covered by our plan until you are discharged. This will happen even if your new health coverage begins before you are discharged.
F. Other situations when your membership ends
These are the cases when Molina Dual Options must end your membership in the plan: If there is a break in your Medicare Part A and Part B coverage. If you no longer qualify for Healthy Connections Medicaid. Our plan is for people who qualify for both Medicare and Healthy Connections Medicaid. Please complete all paperwork from Healthy Connections Medicaid in order to retain your Medicaid eligibility. If you move out of our service area. If you are away from our service area for more than six months. If you move or take a long trip, you need to call Member Services to find out if the place you are moving or traveling to is in our plan's service area. If you enter a nursing home or skilled nursing facility outside the plan's service area and live there for more than six months. If you go to jail or prison for a criminal offense. If you lie about or withhold information about other insurance you have for prescription drugs. If you are not a United States citizen or are not lawfully present in the United States.
You must be a United States citizen or lawfully present in the United States to be a member of our plan. The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services will notify us if you aren't eligible to remain a member on this basis. We must disenroll you if you don't meet this requirement. We can make you leave our plan for the following reasons only if we get permission from Medicare and Healthy Connections Medicaid first:
If you intentionally give us incorrect information when you are enrolling in our plan and that information affects your eligibility for our plan.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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If you continuously behave in a way that is disruptive and makes it difficult for us to provide medical care for you and other members of our plan. If you let someone else use your Member ID Card to get medical care.
If we end your membership because of this reason, Medicare may have your case investigated by the Inspector General.
G. Rules against asking you to leave our plan for any health-related reason
If you feel that you are being asked to leave our plan for a health-related reason, you should call Medicare at 1-800-MEDICARE (1-800-633-4227). TTY users should call 1-877-486-2048. You may call 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. You should also call the Healthy Connections Prime Advocate at 1-844-477-4632. TTY users should call 711.
H. Your right to make a complaint if we end your membership in our plan
If we end your membership in our plan, we must tell you our reasons in writing for ending your membership. We must also explain how you can file a grievance or make a complaint about our decision to end your membership. You can also see Chapter 9 for information about how to make a complaint.
I. How to get more information about ending your plan membership
If you have questions or would like more information on when we can end your membership, you can call Member Services at the number at the bottom of the page.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

? 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. The call is free. For more information, visit www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals.

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Chapter 11: Legal notices
Introduction
This chapter includes legal notices that apply to your membership in Molina Dual Options. Key terms and their definitions appear in alphabetical order in the last chapter of the Member Handbook.
Table of Contents
A. Notice about laws .....................................................................................................................177 B. Notice about nondiscrimination ................................................................................................ 177 C. Notice about Medicare as a second payer ............................................................................... 177

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

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A. Notice about laws
Many laws apply to this Member Handbook. These laws may affect your rights and responsibilities even if the laws are not included or explained in this handbook. The main laws that apply to this handbook are federal laws about the Medicare and Healthy Connections Medicaid programs. Other federal and state laws may apply too.
B. Notice about nondiscrimination
Every company or agency that works with Medicare and Healthy Connections Medicaid must obey laws that protect you from discrimination or unfair treatment. We don't discriminate or treat you differently because of your age, claims experience, color, ethnicity, evidence of insurability, gender, genetic information, geographic location within the service area, health status, medical history, mental or physical disability, national origin, race, religion, or sex. In addition, we don't discriminate or treat you differently because of your behavior, mental ability, receipt of health care, sexual orientation, or use of services.
If you want more information or have concerns about discrimination or unfair treatment:
Call the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Office for Civil Rights at 1-800-368-1019. TTY users can call 1-800-537-7697. You can also visit www.hhs.gov/ocr for more information.
Call your local Office for Civil Rights. You can call The South Carolina Human Affairs Commission at 1-800-521-0725. This call is free.
If you have a disability and need help accessing health care services or a provider, call Member Services. If you have a complaint, such as a problem with wheelchair access, Member Services can help.

C. Notice about Medicare as a second payer
Sometimes someone else has to pay first for the services we provide you. For example, if you are in a car accident or if you are injured at work, insurance or Workers Compensation has to pay first.
We have the right and responsibility to collect for covered Medicare services for which Medicare is not the first payer.

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Chapter 12: Definitions of important words

Introduction
This chapter includes key terms used throughout the Member Handbook with their definitions. The terms are listed in alphabetical order. If you can't find a term you're looking for or if you need more information than a definition includes, contact Member Services.
Activities of daily living: The things people do on a normal day, such as eating, using the toilet,
getting dressed, bathing, or brushing their teeth.
Aid paid pending: You can continue getting previously approved services while you are waiting for
a decision about a Level 1 Appeal (and for a Healthy Connections Medicaid service, while you are waiting for a decision about a Level 2 Appeal). This continued coverage is called "aid paid pending." Please see Chapter 9 to learn more. Please call Member Services at the number at the bottom of the page if you have other questions.
Ambulatory surgical center: A facility that provides outpatient surgery to patients who do not need
hospital care and who are not expected to need more than 24 hours of care.
Appeal: A way for you to challenge our action if you think we made a mistake. You can ask us to
change a coverage decision by filing an appeal. Chapter 9 explains appeals, including how to make an appeal.
Brand name drug: A prescription drug that is made and sold by the company that originally made
the drug. Brand name drugs have the same active ingredients as the generic versions of the drugs. Generic drugs are made and sold by other drug companies.
Care Coordinator: One main person who works with you, with the health plan, and with your care
providers to make sure you get the care you need.
Care plan: A plan for what health services you will get and how you will get them.
Care team: A care team may include doctors, nurses, counselors, or other health professionals who
are there to help you get the care you need. You are an important member of the care team and can also include other family members or friends.
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS): The federal agency in charge of Medicare.
Chapter 2 explains how to contact CMS.
Complaint: A written or spoken statement saying that you have a problem or concern about your
covered services or care. This includes any concerns about the quality of your care, our network providers, or our network pharmacies. The formal name for "making a complaint" is "filing a grievance."
Comprehensive assessment: A review aimed at getting a deeper look at your medical needs,
social needs, and capabilities. We will get information from you, your providers, and family/caregivers when appropriate. This assessment will be done by qualified and trained health professionals, such as nurses, social workers, and Care Coordinators.
Comprehensive outpatient rehabilitation facility (CORF): A facility that mainly provides
rehabilitation services after an illness, accident, or major operation. It provides a variety of services,

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including physical therapy, social or psychological services, respiratory therapy, occupational therapy, speech therapy, and home environment evaluation services.
Coordinated and Integrated Care Organization (CICO): Another name for a Medicare-Medicaid
Plan.
Coverage decision: A decision about what benefits we cover. This includes decisions about covered
drugs and services or the amount we will pay for your health services. Chapter 9 explains how to ask us for a coverage decision.
Covered drugs: The term we use to mean all of the prescription drugs covered by our plan.
Covered services: The general term we use to mean all of the health care, long-term services and
supports, supplies, prescription and over-the-counter drugs, equipment, and other services covered by our plan.
Cultural competence training: Training that provides additional instruction for health care providers
that helps them better understand your background, values, and beliefs to adapt services to meet your social, cultural, and language needs.
Disenrollment: The process of ending your membership in our plan. Disenrollment may be voluntary
(your own choice) or involuntary (not your own choice).
Drug tiers: Groups of drugs on our Drug List. Generic, brand name, or over-the-counter (OTC) drugs
are examples of drug tiers. Every drug on the Drug List is in one of three (3) tiers.
Durable medical equipment (DME): Certain items your doctor orders for use in your own home.
Examples of these items are wheelchairs, crutches, powered mattress systems, diabetic supplies, hospital beds ordered by a provider for use in the home, IV infusion pumps, speech generating devices, oxygen equipment and supplies, nebulizers, and walkers.
Emergency: A medical emergency is when you, or any other person with an average knowledge of
health and medicine, believe that you have medical symptoms that need immediate medical attention to prevent death, loss of a body part, or loss of function of a body part. The medical symptoms may be a serious injury or severe pain.
Emergency care: Covered services that are given by a provider trained to give emergency services
and needed to treat a medical emergency.
Exception: Permission to get coverage for a drug that is not normally covered or to use the drug
without certain rules and limitations.
Extra Help: Medicare program that helps people with limited incomes and resources reduce Medicare
Part D prescription drug costs, such as premiums, deductibles, and copays. Extra Help is also called the "Low-Income Subsidy," or "LIS."
Fair hearing: A chance for you to tell your problem in court and show that a decision we made is
wrong.
Generic drug: A prescription drug that is approved by the federal government to use in place of a
brand name drug. A generic drug has the same active ingredients as a brand name drug. It is usually cheaper and works just as well as the brand name drug.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

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Grievance: A complaint you make about us or one of our network providers or pharmacies. This
includes a complaint about the quality of your care.
Health plan: An organization made up of doctors, hospitals, pharmacies, providers of long-term
services, and other providers. It also has Care Coordinators to help you manage all your providers and services. They all work together to provide the care you need.
Healthy Connections Medicaid: South Carolina's Medicaid program. For more information, see
the definition of "Medicaid" below.
Healthy Connections Prime: A demonstration program jointly run by South Carolina and the federal
government to provide better health care for people who have both Medicare and Healthy Connections Medicaid.
Home health aide: A person who provides services that do not need the skills of a licensed nurse
or therapist, such as help with personal care (like bathing, using the toilet, dressing, or carrying out the prescribed exercises). Home health aides do not have a nursing license or provide therapy.
Hospice: A program of care and support to help people who have a terminal prognosis live comfortably.
A terminal prognosis means that a person has a terminal illness and is expected to have six months or less to live.
A member who has a terminal prognosis has the right to elect hospice.
A specially trained team of professionals and caregivers provide care for the whole person, including physical, emotional, social, and spiritual needs.
Molina Dual Options must give you a list of hospice providers in your geographic area.
Improper/inappropriate billing: A situation when a provider bills you more than the plan's cost
sharing amount for services. Show your Molina Dual Options Member ID Card when you get any services or prescriptions. Call Member Services if you get any bills you do not understand.
Because Molina Dual Options pays the entire cost for your services, you do not owe any cost sharing. Providers should not bill you anything for these services.
Independent Review Entity (IRE): An organization that is hired by the Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services (CMS) to conduct a Level 2 appeal review for a service or item that is covered by Medicare-only or by both Medicare and Healthy Connections Medicaid. If Molina Dual Options denies approval for such a service or item during a member's Level 1 appeal, the denied appeal is sent to the IRE to conduct a Level 2 review. The IRE is not connected to Molina Dual Options and is not a government agency. Please see Chapter 9 for more information about Level 2 appeals.
Initial health screen: A review of a patient's medical history and current condition. It is used to
figure out the patient's health and how it might change in the future.
Inpatient: A term used when you have been formally admitted to the hospital for skilled medical
services. If you were not formally admitted, you might still be considered an outpatient instead of an inpatient even if you stay overnight.
List of Covered Drugs (Drug List): A list of prescription drugs covered by the plan. The plan
chooses the drugs on this list with the help of doctors and pharmacists. The Drug List tells you if there are any rules you need to follow to get your drugs. The Drug List is sometimes called a "formulary."

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

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Long-term services and supports (LTSS): Long-term services and supports are services that
help improve a long-term medical condition. Most of these services help you stay in your home so you don't have to go to a nursing home or hospital.
Low-income subsidy (LIS): See "Extra Help."
Medicaid (or Medical Assistance): A program run by the federal government and the state that
helps people with limited incomes and resources pay for long-term services and supports and medical costs.
It covers extra services and drugs not covered by Medicare.
Medicaid programs vary from state to state, but most health care costs are covered if you qualify for both Medicare and Medicaid.
See Chapter 2 for information about how to contact Medicaid in your state.
Medically necessary:
Services that are reasonable and necessary:
For the diagnosis or treatment of your illness or injury; or
To improve the functioning of a malformed body member; or
Otherwise medically necessary under Medicare law.
This includes care that keeps you from going into a hospital or nursing home.
In accordance with Healthy Connections Medicaid law and regulation, services are medically necessary if they are:
Essential to prevent, diagnose, prevent the worsening of, alleviate, correct, or cure medical conditions that endanger life, cause suffering or pain, cause physical deformity or malfunction, threaten to cause or aggravate a handicap, or result in illness or infirmity; and
Provided at an appropriate facility at the appropriate level of care for the treatment of your medical condition; and
Provided in accordance with generally accepted standards of medical practice.
Medicare: The federal health insurance program for people 65 years of age or older, some people
under age 65 with certain disabilities, and people with end-stage renal disease (generally those with permanent kidney failure who need dialysis or a kidney transplant). People with Medicare can get their Medicare health coverage through Original Medicare or a managed care plan (see "Health plan").
Medicare Advantage Plan: A Medicare program, also known as "Medicare Part C" or "MA Plan,"
that offers plans through private companies. Medicare pays these companies to cover your Medicare benefits.
Medicare-covered services: Services covered by Medicare Part A and Part B. All Medicare health
plans, including our plan, must cover all of the services that are covered by Medicare Part A and Part B.
Medicare-Medicaid enrollee: A person who qualifies for Medicare and Healthy Connections
Medicaid coverage. A Medicare-Medicaid enrollee is also called a "dually individual."

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

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Medicare Part A: The Medicare program that covers most medically necessary hospital, skilled
nursing facility, home health and hospice care.
Medicare Part B: The Medicare program that covers services (like lab tests, surgeries, and doctor
visits) and supplies (like wheelchairs and walkers) that are medically necessary to treat a disease or condition. Medicare Part B also covers many preventive and screening services.
Medicare Part C: The Medicare program that lets private health insurance companies provide Medicare
benefits through a Medicare Advantage Plan.
Medicare Part D: The Medicare prescription drug benefit program. (We call this program "Part D" for
short.) Part D covers outpatient prescription drugs, vaccines, and some supplies not covered by Medicare Part A or Part B or Healthy Connections Medicaid. Molina Dual Options includes Medicare Part D.
Medicare Part D drugs:Drugs that can be covered under Medicare Part D. Congress specifically
excluded certain categories of drugs from coverage as Part D drugs. Healthy Connections Medicaid may cover some of these drugs.
Member (member of our plan, or plan member): A person with Medicare and Healthy
Connections Medicaid who qualifies to get covered services, who has enrolled in our plan, and whose enrollment has been confirmed by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) and the state.
Member Handbook and Disclosure Information: This document, along with your enrollment
form and any other attachments or riders, which explain your coverage, what we must do, your rights, and what you must do as a member of our plan.
Member Services: A department within our plan responsible for answering your questions about
your membership, benefits, grievances, and appeals. See Chapter 2 and the bottom of the page for information about how to contact Member Services.
Network pharmacy: A pharmacy (drug store) that has agreed to fill prescriptions for our plan members.
We call them "network pharmacies" because they have agreed to work with our plan. In most cases, your prescriptions are covered only if they are filled at one of our network pharmacies.
Network provider: "Provider" is the general term we use for doctors, nurses, and other people who
give you services and care. The term also includes hospitals, home health agencies, clinics, and other places that give you health care services, medical equipment, and long-term services and supports.
They are licensed or certified by Medicare and by the state to provide health care services.
We call them "network providers" when they agree to work with the health plan and accept our payment and not charge our members an extra amount.
While you are a member of our plan, you must use network providers to get covered services. Network providers are also called "plan providers."
Nursing home or facility: A place that provides care for people who cannot get their care at home
but who do not need to be in the hospital.
Ombudsman (Healthy Connections Prime Advocate): An office in your state that works as
an advocate on your behalf. They can answer questions if you have a problem or complaint and can help you understand what to do. The ombudsman's services are free. The Healthy Connections Prime Advocate is the ombudsman for people enrolled in Healthy Connections Prime. You can find more

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

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information about the ombudsman in Chapters 2 and 9 of this handbook, including information on how to contact the Healthy Connections Prime Advocate.
Organization determination: The plan has made an organization determination when it, or one of
its providers, makes a decision about whether services are covered or how much you have to pay for covered services. Organization determinations are called "coverage decisions" in this handbook. Chapter 9 explains how to ask us for a coverage decision.
Original Medicare (traditional Medicare or fee-for-service Medicare): Original Medicare
is offered by the government. Under Original Medicare, Medicare services are covered by paying doctors, hospitals, and other health care providers amounts that are set by Congress.
You can see any doctor, hospital, or other health care provider that accepts Medicare. Original Medicare has two parts: Part A (hospital insurance) and Part B (medical insurance).
Original Medicare is available everywhere in the United States.
If you do not want to be in our plan, you can choose Original Medicare.
Out-of-network pharmacy: A pharmacy that has not agreed to work with our plan to coordinate or
provide covered drugs to members of our plan. Most drugs you get from out-of-network pharmacies are not covered by our plan unless certain conditions apply.
Out-of-network provider or Out-of-network facility: A provider or facility that is not employed,
owned, or operated by our plan and is not under contract to provide covered services to members of our plan. Chapter 3 explains out-of-network providers or facilities.
Over-the-counter (OTC) drugs: Over-the-counter drugs refers to any drug or medicine that a
person can buy without a prescription.
Part A: See "Medicare Part A."
Part B: See "Medicare Part B."
Part C: See "Medicare Part C."
Part D: See "Medicare Part D."
Part D drugs: See "Medicare Part D drugs."
Personal health information (also called Protected health information) (PHI): Information
about you and your health, such as your name, address, social security number, physician visits and medical history. See Molina Dual Options' Notice of Privacy Practices for more information about how Molina Dual Options protects, uses, and discloses your PHI, as well as your rights with respect to your PHI.
Primary care provider (PCP): Your primary care provider is the doctor or other provider you see
first for most health problems. He or she makes sure you get the care you need to stay healthy.
He or she also may talk with other doctors and health care providers about your care and refer you to them.
In many Medicare health plans, you must see your primary care provider before you see any other health care provider.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

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See Chapter 3 for information about getting care from primary care providers.
Prior authorization: An approval from Molina Dual Options you must get before you can get a specific
service or drug or see an out-of-network provider. Molina Dual Options may not cover the service or drug if you don't get approval.
Some network medical services are covered only if your doctor or other network provider gets prior authorization from our plan.
Covered services that need our plan's prior authorization are marked in the Benefits Chart in Chapter 4.
Some drugs are covered only if you get prior authorization from us.
Covered drugs that need prior authorization are marked in the List of Covered Drugs.
Prosthetics and Orthotics: These are medical devices ordered by your doctor or other health care
provider. Covered items include, but are not limited to, arm, back, and neck braces; artificial limbs; artificial eyes; and devices needed to replace an internal body part or function, including ostomy supplies and enteral and parenteral nutrition therapy.
Quality improvement organization (QIO): A group of doctors and other health care experts who
help improve the quality of care for people with Medicare. They are paid by the federal government to check and improve the care given to patients. See Chapter 2 for information about how to contact the QIO for your state.
Quantity limits: A limit on the amount of a drug you can have. Limits may be on the amount of the
drug that we cover per prescription.
Referral: A referral means that your primary care provider (PCP) must give you approval before you
can see someone that is not your PCP. If you don't get approval, Molina Dual Options may not cover the services. You don't need a referral to see certain specialists, such as women's health specialists. You can find more information about referrals in Chapter 3 and about services that require referrals in Chapter 4.
Rehabilitation services: Treatment you get to help you recover from an illness, accident or major
operation. See Chapter 4 to learn more about rehabilitation services.
Service area: A geographic area where a health plan accepts members. For plans that limit which
doctors and hospitals you may use, it is also generally the area where you can get routine (non-emergency) services. Only people who live in our service area can get Molina Dual Options.
Skilled nursing facility (SNF): A nursing home with the staff and equipment to give skilled nursing
care and, in most cases, skilled rehabilitative services and other related health services.
Skilled nursing facility (SNF) care: Skilled nursing care and rehabilitation services provided on
a continuous, daily basis, in a skilled nursing facility. Examples of skilled nursing facility care include physical therapy or intravenous (IV) injections that a registered nurse or a doctor can give.
Specialist: A doctor who provides health care for a specific disease or part of the body.
State Medicaid agency: The South Carolina Department of Health and Human Services (SCDHHS)
is designated as the single state agency for the administration of the Medicaid program (called "Healthy

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

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Connections Medicaid") in South Carolina. SCDHHS is a cabinet-level agency under the Governor of the State of South Carolina.
Step therapy: A coverage rule that requires you to first try another drug before we will cover the drug
you are asking for.
Supplemental Security Income (SSI): A monthly benefit paid by Social Security to people with
limited incomes and resources who are disabled, blind, or age 65 and older. SSI benefits are not the same as Social Security benefits.
Tier: A tier is a group of drugs of generally the same type (for example, brand name, generic, or
over-the-counter drugs).
Urgently needed care: Care you get for a sudden illness, injury, or condition that is not an emergency
but needs care right away. You can get urgently needed care from out-of-network providers when network providers are unavailable or you cannot get to them.

If you have questions, please call Molina Dual Options at (855) 735-5831, TTY: 711, 7 days a week,

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Method CALL
TTY FAX WRITE
WEBSITE

Molina Dual Options Member Services
Contact Information
(855) 735-5831 This call is free. 7 days a week, 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time. Assistive technologies, including self-service and voicemail options, are available on holidays, after regular business hours and on Saturdays and Sundays. We have free interpreter services for people who do not speak English.
711 This call is free. 7 days a week, 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., local time.
For Medical Services/For Healthy Connections Medicaid Drugs (non-Part D): Fax: (843) 740-1749 For Part D Prescriptions Services: Fax: (866) 290-1309
For Member Services: P.O. Box 40309 North Charleston, SC 29423-0309 For Healthy Connections Medicaid Drugs (non-Part D): P.O. Box 40309 North Charleston, SC 29423-0309 For Part D Prescription Services: 7050 Union Park Center, Suite 200 Midvale, UT 84047
www.MolinaHealthcare.com/Duals

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