§4313. Carrier liability; cause of action
1. Duty of ordinary care; cause of action. An enrollee may maintain a cause of action against a carrier offering or renewing a health plan in accordance with the following.
A. A carrier has the duty to exercise ordinary care when making health care treatment decisions that affect the quality of the diagnosis, care or treatment provided to an enrollee and is liable for damages as provided in this section for harm to an enrollee proximately caused by the failure of the carrier or its agents to exercise such ordinary care. [PL 1999, c. 742, §19 (NEW).]
B. A carrier is also liable for damages as provided in this section for harm to an enrollee proximately caused by the health care treatment decisions made by its agents who are acting on the carrier's behalf and over whom the carrier exercised control or influence in the health care treatment decisions that result in the failure to exercise ordinary care. [PL 1999, c. 742, §19 (NEW).]
[PL 2007, c. 199, Pt. B, §18 (AMD).]
2. Exhaustion of internal and external review. An enrollee may not maintain a cause of action under this section unless the enrollee or the enrollee's representative:
A. Has exhausted all levels of the carrier's internal grievance procedure in accordance with this chapter; and [PL 1999, c. 742, §19 (NEW).]
B. Has completed the independent external review process required under section 4312. [PL 1999, c. 742, §19 (NEW).]
[PL 1999, c. 742, §19 (NEW).]
3. Limitation on cause of action. An action under this section must be initiated within 3 years from the earlier of the date of issuance of the written external review decision under section 4312 or the date of issuance of the underlying adverse first-level appeal or first-level grievance determination notice.
[PL 1999, c. 742, §19 (NEW).]
4. Jurisdiction; notice and filing. The Superior Court has original jurisdiction over a cause of action under this section. The requirements for notice and filing of a cause of action under this section are governed by the Maine Rules of Civil Procedure.
[PL 1999, c. 742, §19 (NEW).]
5. Corporate practice of medicine. Section 4222, subsection 3 or any other law in this State prohibiting a carrier from practicing medicine or being licensed to practice medicine may not be asserted as a defense by a carrier in any action brought pursuant to this section.
[PL 1999, c. 742, §19 (NEW).]
6. No obligation for benefits. This section does not create any obligation on the part of a carrier to provide an enrollee any health care treatment or service that is not covered by the enrollee's health plan policy or contract.
[PL 1999, c. 742, §19 (NEW).]
7. Admissibility of external review decision. An external review decision is admissible in an action under this section.
[PL 1999, c. 742, §19 (NEW).]
8. Affirmative defense. It is an affirmative defense to any action asserted against a carrier under this section that the carrier or any agent for whose conduct the carrier is liable did not control, influence or participate in the health care treatment decision.
[PL 1999, c. 742, §19 (NEW).]
9. Damages. In a cause of action under this section, the award of damages must be made in accordance with this subsection.
A. Actual or compensatory damages may be awarded. [PL 1999, c. 742, §19 (NEW).]
B. Noneconomic damages awarded may not exceed $400,000. [PL 1999, c. 742, §19 (NEW).]
C. Punitive damages may not be awarded. [PL 1999, c. 742, §19 (NEW).]
[PL 1999, c. 742, §19 (NEW).]
10. Professional negligence. This section does not create any new or additional liability on the part of a carrier for harm caused to an enrollee that is attributable to the professional negligence of a treating physician or other health care practitioner.
[PL 1999, c. 742, §19 (NEW).]
11. Employer liability. This section does not create any liability on the part of an employer that assumes risk on behalf of its employees or an employer group purchasing organization.
[PL 1999, c. 742, §19 (NEW).]
12. Exemption. This section does not apply to workers' compensation, medical malpractice, fidelity, suretyship, boiler and machinery, property or casualty insurance.
[PL 1999, c. 742, §19 (NEW).]
13. Limitation on remedy. The cause of action under this section is the sole and exclusive private remedy under state law for an enrollee against a carrier for its health care treatment decisions that affect the quality of the diagnosis, care or treatment provided to an enrollee, except that this subsection may not be construed to prohibit an enrollee or an enrollee's authorized representative from seeking other remedies specifically available under other provisions of this Title.
[PL 1999, c. 742, §19 (NEW).]
14. Wrongful death action. Notwithstanding subsection 13, an enrollee or an enrollee's authorized representative may bring a cause of action against a carrier for its health care treatment decisions to seek a remedy under either this section or under Title 18‑C, section 2‑807, but may not seek remedies under both this section and Title 18‑C, section 2‑807.
[PL 2017, c. 402, Pt. C, §76 (AMD); PL 2019, c. 417, Pt. B, §14 (AFF).]
SECTION HISTORY
PL 1999, c. 742, §19 (NEW). PL 2007, c. 199, Pt. B, §18 (AMD). PL 2017, c. 402, Pt. C, §76 (AMD). PL 2017, c. 402, Pt. F, §1 (AFF). PL 2019, c. 417, Pt. B, §14 (AFF).
Structure Maine Revised Statutes
TITLE 24-A: MAINE INSURANCE CODE
Chapter 56-A: HEALTH PLAN IMPROVEMENT ACT
Subchapter 1: HEALTH PLAN REQUIREMENTS
24-A §4301. Definitions (REPEALED)
24-A §4302. Reporting requirements
24-A §4303-A. Provider profiling programs
24-A §4303-B. Disclosure related to provider networks
24-A §4303-C. Protection from surprise bills and bills for out-of-network emergency services
24-A §4303-D. Provider directories
24-A §4304. Utilization review
24-A §4306. Enrollee choice of primary care provider
24-A §4306-A. Patient access to obstetrical and gynecological care
24-A §4309-A. Compliance with the Affordable Care Act
24-A §4310. Access to clinical trials
24-A §4311. Access to prescription drugs
24-A §4312. Independent external review
24-A §4313. Carrier liability; cause of action
24-A §4314. Access to eye care providers
24-A §4314-A. Coverage for early refills of prescription eye drops
24-A §4315. Coverage of prosthetic devices
24-A §4316. Coverage for telehealth services
24-A §4317. Pharmacy providers
24-A §4317-A. Prescription drug coverage; out-of-pocket expenses for coinsurance
24-A §4317-B. Orally administered cancer therapy
24-A §4317-C. Coverage for prescription insulin drugs; limit on out-of-pocket costs
24-A §4317-D. Coverage of HIV prevention drugs
24-A §4317-E. Coverage for emergency supply of chronic maintenance drugs
24-A §4319-A. Guaranteed issue
24-A §4319-B. Medical loss ratio reporting for dental insurance plans
24-A §4320. No lifetime or annual limits on health plans
24-A §4320-A. Coverage of preventive and primary health services
24-A §4320-B. Extension of dependent coverage
24-A §4320-C. Emergency services
24-A §4320-D. Comprehensive health coverage
24-A §4320-E. Reinsurance, risk corridors and risk adjustment
24-A §4320-G. Applicability to health plans grandfathered under the Affordable Care Act
24-A §4320-H. Payment reform pilot projects (REALLOCATED FROM TITLE 24-A, SECTION 4320)
24-A §4320-I. Coverage for the cost of testing for bone marrow donation suitability
24-A §4320-J. Coverage for abuse-deterrent opioid analgesic drug products
24-A §4320-K. Coverage for services provided by a naturopathic doctor
24-A §4320-L. Nondiscrimination
24-A §4320-M. Coverage for abortion services
24-A §4320-N. Step therapy (REALLOCATED FROM TITLE 24-A, SECTION 4320-M)
24-A §4320-O. Coverage for services provided by a physician assistant
24-A §4320-P. Coverage for health care services for COVID-19
24-A §4320-R. Mandatory offer of coverage for certain adults with disabilities
24-A §4320-S. Coverage for dental services for cancer patients
24-A §4320-U. Coverage for fertility services (REALLOCATED FROM TITLE 24-A, SECTION 4320-S)