- Study: ‘Unprecedented’ optometry scope of practice expansion benefits patients
- Major victory for West Virginia patients, optometrists
- North Dakota secures telemedicine provisions, ignites grassroots advocacy
- How to build productive relationships with legislators
- Why you should fight for scope expansion
- Committee spotlight: AOA’s State Government Relations Committee
- How Arkansas’ major VBM law delivers on calls to promote fairness, doctor-patient relationships
- Texas optometrists mount defense in court and legislature of landmark law on vision plan abuses
- The case for expanding scope of optometry
- In rural America, opportunity for optometry amid shortfall of ophthalmologists
- Destination: Scope expansion
- Double duty: Doctors of optometry bring their vision to state legislatures
- 'High value' strategy sessions prep states’ advocacy
- VBM abuses scrutinized by state policy think tank, U.S. Senate opens new investigation
- AOA, affiliates’ foundational advocacy work advancing optometry
- South Carolina judge overrules Visibly challenge to consumer protection law
- What kind of impact is optometry making on the nation’s eye health?
- ‘Profits over patients cannot continue’ with VBMs; Texas testifies at health insurance hearing
- Kentucky attorney general holds Warby Parker accountable for its online vision test
- New York assembly bill potentially sows division in health care
- California warily watches ‘not-a-doctor’ wording in Senate bill
- Latest: Texas defends landmark vision plan law
- West Virginia adds optometric surgical procedures
- Florida optometrists quash effort—again—to pass ‘not-a-doctor’ bill
- South Dakota secures scope expansion for injections, optometric laser procedures
- Affiliates, AOA preparing for fresh attacks on optometry: 'Not-a-doctor' bills are back
- Texas vision plan law, now in effect, sees favorable development in federal lawsuit
- Proposal in Utah would restrict contact lens patient choice, disrupt doctor-patient relationship
- Affiliates, AOA share forward-thinking strategies for optometry’s advocates
- Texas’ vision plan law takes effect, court challenge continues
- Doctors of optometry in New Hampshire earn authorization to provide vaccines to public
- New Texas law halts vision plans’ anti-competitive, monopolistic behaviors
- YAG procedures by doctors of optometry, after cataract surgery, better for patients’ care and convenience, AOA survey says
- Affiliates’ advocacy teams prepare to convene for meeting of the minds
- Doctors of optometry in Texas and Nevada build bulwark against vision plan abuses
- DeSantis decision delivers historic win for Florida optometrists and patients
- AOA and state affiliates rally to decry and defeat discriminatory ‘not-a-doctor’ bills
- Optometry’s scope wins draw new attacks from medical and ophthalmology groups
- Regional Advocacy Meetings prime states’ advocates for 2023 battles and beyond
- Hubble Contacts fined for deceptive trade practices in Texas
- Scope victory for Colorado
- Regional Advocacy Meetings strengthen states advocacy
- Virginia scope advancement
- 1-800 Contacts’ attempt to undermine law thwarted by Georgia doctors yet again
- MOA rebuff insurers reprisals against Mississippi eye care providers
- New York gains oral medication prescribing authority
- California amends optometry’s approved treatments, medications and testing
- Kansas Insurance Department puts vision plans on notice
- State advocates fighting to defend and advance our profession
- The scope of success
- State Advocacy Summit amplifies lessons from year of historic scope victories
- Texas scope expansion gains doctors oral meds, glaucoma authority
- Wyoming expands scope to include contemporary laser-excision procedures
- Mississippi scope progresses, other states seeing early successes
- 7 states authorize doctors of optometry for COVID-19 vaccinations
- Massachusetts scope win adds glaucoma authority
- Going further-expanding advocacy efforts and educational and professional development efforts
- Pennsylvania and Iowa earn big victories to expand scope of practice
- Optometry patients win in Arkansas as ballot challenge to expanded practice law is invalidated
- VSP policy change may violate states patient protection laws
- Court-appointed official deems signatures at heart of Arkansas scope saga invalid
- Arkansas scope saga necessitates urgent action
- Scope expansion to save Americans billions annually
- State Government Relations Center presenting at Republican Attorneys General Association
- Arkansas secures expanded scope of practice
- Maryland expands scope of practice
- AOA state affiliates blaze path for optometry’s future
- Optometry can contribute high-quality health care at affordable prices
- AOA president Driving change
- NJ Vision Plan Bill 2018
- Massachusetts seeks glaucoma care expansion
- Alaska-Georgia legislative victories
- South Carolina legislators override veto safeguard patients vision health
- Georgia Nebraska advance patient centered legislation
- Indiana navigates telehealth bill exempts ophthalmic devices
- FTC DOJ weigh in on Massachusetts glaucoma care expansion
- Arizona No on contact lens prescription extension
- Kentucky heralds third party triumph in new law
- State association challenges mobile refractive service
- Texas doctor successfully challenges Aetna’s policy on panels
- Proposed state legislation doesnt address patient safety
- AOA steps up fight against 1 800 Contacts anti patient legislation
- Louisiana Governor Jindal signs expanded scope of practice bill
Oklahoma secures optometry’s latest win over vision plan abuses
June 6, 2024
A new law in Oklahoma provides a check on abuses by dominant prepaid vision plans (vision benefit managers). Patients and doctors of optometry win.
Tag(s): Advocacy, State Advocacy
The bill’s passage means a more level playing field for doctors of optometry in the competition for vision care services in Oklahoma. That leveling maintains a high quality of care and ensures better options for patients, says Jeff Edwards, O.D., president of the Oklahoma Association Optometric Physicians (OAOP).
Most significantly, it preserves the doctor-patient relationship by limiting intrusion by vision plans.
“This bill helps us maximize our scope and minimizes interference from vision benefit managers,” Dr. Edwards says. “HB 1979 ultimately introduces reasonable, responsible regulations that correct a power imbalance and make sure health care decisions are being made by optometrists and their patients, not vision plans.”
Victories by state affiliate associations over vision plan abuses continue to stack up. With increasing vision plan abuses, more affiliates such as Texas, Nevada, Georgia, Illinois and Oklahoma are stepping up to curb vision benefit managers’ (VBMs’) unfair and harmful policies. Practices by VBMs, especially considering consolidation.
At the same time, the AOA continues to push for a federal regulatory crackdown on VBMs and bipartisan legislation is ongoing to deliver relief to doctors. Legislation backed by the AOA and the American Dental Association (ADA), the Dental and Optometric Care (DOC) Access Act, H.R. 1385/S. 1424, remains a priority for optometry on the federal level. Read more about the AOA and affiliates’ fight against VBM abuses.
Says Johndra McNeely, O.D, chair of the AOA State Government Relations Committee: “This is a great win for patients and patient care in Oklahoma. It's also great that our elected officials are understanding and now pushing for reform against the abuses by vision benefit managers that intrude into the doctor-patient relationship."
Leveling the playing field
Among components of Oklahoma’s HB 1979 are:
- Prohibiting a requirement by prepaid vision plans that optometrists provide services or materials at a fee set by the plans, except for those covered in the contract between plans and doctors of optometry.
- Prohibiting prepaid vision plans from using extrapolation to complete an audit of a vision care provider.
- Ensuring parity in payment across different types of professionals, such as optometrists, physicians or osteopaths.
- Disallowing insurers’ requirement for additional terms for network participation for optometrists, compared to physicians or osteopaths, for services within the optometrist’s scope of practice.
- Providing for unrestricted use of labs and suppliers without facing reduced reimbursement for not using specific labs or suppliers preferred by prepaid vision plans.
- Requiring insurers provide notification of contract changes. If the changes are not agreed upon within 90 days, the agreement will terminate.
- Preventing prepaid vision plans from incentivizing patients to receive vision care services at an entity owned wholly or in part by the plans or their subsidiaries.
Prepaid vision plan organizations must apply for a certificate of authority from the insurance commissioner on or before Feb. 1, 2025.
Oklahoma bill beats the clock
HB 1979’s passage marked two years of full-court advocacy by the OAOP.
Members had taken notice of the growing influence of large, monopolistic vision plans gobbling up practices in the state, in a bid to dominate local markets and use the power of vertical integration to force costly mandates on practices. Last year, OAOP collaborated with members of the legislature to put forth a bill establishing responsible guardrails for the anti-competitive vision plans. But the clock ran out on that initiative.
OAOP took another run at passage in 2024—this time with various factors working in its favor.
First, it leans heavily on its “amazing” grassroots—77% of the state’s doctors of optometry are members of the OAOP—and leadership there uses software to quickly mobilize them to reach out to their legislators. Second, other stakeholders supporting the bill included the state insurance commissioner, the chairman of the Board of Examiners, two Oklahoma-based VBMs, and doctors and students at Northeastern State University Oklahoma College of Optometry.
Further, the OAOP has built long and strong relationships with legislators (for instance with Rep. Carl Newton, R-District 58, an optometrist), compared to lobbyists for the out-of-state vision plans.
An amended 2024 version of the bill was easing its way through the legislative process. But its passage was not assured. And as the session began to wind down last week, they were stunned when the governor vetoed the bill at 3 p.m. May 29.
“It was a blow to the stomach,” though not for long, Dr. Edwards recalls.
Given the overwhelming vote tallies in the senate and house, with the clock running, optometry’s advocates figured they still might have a chance.
“There was no time to dwell or wallow,” Dr. Edwards says. “We immediately went into action.”
Twenty-three hours after the veto, at 2 p.m., May 30, the bill passed. Enough votes to override the governor’s veto had been lined up for separate votes in the house (96-0) and the senate (41-3) with only a few hours to spare.
“We were biting our nails,” Dr. Edwards says of the whirlwind finish to the session. “But, when we started seeing all of the green on the board in the senate chambers, it was overwhelming. Once the vote was finished, it was literally jaw dropping. A sense of joy came over all of us.
“Sometimes the good guys win,” he adds. “We are one of the best places in the country to practice optometry.”
OAOP is now educating its members on how to leverage the new guidelines in their own practices.
Oklahoma vision plan law good for patients
Oklahoma continues to have one of the broadest scopes of practice in the nation and the OAOP has made protecting and expanding it a priority, Dr. Edwards says.
“As a more rural state that struggles with a shortage of physicians, having a full scope of practice and a healthy number of optometrists has helped to ensure that vision care is a bright spot in Oklahoma’s health care landscape,” he says.
Attend regional advocacy meetings
The AOA’s State Government Relations Committee (SGRC) Regional Advocacy Meetings are pivotal opportunities for grassroots advocates, affiliate leaders and volunteers to compare playbooks for successful statehouse strategies. Registration and housing are now open for the 2024 SGRC Regional Advocacy Meetings:
- SGRC Regional Advocacy Meeting Eastern
Aug. 9-10 | Charlotte, North Carolina
- SGRC Regional Advocacy Meeting Central
Sept. 13-14 | Dallas, Texas
- SGRC Regional Advocacy Meeting Western
Oct. 4-5 | Seattle, Washington
Affiliate advocacy teams are encouraged to join any of the three regional meetings. Visit the event pages above for registration and housing information for these highly interactive meetings.