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Florida Statute 409.9081 - Full Text and Legal Analysis
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The 2025 Florida Statutes

Title XXX
SOCIAL WELFARE
Chapter 409
SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC ASSISTANCE
View Entire Chapter
409.9081 Copayments.
(1) The agency shall require, subject to federal regulations and limitations, each Medicaid recipient to pay at the time of service a nominal copayment for the following Medicaid services:
(a) Hospital outpatient services: up to $3 for each hospital outpatient visit.
(b) Physician services: up to $2 copayment for each visit with a physician licensed under chapter 458, chapter 459, chapter 460, chapter 461, or chapter 463.
(c) Hospital emergency department visits for nonemergency care: 5 percent of up to the first $300 of the Medicaid payment for emergency room services, not to exceed $15. The agency shall seek federal approval to require Medicaid recipients to pay a $100 copayment for nonemergency services and care furnished in a hospital emergency department. Upon waiver approval, a Medicaid recipient who requests such services and care must pay a $100 copayment to the hospital for the nonemergency services and care provided in the hospital emergency department.
(d) Prescription drugs: a coinsurance equal to 2.5 percent of the Medicaid cost of the prescription drug at the time of purchase. The maximum coinsurance shall be $7.50 per prescription drug purchased.
(2) The agency shall, subject to federal regulations and any directions or limitations provided for in the General Appropriations Act, require copayments for the following additional services: hospital inpatient, laboratory and X-ray services, transportation services, home health care services, community mental health services, rural health services, federally qualified health clinic services, and nurse practitioner services. The agency may only establish copayments for prescribed drugs or for any other federally authorized service if such copayment is specifically provided for in the General Appropriations Act or other law.
(3) In accordance with federal regulations, the agency shall not require copayments of the following Medicaid recipients:
(a) Children under age 21.
(b) Pregnant women when the services relate to the pregnancy or to any other medical condition which may complicate the pregnancy up to 6 weeks after delivery.
(c) Any individual who is an inpatient in a hospital, long-term care facility, or other medical institution if, as a condition of receiving services in the institution, that individual is required to spend all but a minimal amount of her or his income required for personal needs for medical care costs.
(d) Any individual who requires emergency services after the sudden onset of a medical condition which, left untreated, would place the individual’s health in serious jeopardy.
(e) Any individual when the services or supplies relate to family planning.
(f) Any individual who is enrolled in a Medicaid prepaid health plan or health maintenance organization.
(4) No provider shall impose more than one copayment for any encounter upon a Medicaid recipient.
(5) The agency shall develop a mechanism by which participating providers are able to identify those Medicaid recipients from whom they shall not collect copayments.
(6) This section does not require a provider to bill or collect a copayment required or authorized under 1this section from the Medicaid recipient. If the provider chooses not to bill or collect a copayment from a Medicaid recipient, the agency must still deduct the amount of the copayment from the Medicaid reimbursement made to the provider.
History.s. 48, ch. 93-129; s. 6, ch. 95-393; s. 5, ch. 96-280; s. 5, ch. 96-387; s. 1022, ch. 97-103; s. 12, ch. 2003-405; s. 14, ch. 2006-28; s. 13, ch. 2011-135.
1Note.As created by s. 5, ch. 96-280. Subsection (6) was also created by s. 5, ch. 96-387, and that version used the words “subsection (1)” instead of “this section.”

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Amendments to 409.9081


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Cases Citing Statute 409.9081

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Moreau v. Lewis, 648 So. 2d 124 (Fla. 1995).

Cited 17 times | Published | Supreme Court of Florida | 1995 WL 2419

...ion. According to the petition, Claire Moreau is a Medicaid recipient. Her physician has prescribed medications for her which she must refill monthly. Each month, Moreau receives a small check from Social Security. She has no other source of income. Section 409.9081, Florida Statutes (1993), provides that Medicaid recipients shall pay a nominal copayment for physician services and outpatient hospital services. [1] Section 409.9081 does not provide for a Medicaid pharmacy copayment. Legislation that would have amended section 409.9081 to *126 mandate Medicaid pharmacy copayments was introduced, but defeated, during the 1994 legislative session....
...cost containment initiative." Ch. 94-357, § 1A(63), at 2916, Laws of Fla. [2] In addition, section 2, subsection 18 of the Implementing Bill to the 1994-1995 General Appropriations Act provides, in pertinent part: "Notwithstanding the provisions of section 409.9081, Florida Statutes, the Agency for Health Care Administration shall amend the Medicaid State Plan to require a $1 pharmacy copayment to implement the provisions of specific appropriation 63 of the General Appropriations Act for fiscal year 1994-1995." Ch....
...Firestone , this Court concluded that "an appropriations bill must not change or amend existing law on subjects other than appropriations." 382 So.2d at 664. We have no quarrel with the law so stated. However, we do not read the challenged language in Specific Appropriation 63 as amending section 409.9081 by reinstating the Medicaid pharmacy copayment....
...with a nebulous reference to a "$1.00 co-payment cost containment initiative." Standing alone, the challenged language in Specific Appropriation 63 commands nothing. Moreau also contends that section 2, subsection 18 of the Implementing Bill amends section 409.9081 insofar as it reinstates the Medicaid pharmacy copayment....
...We conclude that the reasoning in Brown v. Firestone is equally applicable in this context. An implementing bill that changes or amends existing law on subjects other than appropriations runs afoul of article III, section 6 of the Florida Constitution. Section 409.9081 does not provide for a Medicaid pharmacy copayment. Section 2, subsection 18 of the Implementing Bill directs the Agency for Health Care Administration to reinstate the Medicaid pharmacy copayment. We conclude that section 2, subsection 18 of the Implementing Bill works a substantive change to section 409.9081 and therefore violates article III, section 6 of the Florida Constitution....
...hhold the formal issuance of the writ of mandamus at this time. See Murray v. Lewis, 576 So.2d at 267; House of Representatives v. Martinez, 555 So.2d at 846. It is so ordered. OVERTON, SHAW, KOGAN, HARDING, WELLS and ANSTEAD, JJ., concur. NOTES [1] Section 409.9081 states, in pertinent part: (1) Effective July 1, 1993, the agency shall require, subject to federal regulations and limitations, each Medicaid recipient to pay at the time of service a nominal copayment for the following Medicaid ser...