The Certificate of Need (CON) Program (Program) is operated by the Department of Health (DOH) and is a regulatory process that requires certain health care facilities and providers to get state approval before building certain types of facilities or offering new or expanded services. A CON is required before a health care facility can be constructed, sold, purchased, or leased, or before a health care provider can offer certain new or expanded services, such as a hospital seeking to increase their licensed beds. When the DOH receives a CON application, the DOH reviews the potential impact of the proposed construction or expansion on a community's need for the service. Health care facility CON applications are reviewed subject, but not limited, to the following criteria: the need for such services; the availability of less costly or more effective alternative methods of providing such services; financial feasibility; the impact on health care costs in the community, quality assurance, and cost-effectiveness; the use of existing services and facilities; and?for hospitals?whether the hospital meets or exceeds the regional average level of charity care as well as other factors.
The Certificate of Need Modernization Advisory Committee (Advisory Committee) is established with the following members:
The Governor must appoint the Chair of the Advisory Committee (Chair) and the Chair is responsible for convening meetings every two months. The OFM must provide staff support to the Advisory Committee. The OFM must contract with a contractor with relevant expertise to complete a review of the following items to inform the Advisory Committee's deliberations:
Prior to beginning the review, the contractor must interview every Advisory Committee member for their input. The contractor must provide regular progress reports to the Advisory Committee. The contract is exempt from the competitive procurement requirements.
The Advisory Committee must consider and review:
By December 15, 2024, the contractor must submit a preliminary report summarizing the findings based on their review, which must be submitted to the Governor and relevant committees of the Legislature as well as presented to the Advisory Committee. By October 15, 2025, the contractor must formally present their findings based on the review and their recommendations to the Advisory Committee. The recommendations must focus on whether to modernize, expand, reduce, eliminate, or maintain the Program based on access to care, quality of care, and total health care expenditures. The Advisory Committee must have an opportunity to provide feedback to the consultant on all recommendations. The final report must include the contractor's findings, recommendations, and any feedback from the Advisory Committee on the recommendation and be submitted to the Advisory Committee, the Governor, and relevant committees of the Legislature.
Members of the Advisory Committee that are compensated or reimbursed for participating on behalf of an employer, governmental entity, or other organization are not entitled to reimbursement for travel expenses. The Advisory Committee is subject to the Open Public Meetings Act and the Public Disclosure Act.
The substitute bill:
(In support) It is time that we look at the CON process. Does CON help with patient safety and does it reduce costs? Is it a barrier and is it helping or not? This review has not been taken on since 1989 and the health care system has changed dramatically. Anyone who has been around for awhile has heard a lot of discussion about CON and it is time we take a look.
Certificate of Need is an important issue and there has been a lot of interest in improving CON, but the question is how to do that. The physicians would like to be included in the Task Force but have questions about the timelines.
Certificate of Need laws were adopted in the 1970s in response to federal laws requiring states to do so to keep federal funds. The federal government wanted to keep down their own costs. Keeping down the supply of health care is harmful to patients and the problem that the federal government was trying to solve no longer exists and the federal requirement was repealed in 1986. Other federal entities have supported the repeal of these laws because of their anticompetitive impacts. Other states have repealed or examined their CON laws finding that CON prevents people from accessing care, particularly in rural areas. Economic evidence shows that these laws have failed to achieve any legislative purpose and instead increase costs and decrease access to care and health care quality.
(Opposed) None.
(Other) There is agreement that it is time to take a fresh look at CON and identify any necessary changes to meet the needs of Washington. Certificate of Need is an important lever to ensure the health and stability of the health care system. The Governor's supplemental budget calls on the Department of Health to do an analysis and take a look at the Program and its impact on access to care and cost, to look at what other states are doing, and how it might be done differently. There are concerns about the timeline in this bill.
Health care is a fast-changing field, and the CON process does not look at some of the ways that care is provided today, such as free-standing emergency rooms or virtual care. There is room for more voices on the Task Force to provide social determinants of health and health equity perspectives.
This is not an easy issue to review. Certificate of Need has been reviewed many times, but no was action taken. Reviewing and revising CON is extremely involved and the review must be careful not to lose sight of the community values and input. Health care is a big and competitive business. There should be more consumer and employer representation to balance out all of the industry representation. There should also be a state health plan that is central to the discussion. Finally, the reporting timeline does not give nearly enough time and the Governor's timeline is more reasonable.
(In support) Representative Joe Schmick, prime sponsor; Jaimie Cavanaugh, Institute for Justice; and Sean Graham, Washington State Medical Association.