Before a health care facility, including hospices, hospice care centers, hospitals, psychiatric hospitals, nursing homes, kidney disease treatment centers, ambulatory surgical facilities, and home health agencies, may be constructed, renovated, or sold, the DOH must issue a certificate of need. Until June 30, 2023, certificate of need requirements were suspended for:
New psychiatric beds must remain psychiatric beds unless a certificate of need is granted to change their use or the hospital or psychiatric hospital voluntarily reduces its licensed capacity.
The certificate of need exemptions that expired on June 30, 2023, for psychiatric beds and new psychiatric hospitals are reinstated until June 30, 2028. The requirement that new psychiatric beds remain psychiatric beds expires on June 30, 2029.
(In support) Individuals with mental disorders often face long waiting times to receive needed treatment. They can face long stays in the emergency room as they wait for psychiatric beds to open up. This is not the hospital's fault, but because of a lack of beds. This bill will help increase psychiatric bed capacity.
(Opposed) None.
(Other) This bill highlights the problem with the certificate of need process. The state's bed capacity is inadequate. Certificate of need is an unnecessary requirement, which increases costs and reduces the availability of care. Such laws have been repealed by the federal government and many states. The laws restrict competition.
(In support) Cebell Berry.