Washington State House of Representatives Office of Program Research |
BILL ANALYSIS |
Health Care Committee | |
HB 1015
Brief Description: Requiring reporting of infections acquired in health care facilities.
Sponsors: Representatives Campbell, Morrell, Skinner, Hankins, Simpson, Schindler and Chase.
Brief Summary of Bill |
|
Hearing Date: 2/4/05
Staff: Chris Blake (786-7392).
Background:
The United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) collects data about
hospital-acquired infections through the National Nosocomial Infections Surveillance System.
This program collects information from 315 large-size hospitals on a voluntary basis. Through
this data, the CDC estimates that each year approximately two million patients are infected as a
result of the receipt of health care services that they receive and about 90,000 of these patients
die from their infections.
The Washington State Department of Health licensing standards require that hospitals maintain
infection control programs to reduce the occurrence of hospital-acquired infections. As a part of
this program, hospitals must adopt policies and procedures based on CDC guidelines for
reducing infections.
Summary of Bill:
Acute care hospitals are required to collect information about the rates of hospital-acquired
infections at their facilities for certain clinical procedures including surgical site infections,
ventilator-associated pneumonia, central line-related bloodstream infections, urinary tract
infections, Clostridium difficile infections, and other categories that the Department of Health
(Department) determines necessary. Hospitals must submit quarterly reports of this data to the
Department. Information contained in the hospital reports is not subject to public disclosure or
discovery or admissible as evidence in a court proceeding.
The Department shall adopt guidelines and rules for the collection, reporting, analysis, and
release of hospital-acquired infection rates at hospitals. An advisory committee is established to
make recommendations to the Department in developing standards for conducting these
activities. The Department shall publish the report annually and the report will provide
comparisons of the infection rates at different hospitals. The data in the Department's reports
must be risk-adjusted to account for patient mix and aggregated by facility.
Appropriation: None.
Fiscal Note: Available.
Effective Date: The bill takes effect on August 1, 2005.