H-3804              _______________________________________________

 

                                                   HOUSE BILL NO. 1573

                        _______________________________________________

 

State of Washington                              50th Legislature                              1988 Regular Session

 

By Representatives D. Sommers, Day, Silver, Fuhrman, Ballard, Nealey, Moyer, McLean and Betrozoff

 

 

Read first time 1/20/88 and referred to Committee on Health Care.

 

 


AN ACT Relating to hospital health care services; and amending RCW 70.39.020 and 70.39.140.

 

BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON:

 

        Sec. 1.  Section 3, chapter 5, Laws of 1973 1st ex. sess. as amended by section 2, chapter 288, Laws of 1984 and RCW 70.39.020 are each amended to read as follows:

          As used in this chapter:

          (1) "Commission" means the hospital commission of the state of Washington as created by this chapter;

          (2) "Consumer" means any person whose occupation is other than the administration of health activities or the providing of health services, who has no fiduciary obligation to a health facility or other health agency, and who has no material financial interest in the rendering of health services;

          (3) "Hospital" means any health care institution which is required to qualify for a license under RCW 70.41.020(2); or as a psychiatric hospital under chapter 71.12 RCW, but shall not include beds utilized by a comprehensive cancer center for cancer research, or any health care institution conducted for those who rely primarily upon treatment by prayer or spiritual means in accordance with the creed or tenets of any church or denomination.

          (4) "Diagnosis-related groups" is a classification system that groups hospital patients according to principal and secondary diagnosis, presence or absence of a surgical procedure, age, presence or absence of significant comorbidities or complications, and other relevant criteria, an example of which has been adopted as the basis for prospective payment under the federal medicare program by the social security amendments of 1983, Public Law 98-21.

          (5) "Medical technology" means the drugs, devices, and medical or surgical procedures used in the delivery of health care, and the organizational or supportive systems within which such care is provided.

          (6) "Technology assessment" means a comprehensive form of policy research that examines the technical, economic, and social consequences of technological applications, including the indirect, unintended, or delayed social or economic impacts.  In health care, such analysis must evaluate efficacy and safety as well as efficiency.

          (7) "Charity care" means necessary hospital health care rendered to indigent persons, to the extent that the persons are unable to pay for the care or to pay deductibles or co-insurance amounts required by a third-party payer, as determined by the commission.

          (8) "Rate" means the maximum revenue which a hospital may receive for each unit of service, as determined by the commission.

          (9)  "Comprehensive cancer center" means an institution and its research programs as recognized by the National Cancer Institute prior to April 20, 1983.

          (10) "Region" means one of the health service areas established pursuant to RCW 70.38.085, except that King county shall be considered a separate region for the purposes of this chapter.

         

          (11) "Rural hospital" means a hospital licensed to operate sixty acute care beds or less located in a city of not more than twenty-two thousand population as reported by the office of financial management.

 

        Sec. 2.  Section 15, chapter 5, Laws of 1973 1st ex. sess. as last amended by section 14, chapter 288, Laws of 1984 and RCW 70.39.140 are each amended to read as follows:

          (1) From and after a date not less than twelve months but not more than twenty-four months after the adoption of the uniform system of accounting and financial reporting required by RCW 70.39.100, as the commission may direct, the commission shall have the power to initiate such reviews or investigations as may be necessary to assure all purchasers of health care services that the total costs of a hospital are reasonably related to the total services offered by that hospital, that costs do not exceed those that are necessary for prudently and reasonably managed hospitals, that the hospital's rates are reasonably related to the hospital's aggregate costs; and that rates are set equitably among all purchasers or classes of purchasers of services without undue discrimination or preference.  Effective July 1, 1985, this chapter does not preclude any hospital from negotiating with and charging any particular payer or purchaser rates that are less than those approved by the commission, if:

          (a) The rates are cost justified and do not result in any shifting of costs to other payers or purchasers in the current or any subsequent year; and

          (((c))) (b) All the terms of such negotiated rates are filed with the commission within ten working days and made available for public inspection.

          The commission may retrospectively disapprove such negotiated rates in accordance with procedures established by the commission if such rates are found to contravene any provision of this section.

          (2) In order to properly discharge these obligations, the commission shall have full power to review projected annual revenues and approve the reasonableness of rates proposed to generate that revenue established or requested by any hospital subject to the provisions of this chapter.  No hospital shall charge for services at rates exceeding those established in accordance with the procedures established hereunder.  After June 30, 1985, rates for inpatient care shall be expressed using an appropriate measure of hospital efficiency, such as that based on diagnosis-related groups, and, if necessary for federal medicare participation in a hospital reimbursement control system, hospitals shall charge for such care at rates prospectively established and expressed in terms of a comparable unit of total payment, such as diagnosis-related groups.  In the event any hospital reimbursement control system is implemented, children's hospitals shall be exempted until such time as a pediatric based classification system which reflects the unique resource consumption by patients of a children's hospital is perfected.  For the purposes of this exemption, children's hospitals are defined as hospitals whose patients are predominantly under eighteen years of age.

          Effective for hospital fiscal years beginning after June 30, 1988, there shall be a two-year moratorium upon rate regulation of rural hospitals by the hospital commission.  During this period, each rural hospital may establish and modify its rates at its discretion:  PROVIDED, That rural hospitals shall continue to file their budget, patient discharge, and other data as required by the hospital commission of hospitals which continue to be subject to rate approval under this chapter:  PROVIDED FURTHER, That nothing in this section limits the ability of the department of social and health services to establish hospital payment rates pursuant to RCW 74.09.120 or in accordance with a federally approvable state plan under Title XIX of the federal social security act.

          (3) In the interest of promoting the most efficient and effective use of health care service, and providing greater promise of hospital cost containment, the commission may develop a hospital reimbursement control system in which all payers or purchasers participate, that includes procedures for establishing prospective rates, that deals equitably with the costs of providing charity care, and that shall include the participation of the federal medicare program under the social security amendments of 1983, Public Law 98-21.  The commission shall have the authority to require utilization reviews of patient care to ensure that hospital admissions and services provided are medically justified.  The commission may seek approval, concurrence, or participation in such a system from any federal agency, such as the department of health and human services, prior to securing legislative approval pursuant to concurrent resolution for implementation of any hospital reimbursement control system developed pursuant to this section.  The commission shall involve the legislature in the development of any plan for a hospital reimbursement control system.

          (4) The commission shall assure that no hospital or its medical staff either adopts or maintains admission practices or policies which result in:

          (a) A significant reduction in the proportion of patients who have no third-party coverage and who are unable to pay for hospital services;

          (b) A significant reduction in the proportion of individuals admitted for inpatient hospital services for which payment is or is likely to be less than the anticipated charges for or costs of such services; or

          (c) The refusal to admit patients who would be expected to require unusually costly or prolonged treatment for reasons other than those related to the appropriateness of the care available at the hospital((; or)).

          (5) The commission shall serve as the state agency responsible for coordinating state actions and otherwise responding and relating to the efforts of the federal department of health and human services in planning and implementing federal cost containment programs with respect to hospitals and related health care institutions as authorized by the social security amendments of 1983, as now or hereafter amended, or other federal law, and any rules or regulations promulgated thereto.  In carrying out this responsibility, the commission may assume any function or role authorized by appropriate federal regulations implementing the social security amendments of 1983; or assume any combination of such roles or functions as it may determine will most effectively contain the rising costs of the varying kinds of hospitals and related health care institutions in Washington state.  In determining its functions or roles in relation to federal efforts, the commission shall seek to ensure coordination, and the reduction of duplicatory cost containment efforts, by the state and federal governments, as well as the diligent fulfillment of the purposes of this chapter and declared public policy and legislative intent herein.

          Nothing in this chapter limits the ability of the department of social and health services to establish hospital payment rates pursuant to RCW 74.09.120 or in accord with a federally approvable state plan under Title XIX of the federal social security act.