Passed by the Senate March 11, 2004 YEAS 49   ________________________________________ President of the Senate Passed by the House March 10, 2004 YEAS 97   ________________________________________ Speaker of the House of Representatives | I, Milton H. Doumit, Jr., Secretary of the Senate of the State of Washington, do hereby certify that the attached is SENATE BILL 6485 as passed by the Senate and the House of Representatives on the dates hereon set forth. ________________________________________ Secretary | |
Approved ________________________________________ Governor of the State of Washington | Secretary of State State of Washington |
State of Washington | 58th Legislature | 2004 Regular Session |
Read first time 01/21/2004. Referred to Committee on Health & Long-Term Care.
AN ACT Relating to improving the regulatory environment for hospitals; amending RCW 70.41.080, 70.41.120, 70.38.105, and 70.44.240; adding new sections to chapter 70.41 RCW; and creating a new section.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON:
NEW SECTION. Sec. 1 (1) The department of health, in cooperation
with the Washington state hospital association, shall oversee a pilot
project to implement and evaluate strategies to reduce the burden on
hospitals, and improve the quality and efficiency, of hospital surveys
or audits.
(2) The pilot project shall also include the state auditor's
office, the department of revenue, the department of social and health
services, the state board of pharmacy, the department of ecology, the
office of the state fire marshal, the department of labor and
industries, local building and fire officials, and the joint commission
on accreditation of health care organizations.
(3) Strategies to be implemented and evaluated by the pilot project
include, but are not limited to, providing notice of survey and audit
visits, consolidation of survey and audit visits, coordination of
separate survey and audit visits, deeming of one agency's visits for
another, using a combined entrance meeting with hospital management,
identifying a standard set of documents to be available for all surveys
and audits, and minimizing duplication of required documents.
(4) The department of health shall report to the legislature by
December 1, 2004, regarding the results of the pilot project and the
strategies identified for adoption on a statewide basis to improve the
regulatory environment for hospitals while assuring the safety and
well-being of patients and full compliance with relevant state and
local laws.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 2 A new section is added to chapter 70.41 RCW
to read as follows:
(1) Unless the context clearly requires otherwise, the definitions
in this subsection apply throughout this section.
(a) "Agency" means a department of state government created under
RCW 43.17.010 and the office of the state auditor.
(b) "Audit" means an examination of records or financial accounts
to evaluate accuracy and monitor compliance with statutory or
regulatory requirements.
(c) "Hospital" means a hospital licensed under chapter 70.41 RCW.
(d) "Survey" means an inspection, examination, or site visit
conducted by an agency to evaluate and monitor the compliance of a
hospital or hospital services or facilities with statutory or
regulatory requirements.
(2) By July 1, 2004, each state agency which conducts hospital
surveys or audits shall post to its agency web site a list of the most
frequent problems identified in its hospital surveys or audits along
with information on how to avoid or address the identified problems,
and a person within the agency that a hospital may contact with
questions or for further assistance.
(3) By July 1, 2004, the department of health, in cooperation with
other state agencies which conduct hospital surveys or audits, shall
develop an instrument, to be provided to every hospital upon completion
of a state survey or audit, which allows the hospital to anonymously
evaluate the survey or audit process in terms of quality, efficacy, and
the extent to which it supported improved patient care and compliance
with state law without placing an unnecessary administrative burden on
the hospital. The evaluation may be returned to the department of
health for distribution to the appropriate agency. The department of
health shall annually compile the evaluations in a report to the
legislature.
(4) Except when responding to complaints or immediate public health
and safety concerns or when such prior notice would conflict with other
state or federal law, any state agency that provides notice of a
hospital survey or audit must provide such notice to the hospital no
less than four weeks prior to the date of the survey or audit.
Sec. 3 RCW 70.41.080 and 1995 c 369 s 40 are each amended to read
as follows:
Standards for fire protection and the enforcement thereof, with
respect to all hospitals to be licensed hereunder shall be the
responsibility of the chief of the Washington state patrol, through the
director of fire protection, who shall adopt, after approval by the
department, such recognized standards as may be applicable to hospitals
for the protection of life against the cause and spread of fire and
fire hazards. Such standards shall be consistent with the standards
adopted by the federal centers for medicare and medicaid services for
hospitals that care for medicare or medicaid beneficiaries. The
department upon receipt of an application for a license, shall submit
to the director of fire protection in writing, a request for an
inspection, giving the applicant's name and the location of the
premises to be licensed. Upon receipt of such a request, the chief of
the Washington state patrol, through the director of fire protection,
or his or her deputy, shall make an inspection of the hospital to be
licensed, and if it is found that the premises do not comply with the
required safety standards and fire regulations as adopted pursuant to
this chapter, he or she shall promptly make a written report to the
hospital and to the department listing the corrective actions required
and the time allowed for accomplishing such corrections. The applicant
or licensee shall notify the chief of the Washington state patrol,
through the director of fire protection, upon completion of any
corrections required by him or her, and the chief of the Washington
state patrol, through the director of fire protection, or his or her
deputy, shall make a reinspection of such premises. Whenever the
hospital to be licensed meets with the approval of the chief of the
Washington state patrol, through the director of fire protection, he or
she shall submit to the department a written report approving the
hospital with respect to fire protection, and such report is required
before a full license can be issued. The chief of the Washington state
patrol, through the director of fire protection, shall make or cause to
be made inspections of such hospitals at least once a year.
In cities which have in force a comprehensive building code, the
provisions of which are determined by the chief of the Washington state
patrol, through the director of fire protection, to be equal to the
minimum standards of the code for hospitals adopted by the chief of the
Washington state patrol, through the director of fire protection, the
chief of the fire department, provided the latter is a paid chief of a
paid fire department, shall make the inspection with the chief of the
Washington state patrol, through the director of fire protection, or
his or her deputy and they shall jointly approve the premises before a
full license can be issued.
Sec. 4 RCW 70.41.120 and 1995 c 282 s 4 are each amended to read
as follows:
The department shall make or cause to be made at least yearly an
inspection of all hospitals. Every inspection of a hospital may
include an inspection of every part of the premises. The department
may make an examination of all phases of the hospital operation
necessary to determine compliance with the law and the standards, rules
and regulations adopted thereunder. Any licensee or applicant desiring
to make alterations or additions to its facilities or to construct new
facilities shall, before commencing such alteration, addition or new
construction, comply with the regulations prescribed by the department.
No hospital licensed pursuant to the provisions of this chapter
shall be required to be inspected or licensed under other state laws or
rules and regulations promulgated thereunder, or local ordinances,
relative to hotels, restaurants, lodging houses, boarding houses,
places of refreshment, nursing homes, maternity homes, or psychiatric
hospitals.
To avoid unnecessary duplication in inspections, the department
shall coordinate with the department of social and health services, the
office of the state fire marshal, and local agencies when inspecting
facilities over which ((both agencies have)) each agency has
jurisdiction, the facilities including but not necessarily being
limited to hospitals with both acute care and skilled nursing or
psychiatric nursing functions. The department shall notify the office
of the state fire marshal and the relevant local agency at least four
weeks prior to any inspection conducted under this section and invite
their attendance at the inspection, and shall provide a copy of its
inspection report to each agency upon completion.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 5 A new section is added to chapter 70.41 RCW
to read as follows:
(1) The department shall coordinate its hospital construction
review process with other state and local agencies having similar
review responsibilities, including the department of labor and
industries, the office of the state fire marshal, and local building
and fire officials. Inconsistencies or conflicts among the agencies
shall be identified and eliminated. The department shall provide local
agencies with relevant information derived from its construction review
process.
(2) By September 1, 2004, the department shall report to the
legislature regarding its implementation of subsection (1) of this
section.
Sec. 6 RCW 70.38.105 and 1996 c 50 s 1 are each amended to read
as follows:
(1) The department is authorized and directed to implement the
certificate of need program in this state pursuant to the provisions of
this chapter.
(2) There shall be a state certificate of need program which is
administered consistent with the requirements of federal law as
necessary to the receipt of federal funds by the state.
(3) No person shall engage in any undertaking which is subject to
certificate of need review under subsection (4) of this section without
first having received from the department either a certificate of need
or an exception granted in accordance with this chapter.
(4) The following shall be subject to certificate of need review
under this chapter:
(a) The construction, development, or other establishment of a new
health care facility;
(b) The sale, purchase, or lease of part or all of any existing
hospital as defined in RCW 70.38.025;
(c) Any capital expenditure for the construction, renovation, or
alteration of a nursing home which substantially changes the services
of the facility after January 1, 1981, provided that the substantial
changes in services are specified by the department in rule;
(d) Any capital expenditure for the construction, renovation, or
alteration of a nursing home which exceeds the expenditure minimum as
defined by RCW 70.38.025. However, a capital expenditure which is not
subject to certificate of need review under (a), (b), (c), or (e) of
this subsection and which is solely for any one or more of the
following is not subject to certificate of need review:
(i) Communications and parking facilities;
(ii) Mechanical, electrical, ventilation, heating, and air
conditioning systems;
(iii) Energy conservation systems;
(iv) Repairs to, or the correction of, deficiencies in existing
physical plant facilities which are necessary to maintain state
licensure, however, other additional repairs, remodeling, or
replacement projects that are not related to one or more deficiency
citations and are not necessary to maintain state licensure are not
exempt from certificate of need review except as otherwise permitted by
(d)(vi) of this subsection or RCW 70.38.115(13);
(v) Acquisition of equipment, including data processing equipment,
which is not or will not be used in the direct provision of health
services;
(vi) Construction or renovation at an existing nursing home which
involves physical plant facilities, including administrative, dining
areas, kitchen, laundry, therapy areas, and support facilities, by an
existing licensee who has operated the beds for at least one year;
(vii) Acquisition of land; and
(viii) Refinancing of existing debt;
(e) A change in bed capacity of a health care facility which
increases the total number of licensed beds or redistributes beds among
acute care, nursing home care, and boarding home care if the bed
redistribution is to be effective for a period in excess of six months,
or a change in bed capacity of a rural health care facility licensed
under RCW 70.175.100 that increases the total number of nursing home
beds or redistributes beds from acute care or boarding home care to
nursing home care if the bed redistribution is to be effective for a
period in excess of six months. A health care facility certified as a
critical access hospital under 42 U.S.C. 1395i-4 may increase its total
number of licensed beds to the total number of beds permitted under 42
U.S.C. 1395i-4 for acute care and may redistribute beds permitted under
42 U.S.C. 1395i-4 among acute care and nursing home care without being
subject to certificate of need review. If there is a nursing home
licensed under chapter 18.51 RCW within twenty-seven miles of the
critical access hospital, the critical access hospital is subject to
certificate of need review except for:
(i) Critical access hospitals which had designated beds to provide
nursing home care, in excess of five swing beds, prior to December 31,
2003; or
(ii) Up to five swing beds.
Critical access hospital beds not subject to certificate of need
review under this subsection (4)(e) will not be counted as either acute
care or nursing home care for certificate of need review purposes. If
a health care facility ceases to be certified as a critical access
hospital under 42 U.S.C. 1395i-4, the hospital may revert back to the
type and number of licensed hospital beds as it had when it requested
critical access hospital designation;
(f) Any new tertiary health services which are offered in or
through a health care facility or rural health care facility licensed
under RCW 70.175.100, and which were not offered on a regular basis by,
in, or through such health care facility or rural health care facility
within the twelve-month period prior to the time such services would be
offered;
(g) Any expenditure for the construction, renovation, or alteration
of a nursing home or change in nursing home services in excess of the
expenditure minimum made in preparation for any undertaking under
subsection (4) of this section and any arrangement or commitment made
for financing such undertaking. Expenditures of preparation shall
include expenditures for architectural designs, plans, working
drawings, and specifications. The department may issue certificates of
need permitting predevelopment expenditures, only, without authorizing
any subsequent undertaking with respect to which such predevelopment
expenditures are made; and
(h) Any increase in the number of dialysis stations in a kidney
disease center.
(5) The department is authorized to charge fees for the review of
certificate of need applications and requests for exemptions from
certificate of need review. The fees shall be sufficient to cover the
full cost of review and exemption, which may include the development of
standards, criteria, and policies.
(6) No person may divide a project in order to avoid review
requirements under any of the thresholds specified in this section.
Sec. 7 RCW 70.44.240 and 1997 c 332 s 16 are each amended to read
as follows:
Any public hospital district may contract or join with any other
public hospital district, ((any)) publicly owned hospital, ((any))
nonprofit hospital, ((any corporation, any other)) legal entity, or
individual to acquire, own, operate, manage, or provide any hospital or
other health care facilities or hospital services or other health care
services to be used by individuals, districts, hospitals, or others,
including ((the)) providing ((of)) health maintenance services. If a
public hospital district chooses to contract or join with another party
or parties pursuant to the provisions of this chapter, it may do so
through ((the establishment of)) establishing a nonprofit corporation,
partnership, limited liability company, or other legal entity of its
choosing in which the public hospital district and the other party or
parties participate. The governing body of such legal entity shall
include representatives of the public hospital district, ((including))
which representatives may include members of the public hospital
district's board of commissioners. A public hospital district
contracting or joining with another party pursuant to the provisions of
this chapter may appropriate funds and may sell, lease, or otherwise
provide property, personnel, and services to the legal entity
established to carry out the contract or joint activity.