Washington State House of Representatives Office of Program Research |
BILL ANALYSIS |
Health Care & Wellness Committee | |
E2SSB 5930
This analysis was prepared by non-partisan legislative staff for the use of legislative members in
their deliberations. This analysis is not a part of the legislation nor does it constitute a
statement of legislative intent.
Brief Description: Providing high quality, affordable health care to Washingtonians based on the recommendations of the blue ribbon commission on health care costs and access.
Sponsors: Senate Committee on Ways & Means (originally sponsored by Senators Keiser, Kohl-Welles, Shin and Rasmussen; by request of Governor Gregoire).
Brief Summary of Engrossed Second Substitute Bill |
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Hearing Date: 3/19/07
Staff: Dave Knutson (786-7146).
Background:
The Blue Ribbon Commission on Health Care Costs and Access met from June to December,
2006. It was created by the Legislature and charged with delivering a five-year plan for
substantially improving access to affordable health care for all Washingtonians. The
commission was co-chaired by Governor Gregoire and Senator Thibaudeau, and included 12
other legislative and state agency leaders. The commission met throughout the interim, and
issued their recommendations in January 2007.
The recommendations encompass 16 main topic areas, with multiple action steps for each area.
In brief, they are: use state purchasing to improve health care quality; become a leader in the
prevention and management of chronic illness; provide cost and quality information for
consumers and providers; deliver on the promise of health information technology; reduce
unnecessary emergency room visits; reduce health care administrative costs; support community
organizations that promote cost-effective care; give individuals and families more choice in
selecting private insurance plans that work for them; partner with the federal government to
improve coverage; organize the insurance market to make it more accessible to consumers;
address the affordability of coverage for high-cost individuals; ensure the health of the next
generation by linking insurance coverage with policies that improve children's health; initiate
strategies to improve childhood nutrition and physical activity; pilot a health literacy program for
parents and children; strengthen the public health system; and integrate prevention and health
promotion into state health programs.
Summary of Bill:
A wide variety of projects are initiated within state agencies. The Department of Social and
Health Services (DSHS) and the Health Care Authority (HCA) must initiate a number of efforts
focused on quality improvements, including: developing a five-year plan by September 1, 2007
to change reimbursement to reward quality and incorporate evidence-based standards; report on
trends in unnecessary emergency room use by December 1, 2007, and design a pilot to reduce
such visits; and, in conjunction with Department of Labor and Industries (L&I) and Department
of Health (DOH), develop a five-year plan by September 1, 2007, to integrate disease and
accident prevention and health promotion into all state health programs, and implement
demonstration projects and evaluations of the projects, with reports to the Legislature December
2008, 2009, and 2010.
In addition, DSHS must: design and implement medical homes for their aged, blind, and
disabled clients, and evaluate chronic care management and expansion of best practices for the
medical and long term care programs; seek federal waivers and state plan amendments that seek
to expand coverage and leverage all available funding, explore alternative benefit designs, and
expand enrollment in employer-sponsored insurance premium assistance for the state's Children's
Health Insurance Program (SCHIP); and ensure enrollees are not simultaneously enrolled in the
medical assistance program or SCHIP, and the Basic Health program.
In addition, HCA must: identify a certification process for patient decision aids in consultation
with the National Committee for Quality Assurance, and collaborate with providers, carriers, and
researchers to develop a demonstration project targeting preference-sensitive conditions with
unwarranted variation; create the Washington State Quality Forum, in collaboration with the
Puget Sound Health Alliance, to collect research and health care quality data; design and pilot a
consumer-centric health information infrastructure with the first health record bank; and, in
collaboration with an advisory board, design a Washington Health Insurance Connector to serve
employees of small businesses and other individuals, and submit implementing legislation by
December 1, 2007.
DOH must: (1) provide training and technical assistance for providers of primary care, focused
on caring for people with chronic conditions and high quality preventive and chronic disease
care; (2) modify awards to local public health jurisdictions to include contracts with performance
measures and reporting of progress; and (3) establish a web-based interactive prescription
monitoring program to monitor prescribing and dispensing of schedule II, III, IV, and V
substances.
The Office of Insurance Commissioner (OIC) must report on opportunities to reduce key health
care administrative costs by September 1, 2007. The Office of Financial Management (OFM), in
collaboration with OIC, must design a reinsurance program for individuals and small groups and
submit implementing legislation and funding options by December 1, 2007.
All insurance carriers and the state employee programs must offer enrollees an opportunity to
extend coverage for unmarried dependents up to age 25, effective January 1, 2008.
Modifications are made to the Washington State Health Insurance Program (WSHIP) including
the ability to offer at least one policy with benefits similar to those in the private, individual
market, modify some benefits, modify future contracts to allow them to be replaced with policies
with similar benefits, provide the Board authority to offer incentives, and direct a study of
eligibility for the pool due December 1, 2007.
Access to the University of Washington Health Sciences Library is expanded for health
professionals, with an increase to the licensing fees. Insurance provisions for small group
products are modified: insurance carriers offering products to small employers may offer a
special product free of many mandates; rating rules are modified to allow health savings
accounts to be rated separately, and to allow rate variation of +/-8 percent with no review, and
greater than +/-8 percent with approval of the OIC; and the premium assistance program for
low-income employees of Small Employers Health Insurance Program may be provided for any
benefit plan offered by a small employer.
Appropriation: None.
Fiscal Note: Available. New fiscal note requested on March 12, 2007.
Effective Date: The bill takes effect 90 days after adjournment of session in which bill is passed. However, the bill is null and void if not specifically funded in the Legislative Budget: Section 8-Washington State Quality Forum; Section 9-Health Information Technology health record pilot project; Section 19-Washington Health Insurance Connector; and Section 36-Wellness demonstration pilots.