Passed by the Senate April 18, 2011 YEAS 48   ________________________________________ President of the Senate Passed by the House April 7, 2011 YEAS 53   ________________________________________ Speaker of the House of Representatives | I, Thomas Hoemann, Secretary of the Senate of the State of Washington, do hereby certify that the attached is SUBSTITUTE SENATE BILL 5394 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 | 62nd Legislature | 2011 Regular Session |
READ FIRST TIME 02/15/11.
AN ACT Relating to primary care health homes and chronic care management; amending RCW 43.70.533 and 70.47.100; reenacting and amending RCW 74.09.010 and 74.09.522; adding a new section to chapter 74.09 RCW; and adding new sections to chapter 41.05 RCW.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON:
NEW SECTION. Sec. 1 A new section is added to chapter 74.09 RCW
to read as follows:
The legislature finds that:
(1) Health care costs are growing rapidly, exceeding the consumer
price index year after year. Consequently, state health programs are
capturing a growing share of the state budget, even as state revenues
have declined. Sustaining these critical health programs will require
actions to effectively contain health care cost increases in the
future; and
(2) The primary care health home model has been demonstrated to
successfully constrain costs, while improving quality of care. Chronic
care management, occurring within a primary care health home, has been
shown to be especially effective at reducing costs and improving
quality. However, broad adoption of these models has been impeded by
a fee-for-service system that reimburses volume of services and does
not adequately support important primary care health home services,
such as case management and patient outreach. Furthermore, successful
implementation will require a broad adoption effort by private and
public payers, in coordination with providers.
Therefore the legislature intends to promote the adoption of
primary care health homes for children and adults and, within them,
advance the practice of chronic care management to improve health
outcomes and reduce unnecessary costs. To facilitate the best
coordination and patient care, primary care health homes are encouraged
to collaborate with other providers currently outside the medical
insurance model. Successful chronic care management for persons
receiving long-term care services in addition to medical care will
require close coordination between primary care providers, long-term
care workers, and other long-term care service providers, including
area agencies on aging. Primary care providers also should consider
oral health coordination through collaboration with dental providers
and, when possible, delivery of oral health prevention services. The
legislature also intends that the methods and approach of the primary
care health home become part of basic primary care medical education.
Sec. 2 RCW 74.09.010 and 2010 1st sp.s. c 8 s 28 are each
reenacted and amended to read as follows:
((As used in this chapter:)) The definitions in this section apply
throughout this chapter unless the context clearly requires otherwise.
(1) "Children's health program" means the health care services
program provided to children under eighteen years of age and in
households with incomes at or below the federal poverty level as
annually defined by the federal department of health and human services
as adjusted for family size, and who are not otherwise eligible for
medical assistance or the limited casualty program for the medically
needy.
(2) (("Committee" means the children's health services committee
created in section 3 of this act.)) "Chronic care management" means the health care management
within a health home of persons identified with, or at high risk for,
one or more chronic conditions. Effective chronic care management:
(3)
(a) Actively assists patients to acquire self-care skills to
improve functioning and health outcomes, and slow the progression of
disease or disability;
(b) Employs evidence-based clinical practices;
(c) Coordinates care across health care settings and providers,
including tracking referrals;
(d) Provides ready access to behavioral health services that are,
to the extent possible, integrated with primary care; and
(e) Uses appropriate community resources to support individual
patients and families in managing chronic conditions.
(3) "Chronic condition" means a prolonged condition and includes,
but is not limited to:
(a) A mental health condition;
(b) A substance use disorder;
(c) Asthma;
(d) Diabetes;
(e) Heart disease; and
(f) Being overweight, as evidenced by a body mass index over
twenty-five.
(4) "County" means the board of county commissioners, county
council, county executive, or tribal jurisdiction, or its designee. A
combination of two or more county authorities or tribal jurisdictions
may enter into joint agreements ((to fulfill the requirements of RCW
74.09.415 through 74.09.435)).
(((4))) (5) "Department" means the department of social and health
services.
(((5))) (6) "Department of health" means the Washington state
department of health created pursuant to RCW 43.70.020.
(((6))) (7) "Full benefit dual eligible beneficiary" means an
individual who, for any month: Has coverage for the month under a
medicare prescription drug plan or medicare advantage plan with part D
coverage; and is determined eligible by the state for full medicaid
benefits for the month under any eligibility category in the state's
medicaid plan or a section 1115 demonstration waiver that provides
pharmacy benefits.
(((7))) (8) "Health home" or "primary care health home" means
coordinated health care provided by a licensed primary care provider
coordinating all medical care services, and a multidisciplinary health
care team comprised of clinical and nonclinical staff. The term
"coordinating all medical care services" shall not be construed to
require prior authorization by a primary care provider in order for a
patient to receive treatment for covered services by an optometrist
licensed under chapter 18.53 RCW. Primary care health home services
shall include those services defined as health home services in 42
U.S.C. Sec. 1396w-4 and, in addition, may include, but are not limited
to:
(a) Comprehensive care management including, but not limited to,
chronic care treatment and management;
(b) Extended hours of service;
(c) Multiple ways for patients to communicate with the team,
including electronically and by phone;
(d) Education of patients on self-care, prevention, and health
promotion, including the use of patient decision aids;
(e) Coordinating and assuring smooth transitions and follow-up from
inpatient to other settings;
(f) Individual and family support including authorized
representatives;
(g) The use of information technology to link services, track
tests, generate patient registries, and provide clinical data; and
(h) Ongoing performance reporting and quality improvement.
(9) "Internal management" means the administration of medical
assistance, medical care services, the children's health program, and
the limited casualty program.
(((8))) (10) "Limited casualty program" means the medical care
program provided to medically needy persons as defined under Title XIX
of the federal social security act, and to medically indigent persons
who are without income or resources sufficient to secure necessary
medical services.
(((9))) (11) "Medical assistance" means the federal aid medical
care program provided to categorically needy persons as defined under
Title XIX of the federal social security act.
(((10))) (12) "Medical care services" means the limited scope of
care financed by state funds and provided to disability lifeline
benefits recipients, and recipients of alcohol and drug addiction
services provided under chapter 74.50 RCW.
(((11))) (13) "Multidisciplinary health care team" means an
interdisciplinary team of health professionals which may include, but
is not limited to, medical specialists, nurses, pharmacists,
nutritionists, dieticians, social workers, behavioral and mental health
providers including substance use disorder prevention and treatment
providers, doctors of chiropractic, physical therapists, licensed
complementary and alternative medicine practitioners, home care and
other long-term care providers, and physicians' assistants.
(14) "Nursing home" means nursing home as defined in RCW 18.51.010.
(((12))) (15) "Poverty" means the federal poverty level determined
annually by the United States department of health and human services,
or successor agency.
(((13))) (16) "Primary care provider" means a general practice
physician, family practitioner, internist, pediatrician, osteopath,
naturopath, physician assistant, osteopathic physician assistant, and
advanced registered nurse practitioner licensed under Title 18 RCW.
(17) "Secretary" means the secretary of social and health services.
Sec. 3 RCW 43.70.533 and 2007 c 259 s 5 are each amended to read
as follows:
(1) The department shall conduct a program of training and
technical assistance regarding care of people with chronic conditions
for providers of primary care. The program shall emphasize evidence-based high quality preventive and chronic disease care and shall
collaborate with the health care authority to promote the adoption of
primary care health homes established under this act. The department
may designate one or more chronic conditions to be the subject of the
program.
(2) The training and technical assistance program shall include the
following elements:
(a) Clinical information systems and sharing and organization of
patient data;
(b) Decision support to promote evidence-based care;
(c) Clinical delivery system design;
(d) Support for patients managing their own conditions; and
(e) Identification and use of community resources that are
available in the community for patients and their families.
(3) In selecting primary care providers to participate in the
program, the department shall consider the number and type of patients
with chronic conditions the provider serves, and the provider's
participation in the medicaid program, the basic health plan, and
health plans offered through the public employees' benefits board.
(4) For the purposes of this section, "health home" and "primary
care provider" have the same meaning as in RCW 74.09.010.
Sec. 4 RCW 74.09.522 and 1997 c 59 s 15 and 1997 c 34 s 1 are
each reenacted and amended to read as follows:
(1) For the purposes of this section, "managed health care system"
means any health care organization, including health care providers,
insurers, health care service contractors, health maintenance
organizations, health insuring organizations, or any combination
thereof, that provides directly or by contract health care services
covered under RCW 74.09.520 and rendered by licensed providers, on a
prepaid capitated basis and that meets the requirements of section
1903(m)(1)(A) of Title XIX of the federal social security act or
federal demonstration waivers granted under section 1115(a) of Title XI
of the federal social security act.
(2) The department of social and health services shall enter into
agreements with managed health care systems to provide health care
services to recipients of temporary assistance for needy families under
the following conditions:
(a) Agreements shall be made for at least thirty thousand
recipients statewide;
(b) Agreements in at least one county shall include enrollment of
all recipients of temporary assistance for needy families;
(c) To the extent that this provision is consistent with section
1903(m) of Title XIX of the federal social security act or federal
demonstration waivers granted under section 1115(a) of Title XI of the
federal social security act, recipients shall have a choice of systems
in which to enroll and shall have the right to terminate their
enrollment in a system: PROVIDED, That the department may limit
recipient termination of enrollment without cause to the first month of
a period of enrollment, which period shall not exceed twelve months:
AND PROVIDED FURTHER, That the department shall not restrict a
recipient's right to terminate enrollment in a system for good cause as
established by the department by rule;
(d) To the extent that this provision is consistent with section
1903(m) of Title XIX of the federal social security act, participating
managed health care systems shall not enroll a disproportionate number
of medical assistance recipients within the total numbers of persons
served by the managed health care systems, except as authorized by the
department under federal demonstration waivers granted under section
1115(a) of Title XI of the federal social security act;
(e)(i) In negotiating with managed health care systems the
department shall adopt a uniform procedure to ((negotiate and)) enter
into contractual arrangements, to be included in contracts issued or
renewed on or after January 1, 2012, including:
(A) Standards regarding the quality of services to be provided;
((and))
(B) The financial integrity of the responding system;
(C) Provider reimbursement methods that incentivize chronic care
management within health homes;
(D) Provider reimbursement methods that reward health homes that,
by using chronic care management, reduce emergency department and
inpatient use; and
(E) Promoting provider participation in the program of training and
technical assistance regarding care of people with chronic conditions
described in RCW 43.70.533, including allocation of funds to support
provider participation in the training, unless the managed care system
is an integrated health delivery system that has programs in place for
chronic care management.
(ii)(A) Health home services contracted for under this subsection
may be prioritized to enrollees with complex, high cost, or multiple
chronic conditions.
(B) Contracts that include the items in (e)(i)(C) through (E) of
this subsection must not exceed the rates that would be paid in the
absence of these provisions;
(f) The department shall seek waivers from federal requirements as
necessary to implement this chapter;
(g) The department shall, wherever possible, enter into prepaid
capitation contracts that include inpatient care. However, if this is
not possible or feasible, the department may enter into prepaid
capitation contracts that do not include inpatient care;
(h) The department shall define those circumstances under which a
managed health care system is responsible for out-of-plan services and
assure that recipients shall not be charged for such services; ((and))
(i) Nothing in this section prevents the department from entering
into similar agreements for other groups of people eligible to receive
services under this chapter; and
(j) The department must consult with the federal center for
medicare and medicaid innovation and seek funding opportunities to
support health homes.
(3) The department shall ensure that publicly supported community
health centers and providers in rural areas, who show serious intent
and apparent capability to participate as managed health care systems
are seriously considered as contractors. The department shall
coordinate its managed care activities with activities under chapter
70.47 RCW.
(4) The department shall work jointly with the state of Oregon and
other states in this geographical region in order to develop
recommendations to be presented to the appropriate federal agencies and
the United States congress for improving health care of the poor, while
controlling related costs.
(5) The legislature finds that competition in the managed health
care marketplace is enhanced, in the long term, by the existence of a
large number of managed health care system options for medicaid
clients. In a managed care delivery system, whose goal is to focus on
prevention, primary care, and improved enrollee health status,
continuity in care relationships is of substantial importance, and
disruption to clients and health care providers should be minimized.
To help ensure these goals are met, the following principles shall
guide the department in its healthy options managed health care
purchasing efforts:
(a) All managed health care systems should have an opportunity to
contract with the department to the extent that minimum contracting
requirements defined by the department are met, at payment rates that
enable the department to operate as far below appropriated spending
levels as possible, consistent with the principles established in this
section.
(b) Managed health care systems should compete for the award of
contracts and assignment of medicaid beneficiaries who do not
voluntarily select a contracting system, based upon:
(i) Demonstrated commitment to or experience in serving low-income
populations;
(ii) Quality of services provided to enrollees;
(iii) Accessibility, including appropriate utilization, of services
offered to enrollees;
(iv) Demonstrated capability to perform contracted services,
including ability to supply an adequate provider network;
(v) Payment rates; and
(vi) The ability to meet other specifically defined contract
requirements established by the department, including consideration of
past and current performance and participation in other state or
federal health programs as a contractor.
(c) Consideration should be given to using multiple year
contracting periods.
(d) Quality, accessibility, and demonstrated commitment to serving
low-income populations shall be given significant weight in the
contracting, evaluation, and assignment process.
(e) All contractors that are regulated health carriers must meet
state minimum net worth requirements as defined in applicable state
laws. The department shall adopt rules establishing the minimum net
worth requirements for contractors that are not regulated health
carriers. This subsection does not limit the authority of the
department to take action under a contract upon finding that a
contractor's financial status seriously jeopardizes the contractor's
ability to meet its contract obligations.
(f) Procedures for resolution of disputes between the department
and contract bidders or the department and contracting carriers related
to the award of, or failure to award, a managed care contract must be
clearly set out in the procurement document. In designing such
procedures, the department shall give strong consideration to the
negotiation and dispute resolution processes used by the Washington
state health care authority in its managed health care contracting
activities.
(6) The department may apply the principles set forth in subsection
(5) of this section to its managed health care purchasing efforts on
behalf of clients receiving supplemental security income benefits to
the extent appropriate.
Sec. 5 RCW 70.47.100 and 2009 c 568 s 5 are each amended to read
as follows:
(1) A managed health care system participating in the plan shall do
so by contract with the administrator and shall provide, directly or by
contract with other health care providers, covered basic health care
services to each enrollee covered by its contract with the
administrator as long as payments from the administrator on behalf of
the enrollee are current. A participating managed health care system
may offer, without additional cost, health care benefits or services
not included in the schedule of covered services under the plan. A
participating managed health care system shall not give preference in
enrollment to enrollees who accept such additional health care benefits
or services. Managed health care systems participating in the plan
shall not discriminate against any potential or current enrollee based
upon health status, sex, race, ethnicity, or religion. The
administrator may receive and act upon complaints from enrollees
regarding failure to provide covered services or efforts to obtain
payment, other than authorized copayments, for covered services
directly from enrollees, but nothing in this chapter empowers the
administrator to impose any sanctions under Title 18 RCW or any other
professional or facility licensing statute.
(2) The plan shall allow, at least annually, an opportunity for
enrollees to transfer their enrollments among participating managed
health care systems serving their respective areas. The administrator
shall establish a period of at least twenty days in a given year when
this opportunity is afforded enrollees, and in those areas served by
more than one participating managed health care system the
administrator shall endeavor to establish a uniform period for such
opportunity. The plan shall allow enrollees to transfer their
enrollment to another participating managed health care system at any
time upon a showing of good cause for the transfer.
(3) Prior to negotiating with any managed health care system, the
administrator shall determine, on an actuarially sound basis, the
reasonable cost of providing the schedule of basic health care
services, expressed in terms of upper and lower limits, and recognizing
variations in the cost of providing the services through the various
systems and in different areas of the state.
(4) In negotiating with managed health care systems for
participation in the plan, the administrator shall adopt a uniform
procedure that includes at least the following:
(a) The administrator shall issue a request for proposals,
including standards regarding the quality of services to be provided;
financial integrity of the responding systems; and responsiveness to
the unmet health care needs of the local communities or populations
that may be served;
(b) The administrator shall then review responsive proposals and
may negotiate with respondents to the extent necessary to refine any
proposals;
(c) The administrator may then select one or more systems to
provide the covered services within a local area; and
(d) The administrator may adopt a policy that gives preference to
respondents, such as nonprofit community health clinics, that have a
history of providing quality health care services to low-income
persons.
(5)(a) The administrator may contract with a managed health care
system to provide covered basic health care services to subsidized
enrollees, nonsubsidized enrollees, health coverage tax credit eligible
enrollees, or any combination thereof. At a minimum, such contracts
issued on or after January 1, 2012, must include:
(i) Provider reimbursement methods that incentivize chronic care
management within health homes;
(ii) Provider reimbursement methods that reward health homes that,
by using chronic care management, reduce emergency department and
inpatient use; and
(iii) Promoting provider participation in the program of training
and technical assistance regarding care of people with chronic
conditions described in RCW 43.70.533, including allocation of funds to
support provider participation in the training unless the managed care
system is an integrated health delivery system that has programs in
place for chronic care management.
(b) Health home services contracted for under this subsection may
be prioritized to enrollees with complex, high cost, or multiple
chronic conditions.
(c) For the purposes of this subsection, "chronic care management,"
"chronic condition," and "health home" have the same meaning as in RCW
74.09.010.
(d) Contracts that include the items in (a)(i) through (iii) of
this subsection must not exceed the rates that would be paid in the
absence of these provisions.
(6) The administrator may establish procedures and policies to
further negotiate and contract with managed health care systems
following completion of the request for proposal process in subsection
(4) of this section, upon a determination by the administrator that it
is necessary to provide access, as defined in the request for proposal
documents, to covered basic health care services for enrollees.
(7) The administrator may implement a self-funded or self-insured
method of providing insurance coverage to subsidized enrollees, as
provided under RCW 41.05.140. Prior to implementing a self-funded or
self-insured method, the administrator shall ensure that funding
available in the basic health plan self-insurance reserve account is
sufficient for the self-funded or self-insured risk assumed, or
expected to be assumed, by the administrator. If implementing a self-funded or self-insured method, the administrator may request funds to
be moved from the basic health plan trust account or the basic health
plan subscription account to the basic health plan self-insurance
reserve account established in RCW 41.05.140.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 6 A new section is added to chapter 41.05 RCW
to read as follows:
(1) Effective January 1, 2013, the authority must contract with all
of the public employees benefits board managed care plans and the self-insured plan or plans to include provider reimbursement methods that
incentivize chronic care management within health homes resulting in
reduced emergency department and inpatient use.
(2) Health home services contracted for under this section may be
prioritized to enrollees with complex, high cost, or multiple chronic
conditions.
(3) For the purposes of this section, "chronic care management,"
and "health home" have the same meaning as in RCW 74.09.010.
(4) Contracts with fully insured plans and with any third-party
administrator for the self-funded plan that include the items in
subsection (1) of this section must be funded within the resources
provided by employer funding rates provided for employee health
benefits in the omnibus appropriations act.
(5) Nothing in this section shall require contracted third-party
health plans administering the self-insured contract to expend
resources to implement items in subsection (1) of this section beyond
the resources provided by employer funding rates provided for employee
health benefits in the omnibus appropriations act or from other sources
in the absence of these provisions.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 7 A new section is added to chapter 41.05 RCW
to read as follows:
The authority shall coordinate a discussion with carriers to learn
from successful chronic care management models and develop principles
for effective reimbursement methods to align incentives in support of
patient centered chronic care health homes. The authority shall submit
a report to the appropriate committees of the legislature by December
1, 2012, describing the principles developed from the discussion and
any steps taken by the public employees benefits board or carriers in
Washington state to implement the principles through their payment
methodologies.