Health Care Cost Transparency Board.
The Health Care Cost Transparency Board (Board) was established in 2020 for the purpose of calculating and analyzing information and trends related to health care costs in Washington. The Board consists of 13 members representing state agencies, local governments, consumers, employers, and Taft-Hartley health benefit plans, as well as an expert in health care finance and an actuary or health economist. Each year, the Board must calculate total health care expenditures and health care cost growth. With this information, the Board must establish a health care cost growth benchmark for increases in total health care expenditures. Beginning in 2023, the Board must analyze the impacts of cost drivers to health care, such as labor, capital cost, supply costs, and uncompensated care, and incorporate this into establishing the annual health care cost growth benchmark.
Primary Care Expenditures Report.
The 2019-21 State Omnibus Operating Appropriations Act directed the Office of Financial Management (OFM) to determine the annual primary care expenditures in Washington, by insurance carrier, in total and as a percentage of total medical expenditure. The report was released by the OFM in 2019 and found that in Washington for 2018, primary care expenditures as a percentage of total medical expenditures ranged from 4.4 percent, based on a narrow definition of "primary care," to 5.6 percent, based on a broad definition. These figures represent $838 million and about $1 billion respectively.
The Health Care Cost Transparency Board (Board) must measure and report on primary care expenditures in Washington and the progress toward increasing such spending to 12 percent of total health care expenditures. In developing the measures and the reporting, the Board may consult with primary care providers and review existing work regarding primary care, including reports from the Office of Financial Management, the Bree Collaborative, and the Advancing Integrated Mental Health Center.
The Board must submit a preliminary report related to primary care expenditures in Washington to the Governor and the relevant committees of the Legislature by December 1, 2022. The report must discuss:
The Board must submit annual reports to the Governor and the relevant committees of the Legislature regarding primary care expenditures in Washington beginning August 1, 2023. The reports must include annual primary care expenditures for the most recent year for which data is available by insurance carrier, by market or payer, in total, and as a percentage of total health care expenditure. The annual report must also evaluate annual primary care expenditures by relevant characteristics, such as by type of care, by type of provider, and by payment mechanism. In addition, the report must identify any barriers to reporting requirements and provide recommendations to resolve them.
The Insurance Commissioner is authorized to include an assessment of health carriers' primary care expenditures in its reviews of health plan form or rate filings. The review must consider the definition of "primary care expenditures" and any primary care expenditure goals established by the Board.
(In support) Investing in primary care can improve an entire family's health trajectory. This bill will strengthen primary care in Washington. Investing in primary care will enable practices to retain skilled staff to provide important services such as integrated behavioral health, mental health screening, care coordination, and outreach to complex patients and patients who are behind on immunizations. Hospital and specialty care is more effective when preventive health care and social determinants of health are attended to in primary care. Studies consistently show that primary care helps prevent illness and death and is associated with a more equitable distribution of health. Despite its benefits, too little is invested in primary care. In a 2019 study, the Office of Financial Management found that primary care accounts for about 5 percent of health care costs in Washington, while high performing health care systems in other countries invest two to three times as much. Investing in primary prevention saves money, promotes population health, and spends money where it really matters. A robust system of primary care is best for patients, payers, and the economy and results in better outcomes, reduced health disparities, and less overall cost. There needs to be broad and direct participation from the physician community to assure there is strong buy-in and support of the final product.
(Opposed) None.