Palliative care is the assessment and management of a patient's symptoms, including care coordination, attending to the physical, functional, psychological, practical, and spiritual consequences of serious illness, and assessment and support of caregiver needs. Palliative care provides people living with serious illness relief from the symptoms and stress of an illness, and can be delivered alongside life-prolonging or curative care.
In 2022, the Legislature directed the Health Care Authority (HCA) to design a standard payment methodology for a palliative care benefit for the state Medicaid program and the Employee and Retiree Benefits program. HCA worked with the Center for Evidence-based Policy to conduct a policy review, stakeholder interviews, a gap analysis, and a concluding listening session with stakeholders. In March 2023, HCA released a report outlining the key findings, guiding principles and recommendations for designing a standard payment methodology for a palliative care benefit.
The Office of the Insurance Commissioner (OIC), in consultation with HCA, must convene a work group to design the parameters of a palliative care benefit and payment model for the benefit of fully insured health plans. OIC may contract with an outside vendor to conduct actuarial analysis as necessary. The work group must coordinate its work with the ongoing work at HCA related to designing a palliative care benefit for Medicaid and the Employee and Retiree Benefits program.
The work group must consider the following elements of a palliative care benefit:
The work group must consist of the following members:
The work group must convene its first meeting by July 30, 2024, and shall submit a report to the Legislature detailing its work and any recommendations, including any legislation, by November 1, 2025.