HB117 H H&HR AM #1
Roskovensky 3338
The Committee on Health and Human Resources moved to amend the bill by striking out everything after the enacting clause and inserting in lieu thereof the following:
“That §16-2D-11 of the Code of West Virginia, 1931, as amended, be amended and reenacted; that §16-29B-3 and §16-29B-8 of said code be amended and reenacted; and that of said code be amended by adding thereto two new sections designated §16-29B-24 and §16-29B-25, all to read as follows:
ARTICLE 2D. CERTIFICATE OF NEED.
§16-2D-11. Exemptions from certificate of need which require approval from the authority.
(a) To obtain an exemption under this section a person shall:
(1) File an exemption application;
(2) Pay the $1,000 application fee; and
(3) Provide a statement detailing which exemption applies and the circumstances justifying the approval of the exemption.
(b) The authority has forty-five days to review the exemption request. The authority may not hold an administrative hearing to review the application. A person may not file an objection to the request for an exemption. The applicant may request or agree with the authority to a fifteen day extension of the timeframe. If the authority does not approve or deny the application within forty-five days, then the exemption is immediately approved. If the authority denies the approval of the exemption, only the applicant may appeal the authority’s decision to the Office of Judges or refile the application with the authority.
(c) Notwithstanding section eight and ten and except as provided in section nine of this article, the Legislature finds that a need exists and these health services are exempt from the certificate of need process:
(1) The acquisition and utilization of one computed tomography
scanner and/or one magnetic resonance imaging scanner with a purchase
price up to $750,000 that is installed in a private office practice where at
minimum seventy-five percent of the scans are performed on the patients of the
practice. The private office practice shall obtain and maintain accreditation
from the American College of Radiology prior to, and at all times during, the
offering of this service. The authority may at any time request from the
private office practice information relating to the number of patients who have
been provided scans and proof of active and continuous accreditation from the
American College of Radiology. If a physician owns or operates a private
office practice in more than one location, this exemption shall only apply to
the physician’s primary place of business and if a physician wants to expand
the offering of this service to include more than one computed topography
scanner and/or one magnetic resonance imaging scanner, he or she shall
be required to obtain a certificate of need prior to expanding this service.
All current certificates of need issued for computed tomography services and/or
one magnetic resonance imaging services, with a required percentage
threshold of scans to be performed on patients of the practice in excess of
seventy-five percent, shall be reduced to seventy-five percent: Provided, That
these limitations on the exemption for a private office practice with more than
one location shall not apply to a private office practice with more than twenty
locations in the state on April 8, 2017. at the time of
the changes made to this article during the 2017 Regular Session of the
Legislature.
(2) (A) A birthing center established by a nonprofit primary care center that has a community board and provides primary care services to people in their community without regard to ability to pay; or
(B) A birthing center established by a nonprofit hospital with less than one hundred licensed acute care beds.
(i) To qualify for this exemption, an applicant shall be located in an area that is underserved with respect to low-risk obstetrical services; and
(ii) Provide a proposed health service area.
(3) (A) A health care facility acquiring major medical equipment, adding health services or obligating a capital expenditure to be used solely for research;
(B) To qualify for this exemption, the health care facility shall show that the acquisition, offering or obligation will not:
(i) Affect the charges of the facility for the provision of medical or other patient care services other than the services which are included in the research;
(ii) Result in a substantial change to the bed capacity of the facility; or
(iii) Result in a substantial change to the health services of the facility.
(C) For purposes of this subdivision, the term "solely for research" includes patient care provided on an occasional and irregular basis and not as part of a research program;
(4) The obligation of a capital expenditure to acquire, either by purchase, lease or comparable arrangement, the real property, equipment or operations of a skilled nursing facility: Provided, That a skilled nursing facility developed pursuant to subdivision (17) of this section and subsequently acquired pursuant to this subdivision may not transfer or sell any of the skilled nursing home beds of the acquired skilled nursing facility until the skilled nursing facility has been in operation for at least ten years.
(5) Shared health services between two or more hospitals licensed in West Virginia providing health services made available through existing technology that can reasonably be mobile. This exemption does not include providing mobile cardiac catheterization;
(6) The acquisition, development or establishment of a certified interoperable electronic health record or electronic medical record system;
(7) The addition of forensic beds in a health care facility;
(8) A behavioral health service selected by the Department of Health and Human Resources in response to its request for application for services intended to return children currently placed in out-of-state facilities to the state or to prevent placement of children in out-of-state facilities is not subject to a certificate of need;
(9) The replacement of major medical equipment with like equipment, only if the replacement major medical equipment cost is more than the expenditure minimum;
(10) Renovations within a hospital, only if the renovation cost is more than the expenditure minimum. The renovations may not expand the health care facility’s current square footage, incur a substantial change to the health services, or a substantial change to the bed capacity;
(11) Renovations to a skilled nursing facility;
(12) The construction, development, acquisition or
other establishment by a hospital of an ambulatory heath care facility in the
county in which it is located;
(13) The donation of major medical equipment to
replace like equipment for which a certificate of need has been issued and the
replacement does not result in a substantial change to health services. This
exemption does not include the donation of major medical equipment made to a
health care facility by a related organization;
(14) (13) A person providing specialized
foster care personal care services to one individual and those services are
delivered in the provider's home;
(15) (14) A hospital converting the use of
beds except a hospital may not convert a bed to a skilled nursing home bed and
conversion of beds may not result in a substantial change to health services
provided by the hospital;
(16) (15) The construction, renovation,
maintenance or operation of a state owned veterans skilled nursing facilities
established pursuant to the provisions of article one-b of this chapter;
(17) (16) To develop and operate a skilled
nursing facility with no more than thirty-six beds in a county that currently
is without a skilled nursing facility;
(18) (17) A critical access hospital,
designated by the state as a critical access hospital, after meeting all
federal eligibility criteria, previously licensed as a hospital and
subsequently closed, if it reopens within ten years of its closure;
(19) (18) The establishing of a heath care
facility or offering of health services for children under one year of age
suffering from Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome;
(20) (19) The construction, development,
acquisition or other establishment of community mental health and intellectual
disability facility;
(21) (20) Providing behavioral health
facilities and services;
(22) (21) The construction, development,
acquisition or other establishment of kidney disease treatment centers,
including freestanding hemodialysis units but only to a medically underserved
population;
(23) (22) The transfer, purchase or sale of
intermediate care or skilled nursing beds from a skilled nursing facility or a
skilled nursing unit of an acute care hospital to a skilled nursing facility
providing intermediate care and skilled nursing services. No state agency
may deny payment to an acquiring nursing home or place any restrictions on the
beds transferred under this subsection. The Department of Health and
Human Resources may not create a policy which limits the transfer, purchase or
sale of intermediate care or skilled nursing beds from a skilled nursing
facility or a skilled nursing unit of an acute care hospital. The
transferred beds shall retain the same certification status that existed at the
nursing home or hospital skilled nursing unit from which they were acquired.
If construction is required to place the transferred beds into the acquiring
nursing home, the acquiring nursing home has one year from the date of purchase
to commence construction;
(24) (23) The construction, development,
acquisition or other establishment by a health care facility of a nonhealth
related project, only if the nonhealth related project cost is more than the
expenditure minimum;
(25) (24) The construction, development,
acquisition or other establishment of an alcohol or drug treatment facility and
drug and alcohol treatment services unless the construction, development,
acquisition or other establishment is an opioid treatment facility or programs
as set forth in subdivision (4) of section nine of this article;
(26) (25) Assisted living facilities and
services; and
(27) (26) The creation, construction,
acquisition or expansion of a community-based nonprofit organization with a
community board that provides or will provide primary care services to people
without regard to ability to pay and receives approval from the Health Resources
and Services Administration.
ARTICLE 29B. HEALTH CARE AUTHORITY.
§16-29B-3. Definitions.
(a) Definitions of words and terms defined in
articles two-d and five-f of this chapter are incorporated in this
section unless this section has different definitions.
(b) As used in this article, unless a different meaning clearly appears from the context:
(a) (1) “Authority” means the Health Care
Authority created pursuant to the provisions of this article;
(b) (2) "Board" means the
five-member board of directors of the West Virginia Health Care Authority;
(c) (3) "Charges" means the
economic value established for accounting purposes of the goods and services a
hospital provides for all classes of purchasers;
(d) (4) "Class of purchaser" means
a group of potential hospital patients with common characteristics affecting
the way in which their hospital care is financed. Examples of classes of
purchasers are Medicare beneficiaries, welfare recipients, subscribers of
corporations established and operated pursuant to article twenty-four, chapter
thirty-three of this code, members of health maintenance organizations and other
groups as defined by the authority;
(5) "Covered facility" means a hospital, behavioral health facility, kidney disease treatment center, including a free-standing hemodialysis unit; ambulatory health care facility; ambulatory surgical facility; home health agency; rehabilitation facility; or community mental health or intellectual disability facility, whether under public or private ownership or as a profit or nonprofit organization and whether or not licensed or required to be licensed, in whole or in part, by the state: Provided, That nonprofit, community-based primary care centers providing primary care services without regard to ability to pay which provide the Secretary with a year-end audited financial statement prepared in accordance with generally accepted auditing standards and with governmental auditing standards issued by the Comptroller General of the United States shall be deemed to have complied with the disclosure requirements of this section.
(e) (6) “Executive Director” or “Director”
means the administrative head of the Health Care Authority as set forth in
section five-a of this article;
(f) (7) "Health care provider"
means a person, partnership, corporation, facility, hospital or institution
licensed, certified or authorized by law to provide professional health care
service in this state to an individual during this individual's medical,
remedial, or behavioral health care, treatment or confinement. For purposes of
this article, "health care provider" shall not include the private
office practice of one or more health care professionals licensed to practice
in this state pursuant to the provisions of chapter thirty of this code;
(g) (8) "Hospital" means a
facility subject to licensure as such under the provisions of article five-b of
this chapter, and any acute care facility operated by the state government
which is primarily engaged in providing to inpatients, by or under the
supervision of physicians, diagnostic and therapeutic services for medical
diagnosis, treatment and care of injured, disabled or sick persons, and does
not include state mental health facilities or state long-term care facilities;
(h) (9) "Person" means an
individual, trust, estate, partnership, committee, corporation, association or
other organization such as a joint stock company, a state or political
subdivision or instrumentality thereof or any legal entity recognized by the
state;
(i) (10) "Purchaser" means a
consumer of patient care services, a natural person who is directly or
indirectly responsible for payment for such patient care services rendered by a
health care provider, but does not include third-party payers;
(j) (11) "Rates" means all value
given or money payable to health care providers for health care services,
including fees, charges and cost reimbursements;
(k) (12) "Records" means accounts,
books and other data related to health care costs at health care facilities
subject to the provisions of this article which do not include privileged
medical information, individual personal data, confidential information, the
disclosure of which is prohibited by other provisions of this code and the laws
enacted by the federal government, and information, the disclosure of which
would be an invasion of privacy;
(l) (13) "Related organization"
means an organization, whether publicly owned, nonprofit, tax-exempt or for
profit, related to a health care provider through common membership, governing
bodies, trustees, officers, stock ownership, family members, partners or
limited partners including, but not limited to, subsidiaries, foundations,
related corporations and joint ventures. For the purposes of this subsection
family members means brothers and sisters, whether by the whole or half blood,
spouse, ancestors and lineal descendants;
(m) (14) “Secretary” means the Secretary of
the Department of Health and Human Resources; and
(n) (15) "Third-party payor" means
any natural person, person, corporation or government entity responsible for
payment for patient care services rendered by health care providers.
§16-29B-8. Powers generally; budget expenses of the authority.
In addition to the powers granted to the authority
elsewhere in this article, (a) The authority may:
(1) Adopt, amend and repeal necessary, appropriate and lawful policy guidelines, and in cooperation with the Secretary, propose rules in accordance with article three, chapter twenty-nine-a of this code;
(2) Hold public hearings, conduct investigations and
require the filing of information relating to matters affecting the costs of
health care services subject to the provisions of this article and may subpoena
witnesses, papers, records, documents and all other data in connection
therewith. The board may administer oaths or affirmations in any hearing or
investigation; and
(3) Exercise, subject to limitations or restrictions herein imposed, all other powers which are reasonably necessary or essential to effect the express objectives and purposes of this article.
(4) Assess a fee on a pro rata basis on hospitals, except critical access hospital, using net patient revenue, as defined under generally accepted accounting principles. The assessment may not exceed a total five one hundredths of one percent of its net patient revenue in a fiscal year. The amount of the assessment shall be determined by the authority based upon the information provided in a hospital’s most recent audited financial statement. The authority shall collect the assessment on a semi-annual basis. Two hundred and fifty thousandths of one percent shall be collected on July 1st. The amount of the second assessment shall be based upon the projected expenses to perform the duties consistent with article twenty-nine-b, chapter sixteen, and article two-d, chapter sixteen, but may not exceed two hundred and fifty thousandths of one percent and shall be collect after the first of January of the next year. The assessment shall be paid into the state treasury and kept as a special revolving fund designated "Health Care Cost Review Fund", with the moneys in the fund being expendable after appropriation by the Legislature for purposes consistent with article twenty-nine-b, chapter sixteen, article two-d, chapter sixteen. The Secretary may use any balance remaining in the “Health Care Cost Review Fund” at the end of June 30, 2017 to support the financial viability of certain critical access hospitals that operate rural health clinics in West Virginia. Any balance remaining in the fund at the end of June 30, 2018 and thereafter shall not revert to the treasury, but shall remain in said fund and such moneys shall be expendable after appropriation by the Legislature in ensuing fiscal years. The assessment shall terminate on July 1, 2020.
(b) The legislature finds that an emergency exists and the authority shall promulgate emergency rules pursuant to the provisions of section fifteen, article three, chapter twenty-nine of this code, to effectuate the changes in this article by July 1, 2017.
§16-29B-24. Reports required to be filed.
(a) A covered facility, within one hundred twenty days after the end of its fiscal year, unless an extension be granted by the authority, shall file with the authority its annual financial report prepared by an accountant or auditor.
(b) A covered facility, if applicable by legislative rule, shall submit upon request of the authority but at least annually:
(1) A statement of charges for all services rendered, except a behavioral health facility shall submit its gross rates for its top thirty services by utilization;
(2) The Health Care Authority Financial Report, through the Uniform Reporting System;
(3) The current Uniform Bill form in effect for inpatients. This data is not subject to the provisions of subsection (f), section twenty-five of this article.
(c) The authority may request from a covered facility, except hospitals, the information from subsection (a) and (b) from its related organization.
(d) A covered facility failing to submit a report to the authority shall be notified by the authority and, if the failure continues for ten days after receipt of the notice, the delinquent facility or organization is subject to a penalty of $1,000 for each day thereafter that the failure continues.
§16-29B-25. Data repository.
(a) The authority shall:
(1) Coordinate and oversee the health data collection of state agencies;
(2) Lead state agencies’ efforts to make the best use of emerging technology to effect the expedient and appropriate exchange of health care information and data, including patient records and reports; and
(3) Coordinate database development, analysis and report to facilitate cost management, review utilization review and quality assurance efforts by state payor and regulatory agencies, insurers, consumers, providers and other interested parties.
(b) A state agency collecting health data shall work through the authority to develop an integrated system for the efficient collection, responsible use and dissemination of data and to facilitate and support the development of statewide health information systems that will allow for the electronic transmittal of all health information and claims processing activities of a state agency within the state and to coordinate the development and use of electronic health information systems within state government.
(c) The authority shall establish minimum requirements and issue reports relating to information systems of state health programs, including simplifying and standardizing forms and establishing information standards and reports for capitated managed care programs;
(d) The authority shall develop a comprehensive system to collect ambulatory health care data.
(e) The authority may access any health-related database maintained or operated by a state agency for the purposes of fulfilling its duties. The use and dissemination of information from that database shall be subject to the confidentiality provisions applicable to that database.
(f) A report, statement, schedule or other filing may not contain any medical or individual information personally identifiable to a patient or a consumer of health services, whether directly or indirectly.
(g) A report, statement, schedule or other filing filed with the authority is open to public inspection and examination during regular hours. A copy shall be made available to the public upon request upon payment of a fee.
(h) The authority may require the production of any records necessary to verify the accuracy of any information set forth in any statement, schedule or report filed under the provisions of this article.
(i) The authority may provide requested aggregate data to an entity. The authority may charge a fee to an entity to obtain the data collected by the authority. The authority may not charge a fee to a covered entity to obtain the data collected by the authority.
(j) The authority shall provide to the Legislative Oversight Commission on Health and Human Resources Accountability before July 1, 2018, and every other year thereafter, a strategic data collection and analysis plan:
(1) What entities are submitting data;
(2) What data is being collected;
(3) The types of analysis performed on the submitted data;
(4) A way to reduce duplicative data submissions;
(5) The current and projected expenses to operate the data collection and analysis program.
(k) The Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Resources may assume the powers and duties provided to the authority in this section, if the secretary determines it is more efficient and cost effective to have direct control over the data repository program.
NOTE: The purpose of this bill is to authorize the Secretary, through the Health Care Authority, to request health care facilities file with the Health Care Authority health care financial disclosures; remove restrictive language associated with an exemption to the certificate of need process; and authorize the Health Care Authority to assess and collect a fee, assess a penalty for failure to file required financial documents, define terms.
Strike-throughs indicate language that would be stricken from a heading or the present law and underscoring indicates new language that would be added.