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SPONSOR: |
Cervantes |
DATE TYPED: |
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HB |
831 |
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SHORT TITLE: |
Compact on Threatening Communicable Diseases |
SB |
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ANALYST: |
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APPROPRIATION
Appropriation
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Additional Impact |
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Fund Affected |
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FY04 |
FY03 |
FY04 |
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NFI |
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(Parenthesis
( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
Relates to SB 194
Responses
Received From
Department
of Health (DOH)
Health
Policy Commission (HPC)
Administrative
Office of the Courts (AOC)
SUMMARY
Synopsis
of Bill
House
Bill 831 enacts the Interstate Compact on Threatening Communicable Diseases
which would enable the State of
Significant
Issues
The Interstate Compact
on Communicable Diseases is summarized below:
·
The
purpose of the Compact, and of those states the State of
·
Any
patient may be transferred to an institution in another state, based on
clinical diagnosis and the availability of specialized care in that other
state.
·
A
member state is obliged to provide advanced notice to the other state before
sending a patient to that state, must provide medical records and must conduct
a medical exam of the patient.
·
An
interstate patient shall, under the Compact receive the same priority as a
local patient when a state has a system of priorities for admission to a
hospital.
·
The
best suitable place of hospitalization may be reviewed and further transfer of
the patient may occur if it is in the best interest of the patient.
·
Patient
transport may occur through any Compact state without interference.
·
The
transport of a patient by an institution and the responsibility for the patient
welfare and costs of transport shall be the responsibility of the sending
state, until the completion of the transfer. No provision of the Compact alters
any agreements or internal relationships within the transporting state.
·
The
state may not be restricted by the Compact from asserting financial liability
for the patient with another entity or person.
·
Nothing in the Compact invalidates any
reciprocal agreements with other non-participating states.
·
A
compact administrator shall be appointed by the participating state and shall assume
general coordinator duties for patients under the Compact.
·
A
Compact state may enter into supplementary agreements with any other Compact
state.
·
A
Compact shall enter into full force when it is enacted into legislation and
will be a party to the Compact with any other states legally joining it.
·
The
Compact must comply to the U.S and State Constitutions and statutes and regulations
and can be severable if in breach.
·
The
Secretary of the Department of Health shall designate the Contract administrator,
who may make or arrange for necessary payments and discharge financial
obligations under the Compact.
·
HB831
provides rules of patient transfer under the Compact, which includes the
obligations of the state and the rights of the patient with regards to patient
transfer.
·
The
state does not require the patient or the patient’s family permission to
transfer a patient. The State may seek a court order to facilitate the
transfer.
·
The
state most provide the patient or patient’s family the patient’s right to a
court hearing. The patient has 14 days to respond. The Compact administrator is
bound to respond to comply with the court’s decision.
On occasion, a person with a communicable disease may not have the capacity to effectively manage a course of treatment without significant outside assistance. Currently, these individuals, under court order, are placed in a local detention center. These placements are, in most cases, inappropriate. Experience has demonstrated that sometimes the appropriate placement may be in a neighboring or home state for the individual involved. However, since these infected individuals are sometimes under court order and protection, effecting an appropriate trans-
fer is time consuming and administratively awkward. HB 831 would provide a clear and legally sufficient mechanism to accomplish this kind of appropriate interstate transfer to ensure the most effective treatment.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
Managing non-compliant infectious patients is already a responsibility of the Department of Health. There are no specific fiscal implications to HB 831, rather there would be efficiencies in managing these patients. The costs of transfer will need to be absorbed from state and federal funds.
RELATIONSHIP
Relates to: SB194, the
Public Health Emergency Response Act.
The bill provides for procedures for declaring and responding to a
public health emergency, provides protection of individual civil rights,
provides civil penalties for violation of the Act, and would further clarify
the Governor’s authority to declare and terminate a public health emergency.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
The provisions in HB 831 would enable and facilitate New Mexico’s being able to access specialized health care facilities for New Mexicans infected with a communicable disease and who pose a threat to the health and welfare of the community because of unwillingness or inability to comply with a recommended course of medical treatment. Currently, individuals who find themselves in this situation are placed, through judicial order, in local detention center facilities, state facilities, or other protected locales. In spite of judicial orders, detention facilities often refuse, and are generally reluctant, to admit individuals with infectious disease.
HB 831 would make it
easier for the Department of Health to enter into inter-state compacts that
would allow for transfer of patients across state lines so that New Mexicans
can enter specialized and specialty care facilities where the standard of care
includes such things as: negative pressurized
rooms, provision of medications, supervised therapy according to national
standards of care, safety precautions and security
According
to Department of Health staff, the department identified the need for a Compact
on Threatening Communicable Diseases, in part because of the need to transport
tubercular patients from
HPC
reports:
·
Dealing
with viruses such as Ebola or smallpox would call for a very different response
from public health and legal authorities compared to tuberculosis. The word
“quarantine “ does not appear in HB831, though the public health response in
the event of a large-scale viral outbreak would likely involve the segregation
of segment of the public for an undefined period.
·
HB831
does not discuss the legal or medical feasibility such as quarantine issues
associated with threatening communicable diseases.
·
For a transfer to be appropriate, the
transferring hospital must provide the care it can, minimize transfer risks,
and provide copies of medical records. The receiving facility must have space
and qualified personnel and agree to accept the transfer. Qualified personnel
with necessary equipment must make the transfer. Receiving hospitals with specialized
capabilities, such as burn units, specialized pulmonary units, or intensive
care units, are obligated to accept transfers if they have the capacity to
treat them.
BD/njw