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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Vaughn
DATE TYPED 2-15-05
HB HJM 62
SHORT TITLE Study Rate of Infections While Hospitalized
SB
ANALYST Collard
APPROPRIATION
Appropriation Contained Estimated Additional Impact Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY05
FY06
FY05
FY06
See Narrative
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
Relates to SJM45, HB934, SB775/HB823, HB709
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Aging and Long-Term Services Department (ALTSD)
Health Policy Commission (HPC)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
House Joint Memorial 62 requests HPC, in conjunction with DOH, study the best practices and
current studies on nosocomial infections to determine if a uniform reporting system is necessary.
The bill instructs participation by hospital and health systems associations, the association of
primary health care clinics, medical associations, professionals in infection control and epidemi-
ology, and physician-surgeons. The study will advise New Mexico hospitals about using the
federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) nosocomial reporting standards. The
bill requires HPC to report findings and recommendations to the legislative Health and Human
Services Committee in October 2005.
Significant Issues
ALTSD indicates CDC reported that 90 thousand people die annually from hospital-acquired in-
fections. Their report further indicates that approximately two million people are infected yearly
during hospital stays. Hospital-acquired infections cost the United States nearly $5 billion each
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House Joint Memorial 62 -- Page 2
year. The Journal of the American Medical Association has reported that one type of hospital-
related infection—postoperative sepsis—can add 10 additional days to a patient’s hospital stay
and can add more than $57 thousand to a patient’s hospital bill.
PERFORMANCE IMPLICATIONS
HPC indicates infections and infection control are clinical processes of hospital care and health-
care. The field is a scientific discipline with infectious disease specialists who devote their entire
professional career to dealing with the causes and prevention of infections. HPC would have to
tap into that expertise in order to complete a study of best practices and make a determination if a
uniform public reporting system is in the public interest. HPC does not have the clinical exper-
tise within its operation to conduct such a study. However, HPC could contract with private in-
dividuals and organizations to obtain the knowledge base required to do this study. HPC could
utilize other state resources as well, in particular, within the Department of Health.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
Although there is no appropriation attached to the joint memorial, HPC indicates the budget cur-
rently does not have any funding for what may be required for contract services in the event that
consultative expertise, as noted above, is required. The joint memorial also notes the results of
the recent Atlanta infection control symposium and the need to collect the information from that
event. There may be some unbudgeted expense in that collection as well.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
This is a study HPC expresses interest in conducting. The results could make a difference in the
lives of numerous New Mexicans even if nothing other than best practices via a literature search
and research is published. The prioritization of the staff resources within HPC will have to take
place at the possible expense of other activities within HPC to complete this study.
RELATIONSHIP
House Joint Memorial 62 relates to Senate Joint Memorial 45 which proposes to study hospital
acquired infection rates; House Bill 934, Senate Bill 775 and its duplicate House Bill 823, which
all propose disclosure of infection rates, taking into account patient privacy; and House Bill 709
which proposes an interstate compact on communicable diseases.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
In the past two to three years, Florida, Illinois, Missouri and Pennsylvania have passed legisla-
tion that requires public disclosure of hospital-acquired infections. The California legislature
passed a hospital infection reporting bill but the governor did not sign it. A few other states, in-
cluding Colorado, are currently attempting to pass similar legislation.
HPC notes, as does ALTSD, a study by the American Journal of Infection Control in 2002 found
that hospital-acquired infections add about $5 billion a year to health care costs. Advocates of
collecting infection-rate data say the information can help reduce the incidence of infections.
Health care providers, however, say there is no universal method for obtaining infection-rate sta-
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House Joint Memorial 62 -- Page 3
tistics, in part because it is difficult to determine whether a patient developed an infection while
in the hospital. Providers add that some hospitals are more likely to have higher infection rates
because of patient mix, and a universal standard would need to account for these discrepancies.
Hospitals say laws requiring data reporting could affect malpractice litigation, reward facilities
that are less persistent in finding infections and force others to hire on more record keeping staff.
Some infection control specialists say CDC data show that only about one third of hospital-
acquired infections are preventable and, even with infection-disclosure mandates, health experts
do not know just how far it is possible to reduce them.
HPC also indicates a large part of the difficulty in measuring hospital-acquired infections will be
definitional. Will the definition include outpatients treated within the hospitals. Will it include
a home health agency operated by a hospital. Will it include ambulance service operated by a
hospital, but the patient transported may never be in that hospital.
Discovery of infection may on the surface seem to be easy; however, it is not an easy task. Pa-
tients can develop post-operative or post-hospitalization nosocomial infections days post dis-
charge with the infection not apparent at discharge. Who is responsible, if anyone, to report that
type of infection back to the hospital.
HPC notes some patients are predisposed to develop infections or are already infected, but not
clinically confirmed as such. Because of immuno-surpressed physical conditions upon admis-
sion to a hospital, the infection develops. Also, at times admissions to hospitals are made to run
a series of diagnostic tests to see if the individual is infected. The infection may be in place at
admission, but not surface for some time. Is this type of infection a nosocomial infection or not.
HPC notes the following information on hospital reporting:
Since the early 1990's there has been a proliferation of healthcare quality report cards focusing
on outcomes and processes of healthcare. Consumer demand for public reporting of healthcare
quality data has increased since the 1999 publication of the Institute of Medicine's “ To Err is
Human: Building a Safer Health System” which reported 98,000 deaths in United States hospi-
tals per year and $29 billion spent per year associated with medical error.
The literature shows that when outcomes are made public, results improve. A Health Affairs
study evaluated the impact on quality improvement of reporting hospital performance publicly
versus privately back to the hospital. Making performance information public appears to stimu-
late quality improvement activities in areas where performance is reported to be low. The find-
ings from this Wisconsin-based study indicate that there is added value to making this informa-
tion public.
A new study done by the National Committee for Quality Assurance finds that the quality of care
delivered by health plans that publicly report on their performance improved markedly in 2003.
Using data from 1991 to 1999, a New York study showed the reporting program has both influ-
enced patients’ decisions of which hospital to attend and improved quality of care. Those hospi-
tals with low mortality rates see a positive flow of patients in the first year following a report, but
this increase declines soon after. In contrast, those hospitals identified publicly as offering rela-
tively low quality surgery experienced a decline of 10 percent in the number of patients during
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House Joint Memorial 62 -- Page 4
the first 12 months after an initial report and remained at that level for three years. However,
their risk-adjusted mortality rate declined significantly – about 1.2 percentage points.
Some hospitals have begun publicly and voluntarily reporting their outcomes as a demonstration
of accountability to the public they serve. One of Salt Lake City’s largest hospitals, Latter Day
Saints, which already had an infection rate below the national average, reduced its rate by half
between 1985 and 1995, largely by increasing how thoroughly doctors and nurses complied with
pre-surgical best practices. At Mercy Health Center in Oklahoma City, the surgical infection
rates for cardiac bypass, orthopedic surgery, colon and hysterectomy surgeries were reduced by
78 percent in one year. Another large Kentucky system, Norton Healthcare, has announced that
the health care system has voluntarily committed to measure and publicly report this spring on
a comprehensive list of approximately 200 industry-consensus indicators for clinical quality and
patient safety.
ALTERNATIVES
HPC indicates an alternative would be to allow a voluntary task force of providers to develop
their own public reporting, assuming their data could be audited from an independent third party
that reports its findings to the legislative Health and Human Services Committee.
KBC/yr