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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Gardner
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
2/20/07
2/22/07 HB 956/aHHGAC
SHORT TITLE HEALTH CARE PROVIDER TORT IMMUNITY SB
ANALYST Propst
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY07
FY08
Indeterminate
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Department of Health (DOH)
General Services Department (GSD)
Administrative Office of the Courts (AOC)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Amendment
Clarifies the bills scope to apply to a “provider" “who has no medical liability insurance."
Synopsis of Original Bill
House Bill 956 proposes to amend the Tort Claims Act to provide limited immunity to New
Mexico licensed health care providers providing voluntary services without compensation.
Voluntary services that are provided must be in accordance with rules promulgated the Secretary
of the New Mexico Department of Health.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
GSD reports that the Risk Management Division (RMD) of the General Services Department
(GSD) has no statistics or past experience to calculate the fiscal implication. The governmental
entity authorizing volunteer services of these health care providers would be assessed the cost of
the premiums to cover the defense costs should a lawsuit be filed against the health care provider
pg_0002
House Bill 956/aHHGAC – Page
2
or the authorizing agency. (By granting limited liability to the volunteer health care provider, the
authorizing agency’s liability would also increase.)
Associated costs would be difficult to predict and would be reflected as an increase in the
authorizing agency’s future rate, based on experience (calculated at 70% of a 5-year average)
and exposure (30%). Exposure would increase immediately because of the added potential
liability. Experience would come into play only after a claim is paid in connection with a
volunteer who had been authorized by a governmental entity to provide services.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
DoH reports that due to the shortage of professional health care providers in certain rural areas of
the state some voluntary health care providers would need to respond in the event of a public
health emergency. DOH has developed and maintains a health care provider registry to support a
well coordinated and effective response to health emergencies. If volunteers are not adequately
protected from liability, it may be less likely that they will respond to a request from DOH for
assistance during public health emergencies.
HB 956 does not limit coverage to an identified list of health care providers. In addition, only
those voluntary services provided according to rules promulgated by DOH would be eligible for
coverage by HB 956.
CONFLICT, DUPLICATION, COMPANIONSHIP, RELATIONSHIP
HB 956 relates to:
o
SB22 which would provide limited liability for licensed health care providers during a
public health emergency;
o
HB605 which provides that unpaid health professionals deployed by DOH
responding to a declared emergency would be considered a public employee for purposes
of coverage under the Workers’ Compensation Act.
o
SB 23 which would amend the Medical Malpractice Act to provide limited malpractice
liability for retired still-licensed medical professionals who provide volunteer care
without compensation.
WEP/mt