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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR HHGAC
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
02/05/08
HB 455/HHGACS
SHORT TITLE Hospital Transparency Information System
SB
ANALYST Geisler
ESTIMATED ADDITIONAL OPERATING BUDGET IMPACT (dollars in thousands)
FY08
FY09
FY10 3 Year
Total Cost
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
Total
See fiscal
impact
Recurring General
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
Relates to SB 518
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Department of Health (DOH)
Health Policy Commission (HPC)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
The House Health and Government Affairs Committee substitute for House Bill 455 enacts the
“New Mexico Hospital Transparency Act," which creates a “Hospital Transparency Information
System."
Section 2, Definitions, provides definitions for terms used throughout the bill, which
include department, hospital and secretary.
Section 3, Hospital Transparency Information System Design, requires that the Secretary
of Health develop a Hospital Transparency Information System to provide for the
collection, compilation, coordination, analysis, indexing and use of hospital performance
data and statistics to produce and report uniform health information and statistics.
Section 4, Specific Duties, requires the Secretary of Health to:
o
develop and implement a long-range plan for making hospital services outcomes
and other specific performance data available for public viewing;
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o
submit an initial plan, by September 1, 2008, and thereafter an annual update to
the plan and report on the status of implementation to the Governor, the Pro
Tempore of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of Representatives;
o
make available clinical outcome measures from hospitals;
o
select a statewide association representing hospitals that will provide the
Secretary with the association’s organizational documents and rules, a plan
outlining the organization’s consideration of interests of health care consumers,
and its plans to organize an advisory group to develop and implement infection
rate reporting;
o
examine and evaluate the collection, analysis and validity of the data used as a
basis for the report; and
o
ensure that the Department of Health is prepared to assume the duties of
implementing the New Mexico Hospital Transparency Act if the organization
selected to report does not complete its contract.
Section 5, Compliance with Federal Law, provides that data collected under the
provisions of the New Mexico Hospital Transparency Act shall not include personally
identifiable health information and shall be collected in compliance with the federal
Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act.
Section 6, Report, requires the Secretary of Health to issue a transparency report to be
available on an Internet web site. The Secretary shall allow a hospital 30 days for
comment on and inclusion in the final hospital transparency report.
The committee substitute for House Bill 455 includes an emergency clause.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
No funding is provided in the committee substitute for House Bill 455 to implement the
provisions of the act. DOH would be required to maintain the searchable website and coordinate
the development of the report. These are costs that will have to be absorbed by DOH. It is
unclear whether the Department would be required to compensate the selected hospital
association to coordinate in the collection and submission of required data.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
HPC notes that the New Mexico Health Policy Commission Act of 1991 already charges the
New Mexico Health Policy Commission to do many of the activities described in the committee
substitute for HB 455.
The Health Information System already exists (24-14A-3)
:
The "health information system" is created for the purpose of assisting the commission,
legislature and other agencies and organizations in the state's efforts in collecting, analyzing and
disseminating health information to assist:
1. in the performance of health planning and policymaking functions, including identifying
personnel, facility, education and other resource needs and allocating financial, personnel and
other resources where appropriate;
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3
2. consumers in making informed decisions regarding health care; and
3. in administering, monitoring and evaluating a statewide health plan…
HPC notes that it has a developed process in place to collect data from non-federal hospitals in
New Mexico
.
HPC has published the Hospital Discharge Annual Data report every year from 1996 through
2006.
HPC has developed relationships related to the collection and reporting of hospital data with
the New Mexico Department of Health, the New Mexico Hospital Association, the CDC and
many others.
HPC has a plan in place to join with the national Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project by
the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services to standardize hospital discharge data
and to make it available on the H-CUP web site (http://www.ahrq.gov/data/hcup/).
HPC notes that the committee substitute for HB 455 may place considerable burden on data
submitters because it requires the exclusion of the collection of personally identifiable health
information (PHI)
. Federal law may prohibit the reporting of PHI but not necessarily the data
collection of PHI that is described in the committee substitute for HB 455. The wording of the
bill seems to require the data submitters to aggregate the data.
DOH noted the following issues
:
The legislation specifies no timeline for the ‘long-range plan’ for creation of a hospital
transparency system that would allow the Secretary and the association to determine when
full implementation could reasonably begin.
The committee substitute for HB 455 neglects to define which specific indicators for each
area, such as hospital infections, would be monitored and reported. Outcome measures used
for reporting should take into account risk adjustment for patient and facility-specific factors
(e.g., regional referral centers admit and treat more complicated patients).
Future additional resources required by a hospital transparency system could strain hospitals,
increasing the workload for ICPs and other hospital personnel and potentially requiring an
increased investment in appropriate information technology to facilitate the data collection
and analysis required.
Misinterpretation by the public of the reports resulting from the transparency system (e.g.,
misinterpretation of small differences between individual hospital rates that are not
statistically and clinically meaningful could be confusing).
Increased use of laboratory services for surveillance and reporting activities that go beyond
currently recommended approaches.
Reporting could create a ‘punitive’ system (e.g. payers may use reported information to
develop tiers of reimbursement or channel money to improvement initiatives, or insurers may
use the information for pay-for-performance initiatives).
Duplicate reporting requirements of national organizations and agencies.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
DOH notes that there would be significant administrative impact. The Department would need
to: establish administrative infrastructure to develop a “hospital transparency information
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House Bill 455/HHGACS – Page
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system" and, after development of the system, oversee reporting of many indicators; recruit and
oversee technical expertise to design both the information technology and the numerous
standardized performance measures; work closely with facilities to correctly implement a new
set of tasks to acquire and report the required information; communicate effectively with the
public in order to assure that they are receiving what they need in a format that they are able to
understand. DOH notes, at a minimum, a full-time coordinator would be necessary to analyze,
organize and convene the necessary documentation and participants to meet the bill
requirements.
RELATIONSHIP
The committee substitute for HB 455 is the same as SB 518, but SB 518 includes a $50 thousand
appropriation to establish a report pursuant to the provisions of the act prior to publishing the
report on an internet web site.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
DOH Provided Background on Hospital Reporting
Transparency of hospital operations is a target for public policy. The aim is to provide
consumers with information about hospital service quality and capacity, cost, and other key
operation information. The aim is to give consumers what they need to comparison shop for
hospital services. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) are a key mover in
the hospital transparency effort. They have required reporting from most hospitals on a dataset
related to the data reporting requirements of the committee substitute for HB 455. CMS
established a Hospital Compare website which permits consumers to compare operating
characteristics of all reporting hospitals nationwide:
Similarly, the Internal Revenue Service has modified its form 990, the annual information return
for nonprofit–charitable corporations, to include additional transparency reporting from nonprofit
hospitals. The reporting requirements on this form are related to some of the reporting
requirements identified in the committee substitute for HB 455. The Health Policy Commission
is currently charged with reporting annually on procedures and outcomes for each hospital. The
HPC already has established contacts with hospitals for reporting and would seem to be the best
place to prepare this report.
The committee substitute for HB 455 would establish a state level reporting system related to the
federal system that is under development. There would likely be differences between
information reported under the committee substitute for HB 455 and information reported to the
Federal system, and a means of modifying hospital reporting to deal with the differences would
need to be established. There is enough similarity between State and Federal reporting
requirements to indicate that this is not an insurmountable problem.
New Mexico Administrative Code (Title 7 Health, Chapter 4, Disease Control (Epidemiology),
Part 3 Control of Disease and Conditions of Public Health Significance) already mandates the
reporting of communicable diseases and conditions. This legislation may cause duplication in
reporting.
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Ongoing endeavors in New Mexico to address issues presented in the committee substitute for
HB 455 include the following:
In 2006, the New Mexico Hospital Association (NMHA) opened a public website that
reported comparative average charge information by diagnosis-related group (DRG). This
is a voluntary process and currently 26 hospitals are participating.
Currently 41 New Mexico hospitals voluntarily participate in Hospital Compare. The
Hospital Compare web site (www.hospitalcompare.hhs.gov) was created through the
efforts of Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), the Department of Health
and Human Services (DHHS) and other members of the Hospital Quality Alliance
(HQA).
HQA is a national public/private collaboration designed to promote the reporting of
quality of care in hospitals. Hospitals voluntarily submit data from their medical records
about treatments that adult patients receive for these conditions, including patients with
Medicare and those who do not have Medicare.
Hospitals that participate in the CMS Surgical Care Improvement Project (SCIP) submit
data on surgical process measures. Many of these indicators are already available to the
public and listed by facility (www.medqic.org/scip); more indicators of surgical quality
care and outcomes will follow as this project progresses.
Some New Mexico hospitals also participate in other multi-institution efforts to prevent
healthcare-associated infections (HAIs) such as the 5 Million Lives Campaign conducted
by the Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI). The 5 Million Lives Campaign
(http://www.ihi.org/IHI/Programs/Campaign/) is a voluntary initiative to protect patients
from five million incidents of medical harm over the two-year period of December 2006
– December 2008. As of July 2007, 27 New Mexican hospitals had enrolled as
participants in the campaign.
The New Mexico Health Policy Commission (HPC) is moving toward adoption of the
Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project (HCUP) which is sponsored by the Agency for
Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ). HCUP aims to create a national information
resource of patient-level health care data.
The Health Policy Commission is currently charged with reporting annually on
procedures and outcomes for each hospital.
In August/September 2007, a web-enabled survey was conducted among infection control
practitioners (ICPs) in the state through New Mexico Association for Professionals in
Infection Control and Epidemiology (APIC) and the New Mexico Hospital Association under
the auspices of HJM 67 Task Force. The survey suggests that some hospital personnel are
already overworked. The anonymous survey captured information on the size of the facility,
the number of employees devoted to infection control, what basic surveillance activities were
being performed for healthcare-associated infections and the electronic reporting capacity of
each facility. This survey uncovered at least one potential challenge to healthcare-associated
infections surveillance and reporting; the mean number of beds per 1 full-time equivalent
(FTE) ICP exceeded the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recommendation
(i.e., 100 beds per 1 FTE) in small-medium and large hospitals. This finding implies that
ICPs in small-medium and large hospitals in New Mexico are already overworked and would
therefore struggle to maintain their current responsibilities in addition to meeting the
proposals under the committee substitute for HB 455.
GG/bb