By Melissa Patrick
Kentucky Health News
FRANKFORT, Ky. – The General Assembly has sent Gov. Steve Beshear four health-related bills, and several more could reach his desk in the legislative session that ends Wednesday. Legislators will return briefly after 10 days to reconsider any bills Beshear vetoes; they could also pass more bills, but would not be able to override any vetoes.
Here are some of the health-related bills that were pending on Monday; bills with two readings are ready for floor action.
Heroin: tougher penalties and needle exchanges?
Both the Senate and the House have heroin bills and both remain in committee in the other chamber, but hope remains high in both chambers that a compromise can be reached so that a heroin bill will pass this session. Senate Bill 5 is sponsored by Sen. Christian McDaniel, R-Latonia; House Bill 213 is sponsored by Rep. John Tilley. The main differences are how traffickers would be punished and whether to start needle-exchange programs for addicts. The Senate's penalties are tougher and it has opposed needle exchanges, which advocates say prevent disease and death from dirty needles and can lead addicts to treatment.
Now the Senate is moving toward accepting needle exchanges, James Pilcher reports for The Cincinnati Enquirer. Rep. Dennis Keene, D-Wilder, and Sen. Wil Schroder, R-Wilder, said exchanges "are much more likely to be included than when the session started," Pilcher writes. Schroeder told him, "I think there is a real possibility that we could include needle exchanges and then get our tougher penalties." Pilcher reports, "The possible legislative position shift comes as health officials throughout the Tristate have expressed deep concerns about the spread of diseases that can be contracted using dirty needles."
Protective orders for dating violence
House Bill 8, sponsored by Rep. John Tilley, D-Hopkinsville, has received its second reading and is awaiting passage in the Senate. This bill would allow dating partners to petition for interpersonal protective orders if they have been the victim of domestic violence, sexual abuse or stalking. Such orders are now available only to those who are married, live together or have lived together, or an unmarried couple with a child in common.
Kentucky is the only state that offers no protection for such victims. Legislation to do that has stalled in the Senate in earlier sessions, but a Senate committee substitute addresses a key objection, by creating a new chapter in the statutes for the bill, separate from the existing domestic-violence chapter.
Advocates say domestic violence is a health issue not just because of the physical injuries it causes. They say victims are more likely to be depressed, have unplanned and premature pregnancies, go to fewer prenatal visits, and to miss more well-child visits with their children.
Prescription synchronization, managed-care appeals
Senate Bill 44, sponsored by Sen. Julie Raque Adams, R-Louisville, has had its second reading in the House. This bill would allow patients with multiple prescriptions, in consultation with their health-care provider and their pharmacist, to synchronize prescriptions so that they may be picked up at the same time.
House Majority Caucus Chair Johnny Bell, D-Glasgow, has filed a floor amendment on an unrelated issue, to create a state appeals process for health-care providers to appeal decisions of Medicaid managed-care companies. It is the same as or similar to Senate Bill 120, sponsored by Sen. Ralph Alvarado, which has given it a first reading without assigning it to a committee. The Cabinet for Health and Family Services opposes a state appeals process, saying it would have a conflict of interest (successful appeals would cost the state money) and providers have the courts available to them to resolve contractual issues. UPDATE: Bell withdrew his floor amendment to Senate Bill 44 March 9.
Review panels for suits against health-care providers: Senate Bill 6, filed by Alvarado, remains in the House Judiciary Committee, but a discharge petition was filed March 4 to bring it to the floor, bypassing leaders of the House's Democratic majority. This bill would establish panels of three medical experts, two chosen by each side and the third chosen by the other two, to review suits against health-care providers to determine if the case has merit before the lawsuit can proceed. Panel findings would be admissible in court, but not legally binding. Opponents say that Kentucky already has laws to punish attorneys for filing frivolous cases and that this just adds another barrier for patients seeking justice.
Newborn screenings for fatal disease: Senate Bill 75, sponsored by Sen. Alice Forgy Kerr, R-Lexington, has had two readings. It would require all newborns to be tested for Krabbe disease, a neurological disorder that destroys the protective coating of nerve and brain cells and is fatal once symptoms occur. Treatment with stem cells from an umbilical cord blood transplant is sometimes successful it the infant is treated early enough. The cabinet opposes the bill, saying the screening will cost half a million dollars a year at a time when local health departments are suffering budget cuts.
Spina bifida: Senate Bill 159, sponsored by Sen. Julie Raque Adams, R-Louisville, is in the House and the three-day posting rule has been waived. This bill would require medical providers to supply written, up to date, accurate information to parents when their unborn child is diagnosed with spina bifida so parents can make informed decisions on treatment
Physician assistants: House Bill 258, sponsored by Rep. Denver Butler, D-Louisville, is awaiting Senate passage. This bill allows a physician to supervise up to four physician assistants at the same time, rather than two.
In-home care: House Bill 144, sponsored by Rep. Tom Burch, D-Louisville, is awaiting Senate passage. It would establish a 60-day, hospital-to-home transition program through an approval waiver from the Department for Medicaid Services. The daily cost would have to be less than the average daily nursing home payment allowed by Medicaid. The bill would also provide non-medical support services to the applicant as needed.
BILLS SENT TO THE GOVERNOR
Colorectal cancer screening: Senate Bill 61, sponsored by Sen. Ralph Alvarado, R-Winchester, received final passage in the House March 4. This bill requires that a fecal test to screen for colon cancer, and any follow-up colonoscopy, be considered preventive measures that health insurance is required to cover without imposing additional deductible or co-insurance cost. The bill would apply to health plans issued or renewed on or after Jan. 1, 2016, if it becomes law. A similar measure, House Bill 69, sponsored by Rep. Tom Burch, D-Louisville, is awaiting passage in the Senate with a committee substitute by Sen. Julian Carroll, D-Frankfort, calling for a Medicaid savings study.
Medical order scope of treatment (MOST) form: Senate Bill 77, sponsored by Sen. Tom Buford, R-Nicholasville, received final passage in the House March 3. This bill creates a medical order scope of treatment (MOST) form that specifically directs the type of treatment a patient would like to have, and how much intervention he or she would like to have, during end-of-life care. It is considered a physician's order, travels with the patient between health care facilities, and must be reviewed annually. The bill clearly defines the order of controlling documents for end-of-life care: the living will first, the MOST form second and the health-care surrogate, which is chosen by the patient and listed on the form, third. The MOST form is already used in 32 states.
Emergency care for strokes: Senate Bill 10, sponsored by Sens. Stan Humphries, R-Cadiz, and David Givens, R-Greensburg, received final passage in the House March 4. The bill requires that a list of all acute stroke-ready hospitals, comprehensive stroke centers and primary stroke centers in Kentucky be posted to the cabinet's website and be made available to all emergency medical services providers, who are required to set their own internal protocols toward assessment, treatment and transport of stroke patients.
Funding for UK cancer research center: House Bill 298, sponsored by Rep. Rick Rand, D-Bedford, received final passage in the Senate March 4. This bill authorizes the state to appropriate $132.5 million, half of the cost, for construction of a new medical research center at the University of Kentucky. The university will raise money to cover the other half. The facility will target prevalent diseases in Kentucky, including cancer, diabetes and cardiovascular disease. The bill required a 60 percent vote in each chamber because it affects the state budget and the legislature is in a non-budget session; it passed the House 83-9 and the Senate 36-1 (Sen. John Schickel, R-Union).
Kentucky Health News
FRANKFORT, Ky. – The General Assembly has sent Gov. Steve Beshear four health-related bills, and several more could reach his desk in the legislative session that ends Wednesday. Legislators will return briefly after 10 days to reconsider any bills Beshear vetoes; they could also pass more bills, but would not be able to override any vetoes.
Here are some of the health-related bills that were pending on Monday; bills with two readings are ready for floor action.
Heroin: tougher penalties and needle exchanges?
Both the Senate and the House have heroin bills and both remain in committee in the other chamber, but hope remains high in both chambers that a compromise can be reached so that a heroin bill will pass this session. Senate Bill 5 is sponsored by Sen. Christian McDaniel, R-Latonia; House Bill 213 is sponsored by Rep. John Tilley. The main differences are how traffickers would be punished and whether to start needle-exchange programs for addicts. The Senate's penalties are tougher and it has opposed needle exchanges, which advocates say prevent disease and death from dirty needles and can lead addicts to treatment.
Now the Senate is moving toward accepting needle exchanges, James Pilcher reports for The Cincinnati Enquirer. Rep. Dennis Keene, D-Wilder, and Sen. Wil Schroder, R-Wilder, said exchanges "are much more likely to be included than when the session started," Pilcher writes. Schroeder told him, "I think there is a real possibility that we could include needle exchanges and then get our tougher penalties." Pilcher reports, "The possible legislative position shift comes as health officials throughout the Tristate have expressed deep concerns about the spread of diseases that can be contracted using dirty needles."
Protective orders for dating violence
House Bill 8, sponsored by Rep. John Tilley, D-Hopkinsville, has received its second reading and is awaiting passage in the Senate. This bill would allow dating partners to petition for interpersonal protective orders if they have been the victim of domestic violence, sexual abuse or stalking. Such orders are now available only to those who are married, live together or have lived together, or an unmarried couple with a child in common.
Kentucky is the only state that offers no protection for such victims. Legislation to do that has stalled in the Senate in earlier sessions, but a Senate committee substitute addresses a key objection, by creating a new chapter in the statutes for the bill, separate from the existing domestic-violence chapter.
Advocates say domestic violence is a health issue not just because of the physical injuries it causes. They say victims are more likely to be depressed, have unplanned and premature pregnancies, go to fewer prenatal visits, and to miss more well-child visits with their children.
Prescription synchronization, managed-care appeals
Senate Bill 44, sponsored by Sen. Julie Raque Adams, R-Louisville, has had its second reading in the House. This bill would allow patients with multiple prescriptions, in consultation with their health-care provider and their pharmacist, to synchronize prescriptions so that they may be picked up at the same time.
House Majority Caucus Chair Johnny Bell, D-Glasgow, has filed a floor amendment on an unrelated issue, to create a state appeals process for health-care providers to appeal decisions of Medicaid managed-care companies. It is the same as or similar to Senate Bill 120, sponsored by Sen. Ralph Alvarado, which has given it a first reading without assigning it to a committee. The Cabinet for Health and Family Services opposes a state appeals process, saying it would have a conflict of interest (successful appeals would cost the state money) and providers have the courts available to them to resolve contractual issues. UPDATE: Bell withdrew his floor amendment to Senate Bill 44 March 9.
Review panels for suits against health-care providers: Senate Bill 6, filed by Alvarado, remains in the House Judiciary Committee, but a discharge petition was filed March 4 to bring it to the floor, bypassing leaders of the House's Democratic majority. This bill would establish panels of three medical experts, two chosen by each side and the third chosen by the other two, to review suits against health-care providers to determine if the case has merit before the lawsuit can proceed. Panel findings would be admissible in court, but not legally binding. Opponents say that Kentucky already has laws to punish attorneys for filing frivolous cases and that this just adds another barrier for patients seeking justice.
Newborn screenings for fatal disease: Senate Bill 75, sponsored by Sen. Alice Forgy Kerr, R-Lexington, has had two readings. It would require all newborns to be tested for Krabbe disease, a neurological disorder that destroys the protective coating of nerve and brain cells and is fatal once symptoms occur. Treatment with stem cells from an umbilical cord blood transplant is sometimes successful it the infant is treated early enough. The cabinet opposes the bill, saying the screening will cost half a million dollars a year at a time when local health departments are suffering budget cuts.
Spina bifida: Senate Bill 159, sponsored by Sen. Julie Raque Adams, R-Louisville, is in the House and the three-day posting rule has been waived. This bill would require medical providers to supply written, up to date, accurate information to parents when their unborn child is diagnosed with spina bifida so parents can make informed decisions on treatment
Physician assistants: House Bill 258, sponsored by Rep. Denver Butler, D-Louisville, is awaiting Senate passage. This bill allows a physician to supervise up to four physician assistants at the same time, rather than two.
In-home care: House Bill 144, sponsored by Rep. Tom Burch, D-Louisville, is awaiting Senate passage. It would establish a 60-day, hospital-to-home transition program through an approval waiver from the Department for Medicaid Services. The daily cost would have to be less than the average daily nursing home payment allowed by Medicaid. The bill would also provide non-medical support services to the applicant as needed.
BILLS SENT TO THE GOVERNOR
Colorectal cancer screening: Senate Bill 61, sponsored by Sen. Ralph Alvarado, R-Winchester, received final passage in the House March 4. This bill requires that a fecal test to screen for colon cancer, and any follow-up colonoscopy, be considered preventive measures that health insurance is required to cover without imposing additional deductible or co-insurance cost. The bill would apply to health plans issued or renewed on or after Jan. 1, 2016, if it becomes law. A similar measure, House Bill 69, sponsored by Rep. Tom Burch, D-Louisville, is awaiting passage in the Senate with a committee substitute by Sen. Julian Carroll, D-Frankfort, calling for a Medicaid savings study.
Medical order scope of treatment (MOST) form: Senate Bill 77, sponsored by Sen. Tom Buford, R-Nicholasville, received final passage in the House March 3. This bill creates a medical order scope of treatment (MOST) form that specifically directs the type of treatment a patient would like to have, and how much intervention he or she would like to have, during end-of-life care. It is considered a physician's order, travels with the patient between health care facilities, and must be reviewed annually. The bill clearly defines the order of controlling documents for end-of-life care: the living will first, the MOST form second and the health-care surrogate, which is chosen by the patient and listed on the form, third. The MOST form is already used in 32 states.
Emergency care for strokes: Senate Bill 10, sponsored by Sens. Stan Humphries, R-Cadiz, and David Givens, R-Greensburg, received final passage in the House March 4. The bill requires that a list of all acute stroke-ready hospitals, comprehensive stroke centers and primary stroke centers in Kentucky be posted to the cabinet's website and be made available to all emergency medical services providers, who are required to set their own internal protocols toward assessment, treatment and transport of stroke patients.
Funding for UK cancer research center: House Bill 298, sponsored by Rep. Rick Rand, D-Bedford, received final passage in the Senate March 4. This bill authorizes the state to appropriate $132.5 million, half of the cost, for construction of a new medical research center at the University of Kentucky. The university will raise money to cover the other half. The facility will target prevalent diseases in Kentucky, including cancer, diabetes and cardiovascular disease. The bill required a 60 percent vote in each chamber because it affects the state budget and the legislature is in a non-budget session; it passed the House 83-9 and the Senate 36-1 (Sen. John Schickel, R-Union).
No comments:
Post a Comment