Amended
IN
Assembly
March 23, 2023 |
Introduced by Assembly Member Arambula |
February 02, 2023 |
Existing law requires the Department of Health Care Access and Information to implement and administer the Health Care Payments Data System to learn about and seek to improve public health, population health, social determinants of health, and the health care system. Existing law states the intent of the Legislature in creating the Health Care Payments Data System is to establish a system to collect information regarding health care costs, utilization, quality, and equity, and create a process to aggregate and use this data to provide greater transparency.
This bill would state the intent of the Legislature to enact legislation to increase transparency of health data.
The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:
(a) Private not-for-profit hospitals meet certain needs of their communities through the provision of essential health care and other services. Public recognition of their unique status has led to favorable tax treatment by the government. In exchange, nonprofit hospitals assume a social obligation to provide community benefits in the public interest.
(b) Hospitals and the
environment in which they operate have undergone dramatic changes. The pace of change will accelerate in response to health care reform. In light of this, significant public benefit would be derived if private not-for-profit hospitals reviewed and reaffirmed periodically their commitment to assist in meeting their communities’ health care needs by identifying and documenting benefits provided to the communities which they serve.
(c) California’s private not-for-profit hospitals provide a wide range of benefits to their communities in addition to those reflected in the financial data reported to the state.
(d) Unreported community benefits that are often provided but not otherwise reported include, but are not limited to, all of the following:
(1) Community-oriented wellness and health promotion.
(2) Prevention services, including, but not limited to, health screening, immunizations, school examinations, and disease counseling and education.
(3) Adult day care.
(4) Child care.
(5) Medical research.
(6) Medical education.
(7) Nursing and other professional training.
(8) Home-delivered meals to the homebound.
(9) Sponsorship of free food, shelter, and clothing to the homeless.
(10) Outreach clinics in socioeconomically depressed areas.
(e) Direct provision of goods and services, as well as preventive programs, should be emphasized by hospitals in the development of community benefit plans.
(e)
(1) Medical care services.
(2) Other benefits for vulnerable populations.
(3) Other benefits for the broader community.
(4) Health research, education, and training programs.
(5) Nonquantifiable benefits.
It is the intent of the Legislature to enact legislation to increase transparency of health data.