Today's Law As Amended


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AB-1952 Nonprofit hospitals: charity care.(2013-2014)



As Amends the Law Today


SECTION 1.

 Article 1.5 (commencing with Section 127447.10) is added to Chapter 2.5 of Part 2 of Division 107 of the Health and Safety Code, to read:

Article  1.5. Nonprofit Hospital Charity Care
127447.10.
 (a) Commencing January 1, 2015, a nonprofit hospital, pursuant to its charity care policy maintained under Article 1 (commencing with Section 127400), shall annually provide, for each fiscal year, an appropriate level of charity care equal to at least 5 percent of the nonprofit hospital’s net patient revenue.
(b) For purposes of satisfying subdivision (a), a nonprofit hospital shall not change its existing fiscal year unless the nonprofit hospital changes its ownership or corporate structure as a result of a sale or merger.
(c) A determination of the amount of charity care provided by a nonprofit hospital shall be based on the most recently completed fiscal year of the nonprofit hospital.
(d) If a nonprofit hospital at any time reasonably determines that providing charity care in accordance with this article in a given fiscal year would result in the nonprofit hospital having an annual operating margin of less than 1 percent, the nonprofit hospital may at any time petition the department to be excused in whole or in part from complying with subdivision (a) in that fiscal year or a future fiscal year. The director may excuse compliance if he or she concurs with the nonprofit hospital’s conclusion that compliance with subdivision (a) would result in the nonprofit hospital having an operating margin of less than 1 percent in the fiscal year at issue.
(e) This section shall not apply to a nonprofit hospital that is part of an integrated nonprofit health system. No later than January 1, 2016, the Office of Statewide Health Planning and Development shall issue a report to the Legislature addressing the unique accounting difficulties in calculating charity care for integrated nonprofit health systems and shall issue recommendations to the Legislature addressing how to calculate the amount of charity care required by subdivision (a) for the integrated nonprofit health systems. The office shall, prior to issuing its report, consult with stakeholders, including, but not limited to, the integrated nonprofit systems, a nonprofit organization that represents physicians who are employed by medical groups associated with the systems, a trade union organization that represents nurses and other employees employed by the systems, an academic center located in a university in California specializing in health care financing, and representatives of the uninsured and underinsured, including representatives of the undocumented.
(f) Nothing in this article shall invalidate an ordinance of, nor be construed to prohibit the adoption of an ordinance by, a city, county, or city and county, unless simultaneous compliance with this article and the ordinance is impossible.
127447.15.
 (a) This article shall be administered and enforced by the State Department of Public Health.
(b) The director shall assess a penalty to a nonprofit hospital that does not provide the minimum charity care within a fiscal year as required by this article.
(c) (1) The penalty shall be at least ____ dollars ($___), and shall not exceed ____ dollars ($___) per fiscal year in which the nonprofit hospital is in violation.
(2) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), for a second and each subsequent fiscal year of violation within a five-year period, the penalty shall be a sum that is equivalent to at least twice the nonprofit hospital’s total shortfall in charity care for that fiscal year, but shall not exceed a sum that is equivalent to ___ percent of the nonprofit hospital’s net patient revenue.
(d) In determining the amount of the penalty, the director shall consider both of the following:
(1) The severity of the shortfall in charity care provided by the nonprofit hospital.
(2) The good-faith effort of the nonprofit hospital to reach the required level of charity care.
(e) The department or the Attorney General may bring or intervene in a civil action to collect fines imposed by the department for violations of this article and to recover the state’s enforcement costs, including attorney’s fees, and for appropriate equitable relief.
(f) Fines or other moneys recovered under this section shall first be used to offset any expenses of administering this article, and any moneys beyond those necessary to offset those expenses shall be deposited in the fund.
127447.20.
 As used in this article, the following terms have the following meanings:
(a) (1) “Charity care” means the unreimbursed cost to a nonprofit hospital of all of the following:
(A) Providing, funding, or otherwise financially supporting any of the following community benefits, provided that providing, funding, or financial support of the benefits is demonstrated to reduce community health care costs:
(i) Vaccination programs and services for needy individuals.
(ii) Chronic illness prevention programs and services.
(iii) Nursing and caregiver training.
(iv) Home-based health care programs for needy individuals.
(v) Exercise or nutrition programs for needy individuals.
(vi) Community-based mental health outreach and assessment programs for needy individuals.
(B) Providing, funding, or otherwise financially supporting health care services or items on an inpatient or outpatient basis to needy patients.
(C) Providing, funding, or otherwise financially supporting health care services or items provided to needy patients through other outpatient clinics, hospitals, or health care organizations.
(D) Any unreimbursed difference between the reimbursement a nonprofit hospital receives from the Medi-Cal program for providing a health care service or item pursuant to the Medi-Cal program, and the reimbursement the nonprofit hospital would have received from the Medicare program for providing the identical health care service or item had it been eligible for reimbursement from the Medicare program.
(2) For purposes of this definition, charity care does not include the cost to a nonprofit hospital of paying any taxes or other governmental assessments, uncollected fees, or accounts written off as bad debt.
(3) For purposes of this definition, the “cost to a nonprofit hospital” shall be calculated by applying the cost-to-charge ratios, according to the nonprofit hospital’s most recently filed Medicare cost report, to billed charges.
(b) “Department” means the State Department of Public Health.
(c) “Director” means the State Public Health Officer.
(d) “Fund” means the Nonprofit Hospital Charity Care Penalty Fund established pursuant to Section 127447.25.
(e) (1) “Integrated nonprofit health system” means a nonprofit hospital and an affiliated health care service plan that are owned, operated, or substantially controlled by the same person or persons or other legal entity or entities, including, but not limited to, by a shared corporate parent.
(2) (A) For purposes of this subdivision, “affiliated health care service plan” means a health care service plan licensed under the Knox-Keene Health Care Service Plan Act of 1975 (Chapter 2.2 (commencing with Section 1340) of Division 2) that in a nonprofit hospital’s most recently concluded fiscal year was the primary payer for 5 percent or more of all annual inpatient discharges from the nonprofit hospital on the date of the discharge, excluding inpatient discharges when the primary payer was Medicare, Medi-Cal, or a county indigent program pursuant to Part 5 (commencing with Section 17000) of Division 9 the Welfare and Institutions Code, when the patient was a self-pay patient, as defined in subdivision (f) of Section 127400, or when the care was provided as unreimbursed charity care.
(B) For purposes of this subdivision, “primary payer” means the person or other legal entity, other than the patient, that is or was legally required or responsible to make payment with respect to an item or service provided by a nonprofit hospital to a patient, or any portion thereof, before any other person or other legal entity, other than the patient.
(f) “Needy individual” and “needy patient” shall have the same meaning as the term “financially qualified patient” is defined in Section 127400. If a nonprofit hospital chooses to grant eligibility for its discount payment policy or charity care policies to patients with incomes over 350 percent of the federal poverty level, as permitted by subparagraph (A) of paragraph (1) of subdivision (a) of Section 127405, patients eligible under those policies shall also be deemed “needy individuals” and “needy patients.”
(g) “Net patient revenue” shall be calculated in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles for hospitals, and shall be consistent with information provided by a nonprofit hospital in a compliant Hospital Annual Disclosure Report filed with the Office of Statewide Health Planning and Development pursuant to Section 128735.
(h) “Nonprofit hospital” means any health facility licensed pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 1250 that is owned or operated or substantially controlled by one or more nonprofit corporations or associations, as defined in Division 2 (commencing with Section 5000) of Title 1 of the Corporations Code, in which no part of the net earnings inures, or may lawfully inure, to the benefit of any private shareholder or individual. “Nonprofit hospital” does not include children’s hospitals, as defined in Section 16996 of the Welfare and Institutions Code, or public hospitals, as defined in paragraph (25) of subdivision (a) of Section 14105.98 of the Welfare and Institutions Code.
(i) “Operating margin” shall be calculated in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles for hospitals, and shall be based on a nonprofit hospital’s operating earnings.
(j) “Unreimbursed costs” means either or in combination the costs a nonprofit hospital incurs for providing individuals inpatient and outpatient services or items for which the nonprofit hospital does not receive reimbursement from any source, and for which the nonprofit hospital has no expectation at the time the services or items are provided that any third-party payer will pay in part or in whole. “Unreimbursed costs” does not include payer discounts or contractual adjustments in reimbursements to third-party payers or costs for which the nonprofit hospital receives any partial payment for the related service, including, but not limited to, third-party insurance payments, Medicare payments, payments from TRICARE or the Civilian Health and Medical Program of the Uniformed Services, state reimbursements for education, payments from pharmaceutical companies to pursue research, grant funds for research, and disproportionate share payments.
127447.25.
 (a) The Nonprofit Hospital Charity Care Penalty Fund is hereby established within the General Fund. Revenues derived from penalties assessed pursuant to this article shall be deposited into the fund. Notwithstanding Section 16305.7 of the Government Code, any interest and dividends earned on deposits in the fund shall be retained in the fund for purposes set forth in this article.
(b) All moneys in the fund shall be available for expenditure, upon appropriation by the Legislature, for the support of the Medi-Cal program and for indigent care and safety net programs.
(c) It is the intent of the Legislature that moneys in the fund be used to supplement, and not displace, existing funding for the Medi-Cal program and for indigent care and safety net programs.
(d) For purposes of this section, “existing funding for the Medi-Cal program” means the total amount expended from appropriations by the Legislature for the Medi-Cal program in the fiscal year in which this section is enacted, or in any subsequent fiscal year, whichever is greater. “Existing funding for the Medi-Cal program” does not include any amount appropriated by the Legislature from the fund. For purposes of this section, “existing funding for indigent care and safety net programs” means the total amount expended from appropriations by the Legislature for indigent care and safety net programs in the fiscal year in which this section is enacted, or in any subsequent fiscal year, whichever is greater. “Existing funding for indigent care and safety net programs” does not include any amount appropriated by the Legislature for the fund.
127447.30.
 (a) The department shall adopt necessary regulations consistent with this section to govern the reporting and collection of data and to ensure the confidentiality of any patient-specific data.
(b) Each nonprofit hospital shall file an annual report with the department stating the amount of charity care provided by the nonprofit hospital. Nonprofit hospitals shall make these reports publicly available, including by posting the report on an Internet Web site, except that any confidential patient-specific data included in the reports shall be removed before public disclosure.
(c) The department shall inform the Attorney General of any nonprofit hospital that the department reasonably suspects may have failed to comply with the requirements of subdivision (a) of Section 127447.10.
(d) The department shall enter into an interagency agreement with the Office of Statewide Health Planning and Development relating to the reporting and collection of data under this section.
(e) This article shall not preclude the department from requiring nonprofit hospitals to provide additional information regarding their charitable activities, or preclude the department from entering into interagency agreements with other agencies and departments regarding the reporting, collection, and analysis of data relating to charity care.
127447.40.
 (a) The department shall assess reasonable fees on nonprofit hospitals in amounts designed to cover the costs it incurs in administering and enforcing this article. The Attorney General may assess reasonable fees on nonprofit hospitals in amounts designed to cover the costs it incurs in administering and enforcing this article.
(b) The department, the Office of Statewide Health Planning and Development, and Attorney General may adopt regulations implementing this article.