BILL ANALYSIS                                                                                                                                                                                                    




                   Senate Appropriations Committee Fiscal Summary
                           Senator Kevin Murray, Chairman

                                           774 (Chan)
          
          Hearing Date:  8/17/2006        Amended: 8/7/2006
          Consultant:  John Miller        Policy Vote: Health  5 - 4
          _________________________________________________________________ 
          ____
          BILL SUMMARY: AB 774 requires hospitals to develop and implement  
          policies providing discounted payments or charity care for poor  
          uninsured or underinsured individuals. Hospital charges for  
          eligible patients would be limited and required notice,  
          reporting, compliance and collection procedures are specified.  
          _________________________________________________________________ 
          ____
                            Fiscal Impact (in thousands)

           Major Provisions         2006-07      2007-08       2008-09     Fund
           OSHPD                  $ 106      $ 375       $ 375     Special*
          DHS enforcement        $ 200      $ 400       $ 400     GF

          *Health Data Fund                                       

          _________________________________________________________________ 
          ____

          STAFF COMMENTS: SUSPENSE FILE

          This bill is intended to regulate the charges and collection  
          procedures hospitals levy on uninsured or underinsured patients.  
          Nearly one fifth of Californians, 7 million people, now lack  
          health insurance. Costs generated by these uninsured patients  
          may be partially reimbursed from public sources, but hospitals  
          do seek recovery of their costs and are at risk for  
          un-reimbursed services. Hospital charges are not now regulated,  
          and charges and policies for services to uninsured patients vary  
          substantially, as do the relative financial losses among  
          hospitals. Among uninsured patients, the costs of unanticipated  
          medical care can be financially catastrophic, and medical costs  
          cause one half of all bankruptcies in this state. California  
          hospitals have recently established voluntary charity care  
          principals and guidelines which have been accepted by a large  
          majority of hospitals. This issue is actively litigated.

          This bill requires hospitals to develop and report policies for  










          serving uninsured and underinsured individuals. The bill defines  
          eligible patients generally as self-pay patients earning less  
          than 350% of federal poverty level, requires that a hospital's  
          discounted charges be related to amounts paid any public program  
          such as Medicare or Healthy Families, requires specified notice  
          to patients of the availability of discounted care programs or  
          eligibility for public care, limits collection practices and the  
          use of liens on patient's property, requires filing of a  
          hospital's charity/discount policies, and authorizes the  
          Department of Health Services to enforce administrative  
          penalties for failure to comply with a plan.

          Direct state costs will result from administrative processing  
          through the Office of Statewide Health Planning (special fund)  
          and enforcement by the Department of Health Services (GF). There  
          may be some indirect cost pressure to the extent that AB 774 

          AB 774 (Chan)
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          reduces recoveries or increases financial losses to hospitals.  
          It is almost impossible to gauge this indirect cost, which  
          represents the difference between what is now collected from  
          uninsured individuals and what would be collected under 774,  
          because the cost is most likely to be spread among all payers in  
          the state's health system. The California Hospital Association  
          estimates annual losses to uncompensated care to be $6.5  
          billion. 


          Proposed amendment creates a minor limitation of hospital debt  
          collections.