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April 2003: a retrospective of the March benefit issues.


COBRA Corner:
The Rules Pertaining to Military Active Duty


Service Tips:
Timely Submissions

Pre Authorization of Rx's

HIPAA:
A Primer For Employers


Federal Legislative Developments
Association Health Plans

Caps on Liability Settlements


$100 Billion Here and a $100 Billion There Can Add Up to Real Money

NH Legislation:
SB110 - Small Group Reform



NH Legislation:
BIA Report

More Efforts to Reduce Medical Errors


COBRA Corner
Rules Pertaining to Military Active Duty

With the world's current events, this topic is being visited by many employers. While a call to active duty is considered a qualifying event under COBRA, there are several other options available to the reservist and their qualified dependent(s).

  1. Military Health Care ~ if a reservist is called to active duty that exceeds 30 days, the reservist and his/her eligible dependent(s) SHOULD be covered by military health care. (If this applies, the reservist should contact his/her local military unit.)


  2. COBRA ~ allows a reservist to be eligible for 18 months of continuation. However, a reservist's qualified dependent(s) are eligible to elect continuation of coverage for a period for up to 36 months. This coverage is subject to full payment by the dependent(s) and possibly a 2% administration charge after 30 days of active service.


  3. USERRA (Uniformed Services Employment Reemployment Rights Act of 1994) allows for the reservist's and his/her qualified dependent(s) to elect continuation of coverage for up to 18 months. This coverage is subject to full payment by the reservist's and his/her qualified dependent(s) and possibly a 2% administration charge after 30 days of active service.


This is a difficult and stressful time for all involved. While COBRA must be offered to anyone who is eligible, who pays for the premium is up to the discretion of the employer. Some employers are continuing to charge the "employee" contribution to the member(s) while others are opting to continue the reservist's and his/her eligible dependent(s) coverage at no cost to the reservist. The feeling is that the employers wish to stand behind the reservist during this difficult time.

For more information on the above options, please visit the Department of Labor website.

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Service Tips

Timely Submissions

Many carriers are tightening up their policies regarding the timing of receipt of premium payments, enrollment, and termination and change applications.

Enrollment, termination and change applications must be submitted to the carrier within 31 days of the qualifying event. According to your contract with the carrier, they have the right to decline the application if the receipt is beyond that time.

Regarding late premium payments, this is a tough lesson to learn. Again, per your contract with the carrier, they have the right to terminate your group policy if payment is not received by the due date on your monthly premium bill.

Once your group policy has been terminated by the carrier, there is a snowball effect.

Services and claims are denied, prescriptions cannot be purchased and confused employees line up on the HR Department's doorstep for answers. Getting the group policy reinstated is no easy task and usually requires a bank check for the late month's premium and the following month's premium payment. Once this is accomplished, a claims report will need to be run and the claims reprocess cycle begins. This can take up to a 3-5 week period.

Most carriers will only allow a group policy to be reinstated once.

And, as a foot note, employers or their COBRA administrators should track the termination dates for COBRA to assure that the drop off occurs when it should.

Prescription Pre-Authorization

We have begun receiving an increased number of calls concerning prescription issues. Some members are being told by their pharmacy that they need "prior authorization" for particular prescriptions. Most people are unaware of the carrier's requirements or what to do when faced with this "obstacle".

When this happens at the pharmacy level, the doctor has missed a step in the process. All doctors receive a quarterly list of which drugs need "prior authorization" from each insurance company. When the doctor prescribes one of the medications, the doctor is required to notify the insurance company. Anthem, for example, provides all physicians with a toll free number for their Anthem Prescription Management (APM) unit. These units are staffed by pharmacists and therapeutic practitioners. They meet quarterly and review the characteristics of new drugs. Among other things, they pay particular attention to the potential for abuse of the prescriptions. They are responsible for keeping track of all new drugs that come on the market and for notifying providers and members. Members receive a quarterly list in the LANSDCAPE publication which is mailed to member's homes.

When the doctor contacts the carrier's Prescription Management Unit, they need to be prepared to provide medical documentation about the patient and the medical reason for the prescription(s). They may even have to submit a letter of "medical necessity". This letter needs to detail that the patient has tried the "other" medications, but they were unsuccessful.

If the doctor is successful at convincing the Prescription Management Unit of the need for the requested prescription(s), then the authorization is entered into the system and it will be dispensed by the pharmacy. This process may take several days to complete. The length of the process is heavily dependent on the involvement of the physician's office.

If the doctor is unsuccessful with the unit, an alternate prescription will be prescribed to the patient. This alternate drug will be on the carrier's formulary list and may be a generic substitute for the original prescription. The member may also file an appeal with the insurance company.

Some medications that may require preauthorization are: Vioxx and Celebrex. For more information on medications that require preauthorization, visit your carrier's website:

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HIPAA Privacy Rules
A Primer for Employers

While most employers do not need to be compliant with the HIPAA Privacy Rules until April 14, 2004, employers and members will be working in an environment where insurers and providers are already subject to the law. As a result, employers need to be familiar with the operational aspects of being HIPAA compliant. A great on-line resource can be found at:

US Department of Health & Human Services~ HIPAA

Robert D.Noonan, Esq. will be New England Medical's guest speaker on May 2, 2003, addressing employer requirements relative to HIPAA. The following is an article written for employers:

Medical Insurance Privacy Rules:
Complex Rules Will Impact Everyday Disclosures in the Workplace
Robert D. Noonan, Esq.

It happens every day. An employer, uncertain as to whether an employee with a recent medical problem should be assigned to a particular job, calls the person who handles the company medical claims to get the lowdown on the employee's medical condition and, armed with the information, the company then calls the company's employment counsel to discuss the case. This garden-variety transaction and others like it are soon to be greatly influenced with the advent of the Privacy Rules under the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, HIPAA. The HIPAA Privacy Rules will dictate the rights of patients, the obligations of medical practitioners, insurance plans, and other "covered entities" and the restrictions on their ability to use and disclose medical information without the permission of the individual.

Compliance Deadlines

Slated to take effect on April 14, 2003, the HIPAA privacy rules apply to a broad range of "covered entities". They are "group health plans", including both larger insurance plans and employer group health plans; "health care providers" such as doctors, pharmacies, labs, and "health care clearing houses", organizations that provide such services as medical billing or coding. In the strictest sense, employers are not among the covered entities, but any employer that sponsors an employee welfare benefit plan covered by ERISA, as long as the plan has 50 or more participants or is administered by a third-party organization, must comply with HIPAA's strict privacy provisions. Note, however, that small health plans (those with less than $5 million in gross receipts), have an additional year to comply. In addition, the Bush administration has proposed an additional year for the covered entities to enter into contracts with their "business associates."

The Basics of the Rule

The basic privacy principle of HIPAA is simple: organizations that possess personal information related to an individual's health care (or payment for health care) can not disclose it, except in the following limited circumstances:

  • to the individual;
  • in order to carry out "treatment", "payment" or "health care operations"; providers must have a written consent from the patient for these purposes however;
  • if not for treatment, payment or health care operations, then only if a signed, dated and specific authorization has been provided by the individual; or
  • to the government (state or federal) for purposes of public health, abuse/neglect investigation, fraud prevention, etc.

What information is Protected?

The key characteristic of protected information is that it is health related and it can be linked to a person by name, social security number, employee number, or other identifiers outlined in the regulations. Summary information, such as information concerning the entire workforce, can be disclosed provided it cannot be linked to any specific individual. But the definition of "protected health information" includes any information, in any form (electronic or otherwise), created or received by a provider, health plan, insurer, or employer, that relates to past, present, or future health care or payments. Any such information, if it can be personally identified, falls under the domain of HIPAA.

Disclose only the minimum necessary.

Even where individually identifiable health information can be disclosed, the covered entities must now make a reasonable effort to limit the release of health information to the minimum amount of information necessary to accomplish the purpose for which the disclosure is needed. This requirement does not apply to disclosures to or requests by health care providers for treatment purposes. Nonetheless, the "minimum necessary" disclosure requirement will force insurers and employers to revamp their systems and procedures regarding what, why, and to whom protected health information is released.

Failure to Comply

The civil penalties include $100 for each violation, up to a maximum of $25,000 for violating a particular requirement of the law. Keep in mind that a global release of information on multiple employees would likely trigger the $100 penalty for each employee. The law also stipulates criminal penalties, ranging from $50,000 and one year in federal prison for wrongful disclosure, up to $250,000 and ten years in prison for a deliberate offense with intent to sell protected health information.

Additional Requirements and Administrative Safeguards

In addition to the restrictions on the disclosure of information, the rules also require covered entities to take several administrative steps to safeguard medical information. These additional steps will require a significant amount of planning and effort as the medical and insurance communities have discovered as they have begun taking steps to comply with the privacy rule prior to the implementation date. Less aware of these obligations, employers will also need to undertake several steps to bring their group health plans into compliance. At the very least, they will need to ensure that their medical plans do not disclose health information to facilitate employment decision-making.

In addition, HIPAA requires employers, technically their health plans, to assign staff to develop and implement HIPAA policies and a privacy notice to be distributed to employees. In addition, they must appoint a Privacy Officer (who may or may not be a new employee) with overall responsibility for HIPAA privacy issues. They must also develop a disciplinary procedure and document violations. In addition, HIPAA requires employers to train responsible employees on appropriate uses and disclosures of their protected health information.

Employers will need to reconfigure their administrative, technical, and physical safeguards for health care data. This will likely include significant changes to information systems and the creation of a "firewall" between plan-related uses of health information and employment-related uses of information. In effect, the rules ask the employer to distinguish between the employer and it's own health plan, as if they are separate entities. However, as a practical matter they are not and so the rule provides that where the plan will be sharing medical information with the employer, plan documents will need to be amended to specify permitted uses and disclosures of health information to the employer/plan sponsor and there must be certification of the changes.

Downstream Advisors-Attorneys, Accountants, Insurance Agents

The rules will also have a pronounced impact on those professionals who provide services to health plans and providers-they are "business associates." Covered entities will need to enter into contracts with "business associates" with whom they share protected health information and to assure they also conform, in varying degrees, to the privacy rules. For many lawyers, accountants and insurance agents, this means that it will be far more difficult to obtain information concerning an employee's medical condition, for example, in the determination of whether an employee was disabled within the meaning of the Americans with Disabilities Act without first addressing the impact of the HIPAA privacy rule. Getting Started - A Practical Approach

With less than a month to go before the compliance date, the race for HIPAA compliance appears to be underway among the medical community and large insurance plans, but with comparatively little awareness being shown by the employer community on the impact of the rules, however. Perhaps this should be expected because the rules themselves do not apply directly to employers but rather their health plans. Nonetheless, the question that must be anticipated by attorneys who work with employers is "how do we get started so that we can comply with the privacy rules?"

There are three recommended elements in beginning the compliance process. The first is to recognize that these rules will result in fundamental changes in the relationship between the employer's health plan and the rest of the organization, particularly employment decision makers. Next, appoint a task force of people who can address the compliance issue from the standpoint of information technology, administrative procedures, and human resources issues. Each of these spheres of operation will be impacted by the rules. Third, have the organization undertake an audit of its collection, use and disclosure of health information now. This audit of current practices will enable the employer to determine the degree of organizational control it needs to establish for compliance. Employers who have conducted health information audits have been surprised to find that employee health information is routinely provided to people over the phone without verification of their identity, routinely faxed without any precaution taken by the person faxing or receiving information, and often shared with others within the organization regardless of purpose.

In the final analysis, the HIPAA privacy rules will bring significant legal, operational, and technical changes in how doctors, insurance carriers and employers with employee benefit plans handle health care data. For attorneys, particularly those who deal with employer-matters related to employee health, these rules will bring a new and somewhat uncertain level of complexity.

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Federal Legislation:

Association Health Plans

One of the health care priorities of the Bush administration is the passage of legislation permitting the establishment of Association Health Plans. AHP's would allow individuals and small groups to join together with health insurance companies to negotiate for lower rates and better plans. There are over 50,000 non-profit national and state associations chartered in the USA. Most of these groups are small organizations such as Chambers of Commerce and church organizations. However, they also include large associations like AAA, NRA, or even AOL members who might be capable of forming mega-groups of hundreds of thousands of members.

There is an interesting coalition of 55 diverse members opposing the plan. Those opposed include groups who would rather see a universal national single payer system such as Families USA and the AFL-CIO. Another group of coalition members represented by The Blue Cross Association and Health Insurance Association of America (HIAA) is opposed because the creation of AHP's would be exempt from state regulation, creating further disruption in the non-group and small group market place.

Senator Judd Gregg is the Chair of the Health, Education, Labor and Pension Committee (HELP) where S39 has been assigned. The bill has not had a hearing and it is unclear when it will. Senator Gregg has some concerns about the current proposal. The bill is titled "Promoting Healthcare Purchasing Act."

Our view is that, although this legislation has a lot of support in the Republican controlled House of Representatives, the passage through the Senate is less likely. In addition, Senator Gregg's reservations would indicate that the proposal may not see action until later this year. Senator Gregg's office welcomes comments on this and other pieces of legislation. His office in Washington can be reached at 202 224 6670. The email address for the person responsible for following the AHP proposal is kim_monk@labor.senate.gov

A report by The Congressional Budget Office in January 2000 follows.

An analysis by the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) found that most small employers and workers would pay higher premiums if a preemption from state law for Association Health Plans (AHPs), as contained in S39, is enacted. The report reveals that AHPs would save costs by skimming the healthy from the existing state-regulated small group market, making coverage more expensive for the sick. Specifically, the report found that:

AHPs would not significantly reduce the number of uninsured: Contrary to proponents' claims that AHPs could cover up to 8.5 million uninsured, the CBO estimated that coverage would increase by only 330,000 individuals. However, CBO also notes that the overall number of individuals insured would be lower, "because some of those who gained coverage through AHPs and HealthMarts would have otherwise obtained coverage in the individual market."

Four out of five workers would be worse off under AHPs/HealthMarts: According to the report, 20 million employees and dependents of small employers would experience a rate increase under AHPs, while only 4.6 million would see a rate reduction. In addition, 10,000 of the sickest individuals would lose coverage if AHP provisions were enacted.

AHPs would save money primarily by "cherry picking": The CBO estimated that nearly two-thirds of the cost savings for AHPs would result from attracting healthier members from the existing insurance pool, thereby increasing costs for those who remain in the non-AHP market. The report states that, "In the long run, one would expect the most successful AHPs to be sponsored by associations whose members had lower-than-average health care costs."

AHPs would eliminate benefits to cut costs: Proponents' claim that AHPs could offer generous benefits (comparable to those offered by Fortune 500 firms) while lowering insurance costs. The CBO found that dropping state mandated benefits would be the second major method that AHPs would use to reduce costs (after cherry picking). The CBO estimated that one-third of costs savings in AHPs would come from eliminating benefits.

AHPs would not reduce overhead costs: Contrary to claims that AHPs could reduce overhead by 30 percent, "…CBO assumed that cost savings arising from the group purchasing feature of AHPs and HealthMarts would be negligible." The CBO found "…no substantial evidence that joining a purchasing cooperative produced lower insurance costs for firms."

States with aggressive insurance reforms would see the most damage: The report indicates that states with strict insurance reforms (such as Massachusetts, New Jersey, and New York) would be most attractive to AHPs. The report concludes that "in states with more tightly compressed premiums - where the most cross-subsidization occurs - low-cost firms would face the greatest potential difference in price between traditional and AHP/HealthMart plans.''

The full report, entitled "Increasing Small-Firm Health Insurance Coverage through Association Health Plans and HealthMarts," is available at CBO's Web site: www.cbo.gov

Caps On Liability Insurance

On March 13, 2003, The House of Representatives passed a bill that would limit provider liability for medical malpractice claims to $250,000 for non-economic (pain and suffering) damages. Out of pocket costs for medical bills and lost wages would not be affected. The bill will now advance to the Senate for a vote which may not take place until fall. Passage there is not considered certain as the trial lawyers have considerably more influence with Democrats who oppose the bill.

The bill is considered necessary by medical groups. Malpractice insurance rates have increased substantially in recent years. In fact, many specialists have left their practices in the face of $100,000 premiums and there have even been work stoppages by doctors in some communities. Insurance companies are also supporting the legislation, as passage will help reduce the increase in health insurance premiums. President Bush has indicated that he would sign the bill if it is passed by The Senate.

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A Billion Here, a Billion There ...

As with most people, when dollars are expressed with more than six zeros, we tend to glaze over as the numbers become incomprehensible. Try the cost of health care in 2001:

Hospital care: $451 Billion
Physician and Clinical Services: $341 Billion
Medicare: $242 Billion
Medicaid: $224 Billion
Prescription Drugs: $141 Billion
Total: $1.41 Trillion

This total averages over $5,000 for every American for the year 2001, or more than 14% of the domestic gross national product.

These numbers mean our healthcare culture is either in great shape or terrible shape depending on whether or not you are a patient or a just a premium payer.

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NH Legislation

NH Senate Bill 110 Small Group Reform

(As we are about to hit the send button on this newsletter, the Senate Insurance Committee has passed the bill on to the House Commerce Committee. The bill was amended to change the definition of small group to 1 to 50 versus 2 to 50. In spite of this change, both Fortis and Starmark have maintained their commitment to return to the New Hampshire market if the bill is made into law.)

The intense interest in this health care proposal is the one against which all others are measured. The proposal is a continuation of last year's reform of the non-group market from which NH created a high risk pool and added other underwriting rules consistent with what most of the other states in the county have. It is too early to tell about the success of last year's bill, SB119, but the law has attracted at least one additional insurance company back into the state to provide additional competition.

The line-up of pros and cons is about the same for the small group proposal. Anthem is opposed and doing an excellent job of pointing out the trouble spots in SB110. Most other insurers, many insurance brokers, and the Governor' office are in favor of the changes that would come about as a result of the passage of SB110.

Among controversial provisions, the one getting a lot of attention is the reintroduction of geographical rating. This would allow insurers to charge more in areas where the hospitals charge more. This means the Seacoast and the North Country areas would likely see higher rates than other parts of the state because the hospitals in these regions charge higher fees. Our view is that this would be a good thing, as it would focus consumer attention on the cause of high insurance premiums. As a culture, we are about to enter an age where the consumer of health care services will be more connected to the cost of care. The age of co pays is coming to an end. If premium rates are to become more affordable, the consumer must be in the fight with the providers. SB110 will help create a healthier dynamic in the market.

The Coalition for Affordable Health Insurance which is made up primarily of Producer groups provides this summary:

SB 110
Restoring Insurance Choices to NH's Small Businesses

SB 110 Will:

  • Preserve and strengthen New Hampshire's commitment to guaranteed access to private health insurance for small employers.
  • Give businesses and consumers a choice of health insurance coverage at lower costs.
  • Re-establish a competitive insurance market by attracting insurance companies back to New Hampshire.
  • Provide small business with increased availability and access to modern insurance products including HMO, PPO, MSA (medical savings accounts) and HRA (health reimbursement arrangements) plans.
  • Ensure guarantee issue insurance to small employers at reasonable costs. Eliminates "cherry picking" by requiring carriers to guarantee issue all plans and options, and caps an insurer's underwriting ability at issue and renewal.

Key Provisions of SB 110:

  • Changes the definition of small group from 1-100 employees to 2-50 employees.
    (Currently, New Hampshire is the only state in the nation that defines small group as 1-100 employees, and the passage of SB110 will make New Hampshire consistent with a majority of other states and Federal Law (HIPAA).
  • Introduces limited rating flexibility for small groups seeking insurance coverage based on health, age, industry and location.
    (Similar to laws in 38 other states and DC.)
  • Allow carriers to rate for medical underwriting at issue of new groups, +/- 25% from a base rate. (NAIC Model Law)
    (These rating parameters afford the small group market enhanced ability to compete for low risk business and manage the financial costs associated with high-risk groups. Tying the highest rate to the lowest rate within the band forces insurers to actively compete for the low risk business yet keep the highest rate within a reasonable range.)
  • Caps renewal premium increases due to an employer's bad claims experience at 15% annually. (NAIC Model Law)
    (All renewal premiums have to remain within the +/- 25% of the base rate.)
  • Increases the age rating differential from 3:1 to 4:1, allowing carriers to charge lower rates to young families.
    (Same as NH current individual law.)

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NH Health Care Legislation:

BIA Report

BIA Legislative Review
Business & Industry Association of New Hampshire
603/224-5388
www.nhbia.org

HUMAN RESOURCES
BIA staff contact - MICHAEL GIAIMO and DAVID JUVET
Health Care -staff contact - DAVID JUVET

  • HB 149 - Patients Rights - This bill requires that any discovery of a likely cause or contributing cause of patient injury or death during a quality assurance program shall be disclosed to the patient or the patient's legal guardian. Passed the House with Amendment; referred to Senate Health & Human Services Committee.


  • HB 172 - Community Benefit Law - This bill extends the committee studying the exemption from property taxes for not-for-profit hospitals and requires the committee to include a study of the community benefits law. Passed the House with Amendment; referred to House Ways & Means Committee.


  • HB 287 - Malpractice Commission - This bill establishes the professional malpractice claims commission. House Judiciary Committee recommends OTP/A for March 25.


  • HB 296 - Settlement Agreements - This bill prohibits the enforcement of any portion of a settlement agreement in a medical injury action that prevents the disclosure of relevant information to the appropriate state medical licensing board. House Judiciary Committee recommends OTP for March 25.


  • HB 382 - Healthy Kids Prohibitions - This bill prohibits the state from providing health insurance to persons who do not qualify for such health insurance under the eligibility standards in effect as of the effective date of this bill and prohibits the healthy kids corporation from providing health insurance to low-income adults unless specifically authorized by the general court. Retained in House Commerce Committee.


  • HB 398 - Healthy Adults Corporation - This bill establishes a committee to study the establishment of a healthy adults corporation. House Commerce Committee recommends ITL for March 25.


  • HB 412 - Alternative Medical Treatments - This bill establishes a committee to study alternative medical treatment insurance coverage. House Commerce Committee recommends ITL for March 25.


  • HB 507 - Employee Benefit Plans - This bill removes disability benefits from certain statutes that set minimum requirements for employee benefit plan procedures pertaining to the filing of benefit claims, notification of benefit determinations, and appeal of adverse benefit determinations. House Commerce Committee recommends OTP/A for March 25.


  • HB 596 - Group Health Insurance - This bill allows all private and public employers with at least 50 employees enrolled in their group health plan to receive health plan loss information upon request and without charge. House Commerce Committee recommends OTP/A for March 25.


  • HB 652 - This bill permits health insurers in the small group and individual markets to use a rating factor to discount the premium rate for health benefit plans that include significant incentives for covered persons to participate in wellness or disease management programs. Retained in House Commerce Committee.


  • HB 663 - Medicaid Funding - This bill establishes a statutory county-state finance commission; extends and amends the payment provisions for counties relative to the nonfederal share of nursing home facility services; adds a county official to the health services planning and review board; and increases the tobacco tax. Passed the House with Amendment. Hearing held; report pending before House Finance Committee.


  • HB 686 - Health Insurance - This bill requires HHS to establish a program to allow NH citizens to purchase the state employee health insurance plan at the group rate. Retained in House Exec. Dept. Committee.


  • HB 739 - BET/Medicaid Provider Reimbursement - This bill establishes an acuity-based reimbursement system for Medicaid providers; establishes a long-term care information and referral network; creates a BET deduction for employer contributions to long term care coverage. Retained in House Commerce Committee.


  • HB 758 - Medicaid Eligibility - This bill prohibits the use of certain monetary devices as a method of sheltering wealth for the purposes of Medicaid eligibility. House Health & Human Services Committee recommends OTP/A for March 25.


  • HB 784 - Long Term Care - This bill authorizes individuals eligible to receive Medicaid-funded nursing home services to choose community-based services as an alternative, if the cost is less. Retained in House Health & Human Services Committee.


  • HB 788 - Transferring duties of Health Services Board - repealing the certificate of need law. Passed the House with Amendment. Work Session held; report pending before House Finance Committee.


  • SB 21 - Health Insurance Riders - This bill authorizes insurers to place health insurance riders on individual policies if certain conditions are met. Hearing held; report pending before Senate Insurance Committee. Sponsor: Senator Robert Flanders


  • SB 78 - Health Care Information Council - This bill establishes the NH health care information council, which shall implement and maintain a statewide healthcare database. Hearing held; report pending before Senate Public Institutions Committee.


  • SB 110 - Small Group Employer Definition - This bill revises the laws relative to small group health insurance including changing the definition of small group employer to employers with 2-50 employees. Current law defines small group employers to have 1-100 employees. Hearing held; report pending before Senate Insurance Committee.


  • Note Time Change for Hearing) - SB 119 - Medical Liability Insurance - This bill clarifies the law relative to recovery for medical injuries under RSA 507-E. Hearing: April 1, 8 a.m., Room 101, LOB before Senate Insurance Committee.


  • SB 163 - CON Board Changes - This bill clarifies certain location of health services planning and review board meetings; the standard development relative to equipment; gives notification by electronic mail and increases the annual administrative fee for health care facilities. Passed the Senate; referred to Senate Finance Committee.

The Fight against Medical Errors Continues

One of our editorial policies for editing this newsletter is to look for signs of improvement in our medical care systems. WE assume that a better healthcare system will mean lower cost and, therefore, lower premiums. One of the first such clues that we found that good things are happening came from the Business Round Table when they created the 'Leap Frog' program in 2000. Leap Frog was designed to reduce the number of preventable medical mistakes in hospitals. Medical errors account for up to 100,000 deaths in hospitals at a cost of over $2 billion per year.

Along with Leap Frog, The Department of Health and Human Services, and many other concerned organizations, The Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations (JCAHO) is also promoting specific changes in health care practices through its accreditation function. JCAHO issued its "National Patient Safety Goals" for 2003. JCAHO reviews and accredits over 17,000 healthcare providers nationwide. The 6 goals are:

  • Improve accuracy of patient identification. This recommends that the health care organization use at least two patient identifiers neither of which can be the patient's room number.


  • Improve effective communication between caregivers. JCAHO recommends that all verbal orders be 'read back' so as to confirm understanding of the orders. This would include a standard set of abbreviations that all caregivers would agree on.


  • Improve the safety of using high-alert medications. Here JCAHO recommends that the administration of strong medications be carefully supervised with the development of multiple verification procedures.


  • Eliminate wrong-site, wrong-patient, and wrong-procedure surgery. Here the HCO will use preoperative verification processes to confirm availability of appropriate documentation.


  • Improve the safety of infusion pumps on all general and patient controlled intravenous pumps.


  • Improve the effectives of clinical alarm systems. JCAHO wants patients to be able to get help when they 'push the button.'

Medscape from WebMD

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Newsletter Note: The above information is offered to our clients and prospective clients as a service. It is a compilation of pertinent articles we have read, information we have collected from seminars attended and general trend information. It is not to be taken as legal or tax advice. If you have any questions about the information contained in this newsletter, please feel free to call us. Before acting on any legislative or law changes, you should consult your legal and/or tax advisor.

View the February 2003 NEMIA Newsletter

View the January 2003 NEMIA Newsletter

View the August 2002 NEMIA Newsletter

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