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The Florida Senate

1999 Florida Statutes

SECTION 704
Agency duties and responsibilities related to community health purchasing alliances.

408.704  Agency duties and responsibilities related to community health purchasing alliances.--The agency shall assist in developing a statewide system of community health purchasing alliances. To this end, the agency is responsible for:

(1)  Initially and thereafter annually certifying that each community health purchasing alliance complies with ss. 408.70-408.706 and rules adopted pursuant to ss. 408.70-408.706. The agency may decertify any community health purchasing alliance if the alliance fails to comply with ss. 408.70-408.706 and rules adopted by the agency.

(2)  Providing administrative startup funds. Each contract for startup funds is limited to $275,000.

(3)  Conducting an annual review of the performance of each alliance to ensure that the alliance is in compliance with ss. 408.70-408.706. To assist the agency in its review, each alliance shall submit, quarterly, data to the agency, including, but not limited to, employer enrollment by employer size, industry sector, previous insurance status, and count; number of total eligible employers in the alliance district participating in the alliance; number of insured lives by county and insured category, including employees, dependents, and other insured categories, represented by alliance members; profiles of potential employer membership by county; premium ranges for each accountable health partnership for alliance member categories; type and resolution of member grievances; membership fees; and alliance financial statements. A summary of this annual review shall be provided to the Legislature and to each alliance.

(4)  Developing accountable health partnership comparison sheets to be used in providing members and their employees with information regarding the accountable health partnership.

(5)  Establishing a data system for accountable health partnerships.

(a)  The agency shall establish an advisory data committee comprised of the following representatives of employers, medical providers, hospitals, health maintenance organizations, and insurers:

1.  Two representatives appointed by each of the following organizations: Associated Industries of Florida, the Florida Chamber of Commerce, the National Federation of Independent Businesses, and the Florida Retail Federation;

2.  One representative of each of the following organizations: the Florida League of Hospitals, the Association of Voluntary Hospitals of Florida, the Florida Hospital Association, the Florida Medical Association, the Florida Osteopathic Medical Association, the Florida Chiropractic Association, the Florida Chapter of the National Medical Association, the Association of Managed Care Physicians, the Florida Insurance Council, the Florida Association of Domestic Insurers, the Florida Association of Health Maintenance Organizations; and

3.  One representative of governmental health care purchasers and three consumer representatives, to be appointed by the agency.

(b)  The advisory data committee shall issue a report and recommendations on each of the following subjects as each is completed. A final report covering all subjects must be included in the final Florida Health Plan to be submitted to the Legislature on December 31, 1993. The report shall include recommendations regarding:

1.  Types of data to be collected. Careful consideration shall be given to other data collection projects and standards for electronic data interchanges already in process in this state and nationally, to evaluating and recommending the feasibility and cost-effectiveness of various data collection activities, and to ensuring that data reporting is necessary to support the evaluation of providers with respect to cost containment, access, quality, control of expensive technologies, and customer satisfaction analysis. Data elements to be collected from providers include prices, utilization, patient outcomes, quality, and patient satisfaction. The completion of this task is the first priority of the advisory data committee. The agency shall begin implementing these data collection activities immediately upon receipt of the recommendations, but no later than January 1, 1994. The data shall be submitted by hospitals, other licensed health care facilities, pharmacists, and group practices as defined in s. 455.654(3)(f).

2.  A standard data set, a standard cost-effective format for collecting the data, and a standard methodology for reporting the data to the agency, or its designee, and to the alliances. The reporting mechanisms must be designed to minimize the administrative burden and cost to health care providers and carriers. A methodology shall be developed for aggregating data in a standardized format for making comparisons between accountable health partnerships which takes advantage of national models and activities.

3.  Methods by which the agency should collect, process, analyze, and distribute the data.

4.  Standards for data interpretation. The advisory data committee shall actively solicit broad input from the provider community, carriers, the business community, and the general public.

5.  Structuring the data collection process to:

a.  Incorporate safeguards to ensure that the health care services utilization data collected is reviewed by experienced, practicing physicians licensed to practice medicine in this state;

b.  Require that carrier customer satisfaction data conclusions are validated by the agency;

c.  Protect the confidentiality of medical information to protect the patient's identity and to protect the privacy of individual physicians and patients. Proprietary data submitted by insurers, providers, and purchasers are confidential pursuant to s. 408.061; and

d.  Afford all interested professional medical and hospital associations and carriers a minimum of 60 days to review and comment before data is released to the public.

6.  Developing a data collection implementation schedule, based on the data collection capabilities of carriers and providers.

(c)  In developing data recommendations, the advisory data committee shall assess the cost-effectiveness of collecting data from individual physician providers. The initial emphasis must be placed on collecting data from those providers with whom the highest percentages of the health care dollars are spent: hospitals, large physician group practices, outpatient facilities, and pharmacies.

(d)  The agency shall, to the maximum extent possible, adopt and implement the recommendations of the advisory data committee. The agency shall report all recommendations of the advisory data committee to the Legislature and submit an implementation plan.

(e)  The travel expenses of the participants of the advisory data committee must be paid by the participant or by the organization that nominated the participant.

(6)  Collecting, compiling, and analyzing data on accountable health partnerships and providing statistical information to alliances.

(7)  Receiving appeals by members of an alliance and accountable health partnerships whose grievances were not resolved by the alliance. The agency shall review these appeals pursuant to chapter 120. Records or reports submitted as a part of a grievance proceeding conducted as provided for under this subsection are confidential and exempt from the provisions of s. 119.07(1) and s. 24(a), Art. I of the State Constitution. Records or reports of patient care quality assurance proceedings obtained or made by any member of a community health purchasing alliance or any member of an accountable health partnership and received by the agency as a part of a proceeding conducted pursuant to this subsection are confidential and exempt from s. 119.07(1) and s. 24(a), Art. I of the State Constitution. Portions of meetings held pursuant to the provisions of this subsection during which records held confidential pursuant to the provisions of this subsection are discussed are exempt from the provisions of s. 286.011 and s. 24(b), Art. I of the State Constitution. All portions of any meeting closed to the public shall be recorded by a certified court reporter. For any portion of a meeting that is closed, the reporter shall record the times of commencement and termination of the meeting, all discussion and proceedings, the names of all persons present at any time, and the names of all persons speaking. No portion of the closed meeting shall be off the record. The court reporter's notes shall be fully transcribed and given to the appropriate records custodian within a reasonable time after the meeting. A copy of the original transcript, with information otherwise confidential or exempt from public disclosure redacted, shall be made available for public inspection and copying 3 years after the date of the closed meeting.

History.--s. 70, ch. 93-129; ss. 6, 7, ch. 95-201; s. 249, ch. 96-406; s. 28, ch. 98-166.