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Attorney General’s summary of Committee to Defend
and Improve Health Care's Statewide Ballot Initiative
SUMMARY OF NO. 99-4
This proposed law would set up a state Health Care
Council to review and recommend legislation for a health care system
that ensures comprehensive, high quality health care coverage for
all Massachusetts residents. Until the Council decided that
such a system had been set up, the proposed law would prohibit the
conversion of non-profit hospitals, health maintenance organizations
(HMOs), and health insurance firms to for-profit status. The
proposed law would also require health insurance carriers to provide
certain rights to patients and health care professionals, starting
January 1, 2001. The Council would recommend laws to set up,
and would decide whether laws had been passed to ensure, a health
care system that provides:
- barrier-free access to health care services
- patients’ freedom to choose their health care
providers, get second opinions, and appeal denials of care
- health care professionals’ freedom to act solely
in the best interest of their patients
- affordable coverage, with cost increases no
greater than national averages
- preserving and increasing the quality of care
and encouraging research
- at least 90% of all premiums to be used for
patient care, public health, and training/research, and no more
than 10% for administrative costs, with simpler paperwork and
administration
- a prohibition of financial incentives that limit
patient access to health care, and limits on incentives for inappropriate
care
The Council would include 17 members representing health
care and other organizations. It would hold public hearings,
study proposals, and make recommendations to the state Commissioner
of Public Health and the Legislature on laws and other steps needed
to set up a system meeting the above requirements. The proposed
law would also create a special legislative committee, including legislators
and members of the Council, to make recommendations by September 30,
2001, for laws to set up a system meeting the above requirements by
July 1, 2002. Starting January 1, 2001, the proposed law would
require health insurance carriers to guarantee certain rights to their
insured patients and to health care professionals. These rights
would include:
- patients’ rights to choose all of their health
care providers, subject to the approval of a freely chosen primary
care provider who has no financial incentive to deny care, and
subject to payment of a reasonable extra fee to see a provider
outside the carrier’s network
- health care professionals’ right to make medical
decisions in consultation with their patients
- patients’ right to transitional insurance coverage
when they are undergoing a course of treatment from a health care
provider whose contract with a carrier is being terminated
- patients’ right to medically necessary referrals
to specialists
- limits on and disclosure of contracts between
carriers and health care providers that create financial incentives
to delay or limit care or provide inappropriate care
- health care professionals’ right to discuss
health benefit plans with insured patients and to advocate on
behalf of their patients
- carriers could not terminate health care providers’
contracts without cause
- patients’ right to receive emergency services,
subject to authorization procedures, and to be reimbursed when
they pay cash for emergency services from providers not affiliated
with their carrier
- utilization review procedures that meet specific
standards, including patients’ right to appeal to the Commissioner
of Public Health
- in any year at least 90% of a carrier’s Massachusetts
revenue must be spent on Massachusetts health care, and a carrier
that spent more than 10% for non-health care purposes would have
to refund the excess to its insured patients. Each carrier
would have to report its revenues, premiums, and expenditures
to the state Commissioner of insurance every year.
The proposed law states that it would not interfere
with any existing contract, including contract terms (such as automatic
renewal or option clauses) that may go into effect after January 1,
2001. The proposed law states that if any of its parts were
declared invalid, the rest of the law would stay in effect.
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