Final Report

2007 SESSION OF THE
MARYLAND GENERAL ASSEMBLY

 

 

 

Volume 14, Number 11���������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� �������������������������������������������������������������������June 25, 2007

 

In this first session of a four-year term, the Maryland General Assembly did not pass any major budget or programmatic initiatives.Though careful not to worsen the state’s fiscal outlook, the General Assembly deferred action on the state’s projected $1.5 billion structural deficit.Nevertheless, it was an exciting session and a busy one for Johns Hopkins as legislation affecting health care and hospitals took center stage and progress was made on several key education and research priorities.Here’s a look at the new laws and legislative initiatives that will impact Johns Hopkins.

 

To view the legislative information below, click on the subject of interest to go directly to that area or scroll down to view the entire document.Background and summary information is provided for each subject area followed by details on the bills that passed of interest to Johns Hopkins.All of these bills have been signed into law by Governor O’Malley.

 

 

OPERATING BUDGET

����������� Sellinger Aid
����������� Cigarette Restitution Fund

����������� Maryland Stem Cell Research Fund

����������� Medicaid

����������� Budget Outlook

 

CAPITAL BUDGET

 

BUSINESS & ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT

 

ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH

 

GENERAL HEALTH CARE

 

HEALTH CARE FACILITIES

 

HEALTH CARE PRACTITIONERS

 

HEALTH INSURANCE/HEALTH CARE ACCESS

 

HIGHER EDUCATION AND FINANCIAL AID

 

LONG-TERM CARE/NURSING HOMES

 

MEDICAL LIABILITY & TORT REFORM

 

MINORITY HEALTH DISPARITIES

 

PRESCRIPTION DRUGS

 

PUBLIC HEALTH

 

WORKERS’ COMPENSATION

 

MISCELLANEOUS

 


 

STAFF CONTACT INFORMATION


 

Operating Budget

 

The General Assembly approved a $30 billion operating budget on the last day of session, one week behind schedule.Despite the unusual delay and some contentious debate, lawmakers in the end adopted a budget bill that largely followed that proposed by Governor O’Malley.

 

Sellinger Aid:$24.7 million for Johns Hopkins

The Governor’s budget included $58.6 million for the Sellinger Aid Program, which provides unrestricted support for private institutions of higher education—a 17.2% increase over FY 2007.Although the House cut $1 million from Sellinger by limiting annual growth to 15%, the final budget restored full funding.Johns Hopkins received $24.7 million in Sellinger Aid—a 17.6% increase over FY 2007.

 

Cigarette Restitution Fund:$3.7 million for Johns Hopkins

Maryland’s Cigarette Restitution Fund (CRF), supported by revenue from a settlement with the major tobacco companies, grew by $27.8 million to a total of $194 million for FY 2008.The increase will be directed to the Medicaid program.Johns Hopkins’ CRF appropriation held steady, with a $2.5 million cancer research grant and a $1.2 million public health grant.

 

Maryland Stem Cell Research Fund:$23 million total

Funding for stem cell research became a particular sticking point in the budget debate during the final days of session.The House supported full funding of the Governor’s $25 million request, but the Senate cut the appropriation back to $15 million, the amount in the FY 2007 budget.In conference, lawmakers agreed to a compromise of $23 million.

 

FY 2007 Stem Cell Research Fund Grants: On May 17, the Maryland Stem Cell Research Commission announced that 24 investigators among 86 applicants had been chosen to receive the state’s first grants for stem cell research.Investigators at Johns Hopkins received 15 of these 24 grants—5 (of 7) investigator-initiated research grants and 10 (of 17) exploratory research grants.The individual amounts of the awards will be disclosed once final terms are negotiated and agreements signed.The investigator-initiated grants are eligible for funding up to $500,000/year for three years, and the exploratory grants are eligible for up to $100,000/year for two years.

 

Medicaid: Medicaid constitutes the state’s largest single budget item, and costs continue to grow at a rate that is consistently outpacing revenue.The FY 2008 budget increases funding for Medicaid and the Maryland Children’s Health Program (MCHP) by 6.4% for a total of $4.9 billion.About 650,000 individuals are expected to enroll in Medicaid or MCHP this fiscal year—an increase of 15,000 over projected FY 2007 levels.In addition, the budget restores Medicaid coverage for about 3,500 legal immigrant children and pregnant women at a cost of $11 million.

 

Physician Reimbursement:$40 million increase

The $40 million enhancement in FY 2008 physician reimbursement represents the third year of the four year initiative to raise Medicaid reimbursement rates to 100% of the Medicare fee schedule.

 

Hospital Day Limits:$17.2 million reduction

The Governor’s proposed budget eliminated hospital day limits, which cap the number of days Medicaid will pay for a hospital stay and were instituted in 2003 as a short-term cost savings measure scheduled to terminate June 30, 2005.The House reinstated day limits for another year with a $26 million cut to Medicaid; the Senate also reinstated day limits, but only for six months with a $13 million cut.Consensus was reached on a $17.2 million reduction, allowing for the phasing out of hospital day limits in six to eight months.

 

MCO payments: The budget conference committee rejected the $9 million reduction to MCO payments that was proposed by the House.

 

Budget Outlook: The significant imbalance between incoming revenues and ongoing spending is projected to lead to a cash shortfall of $1.5 billion in FY 2009.Over the last five years, as K-12 education spending rose dramatically, the state spent down a number of special funds rather than make significant programmatic cuts.The state is now holding a reserve fund balance of only $68 million, or 5% of the general fund—the minimum recommended for Maryland to maintain its coveted AAA bond rating.In FY 2010, the shortfall is expected to widen to $1.7 billion due to prior funding commitments.

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Capital Budget

 

Also on the final day of session, the General Assembly approved a capital budget of $805 million for FY 2008.As Governor O’Malley promised during his gubernatorial campaign, public school construction was a top priority in formulating the capital budget, with over $385 million in funding that consumes nearly half of total budget dollars (an additional $15 million in operating funds brings the total up to $400 million).The budget includes the following projects at Johns Hopkins:

 

Cardiovascular and Critical Care Tower Construction:$7.5 million

 

Pediatric Trauma Center Construction:$5 million

 

Gilman Hall Renovations:$2 million

 

Bayview Medical Center Operating Room Expansion:$560,000

 

Maryland Independent Colleges and Universities Association (MICUA) received $8 million in bond funding (including $2 million for Gilman Hall) for the following projects:

 

Maryland Institute College of Art����� $3,000,000

 

Mount St. Mary’s Performing Arts��� $2,000,000

 

St. John’s College�������������������������� $1,000,000

 

Maryland Hospital Association (MHA) received $5 million in bond funding (including $560,000 for the Bayview Medical Center) for the following projects:

 

Adventist HealthCare���������������������� $�� 120,000������� ��� Shady Grove Hospital Prenatal Center

 

Atlantic General Hospital���������������� $�� 700,000������� ��� Primary Care, Diabetes, Pulmonary &

����������������������������������������������������������������������������� ��� Child Sexual Assault Services

 

Bon Secours Hospital�������������������� $1,000,000������� ��� Intensive Care Unit renovation

 

Fort Washington Medical Center����� $�� 560,000������� ��� Emergency department renovation

 

Shore Health System���������������������� $�� 500,000������� ��� Dorchester General ED renovation

 

St. Agnes HealthCare��������������������� $�� 560,000������� ��� Birthing Center/NICU renovation

 

Western Maryland Health Sys.�������� $1,000,000������� ��� New Obstetric Unit

 

In addition, $5 million was allocated to the East Baltimore Development, Inc. (EBDI) biotechnology park.

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Business & Economic Development

On the last day of session, the legislature passed a “living wage” bill and made Maryland the first state in the nation to require contractors to pay a living wage to employees who perform work under state contracts—$11.30/hour in the Baltimore-Washington metropolitan area and $8.50/hour elsewhere in the state, with the rates adjusted annually based on the Consumer Price Index.Also a leader in living wage initiatives, Baltimore City passed the nation’s first living wage ordinance in 1994.

 

With the state facing unprecedented opportunities and challenges as a result of the Base Realignment and Closure (BRAC) process, lawmakers passed bills to establish a subcabinet in the executive branch and a joint committee in the legislative branch to facilitate state action and planning.

 

A number of proposals aimed at protecting consumers against identify theft were debated this session.The legislation that passed, the Personal Information Protection Act, requires businesses to take measures to protect personal information and to promptly disclose security breaches of personal data.Johns Hopkins’ response to a possible loss of personal information in February 2007 exceeded the notification requirements of the bill.

 

For the biotechnology investment tax credit program established in 2005, the FY 2008 budget again approved $6 million, although legislation failed that would have raised the maximum credit value and allowed excess credits to be carried forward to future taxable years.

 

A gubernatorial initiative was passed establishing a Life Sciences Advisory Board for promoting collaboration and coordination among life sciences organizations and institutions of higher education in the state.A Senate bill that would have expanded the prohibition against human cloning to include cells derived from somatic cell nuclear transfer (SCNT) research received an unfavorable report.Additionally, a bill that would have established a biomedical product development fund for research and development on the treatment of smoking-related diseases funded by an increase in the tobacco tax, and a bill that would have increased the annual cap on the R&D tax credit program from $6 million to $12 million also failed.

 

Legislation failed again this session that would have established a tax credit program for a business or nonprofit organization that provides adult literacy services to its employees.Although legislation also failed that would have established a job skills advancement training program for awarding grants to local workforce investment boards, legislative leaders requested that the Secretary of Labor, Licensing and Regulation meet with stakeholders during the interim and report back to the General Assembly on the issue.Several bills regarding procurement activities and minority business enterprise participation were debated this session, but no committee action was taken on the measures.

 

During the 2006 session, forty-three bills relating to eminent domain were introduced and all failed.Of the thirteen eminent domain bills introduced during the 2007 session, only one was successful.This measure, for the first time in almost forty years, increases a number of caps on compensation for homeowners, tenants, and business and farm owners displaced as a result of an eminent domain action.

 

HB 208Consumer Protection - Personal Information Protection Act

This act requires a business that owns or licenses personal information of a Maryland resident to implement and maintain reasonable and appropriate security procedures and practices to protect the information from unauthorized access, use, modification, or disclosure.A business that contracts with a nonaffiliated third party as a service provider must require by contract that the third party implement and maintain security procedures and practices to protect personal information from unauthorized access, use, modification, disclosure, or destruction.When destroying records containing personal information, a business must take reasonable steps to protect the information from unauthorized access or use.

 

On discovery or notification of a “breach of the security of a system,” a business that owns or licenses computerized data that includes personal information of a Maryland resident must conduct a reasonable and prompt investigation to determine the likelihood that the personal information has been or will be misused as a result of the breach.If after the investigation the business determines that misuse of an individual’s personal information has occurred or is reasonably likely to occur, the business must notify the Office of the Attorney General and the individual.

 

Notification must include: a description of the categories of information that may have been acquired by an unauthorized person; contact information for the business making the notification; contact information for the major consumer reporting agencies; and contact information for the Federal Trade Commission and the Office of the Attorney General.If a business is required to give notice to 1,000 or more individuals, the business must also notify all nationwide consumer reporting agencies of the timing, distribution, and content of the notices.

 

A violation of this act is an unfair or deceptive trade practice under the Maryland Consumer Protection Act.

 

Effective Date:January 1, 2008

Signed by the Governor on 5/17/2007; Chapter #532

 

For more information, please contact:Tom Lewis

 

 

HB 430State Procurement Contracts - Living Wage

This act requires state contractors and subcontractors to pay employees a minimum “living wage”:$11.30/hour for contract services in which at least half of the total value of the contract is performed in Montgomery, Prince George’s, Howard, Anne Arundel, and Baltimore counties and Baltimore City; and $8.50/hour elsewhere in the state.Beginning in FY 2009, these wage rates will be adjusted annually according to the Consumer Price Index.State contractors who subsidize the cost of health insurance for their employees may reduce wages by all or part of the cost of their share of insurance premiums.

 

An employer with a state contract valued at less than $100,000, or an employer with a state contract valued at less than $500,000 and ten or fewer employees, is exempt from paying the living wage.Further, this act does not apply to an employee who is under the age of eighteen or works for less than thirteen consecutive weeks, or to a contract for emergency services or a contract with a nonprofit organization.

 

The act establishes procedures for investigating complaints and penalizing the noncompliant.Uncodified language requires several studies to evaluate the effects of the living wage provisions in the public and private sectors.

 

Effective Date:October 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 5/8/2007; Chapter #284

 

For more information, please contact:Matt Greenwood

 

 

HB 1197Business and Economic Development - Maryland Research and Development Tax Credit

This act clarifies that the Maryland Research and Development Tax Credit will continue to be available even if the federal Research and Development Tax Credit is repealed or terminated.

 

Effective Date:July 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 4/10/2007; Chapter #90

 

For more information, please contact:Tom Lewis

 

 

HB 1320Joint Committee on Base Realignment and Closure

This act creates a Joint Committee on Base Realignment and Closure (BRAC) comprised of six members of the House of Delegates and six members of the Senate and charged with overseeing the state’s response to BRAC-related opportunities and challenges.The joint committee must also oversee and participate, in cooperation with local and state units, in developing systems and processes that fast track the approval of: BRAC-related transportation infrastructure; water and sewer infrastructure; state and local planning processes; affordable housing options; education facilities, including public school and community college construction; and health care facilities and infrastructure.

 

Effective Date:October 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 5/8/2007; Chapter #469

 

For more information, please contact:Tom Lewis

 

 

HB 1379Voice Over Internet Protocol Service

This act deregulates Voice over Internet Protocol Service (VoIP), removing it from the jurisdiction of the Public Service Commission (PSC).VoIP service providers are under the purview of the Division of Consumer Protection in the Office of the Attorney General and are subject to generally applicable state and federal laws relating to public safety, consumer protection, and unfair and deceptive trade practices.VoIP is defined as any two-way voice communication that originates from or terminates to the subscriber end user’s location requiring Internet protocol or any successor protocol and requires a broadband connection from the user’s location.

 

The PSC and the Department of Business and Economic Development must report to the General Assembly by December 1, 2010 on the status of the deployment of Internet Protocol–enabled services, including VoIP services, in Maryland and on the status of any federal legislation or regulatory proceedings before the Federal Communications Commission relating to Internet Protocol–enabled services.

 

In addition, the PSC, with input from the Office of the Attorney General and the Office of the People’sCounsel, must monitor the number of consumer complaints received by state agencies regarding theprovision of VoIP services in Maryland.If the PSC determines that additional consumer safeguards arewarranted, it may report its findings and recommendations to the General Assembly.

 

Effective Date:October 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 5/8/2007; Chapter #581

 

For more information, please contact:Tom Lewis

 

 

SB 3Real Property - Condemnation - Procedures and Compensation

This act increases the cap on compensation for homeowners, tenants, and business and farm owners who are displaced as a result of a condemnation action:

 

         $22,500 to $45,000 for a displaced homeowner;

         $5,250 to $10,500 for a displaced tenant for a comparable replacement dwelling;

         $10,000 to $60,000 for a displaced farm, nonprofit, or small business for actual reasonable reestablishment expenses; and

         $20,000 to $60,000 as an alternative payment that may be elected by a displaced business or farm operation in lieu of relocation.

 

When any part of the private property to be acquired in a condemnation action includes a business or farm operation, a representative of the displacing agency must contact the owner of the business or farm operation at least thirty days before filing the action and negotiate in good faith regarding a relocation plan.

 

The state, its instrumentalities, or its political subdivisions must file a condemnation action within four years after the date of the specific administrative or legislative authorization to acquire the property.If an action is not filed within that four-year period, the governmental unit may not proceed until it first obtains a new authorization to acquire the property.With regard to a condemnation authorization granted before the effective date of the act, the state must file an action for condemnation within four years of the act's effective date.

 

Effective Date:July 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 5/8/2007; Chapter #305

 

For more information, please contact:Tom Lewis

 

 

SB 104Maryland Life Sciences Advisory Board

This act establishes the Maryland Life Sciences Advisory Board in the Department of Business and Economic Development charged with developing a comprehensive strategic plan for the life sciences in Maryland and promoting collaboration and coordination among life sciences organizations and research institutions of higher education.The board must develop a strategy to coordinate state and federal resources to attract private-sector investment and job creation; promote life sciences research, development, commercialization, and manufacturing in the state; and develop a strategy to support federal life sciences facilities in the state, including support for infrastructure and capital investment needs.The fifteen-member board will include representatives of federal and state life sciences agencies, life sciences executives, and four representatives of institutions of higher education.

 

Effective Date:July 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 5/8/2007; Chapter #304

 

For more information, please contact:Tom Lewis

 

 

SB 110Base Realignment and Closure Subcabinet

This act creates a Base Realignment and Closure (BRAC) subcabinet in state government to coordinate andoversee the implementation of all state action to support the mission of the military installations affected by BRAC.Chaired by the Lieutenant Governor, the ten-member subcabinet will also include the State Superintendent of Schools and the Secretaries of Budget and Management, Business and Economic Development, Environment, Higher Education, Housing and Community Development, Labor, Licensing and Regulation, Planning, and Transportation.

 

The subcabinet is charged with several tasks, including:

         coordinating and overseeing the development of BRAC-related initiatives in education; workforce readiness; business development; community infrastructure and growth; health care facilities, services, and workforce infrastructure; workforce housing; environmental stewardship; and transportation;

         working with local jurisdictions affected by BRAC to facilitate planning, coordination, and cooperation with the state;

         working with Maryland’s congressional delegation to obtain federal funds;

         collaborating with and reviewing the recommendations of the Maryland Military Installation Council; and

         making policy and budget recommendations to the Governor and General Assembly to strengthen state support of military installations.

 

The subcabinet must meet regularly and report to the Governor and General Assembly annually.Subcommittees of the subcabinet may be established to deal with particular issues and may include other cabinet members and individuals such as state and local officials and private citizens.

Effective Date:June 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 4/10/2007; Chapter #6

For more information, please contact:Tom Lewis

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Environmental Health

Passage of the Maryland Clean Cars Act was a major win for environmentalists this session.Maryland will soon join a number of other states in following the more rigorous California vehicle emissions standards.Lawmakers also added several new products to those subject to minimum efficiency standards under the Maryland Energy Efficiency Standards Act of 2004.With the Stormwater Management Act, the General Assembly strengthened stormwater controls to help keep pace with the increasing amount of impervious surfaces within the Chesapeake Bay watershed.

 

Despite its passage in the House, the Chesapeake Bay green fund bill, which would have supported bay restoration with a projected $100 million in funding raised annually from a fee assessed on “new impervious surface” development, could not overcome concerns about its cost and fiscal sustainability in the Senate.Nevertheless, Senate President Miller has indicated that the legislation has a promising future.

 

 

HB 488Environment - Statewide Electronics Recycling Program

This act expands the current computer recycling program to include computer or video display devices that measure more than four inches diagonally and are not part of a motor vehicle, household appliance, or commercial, industrial, or medical equipment.

 

The act requires all manufacturers producing more than an average of 1,000 covered electronic devices (rather than simply computers) per year to register with the Maryland Department of the Environment (MDE) and increases the initial registration fee from $5,000 to $10,000.MDE is required to keep a list of the registered manufacturers of covered electronic devices.Retailers are barred from selling covered electronic devices which were made by unregistered manufacturers.

 

The Comptroller is authorized to asses a penalty of $500 per violation, up to $5,000 total.�� All fines and penalties will go to the State Recycling Trust Fund, and the act provides that the first $2 million of unspent or unencumbered funds would not revert to the General Fund.

 

Effective Date:October 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 4/24/2007; Chapter #239

 

For more information, please contact:Matt Greenwood

 

 

SB 103Maryland Clean Cars Act of 2007

This act requires the Maryland Department of the Environment (MDE), in consultation with the Motor Vehicle Administration (MVA), to establish by regulation a Low Emissions Vehicle (LEV) Program applicable to vehicles of the 2011 model year and each model year thereafter.

 

The act authorizes MDE to: (1) adopt California regulations, procedures, and certification data by reference; (2) adopt by regulation motor vehicle emissions inspection, recall, and warranty requirements; and (3) work in cooperation with and enter into contracts or agreements with California, other states, and the District of Columbia to administer certification, in-use compliance, inspection, recall, and warranty requirements.Theact requires MDE, in consultation with the MVA, to adopt regulations to exempt motor vehicles from the program under specified conditions and applies existing enforcement provisions for violations of ambient airquality control provisions to a violation of the act.

 

The act also defines a zero emission vehicle (ZEV) and requires the MVA and the Secretary of the Environment to adopt regulations as to which vehicles constitute ZEVs.In addition, it extends the exemption from Vehicle Emissions Inspection Program (VEIP) testing for qualified hybrid vehicles that have a fuel economy rating of 50 miles per gallon from September 30, 2009 to September 30, 2012.Beginning October 1, 2009, qualified hybrid vehicles do not need to be tested by VEIP until three years after the date that the car was first registered in the state, regardless of their fuel economy rating.

 

The act establishes the Maryland Clean Car and Energy Policy Task Force, with a senator and a delegate as co-chairs, to:

         study the activities of neighboring states with respect to vehicle emissions standards;

         study regulatory actions by California and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency relating to vehicle emission standards;

         study emerging energy technologies;

         review state energy policies and consider proposals and strategies to develop alternative fuels and efficiency measures to improve the state’s air quality; and

         make legislative recommendations.

 

The task force must report its recommendations and findings to the Governor and General Assembly annually by December 31, until the task force terminates December 31, 2010.

 

Effective Date:June 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 4/24/2007; Chapter #111

 

For more information, please contact:Matt Greenwood

 

 

SB 674Maryland Energy Efficiency Standards Act of 2007

This act adds several new products to the Maryland Energy Efficiency Standards Act.The Maryland Energy Administration (MEA) must set minimum efficiency standards for the following new products by January 1, 2008: bottle-type water dispensers, commercial hot food holding cabinets, compact audio products, digital versatile disc players and digital versatile disc recorders, metal halide lamp fixtures, residential furnaces, single-voltage external AC to DC power supplies, state-regulated incandescent reflector lamps, and walk-in refrigerators and freezers.These new products may not be sold after March 1, 2009 without meeting or exceeding the tighter efficiency standards.

 

MEA is authorized to establish minimum efficiency standards for products not specifically listed under the Act and to increase the efficiency standards for listed products.MEA may apply for a waiver of federal preemption for any product regulated by the federal government.Also, the Public Service Commission must adopt regulations governing the purchase of liquid-immersed distribution transformers by electric companies.

 

Effective Date:July 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 5/17/2007; Chapter #568

For more information, please contact:Matt Greenwood

 

SB 784Stormwater Management Act of 2007

This act requires the Department of the Environment (MDE) to adopt regulations regarding stormwater management practices in Maryland.MDE’s regulations must establish local regulations and a model ordinance that implements environmental site design (ESD).ESD is defined as using small-scale stormwater management practices, nonstructural techniques, and better site planning to mimic natural hydrologic runoff characteristics and minimize the impact of land development on water resources.The model ordinance must also provide for the review and modification (if necessary) of planning and zoning or public works ordinances to remove impediments to ESD implementation and require a developer to demonstrate that ESD has been implemented to the maximum extent practicable.

 

MDE’s regulations also must specify that all stormwater management plans be designed to prevent soil erosion, prevent an increase in nonpoint pollution, maintain the integrity of stream channels (both for drainage and their biological function), and protect public safety through the proper design and operation of stormwater management facilities.MDE’s regulations must also establish a comprehensive process for approving grading and sediment control plans and stormwater management plans that takes into account the cumulative impact of both plans.MDE must evaluate options for a Stormwater Fee System to improve enforcement and report its findings by December 1, 2007.

 

Effective Date:October 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 4/24/2007; Chapter #121

 

For more information, please contact:Matt Greenwood

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General Health Care

Bills passed reauthorizing and revising the regulatory activities of two of Maryland’s independent health care commissions—the Health Services Cost Review Commission (HSCRC) and the Maryland Health Care Commission (MHCC)—based on recommendations from their fall 2006 “sunset reviews.”The Senate passed a separate bill for the latter commission, altering the composition of the fifteen-member MHCC board to include a hospital administrator.The bill failed, however, when the House did not act on the matter.

 

The General Assembly asserted regulatory control of discount medical plan organizations and discount drug plan organizations with legislation that gives the Maryland Insurance Administration (MIA) oversight of these organizations.Currently, MIA has no regulatory authority over these discount plans because they are not technically engaged in the business of insurance.

 

 

HB 214Health Care Decisions Act - "Patient's Plan of Care" Form – Renaming

This act amends the Health Care Decisions Act by renaming the "Patient's Plan of Care" form, which contains an individual's advance directives, to the "Instructions on Current Life-Sustaining Treatment Options" form.

 

Effective Date:October 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 4/10/2007; Chapter #70

 

For more information, please contact:Sheila Higdon

 

 

HB 797Study of Health Care Services for Children with Life-Threatening Medical Conditions

This act requires the State Advisory Council on Quality Care at the End of Life and the Maryland Health Care Commission to jointly study the current services and potential care delivery alternatives for the care of children with life-threatening medical conditions.The study is to examine the availability of palliative care services under the Maryland Medical Assistance Program and privately-funded insurance for children diagnosed with life-threatening medical conditions.The study will also analyze the impact in states that have adopted the Children’s Hospice International Program for All-Inclusive Care for Children and their Families or other palliative care demonstration projects, including whether such programs may result in the reallocation of resources for more effective care within the parameters of overall budget neutrality.Results of the study are due to the Governor and General Assembly by December 1, 2007.

 

Effective Date:July 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 4/10/2007; Chapter #81

 

For more information, please contact:Sheila Higdon

 

HB 800Maryland Health Care Commission - Program Evaluation

This act implements several recommendations of the October 2006 “sunset review” of the Maryland Health Care Commission (MHCC) and moves forward the date of its next program evaluation to July 1, 2017.The cap on the user fees assessed on hospitals is increased from $10 million to $12 million, and the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene is authorized to continue to assess an administrative charge on MHCC for services provided to MHCC.

 

Several changes are made to commission operations and funding, such as standardizing quorum and voting requirements and authorizing MHCC to collect data on payments to hospitals.This act also requires several studies and reports, including a report on alternatives for individuals enrolled in the State’s Limited Health Benefit Plan.

Effective Date:July 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 4/10/2007; Chapter #627

 

For more information, please contact:Tom Lewis

 

 

HB 844Health Services Cost Review Commission - Sunset Extension and Program Evaluation

This act implements several recommendations of the October 2006 “sunset review” of the Health Services Cost Review Commission (HSCRC) and moves forward the date of its next program evaluation to July 1, 2017.The cap on the user fees assessed on hospitals is increased from $4 million to $5.5 million.The Department of Health and Mental Hygiene is authorized to continue to assess an administrative charge on HSCRC for services provided to HSCRC, and user fees may be used to cover these costs.

 

HSCRC’s annual report must include an update on the status of the state’s Medicare waiver, a summary of its role in hospital quality of care activities, and fund balance information.This act also requires the board of the Maryland Health Insurance Plan (MHIP) to annually report on the number of MHIP enrollees, any increase or decrease in enrollees from the previous year, actions taken by the board to increase enrollment or benefits, and the amount of any fund surplus.Several one-time reports are also required.

Effective Date:July 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 4/10/2007; Chapter #628

 

For more information, please contact:Tom Lewis

 

 

HB 847Discount Medical Plan Organizations and Discount Drug Plan Organizations - Registration and RegulationThis act requires discount medical plan (DMP) organizations and discount drug plan (DDP) organizations to register with the Maryland Insurance Administration (MIA) before selling, marketing, or soliciting a DMP or DDP in the state.MIA has the right to deny registration or refuse to renew, suspend, or revoke the registration.

 

The act also provides for limitations on advertising, plan access, payment to medical providers, termination of plan membership, and disclosure and notification requirements.MIA may examine the affairs, transactions, accounts, records, and assets of a DMP or DDP organization; issue a cease and desist order for �� violations; require corrective action, including restitution; and impose penalties.

Effective Date:October 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 4/10/2007; Chapter #629

 

For more information, please contact:Tom Lewis

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Health Care Facilities

There was a great sense of urgency this session to find a long-term, sustainable solution to the financial crisis facing Prince George’s County Hospital.The House unanimously passed emergency legislation that would have established a state-appointed Prince George’s County Hospital Authority.Governor O’Malley supported this strategy and offered state funding totaling $158.7 million, or 48% of a total $329 million package, to cover the hospital’s operating costs while the authority brokered its sale to another entity.Despite its support in the Senate, this bill never made it to the floor of that chamber because agreement with the Prince George’s County Council was unable to be reached during the final hours of session.After subsequent weeks of uncertainty and intensive planning for a possible closure, the county announced that it would provide the estimated $30 million needed to keep the hospital open through June 2008, thus continuing the piecemeal aid that has kept the hospital struggling along for years.

 

Lawmakers approved adding a second freestanding emergency medical facility, located in Queen Anne’s County, to the “freestanding medical facility pilot project” established in 2005.Queen Anne’s County does not have a hospital, so the project will be established and operated by Memorial Hospital at Easton in Talbot County (the first freestanding emergency medical facility is located in northern Montgomery County and associated with Shady Grove Adventist Hospital).

 

Legislation that would have required hospitals to establish health care-associated infection prevention and control programs received an unfavorable report again this session.The bill would have mandated that hospitals identify colonized or infected patients through active surveillance cultures and report annually on incidents of Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) and Vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus (VRE).With the goal of reducing work-related injuries for nursing personnel, the General Assembly passed a measure requiring hospitals to establish a safe patient lifting policy and a safe lifting committee with equal representation from management and employees.

 

Legislation passed adding anaplasmosis and babesiosis to the list of sixty-six invasive diseases that medical laboratories in Maryland must report to a county health officer.Anaplasmosis is a disease transmitted by deer ticks and western black-legged ticks.Babesiosis is an illness caused by a parasite that lives in some deer ticks.

 

Lawmakers passed a bill establishing a Health Information Exchange Pilot Project to be operated by the Maryland/DC Collaborative for Healthcare Information Technology for the transmission of medication history, laboratory and radiology results, and inpatient and emergency department discharge summaries to participating providers.The Maryland/DC Collaborative is a non-profit corporation aimed at establishing a regional health information organization (RHIO) that will link a broad range of health care providers.The collaborative includes community hospitals, CareFirst BlueCross BlueShield, Aetna, University of Maryland Medicine, MedStar Health, and Johns Hopkins Medicine.

 

A bill passed removing the Executive Director of the Maryland Institute for Emergency Medical Services Systems (MIEMSS) from the Board of Directors of the University of Maryland Medical System (UMMS).Legislators were concerned about the potential conflict of interest created by having the MIEMSS Executive Director simultaneously serve as a voting member of the UMMS board.Although MIEMSS became an independent state agency in 1993, this dual relationship was a remnant of its historical relationship with UMMS’ R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center.

 

 

HB 119Health - Laboratory Examination Reports - Invasive Diseases

This act adds anaplasmosis and babesiosis, which are both caused by ticks, to the list of invasive diseases orconditions that medical laboratories must report to the local health department.In addition, the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene must pursue epidemiologic follow-up and laboratory confirmation of anaplasmosis and babesiosis and, by January 1, 2010, must report to the General Assembly on the continued need to monitor and require reporting of these diseases.

Effective Date:October 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 5/8/2007; Chapter #377

 

For more information, please contact:Sheila Higdon

 

 

HB 343Department of Health and Mental Hygiene - Laboratories - Letter of Exception

This act alters the requirement that limited medical laboratory tests or examinations must be simple procedures for the laboratory to receive a letter of exception to the state’s licensing requirement by repealing the word “simple.”The act allows the Secretary of Health and Mental Hygiene to grant a letter of exception to out-of-state laboratories performing rare and unusual tests in order to enhance access to these tests by Maryland health care providers.

 

Effective Date: October 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 4/10/2007; Chapter #73

 

For more information, please contact:Sheila Higdon

 

 

HB 640Mental Hygiene Facilities - Patient Rights

This act prohibits locked door seclusions and certain types of physical restraints or holds for a mentally ill individual in a mental health facility; it does not include acute general hospitals that do not have a separately identified inpatient psychiatric service.

 

The act restricts the use of seclusions and restraints for use only during an emergency in which the behavior of the individual places the individual or others at serious threat of violence or injury.The act requires that each individual in a facility be free from physical restraint or hold that places the individual face down with pressure applied to the back; obstructs the individual’s airway or impairs the individual’s ability to breathe; obstructs a staff member’s view of the individual’s face; or restricts the individual's ability to communicate distress.An individual may be placed face down momentarily to transition the individual to a restraint position.

 

A facility must have a written policy on the method used to ensure that an individual whose primary method of communication is nonverbal is able to communicate distress during physical restraint or hold and ensure that all staff authorized to participate in physical restraint are trained appropriately.

Effective Date:October 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 4/24/2007; Chapter #173

 

For more information, please contact:Sheila Higdon

 

 

HB 979Health Information Exchange Pilot Project

This act establishes a Health Information Exchange Pilot Project to be operated by the Maryland/DC Collaborative for Healthcare Information Technology for the transmission of medication history, laboratory and radiology results, and inpatient and emergency department discharge summaries to participating health care providers.

 

The Maryland Health Care Commission and the Health Services Cost Review Commission must ensure that the collaborative addresses privacy, security, economic, and interoperability issues.To receive partial compensation for the cost of developing a data interface necessary for participation in the project, hospitals may apply to the HSCRC for a one-time award through rate adjustment.The act terminates June 30, 2010.

 

Effective Date:July 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 4/24/2007; Chapter #262

 

For more information, please contact:Sheila Higdon

 

 

HB 1137Hospitals - Safe Patient Lifting

This act requires hospitals to establish a safe lifting committee by December 1, 2007, with equal membership from management and employees.By July 1, 2008, the committee is to develop a safe patient lifting policy for the hospital for the purpose of reducing employee injuries associated with patient lifting.The committee must consider, based on the patient population of the hospital, the appropriateness and effectiveness of:

1 - developing or enhancing patient handling hazard assessment processes;

2 - enhanced use of mechanical lifting devices;

3 - developing specialized lift teams;

4 - training programs for safe patient lifting required for all patient care personnel;

5 - incorporating physical space and construction design for mechanical lifting devices in any architectural plans for hospital construction or renovation; and

6 - developing an evaluation process to determine the effectiveness of the policy.

 

Effective Date:October 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 4/24/2007; Chapter #57

 

For more information, please contact:Sheila Higdon

 

 

SB 750Queen Anne's County - Health Care Facilities Regulation - Licensing of Freestanding Medical FacilitiesThis emergency act requires the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene to add a second project, located in Queen Anne’s County, to the freestanding medical facility pilot project.Although the pilot project is not required to have a certificate of need (CON) and is exempt from Maryland Health Care Commission (MHCC) regulations, the facility’s capital expenditure must meet CON requirements and information must be submitted to MHCC on the project’s configuration, location, operation, and utilization.

 

Third-party payors must reimburse the pilot project facility at a rate consistent with the contract between the carrier and the freestanding medical facility. Medicaid must reimburse at a rate at least equal to the rate paid by Medicare.

 

Uncodified language specifies that the act does not exempt a health care facility in Talbot County from health planning and development requirements nor authorize a health care facility or service to be relocated from Talbot County to Queen Anne’s County.

 

Effective Date:Emergency measure

Signed by the Governor on 5/17/2007; Chapter #574

 

For more information, please contact:Tom Lewis

 

 

SB 882Medical System Corporation - Board of Directors – Membership

This act removes the Executive Director of the Maryland Institute for Emergency Medical Services Systems (MIEMSS) as a voting member of the Board of Directors of the University of Maryland Medical System.

Effective Date:October 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 5/8/2007; Chapter #361

 

For more information, please contact:Sheila Higdon

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Health Care Practitioners

Several bills aimed at eliminating health insurance cramdown” provisions were unsuccessful this session.A bill introduced at the request of the Maryland State Medical Society (MedChi) would have prohibited carriers from requiring providers, as a condition of participation in some insurance products, to participate in other insurance products.The bill was prompted by an unfavorable ruling of the Maryland Insurance Administration that was upheld by a circuit court in October 2006.Another “cramdown” bill passed the House on the final day of session, but the clock ran out of time before the Senate could take a concurring vote.This bill would have prohibited carriers from requiring providers, as a condition of participation with the carrier, to participate with a different carrier.Although these bills failed, “cramdown” provisions are among the areas to be studied by the Task Force on Health Care Access and Reimbursement.

 

A bill failed that would have changed the HMO reimbursement rate for non-participating health care providers from the current statutory rate of 125% of the average rate paid to a similar type of participating provider to the rate equal to the 50th percentile charge for the service according to the physician payment database of the Maryland Health Care Commission.Under the current law, there is no transparent or objective fee schedule on which to base the 125%, making it hard to enforce or even determine correct reimbursement amounts.This topic will also be among the study areas of the Task Force on Health Care Access and Reimbursement.

 

The final version of the legislation reauthorizing the State Board of Physicians did not include a number of earlier provisions opposed by MedChi, including mandatory fingerprinting and criminal background checks, a pilot program to assess clinical competency, and open public hearings.Stakeholders were also successful in amending the bill to revise the requirement that medical malpractice case settlement information be posted as part of a licensee’s profile on the board’s website and in adding language to require that peer reviewers, to the extent practicable, be licensed and engaged in the practice of medicine in Maryland.

 

A bill passed requiring the Secretary of Health and Mental Hygiene and the Governor’s Workforce Investment Board to examine and recommend ways to overcome barriers to licensing returning military personnel as health care providers in the state.The focus of the study will be on meeting employment needs in acute hospital emergency departments.

 

 

HB 236Health Occupations - Nurses - Dispensing Methadone

This act authorizes RNs or LPNs working in a methadone clinic licensed by the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene to dispense methadone in accordance with regulations developed jointly by the State Board of Nursing and the State Board of Pharmacy.

Effective Date:October 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 5/8/2007; Chapter #385

 

For more information, please contact:Sheila Higdon

 

 

HB 315State Board of Nursing - Licensing, Certification, and Reinstatement Requirements

This act makes various changes to the Maryland Nurse Practice Act relating to the revocation, reinstatement, and renewal of licenses and certificates issued by the State Board of Nursing.It also repeals provisions allowing for an unlicensed individual to perform acts of registered nursing or licensed practical nursing while supervised by an individual authorized by the state to practice medicine or dentistry.

 

A license or certificate that is suspended or revoked for more than one year may be reinstated if the licensee or certificate holder submits to a criminal history records check, in addition to meeting the reinstatement requirements.A temporary license or temporary certificate must be revoked if the individual was convicted or pled guilty or nolo contendere to a felony or to a crime involving moral turpitude.

 

A certified medicine aide seeking certification renewal must have practiced 100 hours as a certified medicine aide in the two years prior to renewal and successfully completed a board-approved medicine aide continuing education program.

 

A student performing nursing assistant tasks is not required to be board-certified if the student is enrolled in a board-approved nursing assistant training program and is practicing under the direct supervision of qualified faculty or preceptors.Current law requires that the student meet one of those requirements.

Effective Date:October 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 5/17/2007; Chapter #598

 

For more information, please contact:Sheila Higdon

 

 

HB 326Maryland Audiologists, Hearing Aid Dispensers, and Speech-Language Pathologists Act – RevisionThis act makes revisions to the statue governing audiologists, hearing aid dispensers, and speech-language pathologists.No changes are made to the scope of practice.

 

Speech-Language Pathology Assistants

Speech-language pathology assistants must be licensed by the board; the act clarifies that this requirement does not apply to federal employees performing the duties of that federal employment.

 

Audiology

Beginning October 1, 2007, an applicant for licensure to practice audiology must hold a doctor of audiology degree, or must qualify for a waiver.An applicant must pass an audiology examination and complete training consistent with the standards established by the Accreditation Commission for Audiology Education or the Council of Academic Accreditation.

 

Hearing Aid Dispensing

As of January 1, 2008, an applicant for an initial license to practice hearing aid dispensing must be a graduate of an accredited two-year postsecondary program with a diploma or degree before receiving a full license.The act repeals the provision requiring an applicant to be at least 18 years old as well as the requirement for a licensee to be a high school graduate or equivalent.

 

Speech-Language Pathology

An applicant for speech-language pathology licensure must pass an examination approved under the board’s regulations, and demonstrate oral competency.It addition, the act expands the conditions under which the board can waive any qualifications required for licensure.

 

The act also addresses issues related to license renewal and reinstatement, disciplinary actions and appeals procedures, and board duties and membership.

 

Effective Date:October 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 5/8/2007; Chapter #391

 

For more information, please contact:Sheila Higdon

 

 

HB 358Certified Social Workers-Clinical - Practice – Definition

This act expands the scope of practice for an individual licensed as a certified social worker-clinical to allow the evaluation, diagnosis, and treatment of mental and emotional conditions and impairments including mental retardation.

 

Effective Date:October 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 5/24/2007; Chapter #235

 

For more information, please contact:Sheila Higdon

 

 

HB 445State Board of Nursing - Advanced Nurse Practitioners - Membership and Qualifications

This act requires the State Board of Nursing to include one advanced practice nurse among the sevenregistered nurses in its membership.The Governor will appoint the advanced practice nurse, with advicefrom the Secretary of Health and Mental Hygiene, from a list of qualified individuals jointly developed, in accordance with a rotating list of specialties as set forth in statue, by the following:

 

         Maryland Association of Nurse Anesthetists,

         Nurse Practitioners Association of Maryland,

         Maryland Coalition of Nurse Practitioners,

         Maryland Chapter, American College of Nurse-Midwives, and

         Psychiatric Advance Practice Nurses of Maryland.

 

The other registered nurse members will also be appointed by the Governor, with advice from the Secretary, from a list of qualified individuals submitted by the Maryland Nurses Association.

 

Effective Date:October 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 5/17/2007; Chapter #545

 

For more information, please contact:Sheila Higdon

 

 

HB 515Health Insurance - Credentialing Intermediaries and Uniform Credentialing Form

This act exempts hospitals or academic medical centers that serve as credentialing intermediaries from the requirement to use the uniform credentialing form and from complying with the carrier deadlines for making credentialing decisions.This act also authorizes, rather than requires, the Maryland Insurance Commissioner to adopt credentialing regulations.

Effective Date:June 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 5/17/2007; Chapter #612

 

For more information, please contact:Sheila Higdon

 

 

HB 682Health Care Decisions Act - Emergency Medical Services "Do Not Resuscitate Orders" – Health Care ProvidersThis act authorizes health care providers, other than emergency medical services (EMS) personnel, who see, in a valid form, an EMS “do not resuscitate order” (DNR order) that is not superseded by a subsequent physician’s order, to provide, withhold, or withdraw treatment in accordance with the DNR order before a patient’s cardiac or respiratory arrest.The act further requires health care providers to withhold or withdraw treatment in accordance with the DNR order after a patient’s cardiac or respiratory arrest.

Effective Date:October 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 4/24/2007; Chapter #251

 

For more information, please contact:Sheila Higdon

 

 

HB 947Health Insurance - Health Care Providers - Reimbursement and Charges

This act prohibits a health insurance carrier from requiring a provider in a group practice or facility who participates under a contract on the carrier’s provider panel to accept the reimbursement fee schedule applicable under the contract when providing services to enrollees of the carrier through a noncontracting practice or facility and billing for services provided to enrollees of the carrier with a different federal tax identification number.Nonparticipating providers must notify an enrollee of total anticipated charges for the health care services, given that the provider does not participate on the provider panel of the enrollee’s carrier.

 

Effective Date:October 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 4/24/2007; Chapter #169

 

For more information, please contact:Tom Lewis

 

 

HB 949Military Health Care Personnel - Staffing Initiative

This act requires the Secretary of Health and Mental Hygiene—in conjunction with the Governor’s Workforce Investment Board, and in consultation with the Maryland Hospital Association, MedChi, the Maryland Nurses Association, and others—to study and make recommendations regarding the barriers to licensing or certifying individuals who have training and experience in providing health care through military service.The review will focus on meeting employment needs in acute hospital emergency departments and community–based health care settings.

Effective Date:June 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 4/24/2007; Chapter #441

 

For more information, please contact:Sheila Higdon

 

 

SB 255State Board of Physicians - Sunset Extension and Program Evaluation

This act extends the sunset date of the State Board of Physicians (MBP) from July 1, 2007 to July 1, 2013 and makes the following changes:

 

Physician Rehabilitation Program

The act broadens eligibility for rehabilitation services by including other health professionals regulated by the board.In addition, it abolishes the Physician Rehabilitation Committee and requires MBP to attempt to contract with a nonprofit entity for physician rehabilitation services.

 

Disciplinary Actions in Other States

The act allows MBP to share certain data with the National Practitioner Data Bank so that the board may take advantage of a new service to receive more timely information on actions against physicians in other states.

 

Licensee Profiles

The act repeals the requirement that certain medical malpractice settlement information must be posted as part of a licensee’s profile on MBP’s web site.Instead, MBP must provide on its Internet site notification that a person may, by request, find out from the board whether the number of medical malpractice settlements involving a licensee totals three or more with a settlement amount of $150,000 or greater within the most recent five-year period.MBP must provide the requested information within two business days.

 

Board Disciplinary Actions and Procedures

MBP is authorized to enter premises where the board suspects that medicine is being practiced by an unlicensed individual, based on a formal complaint.The act conforms penalties for not filing certain reports relating to allied health professionals and prohibits licensed physicians, hospitals, or employers from employing uncertified radiation oncology/therapy technologists, medical radiation technologists, or nuclear medicine technologists.

 

Office-based, Medication-assisted Opioid Addiction Therapy

The act repeals the requirement that the board must establish or designate a program to train Maryland physicians who wish to apply for a waiver from the federal Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration to practice office-based, medication-assisted opioid addiction therapy.However, it retains the requirement for the board to educate physicians regarding this type of therapy.

 

Self-referral Investigations

The appropriate regulatory health occupations boards may investigate a self-referral claim.The Department of Health and Mental Hygiene and the Office of Attorney General must review the process for investigation of self-referral cases, recommend a revised investigative process, and report its finding and recommendations to the Governor and General Assembly by October 1, 2007.

 

Peer Review Decisions

MBP must enter into a written contract with an entity or individual for confidential peer review of allegations that a physician failed to meet appropriate standards of care.MBP must obtain two peer review reports for each allegation.To the extent practicable, a peer reviewer must be licensed and engaged in the practice of medicine in Maryland.By December 31, 2008, MBP must submit a report to the Governor and General Assembly regarding the number of complaints reviewed by two peer reviewers that resulted in disagreement and how many of these complaints resulted in charges against a licensee.

 

Specialized Administrative Hearings and Training

The Chief Administrative Law Judge must designate a pool of administrative law judges in the Office of Administrative Hearings (OAH) to hear MBP-referred cases.MBP must provide training at least annually to OAH on medical terminology, medical ethics, and, to the extent practicable, descriptions of basic medical and surgical procedures currently in use.

 

Administrative Changes

The act also makes various administrative and technical changes, including codifying MBP’s existing practice by allowing the board to impose a civil penalty of up to $100 per continuing medical education credit in lieu of a sanction, for a first offense, for failure of a licensee to obtain the required continuing education credits.

Effective Date:June 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 4/24/2007; Chapter #539

 

For more information, please contact:Sheila Higdon

 

 

SB 262Consent Provisions - Minors - Mental or Emotional Disorder

This act authorizes a psychologist, or medical staff of a hospital or public clinic under the psychologist’s advice or direction, to be added to those health care professionals who may—without the minor’s consent or over the minor’s express objection—give a parent, guardian, or custodian of a minor or the spouse of the parent, information about treatment for a mental or emotional disorder needed by the minor or provided to the minor.

 

If a psychologist is on a treatment team for a minor that is headed by a physician, the physician must decide whether a parent, guardian, or custodian of the minor or the spouse of the parent should receive information about treatment needed by the minor or provided to the minor.

 

Effective Date:October 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 4/24/2007; Chapter #140

 

For more information, please contact:Sheila Higdon

 

 

SB 472Mental Hygiene Law - Court Records Relating to a Petition for Emergency Evaluation -ConfidentialityThis act specifies that on or after January 1, 2006, all court records relating to a petition for an emergency evaluation of an individual believed to have a mental disorder and who presents a danger to the life or safety of the individual or others is confidential and its contents may not be divulged, by subpoena or otherwise, except by court order on good cause shown.This does not prohibit access to and confidential use of a petition by a law enforcement agency in the investigation and prosecution of the emergency evaluee or by the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene (DHMH) or a local health department, if either is providing treatment or care to an emergency evaluee who is the petition’s subject for a purpose relevant to the individual’s treatment or care.Within 180 days after DHMH or a local health department accesses a petition, either must submit a report to the court detailing the purposes for which the petition was used.

Effective Date:October 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 5/17/2007; Chapter #557

 

For more information, please contact:Sheila Higdon

 

 

SB 851Physicians - Unauthorized Practice of Medicine – Penalty

This act increases the penalty for the unauthorized practice of medicine, changing the offense from a misdemeanor to a felony.Upon conviction, an individual is subject to a fine of up to $100,000 or imprisonment of up to five years, or both.The act does not apply to a physician licensee in Maryland who fails to renew a license.

Effective Date:October 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 5/8/2007; Chapter #359

 

For more information, please contact:Sheila Higdon

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Health Insurance/Health Care Access

Early in the session, the Governor and the House leadership each introduced substantial proposals to address the rising number of Maryland’s uninsured and expand access to health care.The House plan to expand eligibility for Medicaid and the Maryland Children’s Health Program (MCHP) coverage to more than 100,000 uninsured individuals—funded by a $1 increase in the tobacco tax, savings from hospital uncompensated care, and the transfer of funds from the Maryland Health Insurance Plan Fund and the Maryland Health Care Provider Rate Stabilization Account and Fund—moved easily through its originating chamber, but was never brought to the Senate floor because of significant fiscal concerns.For its part, the Senate approved a much more modest expansion in a pared down version of the administration’s proposal, but that bill did not make it out of the House.

 

Despite the failure of any significant action to expand health care access, progress was made not only in bringing the issue to the forefront of debate but also in the passage of several limited reforms:

 

One measure requires the Maryland Health Care Commission (MHCC) to study the issue of personal responsibility for obtaining health care coverage, including incentives for individuals to purchase health insurance such as a tax credit or income tax surcharge.MHCC has announced that they will also study the feasibility and desirability of establishing a health insurance exchange to expand health coverage in the state, a component of the failed access bills.

 

The Family Coverage Expansion Act requires insurers to allow dependents to remain on their parents’ policy until the age of 25 and requires insurance policies that allow family coverage to provide the same benefits and eligibility that apply to other covered dependents to a domestic partner or the child of a domestic partner.There were also several bills promoting participation in wellness programs, including a bill authorizing insurers in the small group market to provide discounts of up to 20% for participation in a wellness program and another authorizing carriers to provide incentives for participation in a wellness program.

 

The General Assembly also approved an administration initiative to establish a Task Force on Health Care Access and Reimbursement to review health care provider reimbursement and the impact of reimbursement rates on access to care.Unlike hospitals, physicians do not recoup any uncompensated care expenses through Maryland’s rate setting system.Among its charges, the task force must develop recommendations regarding whether to enhance the ability of providers to negotiate reimbursement rates and whether to establish a rate-setting system for providers.The bill also requires review of several areas of medical malpractice law on which bills were introduced this session but failed.Hospital quality measurers and chronic care management were other key components of the health care access bills that did not pass.

 

In the area of Medicaid, a bill was passed clarifying that MCOs are subject to state laws governing the retroactive denial of claims.Another bill was passed requiring the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene to provide individuals transitioning between Maryland’s HealthChoice Medicaid Program and the Maryland Primary Adult Care Program (which gives low-income individuals access to primary care, mental health services, and prescription drugs), with continuity of care by enrolling them in the same MCO.In accordance with the federal Deficit Reduction Act of 2005, Maryland passed legislation requiring health insurers to provide the Department with information about individuals eligible for or enrolled in Medicaid in order for the state to coordinate benefits and assert Medicaid’s right of recovery.

 

 

HB 157Health Insurance - Prohibited Discrimination and Rebates - Incentives for Participation in Wellness Programs and Other ExceptionsThis act authorizes a health insurance carrier to provide reasonable incentives to enrollees for participation in a bona fide wellness program offered by the carrier.A bona fide wellness program is a program designed to prevent or detect disease or illness, reduce or avoid poor clinical outcomes, prevent complications from medical conditions, or promote healthy behaviors and lifestyle choices.

 

A carrier may not make participation in a wellness program a condition of coverage or impose a penalty on enrollees for nonparticipation.A carrier also may not require enrollees to achieve specific outcomes in order to receive an incentive for participation in a wellness program.Any incentive offered for participation must be reasonably related to the program and may not have a value that exceeds any limit established in regulations adopted by the Maryland Insurance Commissioner.

Effective Date:October 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 5/17/2007; Chapter #591

 

For more information, please contact:Tom Lewis

 

 

HB 339Health Insurance - Small Group Market - Health Benefit Plans – Rates

This act authorizes a health insurance carrier in the small group market to charge a rate that is 50% below or 40% above the community rate.Currently, the rate may be adjusted (for age and geographical location) to 40% below or 40% above the community rate.

 

This act also authorizes a health insurance carrier to offer a discount of up to 20% to a small employer for participation in a wellness program.A wellness program is a program or activity designed to improve health status and reduce health care costs, including programs and activities for smoking cessation, reduction of alcohol misuse, weight reduction, nutrition education, and automobile and motorcycle safety.

 

The Maryland Health Care Commission (MHCC) must adopt regulations by October 1, 2007 that require carriers to collect and report on participation, by rate band, in health benefit plans issued, delivered, or renewed under this act.By January 1, 2011, MHCC must report to the Governor and General Assembly on the effect of the 50% rate adjustment authorized under this act.

Effective Date:October 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 5/17/2007; Chapter #600

 

For more information, please contact:Tom Lewis

 

 

HB 0367Maryland Medical Assistance Program - Primary Adult Care Program - Enrollment in a Managed Care OrganizationThis act requires the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene to provide continuity of care for individuals transitioning between the Maryland Primary Adult Care Program (MPAC) and HealthChoice, Maryland’s Medicaid managed care program, by adopting regulations that establish a process through which individuals enrolled in Medicaid within 120 days of becoming eligible for MPAC are automatically enrolled in the same MCO in which the individual was enrolled under HealthChoice.The act further provides that if an individual was enrolled in MPAC within 120 days of becoming eligible for Medicaid, the individual must be automatically enrolled in the same MCO in which the individual was enrolled under MPAC.

Effective Date:October 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 4/10/2007; Chapter #75

 

For more information, please contact:Tom Lewis

 

 

HB 487Nonprofit Health Service Plans - Boards of Directors - Term Limits and Compensation

This act extends the term limit for board members of a nonprofit health service plan from two to three years, or from a total of six to nine years.

 

Board members may receive reimbursement for ordinary and necessary expenses, compensation for attendance at meetings, and an amount of base compensation to be proposed by the Compensation Committee of the board and annually reviewed by the Insurance Commissioner.The Compensation Committee must develop proposed guidelines for compensation of board members that is reasonable in comparison to compensation for board members of similar nonprofit health service plans.A copy of the approved guidelines must be provided to each board member and the Insurance Commissioner.

 

The Insurance Commissioner must annually review board member compensation and may issue an order prohibiting payment if the Commissioner finds that the compensation exceeds the amount authorized under the approved guidelines.By June 30 of every year, each nonprofit health service plan must submit a report to the Commissioner on the total amount of reimbursement for ordinary and necessary expenses, compensation for attendance at meetings, and base compensation paid to each board member in the preceding calendar year and the proposed annual compensation to be paid to board members in the next calendar year.

 

Effective Date:October 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 4/10/2007; Chapter #609

 

For more information, please contact:Tom Lewis

 

 

HB 519Health Insurance - Carrier Provider Panels - Nonphysician Specialists

This act requires health insurance carriers to establish and implement a procedure by which a member may request a referral to a nonphysician specialist who is not part of the carrier’s provider panel if the carrier cannot provide reasonable access to a nonphysician specialist with the expertise needed to treat a condition or disease.

Effective Date:October 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 4/24/2007; Chapter #142

 

For more information, please contact:Tom Lewis

 

 

HB 572Health Insurance - Personal Responsibility – Study

This act requires the Maryland Health Care Commission (MHCC), in consultation with other agencies, to study the issue of personal responsibility for obtaining health care coverage.

 

The study must consider:

����� the affordability of health insurance;

����� the need to subsidize health insurance for certain individuals;

����� the use of incentives to encourage individuals to purchase health insurance and what the level of the incentives would have to be to result in increased purchase of health insurance;

����� strategies to educate individuals and employers about the importance of health coverage;

����� whether individual responsibility should be accompanied by some form of employer responsibility;

����� enforcement issues;

����� potential reductions in uncompensated care and government expenditures from personal responsibility provisions; and

����� the need for religious exemptions from any proposed coverage requirement.

 

MHCC must report its findings by December 1, 2007.

Effective Date:Various

Signed by the Governor on 5/17/2007; Chapter #613

 

For more information, please contact:Tom Lewis

 

 

HB 579 Health Insurance - Authorization of Additional Products and Small Group Administrative Discounts and StudyThis act authorizes health insurance carriers to offer a preferred provider insurance policy so long as the policy does not restrict payment for covered services provided by nonpreferred providers for emergency services.Carriers that offer this type of product must also offer an option to include preferred and nonpreferred providers as an additional benefit which may require a greater premium.

 

The act also authorizes carriers to offer a limited benefit policy to employees who do not qualify for group coverage, such as temporary employees or employees who work less than 30 hours a week.Carriers that sell a limited benefit policy may require the employer to: collect premiums through payroll deduction, contribute to premium payments, and offer coverage to dependents.

 

The act also authorizes small group carriers to offer an administrative discount to small employers that purchase for their employees other insurance products, such as life insurance or disability insurance, sold by the carrier, provided that the discount is offered under the same terms and conditions for all qualifying small employers.

 

Effective Date:October 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 4/24/2007; Chapter #243

 

For more information, please contact:Tom Lewis

 

 

HB 1057Health Insurance - Family Coverage Expansion Act

This act requires individual and group health insurance policies and contracts that allow family coverage to provide, at the request of an insured or group policy holder, the same benefits and eligibility guidelines that apply to other covered dependents for a domestic partner or the child dependent of a domestic partner of the insured.

 

The act also requires insurers, nonprofit health service plans, and HMOs to allow a child dependent to remain on an insured’s plan until age 25.Each health insurance policy or contract issued in Maryland that provides coverage for dependents must: (1) include coverage for a child dependent; (2) provide the same benefits to a child dependent that are available to any other covered dependent; and (3) provide benefits to a child dependent at the same rate or premium applicable to any other covered dependent.Carriers must notify a parent, at least 60 days before a child covered under the parent’s policy turns 18 years of age, of the criteria under which a child may remain eligible for coverage as a child dependent.The Insurance Commissioner must establish and publish by bulletin the notice to be given.

 

The act further requires the Maryland Health Care Commission (MHCC), in consultation with the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene and the Maryland Insurance Administration, to study the high rate of uninsurance among young adults ages 19 to 29 and recommend ways to increase health insurance coverage for this population.MHCC must report its findings to the General Assembly by November 1, 2007.

 

Effective Date:October 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 5/17/2007; Chapter #639

 

For more information, please contact:Tom Lewis

 

 

HB 1082Managed Care Organizations - Retroactive Denial of Claims and Applicability of State Laws

This act provides that Medicaid MCOs are subject to the same restrictions governing retroactive denial of claims that apply to commercial insurance companies and clarifies that MCOs are not subject to state insurance laws with the exception of provisions that are specifically applied to all MCOs.The act also permits an MCO to retroactively deny a claim submitted for services provided to a Medicaid enrollee during a time period for which Medicaid has permanently retracted the capitation payment for the recipient from the MCO.

Effective Date:July 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 5/8/2007; Chapter #452

 

For more information, please contact:Tom Lewis

 

 

HB 1283Maryland Health Insurance Plan – Authority

This act authorizes the Maryland Health Insurance Plan (MHIP) to offer members an optional endorsement to remove a preexisting condition limitation placed on the policies of individuals who have not maintained continuous health insurance coverage.MHIP may charge an actuarially justified additional premium amount for the endorsement, subject to approval by the Insurance Commissioner.The act also permits MHIP to charge different premiums based on the cost-sharing arrangement when more than one cost-sharing arrangement is offered.

Effective Date:October 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 4/10/2007; Chapter #467

 

For more information, please contact:Tom Lewis

 

 

HB 1313Department of Health and Mental Hygiene - Maryland Medical Assistance Program - Information from and Liability of Health Insurance CarriersThis act requires health insurance carriers to provide the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene with information about individuals eligible for or enrolled in Medicaid so the department may determine whether an individual or the individual’s spouse or dependent is receiving health care coverage from a carrier and the nature of that coverage.Carriers must accept Medicaid’s right of recovery and the assignment to Medicaid of any right of an individual or other entity to payment from the carrier for an item or service for which payment has been made under Medicaid.

 

Carriers may not reject, deny, limit, cancel, refuse to renew, increase the rates of, affect the terms or conditions of, or otherwise affect a health insurance policy or contract for a reason based wholly or partly on the eligibility of the individual for receiving Medicaid benefits or the receipt by an individual of Medicaid benefits.

Effective Date:June 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 5/17/2007; Chapter #646

 

For more information, please contact:Tom Lewis

 

 

SB 107Task Force on Health Care Access and Reimbursement

This act establishes a fourteen-member Task Force on Health Care Access and Reimbursement staffed by the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene (DHMH) and chaired by the DHMH Secretary.The fourteen-member task force will include state government officials, two senators, two delegates, and six individuals appointed by the Governor.

The task force must examine:

         reimbursement rates and total payments to health care providers by specialty and geographic area and trends in such reimbursement rates and total payments;

         the impact of changes in reimbursement on access to health care, health care disparities, volume of services, and quality of care;

         the effect of competition on payments to health care providers;

         trends for health care provider shortages by specialty and geographic area and any impact on access and quality caused by such shortages;

         the amount of uncompensated care being provided by health care providers and trends in uncompensated care;

         the extent to which current reimbursement methods recognize and reward higher quality of care;

         methods used by large purchasers of health care to evaluate adequacy and cost of provider networks; and

         the practice by certain health insurance carriers of requiring health care providers who join a provider network of a carrier to also serve on a provider network of a difference carrier and the effect of this practice on health care provider payments and willingness to serve on provider networks of health insurance carriers.

 

The task force must develop recommendations regarding:(1) specific options available to change physician reimbursements, if needed; (2) the sufficiency of present statutory formulas for the reimbursement of noncontracting physicians by health maintenance organizations; (3) whether the Maryland Insurance Administration and the Attorney General have sufficient authority to regulate rate setting and market-related practices of health insurance carriers; (4) whether there is a need to enhance the ability of physicians and other health care providers to negotiate reimbursement rates with health insurance carriers; (5) whether there is a need to establish a rate-setting system for health care providers; (6) the advisability of the use of payment methods linked to quality of care or outcomes; and (7) the need to prohibit a health insurance carrier from requiring health care providers who join a provider network of the carrier to also serve on a provider network of a different carrier.A report of findings and recommendations is due by December 31, 2007.

Effective Date:July 1, 2007.

Signed by the Governor on 5/17/2007; Chapter #505

 

For more information, please contact:Tom Lewis

 

 

SB 952Health Insurance - Small Group Market - Choice of Policies for Sole Proprietors

This act permits self-employed individuals and sole proprietors enrolled in the small group market on September 30, 2005 to remain covered under any policy issued by the carrier to small employers and selected by the enrollee at renewal.

 

Legislation in 2005 made self-employed individuals and sole proprietors ineligible for health insurance coverage in the small group market.However, self-employed individuals and sole proprietors who were enrolled in the small group market on September 30, 2005 were permitted to remain covered with the same carrier on the same policy.

Effective Date:July 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 4/10/2007; Chapter #59

 

For more information, please contact:Tom Lewis

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Higher Education and Financial Aid

The legislature passed a bill again this year prohibiting an increase in resident undergraduate tuition at public institutions of higher education in Maryland.The state’s budget includes an additional $16.2 million in funding for the institutions to compensate for the loss in tuition revenue.After considerable debate, the General Assembly did not pass a bill that would have allowed undocumented immigrants to pay in-state tuition at public institutions of higher education in Maryland as long as they attended for two years and graduated from a Maryland high school.

 

Another unsuccessful controversial measure would have allowed Morgan State University to challenge the Maryland Higher Education Commission’s ruling that a new MBA program at Towson University would not constitute a duplicative academic program and therefore would be in compliance with Maryland’s desegregation agreement with the federal Office of Civil Rights.While the Senate version authorized judicial review, the House version authorized only mediation and binding arbitration, and the two chambers could not reconcile their differences.Similar legislation passed during the 2006 session but was vetoed by former Governor Ehrlich.

 

A bill was introduced and failed that would have required nonpublic institutions of higher education to submit annual reports on their respective programs to promote and enhance cultural diversity on their campuses.This measure easily passed the Senate but stalled in the House.Another bill establishes an Instructional Materials Access Guidelines Committee to facilitate the distribution of instructional materials for blind and print disabled students.

 

A bill which would have prevented senators and delegates from awarding scholarships to their relatives was introduced but failed; however, a bill passed increasing the annual maximum award for senatorial scholarships from $2,000 to the equivalent of annual tuition and fees at a University of Maryland System institution.

 

 

HB 19Task Force to Implement Holocaust, Genocide, Human Rights, and Tolerance Education –MembershipThis act alters the membership of the Task Force to Implement Holocaust, Genocide, Human Rights, and Tolerance Education.Rather than having two delegates and two senators, the membership of the task force will have one member from each chamber and two additional Maryland citizens.

Effective Date:June 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 5/82007; Chapter #373

 

For more information, please contact:Matt Greenwood

 

 

HB 134Higher Education - Tuition Affordability Act of 2007

This act prohibits the Board of Regents of the University of Maryland System institutions and Morgan State University from increasing resident undergraduate tuition for the 2007-08 academic year beyond the rates charged in the 2005-06 academic year.The state’s budget includes an additional $16.2 million in funding for the institutions to make up for the loss in tuition revenue.

Effective Date:July 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 5/8/2007; Chapter #294

 

For more information, please contact:Tom Lewis

 

 

HB 279Higher Education - Workforce Shortage Student Assistance Grants

This act provides more guidance to the Maryland Higher Education Commission (MHEC) and the Advisory Council on Workforce Shortage by defining a “public good or benefit,” which the advisory council must consider when making recommendations for workforce shortage fields that merit grant assistance.It also clarifies that students must earn at least twelve undergraduate credit hours or nine graduate credit hours per year to qualify for Workforce Shortage Student Assistance grants and authorizes MHEC to make awards to qualifying students during summer sessions.

Effective Date:June 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 5/17/2007; Chapter #594

 

For more information, please contact:Tom Lewis

 

 

HB 318Higher Education - Edward T. Conroy Memorial Scholarship Program – Eligibility

This act expands eligibility for the Edward T. Conroy Memorial Scholarship Program by eliminating the program’s Maryland residency requirement for the child or surviving spouse of a state or local public safety employee killed in the line of duty.

Effective Date:June 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 4/24/2007; Chapter #232

 

For more information, please contact:Tom Lewis

 

 

HB 538Higher Education - Dual Enrollment Grant Program

This act rescinds dually-enrolled students' eligibility for the Part-time Grant Program and establishes a new Dual Enrollment Grant Program to provide assistance to Maryland residents who are simultaneously enrolled in college and high school and demonstrate financial need.The Maryland Higher Education Commission (MHEC) must administer the Dual Enrollment Grant Program in cooperation with institutions of higher education.Program funds must be allocated to institutions of higher education based on the number of dually-enrolled students at each institution, and institutions that receive program funds must submit annual audits of the use of the funds.Scholarship funds retained by MHEC at the end of a fiscal year may be used for the Dual Enrollment Grant Program.The act terminates June 30, 2008.

 

By November 1, 2007, the Maryland Partnership for Teaching and Learning PreK-16 Council must provide the Governor and General Assembly with a comprehensive list of recommendations for overcoming barriers to dual enrollment and facilitating dual-enrollment opportunities.

Effective Date:June 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 5/8/2007; Chapter #297

 

For more information, please contact:Tom Lewis

 

 

HB 1056Higher Education - Blind and Print Disabled Students - Instructional Materials

This act requires the Maryland Library for the Blind and Physically Handicapped (LBPH) to convene an Instructional Materials Access Guidelines Committee in order to assist LBPH in developing guidelines to facilitate the distribution of instructional materials to blind and other print disabled students.At least two members of the committee are to be blind or print disabled.Beginning in fiscal year 2009, the Governor must include $200,000 for LBPH in the annual state budget to implement the act's requirements.

Effective Date:June 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 5/18/2007; Chapter #318

 

For more information, please contact:Tom Lewis

 

 

SB 604Higher Education - Senatorial Scholarships

This act increases the maximum annual award under the Maryland Senatorial Scholarship Program from $2,000 to the equivalent annual tuition and mandatory fees for a full-time resident undergraduate student at the University System of Maryland institution with the highest annual expenses, excluding the University of Maryland University College and the University of Maryland, Baltimore.With the increase, the $8,000 limit on the amount a student may receive over multiple years is likewise eliminated.The act also repeals limitations on the use of senatorial scholarship funds for summer study.

Effective Date:October 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 5/8/2007; Chapter #339

 

For more information, please contact:Tom Lewis

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Long-Term Care/Nursing Homes

In the area of aging, a number of bills establishing summer studies were passed this session.Specifically, these studies concern: the state’s options for increasing access to long-term care services for individuals at high risk of institutionalization because of cognitive or functional impairments; review of state regulation of nursing homes, including consideration of issues such as electronic monitoring, resident-directed care, and family councils; and the feasibility of developing urban senior care communities in Baltimore City.

 

An administration bill passed establishing a quality assessment fee on nursing facilities, which will be matched by federal funds and then returned to nursing facilities through increased Medicaid payments.As a result, nursing homes will receive an additional $26 million annually through their reimbursement rates.Thirty-two other states have established similar fee programs.

 

A bill to extend the termination of the pilot CommunityChoice Program, a managed care system for Medicaid enrollees receiving long-term care services, failed when the newly-appointed Secretary of Health and Mental Hygiene announced that it was anticipated that the federal government would deny the state’s waiver application as submitted and that the department would discontinue its efforts to implement the program.

 

 

HB 594Department of Health and Mental Hygiene - Long-Term Care Services for Cognitive and Functional Impairments - Study and AnalysisThis act requires the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, in consultation with stakeholders, to conduct a comprehensive study and analysis of the options available to the state to increase access to long-term care services.These services include home and community-based services such as adult medical day care for individuals at high risk of institutionalization because of cognitive impairments, mental illness, traumatic brain injury or other conditions, and who meet financial eligibility criteria.

 

The study must include:

         review of the provision of long-term care services in other states;

         determination of the feasibility of developing criteria for an alternative level of care and increasing access to long-term care services through the Federal Deficit Reduction Act, the State Plan Amendments, the Older Adults Waiver, and other options available to the state; and

         a cost-benefit analysis of the options examined, including the projected long-term savings to the state realized by the delay or reduction in need for the provision of care in hospitals or other institutional settings.

 

Effective Date:June 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 5/8/2007; Chapter #244

 

For more information, please contact:Sheila Higdon

 

 

HB 837Department of Health and Mental Hygiene - Regulation of Nursing Homes – Review

This act requires the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene (DHMH), in consultation with the Maryland Board of Nursing, the Maryland Board of Pharmacy, Mid-Atlantic LifeSpan, the Health Facilities Association of Maryland, the Oversight Committee on the Quality of Care in Nursing Homes and Assisted Living Facilities, and other interested parties to review current state laws and regulations, best practices, and experiences in other states regarding regulation of nursing homes in the state.By January 1, 2008, DHMH must report to the General Assembly on their review.

The report must include discussion of the following:

         status of and demand for electronic monitoring;

         resident-directed care and whether specific state regulations may be barriers to culture change and patients' rights;

         status and rights of family councils;

         communication between residents or their legal representatives and nursing homes; and

         whether specific state regulations should be changed to provide nursing homes with greater flexibility while maintaining safety.

 

Effective Date:October 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 5/8/2007; Chapter #436

 

For more information, please contact:Sheila Higdon

 

 

SB 101Nursing Facilities - Quality Assessment - Medicaid Reimbursement

This act authorizes the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene (DHMH) in fiscal years 2008-12 to impose a quality assessment on freestanding nursing homes with 45 or more beds.The assessment may not exceed 2% of the net operating revenues for all nursing homes, and the aggregate annual assessment may not exceed the amount necessary to fully fund the nursing home reimbursement system.All amounts collected by the state will be used to supplement nursing home reimbursement under the Medicaidprogram.These funds will be additional reimbursement to those facilities and may not supplant funds already appropriated for this purpose.

 

Beginning July 1, 2008, up to 25% of revenues from the quality assessment will be distributed to nursing homes based on accountability measures developed by DHMH in consultation with stakeholders.The measures should be objective, measurable, and when considered in combination with each other, deemed to have a correlation to residents’ quality of life and care.

 

DHMH must report annually to the General Assembly on the following:

         percentage and amount of the assessment charged to each nursing facility;

         the number of nursing facilities subject to this section with a net loss; and

         a comparison of the total amount provided in the Medicaid budget for nursing home reimbursement in the current fiscal year to the amount proposed for the upcoming fiscal year.

Effective Date:July 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 5/17/2007; Chapter #503

 

For more information, please contact:Sheila Higdon

 

 

SB 861Task Force - Urban Senior Care Communities in Baltimore City

This act establishes the Task Force to Study the Feasibility of Developing Urban Senior Care Communities in Baltimore City, staffed by the Department of Housing and Community Development.The task force must study the feasibility of developing senior care facilities in Baltimore City; investigate the use of tax credits to provide incentives for the private sector to develop senior care facilities; and investigate the use of Medicaid or Medicare funding for health care services needed by seniors at senior care facilities.The task force must submit a final report of its findings and recommendations to the General Assembly by December 31, 2007.

Effective Date:July 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 5/17/2007; Chapter #510

 

For more information, please contact:Sheila Higdon

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Medical Liability & Tort Reform

In a November 2006 decision in the case of Walzer v. Osborne, the Maryland Court of Appeals held that Maryland law requires courts to dismiss, without prejudice, any medical malpractice claim that fails to include the expert’s report attesting to departure from standards of care.In response to the Walzer decision, legislation was introduced that would have repealed the state’s legal requirement that a claim against a health care provider include an expert’s report.The bill was strongly opposed by hospitals and health care providers.It passed out of committee but received an unfavorable vote on the floor of the House; proponents tried, but were unsuccessful, in changing enough votes to file a motion for reconsideration.

 

Several bills that would have authorized the establishment of, or studied the feasibility of establishing, separate medical liability divisions in state circuit courts failed this session.Another failed bill would have required medical liability actions to be referred to a medical malpractice review board before being heard in court.A measure that would have established a no-fault cerebral palsy insurance fund also failed, in part because of the flaws found in Virginia’s birth-related neurological injury compensation program.

 

The General Assembly approved an increase in the medical malpractice insurance subsidy for family practitioners who provide obstetrical services at Garrett County Memorial Hospital.The difference between the enhanced subsidy and the existing subsidy is an average of $44,000 for each provider annually; there are two to four medical professionals who qualify.Without this measure, the physicians now providing obstetrical services in Garrett County would not be able to continue to do so.

 

For the first time since 2002, legislation was introduced aiming to replace Maryland’s contributory negligence liability standard with a comparative negligence standard for awarding damages that would have allowed plaintiffs to recover damages even if their own negligence contributed to their injuries.

 

HB 372Medical Malpractice Liability Insurance - Garrett County Memorial Hospital - Subsidy for FamilyPractitioners Who Also Perform Obstetrical ServicesThis act increases the subsidy from the Rate Stabilization Account for medical malpractice liability insurance policies issued to family practitioners who have staff privileges and provide obstetrical services at Garrett County Memorial Hospital.The amount of the increase in the subsidy is equal to 75% of the difference between the policyholder's premium for calendar year 2007, 2008, and 2009 and the premium that otherwise would be payable in those years if the policyholder was not providing obstetrical services.Under this act, funds necessary to pay for the increased subsidy must remain in the Rate Stabilization Account.This act terminates June 30, 2010.

Effective Date:July 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 4/24/2007; Chapter #175

 

For more information, please contact:Tom Lewis

 

 

HB 387Torts - Release of Claim for Damages – Voidable

This act increases from five days to 30 days the time period during which the signing of a tort claim release or a contract of employment with an attorney by an injured individual makes the release or contract voidable.According to this act, such a release or contract is voidable at the option of the injured individual within 60 days after the document is signed if it was signed by that individual within 30 days of sustaining the injuries, without the assistance of an attorney.Notice that a release is being voided by the injured individual must be in writing and accompanied by the return of any money paid to the injured individual.The release is void from the date the notice is mailed.

 

Effective Date:October 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 4/24/2007; Chapter #149

 

For more information, please contact:Tom Lewis

 

 

SB 309Civil Actions - Dismissal – Limitations

This act authorizes a party to commence a new health care malpractice action or claim for the same cause against the same party or parties if the original action or claim was dismissed for failure to file an attesting expert's report.The new action or claim must be commenced before the later of: 1) the expiration of the statue of limitations; 2) 60 days from the date of dismissal of the original action or claim; or 3) August 1, 2007, if the action or claim was dismissed on or after November 17, 2006 but before June 1, 2007.This does not apply to a voluntary dismissal of a civil action or claim by the party who commenced the action or claim.

 

Effective Date:October 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 5/8/2007; Chapter #324

 

For more information, please contact:Tom Lewis

 

 

SB 389Civil Actions - Liability of Insurer - Failure to Act in Good Faith

This act provides that, in a first-party property and casualty insurance claim, an insured who proves in a civil action that an insurer did not act in good faith may recover expenses and litigation costs in addition to actual damages under the policy.An insurer may not be found to have failed to act in good faith solely because of the time taken to investigate a claim so long as it is within the time specified in statue of regulation.

 

A complaint filed with Maryland Insurance Administration (MIA) must be accompanied by all documents that the insured has submitted to the insurer for proof of loss; specify the applicable insurance coverage and the amount of the claim; and state the amount of actual damages.The MIA must issue a decision within 90 days from the date of filing.Any party within 30 days after an adverse decision by MIA, may request a hearing conducted by the Office of Administrative Hearings or appeal to a circuit court.

 

Failure to act in good faith constitutes an unfair claim settlement practice for which the Insurance Commissioner may impose a fine up to $125,000.MIA may proceed with more severe sanctions against property and casualty insurers currently available under its enforcement authority if an insurance company’s failure to act in good faith in settling first-party claims is committed with the frequency to indicate a general business practice.

 

MIA is required to report annually to the General Assembly on the number and type of claims filed and their dispositions at the administrative and judicial levels.

 

Effective Date:October 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 4/24/2007; Chapter #150

 

For more information, please contact:Tom Lewis

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Minority Health Disparities

Like many other legislative initiatives this session, a bill to establish a health disparities grant program failed due to lack of funding.This bill would have required that $2.6 million from the Cigarette Restitution Fund annually be directed to the Office of Minority Health and Health Disparities.Established by the legislature in 2004, the office currently does not have a dedicated source of revenue.Legislation did pass ending Maryland’s status as one of only four states that prohibits health insurance carriers from collecting racial and ethnic data.

 

A bill was introduced again this year that have would required the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene to convene a workgroup to develop recommendations for requiring individuals licensed by health occupations boards to receive instruction in cultural competency as part of the licensure or license renewal process.This bill was withdrawn by its sponsor.Lawmakers did, however, pass a bill convening a Workgroup on Cultural Competency and Workforce Development for Mental Health Professionals that will study the advantages and disadvantages of adding cultural competency training to the licensing and certification requirements for mental health professionals.Also among its duties, the workgroup will develop recommendations on how best to facilitate the licensure or certification of foreign–born and foreign–trained mental health professionals.

 

To implement some of the recommendations of Department of Health and Mental Hygiene’s study of Sickle Cell Disease (SCD) in Maryland that was completed in December 2006, lawmakers established a Statewide Steering Committee on Services for Adults with Sickle Cell Disease. Among the steering committee’s charges is to seek grant funding to establish a case management system and a day infusion center for adults with SCD.

 

 

HB 524Workgroup on Cultural Competency and Workforce Development for Mental Health Professionals This act requires the Mental Health Transformation Working Group, in collaboration with the Mental Hygiene Administration and the Office of Minority Health and Health Disparities, to convene a Workgroup on Cultural Competency and Workforce Development for Mental Health Professionals.Representatives on the workgroup will include members of the General Assembly, representatives from relevant professional licensing boards, mental health care providers, advocacy and consumer groups, representatives from the Statewide Commission on the Shortage in the Healthcare Workforce and the Governor’s Workforce Investment Board, and other stakeholders including organizations that represent minority health professionals.

 

The workgroup is directed to address barriers to access to appropriate mental health services provided by health care professionals who are culturally competent to address the needs of the state’s diverse population.In addition, the workgroup is charged with examining: mental health workforce shortages and potential strategies to alleviate shortages; barriers to licensure and certification of foreign-born and foreign-trained mental health professionals; and the advantages and disadvantages of changing current licensing and certification requirements.Recommendations are due to the Governor, General Assembly, and the Joint Committee on Access to Mental Health Services by November 1, 2007.

 

Effective Date:July 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 5/8/2007; Chapter #412

 

For more information, please contact:Sheila Higdon

 

 

HB 788Health Insurance - Collection of Racial and Ethnic Data – Nondiscrimination

This act authorizes health insurance carriers to inquire about race and ethnicity in an insurance form, questionnaire, or other manner requesting general information, provided the information is used solely for the evaluation of quality of care outcomes and performance measurements, such as annual hospital report cards.The act prohibits these carriers from using race or ethnicity data to in any way affect the terms or conditions of a health insurance policy or contract.The Insurance Commissioner may refuse to renew, suspend, or revoke a certificate of authority or issue a cease and desist order to a carrier that uses racial or ethnic variations data in a prohibited manner.

 

Effective Date:October 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 4/10/2007; Chapter #26

 

For more information, please contact:Sheila Higdon

 

 

HB 793Sickle Cell Disease - Statewide Steering Committee on Services for Adults with Sickle Cell DiseaseThis act establishes the Statewide Steering Committee on Services for Adults with Sickle Cell Disease (SCD) to implement some of the recommendations of the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene's study of SCD in Maryland released December 2006 as required by legislation last session.The steering committee is charged with establishing institutional and community partnerships and a statewide network of stakeholders who care for adults with SCD; developing, implementing, and leading a state education and treatment program for adults with SCD; developing and implementing SCD awareness and education programs for health care providers; and seeking grant funding to develop and establish a case management system and an adult SCD day infusion center.

 

Effective Date:October 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 5/8/2007; Chapter #435

 

For more information, please contact:Sheila Higdon

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Prescription Drugs

The General Assembly approved pedigree requirements for wholesale distributors of prescription drugs to record each distribution of a certain drug.The Wholesale Distributor Permitting and Prescription Drug Integrity Act also requires that a workgroup be convened to recommend to the State Board of Pharmacy a target date, which can be no sooner than July 1, 2010, for implementing electronic track and trace pedigree technology.

 

Lawmakers extended the termination date for the Senior Prescription Drug Assistance Program (SPDAP) and authorized subsidies to be paid only on behalf of eligible individuals enrolled in a Medicare Part D prescription drug plan or Medicare Advantage Plan that agrees to coordinate state subsidies in accordance with federal requirements.The $14 million in funding for SPDAP is provided by CareFirst as a condition of earning its premium tax exemption as a nonprofit health service plan.

 

The legislature approved another measure authorizing up to $425,000 of the $3.2 million remaining from the now-defunct Senior Prescription Drug Program be given as a grant to the Maryland MedBank Program in FY 2008.The MedBank Program administers patient assistance programs for low-income individuals and is sponsored by pharmaceutical drug manufacturers.In the last five years, the program has received over $8 million in state appropriations.

 

 

HB 1004Maryland MedBank Program – Funding

This act authorizes a transfer of up to $425,000 in funds remaining from the now-defunct Senior Prescription Drug Program to be transferred to the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene for a grant to the Maryland MedBank Program in fiscal year 2008.

 

Effective Date:July 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 5/17/2007; Chapter #636

 

For more information, please contact:Sheila Higdon

 

 

HB 1030Wholesale Distributor Permitting and Prescription Drug Integrity Act

This act expands the requirements for a wholesale distributor of prescription drugs or devices to obtain a State Board of Pharmacy permit, repealing the existing statutory requirements.Permits are valid for two years, instead of the current one year, and may be renewed for an additional two years.The act also requires prescription drugs distributed outside the “normal distribution channel” to have a pedigree that records each distribution.

Before issuing a permit, the board must inspect the applicant’s place of business; find that board requirements are met; and determine that the applicant’s representative and the representative’s supervisor meet specified requirements.Permit applications must include fingerprints necessary to conduct a criminal background check.

The board may accept the accreditation of a wholesale distributor by an accreditation organization that has standards equal to or more stringent than state requirements.A warehouse distributor permit applicant must submit a surety bond of at least $100,000.Any person knowingly violating any provision of the act may be subject to a board-imposed fine of up to $500,000.By January 1, 2008, and each subsequent year, the board must report to the Governor and General Assembly on the act’s implementation.

 

The Secretary of Health and Mental Hygiene, in conjunction with the board, must convene a workgroup of manufacturers, distributors, and pharmacies that sell and distribute prescription drugs in Maryland to recommend to the board a target date for implementing electronic track and trace pedigree technology, which can be no sooner than July 1, 2010.

 

Effective Date:July 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 5/8/2007; Chapter #353

 

For more information, please contact:Tom Lewis

 

 

HB 1033Health Insurance - Prescription Drugs and Devices - Copayment or Coinsurance

This act prohibits insurers, nonprofit health service plans, and HMOs that provide coverage for prescription drugs and devices from imposing a copayment or coinsurance requirement that exceeds the retail price of the prescription drug or device.

 

Effective Date:October 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 5/17/2007; Chapter #638

 

For more information, please contact:Tom Lewis

 

 

SB 824Senior Prescription Drug Assistance Program - Modifications and Sunset Extension

This act extends the termination date for the Senior Prescription Drug Assistance Program (SPDAP) from December 31, 2007 to December 31, 2009.The current $14 million cap on CareFirst's subsidy of SPDAP is extended through fiscal year 2010.SPDAP is authorized to pay the subsidy only on behalf of eligible individuals enrolled in a Medicare Part D prescription drug plan or Medicare Advantage Plan that coordinates with SPDAP in accordance with federal requirements.The act also corrects obsolete statutory references.

 

Effective Date:June 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 5/17/2007; Chapter #508

 

For more information, please contact:Tom Lewis

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Public Health

Passage of the Clean Indoor Air Act was one of the big victories this session in the area of public health.Following action in February 2007 by the City Council to ban smoking in Baltimore, the statewide smoke free initiative gained considerable momentum.Initially, the House and Senate passed different versions of the bill, with the latter giving exemptions to private clubs.The final version that emerged from conference, however, made Maryland’s smoke free law one of the strongest in the nation.The smoking ban will take effect February 1, 2008, and although local health officials may issue waivers to businesses that can demonstrate undue financial hardship, all waivers will expire January 31, 2011 and will not be renewable.

 

A bill passed requiring the AIDS Administration to convene a workgroup to study the CDC’s revised guidelines on HIV testing, including test counseling and informed consent.Revised in September 2006, the guidelines recommend routine screening and the elimination of statutory requirements for informed consent and pre-test counseling.The legislature also passed emergency legislation repealing Maryland’s code-based HIV reporting system and establishing a name-based HIV reporting system.This change became necessary following Congress’s reauthorization of the Ryan White CARE Act in December 2006, which made name-based reporting a prerequisite for the $65 million the state receives in Ryan White funding annually.A bill passed establishing an Expedited Partner Therapy Pilot Program in the Baltimore City Health Department to provide antibiotics, free of charge, to sexual partners of patients diagnosed with chlamydia or gonorrhea without a personal clinical assessment of the partner.

 

In 2006 the CDC’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practice recommended that Gardasil, a vaccine to protect against HPV, be routinely given to girls at ages 11 and 12.Legislation was introduced mandating that all sixth grade girls receive the HPV vaccine but was withdrawn by its sponsor.Instead, a bill passed creating the HPV Vaccine Subcommittee in the Cervical Cancer Committee, on which it is stipulated that a Johns Hopkins representative will be a member.Also in the area of student health, two separate bills were adopted requiring the Department of Education and the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene to provide awareness and training on inhalant abuse and self-mutilation for directors of student services in local education agencies.

 

The legislature established a Charles County Prostate Cancer Pilot Program to increase access to prostate cancer screening and services in Charles County, which has consistently held the highest prostate cancer incidence rates in Maryland over the last decade.Funding is subject to the limitations of the state budget.Lawmakers also established an Oral Health Safety Net Program this session following reports of a child who died from an infection caused by an abscessed tooth because the child’s family did not have access to dental care.This program is also subject to the limitations of the state budget.

 

An administration bill was passed requiring the Statewide Advisory Commission on Immunizations to make recommendations on the viability of establishing a universal vaccine purchasing system.Hoping to build on the precedent established by the recent action of the New York City Board of Health to ban artificial trans fat in restaurants, lawmakers introduced several bills to establish an artificial trans fat ban in Maryland.The bills all failed.Also in the area of public health, a bill was passed requiring MedChi and the Maryland Hospital Association to convene a workgroup to consider whether the injury reporting requirements currently in place in ten Maryland jurisdictions—not including Baltimore City or Baltimore County—should be extended statewide.Those requirements include criminal penalties for non-reporting.The penalties will be among the issues reviewed.

 

 

HB 30Oral Health Safety Net Program

This act establishes an Oral Health Safety Net Program within the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene's Office of Oral Health (OOH) to provide start-up funding to expand oral health capacity for underserved low-income and disabled individuals, including individuals enrolled in the Medical Assistance Program and the Children's Health Program.The OOH will solicit proposals from local health departments, FQHCs, and entities providing dental services within state facilities for the purpose of issuing grants to support collaborative and innovative ways to increase dental provider capacity for the underserved.

 

Subject to the limitations of the state budget, OOH will award grants, placing priority on those that target regions of the state where oral health services are most scarce for low-income, disabled, and Medicaid populations and that outline how the potential grantee will maximize resources.Also subject to the state budget, OOH will contract with a licensed dentist who will provide expertise in dental public health issues and provide for appropriate continuing education courses for providers that offer oral health treatment to the underserved.

 

By December 1, 2007, the Secretary of Health is required to report to the Governor and General Assembly on the annual cost to provide comprehensive oral health services in all programs funded by the MarylandMedical Assistance Program, the amount of state revenues spent on somatic health services related to the lack of comprehensive oral health care, and the number of dental providers in each jurisdiction providing care to the uninsured/underinsured, the number of residents served, and the dental providers' capacity to provide additional services.

 

The OOH will evaluate the program annually and report its findings to the Governor and General Assembly.The act sunsets in four years.

 

Effective Date:October 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 5/17/2007; Chapter #528

 

For more information, please contact:Sheila Higdon

 

 

HB 216HIV Testing - Exposure - Forensic Scientist

This act adds a forensic scientist working under the direction of a law enforcement agency to the definition of a "public safety worker" under disease prevention provisions providing a right to HIV testing in the event of an exposure.

 

Effective Date:October 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 5/17/2007; Chapter #227

 

For more information, please contact:Sheila Higdon

 

 

HB 781Human Immunodeficiency Virus - Test Counseling and Informed Consent – Review

This act requires the AIDS Administration to convene a workgroup of HIV infected individuals, HIV/AIDS advocacy organizations, HIV service providers, and other stakeholders to review and make recommendations regarding the CDC guidelines on HIV/AIDS, including pre- and post-test counseling and written informed consent.The workgroup must consider best practices, research, and data regarding treatment for HIV/AIDS and report on its recommendations to the Governor and General Assembly by January 1, 2008.

 

Effective Date:June 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 4/24/2007; Chapter #183

 

For more information, please contact:Jessica Best

 

 

HB 850Alcohol and Drug Abuse Administration - Needs Assessment

This act requires the Alcohol and Drug Abuse Administration to conduct a needs assessment every three years that identifies the financial and treatment needs of each jurisdiction and of each drug treatment program operated by the state.

 

Effective Date:October 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 4/10/2007; Chapter #82

 

For more information, please contact:Sheila Higdon

 

 

HB 1253HIV Testing - Prohibited Exposure - Forensic Scientists

This act includes a forensic scientist, working under the direction of a law enforcement agency, who is exposed to HIV while acting in the performance of duty to the definition of a "victim" under provisions providing a right to HIV testing.

 

Effective Date:October 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 4/10/2007; Chapter #97

 

For more information, please contact:Sheila Higdon

 

 

HB 1270Maryland HIV/AIDS Reporting Act

This act repeals Maryland’s unique identifier HIV reporting system and establishes a name-based HIV reporting system.

 

A physician who has diagnosed a patient with HIV must immediately submit a report to the local health officer that includes the name, age, race, sex, and residence address of the patient on a form provided by the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene.A physician must also submit such a report within 48 hours of the birth of an infant whose mother has tested positive for HIV.If the infant does not become HIV positive within 18 months of submission of the report, the Secretary of Health and Mental Hygiene must remove the infant’s name from the HIV registry.

 

A hospital that has an individual in its care with a diagnosis of HIV or AIDS must submit a report to the local health officer within 48 hours that includes the name, age, race, sex, residence address of the patient, name of the administrative head of the institution, and address of the institution.The director of a medical laboratory must submit a report to the Health Secretary within 48 hours of a specimen showing evidence of any CD 4+ count or HIV.

 

All HIV and AIDS reports from physicians, hospitals, or laboratories are not medical records and are confidential, not discoverable, and not admissible in evidence in any civil actions.

 

Any person who knowingly and willfully discloses personal identifying health information acquired for the purposes of HIV and AIDS reporting is guilty of a misdemeanor and on conviction is subject to a $1,000 fine for a first offense and a $5,000 fine for each subsequent conviction.Any person who knowingly and willfully requests or obtains information on HIV and AIDS under false pretenses or through deception on conviction is subject to a maximum of five years in prison and/or a $100,000 fine.If the offense is committed with intent to sell, transfer, or use individually identifiable information for commercial advantage, personal gain, or malicious harm, a violator on conviction is subject to a maximum of ten years in prison and/or a $250,000 fine.

 

A physician, hospital, or laboratory that in good faith submits a report or discloses information in accordance with the act is not liable in any action arising from the disclosure of the information.

 

Effective Date:Emergency

Signed by the Governor on 4/24/2007; Chapter #213

 

For more information, please contact:Jessica Best

 

 

SB 9State Department of Education and Department of Health and Mental Hygiene - Student Surveys WorkgroupThis act requires the Maryland State Department of Education (MSDE) and the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene (DHMH) to establish a workgroup to evaluate and reduce the impact on schools of administering, and on students of taking, various health-related risk surveys with similar or overlapping content, while still collecting valid data that meet the legal data collection responsibilities of the two departments.The workgroup will include representatives from MSDE, DHMH, local school districts of varying size, local health departments of varying size, at least one parent with a child in public school, and an epidemiologist.The workgroup must study the feasibility of coordinating the administration of multiple health-related surveys or of administering a single survey by incorporating the Maryland Adolescent Survey and the Youth Tobacco Survey into the CDC Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance System Survey.The workgroup must submit a report of its findings and recommendations to the Governor and General Assembly by September 1, 2008.

 

Effective Date:October 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 5/8/2007; Chapter #306

 

Forr more information, please contact:Sheila Higdon

 

 

SB 91Clean Indoor Air Act of 2007

This act expands the state's indoor smoking ban to bars and restaurants beginning February 1, 2008.It does not apply to research or educational laboratories conducting research into the health effects of tobacco smoke.

 

Local health officials may grant waivers to businesses that can demonstrate undue financial hardship, but all waivers will terminate January 31, 2011 and will not be renewable.The act also allows counties and municipalities to enact more stringent measures.

 

Penalties for violation are as follows: for a first violation, a written reprimand; for a second violation, a $100 civil penalty; and for each subsequent violation, a penalty not less than $250.Any funds collected from the civil penalties will go to the Cigarette Restitution Fund.The act also stipulates penalties for employers that discharge or discriminate against any employees that have taken action against an employer suspected of violating the smoking ban.

 

Effective Date:October 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 5/17/2007; Chapter #501

 

For more information, please contact:Sheila Higdon

 

 

SB 105Statewide Advisory Commission on Immunizations - Duties and Sunset Extension

This act extends the termination date for the Statewide Advisory Commission on Immunizations from May 31, 2008 to May 31, 2010, adds an additional member who is a representative from a health insurance carrier, and specifies that in addition to the commission’s existing duties, it must consider the development of a universal vaccine purchasing program and provide an update on the use of thimerosal in vaccines.

 

In the commission’s annual evaluation of and report on vaccines that is due on December 15, 2007, the commission must make recommendations on whether the state should consider implementing a universal vaccine purchasing system, or some similar action.In developing its recommendations, the commission must:

         consult with stakeholders;

         review the structure, cost, scope, success, and implementation issues of similar programs in other states;

         consider any existing state or federal programs or funds, or any other sources of funds, that could be used for any proposed new program;

         provide a range of policy, structure, cost, and scope options to be considered in any proposed new program;

         consider the feasibility and advisability of requiring the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene to reimburse vaccine administration on a per-antigen basis as an alternative to reimbursing on a per-dosage basis;

         consider all options for requiring carriers to reimburse providers adequately for the full cost of immunizations, including acquisition and overhead; and

         consider the feasibility of publicizing a list of wholesale vendors and the prices charged by each vendor for vaccines.

 

Effective Date:July 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 5/17/2007; Chapter #504

 

For more information, please contact:Sheila Higdon

 

 

SB 283Charles County Prostate Cancer Pilot Program

This act establishes the Charles County Prostate Cancer Pilot Program to fund prostate cancer screening, treatment, and education services for uninsured and economically challenged men.The program will be open to men who are at least 50 years of age, and to men who are at least 35 years of age and are at high risk for prostate cancer on the advice of a physician or at the request of the individual.It will be funded as provided in the state budget and through grants distributed by the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene (DHMH) to the local health department or an FQHC in Charles County.By September 2010, DHMH is required to report to the General Assembly on the number of individuals screened and treated by the program, including racial and ethnic data, and any cost savings achieved by the program a result of early detection of prostate cancer.

 

Effective Date:October 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 5/17/2007; Chapter #541

 

For more information, please contact:Sheila Higdon

 

 

SB 339Drug Treatment - Maryland State Drug and Alcohol Abuse Council - Study of the State's Approach to Drug TreatmentThis act requires the Maryland State Drug and Alcohol Abuse Council to include in its two-year strategic plan a review of the state's approach to drug treatment, including a review of the appropriate location of treatment services and the use of employment and housing services for individuals in treatment.

 

Effective Date:June 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 4/24/2007; Chapter #145

 

For more information, please contact:Sheila Higdon

 

 

SB 349Disease Prevention - Sexually Transmitted Diseases - Expedited Partner Therapy Pilot Program This act establishes the Expedited Partner Therapy Pilot Program in the Baltimore City Health Department to provide antibiotic therapy to any sexual partner of a patient diagnosed with chlamydia or gonorrhea by a health care provider without making a personal clinical assessment of the patient's partner.

 

The Baltimore City Health Department must report to the Governor and General Assembly on the operation and performance of the program by December 31, 2007.The act terminates July 1, 2010.

 

Effective Date:July 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 4/24/2007; Chapter #146

 

For more information, please contact:Sheila Higdon

 

 

SB 774Cervical Cancer Committee - HPV Vaccine Subcommittee

This act establishes a subcommittee on the Human Papillomavirus (HPV) Vaccine within the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene’s existing Cervical Cancer Committee of the Maryland Comprehensive Cancer Control Plan.The subcommittee, whose membership of fourteen includes a representative from Johns Hopkins, must:

         examine federal and state programs relating to the HPV vaccine;

         develop a public awareness and education campaign about the vaccine with an emphasis on parental education;

         evaluate the availability and affordability of the vaccine;

         identify barriers to the vaccine’s administration to all recommended individuals;

         identify and evaluate various resources to cover the vaccine’s costs; and

         identify and evaluate appropriate mechanisms Maryland may use to increase access to the vaccine.

 

Annually on September 1, the subcommittee must report its findings and recommendations to the committee.These findings and recommendations must be included in the committee’s findings and recommendations for the annual State Council on Cancer Control report.

 

Effective Date:July 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 5/17/2007; Chapter #190

 

For more information, please contact:Sheila Higdon

 

 

SB 938Public Health - Injury Reports – Workgroup

This act requires the Maryland Hospital Association, the Maryland State Medical Society, the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, the Maryland State Police, and other interested stakeholders to convene a workgroup to develop recommendations regarding the reporting requirements for injuries caused or showing evidence as having been caused by an automobile accident or a lethal weapon.The recommendations must include whether reporting requirements, currently limited to ten counties within the state, should be applicable statewide; what injuries should be reported; who should be required to report and when; and what penalties should be imposed for failing to report.The workgroup must report its recommendations to the General Assembly by December 1, 2007.

 

Effective Date:October 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 5/17/2007; Chapter #206

 

For more information, please contact:Sheila Higdon

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Workers’ Compensation

Several measures were introduced pertaining to workers’ compensation in Maryland.A bill was passed increasing the membership of the Joint Committee on Workers’ Compensation Benefit and Insurance Oversight from fourteen to fifteen to include a certified rehabilitation service provider.Also passed was a bill which requires the Injured Worker’s Insurance Fund (IWIF) to provide a cost of living adjustment for permanent total disability payments arising from injuries occurring before January 1, 1998.Another successful measure requires a health care provider to disclose a medical record on receipt of an authorization for the release of medical information that is included with a claim application filed with the Workers’ Compensation Commission.Legislation failed that would have made written medical records admissible evidence in a workers’ compensation appeal.

 

HB 184Joint Committee on Workers' Compensation Benefit and Insurance Oversight – Membership

This act increases the membership of the Joint Committee on Workers’ Compensation Benefit and Insurance Oversight from fourteen to fifteen members.The additional member will be appointed jointly by the Senate President and the Speaker of the House of Delegates and must be certified by the Workers’ Compensation Commission as a Maryland rehabilitation service provider.

 

Effective Date:October 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 4/24/2007; Chapter #225

 

For more information, please contact:Tom Lewis

 

 

HB 1006Workers' Compensation - Benefits - Cost of Living Adjustment

This act requires the Injured Workers’ Insurance Fund (IWIF) to provide a cost-of-living adjustment (COLA) for permanent total disability payments arising from events occurring before January 1, 1988.Nongovernmental units, counties, and municipal corporations are authorized to provide a COLA for pre-1988 events at their discretion.

 

The act applies retroactively to affect compensation paid by IWIF on or after October 1, 2006.

 

Effective Date: October 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 5/8/2007; Chapter #446

 

For more information, please contact:Tom Lewis

 

 

SB 600Workers' Compensation Commission - Authorization for Release of Medical Information - Work-Related Injury or Occupational DiseaseThis act requires a health care provider to disclose a medical record on receipt of an authorization for the release of relevant medical information that is included with a claim application filed with the Workers' Compensation Commission.

 

A claim application filed with the Commission must include an authorization by the claimant for the release of medical information, including information on the member of the body that was injured and a description of how the injury occurred.An authorization for the release of medical information includes the release of information relating to the history, findings, patient charts, files, examination and progress notes, and physical evidence.The authorization is effective for one year from the date the claim is filed and does not restrict the redisclosure of medical information to a medical manager, health care professional, or certified rehabilitation practitioner.If the medical provider determines that information being requested is not relevant to the injured body part, the requestor will need to obtain a subpoena from the Workers' Compensation Commission in order for the information to be provided by the medical provider.

 

Effective Date:October 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 4/24/2007; Chapter #167

 

For more information, please contact:Tom Lewis

 

 

SB 765Workers' Compensation Insurance - Notice – Premiums

This emergency act extends commercial insurance policy renewal notification requirements to workers’ compensation insurance policyholders.Insurers must notify workers’ compensation insurance policyholders of increases in renewal premiums of 20% or more at least 45 days prior to the expiration of a policy.Notification must include telephone contact information for reaching the insurer.

 

If an insurer requests information from a worker’s compensation insurance policyholder to determine the renewal policy premium, the insurer is required to provide a reasonable estimate of the renewal premium if the insurer does not receive the requested information.In determining the amount of a premium increase, an insurer is not required to include premium resulting from change in exposure, application of an experience or retrospective rating plan, or an audit of the insured.

 

Effective Date:Emergency measure

Signed by the Governor on 5/17/2007; Chapter #575

 

For more information, please contact:Tom Lewis

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Miscellaneous

A bill passed requiring voter-verified paper voting records for Maryland elections, contingent upon the inclusion of sufficient funding, estimated to be $15 million, in the FY 2009 budget.

 

Legislation failed that would have established a summer learning pilot program in public elementary schools.The Johns Hopkins Center for Summer Learning strongly supported this measure.

 

The General Assembly established a Baby Boomer Initiative Council consisting of state officials and members of the business, education, and aging communities.As amended, the council will include the director of the Johns Hopkins University Center on Aging and Health, or the director’s designee, among its members.The bill also requires the University of Maryland and Johns Hopkins representatives to jointly initiate a study documenting the economic and social impact of older workers.

 

 

HB 18Election Law - Voting Systems - Voter-Verified Paper Records

This act adds new certification requirements, including the creation of a voter-verifiable paper record (contingent upon the inclusion of sufficient funding in the fiscal year 2009 budget), increased accessibility for people with disabilities, and training for election judges.

 

A voter-verifiable paper record includes paper ballots prepared by a voter: to be read by an optical scan machine, to be mailed to a local board, or through the use of a ballot marking device.It must be an individual document physically separated from any other similar document and not part of a continuous roll.

 

The State Board of Elections must conduct an evaluation of the voting system to assess its accessibility and usability by voters with disabilities, including a public demonstration of the system and an evaluation by individuals representing a cross-section of voters with disabilities.At least one voting system in each polling place must provide access to voters with disabilities, and the board must ensure that adequate backup equipment is available and contingency plans are established.

 

Election judges must be provided with uniform statewide training on the voting system, including all features that allow access to voters with disabilities and the rights of voters with disabilities.

 

Effective Date:July 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 5/17/2007; Chapter #548

For more information, please contact:Matt Greenwood

 

 

HB 599The Baby Boomer Initiative Act

This act establishes a Baby Boomer Initiative Council consisting of representatives of the Departments of Aging, Education, Business and Economic Development, Health and Mental Hygiene; the dean (or designee) of the University of Maryland’s College of Health and Human Performance; representatives of United Seniors of Maryland and the AARP of Maryland; and the director (or designee) of the Johns Hopkins University Center on Aging and Health.The Governor will designate the chair.

 

The council is charged with the following:

         developing recommendations for addressing the needs of the baby boomer population;

         making recommendations for using baby boomers as a source of social capital and developing multigenerational civic activities for baby boomers following their exit from career-track work;

         making recommendations to the Maryland Department of Aging on outreach to business, nonprofit organizations, and state agencies; and

         studying and documenting health benefits derived from baby boomers’ active engagement in intergenerational civic activities.

 

The representatives from the University of Maryland and Johns Hopkins will jointly initiate a study to document the economic and social impact of older workers.By December 31, 2008, and each year thereafter, the council must report its findings to the Governor and General Assembly.The act terminates December 31, 2011.

 

Effective Date:October 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 5/17/2007; Chapter #507

 

For more information, please contact:Tom Lewis

 

 

HB 1071Child Fatality Review Teams - Access and Disclosure of Information

This act allows a local child fatality review team to investigate the information and records of a child convicted of a crime or adjudicated as having committed a delinquent act that caused a death or near fatality.Upon request, information and records, including information on prenatal care, maintained by a health care provider regarding such a child or a child whose death is being reviewed must be provided.

 

A local team must also have access to all information and records maintained by state and local government entities that provided services to such a child or the child’s family.However, information identifying such a child, deceased or not, or a member of a child’s family or an alleged or suspected perpetrator of abuse or neglect upon a child may not be disclosed during a public meeting.Information regarding the involvement of any agency with such a child also may not be disclosed during a public meeting.

 

Effective Date:October 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 4/24/2007; Chapter #264

 

For more information, please contact:Tom Lewis

 

 

HB 1425Insurance Producers - Use of Trade Name

This act prohibits a licensed insurance producer from using any name other than the name in which the license is issued or a trade name filed with the Maryland Insurance Commissioner to engage in any activity for which a license is required.Licensees are required to file name changes with the Commissioner.Under this act, "trade name" means a name, symbol, word, or combination thereof that a person uses to identify its business, occupation, or self in a business capacity and to distinguish itself from another business, occupation, or person.

 

Effective Date:October 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 4/10/2007; Chapter #109

 

For more information, please contact:Tom Lewis

 

 

HB 1432Insurance - Analyses and Examination Reports - Use and Sharing of Documents, Materials, andInformation This act authorizes the Maryland Insurance Commissioner to conduct an analysis of insurance entities and adds an entity’s financial condition to the list of items that the Commissioner may examine or analyze.It also revises requirements for the disclosure of a preliminary examination report, investigation report, or any other matter related to an examination.

 

Under the act, a document, material, or information that is obtained during specified examinations or analyses by the Commissioner is: (1) confidential and privileged; (2) not subject to the public records provisions of the Public Information Act; (3) not subject to a subpoena; and (4) not subject to discovery or admissible in evidence in any private civil action.The Commissioner may use any document, material, or information obtained during an examination or analysis to further any regulatory or legal action brought as part of the Commissioner’s duties.

 

If the recipient agrees to maintain the confidentiality and privileged status, the Commissioner may share a document, material, or information obtained during an examination or analysis with other state, federal, or international regulatory agencies; the National Association of Insurance Commissioners or its affiliates or subsidiaries; or state, federal, or international law enforcement authorities.

 

The Commissioner may also receive a document, material, or information from these entities but must maintain as confidential and privileged any document, material, or information received with notice or the understanding that it is confidential or privileged under the laws of the jurisdiction that is its source.

 

Effective Date: October 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 4/10/2007; Chapter #110

 

For more information, please contact:Tom Lewis

 

 

SB 6Human Services

This act adds a new Human Services Article to the Annotated Code of Maryland and is part of a long-term project to revise and update Maryland's laws in a way that makes them more understandable and more easily researched.This session’s legislation revises, restates, and recodifies the laws which relate to the Department of Human Resources and its component parts of social services (departments of Disabilities, Juvenile Services, and Aging).The intent of this revision is to avoid any substantive change while transforming the law to a more readable, modern style.

Effective Date:October 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 3/22/2007; Chapter #3

 

For more information, please contact:Tom Lewis

 

 

SB 7Human Services Article - Cross-References and Corrections

This act corrects cross-references to the Annotated Code of Maryland to reflect the structure of the new Human Services Article, as established by Senate Bill 6.

Effective Date:October 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 4/10/2007; Chapter #8

 

For more information, please contact:Tom Lewis

 

 

SB 57Education - Teachers - State and Local Aid Program for Certification by the National Board for Professional Teaching StandardsThis act extends the termination date of the State and Local Aid Program for Certification by the National Board for Professional Teaching Standards (NBPTS) from May 31, 2008 to June 30, 2013, and makes the following program enhancements: eligibility is extended to teachers who are seeking recertification; the annual participation limit is increased from 750 to 1,000 teachers; and the State Board of Education is authorized to fund, through the program, up to one retake of an unsuccessful entry on the NBPTS assessment.The act also requires the Maryland State Department of Education to include in its annual budget request the total amount of money needed to fund the full number of eligible program participants.

Effective Date:October 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 5/8/2007; Chapter #309

 

For more information, please contact:Tom Lewis

 

 

SB 1022Group Life Insurance - Additional Insureds - Domestic Partners

This act authorizes an insurer to extend insurance coverage under a group life insurance policy to the domestic partner of an insured employee or member who elects to obtain that coverage.Such coverage is treated in the same manner as coverage for a spouse or dependent child.Under the act, “domestic partner” has the meaning stated in the policy.

 

Effective Date:October 1, 2007

Signed by the Governor on 5/17/2007; Chapter #586

 

For more information, please contact:Tom Lewis

 

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STAFF CONTACT INFORMATION
Please contact Government Relations if you have concerns or would like additional information. Your input assists us greatly in evaluating and formulating the position of Johns Hopkins on all legislation.

 

Legislative Session Office
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Annapolis, MD 21401

phone: 410-269-0057
fax: 410-269-1574

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Phone: 443-287-9900



Jessica Best

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