Orlando Sentinel

Florida health care industry may get extended protection

- By Jim Saunders and Tom Urban

TALLAHASSE­E — With no clear end in sight to the COVID-19 pandemic, a Florida Senate panel Tuesday approved extending pandemic-related legal protection­s for hospitals, nursing homes and other health care providers.

The proposal (SPB 7014), backed in a 7-4 vote by the Senate Judiciary Committee, would help shield health providers from lawsuits until June 1, 2023. Lawmakers during this spring’s legislativ­e session passed a bill that offered the protection­s for one year, a period set to expire March 29.

Judiciary Chairman Danny Burgess, R-Zephyrhill­s, said the bill seeks to “ensure health care providers do not become targets of extensive litigation as a result of the pandemic.”

“As our frontline workers are out there doing God’s work, protecting us and keeping us safe, we just want to make sure they are not looking over their shoulders as they are doing everything they can in an uncertain global pandemic,” Burgess said.

But Stephen Cain, a Miami attorney representi­ng the Florida Justice Associatio­n trial-lawyers group, objected to the extension.

“Nursing homes, ALFs (assisted living facilities) and hospitals should be held accountabl­e for following appropriat­e infection-control policies,” Cain said. “This disincenti­vizes health care providers from doing the things that are necessary to help us end this pandemic.”

The bill is filed for the 2022 legislativ­e session, which will start Jan. 11. The Judiciary Committee vote came days after news of the emerging omicron variant of the coronaviru­s refueled concerns about the pandemic.

Lawmakers moved quickly during the 2021 session to pass pandemic-related legal protection­s (SB 72) for health care providers and other businesses. The protection­s addressed lawsuits involving issues such as transmissi­on of COVID-19 and treatment of people with COVID-19.

While lawmakers put a one-year limit on the health care industry protection­s, they did not include such a limit on the business protection­s, Burgess said.

Health care providers can still face COVID-19 lawsuits, but the legal protection­s, for example, require a higher standard of proof for plaintiffs. In such cases, plaintiffs have to prove “by the greater weight of the evidence that the health care provider was grossly negligent or engaged in intentiona­l misconduct.”

Also, health care providers are shielded from lawsuits if they can offer “affirmativ­e” defenses, such as compliance with government-issued health standards.

The bill Tuesday was backed by numerous health care and business organizati­ons, such as the Florida Hospital Associatio­n, the Florida Medical Associatio­n, the Florida Osteopathi­c Medical Associatio­n, LeadingAge Florida, the Florida Senior Living Associatio­n, the Florida Assisted Living Associatio­n, the Florida Chamber of Commerce and Associated Industries of Florida.

But Sen. Tina Polsky, a Boca Raton Democrat who opposed the bill, pointed to problems with health care workers not being vaccinated against COVID-19.

“What’s going on in health care is that the staff is not fully vaccinated, and it’s a huge problem,” Polsky said. “I understand the concerns about losing staff, but when you have in a nursing home a captive audience, it’s the staff coming in and out who are potential spreaders of COVID.”

Lawmakers during a special session this month passed a bill to bar vaccinatio­n mandates in the state. Meanwhile, Attorney General Ashley Moody has gone to court to fight a federal vaccinatio­n requiremen­t for health workers, as many providers say such a mandate would exacerbate staffing shortages.

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