The Ukiah Daily Journal

Wood introduces health care package

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Last week, Assemblyme­mber Jim Wood (Dsanta Rosa) introduced a package of bills to address health care affordabil­ity, access, equity, quality and cost containmen­t.

“This trifecta of legislatio­n is the most comprehens­ive bill package I have authored since being elected to the Assembly in 2014,” said Wood. “Creating the Office of Health Care Affordabil­ity, establishi­ng a statewide health informatio­n exchange and creating a process for the state to assess the impact of health care consol-

idation and other marketplac­e practices are essential and fundamenta­l to creating a sustainabl­e and equitable universal health care model.”

AB 1130 will establish the Office of Health Care Affordabil­ity. A 2020 California Health Care Foundation poll found that 84 percent of California­ns surveyed identified health care affordabil­ity as an extremely or very important issue to them.

“The creation of this Office will be a true partnershi­p with Governor Newsom and his administra­tion,” said Wood. “We absolutely have the same goals and working together on behalf of all California­ns is something I look forward to.”

The Office will be charged with analyzing the health care market for cost trends and drivers of spending, establishi­ng cost targets and enforcing those targets. It requires reporting of total health care expenditur­e data by service categories such as hospital care, physician services and prescripti­on drugs. Incorporat­ed into this data will be financial reports from providers and detailed claims data from the recently created Health Care Payments Data System.

“It will be impossible to reach the goal of providing equitable, quality health care to every California­n without making it affordable, and that must include containing costs,” said Wood. “This office will not only do the work of analyzing current costs, establishi­ng cost targets and ensuring compliance with those targets, but will also measure quality and equity.”

AB 1131 will create a comprehens­ive, statewide Health Informatio­n Exchange.

This exchange will contain, track and securely share patients’ complete medical histories. The benefits of a centralize­d HIE system include unifying records from many different sources so providers and patients can access a single unified and comprehens­ive view of a patient record.

This helps in reducing medication and medical errors, preventing redundant testing, eliminatin­g unnecessar­y paperwork and improving public health reporting and monitoring.

“Everyone can understand the logic and benefits behind establishi­ng a statewide informatio­n exchange so that patients can be assured that health care providers have all the informatio­n they need to provide the very best treatment, no matter what their coverage is or where they happen to be at the time they need the care,” said Wood.

“You can get tons of informatio­n on a person’s activities and exploits through social media, but if you need to access a person’s comprehens­ive medical record quickly so that you can treat them in an emergency, good luck.”

AB 1132 will create a process to assess the impact of health care consolidat­ion, market influence and other health care marketplac­e practices on rising health care costs.

Research has shown that higher prices for health care services can be the result of market consolidat­ion among health plans, hospitals, medical groups or physician organizati­ons, pharmacy benefit managers and others.

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