The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Legislator­s debate how to ease rules on new, rural hospitals

House, Senate must settle on role health care centers will play.

- By Michelle Baruchman michelle.baruchman@ajc.com

The kinds of new health care facilities opening in Georgia could expand sig- nificantly under the ver- sion of a bill the state Sen- ateapprove­d Thursday ina 48-11 vote.

Lawmakers from both chambers of the General Assembly, however, still need to settle on the role hospitals play in providing care, espe- cially in rural areas.

House lawmakersp­assed House Bill 1339 last month, rolling back re gulations governing the opening of new medical facilities. But changes inserted in that bill in the Senate may need to be resolved through a meeting of members from both chambers.

The debate hinges on cer- tain exemptions. Senate Republican­s want to allow more free-standing outpa- tient care facilities where patients can undergo minor surgical procedures without going to a hospital.

“The big issue that we con- tinue to worry about is access to medical care. Our focus in recent years has been on rural health care,” said Sen. Bill Cowsert, a Republican from Athens who sponsored the legislatio­n in his cham- ber. “What do we have to do to get new hospitals closer to our people in rural areas of the state?”

However, advocates for rural and nonprofit hospitals say these kinds of facilities, also known as ambulatory surgical centers or ASCs, can cherry-pick wealthier patients because they are not required to treat all patients regardless of their ability to pay. And because ASCs can provide high-dollar procedures such as imaging, lab work and surgeries, they would also siphon off reve- nue from hospitals, making the hospitals responsibl­e for treating all uninsured patients with more expen- sive emergency services.

To open a new hospital in Georgia under current law, hospitals must demon- strate a significan­t need for care in their area through a process known as certificat­e of need, or CON. The rules were establishe­d in 1974 to comply with a federal mandate requiring states to regulate new medical facilities to help control the costs of government reimbursem­ents for Med- icaid and Medicare.

That mandate ended in 1986, and some states have since repealed or amended their CON rules.

Since at least the mid- 2000s, Georgia lawmak- ers have discussed changes to CON rules. The conversa- tion has lingered for so long without a fix in part because the issue crosses party lines: Several lawmakers, Democrats and Republican­s, rep- resent rural areas that may only have one hospital in each county, if that, and shift their attitude depend- ing on what level of care is available within their dis- tricts. Thoserural hospitals, which may also be among the largest employers in a lawmaker’s district, would be strongly impacted by CON changes.

The House version of HB 1339, sponsored by state Rep. Butch Parrish, a Repub- licanfrom rural Swainsboro in east Georgia, did not allow the free-standing outpatient surgical facilities to avoid the CON process. Instead, the House version focuses on allowing more rural hospi- tals to open so long as they meet certain criteria, includ- ing providing instructio­n for medical residency stu- dents and psychiatri­c care.

Rather than deregulati­on, Democrats in the Houseand Senate say the state should expand Medicaid, the gov- ernment health insurance program for low-income people. They said that would make a bigger difference in hospitals’ ability to stay open and they expressed disappoint­ment and frustra- tion that the topic has again been pushed back. Georgia is one of just 10 states that have not accepted federal funding to expand Medicaid.

“As someone who believes that CON reform is needed and that we should be significan­tly reforming the CON framework, I also believe that CON reform alone will not solve our health care issues in Georgia,” said Sen. Jason Esteves, a Democrat from Atlanta.

Senate Minority Leader Gloria Butler, a Democrat from Stone Mountain, said Thursday that she would vote to support the legis- lation to give members of the conference committee, who will work out changes on the bill between cham- bers, “one more chance to do the right thing and finally pass Medicaid expansion.”

Republican­s have no plans to expand Medicaid this year, relegating the topic to a study commission to review access to health care for low-income and unin- sured people.

Anna Adams, executive vice president for external affairs at the Georgia Hos- pital Associatio­n, said Med- icaid expansion would help many hospitals in Georgia, although it wouldn’t address financial concerns for every hospital.

“From the perspectiv­e of the hospital, an insured patient is a healthier patient,” she said, because “an insured patient will seek the right care at the right place at the right time.” For example, insured patients are more likely to go to a primary care physician for preventive care, rather than waiting to go to an emer- gency room when they expe- rience a medical crisis.

Monty Veazey, president of the Georgia Alliance of Community Hospitals, said expanding Medicaid would transform many uninsured patients into paying patients, giving hospitals “a lot more cash flow to work with.”

In addition, the Senate’s changes to the bill would allow physician groups of different specialtie­s, such as orthopedic surgery and cardiac surgery, to share operating rooms, effectivel­y though not officially creating multispeci­alty ASCs. The hospitals could lose more and more patients, especially those paying with insurance, if they can go to multispeci­alty facilities.

Veazey said he i s concerned that the Senate’s bill would cut down on what percentage ASCs must be owned by physicians, allowing more private equity firms, which “cut back on overhead and jack up prices,” to buy up these facilities.

“It would be the Wi d West and create devastatin­g negative financial impacts for hospitals,” he said. “For any hospitals, especially rural ones, they will not be able to survive.”

Veazey said he is also worried about the ability of ambulatory surgical centers to handle medical emergencie­s. If something goes wrong when a physician is performing a hip or knee surgery, they would have to call 911.

That’s a bad deal for hospitals, Veazey said, because in that scenario, hospitals lose out on the moneymakin­g surgery but are still responsibl­e for the emergency care.

While Gov. Brian Kemp said he won’t stop Medicaid expansion conversati­ons, he also won’t encourage them. “That was a legislativ­e priority, mainly of the House, to put that out there and have some conversati­ons,” Kemp said. “I was never in favor of doing that last year or this year.”

Kemp is standing behind his program, Georgia Pathways to Coverage, launched last year. It expanded Medicaid eligibilit­y for low-income people who work at least 80 hours per month or perform certain specified activities.

However, the program has so far attracted fewer than 3,000 people out of an estimated 370,000 eligible for the work-oriented program.

In response to Democrats’ complaints about lack of Medicaid expansion provisions in the amended legislatio­n, Cowsert urged lawmakers to be patient.

“Don’t make a protest vote and slow down the process ... because you’re unhappy wi h

e fact we haven’t expanded Medicaid yet,” he said.

L t . Gov. Burt J o n es applauded the passage of the bill, saying in a statement that the legislatio­n would “ensure that every Georgian, regardless of where they live, would have an opportunit­y to access quality care in their community.”

To open a new hospital in Georgia under current law, hospitals must demonstrat­e a significan­t need for care in their area through a process known as certificat­e of need, or CON.

 ?? NATRICE MILLER/ NATRICE.MILLER@AJC.COM ?? State Sen. Bill Cowsert, R- Athens, speaks in favor of House Bill 1339 , which would roll back regulation­s governing the constructi­on of new hospitals in counties with fewer than 50,000 people.
NATRICE MILLER/ NATRICE.MILLER@AJC.COM State Sen. Bill Cowsert, R- Athens, speaks in favor of House Bill 1339 , which would roll back regulation­s governing the constructi­on of new hospitals in counties with fewer than 50,000 people.

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