Senate Bill 2034er
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1
2 An act relating to health care; providing an
3 appropriation for continued review of clinical
4 laboratory services for kidney dialysis
5 patients and requiring a report thereon;
6 amending s. 20.43, F.S.; requiring the
7 department to include certain assessments,
8 projections, and recommendations in the
9 department's strategic plan rather than in the
10 state health plan; authorizing the department
11 to hold copyrights, trademarks, and service
12 marks and to enforce its rights to them;
13 amending s. 39.303, F.S.; providing duties of
14 the Children's Medical Services Program within
15 the department with respect to child protection
16 teams; amending s. 120.80, F.S.; revising
17 procedures for hearings conducted with respect
18 to the Brain and Spinal Cord Injury Program;
19 amending s. 154.011, F.S.; revising duties of
20 the department with respect to monitoring and
21 administering certain primary care programs;
22 amending s. 215.5602, F.S.; revising the goals
23 of and expenditures for the Florida Biomedical
24 Research Program within the Lawton Chiles
25 Endowment Fund; amending s. 381.0011, F.S.;
26 providing requirements for the department's
27 strategic plan; amending s. 381.003, F.S.;
28 requiring the department to develop an
29 immunization registry; requiring that the
30 registry include all children born in this
31 state; providing procedures under which a
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1 parent or guardian may elect not to participate
2 in the immunization registry; providing for the
3 electronic transfer of records between health
4 care professionals and other agencies;
5 authorizing the department to adopt rules for
6 administering the registry; amending s.
7 381.0031, F.S.; authorizing the department to
8 obtain and inspect copies of certain medical
9 records and information, notwithstanding laws
10 governing the confidentiality of patient
11 records; exempting health care practitioners,
12 health care facilities, and agents and
13 employees thereof from liability for the
14 authorized release of patient records; amending
15 s. 381.004, F.S.; revising requirements for the
16 release of certain preliminary test results for
17 human immunodeficiency virus; revising the
18 definition of the term "medical personnel" to
19 include additional personnel; amending s.
20 381.0059, F.S.; defining the term "person who
21 provides services under a school health
22 services plan" for purposes of background
23 screening requirements for school health
24 services personnel; amending s. 381.0101, F.S.;
25 revising certification requirements for certain
26 environmental health professionals; amending s.
27 381.731, F.S.; requiring that the department
28 include certain strategies in the department's
29 strategic plan rather than in the Healthy
30 Communities, Healthy People Plan; amending s.
31 381.734, F.S.; revising the requirements of the
2
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1 Healthy Communities, Healthy People Program;
2 transferring, renumbering, and amending s.
3 413.46, F.S.; revising legislative intent with
4 respect to the brain and spinal cord injury
5 program; creating s. 381.745, F.S.; providing
6 definitions for purposes of the Charlie Mack
7 Overstreet Brain or Spinal Cord Injuries Act;
8 amending s. 381.75, F.S., relating to duties of
9 the department under the brain and spinal cord
10 injury program; conforming provisions to
11 changes made by the act; creating s. 381.755,
12 F.S.; providing that the right to benefits
13 under the program is not assignable; amending
14 s. 381.76, F.S.; revising eligibility
15 requirements for the brain and spinal cord
16 injury program; creating s. 381.765, F.S.;
17 authorizing the department to retain title to
18 property and equipment and to dispose of
19 surplus equipment; authorizing the department
20 to adopt rules; creating s. 381.775, F.S.;
21 continuing the confidentiality provided for
22 records and information that pertains to
23 applicants for and recipients of services under
24 the brain and spinal cord injury program;
25 specifying circumstances under which the
26 department may release such records or
27 information; amending s. 381.78, F.S., relating
28 to the advisory council on brain and spinal
29 cord injuries; authorizing reimbursement for
30 per diem and travel expenses for members of the
31 council; prohibiting a council member from
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1 voting on matters that provide a financial
2 benefit or create a conflict of interest;
3 providing for removal of members for cause;
4 creating s. 381.785, F.S.; authorizing the
5 department to recover third-party payments for
6 funded services; providing for the enforcement
7 of such right to recovery pursuant to a lien;
8 requiring the department to adopt rules
9 governing the recovery of payments; amending s.
10 381.79, F.S., relating to the Brain and Spinal
11 Cord Injury Rehabilitation Trust Fund;
12 redesignating the fund as the "Brain and Spinal
13 Cord Injury Program Trust Fund"; providing
14 additional purposes for which moneys in the
15 trust fund may be used; authorizing the
16 department to accept certain gifts; amending s.
17 385.103, F.S.; providing for the department to
18 operate community intervention programs rather
19 than comprehensive health improvement projects;
20 revising definitions; revising duties of the
21 department in operating such services;
22 requiring the department to adopt rules
23 governing the operation of community
24 intervention programs; amending s. 385.207,
25 F.S., relating to programs in epilepsy control;
26 conforming a cross-reference; amending s.
27 402.181, F.S.; providing for certain damages
28 and injuries caused by patients of institutions
29 under the Department of Health and specified
30 other state agencies to be reimbursed under the
31 State Institutions Claims Program; amending s.
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1 514.021, F.S.; requiring the department to
2 review rules; designating Florida Alzheimer's
3 Disease Day; providing planning for long-term
4 community-based supports for specified brain
5 and spinal cord injury individuals; providing
6 purpose; providing for compliance with s.
7 381.775, F.S.; providing for a study and
8 report; providing base standard for ranking for
9 services; providing limitation on use of
10 funding; providing the department with certain
11 rulemaking authority; providing residency
12 requirement; providing severability; providing
13 intent; creating the Jessie Trice Cancer
14 Prevention Program within the Department of
15 Health; providing funding contingent upon an
16 appropriation; creating the Florida Commission
17 on Excellence in Health Care; providing
18 legislative findings and intent; providing
19 definitions; providing duties and
20 responsibilities; providing for membership,
21 organization, meetings, procedures, and staff;
22 providing for reimbursement of travel and
23 related expenses of certain members; providing
24 certain evidentiary prohibitions; requiring a
25 report to the Governor, the President of the
26 Senate, and the Speaker of the House of
27 Representatives; providing for termination of
28 the commission; providing an appropriation;
29 creating s. 381.00325, F.S.; providing for a
30 Hepatitis A awareness program; creating s.
31 154.247, F.S.; authorizing authorities to issue
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1 bonds to finance projects for health facilities
2 or not-for-profit corporations under their
3 common control outside the geographical limits
4 of the local agency or outside the state;
5 providing that certain specialty hospitals are
6 not exempt from s. 408.036(1), F.S.; amending
7 s. 400.0065, F.S.; providing duty of the State
8 Long-Term Care Ombudsman to prepare and submit
9 annual budget requests; creating s. 400.0066,
10 F.S.; specifying additional duties of the
11 Long-Term Care Ombudsman and other state
12 agencies; limiting administrative charges;
13 amending ss. 400.0067 and 400.0069, F.S.;
14 revising provisions relating to appointment and
15 terms of service of members of the state and
16 local ombudsman councils; amending ss.
17 400.0077, 400.0081, and 400.0087, F.S.;
18 providing authority of the Office of State
19 Long-Term Care Ombudsman to adopt rules
20 relating to disclosure of files maintained by
21 the program, access to facilities and
22 residents, and monitoring of local ombudsman
23 councils by the Department of Elderly Affairs;
24 deleting rulemaking authority of the
25 department; amending ss. 20.41, 395.3025,
26 400.0063, 400.0071, 400.0073, 400.0075,
27 400.0079, 400.0083, 400.0089, 400.0091,
28 400.021, 400.022, 400.0255, 400.19, 400.191,
29 400.23, 400.419, 400.428, 400.434, 400.435,
30 400.4415, 400.619, and 400.628, F.S.;
31 clarifying and conforming references and
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1 cross-references; providing appropriations;
2 providing for protection of the state's
3 interest in property purchased or improved with
4 state funds; amending s. 409.912, F.S.,
5 relating to cost-effective purchasing of health
6 care under the Medicaid program; requiring the
7 agency to implement a Medicaid prescribed-drug
8 spending-control program; specifying program
9 components; providing for implementation to the
10 extent funds are appropriated; authorizing
11 contracts; requiring an annual report; creating
12 the Medicaid Pharmaceutical Therapeutics
13 Committee; providing for membership; providing
14 for the adoption of a voluntary preferred
15 prescribed-drug list by the committee;
16 providing an effective date.
17
18 Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida:
19
20 Section 1. Paragraph (l) of subsection (1) of section
21 20.43, Florida Statutes, is amended and subsection (8) is
22 added to that section to read:
23 20.43 Department of Health.--There is created a
24 Department of Health.
25 (1) The purpose of the Department of Health is to
26 promote and protect the health of all residents and visitors
27 in the state through organized state and community efforts,
28 including cooperative agreements with counties. The
29 department shall:
30 (l) Include in the department's strategic plan
31 developed under s. 186.021 an assessment of Biennially
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1 publish, and annually update, a state health plan that
2 assesses current health programs, systems, and costs; makes
3 projections of future problems and opportunities; and
4 recommended recommends changes that are needed in the health
5 care system to improve the public health.
6 (8) The department may hold copyrights, trademarks,
7 and service marks and enforce its rights with respect thereto,
8 except such authority does not extend to any public records
9 relating to the department's responsibilities for health care
10 practitioners regulated under part II, chapter 455.
11 Section 2. Section 39.303, Florida Statutes, is
12 amended to read:
13 39.303 Child protection teams; services; eligible
14 cases.--The Children's Medical Services Program in the
15 Department of Health shall develop, maintain, and coordinate
16 the services of one or more multidisciplinary child protection
17 teams in each of the service districts of the Department of
18 Children and Family Services. Such teams may be composed of
19 appropriate representatives of school districts and
20 appropriate health, mental health, social service, legal
21 service, and law enforcement agencies. The Legislature finds
22 that optimal coordination of child protection teams and sexual
23 abuse treatment programs requires collaboration between the
24 Department of Health and the Department of Children and Family
25 Services. The two departments shall maintain an interagency
26 agreement that establishes protocols for oversight and
27 operations of child protection teams and sexual abuse
28 treatment programs. The Secretary of Health and the Deputy
29 Secretary director of Children's Medical Services, in
30 consultation with the Secretary of Children and Family
31 Services, shall maintain the responsibility for the screening,
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1 employment, and, if necessary, the termination of child
2 protection team medical directors, at headquarters and in the
3 15 districts. Child protection team medical directors shall be
4 responsible for oversight of the teams in the districts.
5 (1) The Department of Health shall utilize and convene
6 the teams to supplement the assessment and protective
7 supervision activities of the family safety and preservation
8 program of the Department of Children and Family Services.
9 Nothing in this section shall be construed to remove or reduce
10 the duty and responsibility of any person to report pursuant
11 to this chapter all suspected or actual cases of child abuse,
12 abandonment, or neglect or sexual abuse of a child. The role
13 of the teams shall be to support activities of the program and
14 to provide services deemed by the teams to be necessary and
15 appropriate to abused, abandoned, and neglected children upon
16 referral. The specialized diagnostic assessment, evaluation,
17 coordination, consultation, and other supportive services that
18 a child protection team shall be capable of providing include,
19 but are not limited to, the following:
20 (a) Medical diagnosis and evaluation services,
21 including provision or interpretation of X rays and laboratory
22 tests, and related services, as needed, and documentation of
23 findings relative thereto.
24 (b) Telephone consultation services in emergencies and
25 in other situations.
26 (c) Medical evaluation related to abuse, abandonment,
27 or neglect, as defined by policy or rule of the Department of
28 Health.
29 (d) Such psychological and psychiatric diagnosis and
30 evaluation services for the child or the child's parent or
31 parents, legal custodian or custodians, or other caregivers,
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1 or any other individual involved in a child abuse,
2 abandonment, or neglect case, as the team may determine to be
3 needed.
4 (e) Expert medical, psychological, and related
5 professional testimony in court cases.
6 (f) Case staffings to develop treatment plans for
7 children whose cases have been referred to the team. A child
8 protection team may provide consultation with respect to a
9 child who is alleged or is shown to be abused, abandoned, or
10 neglected, which consultation shall be provided at the request
11 of a representative of the family safety and preservation
12 program or at the request of any other professional involved
13 with a child or the child's parent or parents, legal custodian
14 or custodians, or other caregivers. In every such child
15 protection team case staffing, consultation, or staff activity
16 involving a child, a family safety and preservation program
17 representative shall attend and participate.
18 (g) Case service coordination and assistance,
19 including the location of services available from other public
20 and private agencies in the community.
21 (h) Such training services for program and other
22 employees of the Department of Children and Family Services,
23 employees of the Department of Health, and other medical
24 professionals as is deemed appropriate to enable them to
25 develop and maintain their professional skills and abilities
26 in handling child abuse, abandonment, and neglect cases.
27 (i) Educational and community awareness campaigns on
28 child abuse, abandonment, and neglect in an effort to enable
29 citizens more successfully to prevent, identify, and treat
30 child abuse, abandonment, and neglect in the community.
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1 (2) The child abuse, abandonment, and neglect reports
2 that must be referred by the Department of Children and Family
3 Services to child protection teams of the Department of Health
4 for medical evaluation and available support services as set
5 forth in subsection (1) must include cases involving:
6 (a) Bruises, burns, or fractures in a child of any
7 age.
8 (b) Sexual abuse of a child in which vaginal or anal
9 penetration is alleged or in which other unlawful sexual
10 conduct has been determined to have occurred.
11 (c) Venereal disease, or any other sexually
12 transmitted disease, in a prepubescent child.
13 (d) Reported malnutrition of a child and failure of a
14 child to thrive.
15 (e) Reported medical, physical, or emotional neglect
16 of a child.
17 (f) Any family in which one or more children have been
18 pronounced dead on arrival at a hospital or other health care
19 facility, or have been injured and later died, as a result of
20 suspected abuse, abandonment, or neglect, when any sibling or
21 other child remains in the home.
22 (g) Symptoms of serious emotional problems in a child
23 when emotional or other abuse, abandonment, or neglect is
24 suspected.
25 (h) Injuries to a child's head.
26 (3) All abuse and neglect cases transmitted for
27 investigation to a district by the hotline must be
28 simultaneously transmitted to the Department of Health child
29 protection team for review. All cases transmitted to the child
30 protection team which meet the criteria in subsection (2) must
31 be timely reviewed by a board-certified pediatrician or
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1 registered nurse practitioner under the supervision of such
2 pediatrician for the purpose of determining whether a
3 face-to-face medical evaluation by a child protection team is
4 necessary. Such face-to-face medical evaluation is not
5 necessary only if it is determined that the child was examined
6 by a physician for the alleged abuse or neglect, and a
7 consultation between the child protection team board-certified
8 pediatrician or nurse practitioner and the examining physician
9 concludes that a further medical evaluation is unnecessary.
10 (4) In all instances in which a child protection team
11 is providing certain services to abused, abandoned, or
12 neglected children, other offices and units of the Department
13 of Health, and offices and units of the Department of Children
14 and Family Services, shall avoid duplicating the provision of
15 those services.
16 Section 3. Subsection (15) of section 120.80, Florida
17 Statutes, is amended to read:
18 120.80 Exceptions and special requirements;
19 agencies.--
20 (15) DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH.--Notwithstanding s.
21 120.57(1)(a), formal hearings may not be conducted by the
22 Secretary of Health, the director of the Agency for Health
23 Care Administration, or a board or member of a board within
24 the Department of Health or the Agency for Health Care
25 Administration for matters relating to the regulation of
26 professions, as defined by part II of chapter 455.
27 Notwithstanding s. 120.57(1)(a), hearings conducted within the
28 Department of Health in execution of the Special Supplemental
29 Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children; Child Care
30 Food Program; Children's Medical Services Program; the Brain
31 and Spinal Cord Injury Program; and the exemption from
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1 disqualification reviews for certified nurse assistants
2 program need not be conducted by an administrative law judge
3 assigned by the division. The Department of Health may
4 contract with the Department of Children and Family Services
5 for a hearing officer in these matters.
6 Section 4. Subsections (2) and (5) of section 154.011,
7 Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
8 154.011 Primary care services.--
9 (2) The department shall monitor, measure, and
10 evaluate be responsible for monitoring, measuring, and
11 evaluating the quality of care, cost-effectiveness, services,
12 and geographic accessibility provided by each primary care
13 program and shall utilize the resulting data when
14 renegotiating contracts with counties.
15 (5) The department shall adopt rules to govern the
16 operation of primary care programs authorized by this section.
17 Such rules shall include, but not be limited to, quality of
18 care, case management, a definition of income used to
19 determine eligibility or sliding fees, and Medicaid
20 participation and shall be developed by the State Health
21 Officer. Rules governing services to clients under 21 years of
22 age shall be developed in conjunction with children's medical
23 services and shall at a minimum include preventive services as
24 set forth in s. 627.6579.
25 Section 5. Paragraphs (a) and (b) of subsection (1)
26 and subsection (2) of section 215.5602, Florida Statutes, are
27 amended to read:
28 215.5602 Florida Biomedical Research Program.--
29 (1) There is established within the Lawton Chiles
30 Endowment Fund the Florida Biomedical Research Program to
31 support research initiatives that address the health care
13
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1 problems of Floridians in the areas of cancer, cardiovascular
2 disease, stroke, and pulmonary disease. The long-term goals of
3 the program are to:
4 (a) Improve the health of Floridians by researching
5 better prevention, diagnoses, and treatments for cancer,
6 cardiovascular disease, stroke, and pulmonary disease.
7 (b) Expand the foundation of biomedical knowledge
8 relating to the prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of
9 diseases related to tobacco use, including cancer,
10 cardiovascular disease, stroke, and pulmonary disease.
11 (2) Funds appropriated from the Lawton Chiles
12 Endowment Fund to the Department of Health for the purposes of
13 this section shall be used exclusively for the award of grants
14 and fellowships under the program established in this section;
15 for research relating to the prevention, diagnosis, and
16 treatment of diseases related to tobacco use, including
17 cancer, cardiovascular disease, stroke, and pulmonary disease;
18 and for expenses incurred in the administration of this
19 section.
20 Section 6. Subsection (3) of section 381.0011, Florida
21 Statutes, is amended to read:
22 381.0011 Duties and powers of the Department of
23 Health.--It is the duty of the Department of Health to:
24 (3) Include in the department's strategic plan
25 developed under s. 186.021 a summary of Develop a
26 comprehensive public health plan that addresses all aspects of
27 the public health mission and establishes health status
28 objectives to direct the use of public health resources with
29 an emphasis on prevention.
30
31
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1 Section 7. Paragraph (e) of subsection (1) and
2 subsection (2) of section 381.003, Florida Statutes, is
3 amended to read:
4 381.003 Communicable disease and acquired immune
5 deficiency syndrome prevention and control.--
6 (1) The department shall conduct a communicable
7 disease prevention and control program as part of fulfilling
8 its public health mission. A communicable disease is any
9 disease caused by transmission of a specific infectious agent,
10 or its toxic products, from an infected person, an infected
11 animal, or the environment to a susceptible host, either
12 directly or indirectly. The communicable disease program must
13 include, but need not be limited to:
14 (e) Programs for the prevention and control of
15 vaccine-preventable diseases, including programs to immunize
16 school children as required by s. 232.032 and the development
17 of an automated, electronic, and centralized database or
18 registry of immunizations. The department shall ensure that
19 all children in this state are immunized against
20 vaccine-preventable diseases. The immunization registry shall
21 allow the department to enhance current immunization
22 activities for the purpose of improving the immunization of
23 all children in this state.
24 1. Except as provided in subparagraph 2., the
25 department shall include all children born in this state in
26 the immunization registry by using the birth records from the
27 Office of Vital Statistics. The department shall add other
28 children to the registry as immunization services are
29 provided.
30 2. The parent or guardian of a child may refuse to
31 have the child included in the immunization registry by
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1 signing a form obtained from the department, or from the
2 health care practitioner or entity that provides the
3 immunization, which indicates that the parent or guardian does
4 not wish to have the child included in the immunization
5 registry. The decision to not participate in the immunization
6 registry must be noted in the registry.
7 3. The immunization registry shall allow for
8 immunization records to be electronically transferred to
9 entities that are required by law to have such records,
10 including schools, licensed child care facilities, and any
11 other entity that is required by law to obtain proof of a
12 child's immunizations.
13 4. Any health care practitioner licensed under chapter
14 458, chapter 459, or chapter 464 in this state who complies
15 with rules adopted by the department to access the
16 immunization registry may, through the immunization registry,
17 directly access immunization records and update a child's
18 immunization history or exchange immunization information with
19 another authorized practitioner, entity, or agency involved in
20 a child's care. The information included in the immunization
21 registry must include the child's name, date of birth,
22 address, and any other unique identifier necessary to
23 correctly identify the child; the immunization record,
24 including the date, type of administered vaccine, and vaccine
25 lot number; and the presence or absence of any adverse
26 reaction or contraindication related to the immunization.
27 Information received by the department for the immunization
28 registry retains its status as confidential medical
29 information and the department must maintain the
30 confidentiality of that information as otherwise required by
31 law. A health care practitioner or other agency that obtains
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1 information from the immunization registry must maintain the
2 confidentiality of any medical records in accordance with s.
3 455.667 or as otherwise required by law.
4 (2) The department may adopt, repeal, and amend rules
5 related to the prevention and control of communicable diseases
6 and the administration of the immunization registry. Such
7 rules may include, including procedures for investigating
8 disease, timeframes for reporting disease, requirements for
9 followup reports of known or suspected exposure to disease,
10 and procedures for providing access to confidential
11 information necessary for disease investigations. For purposes
12 of the immunization registry, the rules may include procedures
13 for a health care practitioner to obtain authorization to use
14 the immunization registry, methods for a parent or guardian to
15 elect not to participate in the immunization registry, and
16 procedures for a health care practitioner licensed under
17 chapter 458, chapter 459, or chapter 464 to access and share
18 electronic immunization records with other entities allowed by
19 law to have access to the records.
20 Section 8. Section 381.0031, Florida Statutes, is
21 amended to read:
22 381.0031 Report of diseases of public health
23 significance to department.--
24 (1) Any practitioner licensed in this state to
25 practice medicine, osteopathic medicine, chiropractic
26 medicine, naturopathy, or veterinary medicine; any hospital
27 licensed under part I of chapter 395; or any laboratory
28 licensed under chapter 483 that diagnoses or suspects the
29 existence of a disease of public health significance shall
30 immediately report the fact to the Department of Health.
31
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1 (2) Periodically the department shall issue a list of
2 infectious or noninfectious diseases determined by it to be a
3 threat to public health and therefore of significance to
4 public health and shall furnish a copy of the list to the
5 practitioners listed in subsection (1).
6 (3) Reports required by this section must be in
7 accordance with methods specified by rule of the department.
8 (4) Information submitted in reports required by this
9 section is confidential, exempt from the provisions of s.
10 119.07(1), and is to be made public only when necessary to
11 public health. A report so submitted is not a violation of the
12 confidential relationship between practitioner and patient.
13 (5) The department may obtain and inspect copies of
14 medical records, records of laboratory tests, and other
15 medical-related information for reported cases of diseases of
16 public health significance described in subsection (2). The
17 department shall examine the records of a person who has a
18 disease of public health significance only for purposes of
19 preventing and eliminating outbreaks of disease and making
20 epidemiological investigations of reported cases of diseases
21 of public health significance, notwithstanding any other law
22 to the contrary. Health care practitioners, licensed health
23 care facilities, and laboratories shall allow the department
24 to inspect and obtain copies of such medical records and
25 medical-related information, notwithstanding any other law to
26 the contrary. Release of medical records and medical-related
27 information to the department by a health care practitioner,
28 licensed health care facility, or laboratory, or by an
29 authorized employee or agent thereof, does not constitute a
30 violation of the confidentiality of patient records. A health
31 care practitioner, health care facility, or laboratory, or any
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1 employee or agent thereof, may not be held liable in any
2 manner for damages and is not subject to criminal penalties
3 for providing patient records to the department as authorized
4 by this section.
5 (6)(5) The department may adopt rules related to
6 reporting diseases of significance to public health, which
7 must specify the information to be included in the report, who
8 is required to report, the method and time period for
9 reporting, requirements for enforcement, and required followup
10 activities by the department which are necessary to protect
11 public health.
12
13 This section does not affect s. 384.25.
14 Section 9. Paragraphs (d) and (h) of subsection (3) of
15 section 381.004, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
16 381.004 Testing for human immunodeficiency virus.--
17 (3) HUMAN IMMUNODEFICIENCY VIRUS TESTING; INFORMED
18 CONSENT; RESULTS; COUNSELING; CONFIDENTIALITY.--
19 (d) No test result shall be determined as positive,
20 and no positive test result shall be revealed to any person,
21 without corroborating or confirmatory tests being conducted
22 except in the following situations:
23 1. Preliminary test results may be released to
24 licensed physicians or the medical or nonmedical personnel
25 subject to the significant exposure for purposes of
26 subparagraphs (h)10., 11., and 12.
27 2. Preliminary test results may be released to health
28 care providers and to the person tested when decisions about
29 medical care or treatment of, or recommendation to, the person
30 tested and, in the case of an intrapartum or postpartum woman,
31 when care, treatment, or recommendations regarding her
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1 newborn, cannot await the results of confirmatory testing.
2 Positive preliminary HIV test results shall not be
3 characterized to the patient as a diagnosis of HIV infection.
4 Justification for the use of preliminary test results must be
5 documented in the medical record by the health care provider
6 who ordered the test. This subparagraph does not authorize
7 the release of preliminary test results for the purpose of
8 routine identification of HIV-infected individuals or when HIV
9 testing is incidental to the preliminary diagnosis or care of
10 a patient. Corroborating or confirmatory testing must be
11 conducted as followup to a positive preliminary test. Results
12 shall be communicated to the patient according to statute
13 regardless of the outcome. Except as provided in this section,
14 test results are confidential and exempt from the provisions
15 of s. 119.07(1).
16 (h) Notwithstanding the provisions of paragraph (a),
17 informed consent is not required:
18 1. When testing for sexually transmissible diseases is
19 required by state or federal law, or by rule including the
20 following situations:
21 a. HIV testing pursuant to s. 796.08 of persons
22 convicted of prostitution or of procuring another to commit
23 prostitution.
24 b. Testing for HIV by a medical examiner in accordance
25 with s. 406.11.
26 2. Those exceptions provided for blood, plasma,
27 organs, skin, semen, or other human tissue pursuant to s.
28 381.0041.
29 3. For the performance of an HIV-related test by
30 licensed medical personnel in bona fide medical emergencies
31 when the test results are necessary for medical diagnostic
20
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1 purposes to provide appropriate emergency care or treatment to
2 the person being tested and the patient is unable to consent,
3 as supported by documentation in the medical record.
4 Notification of test results in accordance with paragraph (c)
5 is required.
6 4. For the performance of an HIV-related test by
7 licensed medical personnel for medical diagnosis of acute
8 illness where, in the opinion of the attending physician,
9 obtaining informed consent would be detrimental to the
10 patient, as supported by documentation in the medical record,
11 and the test results are necessary for medical diagnostic
12 purposes to provide appropriate care or treatment to the
13 person being tested. Notification of test results in
14 accordance with paragraph (c) is required if it would not be
15 detrimental to the patient. This subparagraph does not
16 authorize the routine testing of patients for HIV infection
17 without informed consent.
18 5. When HIV testing is performed as part of an autopsy
19 for which consent was obtained pursuant to s. 872.04.
20 6. For the performance of an HIV test upon a defendant
21 pursuant to the victim's request in a prosecution for any type
22 of sexual battery where a blood sample is taken from the
23 defendant voluntarily, pursuant to court order for any
24 purpose, or pursuant to the provisions of s. 775.0877, s.
25 951.27, or s. 960.003; however, the results of any HIV test
26 performed shall be disclosed solely to the victim and the
27 defendant, except as provided in ss. 775.0877, 951.27, and
28 960.003.
29 7. When an HIV test is mandated by court order.
30 8. For epidemiological research pursuant to s.
31 381.0032, for research consistent with institutional review
21
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1 boards created by 45 C.F.R. part 46, or for the performance of
2 an HIV-related test for the purpose of research, if the
3 testing is performed in a manner by which the identity of the
4 test subject is not known and may not be retrieved by the
5 researcher.
6 9. When human tissue is collected lawfully without the
7 consent of the donor for corneal removal as authorized by s.
8 732.9185 or enucleation of the eyes as authorized by s.
9 732.919.
10 10. For the performance of an HIV test upon an
11 individual who comes into contact with medical personnel in
12 such a way that a significant exposure has occurred during the
13 course of employment or within the scope of practice and where
14 a blood sample is available that was taken from that
15 individual voluntarily by medical personnel for other
16 purposes. The term "medical personnel" includes a licensed or
17 certified health care professional; an employee of a health
18 care professional or, health care facility; employees of a
19 laboratory licensed under chapter 483; personnel of a, or
20 blood bank or plasma center; a medical student or other
21 student who is receiving training as a health care
22 professional at a health care facility; and a paramedic or
23 emergency medical technician certified by the department to
24 perform life-support procedures under as defined in s. 401.23.
25 a. Prior to performance of an HIV test on a
26 voluntarily obtained blood sample, the individual from whom
27 the blood was obtained shall be requested to consent to the
28 performance of the test and to the release of the results.
29 The individual's refusal to consent and all information
30 concerning the performance of an HIV test and any HIV test
31 result shall be documented only in the medical personnel's
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1 record unless the individual gives written consent to entering
2 this information on the individual's medical record.
3 b. Reasonable attempts to locate the individual and to
4 obtain consent shall be made and all attempts must be
5 documented. If the individual cannot be found, an HIV test may
6 be conducted on the available blood sample. If the individual
7 does not voluntarily consent to the performance of an HIV
8 test, the individual shall be informed that an HIV test will
9 be performed, and counseling shall be furnished as provided in
10 this section. However, HIV testing shall be conducted only
11 after a licensed physician documents, in the medical record of
12 the medical personnel, that there has been a significant
13 exposure and that, in the physician's medical judgment, the
14 information is medically necessary to determine the course of
15 treatment for the medical personnel.
16 c. Costs of any HIV test of a blood sample performed
17 with or without the consent of the individual, as provided in
18 this subparagraph, shall be borne by the medical personnel or
19 the employer of the medical personnel. However, costs of
20 testing or treatment not directly related to the initial HIV
21 tests or costs of subsequent testing or treatment shall not be
22 borne by the medical personnel or the employer of the medical
23 personnel.
24 d. In order to utilize the provisions of this
25 subparagraph, the medical personnel must either be tested for
26 HIV pursuant to this section or provide the results of an HIV
27 test taken within 6 months prior to the significant exposure
28 if such test results are negative.
29 e. A person who receives the results of an HIV test
30 pursuant to this subparagraph shall maintain the
31 confidentiality of the information received and of the persons
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1 tested. Such confidential information is exempt from s.
2 119.07(1).
3 f. If the source of the exposure will not voluntarily
4 submit to HIV testing and a blood sample is not available, the
5 medical personnel or the employer of such person acting on
6 behalf of the employee may seek a court order directing the
7 source of the exposure to submit to HIV testing. A sworn
8 statement by a physician licensed under chapter 458 or chapter
9 459 that a significant exposure has occurred and that, in the
10 physician's medical judgment, testing is medically necessary
11 to determine the course of treatment constitutes probable
12 cause for the issuance of an order by the court. The results
13 of the test shall be released to the source of the exposure
14 and to the person who experienced the exposure.
15 11. For the performance of an HIV test upon an
16 individual who comes into contact with medical personnel in
17 such a way that a significant exposure has occurred during the
18 course of employment or within the scope of practice of the
19 medical personnel while the medical personnel provides
20 emergency medical treatment to the individual; or who comes
21 into contact with nonmedical personnel in such a way that a
22 significant exposure has occurred while the nonmedical
23 personnel provides emergency medical assistance during a
24 medical emergency. For the purposes of this subparagraph, a
25 medical emergency means an emergency medical condition outside
26 of a hospital or health care facility that provides physician
27 care. The test may be performed only during the course of
28 treatment for the medical emergency.
29 a. An individual who is capable of providing consent
30 shall be requested to consent to an HIV test prior to the
31 testing. The individual's refusal to consent, and all
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1 information concerning the performance of an HIV test and its
2 result, shall be documented only in the medical personnel's
3 record unless the individual gives written consent to entering
4 this information on the individual's medical record.
5 b. HIV testing shall be conducted only after a
6 licensed physician documents, in the medical record of the
7 medical personnel or nonmedical personnel, that there has been
8 a significant exposure and that, in the physician's medical
9 judgment, the information is medically necessary to determine
10 the course of treatment for the medical personnel or
11 nonmedical personnel.
12 c. Costs of any HIV test performed with or without the
13 consent of the individual, as provided in this subparagraph,
14 shall be borne by the medical personnel or the employer of the
15 medical personnel or nonmedical personnel. However, costs of
16 testing or treatment not directly related to the initial HIV
17 tests or costs of subsequent testing or treatment shall not be
18 borne by the medical personnel or the employer of the medical
19 personnel or nonmedical personnel.
20 d. In order to utilize the provisions of this
21 subparagraph, the medical personnel or nonmedical personnel
22 shall be tested for HIV pursuant to this section or shall
23 provide the results of an HIV test taken within 6 months prior
24 to the significant exposure if such test results are negative.
25 e. A person who receives the results of an HIV test
26 pursuant to this subparagraph shall maintain the
27 confidentiality of the information received and of the persons
28 tested. Such confidential information is exempt from s.
29 119.07(1).
30 f. If the source of the exposure will not voluntarily
31 submit to HIV testing and a blood sample was not obtained
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1 during treatment for the medical emergency, the medical
2 personnel, the employer of the medical personnel acting on
3 behalf of the employee, or the nonmedical personnel may seek a
4 court order directing the source of the exposure to submit to
5 HIV testing. A sworn statement by a physician licensed under
6 chapter 458 or chapter 459 that a significant exposure has
7 occurred and that, in the physician's medical judgment,
8 testing is medically necessary to determine the course of
9 treatment constitutes probable cause for the issuance of an
10 order by the court. The results of the test shall be released
11 to the source of the exposure and to the person who
12 experienced the exposure.
13 12. For the performance of an HIV test by the medical
14 examiner or attending physician upon an individual who expired
15 or could not be resuscitated while receiving emergency medical
16 assistance or care and who was the source of a significant
17 exposure to medical or nonmedical personnel providing such
18 assistance or care.
19 a. HIV testing may be conducted only after a licensed
20 physician documents in the medical record of the medical
21 personnel or nonmedical personnel that there has been a
22 significant exposure and that, in the physician's medical
23 judgment, the information is medically necessary to determine
24 the course of treatment for the medical personnel or
25 nonmedical personnel.
26 b. Costs of any HIV test performed under this
27 subparagraph may not be charged to the deceased or to the
28 family of the deceased person.
29 c. For the provisions of this subparagraph to be
30 applicable, the medical personnel or nonmedical personnel must
31 be tested for HIV under this section or must provide the
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1 results of an HIV test taken within 6 months before the
2 significant exposure if such test results are negative.
3 d. A person who receives the results of an HIV test
4 pursuant to this subparagraph shall comply with paragraph (e).
5 13. For the performance of an HIV-related test
6 medically indicated by licensed medical personnel for medical
7 diagnosis of a hospitalized infant as necessary to provide
8 appropriate care and treatment of the infant when, after a
9 reasonable attempt, a parent cannot be contacted to provide
10 consent. The medical records of the infant shall reflect the
11 reason consent of the parent was not initially obtained. Test
12 results shall be provided to the parent when the parent is
13 located.
14 14. For the performance of HIV testing conducted to
15 monitor the clinical progress of a patient previously
16 diagnosed to be HIV positive.
17 15. For the performance of repeated HIV testing
18 conducted to monitor possible conversion from a significant
19 exposure.
20 Section 10. Section 381.0059, Florida Statutes, is
21 amended to read:
22 381.0059 Background screening requirements for school
23 health services personnel.--
24 (1)(a) Any person who provides services under a school
25 health services plan pursuant to s. 381.0056 must complete
26 level 2 screening as provided in chapter 435. A person may
27 satisfy the requirements of this subsection by submitting
28 proof of compliance with the requirements of level 2 screening
29 under s. 435.04, conducted within 12 months before the date
30 that person initially provides services under a school health
31 services plan pursuant to s. 381.0056. Any person who provides
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1 services under a school health services plan pursuant to s.
2 381.0056 shall be on probationary status pending the results
3 of the level 2 screening.
4 (b) In order to conduct level 2 screening, any person
5 who provides services under a school health services plan
6 pursuant to s. 381.0056 must furnish to the Department of
7 Health a full set of fingerprints to enable the department to
8 conduct a criminal background investigation. Each person who
9 provides services under a school health services plan pursuant
10 to s. 381.0056 must file a complete set of fingerprints taken
11 by an authorized law enforcement officer and must provide
12 sufficient information for a statewide criminal records
13 correspondence check through the Florida Department of Law
14 Enforcement. The Department of Health shall submit the
15 fingerprints to the Florida Department of Law Enforcement for
16 a statewide criminal history check, and the Florida Department
17 of Law Enforcement shall forward the fingerprints to the
18 Federal Bureau of Investigation for a national criminal
19 history check.
20 (c) The person subject to the required background
21 screening or his or her employer must pay the fees required to
22 obtain the background screening. Payment for the screening and
23 the abuse registry check must be submitted to the Department
24 of Health. The Florida Department of Law Enforcement shall
25 charge the Department of Health for a level 2 screening at a
26 rate sufficient to cover the costs of such screening pursuant
27 to s. 943.053(3). The Department of Health shall establish a
28 schedule of fees to cover the costs of the level 2 screening
29 and the abuse registry check. The applicant or his or her
30 employer who pays for the required screening may be reimbursed
31
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1 by the Department of Health from funds designated for this
2 purpose.
3 (2)(a) When the Department of Health has reasonable
4 cause to believe that grounds exist for the disqualification
5 of any person providing services under a school health
6 services plan pursuant to s. 381.0056, as a result of
7 background screening, it shall notify the person in writing,
8 stating the specific record that indicates noncompliance with
9 the level 2 screening standards. The Department of Health must
10 disqualify any person from providing services under a school
11 health services plan pursuant to s. 381.0056 if the department
12 finds that the person is not in compliance with the level 2
13 screening standards. A person who provides services under a
14 school health plan pursuant to s. 381.0056 on a probationary
15 status and who is disqualified because of the results of his
16 or her background screening may contest that disqualification.
17 (b) As provided in s. 435.07, the Department of Health
18 may grant an exemption from disqualification to a person
19 providing services under a school health services plan
20 pursuant to s. 381.0056 who has not received a professional
21 license or certification from the Department of Health.
22 (c) As provided in s. 435.07, the Department of Health
23 may grant an exemption from disqualification to a person
24 providing services under a school health services plan
25 pursuant to s. 381.0056 who has received a professional
26 license or certification from the Department of Health.
27 (3) Any person who is required to undergo the
28 background screening to provide services under a school health
29 plan pursuant to s. 381.0056 who refuses to cooperate in such
30 screening or refuses to submit the information necessary to
31 complete the screening, including fingerprints, shall be
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1 disqualified for employment or volunteering in such position
2 or, if employed, shall be dismissed.
3 (4) Under penalty of perjury, each person who provides
4 services under a school health plan pursuant to s. 381.0056
5 must attest to meeting the level 2 screening requirements for
6 participation under the plan and agree to inform the
7 Department of Health immediately if convicted of any
8 disqualifying offense while providing services under a school
9 health services plan pursuant to s. 381.0056.
10 (5) As used in this section, the term "person who
11 provides services under a school health services plan" does
12 not include an unpaid volunteer who lectures students in group
13 settings on health education topics.
14 Section 11. Paragraphs (a) and (d) of subsection (5)
15 of section 381.0101, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
16 381.0101 Environmental health professionals.--
17 (5) STANDARDS FOR CERTIFICATION.--The department shall
18 adopt rules that establish minimum standards of education,
19 training, or experience for those persons subject to this
20 section. The rules shall also address the process for
21 application, examination, issuance, expiration, and renewal of
22 certification and ethical standards of practice for the
23 profession.
24 (a) Persons employed as environmental health
25 professionals shall exhibit a knowledge of rules and
26 principles of environmental and public health law in Florida
27 through examination. A person may not conduct environmental
28 health evaluations in a primary program area unless he or she
29 is currently certified in that program area or works under the
30 direct supervision of a certified environmental health
31 professional.
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1 1. All persons who begin employment in a primary
2 environmental health program on or after September 21, 1994,
3 must be certified in that program within 6 months after
4 employment.
5 2. Persons employed in the a primary environmental
6 health program of a food protection program or an onsite
7 sewage treatment and disposal system prior to September 21,
8 1994, shall be considered certified while employed in that
9 position and shall be required to adhere to any professional
10 standards established by the department pursuant to paragraph
11 (b), complete any continuing education requirements imposed
12 under paragraph (d), and pay the certificate renewal fee
13 imposed under subsection (7).
14 3. Persons employed in the a primary environmental
15 health program of a food protection program or an onsite
16 sewage treatment and disposal system prior to September 21,
17 1994, who change positions or program areas and transfer into
18 another primary environmental health program area on or after
19 September 21, 1994, must be certified in that program within 6
20 months after such transfer, except that they will not be
21 required to possess the college degree required under
22 paragraph (e).
23 4. Registered sanitarians shall be considered
24 certified and shall be required to adhere to any professional
25 standards established by the department pursuant to paragraph
26 (b).
27 (d) Persons who are certified shall renew their
28 certification biennially by completing not less than 24
29 contact hours of continuing education for each program area in
30 which they maintain certification, subject to a maximum of 48
31 hours for multiprogram certification.
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1 Section 12. Section 381.731, Florida Statutes, is
2 amended to read:
3 381.731 Strategic planning Healthy Communities,
4 Healthy People Plan.--
5 (1) The Department of Health shall include
6 population-based health-promotion strategies in the
7 department's strategic plan developed under s. 186.021 develop
8 a biennial Healthy Communities, Healthy People Plan that shall
9 be submitted to the Governor, the President of the Senate, and
10 the Speaker of the House of Representatives by December 31 of
11 each even-numbered year.
12 (2) The strategic plan must include data on the health
13 status of the state's population, health status objectives and
14 outcome measures, and public health strategies, including
15 health promotion strategies. The strategic plan must also
16 provide an overall conceptual framework for the state's health
17 promotion programs that considers available information on
18 mortality, morbidity, disability, and behavioral risk factors
19 associated with chronic diseases and conditions; proposals for
20 public and private health insurance reforms needed to fully
21 implement the state's health promotion initiative; the best
22 health promotion practices of the county health departments
23 and other states; and proposed educational reforms needed to
24 promote healthy behaviors among the state's school-age
25 children.
26 Section 13. Section 381.734, Florida Statutes, is
27 amended to read:
28 381.734 Healthy Communities, Healthy People Program.--
29 (1) The department shall develop and implement the
30 Healthy Communities, Healthy People Program, a comprehensive
31 and community-based health promotion and wellness program.
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1 The program shall be designed to reduce major behavioral risk
2 factors associated with chronic diseases, including those
3 chronic diseases identified in chapter 385, and injuries and
4 accidents, by enhancing the knowledge, skills, motivation, and
5 opportunities for individuals, organizations, and communities
6 to develop and maintain healthy lifestyles.
7 (2) The department shall consolidate and use existing
8 resources, programs, and program data to develop this program,
9 to avoid duplication of efforts or services. Such resources,
10 programs, and program data shall include the community
11 intervention programs operated, but not be limited to, s.
12 381.103, the comprehensive health improvement project under s.
13 385.103, and the comprehensive public health plan, public
14 information, and statewide injury control plan under s.
15 381.0011(3), (8), and (12).
16 (3) The program shall include:
17 (a) Biennial Statewide assessments of specific,
18 causal, and behavioral risk factors that affect the health of
19 residents of the state.
20 (b) The development of community-based health
21 promotion programs, incorporating health promotion and
22 preventive care practices supported in scientific and medical
23 literature.
24 (c) The development and implementation of statewide
25 age-specific, disease-specific, and community-specific health
26 promotion and preventive care strategies using primary,
27 secondary, and tertiary prevention interventions.
28 (d) The development and implementation of models for
29 testing statewide health promotion of community-based
30 health-promotion model programs that meet specific criteria
31 and address major risk factors in the state and motivate
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1 individuals to permanently adopt healthy behaviors, enhance
2 self-esteem, and increase social and personal
3 responsibilities.
4 (e) The enhancement of the department's State Health
5 Office's special initiatives to develop the mental, emotional,
6 and social competencies of children and adolescents, using
7 innovative school-based and neighborhood-based approaches to
8 build self-esteem and prevent later problems such as drug
9 abuse, poor school performance, criminal behavior, and other
10 behavioral problems.
11 (f) The development and implementation of a statewide
12 health education program to educate the public and communities
13 about health risks and assist them in modifying unhealthy
14 behaviors.
15 (g) The establishment of a comprehensive program to
16 inform the public, health care professionals, and communities
17 about the prevalence of chronic diseases in the state; known
18 and potential risks, including social and behavioral risks;
19 and behavior changes that would reduce risks.
20 (h) The development and implementation of a program
21 for enhancing self-help organizations and volunteer programs
22 that enlist the support of volunteers in health promotion
23 activities, particularly persons who serve as role models
24 because of their public visibility or because of their
25 recovery from or skill in coping with disease.
26 (i) The development of policies that encourage the use
27 of alternative community delivery sites for health promotion
28 and preventive care programs and promote the use of
29 neighborhood delivery sites that are close to work, home, and
30 school.
31
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1 (j) An emphasis on the importance of a physically
2 active lifestyle to build self-esteem, reduce morbidity and
3 mortality associated with chronic disease, and reduce obesity.
4 Section 14. Section 413.46, Florida Statutes, is
5 transferred, renumbered as section 381.7395, Florida Statutes,
6 and amended to read:
7 381.7395 413.46 Legislative intent.--It is the intent
8 of the Legislature to ensure the referral of individuals
9 persons who have moderate-to-severe brain or spinal cord
10 injuries to the brain and spinal cord injury program, a
11 coordinated rehabilitation program developed and administered
12 by the department division. The program shall provide eligible
13 persons, as defined in s. 381.76 s. 413.507, the opportunity
14 to obtain the necessary rehabilitative services enabling them
15 to be referred to a vocational rehabilitation program or to
16 return to an appropriate level of functioning in their
17 community. Further, it is intended that permanent disability
18 be avoided, whenever possible, through prevention, early
19 identification, skilled emergency medical services and
20 transport evacuation procedures, and proper medical and
21 rehabilitative treatment.
22 Section 15. Section 381.745, Florida Statutes, is
23 created to read:
24 381.745 Definitions.--As used in ss. 381.739-381.79,
25 the term:
26 (1) "Activity of daily living" means an activity
27 required on a frequent basis which permits an individual to
28 secure or maintain independence. Such activities include, but
29 are not limited to, personal home care, transportation,
30 personal-assistance services, housekeeping, shopping,
31 attending school, communication, and employment.
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1 (2) "Brain or spinal cord injury" means:
2 (a) A lesion to the spinal cord or cauda equina,
3 resulting from external trauma, with evidence of significant
4 involvement of two of the following deficits or dysfunctions:
5 1. Motor deficit.
6 2. Sensory deficit.
7 3. Bowel and bladder dysfunction.
8 (b) An insult to the skull, brain, or its covering,
9 resulting from external trauma that produces an altered state
10 of consciousness or anatomic motor, sensory, cognitive, or
11 behavioral deficits.
12 (3) "Emergency medical evacuation system" means a
13 department-approved transportation system that provides timely
14 and skilled emergency care and movement of individuals
15 believed to have sustained a brain or spinal cord injury.
16 (4) "Personal-assistance services" means a range of
17 services, provided by one or more individuals, which are
18 designed to assist an individual who has a disability to
19 perform activities of daily living.
20 (5) "Funded services" means services paid for through
21 the brain and spinal cord injury program.
22 (6) "Designated facility" means a facility approved by
23 the brain and spinal cord injury program which meets the
24 criteria and standards of care of the brain and spinal cord
25 injury program for individuals who have sustained a brain or
26 spinal cord injury.
27 (7) "Third-party coverage" means any claim for, right
28 to receive payment for, or any coverage for the payment of any
29 services under the brain and spinal cord injury program.
30 (8) "Third-party payment" means any and all payments
31 received or due as a result of any third-party obligation
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1 created by gift, coverage or other contract, settlement or
2 judicial decision, or action of law.
3 (9) "Transitional living facility" means a
4 state-approved facility, as defined and licensed under chapter
5 400, or a facility approved by the brain and spinal cord
6 injury program in accordance with this chapter.
7 (10) "Trauma center" means a department-approved acute
8 care facility that provides diagnosis and treatment of
9 individuals who have sustained a brain or spinal cord injury.
10 Section 16. Section 381.75, Florida Statutes, is
11 amended to read:
12 381.75 Duties and responsibilities of the department,
13 of transitional living facilities, and of
14 residents.--Consistent with the mandate of s. 381.7395 s.
15 413.46, the department shall develop and administer a
16 multilevel treatment program for individuals persons who
17 sustain have brain or spinal cord injuries and who are
18 referred to the brain and spinal cord injury program.
19 (1) Within 15 days after any report of an individual a
20 person who has sustained a brain or spinal cord injury, the
21 department shall notify the individual or the most immediate
22 available family members of their right to assistance from the
23 state, the services available, and the eligibility
24 requirements.
25 (2) The department shall refer individuals persons who
26 have brain or spinal cord injuries to other state agencies to
27 assure that rehabilitative services, if desired, are obtained
28 by that individual person.
29 (3) The department, in consultation with emergency
30 medical service, shall develop standards for an emergency
31 medical evacuation system that will ensure that all
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1 individuals persons who sustain traumatic brain or spinal cord
2 injuries are transported to a department-approved trauma
3 center that meets the standards and criteria established by
4 the emergency medical service and the acute-care standards of
5 the brain and spinal cord injury program.
6 (4) The department shall develop standards for
7 designation of rehabilitation centers to provide
8 rehabilitation services for individuals persons who have brain
9 or spinal cord injuries.
10 (5) The department shall determine the appropriate
11 number of designated acute-care facilities, inpatient
12 rehabilitation centers, and outpatient rehabilitation centers,
13 needed based on incidence, volume of admissions, and other
14 appropriate criteria.
15 (6) The department shall develop standards for
16 designation of transitional living facilities to provide
17 individuals the opportunity to adjust to their disabilities
18 and to develop physical and functional skills in a supported
19 living environment.
20 (a) The Agency for Health Care Administration, in
21 consultation with the department, shall develop rules for the
22 licensure of transitional living facilities for individuals
23 persons who have brain or spinal cord injuries.
24 (b) The goal of a transitional living program for
25 individuals persons who have brain or spinal cord injuries is
26 to assist each individual person who has such a disability to
27 achieve a higher level of independent functioning and to
28 enable that person to reenter the community. The program shall
29 be focused on preparing participants to return to community
30 living.
31
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1 (c) A transitional living facility for an individual a
2 person who has a brain or spinal cord injury shall provide to
3 such individual person, in a residential setting, a
4 goal-oriented treatment program designed to improve the
5 individual's person's physical, cognitive, communicative,
6 behavioral, psychological, and social functioning, as well as
7 to provide necessary support and supervision. A transitional
8 living facility shall offer at least the following therapies:
9 physical, occupational, speech, neuropsychology, independent
10 living skills training, behavior analysis for programs serving
11 brain-injured individuals persons, health education, and
12 recreation.
13 (d) All residents shall use the transitional living
14 facility as a temporary measure and not as a permanent home or
15 domicile. The transitional living facility shall develop an
16 initial treatment plan for each resident within 3 days after
17 the resident's admission. The transitional living facility
18 shall develop a comprehensive plan of treatment and a
19 discharge plan for each resident as soon as practical, but no
20 later than 30 days after the resident's admission. Each
21 comprehensive treatment plan and discharge plan must be
22 reviewed and updated as necessary, but no less often than
23 quarterly. This subsection does not require the discharge of
24 an individual who continues to require any of the specialized
25 services described in paragraph (c) or who is making
26 measurable progress in accordance with that individual's
27 comprehensive treatment plan. The transitional living facility
28 shall discharge any individual who has an appropriate
29 discharge site and who has achieved the goals of his or her
30 discharge plan or who is no longer making progress toward the
31 goals established in the comprehensive treatment plan and the
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1 discharge plan. The discharge location must be the least
2 restrictive environment in which an individual's health,
3 well-being, and safety is preserved.
4 (7) Recipients of services, under this section, from
5 any of the facilities referred to in this section shall pay a
6 fee based on ability to pay.
7 Section 17. Section 381.755, Florida Statutes, is
8 created to read:
9 381.755 Benefits not assignable.--The right of an
10 eligible individual to any services provided by the brain and
11 spinal cord injury program is not transferable or assignable,
12 and any benefits, including money, goods, or chattels,
13 received as services under the brain and spinal cord injury
14 program are exempt from all state, county, and municipal taxes
15 and from sale under the process of any court, except for
16 obligations contracted for the purchase of such property.
17 Section 18. Section 381.76, Florida Statutes, is
18 amended to read:
19 381.76 Eligibility for the brain and spinal cord
20 injury program.--
21 (1) An individual shall be accepted as eligible for
22 the brain and spinal cord injury program following
23 certification by the department that the individual:
24 (a) Has been referred to the central registry pursuant
25 to s. 381.74; s. 413.48.
26 (b) Is a legal resident of this state at the time of
27 application for services;.
28 (c) Has sustained a brain or spinal cord suffered a
29 traumatic injury; as defined in s. 413.20.
30 (d) Is medically stable; and as defined by rules of
31 the department.
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1 (e) Is reasonably expected to achieve reintegration
2 into the community through rehabilitative services provided by
3 the brain and spinal cord injury program.
4 (2) If In the event the department is unable to
5 provide services to all eligible individuals, the department
6 may establish an order of selection.
7 Section 19. Section 381.765, Florida Statutes, is
8 created to read:
9 381.765 Retention of title to and disposal of
10 equipment.--
11 (1) The department may retain title to any property,
12 tools, instruments, training supplies, equipment, or other
13 items of value acquired for services provided under the brain
14 and spinal cord injury program or for personnel employed in
15 operating the brain and spinal cord injury program, and may
16 repossess or transfer such property, tools, instruments,
17 supplies, equipment, or other items of value.
18 (2) The department may offer for sale any surplus
19 items acquired in operating the brain and spinal cord injury
20 program when they are no longer necessary or exchange them for
21 necessary items that may be used to greater advantage. When
22 any such surplus equipment is sold or exchanged, a receipt for
23 the equipment shall be taken from the purchaser showing the
24 consideration given for such equipment and forwarded to the
25 Treasurer, and any funds received by the brain and spinal cord
26 injury program pursuant to any such transaction shall be
27 deposited in the Brain and Spinal Cord Injury Rehabilitation
28 Trust Fund and shall be available for expenditure for any
29 purpose consistent with this part.
30
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1 (3) The department may adopt rules relating to records
2 and recordkeeping for department-owned property referenced in
3 subsections (1) and (2).
4 Section 20. Section 381.775, Florida Statutes, is
5 created to read:
6 381.775 Applicant and recipient records; confidential
7 and privileged.--
8 (1) All oral and written records, information,
9 letters, and reports received, made, or maintained by the
10 department relative to any applicant for or recipient of
11 services under the brain and spinal cord injury program are
12 privileged, confidential, and exempt from s. 119.07(1). Any
13 person who discloses or releases such records, information, or
14 communications in violation of this section commits a
15 misdemeanor of the second degree, punishable as provided in s.
16 775.082 or s. 775.083. Such records may not be released,
17 except that:
18 (a) Records may be released to the applicant or
19 recipient, or his or her representative, upon receipt of a
20 written waiver from the applicant or recipient. Medical,
21 psychological, or other information that the department
22 believes may be harmful to an applicant or recipient may not
23 be released directly to him or her, but must be provided
24 through a licensed health care professional designated by the
25 applicant or recipient.
26 (b) Records that do not identify applicants or
27 recipients may be released for the purpose of research, when
28 the research is approved by the department.
29 (c) Records used in administering the brain and spinal
30 cord injury program may be released as required to administer
31 the program or as required by an agency or political
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1 subdivision of the state in the performance of its duties. Any
2 agency or political subdivision to which records are released
3 under this paragraph may not disclose the records to third
4 parties.
5 (d) Records may be released upon the order of an
6 administrative law judge, a hearing officer, a judge of
7 compensation claims, an agency head exercising quasi-judicial
8 authority, or a judge of a court of competent jurisdiction
9 following a finding in an in camera proceeding that the
10 records are relevant to the inquiry before the court and
11 should be released. The in camera proceeding and all records
12 relating thereto are confidential and exempt from s.
13 119.07(1).
14 (e) Whenever an applicant for or recipient of services
15 under the brain and spinal cord injury program has declared
16 any intention to harm other persons or property, such
17 declaration may be disclosed.
18 (f) The department may release personal information
19 about an applicant for or recipient of services under the
20 brain and spinal cord injury program in order to protect him
21 or her or others when the applicant or recipient poses a
22 threat to his or her own safety or to the safety of others and
23 shall, upon official request, release such information to law
24 enforcement agencies investigating the commission of a crime.
25 (2) Records that come into the possession of the
26 department relative to any applicant for or receipt of
27 services under the brain and spinal cord injury program and
28 that are confidential by other provisions of law are
29 confidential and exempt from s. 119.07(1), and may not be
30 released by the department, except as provided in this
31 section.
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1 Section 21. Section 381.78, Florida Statutes, is
2 amended to read:
3 381.78 Advisory council on brain and spinal cord
4 injuries.--
5 (1) There is created within the department a 16-member
6 advisory council on brain and spinal cord injuries. The
7 council shall be composed of a minimum of four individuals
8 persons who have brain injuries or are family members of
9 individuals persons who have brain injuries, a minimum of four
10 individuals persons who have spinal cord injuries or are
11 family members of individuals persons who have spinal cord
12 injuries, and a minimum of two individuals persons who
13 represent the special needs of children who have brain or
14 spinal cord injuries. The balance of the council members shall
15 be physicians, other allied health professionals,
16 administrators of brain and spinal cord injury programs, and
17 representatives from support groups that have expertise in
18 areas related to the rehabilitation of individuals persons who
19 have brain or spinal cord injuries.
20 (2) Members of the council shall be appointed to serve
21 by the Secretary of Health. All members' terms shall be for 4
22 years. An individual may not serve more than two terms.
23 (a) Eight members of the first appointed council shall
24 serve an initial term of 2 years. This group shall include two
25 persons who have brain injuries or are family members of
26 persons who have brain injuries, two persons who have spinal
27 cord injuries or are family members of persons who have spinal
28 cord injuries, and four other persons from the previous
29 council.
30
31
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1 (b) The remaining members of the first appointed
2 council shall serve an initial term of 4 years. Thereafter all
3 members' terms shall be for 4 years.
4 (c) Any council member who is unwilling or unable to
5 properly fulfill the duties of the office shall be succeeded
6 by an individual a person chosen by the secretary to serve out
7 the unexpired balance of the replaced council member's term.
8 If the unexpired balance of the replaced council member's term
9 is less than 18 months, then, notwithstanding the provisions
10 of this subsection, the succeeding council member may be
11 reappointed by the secretary twice.
12 (3) The council shall meet at least two times
13 annually.
14 (4) The council shall:
15 (a) Provide advice and expertise to the department
16 division in the preparation, implementation, and periodic
17 review of the brain and spinal cord injury program as
18 referenced in s. 413.49.
19 (b) Annually appoint a five-member committee composed
20 of one individual person who has a brain injury or has a
21 family member with a brain injury, one individual person who
22 has a spinal cord injury or has a family member with a spinal
23 cord injury, and three members who shall be chosen from among
24 these representative groups: physicians, other allied health
25 professionals, administrators of brain and spinal cord injury
26 programs, and representatives from support groups with
27 expertise in areas related to the rehabilitation of
28 individuals persons who have brain or spinal cord injuries,
29 except that one and only one member of the committee shall be
30 an administrator of a transitional living facility. Membership
31
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1 on the council is not a prerequisite for membership on this
2 committee.
3 1. The committee shall perform onsite visits to those
4 transitional living facilities identified by the Agency for
5 Health Care Administration as being in possible violation of
6 the statutes and rules regulating such facilities. The
7 committee members have the same rights of entry and inspection
8 granted under s. 400.805(7) to designated representatives of
9 the agency.
10 2. Factual findings of the committee resulting from an
11 onsite investigation of a facility pursuant to subparagraph 1.
12 shall be adopted by the agency in developing its
13 administrative response regarding enforcement of statutes and
14 rules regulating the operation of the facility.
15 3. Onsite investigations by the committee shall be
16 funded by the Health Care Trust Fund.
17 4. Travel expenses for committee members shall be
18 reimbursed in accordance with s. 112.061.
19 5. Members of the committee shall recuse themselves
20 from participating in any investigation that would create a
21 conflict of interest under state law, and the council shall
22 replace the member, either temporarily or permanently.
23 (5) Members of the advisory council are entitled to
24 reimbursement for per diem and travel expenses for required
25 attendance at council meetings in accordance with s. 112.061.
26 Reasonable expenses for personal-assistance services and
27 interpreters needed by members during required attendance at
28 council meetings shall be reimbursed. A member may not receive
29 any compensation for performing duties specified in, or
30 arising out of, her or his duties as a council member under
31 this part, except as otherwise specified in this part.
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1 (6) A member of the advisory council may not cast a
2 vote on any matter that would provide direct financial benefit
3 to the member or create a conflict of interest under state
4 law.
5 (7) A member of the advisory council may be removed
6 from office by the Secretary of Health for malfeasance,
7 misfeasance, neglect of duty, incompetence, or permanent
8 inability to perform official duties or for pleading nolo
9 contendere to, or being found guilty of, a crime. Malfeasance
10 includes, but is not limited to, a violation of any specific
11 prohibition within this part.
12 Section 22. Section 381.785, Florida Statutes, is
13 created to read:
14 381.785 Recovery of third-party payments for funded
15 services.--
16 (1) Third-party coverage for funded services
17 constitutes primary coverage.
18 (2) An applicant for or recipient of services funded
19 under the brain and spinal cord injury program must inform the
20 brain and spinal cord injury program of any rights she or he
21 has to third-party payments for such services, and the brain
22 and spinal cord injury program shall be subrogated to her or
23 his rights to such third-party payments. The brain and spinal
24 cord injury program may recover directly from:
25 (a) Any third party that is liable to make a benefit
26 payment to the provider of the recipient's funded services or
27 to the recipient under the terms of any contract, settlement,
28 or award;
29 (b) The recipient, if she or he has received a
30 third-party payment for funded services provided to her or
31 him; or
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1 (c) The provider of the recipient's funded services,
2 if third-party payment for such services has been recovered by
3 the provider.
4 (3) An applicant for or a recipient of funded services
5 is deemed to have assigned to the brain and spinal cord injury
6 program her or his rights to any payments for such services
7 from a third party and to have authorized the brain and spinal
8 cord injury program to release information with respect to
9 such services for the sole purpose of obtaining reimbursement.
10 (4) The brain and spinal cord injury program may, in
11 order to enforce its rights under this section, institute,
12 intervene in, or join any legal proceeding against a third
13 party against whom recovery rights arise. Action taken by the
14 brain and spinal cord injury program does not preclude the
15 recipient's recovery for that portion of her or his damages
16 not subrogated to the brain and spinal cord injury program,
17 and action taken by the recipient does not prejudice the
18 rights of the brain and spinal cord injury program.
19 (5) When the brain and spinal cord injury program
20 provides, pays for, or becomes liable for funded services, it
21 has a lien for the amount of such services upon all causes of
22 action that accrue to the recipient or to her or his legal
23 representatives as a result of sickness, injury, disease,
24 disability, or death due to the liability of a third party
25 which necessitated funded services. To perfect such lien, a
26 notice of lien must be filed with the clerk of the circuit
27 court in the recipient's county of residence. The notice of
28 lien must contain the name and address of the person to whom
29 services were furnished and the name, address, and telephone
30 number of a person at the brain and spinal cord injury program
31 from whom information regarding the lien can be obtained.
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1 Failure of the brain and spinal cord injury program to file a
2 notice of lien does not affect the program's other rights
3 provided in this section. Any notice of lien filed as provided
4 under this subsection is valid for 5 years after filing, and
5 may be extended for an additional 5-year period by filing a
6 new notice of lien at any time prior to the expiration of the
7 original notice of lien.
8 (6) In recovering any payments in accordance with this
9 section, the brain and spinal cord injury program may make
10 appropriate settlements.
11 (7) Notwithstanding any other law to the contrary,
12 payments made for funded services are neither collateral
13 payments nor collateral sources within the meaning of chapter
14 86-160, Laws of Florida, or chapter 88-1, Laws of Florida.
15 (8) Notwithstanding any other law to the contrary, the
16 brain and spinal cord injury program retains all rights and
17 remedies granted under this section as against moneys paid
18 under chapter 440.
19 (9) The department shall adopt rules to administer
20 this section.
21 Section 23. Section 381.79, Florida Statutes, is
22 amended to read:
23 381.79 Brain and Spinal Cord Injury Program
24 Rehabilitation Trust Fund.--
25 (1) There is created in the State Treasury the Brain
26 and Spinal Cord Injury Program Rehabilitation Trust Fund.
27 Moneys in the fund shall be appropriated to the department for
28 the purpose of providing the cost of care for brain or spinal
29 cord injuries as a payor of last resort to residents of this
30 state, for multilevel programs of care established pursuant to
31 s. 381.75 s. 413.49.
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1 (a) Authorization of expenditures for brain or spinal
2 cord injury care shall be made only by the department.
3 (b) Authorized expenditures include acute care,
4 rehabilitation, transitional living, equipment, and supplies
5 necessary for activities of daily living, public information,
6 prevention, education, and research. In addition, the
7 department may provide matching funds for public or private
8 assistance provided under the brain and spinal cord injury
9 program and may provide funds for any approved expansion of
10 services for treating individuals who have sustained a brain
11 or spinal cord injury.
12 (2) The department shall issue a report to the
13 President of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of
14 Representatives by March 1 of each year, summarizing the
15 activities supported by the trust fund.
16 (3) Annually, 5 percent of the revenues deposited
17 monthly in the fund pursuant to s. 318.21(2)(d) shall be
18 appropriated to the University of Florida and 5 percent to the
19 University of Miami for spinal cord injury and brain injury
20 research. The amount to be distributed to the universities
21 shall be calculated based on the deposits into the fund for
22 each quarter in the fiscal year, but may not exceed $500,000
23 per university per year. Funds distributed under this
24 subsection shall be made in quarterly payments at the end of
25 each quarter during the fiscal year.
26 (4) The Board of Regents shall establish a program
27 administration process which shall include: an annual
28 prospective program plan with goals, research design, proposed
29 outcomes, a proposed budget, an annual report of research
30 activities and findings, and an annual end-of-year financial
31 statement. Prospective program plans shall be submitted to the
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1 Board of Regents, and funds shall be released upon acceptance
2 of the proposed program plans. The annual report of research
3 activities and findings shall be submitted to the Board of
4 Regents, with the executive summaries submitted to the
5 President of the Senate, the Speaker of the House of
6 Representatives, and the Secretary of the Department of
7 Health.
8 (5) Moneys received under s. 381.785 shall be
9 deposited into the trust fund and used for the purposes
10 specified in subsection (1).
11 (6) The department may accept, deposit into the trust
12 fund, and use for carrying out the purposes of this part gifts
13 made unconditionally by will or otherwise. Any gift made under
14 conditions that, in the judgment of the department, are proper
15 and consistent with this section, the laws of the United
16 States, and the laws of this state may be accepted and shall
17 be held, invested, reinvested, and used in accordance with the
18 conditions of the gift.
19 Section 24. Section 385.103, Florida Statutes, is
20 amended to read:
21 385.103 Community intervention programs Chronic
22 disease control program.--
23 (1) DEFINITIONS.--As used in this section, the term
24 act:
25 (a) "Chronic disease prevention and control program"
26 means a program including a combination of at least the
27 following elements:
28 1. Health screening;
29 2. Risk factor detection;
30
31
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1 3. Appropriate intervention to enable and encourage
2 changes in behaviors that create health risks risk factor
3 reversal; and
4 4. Counseling in nutrition, physical activity, the
5 effects of tobacco use, hypertension, blood pressure control,
6 and diabetes control and the provision of other clinical
7 prevention services counseling.
8 (b) "Community health education program" means a
9 program involving the planned and coordinated use of the
10 educational resources available in a community in an effort
11 to:
12 1. Motivate and assist citizens to adopt and maintain
13 healthful practices and lifestyles;
14 2. Make available learning opportunities which will
15 increase the ability of people to make informed decisions
16 affecting their personal, family, and community well-being and
17 which are designed to facilitate voluntary adoption of
18 behavior which will improve or maintain health;
19 3. Reduce, through coordination among appropriate
20 agencies, duplication of health education efforts; and
21 4. Facilitate collaboration among appropriate agencies
22 for efficient use of scarce resources.
23 (c) "Community intervention program" "Comprehensive
24 health improvement project" means a program combining the
25 required elements of both a chronic disease prevention and
26 control program and a community health education program into
27 a unified program over which a single administrative entity
28 has authority and responsibility.
29 (d) "Department" means the Department of Health.
30 (e) "District" means a service district of the
31 department.
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1 (e)(f) "Risk factor" means a factor identified during
2 the course of an epidemiological study of a disease, which
3 factor appears to be statistically associated with a high
4 incidence of that disease.
5 (2) OPERATION OF COMMUNITY INTERVENTION PROGRAMS
6 COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH IMPROVEMENT PROJECTS.--
7 (a) The department shall assist the county health
8 departments in developing and operating community intervention
9 programs comprehensive health improvement projects throughout
10 the state. At a minimum, the community intervention programs
11 comprehensive health improvement projects shall address one to
12 three of the following the chronic diseases: of cancer,
13 diabetes, heart disease, stroke, hypertension, renal disease,
14 and chronic obstructive lung disease.
15 (b) Existing community resources, when available,
16 shall be used to support the programs. The department shall
17 seek funding for the programs from federal and state financial
18 assistance programs which presently exist or which may be
19 hereafter created. Additional services, as appropriate, may be
20 incorporated into a program to the extent that resources are
21 available. The department may accept gifts and grants in
22 order to carry out a program.
23 (c) Volunteers shall be used to the maximum extent
24 possible in carrying out the programs. The department shall
25 contract for the necessary insurance coverage to protect
26 volunteers from personal liability while acting within the
27 scope of their volunteer assignments under a program.
28 (d) The department may contract for the provision of
29 all or any portion of the services required by a program, and
30 shall so contract whenever the services so provided are more
31 cost-efficient than those provided by the department.
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1 (e) If the department determines that it is necessary
2 for clients to help pay for services provided by a program,
3 the department may require clients to make contribution
4 therefor in either money or personal services. The amount of
5 money or value of the personal services shall be fixed
6 according to a fee schedule established by the department or
7 by the entity developing the program. In establishing the fee
8 schedule, the department or the entity developing the program
9 shall take into account the expenses and resources of a client
10 and his or her overall ability to pay for the services.
11 (f) The department shall adopt rules governing the
12 operation of the community intervention programs health
13 improvement projects. These rules shall include guidelines
14 for intake and enrollment of clients into the projects.
15 Section 25. Subsection (3) of section 385.207, Florida
16 Statutes, is amended to read:
17 385.207 Care and assistance of persons with epilepsy;
18 establishment of programs in epilepsy control.--
19 (3) Revenue for statewide implementation of programs
20 for epilepsy prevention and education pursuant to this section
21 shall be derived pursuant to the provisions of s. 318.21(6) s.
22 318.18(12) and shall be deposited in the Epilepsy Services
23 Trust Fund, which is hereby established to be administered by
24 the Department of Health. All funds deposited into the trust
25 fund shall be invested pursuant to the provisions of s.
26 18.125. Interest income accruing to such invested funds shall
27 increase the total funds available under this subsection.
28 Section 26. Section 402.181, Florida Statutes, is
29 amended to read:
30 402.181 State Institutions Claims Program.--
31
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1 (1) There is created a State Institutions Claims
2 Program, for the purpose of making restitution for property
3 damages and direct medical expenses for injuries caused by
4 shelter children or foster children, or escapees, or inmates,
5 or patients of state institutions under the Department of
6 Children and Family Services, the Department of Health, the
7 Department of Juvenile Justice, or the Department of
8 Corrections.
9 (2) Claims for restitution may be filed with the
10 Department of Legal Affairs at its office in accordance with
11 regulations prescribed by the Department of Legal Affairs. The
12 Department of Legal Affairs shall have full power and
13 authority to hear, investigate, and determine all questions in
14 respect to such claims and is authorized, within the limits of
15 current appropriations, to pay individual claims up to $1,000
16 or, with respect to children in foster care and their
17 families, individual claims up to $1,500. Claims in excess of
18 these amounts shall continue to require legislative approval.
19 (3)(a) The Department of Legal Affairs shall make or
20 cause to be made such investigations as it considers necessary
21 in respect to such claims. Hearings shall be held in
22 accordance with chapter 120.
23 (b) The Department of Legal Affairs shall work with
24 the Department of Children and Family Services, the Department
25 of Health, the Department of Juvenile Justice, and the
26 Department of Corrections to streamline the process of
27 investigations, hearings, and determinations with respect to
28 claims under this section, to ensure that eligible claimants
29 receive restitution within a reasonable time.
30 Section 27. Section 514.021, Florida Statutes, is
31 amended to read:
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1 514.021 Department authorization.--The department is
2 authorized to adopt and enforce rules to protect the health,
3 safety, or welfare of persons using public swimming pools and
4 bathing places. The department shall review and revise such
5 rules as necessary, but not less than biennially biannually.
6 Sanitation and safety standards shall include, but not be
7 limited to, matters relating to structure; appurtenances;
8 operation; source of water supply; bacteriological, chemical,
9 and physical quality of water in the pool or bathing area;
10 method of water purification, treatment, and disinfection;
11 lifesaving apparatus; measures to ensure safety of bathers;
12 and measures to ensure the personal cleanliness of bathers.
13 Section 28. February 6th of each year is designated
14 Florida Alzheimer's Disease Day.
15 Section 29. Long-term community-based supports.--The
16 department shall, contingent upon specific appropriations for
17 these purposes:
18 (1) Study the long-term needs for community-based
19 supports and services for individuals who have sustained
20 traumatic brain or spinal cord injuries. The purpose of this
21 study is to prevent inappropriate residential and
22 institutional placement of these individuals, and promote
23 placement in the most cost effective and least restrictive
24 environment. Any placement recommendations for these
25 individuals shall ensure full utilization of and collaboration
26 with other state agencies, programs, and community partners.
27 This study shall be submitted to the Governor, the President
28 of the Senate, and the Speaker of the House of Representatives
29 not later than December 31, 2000.
30 (2) Based upon the results of this study, establish a
31 plan for the implementation of a program of long-term
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1 community-based supports and services for individuals who have
2 sustained traumatic brain or spinal cord injuries who may be
3 subject to inappropriate residential and institutional
4 placement as a direct result of such injuries.
5 (a) The program shall be payor of last resort for
6 program services and expenditures for such services shall be
7 considered funded services for purposes of section 381.785,
8 Florida Statutes; however, notwithstanding section 381.79(5),
9 Florida Statutes, proceeds resulting from this subsection
10 shall be used solely for this program.
11 (b) The department shall create, by rule, procedures
12 to ensure, that in the event the program is unable to directly
13 or indirectly provide such services to all eligible
14 individuals due to lack of funds, those individuals most at
15 risk to suffer the greatest harm from an imminent
16 inappropriate residential or institutional placement are
17 served first.
18 (c) Every applicant or recipient of the long-term
19 community-based supports and services program shall have been
20 a resident of the state for 1 year immediately preceding
21 application and be a resident of the state at the time of
22 application.
23 (d) The department shall adopt rules pursuant to
24 sections 120.536(1) and 120.54, Florida Statutes, to implement
25 the provision of this subsection.
26 Section 30. If any provision of this act or its
27 application to any person or circumstance is held invalid, the
28 invalidity does not affect other provisions or applications of
29 this act which can be given effect without the invalid
30 provision or application, and to this end the provisions of
31 this act are severable.
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1 Section 31. (1) It is the intent of the Legislature
2 to:
3 (a) Reduce the rates of illness and death from lung
4 cancer and other cancers and improve the quality of life among
5 low-income African-American and Hispanic populations through
6 increased access to early, effective screening and diagnosis,
7 education, and treatment programs.
8 (b) Create a community faith-based disease-prevention
9 program in conjunction with the Health Choice Network and
10 other community health centers to build upon the natural
11 referral and education networks in place within minority
12 communities and to increase access to health service delivery
13 in South Florida.
14 (c) Establish a funding source to build upon local
15 private participation to sustain the operation of the program.
16 (2)(a) There is created the Jessie Trice Cancer
17 Prevention Program, to be located, for administrative
18 purposes, within the Department of Health, and operated from
19 the community health centers within the Health Choice Network
20 in South Florida.
21 (b) Funding will be provided to develop contracts with
22 community health centers and local community faith-based
23 education programs to provide cancer screening, diagnosis,
24 education, and treatment services to low-income populations
25 throughout the state. Pilot programs will be initially created
26 in the communities of Goulds, Naranja, Coconut Grove, Liberty
27 City, and East Little Havana in Dade County and Dunbar in Lee
28 County.
29 Section 32. Funds to implement the provisions in this
30 act are contingent upon a specific appropriation for that
31 purpose in the General Appropriations Act.
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1 Section 33. Florida Commission on Excellence in Health
2 Care.--
3 (1) LEGISLATIVE FINDINGS AND INTENT.--The Legislature
4 finds that the health care delivery industry is one of the
5 largest and most complex industries in Florida. The
6 Legislature finds that additional focus on strengthening
7 health care delivery systems by eliminating avoidable mistakes
8 in the diagnosis and treatment of Floridians holds tremendous
9 promise to increase the quality of health care services
10 available to Floridians. To achieve this enhanced focus, it is
11 the intent of the Legislature to create the Florida Commission
12 on Excellence in Health Care to facilitate the development of
13 a comprehensive statewide strategy for improving health care
14 delivery systems through meaningful reporting standards, data
15 collection and review, and quality measurement.
16 (2) DEFINITIONS.--As used in this act, the term:
17 (a) "Agency" means the Agency for Health Care
18 Administration.
19 (b) "Commission" means the Florida Commission on
20 Excellence in Health Care.
21 (c) "Department" means the Department of Health.
22 (d) "Error," with respect to health care, means an
23 unintended act, by omission or commission.
24 (e) "Health care practitioner" means any person
25 licensed under chapter 457; chapter 458; chapter 459; chapter
26 460; chapter 461; chapter 462; chapter 463; chapter 464;
27 chapter 465; chapter 466; chapter 467; part I, part II, part
28 III, part V, part X, part XIII, or part XIV of chapter 468;
29 chapter 478; chapter 480; part III or part IV of chapter 483;
30 chapter 484; chapter 486; chapter 490; or chapter 491, Florida
31 Statutes.
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1 (f) "Health care provider" means any health care
2 facility or other health care organization licensed or
3 certified to provide approved medical and allied health
4 services in this state.
5 (3) COMMISSION; DUTIES AND RESPONSIBILITIES.--There is
6 created the Florida Commission on Excellence in Health Care.
7 The commission shall:
8 (a) Identify existing data sources that evaluate
9 quality of care in Florida and collect, analyze, and evaluate
10 this data.
11 (b) Establish guidelines for data sharing and
12 coordination.
13 (c) Identify core sets of quality measures for
14 standardized reporting by appropriate components of the health
15 care continuum.
16 (d) Recommend a framework for quality measurement and
17 outcome reporting.
18 (e) Develop quality measures that enhance and improve
19 the ability to evaluate and improve care.
20 (f) Make recommendations regarding research and
21 development needed to advance quality measurement and
22 reporting.
23 (g) Evaluate regulatory issues relating to the
24 pharmacy profession and recommend changes necessary to
25 optimize patient safety.
26 (h) Facilitate open discussion of a process to ensure
27 that comparative information on health care quality is valid,
28 reliable, comprehensive, understandable, and widely available
29 in the public domain.
30
31
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1 (i) Sponsor public hearings to share information and
2 expertise, identify "best practices," and recommend methods to
3 promote their acceptance.
4 (j) Evaluate current regulatory programs to determine
5 what changes, if any, need to be made to facilitate patient
6 safety.
7 (k) Review public and private health care purchasing
8 systems to determine if there are sufficient mandates and
9 incentives to facilitate continuous improvement in patient
10 safety.
11 (l) Analyze how effective existing regulatory systems
12 are in ensuring continuous competence and knowledge of
13 effective safety practices.
14 (m) Develop a framework for organizations that
15 license, accredit, or credential health care practitioners and
16 health care providers to more quickly and effectively identify
17 unsafe providers and practitioners and to take action
18 necessary to remove the unsafe provider or practitioner from
19 practice or operation until such time as the practitioner or
20 provider has proven safe to practice or operate.
21 (n) Recommend procedures for development of a
22 curriculum on patient safety and methods of incorporating such
23 curriculum into training, licensure, and certification
24 requirements.
25 (o) Develop a framework for regulatory bodies to
26 disseminate information on patient safety to health care
27 practitioners, health care providers, and consumers through
28 conferences, journal articles and editorials, newsletters,
29 publications, and Internet websites.
30 (p) Recommend procedures to incorporate recognized
31 patient safety considerations into practice guidelines and
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1 into standards related to the introduction and diffusion of
2 new technologies, therapies, and drugs.
3 (q) Recommend a framework for development of
4 community-based collaborative initiatives for error reporting
5 and analysis and implementation of patient safety
6 improvements.
7 (r) Evaluate the role of advertising in promoting or
8 adversely affecting patient safety.
9 (4) MEMBERSHIP, ORGANIZATION, MEETINGS, PROCEDURES,
10 STAFF.--
11 (a) The commission shall consist of:
12 1. The Secretary of Health and the Director of Health
13 Care Administration;
14 2. One representative each from the following agencies
15 or organizations: the Board of Medicine, the Board of
16 Osteopathic Medicine, the Board of Pharmacy, the Board of
17 Dentistry, the Board of Nursing, the Florida Dental
18 Association, the Florida Medical Association, the Florida
19 Osteopathic Medical Association, the Florida Chiropractic
20 Association, the Florida Chiropractic Society, the Florida
21 Podiatric Medical Association, the Florida Nurses Association,
22 the Florida Organization of Nursing Executives, the Florida
23 Pharmacy Association, the Florida Society of Health System
24 Pharmacists, Inc., the Florida Hospital Association, the
25 Association of Community Hospitals and Health Systems of
26 Florida, Inc., the Florida League of Health Systems, the
27 Florida Health Care Risk Management Advisory Council, the
28 Florida Health Care Association, the Florida Statutory
29 Teaching Hospital Council, Inc., the Florida Statutory Rural
30 Hospital Council, the Florida Association of Homes for the
31 Aging, and the Florida Society for Respiratory Care;
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1 3. Two health lawyers, appointed by the Secretary of
2 Health, one of whom must be a member of the Health Law Section
3 of The Florida Bar who defends physicians and one of whom must
4 be a member of the Academy of Florida Trial Lawyers;
5 4. Two representatives of the health insurance
6 industry, appointed by the Director of Health Care
7 Administration, one of whom shall represent indemnity plans
8 and one of whom shall represent managed care;
9 5. Five consumer advocates, consisting of one from the
10 Association for Responsible Medicine, two appointed by the
11 Governor, one appointed by the President of the Senate, and
12 one appointed by the Speaker of the House of Representatives;
13 6. Two legislators, one appointed by the President of
14 the Senate and one appointed by the Speaker of the House of
15 Representatives; and
16 7. One representative of a Florida medical school
17 appointed by the Secretary of Health.
18
19 Commission membership shall reflect the geographic and
20 demographic diversity of the state.
21 (b) The Secretary of Health and the Director of Health
22 Care Administration shall jointly chair the commission.
23 Subcommittees shall be formed by the joint chairs, as needed,
24 to make recommendations to the full commission on the subjects
25 assigned. However, all votes on work products of the
26 commission shall be at the full commission level, and all
27 recommendations to the Governor, the President of the Senate,
28 and the Speaker of the House of Representatives must pass by a
29 two-thirds vote of the full commission. Sponsoring agencies
30 and organizations may designate an alternative member who may
31 attend and vote on behalf of the sponsoring agency or
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1 organization in the event the appointed member is unable to
2 attend a meeting of the commission or any subcommittee. The
3 commission shall be staffed by employees of the Department of
4 Health and the Agency for Health Care Administration.
5 Sponsoring agencies or organizations must fund the travel and
6 related expenses of their appointed members on the commission.
7 Travel and related expenses for the consumer members of the
8 commission shall be reimbursed by the state pursuant to
9 section 112.061, Florida Statutes. The commission shall hold
10 its first meeting no later than July 15, 2000.
11 (5) EVIDENTIARY PROHIBITIONS.--
12 (a) The findings, recommendations, evaluations,
13 opinions, investigations, proceedings, records, reports,
14 minutes, testimony, correspondence, work product, and actions
15 of the commission shall be available to the public, but may
16 not be introduced into evidence at any civil, criminal,
17 special, or administrative proceeding against a health care
18 practitioner or health care provider arising out of the
19 matters which are the subject of the findings of the
20 commission. Moreover, no member of the commission shall be
21 examined in any civil, criminal, special, or administrative
22 proceeding against a health care practitioner or health care
23 provider as to any evidence or other matters produced or
24 presented during the proceedings of this commission or as to
25 any findings, recommendations, evaluations, opinions,
26 investigations, proceedings, records, reports, minutes,
27 testimony, correspondence, work product, or other actions of
28 the commission or any members thereof. However, nothing in
29 this section shall be construed to mean that information,
30 documents, or records otherwise available and obtained from
31 original sources are immune from discovery or use in any
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1 civil, criminal, special, or administrative proceeding merely
2 because they were presented during proceedings of the
3 commission. Nor shall any person who testifies before the
4 commission or who is a member of the commission be prevented
5 from testifying as to matters within his or her knowledge in a
6 subsequent civil, criminal, special, or administrative
7 proceeding merely because such person testified in front of
8 the commission.
9 (b) The findings, recommendations, evaluations,
10 opinions, investigations, proceedings, records, reports,
11 minutes, testimony, correspondence, work product, and actions
12 of the commission shall be used as a guide and resource and
13 shall not be construed as establishing or advocating the
14 standard of care for health care practitioners or health care
15 providers unless subsequently enacted into law or adopted in
16 rule. Nor shall any findings, recommendations, evaluations,
17 opinions, investigations, proceedings, records, reports,
18 minutes, testimony, correspondence, work product, or actions
19 of the commission be admissible as evidence in any way,
20 directly or indirectly, by introduction of documents or as a
21 basis of an expert opinion as to the standard of care
22 applicable to health care practitioners or health care
23 providers in any civil, criminal, special, or administrative
24 proceeding unless subsequently enacted into law or adopted in
25 rule.
26 (c) No person who testifies before the commission or
27 who is a member of the commission may specifically identify
28 any patient, health care practitioner, or health care provider
29 by name. Moreover, the findings, recommendations, evaluations,
30 opinions, investigations, proceedings, records, reports,
31 minutes, testimony, correspondence, work product, and actions
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1 of the commission may not specifically identify any patient,
2 health care practitioner, or health care provider by name.
3 (6) REPORT; TERMINATION.--The commission shall provide
4 a report of its findings and recommendations to the Governor,
5 the President of the Senate, and the Speaker of the House of
6 Representatives no later than February 1, 2001. After
7 submission of the report, the commission shall continue to
8 exist for the purpose of assisting the Department of Health,
9 the Agency for Health Care Administration, and the regulatory
10 boards in their drafting of proposed legislation and rules to
11 implement its recommendations and for the purpose of providing
12 information to the health care industry on its
13 recommendations. The commission shall be terminated June 1,
14 2001.
15 Section 34. The sum of $91,000 in nonrecurring general
16 revenue is hereby appropriated from the General Revenue Fund
17 to the Department of Health to cover costs of the Florida
18 Commission on Excellence in Health Care relating to the travel
19 and related expenses of staff and consumer members and the
20 reproduction and dissemination of documents.
21 Section 35. Pursuant to section 187 of chapter 99-397,
22 Laws of Florida, the Agency for Health Care Administration was
23 directed to conduct a detailed study and analysis of clinical
24 laboratory services for kidney dialysis patients in the State
25 of Florida and to report back to the Legislature no later than
26 February 1, 2000. The agency reported that additional time and
27 investigative resources were necessary to adequately respond
28 to the legislative directives. Therefore, the sum of $230,000
29 from the Agency for Health Care Administration Tobacco
30 Settlement Trust Fund is appropriated to the Agency for Health
31 Care Administration to contract with the University of South
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1 Florida to conduct a review of laboratory test utilization,
2 any self-referral to clinical laboratories, financial
3 arrangements among kidney dialysis centers, their medical
4 directors, referring physicians, and any business
5 relationships and affiliations with clinical laboratories, and
6 the quality and effectiveness of kidney dialysis treatment in
7 this state. A report on the findings from such review shall be
8 presented to the President of the Senate, the Speaker of the
9 House of Representatives, and the chairs of the appropriate
10 substantive committees of the Legislature no later than
11 February 1, 2001.
12 Section 36. Section 381.00325, Florida Statutes, is
13 created to read:
14 381.00325 Hepatitis A awareness program.--The
15 Department of Health shall develop a Hepatitis A awareness
16 program. This program shall include information regarding the
17 appropriate education of the public and information regarding
18 the availability of Hepatitis A vaccine. The department shall
19 work with private businesses and associations in developing
20 the program and in disseminating the information.
21 Section 37. Section 154.247, Florida Statutes, is
22 created to read:
23 154.247 Financing of projects located outside of local
24 agency.--Notwithstanding any provision of this part to the
25 contrary, an authority may, if it finds that there will be a
26 benefit or a cost savings to a health facility located within
27 its jurisdiction, issue bonds for such health facility to
28 finance projects for such health facility, or for another
29 not-for-profit corporation under common control with such
30 health facility, located outside the geographical limits of
31 the local agency or outside this state.
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1 Section 38. Notwithstanding any provision to the
2 contrary contained in Committee Substitute for House Bill
3 2339, enacted in the 2000 Regular Session of the Legislature,
4 the establishment of a specialty hospital offering a range of
5 medical services restricted to a defined age or gender group
6 of the population or a restricted range of services
7 appropriate to the diagnosis, care, and treatment of patients
8 with specific categories of medical illnesses or disorders,
9 through the transfer of beds and services from an existing
10 hospital in the same county, is not exempt from the provisions
11 of section 408.036(1), Florida Statutes.
12 Section 39. Subsection (4) of section 20.41, Florida
13 Statutes, is amended to read:
14 20.41 Department of Elderly Affairs.--There is created
15 a Department of Elderly Affairs.
16 (4) The department shall administratively house the
17 State Long-Term Care Ombudsman Council, created by s.
18 400.0067, and the local district long-term care ombudsman
19 councils, created by s. 400.0069 and shall, as required by s.
20 712 of the federal Older Americans Act of 1965, ensure that
21 both the state and local district long-term care ombudsman
22 councils operate in compliance with the Older Americans Act.
23 The councils in performance of their duties shall not be
24 subject to control, supervision, or direction by the
25 department.
26 Section 40. Paragraph (h) of subsection (4) of section
27 395.3025, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
28 395.3025 Patient and personnel records; copies;
29 examination.--
30 (4) Patient records are confidential and must not be
31 disclosed without the consent of the person to whom they
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1 pertain, but appropriate disclosure may be made without such
2 consent to:
3 (h) The State Long-Term Care Ombudsman Council and the
4 local district long-term care ombudsman councils, with respect
5 to the records of a patient who has been admitted from a
6 nursing home or long-term care facility, when the councils are
7 conducting an investigation involving the patient as
8 authorized under part II of chapter 400, upon presentation of
9 identification as a council member by the person making the
10 request. Disclosure under this paragraph shall only be made
11 after a competent patient or the patient's representative has
12 been advised that disclosure may be made and the patient has
13 not objected.
14 Section 41. Paragraph (b) of subsection (3) of section
15 400.0063, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
16 400.0063 Establishment of Office of State Long-Term
17 Care Ombudsman; designation of ombudsman and legal advocate.--
18 (3)
19 (b) The duties of the legal advocate shall include,
20 but not be limited to:
21 1. Assisting the ombudsman in carrying out the duties
22 of the office with respect to the abuse, neglect, or violation
23 of rights of residents of long-term care facilities.
24 2. Assisting the state and local district ombudsman
25 councils in carrying out their responsibilities under this
26 part.
27 3. Initiating and prosecuting legal and equitable
28 actions to enforce the rights of long-term care facility
29 residents as defined in this chapter.
30 4. Serving as legal counsel to the state and local
31 district ombudsman councils, or individual members thereof,
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1 against whom any suit or other legal action is initiated in
2 connection with the performance of the official duties of the
3 councils or an individual member.
4 Section 42. Paragraph (f) of subsection (1) and
5 subsections (2) and (3) of section 400.0065, Florida Statutes,
6 are amended to read:
7 400.0065 State Long-Term Care Ombudsman; duties and
8 responsibilities; conflict of interest.--
9 (1) The purpose of the Office of State Long-Term Care
10 Ombudsman shall be to:
11 (f) Provide administrative and technical assistance to
12 state and local district ombudsman councils.
13 (2) The State Long-Term Care Ombudsman shall have the
14 duty and authority to:
15 (a) Assist and support the efforts of the State
16 Long-Term Care Ombudsman Council in the establishment and
17 coordination of local district ombudsman councils throughout
18 the state.
19 (b) Perform the duties specified in state and federal
20 law, rules, and regulations.
21 (c) Within the limits of federal and state funding
22 authorized and appropriated, employ such personnel, including
23 staff for local district ombudsman councils, as are necessary
24 to perform adequately the functions of the office and provide
25 or contract for legal services to assist the state and local
26 district ombudsman councils in the performance of their
27 duties. Staff positions for each local district ombudsman
28 council may be established as career service positions, and
29 shall be filled by the ombudsman after in consultation with
30 the respective local district ombudsman council.
31
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1 (d) Contract for services necessary to carry out the
2 activities of the office.
3 (e) Apply for, receive, and accept grants, gifts, or
4 other payments, including, but not limited to, real property,
5 personal property, and services from a governmental entity or
6 other public or private entity or person, and make
7 arrangements for the use of such grants, gifts, or payments.
8 (f) Annually prepare a budget request that shall be
9 submitted to the Governor by the department for transmittal to
10 the Legislature.
11 (f) Perform the duties specified in state and federal
12 law without interference by officials of the Department of
13 Elderly Affairs, the Agency for Health Care Administration, or
14 the Department of Children and Family Services. The ombudsman
15 shall report to the Governor, the President of the Senate, and
16 the Speaker of the House of Representatives whenever
17 organizational or departmental policy issues threaten the
18 ability of the Office of State Long-Term Care Ombudsman to
19 carry out its duties under state or federal law.
20 (g) Coordinate, to the greatest extent possible, state
21 and local district ombudsman services with the protection and
22 advocacy systems for individuals with developmental
23 disabilities and mental illnesses and with legal assistance
24 programs for the poor through adoption of memoranda of
25 understanding and other means.
26 (h) Enter into a cooperative agreement with the
27 statewide and district human rights advocacy committees for
28 the purpose of coordinating advocacy services provided to
29 residents of long-term care facilities.
30
31
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1 (i) Enter into a cooperative agreement with the office
2 of state government which is responsible for investigating
3 Medicaid fraud.
4 (3) The State Long-Term Care Ombudsman shall not:
5 (a) Have a direct involvement in the licensing or
6 certification of, or an ownership or investment interest in, a
7 long-term care facility or a provider of a long-term care
8 service.
9 (b) Be employed by, or participate in the management
10 of, a long-term care facility.
11 (c) Receive, or have a right to receive, directly or
12 indirectly, remuneration, in cash or in kind, under a
13 compensation agreement with the owner or operator of a
14 long-term care facility.
15
16 The Department of Elderly Affairs, in consultation with the
17 ombudsman, shall adopt rules to establish procedures to
18 identify and eliminate conflicts of interest as described in
19 this subsection.
20 Section 43. Section 400.0066, Florida Statutes, is
21 created to read:
22 400.0066 Long-Term Care Ombudsman and departments of
23 state government.--
24 (1) The Long-Term Care Ombudsman shall perform the
25 duties specified in state and federal law.
26 (2) Officials from the Department of Elderly Affairs,
27 the Agency for Health Care Administration, and the Department
28 of Children and Family Services shall not interfere in the
29 performance of official duties of any ombudsman staff or
30 volunteers.
31
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1 (3) The Department of Elderly Affairs shall provide
2 administrative support to the ombudsman program. The
3 department shall meet the costs associated with these
4 functions from funds appropriated to the department.
5 (4) The department shall include the costs associated
6 with support of the ombudsman program in developing its budget
7 requests for consideration by the Governor and submittal to
8 the Legislature.
9 (5) The department may divert from the federal
10 ombudsman appropriation an amount not to exceed 10 percent of
11 the federal appropriation for the ombudsman.
12 Section 44. Section 400.0067, Florida Statutes, is
13 amended to read:
14 400.0067 Establishment of State Long-Term Care
15 Ombudsman Council; duties; membership.--
16 (1) There is created within the Office of State
17 Long-Term Care Ombudsman, the State Long-Term Care Ombudsman
18 Council.
19 (2) The State Long-Term Care Ombudsman Council shall:
20 (a) Assist the ombudsman in reaching a consensus among
21 local district ombudsman councils on issues of statewide
22 concern.
23 (b) Serve as an appellate body in receiving from the
24 local district ombudsman councils complaints not resolved at
25 the local district level. The state ombudsman council may
26 enter any long-term care facility involved in an appeal,
27 pursuant to the conditions specified in s. 400.0069(3).
28 (c) Assist the ombudsman to discover, investigate, and
29 determine the existence of abuse or neglect in any long-term
30 care facility and to develop procedures, in consultation with
31 the Department of Elderly Affairs, relating to such
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1 investigations. Investigations may consist, in part, of one or
2 more onsite administrative inspections.
3 (d) Assist the ombudsman in eliciting, receiving,
4 responding to, and resolving complaints made by or on behalf
5 of long-term care facility residents and in developing
6 procedures, in consultation with the Department of Elderly
7 Affairs, relating to the receipt and resolution of such
8 complaints.
9 (e) Elicit and coordinate state, local, and voluntary
10 organizational assistance for the purpose of improving the
11 care received by residents of a long-term care facility.
12 (f) Be authorized to call upon appropriate agencies of
13 state government for such professional assistance as may be
14 needed in the discharge of its duties, including assistance
15 from the adult protective services program of the Department
16 of Children and Family Services.
17 (g) Enter into a cooperative agreement with the
18 statewide and district human rights advocacy committees for
19 the purpose of coordinating advocacy services provided to
20 residents of long-term care facilities.
21 (g)(h) Prepare an annual report describing the
22 activities carried out by the ombudsman and the State
23 Long-Term Care Ombudsman Council in the year for which the
24 report is prepared. The State Long-Term Care Ombudsman
25 Council shall submit the report to the Commissioner of the
26 United States Administration on Aging, the Governor, the
27 President of the Senate, the Speaker of the House of
28 Representatives, the minority leaders of the House and Senate,
29 the chairpersons of appropriate House and Senate committees,
30 the Secretaries of Elderly Affairs and Children and Family
31 Services, and the Director of Health Care Administration. The
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1 report shall be submitted at least 30 days before the
2 convening of the regular session of the Legislature and shall,
3 at a minimum:
4 1. Contain and analyze data collected concerning
5 complaints about and conditions in long-term care facilities.
6 2. Evaluate the problems experienced by residents of
7 long-term care facilities.
8 3. Contain recommendations for improving the quality
9 of life of the residents and for protecting the health,
10 safety, welfare, and rights of the residents.
11 4. Analyze the success of the ombudsman program during
12 the preceding year and identify the barriers that prevent the
13 optimal operation of the program. The report of the program's
14 successes shall also address the relationship between the
15 state long-term care ombudsman program, the Department of
16 Elderly Affairs, the Agency for Health Care Administration,
17 and the Department of Children and Family Services, and an
18 assessment of how successfully the state long-term care
19 ombudsman program has carried out its responsibilities under
20 the Older Americans Act.
21 5. Provide policy and regulatory and legislative
22 recommendations to solve identified problems; resolve
23 residents' complaints; improve the quality of care and life of
24 the residents; protect the health, safety, welfare, and rights
25 of the residents; and remove the barriers to the optimal
26 operation of the state long-term care ombudsman program.
27 6. Contain recommendations from the local district
28 ombudsman councils regarding program functions and activities.
29 7. Include a report on the activities of the legal
30 advocate and other legal advocates acting on behalf of the
31 local district and state councils.
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1 (3)(a) The State Long-Term Care Ombudsman Council
2 shall be composed of one active member designated by each
3 local council plus three persons appointed by the Governor a
4 number of members equal to the number of district councils in
5 the state plus three. Each district ombudsman council,
6 including the ombudsman councils for subdistricts 3A and 3B,
7 shall appoint one member and the Governor shall appoint three
8 members to the State Long-Term Care Ombudsman Council. An
9 individual designated by a district ombudsman council must
10 have been a member of a district ombudsman council for at
11 least 1 year, and shall continue to serve as an active member
12 at the district level. The Governor's appointments shall be
13 made from a list of not fewer than eight nominees, to be
14 selected by the secretary in consultation with the State
15 Long-Term Care Ombudsman Council and submitted to the
16 Governor. If the appointments are not made within 30 days
17 after the Governor receives the list of nominees, the
18 secretary shall, in consultation with the State Long-Term Care
19 Ombudsman Council, appoint three members from the list of
20 nominees submitted to the Governor. At least one member
21 appointed by the Governor must be over 60 years of age.
22 (b) The ombudsman, in consultation with the secretary
23 and the state ombudsman council, shall submit to the Governor
24 a list of at least eight names of persons who are not serving
25 on a local council.
26 (c) The Governor shall appoint three members chosen
27 from the list, at least one of whom must be over 60 years of
28 age.
29 (d) If the Governor's appointments are not made within
30 60 days after the ombudsman submits the list, the ombudsman,
31 in consultation with the State Long-Term Care Ombudsman
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1 Council, shall appoint three members, one of whom must be over
2 60 years of age.
3 (e)(b) All members shall be appointed to serve 3-year
4 terms. A member of the State Long-Term Care Ombudsman Council
5 may not serve more than two consecutive terms. Any vacancy
6 shall be filled in the same manner as the original
7 appointment. The position of any member missing three
8 consecutive regular meetings without cause shall be declared
9 vacant. The finding of the ombudsman regarding cause shall be
10 final and binding.
11 (f)(c) The state ombudsman council shall elect a
12 chairperson for a term of 1 year from among the members who
13 have served for at least 1 year. The chairperson shall select
14 a vice chairperson from among the members. The vice
15 chairperson shall preside over the council in the absence of
16 the chairperson.
17 (g)(d) The state ombudsman council shall meet upon the
18 call of the chairperson, at least quarterly or more frequently
19 as needed.
20 (h)(e) Members shall receive no compensation but shall
21 be reimbursed for per diem and travel expenses as provided in
22 s. 112.061.
23 (4) Members shall be appointed and serve 3-year terms
24 as provided by this section.
25 (4)(5) No officer, employee, or representative of the
26 Office of State Long-Term Care Ombudsman or of the State
27 Long-Term Care Ombudsman Council, nor any member of the
28 immediate family of such officer, employee, or representative,
29 may have a conflict of interest. The Department of Elderly
30 Affairs, in consultation with the ombudsman, shall adopt rules
31 to identify and remove conflicts of interest.
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1 (5)(6) The Department of Elderly Affairs shall make a
2 separate and distinct request for an appropriation for all
3 expenses for the state and local district ombudsman councils.
4 Section 45. Section 400.0069, Florida Statutes, is
5 amended to read:
6 400.0069 Local District long-term care ombudsman
7 councils; duties; membership.--
8 (1) There shall be at least one long-term care
9 ombudsman council in each of the planning and service areas of
10 the Department of Elderly Affairs, which shall function under
11 the direction of the ombudsman and the state ombudsman
12 council.
13 (2) The duties of the local district ombudsman council
14 are:
15 (a) To serve as a third-party mechanism for protecting
16 the health, safety, welfare, and civil and human rights of
17 residents of a long-term care facility.
18 (b) To discover, investigate, and determine the
19 existence of abuse or neglect in any long-term care facility
20 and to use the procedures provided for in ss. 415.101-415.113
21 when applicable. Investigations may consist, in part, of one
22 or more onsite administrative inspections.
23 (c) To elicit, receive, investigate, respond to, and
24 resolve complaints made by, or on behalf of, long-term care
25 facility residents.
26 (d) To review and, if necessary, to comment on, for
27 their effect on the rights of long-term care facility
28 residents, all existing or proposed rules, regulations, and
29 other governmental policies relating to long-term care
30 facilities.
31
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1 (e) To review personal property and money accounts of
2 Medicaid residents pursuant to an investigation to obtain
3 information regarding a specific complaint or problem.
4 (f) To represent the interests of residents before
5 government agencies and to seek administrative, legal, and
6 other remedies to protect the health, safety, welfare, and
7 rights of the residents.
8 (g) To carry out other activities that the ombudsman
9 determines to be appropriate.
10 (3) In order to carry out the duties specified in
11 subsection (2), the local district ombudsman council is
12 authorized, pursuant to ss. 400.19(1) and 400.434, to enter
13 any long-term care facility without notice or first obtaining
14 a warrant, subject to the provisions of s. 400.0073(5).
15 (4) Each local district ombudsman council shall be
16 composed of no less than 15 members and no more than 30
17 members from the local planning and service area district, to
18 include the following: one medical or osteopathic physician
19 whose practice includes or has included a substantial number
20 of geriatric patients and who may have limited practice in a
21 long-term care facility; one registered nurse who has
22 geriatric experience, if possible; one licensed pharmacist;
23 one registered dietitian; at least six nursing home residents
24 or representative consumer advocates for nursing home
25 residents; at least three residents of assisted living
26 facilities or adult family-care homes or three representative
27 consumer advocates for long-term care facility residents; one
28 attorney; and one professional social worker. In no case
29 shall the medical director of a long-term care facility or an
30 employee of the Agency for Health Care Administration, the
31 Department of Children and Family Services, or the Department
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1 of Elderly Affairs serve as a member or as an ex officio
2 member of a council. Each member of the council shall certify
3 that neither the council member nor any member of the council
4 member's immediate family has any conflict of interest
5 pursuant to subsection (10). Local District ombudsman
6 councils are encouraged to recruit council members who are 60
7 years of age or older.
8 (5) All members shall be appointed to serve 3-year
9 terms. Upon expiration of a term and in case of any other
10 vacancy, the council shall select appoint a replacement by
11 majority vote of the council, subject to the approval of the
12 Governor. The ombudsman shall review the selection of the
13 council and recommend approval or disapproval to the Governor.
14 If no action is taken by the Governor to approve or disapprove
15 the replacement of a member within 30 days after the ombudsman
16 council has notified the Governor of his or her
17 recommendation, the appointment, the appointment of the
18 replacement shall be considered disapproved and the process
19 for selection of a replacement shall be repeated approved. The
20 term of any member missing three consecutive regular meetings
21 without cause shall be declared vacant.
22 (6) The local district ombudsman council shall elect a
23 chair for a term of 1 year from members who have served at
24 least 1 year. The chair shall select a vice chair from among
25 the members of the council. The vice chair shall preside over
26 the council in the absence of the chair.
27 (7) The local district ombudsman council shall meet
28 upon the call of the chair or the ombudsman, at least once a
29 month or more frequently as needed to handle emergency
30 situations.
31
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1 (8) A member of a local district ombudsman council
2 shall receive no compensation but shall be reimbursed for
3 travel expenses both within and outside the county of
4 residence in accordance with the provisions of s. 112.061.
5 (9) The local district ombudsman councils are
6 authorized to call upon appropriate agencies of state
7 government for such professional assistance as may be needed
8 in the discharge of their duties. All state agencies shall
9 cooperate with the local district ombudsman councils in
10 providing requested information and agency representatives at
11 council meetings. The Department of Children and Family
12 Services shall continue to provide space and in-kind
13 administrative support for each district ombudsman council
14 staff within available resources until the Legislature
15 appropriates funds for office space and administrative
16 support.
17 (10) No officer, employee, or representative of a
18 local district long-term care ombudsman council, nor any
19 member of the immediate family of such officer, employee, or
20 representative, may have a conflict of interest. The
21 Department of Elderly Affairs, in consultation with the
22 ombudsman, shall adopt rules to identify and remove conflicts
23 of interest.
24 Section 46. Section 400.0071, Florida Statutes, is
25 amended to read:
26 400.0071 Complaint procedures.--
27 (1) The state ombudsman council shall establish state
28 and local district procedures for receiving complaints against
29 a nursing home or long-term care facility or its employee.
30 (2) These procedures shall be posted in full view in
31 every nursing home or long-term care facility. Every resident
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1 or representative of a resident shall receive, upon admission
2 to a nursing home or long-term care facility, a printed copy
3 of the procedures of the state and the local district
4 ombudsman councils.
5 Section 47. Section 400.0073, Florida Statutes, is
6 amended to read:
7 400.0073 State and local district ombudsman council
8 investigations.--
9 (1) A local district ombudsman council shall
10 investigate any complaint of a resident or representative of a
11 resident based on an action by an administrator or employee of
12 a nursing home or long-term care facility which might be:
13 (a) Contrary to law.
14 (b) Unreasonable, unfair, oppressive, or unnecessarily
15 discriminatory, even though in accordance with law.
16 (c) Based on a mistake of fact.
17 (d) Based on improper or irrelevant grounds.
18 (e) Unaccompanied by an adequate statement of reasons.
19 (f) Performed in an inefficient manner.
20 (g) Otherwise erroneous.
21 (2) In an investigation, both the state and local
22 district ombudsman councils have the authority to hold
23 hearings.
24 (3) Subsequent to an appeal from a local district
25 ombudsman council, the state ombudsman council may investigate
26 any nursing home or long-term care facility.
27 (4) In addition to any specific investigation made
28 pursuant to a complaint, the local district ombudsman council
29 shall conduct, at least annually, an investigation, which
30 shall consist, in part, of an onsite administrative
31
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1 inspection, of each nursing home or long-term care facility
2 within its jurisdiction.
3 (5) Any onsite administrative inspection conducted by
4 an ombudsman council shall be subject to the following:
5 (a) All inspections shall be at times and for
6 durations necessary to produce the information required to
7 carry out the duties of the council.
8 (b) No advance notice of an inspection shall be
9 provided to any nursing home or long-term care facility,
10 except that notice of followup inspections on specific
11 problems may be provided.
12 (c) Inspections shall be conducted in a manner which
13 will impose no unreasonable burden on nursing homes or
14 long-term care facilities, consistent with the underlying
15 purposes of this part. Unnecessary duplication of efforts
16 among council members or the councils shall be reduced to the
17 extent possible.
18 (d) Any ombudsman council member physically present
19 for the inspection shall identify himself or herself and the
20 statutory authority for his or her inspection of the facility.
21 (e) Inspections may not unreasonably interfere with
22 the programs and activities of clients within the facility.
23 Ombudsman council members shall respect the rights of
24 residents.
25 (f) All inspections shall be limited to compliance
26 with parts II, III, and VII of this chapter and 42 U.S.C. ss.
27 1396(a) et seq., and any rules or regulations promulgated
28 pursuant to such laws.
29 (g) No ombudsman council member shall enter a
30 single-family residential unit within a long-term care
31
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1 facility without the permission of the resident or the
2 representative of the resident.
3 (h) Any inspection resulting from a specific complaint
4 made to an ombudsman council concerning a facility shall be
5 conducted within a reasonable time after the complaint is
6 made.
7 (6) An inspection may not be accomplished by forcible
8 entry. Refusal of a long-term care facility to allow entry of
9 any ombudsman council member constitutes a violation of part
10 II, part III, or part VII of this chapter.
11 Section 48. Section 400.0075, Florida Statutes, is
12 amended to read:
13 400.0075 Complaint resolution procedures.--
14 (1) Any complaint, including any problem identified by
15 an ombudsman council as a result of an investigation, deemed
16 valid and requiring remedial action by the local district
17 ombudsman council shall be identified and brought to the
18 attention of the long-term care facility administrator in
19 writing. Upon receipt of such document, the administrator, in
20 concurrence with the local district ombudsman council chair,
21 shall establish target dates for taking appropriate remedial
22 action. If, by the target date, the remedial action is not
23 completed or forthcoming, the local district ombudsman council
24 may:
25 (a) Extend the target date if the council has reason
26 to believe such action would facilitate the resolution of the
27 complaint.
28 (b) In accordance with s. 400.0077, publicize the
29 complaint, the recommendations of the council, and the
30 response of the long-term care facility.
31
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1 (c) Refer the complaint to the state ombudsman
2 council.
3
4 If the health, safety, welfare, or rights of the resident are
5 in imminent danger, the local district long-term care
6 ombudsman council may seek immediate legal or administrative
7 remedies to protect the resident.
8 (2) Upon referral from the local district ombudsman
9 council, the state ombudsman council shall assume the
10 responsibility for the disposition of the complaint. If a
11 long-term care facility fails to take action on a complaint
12 found valid by the state ombudsman council, the state council
13 may:
14 (a) In accordance with s. 400.0077, publicize the
15 complaint, the recommendations of the council, and the
16 response of the long-term care facility.
17 (b) Recommend to the agency a series of facility
18 reviews pursuant to s. 400.19(4) to assure correction and
19 nonrecurrence of conditions that give rise to complaints
20 against a long-term care facility.
21 (c) Recommend to the agency changes in rules for
22 inspecting and licensing or certifying long-term care
23 facilities, and recommend to the Agency for Health Care
24 Administration changes in rules for licensing and regulating
25 long-term care facilities.
26 (d) Refer the complaint to the state attorney for
27 prosecution if there is reason to believe the long-term care
28 facility or its employee is guilty of a criminal act.
29 (e) Recommend to the Agency for Health Care
30 Administration that the long-term care facility no longer
31
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1 receive payments under the State Medical Assistance Program
2 (Medicaid).
3 (f) Recommend that the agency initiate procedures for
4 revocation of license in accordance with chapter 120.
5 (g) Seek legal, administrative, or other remedies to
6 protect the health, safety, welfare, or rights of the
7 resident.
8
9 If the health, safety, welfare, or rights of the resident are
10 in imminent danger, the State Long-Term Care Ombudsman Council
11 shall seek immediate legal or administrative remedies to
12 protect the resident.
13 (3) The state ombudsman council shall provide, as part
14 of its annual report required pursuant to s.
15 400.0067(2)(g)(h), information relating to the disposition of
16 all complaints to the Department of Elderly Affairs.
17 Section 49. Paragraph (a) of subsection (1) and
18 subsections (4) and (5) of section 400.0077, Florida Statutes,
19 are amended to read:
20 400.0077 Confidentiality.--
21 (1) The following are confidential and exempt from the
22 provisions of s. 119.07(1):
23 (a) Resident records held by the ombudsman or by the
24 state or a local district ombudsman council.
25 (4) Members of any state or local district ombudsman
26 council shall not be required to testify in any court with
27 respect to matters held to be confidential under s. 400.414
28 except as may be necessary to enforce the provisions of this
29 act.
30 (5) Subject to the provisions of this section, the
31 Department of Elderly Affairs, in consultation with the
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1 ombudsman and the State Long-Term Care Ombudsman Council,
2 shall adopt rules for the disclosure by the ombudsman or local
3 district ombudsman councils of files maintained by the
4 program.
5 Section 50. Subsection (2) of section 400.0079,
6 Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
7 400.0079 Immunity.--
8 (2) The ombudsman or any person acting on behalf of
9 the Office of State Long-Term Care Ombudsman or the state or a
10 local district long-term care ombudsman council shall be
11 immune from any liability, civil or criminal, that otherwise
12 might be incurred or imposed, during the good faith
13 performance of official duties.
14 Section 51. Section 400.0081, Florida Statutes, is
15 amended to read:
16 400.0081 Access.--
17 (1) The Office of State Long-Term Care Ombudsman, the
18 State Long-Term Care Ombudsman Council, and the local district
19 long-term care ombudsman councils, or their representatives,
20 shall have access to:
21 (a) Long-term care facilities and residents.
22 (b) Medical and social records of a resident for
23 review, if:
24 1. The office has the permission of the resident or
25 the legal representative of the resident; or
26 2. The resident is unable to consent to the review and
27 has no legal representative.
28 (c) Medical and social records of the resident as
29 necessary to investigate a complaint, if:
30 1. A legal guardian of the resident refuses to give
31 permission.
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1 2. The office has reasonable cause to believe that the
2 guardian is not acting in the best interests of the resident.
3 3. The representative obtains the approval of the
4 ombudsman.
5 (d) The administrative records, policies, and
6 documents to which the residents, or the general public, have
7 access.
8 (e) Upon request, copies of all licensing and
9 certification records maintained by the state with respect to
10 a long-term care facility.
11 (2) Notwithstanding paragraph (1)(b), if, pursuant to
12 a complaint investigation by the state ombudsman council or a
13 local district ombudsman council, the legal representative of
14 the resident refuses to give permission for the release of the
15 resident's records, and if the Office of the State Long-Term
16 Care Ombudsman Council has reasonable cause to find that the
17 legal representative is not acting in the best interests of
18 the resident, the medical and social records of the resident
19 must be made available to the state or local district council
20 as is necessary for the members of the council to investigate
21 the complaint.
22 (3) The Department of Elderly Affairs, in consultation
23 with the ombudsman and the State Long-Term Care Ombudsman
24 Council, shall adopt rules to establish procedures to ensure
25 access as described in this section.
26 Section 52. Subsections (1) and (2) of section
27 400.0083, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
28 400.0083 Interference; retaliation; penalties.--
29 (1) It shall be unlawful for any person, long-term
30 care facility, or other entity to willfully interfere with a
31 representative of the Office of the State Long-Term Care
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1 Ombudsman, the State Long-Term Care Ombudsman Council, or a
2 local district long-term care ombudsman council in the
3 performance of official duties.
4 (2) It shall be unlawful for any person, long-term
5 care facility, or other entity to retaliate against any
6 resident, employee, or other person for filing a complaint
7 with, providing information to, or otherwise cooperating with
8 any representative of the Office of the State Long-Term Care
9 Ombudsman, the State Long-Term Care Ombudsman Council, or a
10 local district long-term care ombudsman council.
11 Section 53. Section 400.0087, Florida Statutes, is
12 amended to read:
13 400.0087 Agency oversight.--
14 (1) The Department of Elderly Affairs shall monitor
15 the local district ombudsman councils responsible for carrying
16 out the duties delegated by s. 400.0069 and federal law. The
17 department, in consultation with the ombudsman and the State
18 Long-Term Care Ombudsman Council, shall adopt rules to
19 establish the policies and procedures for the monitoring of
20 local district ombudsman councils.
21 (2) The department is responsible for ensuring that
22 the Office of State Long-Term Care Ombudsman prepares its
23 annual report; provides information to public and private
24 agencies, legislators, and others; provides appropriate
25 training to representatives of the office or of the state or
26 local district long-term care ombudsman councils; and
27 coordinates ombudsman services with the Advocacy Center for
28 Persons with Disabilities and with providers of legal services
29 to residents of long-term care facilities in compliance with
30 state and federal laws.
31
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1 (3) The Department of Elderly Affairs is the
2 designated state unit on aging for purposes of complying with
3 the federal Older Americans Act. The Department of Elderly
4 Affairs shall ensure that the ombudsman program has the
5 objectivity and independence required to qualify it for
6 funding under the federal Older Americans Act, and shall carry
7 out the long-term care ombudsman program through the Office of
8 the State Long-Term Care Ombudsman Council. The Department of
9 Elderly Affairs shall also:
10 (a) Receive and disburse state and federal funds for
11 purposes that the state ombudsman council has formulated in
12 accordance with the Older Americans Act.
13 (b) Act as liaison between the federal program
14 representatives, the staffs of the state and local district
15 ombudsman councils, and members of the state and local
16 district ombudsman councils.
17 Section 54. Section 400.0089, Florida Statutes, is
18 amended to read:
19 400.0089 Agency reports.--The State Long-Term Care
20 Ombudsman Council, shall, in cooperation with the Department
21 of Elderly Affairs, maintain a statewide uniform reporting
22 system to collect and analyze data relating to complaints and
23 conditions in long-term care facilities and to residents, for
24 the purpose of identifying and resolving significant problems.
25 The council shall submit such data as part of its annual
26 report required pursuant to s. 400.0067(2)(g)(h) to the Agency
27 for Health Care Administration, the Department of Children and
28 Family Services, the Statewide Human Rights Advocacy
29 Committee, the Advocacy Center for Persons with Disabilities,
30 the Commissioner for the United States Administration on
31 Aging, the National Ombudsman Resource Center, and any other
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1 state or federal entities that the ombudsman determines
2 appropriate.
3 Section 55. Section 400.0091, Florida Statutes, is
4 amended to read:
5 400.0091 Training.--The ombudsman shall provide
6 appropriate training to all employees of the Office of State
7 Long-Term Care Ombudsman and to the state and local district
8 long-term care ombudsman councils, including all unpaid
9 volunteers. The ombudsman shall implement the training
10 program no later than June 1, 1994. No employee, officer, or
11 representative of the office or of the state or local district
12 long-term care ombudsman councils, other than the ombudsman,
13 may carry out any authorized ombudsman duty or responsibility
14 unless the person has received the training required by this
15 section and has been approved by the ombudsman as qualified to
16 carry out ombudsman activities on behalf of the office or the
17 state or local district long-term care ombudsman councils.
18 Section 56. Present subsections (8), (9), and (10) of
19 section 400.021, Florida Statutes, are renumbered as
20 subsections (7), (8), and (9), respectively, and present
21 subsection (7) is renumbered as subsection (10) and amended to
22 read:
23 400.021 Definitions.--When used in this part, unless
24 the context otherwise requires, the term:
25 (10)(7) "Local District ombudsman council" means a
26 local district long-term care ombudsman council established
27 pursuant to s. 400.0069, located within the Older Americans
28 Act planning and service areas.
29 Section 57. Paragraph (c) of subsection (1) and
30 subsections (2) and (3) of section 400.022, Florida Statutes,
31 are amended to read:
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1 400.022 Residents' rights.--
2 (1) All licensees of nursing home facilities shall
3 adopt and make public a statement of the rights and
4 responsibilities of the residents of such facilities and shall
5 treat such residents in accordance with the provisions of that
6 statement. The statement shall assure each resident the
7 following:
8 (c) Any entity or individual that provides health,
9 social, legal, or other services to a resident has the right
10 to have reasonable access to the resident. The resident has
11 the right to deny or withdraw consent to access at any time by
12 any entity or individual. Notwithstanding the visiting policy
13 of the facility, the following individuals must be permitted
14 immediate access to the resident:
15 1. Any representative of the federal or state
16 government, including, but not limited to, representatives of
17 the Department of Children and Family Services, the Department
18 of Health, the Agency for Health Care Administration, the
19 Office of the Attorney General, and the Department of Elderly
20 Affairs; any law enforcement officer; members of the state or
21 local district ombudsman council; and the resident's
22 individual physician.
23 2. Subject to the resident's right to deny or withdraw
24 consent, immediate family or other relatives of the resident.
25
26 The facility must allow representatives of the State Long-Term
27 Care Ombudsman Council to examine a resident's clinical
28 records with the permission of the resident or the resident's
29 legal representative and consistent with state law.
30 (2) The licensee for each nursing home shall orally
31 inform the resident of the resident's rights and provide a
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1 copy of the statement required by subsection (1) to each
2 resident or the resident's legal representative at or before
3 the resident's admission to a facility. The licensee shall
4 provide a copy of the resident's rights to each staff member
5 of the facility. Each such licensee shall prepare a written
6 plan and provide appropriate staff training to implement the
7 provisions of this section. The written statement of rights
8 must include a statement that a resident may file a complaint
9 with the agency or local district ombudsman council. The
10 statement must be in boldfaced type and shall include the
11 name, address, and telephone numbers of the local district
12 ombudsman council and adult abuse registry where complaints
13 may be lodged.
14 (3) Any violation of the resident's rights set forth
15 in this section shall constitute grounds for action by the
16 agency under the provisions of s. 400.102. In order to
17 determine whether the licensee is adequately protecting
18 residents' rights, the annual inspection of the facility shall
19 include private informal conversations with a sample of
20 residents to discuss residents' experiences within the
21 facility with respect to rights specified in this section and
22 general compliance with standards, and consultation with the
23 ombudsman council in the local district in which the nursing
24 home is located.
25 Section 58. Subsections (8), (9), (11), (12), (13),
26 and (14) of section 400.0255, Florida Statutes, are amended to
27 read:
28 400.0255 Resident transfer or discharge; requirements
29 and procedures; hearings.--
30 (8) The notice required by subsection (7) must be in
31 writing and must contain all information required by state and
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1 federal law, rules, or regulations applicable to Medicaid or
2 Medicare cases. The agency shall develop a standard document
3 to be used by all facilities licensed under this part for
4 purposes of notifying residents of a discharge or transfer.
5 Such document must include a means for a resident to request
6 the local district long-term care ombudsman council to review
7 the notice and request information about or assistance with
8 initiating a fair hearing with the department's Office of
9 Appeals Hearings. In addition to any other pertinent
10 information included, the form shall specify the reason
11 allowed under federal or state law that the resident is being
12 discharged or transferred, with an explanation to support this
13 action. Further, the form shall state the effective date of
14 the discharge or transfer and the location to which the
15 resident is being discharged or transferred. The form shall
16 clearly describe the resident's appeal rights and the
17 procedures for filing an appeal, including the right to
18 request the local district ombudsman council to review the
19 notice of discharge or transfer. A copy of the notice must be
20 placed in the resident's clinical record, and a copy must be
21 transmitted to the resident's legal guardian or representative
22 and to the local district ombudsman council.
23 (9) A resident may request that the local district
24 ombudsman council review any notice of discharge or transfer
25 given to the resident. When requested by a resident to review
26 a notice of discharge or transfer, the local district
27 ombudsman council shall do so within 7 days after receipt of
28 the request. The nursing home administrator, or the
29 administrator's designee, must forward the request for review
30 contained in the notice to the local district ombudsman
31 council within 24 hours after such request is submitted.
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1 Failure to forward the request within 24 hours after the
2 request is submitted shall toll the running of the 30-day
3 advance notice period until the request has been forwarded.
4 (11) Notwithstanding paragraph (10)(b), an emergency
5 discharge or transfer may be implemented as necessary pursuant
6 to state or federal law during the period of time after the
7 notice is given and before the time a hearing decision is
8 rendered. Notice of an emergency discharge or transfer to the
9 resident, the resident's legal guardian or representative, and
10 the local district ombudsman council if requested pursuant to
11 subsection (9) must be by telephone or in person. This notice
12 shall be given before the transfer, if possible, or as soon
13 thereafter as practicable. A local district ombudsman council
14 conducting a review under this subsection shall do so within
15 24 hours after receipt of the request. The resident's file
16 must be documented to show who was contacted, whether the
17 contact was by telephone or in person, and the date and time
18 of the contact. If the notice is not given in writing, written
19 notice meeting the requirements of subsection (8) must be
20 given the next working day.
21 (12) After receipt of any notice required under this
22 section, the local district ombudsman council may request a
23 private informal conversation with a resident to whom the
24 notice is directed, and, if known, a family member or the
25 resident's legal guardian or designee, to ensure that the
26 facility is proceeding with the discharge or transfer in
27 accordance with the requirements of this section. If
28 requested, the local district ombudsman council shall assist
29 the resident with filing an appeal of the proposed discharge
30 or transfer.
31
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1 (13) The following persons must be present at all
2 hearings authorized under this section:
3 (a) The resident, or the resident's legal
4 representative or designee.
5 (b) The facility administrator, or the facility's
6 legal representative or designee.
7
8 A representative of the local district long-term care
9 ombudsman council may be present at all hearings authorized by
10 this section.
11 (14) In any hearing under this section, the following
12 information concerning the parties shall be confidential and
13 exempt from the provisions of s. 119.07(1):
14 (a) Names and addresses.
15 (b) Medical services provided.
16 (c) Social and economic conditions or circumstances.
17 (d) Evaluation of personal information.
18 (e) Medical data, including diagnosis and past history
19 of disease or disability.
20 (f) Any information received verifying income
21 eligibility and amount of medical assistance payments. Income
22 information received from the Social Security Administration
23 or the Internal Revenue Service must be safeguarded according
24 to the requirements of the agency that furnished the data.
25
26 The exemption created by this subsection does not prohibit
27 access to such information by a local district long-term care
28 ombudsman council upon request, by a reviewing court if such
29 information is required to be part of the record upon
30 subsequent review, or as specified in s. 24(a), Art. I of the
31 State Constitution.
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1 Section 59. Subsection (1) of section 400.19, Florida
2 Statutes, is amended to read:
3 400.19 Right of entry and inspection.--
4 (1) The agency and any duly designated officer or
5 employee thereof or a member of the State Long-Term Care
6 Ombudsman Council or the local district long-term care
7 ombudsman council shall have the right to enter upon and into
8 the premises of any facility licensed pursuant to this part,
9 or any distinct nursing home unit of a hospital licensed under
10 chapter 395 or any freestanding facility licensed under
11 chapter 395 that provides extended care or other long-term
12 care services, at any reasonable time in order to determine
13 the state of compliance with the provisions of this part and
14 rules in force pursuant thereto. The right of entry and
15 inspection shall also extend to any premises which the agency
16 has reason to believe is being operated or maintained as a
17 facility without a license, but no such entry or inspection of
18 any premises shall be made without the permission of the owner
19 or person in charge thereof, unless a warrant is first
20 obtained from the circuit court authorizing same. Any
21 application for a facility license or renewal thereof, made
22 pursuant to this part, shall constitute permission for and
23 complete acquiescence in any entry or inspection of the
24 premises for which the license is sought, in order to
25 facilitate verification of the information submitted on or in
26 connection with the application; to discover, investigate, and
27 determine the existence of abuse or neglect; or to elicit,
28 receive, respond to, and resolve complaints. The agency shall,
29 within 60 days after receipt of a complaint made by a resident
30 or resident's representative, complete its investigation and
31 provide to the complainant its findings and resolution.
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1 Section 60. Subsection (1) of section 400.191, Florida
2 Statutes, is amended to read:
3 400.191 Availability, distribution, and posting of
4 reports and records.--
5 (1) The agency shall provide information to the public
6 about all of the licensed nursing home facilities operating in
7 the state. The agency shall, within 60 days after an annual
8 inspection visit or within 30 days after any interim visit to
9 a facility, send copies of the inspection reports to the local
10 district long-term care ombudsman council, the agency's local
11 office, and a public library or the county seat for the county
12 in which the facility is located.
13 Section 61. Subsection (6) and paragraph (c) of
14 subsection (7) of section 400.23, Florida Statutes, are
15 amended to read:
16 400.23 Rules; evaluation and deficiencies; licensure
17 status.--
18 (6) Prior to conducting a survey of the facility, the
19 survey team shall obtain a copy of the local district
20 long-term care ombudsman council report on the facility.
21 Problems noted in the report shall be incorporated into and
22 followed up through the agency's inspection process. This
23 procedure does not preclude the local district nursing home
24 and long-term care facility ombudsman council from requesting
25 the agency to conduct a followup visit to the facility.
26 (7) The agency shall, at least every 15 months,
27 evaluate all nursing home facilities and make a determination
28 as to the degree of compliance by each licensee with the
29 established rules adopted under this part as a basis for
30 assigning a licensure status to that facility. The agency
31 shall base its evaluation on the most recent inspection
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1 report, taking into consideration findings from other official
2 reports, surveys, interviews, investigations, and inspections.
3 The agency shall assign a licensure status of standard or
4 conditional to each nursing home.
5 (c) In evaluating the overall quality of care and
6 services and determining whether the facility will receive a
7 conditional or standard license, the agency shall consider the
8 needs and limitations of residents in the facility and the
9 results of interviews and surveys of a representative sampling
10 of residents, families of residents, ombudsman council members
11 in the planning and service area district in which the
12 facility is located, guardians of residents, and staff of the
13 nursing home facility.
14 Section 62. Subsection (13) of section 400.419,
15 Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
16 400.419 Violations; administrative fines.--
17 (13) The agency shall develop and disseminate an
18 annual list of all facilities sanctioned or fined $5,000 or
19 more for violations of state standards, the number and class
20 of violations involved, the penalties imposed, and the current
21 status of cases. The list shall be disseminated, at no charge,
22 to the Department of Elderly Affairs, the Department of
23 Health, the Department of Children and Family Services, the
24 area agencies on aging, the Statewide Human Rights Advocacy
25 Committee, and the state and local district nursing home
26 ombudsman councils. The Department of Children and Family
27 Services shall disseminate the list to service providers under
28 contract to the department who are responsible for referring
29 persons to a facility for residency. The agency may charge a
30 fee commensurate with the cost of printing and postage to
31 other interested parties requesting a copy of this list.
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1 Section 63. Subsection (2) of section 400.428, Florida
2 Statutes, is amended to read:
3 400.428 Resident bill of rights.--
4 (2) The administrator of a facility shall ensure that
5 a written notice of the rights, obligations, and prohibitions
6 set forth in this part is posted in a prominent place in each
7 facility and read or explained to residents who cannot read.
8 This notice shall include the name, address, and telephone
9 numbers of the local district ombudsman council and adult
10 abuse registry and, when applicable, the Advocacy Center for
11 Persons with Disabilities, Inc., and the district human rights
12 advocacy committee, where complaints may be lodged. The
13 facility must ensure a resident's access to a telephone to
14 call the local district ombudsman council, adult abuse
15 registry, Advocacy Center for Persons with Disabilities, Inc.,
16 and district human rights advocacy committee.
17 Section 64. Section 400.434, Florida Statutes, is
18 amended to read:
19 400.434 Right of entry and inspection.--Any duly
20 designated officer or employee of the department, the
21 Department of Children and Family Services, the agency, the
22 state or local fire marshal, or a member of the state or local
23 district long-term care ombudsman council shall have the right
24 to enter unannounced upon and into the premises of any
25 facility licensed pursuant to this part in order to determine
26 the state of compliance with the provisions of this part and
27 of rules or standards in force pursuant thereto. The right of
28 entry and inspection shall also extend to any premises which
29 the agency has reason to believe is being operated or
30 maintained as a facility without a license; but no such entry
31 or inspection of any premises may be made without the
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1 permission of the owner or person in charge thereof, unless a
2 warrant is first obtained from the circuit court authorizing
3 such entry. The warrant requirement shall extend only to a
4 facility which the agency has reason to believe is being
5 operated or maintained as a facility without a license. Any
6 application for a license or renewal thereof made pursuant to
7 this part shall constitute permission for, and complete
8 acquiescence in, any entry or inspection of the premises for
9 which the license is sought, in order to facilitate
10 verification of the information submitted on or in connection
11 with the application; to discover, investigate, and determine
12 the existence of abuse or neglect; or to elicit, receive,
13 respond to, and resolve complaints. Any current valid license
14 shall constitute unconditional permission for, and complete
15 acquiescence in, any entry or inspection of the premises by
16 authorized personnel. The agency shall retain the right of
17 entry and inspection of facilities that have had a license
18 revoked or suspended within the previous 24 months, to ensure
19 that the facility is not operating unlawfully. However, before
20 entering the facility, a statement of probable cause must be
21 filed with the director of the agency, who must approve or
22 disapprove the action within 48 hours. Probable cause shall
23 include, but is not limited to, evidence that the facility
24 holds itself out to the public as a provider of personal care
25 services or the receipt of a complaint by the long-term care
26 ombudsman council about the facility.
27 Section 65. Subsection (2) of section 400.435, Florida
28 Statutes, is amended to read:
29 400.435 Maintenance of records; reports.--
30 (2) Within 60 days after the date of the biennial
31 inspection visit or within 30 days after the date of any
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1 interim visit, the agency shall forward the results of the
2 inspection to the local district ombudsman council in whose
3 planning and service area, as defined in part II, the facility
4 is located; to at least one public library or, in the absence
5 of a public library, the county seat in the county in which
6 the inspected assisted living facility is located; and, when
7 appropriate, to the district adult services and district
8 alcohol, drug abuse, and mental health program offices.
9 Section 66. Paragraph (i) of subsection (1) and
10 subsection (5) of section 400.4415, Florida Statutes, are
11 amended to read:
12 400.4415 Assisted living facilities advisory
13 committee.--
14 (1) There is created the assisted living facilities
15 advisory committee, which shall assist the agency in
16 developing and implementing a pilot rating system for
17 facilities. The committee shall consist of nine members who
18 are to be appointed by, and report directly to, the director
19 of the agency. The membership is to include:
20 (i) One consumer representative from a local district
21 long-term care ombudsman council.
22 (5) In determining the rating and evaluating the
23 overall quality of care and services, the agency shall
24 consider the needs and limitations of residents in the
25 facility and the results of interviews and surveys of a
26 representative sampling of residents, families of residents,
27 long-term care ombudsman council members in the planning and
28 service area district in which the facility is located,
29 guardians of residents, and staff of the facility.
30 Section 67. Subsection (7) of section 400.619, Florida
31 Statutes, is amended to read:
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1 400.619 Licensure application and renewal.--
2 (7) Access to a licensed adult family-care home must
3 be provided at reasonable times for the appropriate officials
4 of the department, the Department of Health, the Department of
5 Children and Family Services, the agency, and the State Fire
6 Marshal, who are responsible for the development and
7 maintenance of fire, health, sanitary, and safety standards,
8 to inspect the facility to assure compliance with these
9 standards. In addition, access to a licensed adult
10 family-care home must be provided at reasonable times for the
11 local district long-term care ombudsman council.
12 Section 68. Subsection (2) of section 400.628, Florida
13 Statutes, is amended to read:
14 400.628 Residents' bill of rights.--
15 (2) The provider shall ensure that residents and their
16 legal representatives are made aware of the rights,
17 obligations, and prohibitions set forth in this part.
18 Residents must also be given the names, addresses, and
19 telephone numbers of the local district ombudsman council and
20 the adult abuse registry where they may lodge complaints.
21 Section 69. (1) The sum of $40,000 is appropriated
22 from the General Revenue Fund to the Long-Term Care Ombudsman
23 Program in the Department of Elderly Affairs to be used for
24 training members of the state and local long-term care
25 ombudsman councils.
26 (2) The sum of $40,000 is appropriated from the
27 General Revenue Fund to the Long-Term Care Ombudsman Program
28 in the Department of Elderly Affairs to be used for materials
29 to educate residents of long-term care facilities, their
30 families, visitors, facility staff, and the public about the
31
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1 ombudsman program and to encourage people to seek assistance
2 from the Long-Term Care Ombudsman Program.
3 Section 70. Each state agency shall include in its
4 standard contract document a requirement that any state funds
5 provided for the purchase of or improvements to real property
6 are contingent upon the contractor or political subdivision
7 granting to the state a security interest in the property at
8 least to the amount of state funds provided for at least 5
9 years from the date of purchase or the completion of the
10 improvements or as further required by law.
11 Section 71. Subsection (37) is added to section
12 409.912, Florida Statutes, to read:
13 409.912 Cost-effective purchasing of health care.--The
14 agency shall purchase goods and services for Medicaid
15 recipients in the most cost-effective manner consistent with
16 the delivery of quality medical care. The agency shall
17 maximize the use of prepaid per capita and prepaid aggregate
18 fixed-sum basis services when appropriate and other
19 alternative service delivery and reimbursement methodologies,
20 including competitive bidding pursuant to s. 287.057, designed
21 to facilitate the cost-effective purchase of a case-managed
22 continuum of care. The agency shall also require providers to
23 minimize the exposure of recipients to the need for acute
24 inpatient, custodial, and other institutional care and the
25 inappropriate or unnecessary use of high-cost services.
26 (37)(a) The agency shall implement a Medicaid
27 prescribed-drug spending-control program that includes the
28 following components:
29 1. Medicaid prescribed-drug coverage for brand-name
30 drugs for adult Medicaid recipients not residing in nursing
31 homes or other institutions is limited to the dispensing of
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1 four brand-name drugs per month per recipient. Children and
2 institutionalized adults are exempt from this restriction.
3 Antiretroviral agents are excluded from this limitation. No
4 requirements for prior authorization or other restrictions on
5 medications used to treat mental illnesses such as
6 schizophrenia, severe depression, or bipolar disorder may be
7 imposed on Medicaid recipients. Medications that will be
8 available without restriction for persons with mental
9 illnesses include atypical antipsychotic medications,
10 conventional antipsychotic medications, selective serotonin
11 re-uptake inhibitors, and other medications used for the
12 treatment of serious mental illnesses. The agency shall also
13 limit the amount of a prescribed drug dispensed to no more
14 than a 34-day supply. The agency shall continue to provide
15 unlimited generic drugs, contraceptive drugs and items, and
16 diabetic supplies. The agency may authorize exceptions to the
17 brand-name-drug restriction, based upon the treatment needs of
18 the patients, only when such exceptions are based on prior
19 consultation provided by the agency or an agency contractor,
20 but the agency must establish procedures to ensure that:
21 a. There will be a response to a request for prior
22 consultation by telephone or other telecommunication device
23 within 24 hours after receipt of a request for prior
24 consultation; and
25 b. A 72-hour supply of the drug prescribed will be
26 provided in an emergency or when the agency does not provide a
27 response within 24 hours as required by sub-subparagraph a.
28 2. Reimbursement to pharmacies for Medicaid prescribed
29 drugs shall be set at the average wholesale price less 13.25
30 percent.
31
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1 3. The agency shall develop and implement a process
2 for managing the drug therapies of Medicaid recipients who are
3 using significant numbers of prescribed drugs each month. The
4 management process may include, but is not limited to,
5 comprehensive, physician-directed medical-record reviews,
6 claims analyses, and case evaluations to determine the medical
7 necessity and appropriateness of a patient's treatment plan
8 and drug therapies. The agency may contract with a private
9 organization to provide drug-program-management services.
10 4. The agency may limit the size of its pharmacy
11 network based on need, competitive bidding, price
12 negotiations, credentialing, or similar criteria. The agency
13 shall give special consideration to rural areas in determining
14 the size and location of pharmacies included in the Medicaid
15 pharmacy network. A pharmacy credentialing process may include
16 criteria such as a pharmacy's full-service status, location,
17 size, patient educational programs, patient consultation,
18 disease-management services, and other characteristics. The
19 agency may impose a moratorium on Medicaid pharmacy enrollment
20 when it is determined that it has a sufficient number of
21 Medicaid-participating providers.
22 5. The agency shall develop and implement a program
23 that requires Medicaid practitioners who prescribe drugs to
24 use a counterfeit-proof prescription pad for Medicaid
25 prescriptions. The agency shall require the use of
26 standardized counterfeit-proof prescription pads by
27 Medicaid-participating prescribers. The agency may implement
28 the program in targeted geographic areas or statewide.
29 6. The agency may enter into arrangements that require
30 manufacturers of generic drugs prescribed to Medicaid
31 recipients to provide rebates of at least 15.1 percent of the
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1 average manufacturer price for the manufacturer's generic
2 products. These arrangements shall require that if a
3 generic-drug manufacturer pays federal rebates for
4 Medicaid-reimbursed drugs at a level below 15.1 percent, the
5 manufacturer must provide a supplemental rebate to the state
6 in an amount necessary to achieve a 15.1-percent rebate level.
7 If a generic-drug manufacturer raises its price in excess of
8 the Consumer Price Index (Urban), the excess amount shall be
9 included in the supplemental rebate to the state.
10 (b) The agency shall implement this subsection to the
11 extent that funds are appropriated to administer the Medicaid
12 prescribed-drug spending-control program. The agency may
13 contract all or any part of this program to private
14 organizations.
15 (c) The agency shall submit a report to the Governor,
16 the President of the Senate, and the Speaker of the House of
17 Representatives by January 15 of each year. The report must
18 include, but need not be limited to, the progress made in
19 implementing Medicaid cost-containment measures and their
20 effect on Medicaid prescribed-drug expenditures.
21 Section 72. There is created a Medicaid Pharmaceutical
22 and Therapeutics Committee. The committee shall develop and
23 implement a voluntary Medicaid preferred prescribed drug
24 designation program. The program shall provide information to
25 Medicaid providers on medically appropriate and cost efficient
26 prescription drug therapies through the development and
27 publication of a voluntary Medicaid preferred prescribed-drug
28 list.
29 (1) The Medicaid Pharmaceutical and Therapeutics
30 Committee shall be comprised of nine members appointed as
31 follows: one practicing physician licensed under chapter 458,
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1 Florida Statutes, appointed by the Speaker of the House of
2 Representatives from a list of recommendations from the
3 Florida Medical Association; one practicing physician licensed
4 under chapter 459, Florida Statutes, appointed by the Speaker
5 of the House of Representatives from a list of recommendations
6 from the Florida Osteopathic Medical Association; one
7 practicing physician licensed under chapter 458, Florida
8 Statutes, appointed by the President of the Senate from a list
9 of recommendations from the Florida Academy of Family
10 Physicians; one practicing podiatric physician licensed under
11 chapter 461, Florida Statutes, appointed by the President of
12 the Florida Senate from a list of recommendations from the
13 Florida Podiatric Medical Association; one trauma surgeon
14 licensed under chapter 458, Florida Statutes, appointed by the
15 Speaker of the House of Representatives from a list of
16 recommendations from the American College of Surgeons; one
17 practicing dentist licensed under chapter 466, Florida
18 Statutes, appointed by the President of the Senate from a list
19 of recommendations from the Florida Dental Association; one
20 practicing pharmacist licensed under chapter 465, Florida
21 Statutes, appointed by the Governor from a list of
22 recommendations from the Florida Pharmacy Association; one
23 practicing pharmacist licensed under chapter 465, Florida
24 Statutes, appointed by the Governor from a list of
25 recommendations from the Florida Society of Health System
26 Pharmacists; and one health care professional with expertise
27 in clinical pharmacology appointed by the Governor from a list
28 of recommendations from the Pharmaceutical Research and
29 Manufacturers Association. The members shall be appointed to
30 serve for terms of 2 years from the date of their appointment.
31 Members may be appointed to more than one term. The Agency for
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1 Health Care Administration shall serve as staff for the
2 committee and assist them with all ministerial duties.
3 (2) Upon recommendation by the committee, the Agency
4 for Health Care Administration shall establish the voluntary
5 Medicaid preferred prescribed-drug list. Upon further
6 recommendation by the committee, the agency shall add to,
7 delete from, or modify the list. The committee shall also
8 review requests for additions to, deletions from, or
9 modifications of the list. The list shall be adopted by the
10 committee in consultation with medical specialists, when
11 appropriate, using the following criteria: use of the list
12 shall be voluntary by providers and the list must provide for
13 medically appropriate drug therapies for Medicaid patients
14 which achieve cost savings in the Medicaid program.
15 (3) The Agency for Health Care Administration shall
16 publish and disseminate the voluntary Medicaid preferred
17 prescribed drug list to all Medicaid providers in the state.
18 Section 73. This act shall take effect July 1, 2000.
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