1 | Representative Homan offered the following: |
2 |
|
3 | Amendment (with title amendment) |
4 | Remove everything after the enacting clause and insert: |
5 | Section 1. Effective July 1, 2004, section 110.175, |
6 | Florida Statutes, is created to read: |
7 | 110.175 Employee health and wellness program.-- |
8 | (1) Each state agency may allocate, from existing |
9 | resources, the necessary funding and facilities for the |
10 | development and maintenance of an employee health and wellness |
11 | program and may seek additional funding from other sources to |
12 | support the program for the benefit of the agency's employees. |
13 | (2) Each state agency may dedicate resources to develop |
14 | and coordinate an employee health and wellness program or |
15 | arrange to cooperate with other agencies within such agency's |
16 | geographic proximity for program coordination, including |
17 | providers of state employee benefits. |
18 | (3) Each state agency electing to participate shall |
19 | establish an employee health and wellness coordinator and |
20 | advisory committee to guide the development of an operational |
21 | plan, including the collection of data and development of goals |
22 | and objectives, and to oversee program evaluation and use of any |
23 | agency-allocated funds. |
24 | (4) Each state agency may conduct and dedicate resources |
25 | toward an employee needs assessment to ascertain the health-and- |
26 | wellness-related needs of its employees. |
27 | (5) Each state agency may establish policies that allow |
28 | employees no more than 30 minutes of work time three times each |
29 | week, as individual workload allows, to use for the purpose of |
30 | engaging in health and wellness activities which may include |
31 | physical activity, stress reduction, tobacco cessation, personal |
32 | training, nutrition counseling, or weight reduction and control. |
33 | Such 30-minute periods may be used to modify the start or end of |
34 | the workday or to extend the lunch hour. |
35 | (6) Each state agency shall use an employee health and |
36 | wellness activity agreement form, developed by the Department of |
37 | Health, to be completed by the employee, signed by both the |
38 | employee and the employee's immediate supervisor, and kept in |
39 | the employee's personnel file prior to the employee's |
40 | participation in any activity. It is the responsibility of the |
41 | employee to complete the form and submit it to the personnel |
42 | office. Any change to the employee's activities requires |
43 | submission of a revised form. An employee found to be in |
44 | violation of the submitted agreement form is not allowed further |
45 | participation in the program. |
46 | (7) Each state agency may designate up to 1 hour each |
47 | month for the purpose of providing inservice health and wellness |
48 | training for its employees. |
49 | (8) Each state agency may use electronic mail and other |
50 | communication systems to promote the agency's employee health |
51 | and wellness activities. |
52 | (9) Each state agency may, and is encouraged to: |
53 | (a) Enter into an agreement or contract with other public |
54 | or private entities to collaborate or participate jointly in |
55 | health or wellness education or activity programs. |
56 | (b) Implement health education activities that focus on |
57 | skill development and lifestyle behavior change along with |
58 | information dissemination and awareness building, preferably |
59 | tailored to the employees' interests and needs. |
60 | (c) Review and offer recommendations to agency leadership |
61 | on environmental and social support policies that pertain to |
62 | improving the health of employees. |
63 | (d) Link the employee health and wellness program to other |
64 | programs such as the employee assistance program and other |
65 | related programs to help employees balance work and family. |
66 | (e) Offer free, low-cost, or employee-fee-based programs |
67 | on site, including the designation of rooms for the express |
68 | purpose of physical activity, nutrition, stress reduction, and |
69 | weight control activities. Participating agencies with |
70 | established employee health and wellness programs may purchase |
71 | exercise equipment to be used in the room designated for this |
72 | purpose. |
73 | (10) Each state agency that develops and implements an |
74 | employee health and wellness program shall include and document |
75 | an evaluation and improvement process in an annual report to |
76 | help enhance the program's efficiency and effectiveness. The |
77 | annual report shall be submitted to the Department of Health on |
78 | July 1 of each year. Agencies shall use an annual report |
79 | template provided by the Department of Health to ensure |
80 | consistency in the presentation of data and other evaluation |
81 | results. |
82 | (11) The Department of Health shall provide employee |
83 | health and wellness model program guidelines and ongoing |
84 | technical assistance to other state agencies to assist in the |
85 | development of each agency's employee health and wellness |
86 | program. |
87 | Section 2. Subsections (6) and (7) are added to section |
88 | 381.0012, Florida Statutes, to read: |
89 | 381.0012 Enforcement authority.-- |
90 | (6) When a violation of s. 386.01, s. 386.041, or |
91 | environmental health rules adopted under this chapter occurs, |
92 | and such violation is enforceable by administrative or civil |
93 | remedy or is a second degree misdemeanor, the department may |
94 | issue a citation that contains an order of correction, an order |
95 | to pay a fine, or both. A citation issued under this subsection |
96 | constitutes a notice of proposed agency action. |
97 | (a) Citations must be in writing and must describe the |
98 | particular nature of the violation, including specific reference |
99 | to the provision of statute or rule allegedly violated. |
100 | (b) The fines imposed may not exceed $500 for each |
101 | violation. Each day constitutes a separate violation for which a |
102 | citation may be issued. |
103 | (c) The citing official shall inform the recipient, by |
104 | written notice pursuant to ss. 120.569 and 120.57, of the right |
105 | to an administrative hearing. The citation must contain a |
106 | conspicuous statement that failure to pay the fine within the |
107 | allotted time, or failure to appear to contest the citation |
108 | after having requested a hearing, constitutes a waiver of the |
109 | right to contest the citation. |
110 | (d) The department may reduce or waive the fine imposed by |
111 | the citation after giving due consideration to such factors as |
112 | the gravity of the violation, the good faith of the person who |
113 | has allegedly committed the violation, and the person's history |
114 | of previous violations, including violations for which |
115 | enforcement actions were taken under this section or other |
116 | provisions of law. |
117 | (e) A citation must read, in the space immediately above |
118 | the signature line: "Signing this citation is not an admission |
119 | of guilt. A refusal to sign this citation is a misdemeanor. You |
120 | must be given a copy of this citation." Any person who willfully |
121 | refuses to sign and accept a citation issued by the department |
122 | commits a misdemeanor of the second degree, punishable as |
123 | provided in s. 775.082 or s. 775.083. |
124 | (f) The department shall deposit all fines collected under |
125 | the authority of this subsection in the County Health Department |
126 | Trust Fund for use in the environmental health program under |
127 | which the fine was issued and shall use such fines to improve |
128 | the respective programs or to provide training to the regulated |
129 | industry and department staff working in such programs. |
130 | (g) The provisions of this subsection are an alternative |
131 | means of enforcing environmental health requirements which does |
132 | not prohibit the department from using other means of |
133 | enforcement. However, the department shall use only one method |
134 | of enforcement for a single violation. |
135 | (7) The department may use positive means of enforcement |
136 | to ensure compliance with environmental health requirements |
137 | specified in this chapter, ss. 386.01 and 386.041, or |
138 | environmental health rules adopted under the authority of this |
139 | chapter. Such means of enforcement may include requiring |
140 | attendance at training courses applicable to the violations |
141 | committed and requiring the use of best management practices |
142 | currently used or recognized by the appropriate regulated |
143 | industry or governmental agency. |
144 | Section 3. Section 381.0033, Florida Statutes, is created |
145 | to read: |
146 | 381.0033 Influenza virus and pneumococcal bacteria |
147 | vaccinations.--Hospitals licensed pursuant to chapter 395 shall |
148 | implement a program, in accordance with the recommendations of |
149 | the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices of the United |
150 | States Public Health Service, to offer immunizations against the |
151 | influenza virus and pneumococcal bacteria to all patients 65 |
152 | years of age or older between October 1, or earlier if the |
153 | vaccination is available, and February 1 of each year, subject |
154 | to the availability of an adequate supply of the necessary |
155 | vaccine and the clinical judgment of a responsible practitioner. |
156 | Section 4. Paragraph (d) of subsection (3) of section |
157 | 381.004, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: |
158 | 381.004 HIV testing.-- |
159 | (3) HUMAN IMMUNODEFICIENCY VIRUS TESTING; INFORMED |
160 | CONSENT; RESULTS; COUNSELING; CONFIDENTIALITY.-- |
161 | (d) No test result shall be determined as positive, and no |
162 | positive test result shall be revealed to any person, without |
163 | corroborating or confirmatory tests being conducted except in |
164 | the following situations: |
165 | 1. Preliminary test results may be released to licensed |
166 | physicians or the medical or nonmedical personnel subject to the |
167 | significant exposure for purposes of subparagraphs (h)10., 11., |
168 | and 12. |
169 | 2. Preliminary test results may be released to health care |
170 | providers and to the person tested when decisions about medical |
171 | care or treatment of, or recommendation to, the person tested |
172 | and, in the case of an intrapartum or postpartum woman, when |
173 | care, treatment, or recommendations regarding her newborn, |
174 | cannot await the results of confirmatory testing. Positive |
175 | preliminary HIV test results shall not be characterized to the |
176 | patient as a diagnosis of HIV infection. Justification for the |
177 | use of preliminary test results must be documented in the |
178 | medical record by the health care provider who ordered the test. |
179 | This subparagraph does not authorize the release of preliminary |
180 | test results for the purpose of routine identification of HIV- |
181 | infected individuals or when HIV testing is incidental to the |
182 | preliminary diagnosis or care of a patient. Corroborating or |
183 | confirmatory testing must be conducted as followup to a positive |
184 | preliminary test. Results shall be communicated to the patient |
185 | according to statute regardless of the outcome. Except as |
186 | provided in this section, test results are confidential and |
187 | exempt from the provisions of s. 119.07(1). |
188 | 3. Positive rapid test results are considered preliminary |
189 | and may be released in accordance with the manufacturer's |
190 | instructions as approved by the United States Food and Drug |
191 | Administration. Positive rapid test results require confirmatory |
192 | testing for diagnosis and reporting of HIV infection. |
193 | Section 5. Paragraph (a) of subsection (3) of section |
194 | 381.0065, Florida Statutes, is amended, and paragraph (c) is |
195 | added to subsection (5) of said section, to read: |
196 | 381.0065 Onsite sewage treatment and disposal systems; |
197 | regulation.-- |
198 | (3) DUTIES AND POWERS OF THE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH.--The |
199 | department shall: |
200 | (a) Adopt rules to administer ss. 381.0065-381.0067, |
201 | including definitions that are consistent with the definitions |
202 | in this section, decreases to setback requirements where no |
203 | health hazard exists, increases for the lot-flow allowance for |
204 | performance-based systems, requirements for separation from |
205 | water table elevation during the wettest season, requirements |
206 | for the design and construction of any component part of an |
207 | onsite sewage treatment and disposal system, application and |
208 | permit requirements for persons who maintain an onsite sewage |
209 | treatment and disposal system, requirements for maintenance and |
210 | service agreements for aerobic treatment units and performance- |
211 | based treatment systems, and recommended standards, including |
212 | disclosure requirements, for voluntary system inspections to be |
213 | performed by individuals who are authorized by law to perform |
214 | such inspections and who shall inform a person having ownership, |
215 | control, or use of an onsite sewage treatment and disposal |
216 | system of the inspection standards and of that person's |
217 | authority to request an inspection based on all or part of the |
218 | standards, and requirements for implementation of the United |
219 | States Environmental Protection Agency's voluntary national |
220 | guidelines for management of onsite and clustered or |
221 | decentralized wastewater treatment systems. |
222 | (5) ENFORCEMENT; RIGHT OF ENTRY; CITATIONS.-- |
223 | (c) Department personnel may enter the premises of others |
224 | when necessary to conduct site evaluations and inspections |
225 | relating to the permitting of onsite sewage treatment and |
226 | disposal systems. Such entry does not constitute trespass, and |
227 | department personnel making such entry are not subject to arrest |
228 | or to a civil action by reason of such entry. This paragraph |
229 | does not authorize a department employee to destroy, injure, |
230 | damage, or move anything on premises of another without the |
231 | written permission of the landowner. |
232 | Section 6. Subsections (1), (2), (3), and (6) and |
233 | paragraph (a) of subsection (5) of section 381.0101, Florida |
234 | Statutes, are amended to read: |
235 | 381.0101 Environmental health professionals.-- |
236 | (1) LEGISLATIVE INTENT.--Persons responsible for providing |
237 | technical and scientific evaluations of environmental health and |
238 | sanitary conditions in business establishments and communities |
239 | throughout the state may create a danger to the public health if |
240 | they are not skilled or competent to perform such evaluations. |
241 | The public relies on the judgment of environmental health |
242 | professionals employed by both government agencies and private |
243 | industries to assure them that environmental hazards are |
244 | identified and removed before they endanger the health or safety |
245 | of the public. The purpose of this section is to assure the |
246 | public that persons specifically responsible for performing |
247 | environmental health and sanitary evaluations have been |
248 | certified by examination as competent to perform such work. |
249 | (2) DEFINITIONS.--As used in this section: |
250 | (a) "Accredited" means recognized by the American Council |
251 | on Education as meeting acceptable levels of quality and |
252 | performance. |
253 | (b)(a) "Board" means the Environmental Health |
254 | Professionals Advisory Board. |
255 | (c)(b) "Department" means the Department of Health. |
256 | (d)(c) "Environmental health" means that segment of public |
257 | health work which deals with the examination of those factors in |
258 | the human environment which may impact adversely on the health |
259 | status of an individual or the public. |
260 | (e)(d) "Environmental health professional" means a person |
261 | who is employed or assigned the responsibility for assessing the |
262 | environmental health or sanitary conditions, as defined by the |
263 | department, within a building, on an individual's property, or |
264 | within the community at large, and who has the knowledge, |
265 | skills, and abilities to carry out these tasks. Environmental |
266 | health professionals may be either field, supervisory, or |
267 | administrative staff members. |
268 | (f)(e) "Certified" means a person who has displayed |
269 | competency to perform evaluations of environmental or sanitary |
270 | conditions through examination. |
271 | (g)(f) "Registered sanitarian," "R.S.," "Registered |
272 | Environmental Health Specialist," or "R.E.H.S." means a person |
273 | who has been certified by either the National Environmental |
274 | Health Association or the Florida Environmental Health |
275 | Association as knowledgeable in the environmental health |
276 | profession. |
277 | (h)(g) "Primary environmental health program" means those |
278 | programs determined by the department to be essential for |
279 | providing basic environmental and sanitary protection to the |
280 | public. These programs shall be established by rule and, at a |
281 | minimum, these programs shall include food protection program |
282 | work and onsite sewage treatment and disposal systems program |
283 | work system evaluations. |
284 | (3) CERTIFICATION REQUIRED.--No person shall perform |
285 | environmental health or sanitary evaluations in any primary |
286 | program area of environmental health without being certified by |
287 | the department as competent to perform such evaluations. The |
288 | requirements of this section shall not be mandatory for persons |
289 | performing inspections of public or retail food service |
290 | establishments licensed under chapter 500 or chapter 509. |
291 | (5) STANDARDS FOR CERTIFICATION.--The department shall |
292 | adopt rules that establish definitions of terms and minimum |
293 | standards of education, training, or experience for those |
294 | persons subject to this section. The rules must also address the |
295 | process for application, examination, issuance, expiration, and |
296 | renewal of certification and ethical standards of practice for |
297 | the profession. |
298 | (a) Persons employed as environmental health professionals |
299 | shall exhibit a knowledge of rules and principles of |
300 | environmental and public health law in Florida through |
301 | examination. A person may not conduct environmental health |
302 | evaluations in a primary program area unless he or she is |
303 | currently certified in that program area or works under the |
304 | direct supervision, during his or her initial probationary |
305 | period for that position, of a certified environmental health |
306 | professional. |
307 | 1. All persons who begin employment in a primary |
308 | environmental health program on or after September 21, 1994, |
309 | must be certified in that program within the initial |
310 | probationary period for that position 6 months after employment. |
311 | 2. Persons employed in the primary environmental health |
312 | programs program of a food protection program or an onsite |
313 | sewage treatment and disposal systems system prior to September |
314 | 21, 1994, shall be considered certified while employed in that |
315 | position and shall be required to adhere to any professional |
316 | standards established by the department pursuant to paragraph |
317 | (b), complete any continuing education requirements imposed |
318 | under paragraph (d), and pay the certificate renewal fee imposed |
319 | under subsection (7). |
320 | 3. Persons employed in the primary environmental health |
321 | programs program of a food protection program or an onsite |
322 | sewage treatment and disposal systems system prior to September |
323 | 21, 1994, who change positions or program areas and transfer |
324 | into another primary environmental health program area on or |
325 | after September 21, 1994, must be certified by examination in |
326 | that program within 6 months after such transfer, except that |
327 | they will not be required to possess the college degree required |
328 | under paragraph (e). |
329 | 4. Registered sanitarians shall be considered certified |
330 | and shall be required to adhere to any professional standards |
331 | established by the department pursuant to paragraph (b). |
332 | (6) EXEMPTIONS.--A person who conducts primary |
333 | environmental evaluation activities and maintains a current |
334 | registration or certification from another state agency which |
335 | examined the person's knowledge of the primary program area and |
336 | requires comparable continuing education to maintain the |
337 | certificate shall not be required to be certified by this |
338 | section. Examples of persons not subject to certification are |
339 | physicians, registered dietitians, certified laboratory |
340 | personnel, and nurses. |
341 | Section 7. Effective July 1, 2004, section 384.25, Florida |
342 | Statutes, is amended to read: |
343 | 384.25 Reporting required.-- |
344 | (1) Each person who makes a diagnosis of or treats a |
345 | person with a sexually transmissible disease, including, but not |
346 | limited to, HIV and AIDS, and each laboratory that performs a |
347 | test for a sexually transmissible disease, including, but not |
348 | limited to, HIV, which concludes with a positive result shall |
349 | report such facts as may be required by the department by rule, |
350 | within a time period as specified by rule of the department, but |
351 | in no case to exceed 2 weeks. |
352 | (a)(2) The department shall adopt rules specifying the |
353 | information required in and a maximum minimum time period for |
354 | reporting a sexually transmissible disease, including, but not |
355 | limited to, HIV and AIDS. In adopting such rules, the department |
356 | shall consider the need for information, protections for the |
357 | privacy and confidentiality of the patient, and the practical |
358 | ability of persons and laboratories to report in a reasonable |
359 | fashion. To ensure the confidentiality of persons infected with |
360 | HIV the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), reporting of HIV |
361 | infection and AIDS acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) |
362 | must be conducted using a system the HIV/AIDS Reporting System |
363 | (HARS) developed by the Centers for Disease Control and |
364 | Prevention of the United States Public Health Service or an |
365 | equivalent system. |
366 | (3) The department shall require reporting of physician |
367 | diagnosed cases of AIDS based upon diagnostic criteria from the |
368 | Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. |
369 | (b)(4) The department may require physician and laboratory |
370 | reporting of HIV infection. However, only reports of HIV |
371 | infection identified on or after the effective date of the rule |
372 | developed by the department pursuant to this subsection shall be |
373 | accepted. The Reporting may not affect or relate to anonymous |
374 | HIV testing programs conducted pursuant to s. 381.004(4) or to |
375 | university-based medical research protocols as determined by the |
376 | department. |
377 | (2)(5) After notification of the test subject under |
378 | subsection (4), the department may, with the consent of the test |
379 | subject, notify school superintendents of students and school |
380 | personnel whose HIV tests are positive. |
381 | (3) The department shall adopt rules requiring each |
382 | physician and laboratory to report any newborn or infant up to |
383 | 18 months of age who has been exposed to HIV. The rules may |
384 | include the method and time period for reporting, information to |
385 | be included in the report, requirements for enforcement, and |
386 | followup activities by the department. |
387 | (4)(6) The department shall by February 1 of each year |
388 | submit to the Legislature an annual report relating to all |
389 | information obtained pursuant to this section. |
390 | (5)(7) Each person who violates the provisions of this |
391 | section or the rules adopted hereunder may be fined by the |
392 | department up to $500 for each offense. The department shall |
393 | report each violation of this section to the regulatory agency |
394 | responsible for licensing each health care professional and each |
395 | laboratory to which these provisions apply. |
396 | Section 8. Effective July 1, 2004, section 384.31, Florida |
397 | Statutes, is amended to read: |
398 | 384.31 Serological Testing of pregnant women; duty of the |
399 | attendant.-- |
400 | (1) Every person, including every physician licensed under |
401 | chapter 458 or chapter 459 or midwife licensed under part I of |
402 | chapter 464 or chapter 467, attending a pregnant woman for |
403 | conditions relating to pregnancy during the period of gestation |
404 | and delivery shall take or cause the woman to be tested for |
405 | sexually transmissible diseases, including, but not limited to, |
406 | HIV, as required by rule of the department, notwithstanding s. |
407 | 381.004(3)(a), taken a sample of venous blood at a time or times |
408 | specified by the department. The tests Each sample of blood |
409 | shall be performed tested by a laboratory approved for such |
410 | purposes under part I of chapter 483 for sexually transmissible |
411 | diseases as required by rule of the department. Pregnant women |
412 | shall be notified of the tests that will be conducted and of |
413 | their right to refuse testing. If a woman objects to testing, a |
414 | written statement of objection, signed by the patient, shall be |
415 | placed in the patient's medical record and no testing shall |
416 | occur. If the patient refuses to sign the statement of |
417 | objection, the refusal shall be noted on the form by a licensed |
418 | health care professional who shall print his or her name by the |
419 | notation and who shall sign the notation. |
420 | (2) At the time the venous blood sample is taken, testing |
421 | for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection shall be |
422 | offered to each pregnant woman. The prevailing professional |
423 | standard of care in this state requires each health care |
424 | provider and midwife who attends a pregnant woman to counsel the |
425 | woman to be tested for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). |
426 | Counseling shall include a discussion of the availability of |
427 | treatment if the pregnant woman tests HIV positive. If a |
428 | pregnant woman objects to HIV testing, reasonable steps shall be |
429 | taken to obtain a written statement of such objection, signed by |
430 | the patient, which shall be placed in the patient's medical |
431 | record. Every person, including every physician licensed under |
432 | chapter 458 or chapter 459 or midwife licensed under part I of |
433 | chapter 464 or chapter 467, who attends a pregnant woman who has |
434 | been offered and objects to HIV testing shall be immune from |
435 | liability arising out of or related to the contracting of HIV |
436 | infection or acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) by the |
437 | child from the mother. |
438 | Section 9. Section 385.104, Florida Statutes, is created |
439 | to read: |
440 | 385.104 Health Promotion and Health Education Statewide |
441 | Initiative.-- |
442 | (1) The Department of Health shall establish the Health |
443 | Promotion and Health Education Statewide Initiative to provide a |
444 | comprehensive and community-based health promotion and education |
445 | program. The program is designed to provide funding to counties |
446 | in this state to improve individual and community health, aimed |
447 | specifically at preventing and reducing the impact of chronic |
448 | diseases and promoting healthy lifestyles. |
449 | (2) The program's targeted diseases include, but are not |
450 | limited to, diabetes, heart disease, stroke, asthma, and cancer, |
451 | with a focus on the preventable risk factors of tobacco use, |
452 | physical inactivity, and poor nutrition. |
453 | (3) The implementation of these activities shall be |
454 | coordinated with and linked to existing state plans and national |
455 | priorities, focusing on evidence-based programs and population- |
456 | based efforts that specifically address social and environmental |
457 | policy strategies. |
458 | (4) Subject to the availability of funds, the Department |
459 | of Health may award funding to county health departments for |
460 | purposes of improving individual and community health by |
461 | expanding and improving the health infrastructure through |
462 | environmental and policy changes aimed specifically at |
463 | preventing and reducing the impact of chronic diseases and |
464 | promoting healthy lifestyles. |
465 | (5) To be eligible to receive funding under this section, |
466 | a county health department shall submit an application to the |
467 | secretary of the Department of Health containing information as |
468 | required, including: |
469 | (a) A description of the proposed activities and how they |
470 | promote tobacco cessation, healthy eating, or physical fitness |
471 | and address the health and social consequences to residents of |
472 | this state that have chronic diseases. |
473 | (b) Information describing how health promotion and |
474 | education activities are to be coordinated at the local level |
475 | with other health activities conducted by other education, |
476 | health, and agricultural agencies. |
477 | (c) Information describing how local health promotion and |
478 | education activities reflect state and national objectives for |
479 | health. |
480 | (d) A description of the collaborative process that the |
481 | county health department employed in the development of the |
482 | health promotion and education program, including consultations |
483 | with individuals and organizations with expertise in promoting |
484 | public health, nutrition, or physical activity. |
485 | (e) A description of how the county health department will |
486 | evaluate the effectiveness of its program. |
487 | (6) Subject to the availability of funds, a county health |
488 | department receiving funds under this section shall, pending |
489 | successful implementation or evaluation as determined by |
490 | department headquarters staff, conduct the project for at least |
491 | a period of 3 consecutive years. |
492 | (7) A county health department that receives funds under |
493 | this section may use the funds to carry out one or more of the |
494 | following activities: |
495 | (a) Collect, analyze, and disseminate data related to |
496 | diabetes, heart disease, stroke, asthma, and cancer, with a |
497 | focus on the preventable risk factors of tobacco use, physical |
498 | inactivity, and poor nutrition. |
499 | (b) Develop and implement activities to create a |
500 | comprehensive, coordinated nutrition and physical fitness |
501 | awareness and chronic disease prevention program. |
502 | (c) Develop and implement programs in schools and |
503 | worksites to increase physical fitness and to enhance the |
504 | nutritional status of residents of this state. |
505 | (d) Develop and implement policy and environmental changes |
506 | related to the cessation of tobacco, healthful nutrition, and |
507 | physical education. |
508 | (e) Collaborate with community-based organizations, |
509 | volunteer organizations, state medical associations, and public |
510 | health groups to develop and implement health education and |
511 | promotion activities. |
512 | (f) Collaborate with public and private organizations that |
513 | have a mission to increase public awareness of the importance of |
514 | a balanced diet and an active lifestyle. |
515 | Section 10. Section 458.3215, Florida Statutes, is created |
516 | to read: |
517 | 458.3215 Reactivation of license for clinical research |
518 | purposes.-- |
519 | (1) Any person who left the practice of medicine for |
520 | purposes of retirement and who, at the time of retirement, was |
521 | in good standing with the board may apply to have his or her |
522 | license reactivated, without examination, for purposes of seeing |
523 | patients solely in a clinical research setting. Such person must |
524 | not have been out of the practice of medicine for more than 10 |
525 | years at the time of application under this section. |
526 | (2) The board shall by rule set the reactivation fee, not |
527 | to exceed $300, and develop criteria for reactivation of a |
528 | license under this section, including appropriate continuing |
529 | education requirements, not to exceed those prescribed in s. |
530 | 458.321 for reactivation of a license. |
531 | Section 11. Section 945.601, Florida Statutes, is amended |
532 | to read: |
533 | 945.601 Correctional Medical Authority; ss. 945.601- |
534 | 945.6038; 945.601-945.6035, definitions.--As used in this act: |
535 | (1) "Authority" means the State of Florida Correctional |
536 | Medical Authority created in this act. |
537 | (2) "Health care provider" means: |
538 | (a) A regional research hospital or research center which |
539 | is authorized by law to provide hospital services in accordance |
540 | with chapter 395, which has a contractual or operating |
541 | arrangement with a regional school of medicine, and which is |
542 | located at that regional school of medicine; |
543 | (b) Any entity which has agreed to provide hospital |
544 | services to inmates in the Department of Corrections; or |
545 | (c) Any entity licensed to provide hospital services in |
546 | accordance with chapter 395. |
547 | (3) "Project" means any structure, facility, machinery, |
548 | equipment, or other property suitable for use by a health |
549 | facility in connection with its operations or proposed |
550 | operations, including, without limitation, real property |
551 | therefor; a clinic, computer facility, dining hall, firefighting |
552 | facility, fire prevention facility, long-term care facility, |
553 | hospital, interns' residence, laboratory, laundry, maintenance |
554 | facility, nurses' residence, office, parking area, pharmacy, |
555 | recreational facility, research facility, storage facility, |
556 | utility, or X-ray facility, or any combination of the foregoing; |
557 | and other structure or facility related thereto or required or |
558 | useful for health care purposes, the conducting of research, or |
559 | the operation of a health facility, including a facility or |
560 | structure essential or convenient for the orderly conduct of the |
561 | health facility and other similar items necessary or convenient |
562 | for the operation of a particular facility or structure in the |
563 | manner for which its use is intended. "Project" does not include |
564 | such items as fuel, supplies, or other items which are |
565 | customarily deemed to result in a current operating charge. |
566 | (4) "Quality management program" means to monitor and |
567 | evaluate inmate health care and includes the following |
568 | objectives: |
569 | (a) Assuring that all inmates receive appropriate and |
570 | timely services in a safe environment. |
571 | (b) Assuring systematic monitoring of the treatment |
572 | environment. |
573 | (c) Assisting in the reduction of professional and general |
574 | liability risks. |
575 | (d) Enhancing efficient utilization of resources. |
576 | (e) Assisting in credential review and privilege |
577 | delineation. |
578 | (f) Enhancing the identification of continuing educational |
579 | needs. |
580 | (g) Facilitating the identification of strengths, |
581 | weaknesses, and opportunities for improvement. |
582 | (h) Facilitating the coordination and integration of |
583 | information systems. |
584 | (i) Assuring the resolution of identified problems. |
585 | (5) "Real property" includes all lands, including |
586 | buildings, structures, improvements, and fixtures thereon; any |
587 | property of any nature appurtenant thereto or used in connection |
588 | therewith; and every estate, interest, and right, legal or |
589 | equitable, therein, including any such interest for a term of |
590 | years. |
591 | Section 12. Section 945.6038, Florida Statutes, is created |
592 | to read: |
593 | 945.6038 Additional services.--The authority is authorized |
594 | to enter into an agreement or may contract with the Department |
595 | of Children and Family Services, subject to the availability of |
596 | funding, to conduct surveys of medical services and to provide |
597 | medical quality assurance and improvement assistance at secure |
598 | confinement and treatment facilities for persons confined under |
599 | part V of chapter 394. The authority may enter into similar |
600 | agreements with other state agencies, subject to the |
601 | availability of funds. The authority may not enter into any such |
602 | agreement if doing so would impair the authority's ability to |
603 | fulfill its obligations with regard to the Department of |
604 | Corrections as set forth in this chapter. |
605 | Section 13. Except as otherwise provided herein, this act |
606 | shall take effect upon becoming a law. |
607 |
|
608 |
|
609 | ================= T I T L E A M E N D M E N T ================= |
610 | Remove the entire title and insert: |
611 | A bill to be entitled |
612 | An act relating to public health care; creating s. |
613 | 110.175, F.S.; creating an employee health and wellness |
614 | program; providing requirements; authorizing state |
615 | agencies to undertake certain activities relating to |
616 | agency resources for program purposes; requiring each |
617 | participating agency to make an annual report; providing |
618 | duties of the department; amending s. 381.0012, F.S.; |
619 | expanding the environmental health enforcement authority |
620 | of the Department of Health; authorizing the department to |
621 | issue citations or order payment of fines; providing |
622 | requirements and limitations; providing a criminal |
623 | penalty; providing for deposit and use of fines; creating |
624 | s. 381.0033, F.S.; requiring hospitals to implement a |
625 | program to offer immunizations against the influenza virus |
626 | and pneumococcal bacteria to certain patients; amending s. |
627 | 381.004, F.S.; providing additional criteria for release |
628 | of HIV preliminary test results; amending s. 381.0065, |
629 | F.S.; modifying standards for rulemaking applicable to |
630 | regulation of onsite sewage treatment and disposal |
631 | systems; providing for an extended right of entry; |
632 | amending s. 381.0101, F.S.; revising definitions; revising |
633 | environmental health professional certification |
634 | requirements; clarifying exemptions; amending s. 384.25, |
635 | F.S.; revising reporting requirements for sexually |
636 | transmissible diseases; authorizing the department to |
637 | adopt rules; amending s. 384.31, F.S.; revising sexually |
638 | transmissible disease testing requirements for pregnant |
639 | women; providing notice requirements; creating s. 385.104, |
640 | F.S.; establishing the Health Promotion and Health |
641 | Education Statewide Initiative for certain purposes; |
642 | providing requirements; authorizing the department to |
643 | award funding to county health departments for certain |
644 | purposes; providing funding requirements; providing |
645 | participation requirements for county health departments; |
646 | creating s. 458.3215, F.S.; providing for reactivation of |
647 | licenses of certain physicians for certain limited |
648 | purposes; providing for a reactivation fee; amending s. |
649 | 945.601, F.S.; revising a cross reference, to conform; |
650 | creating s. 945.6038, F.S.; authorizing the State of |
651 | Florida Correctional Medical Authority to enter into |
652 | agreements with other state agencies to provide additional |
653 | medical services; providing a limitation; providing |
654 | effective dates. |