Bill Text: AZ SB1301 | 2019 | Fifty-fourth Legislature 1st Regular | Introduced


Bill Title: Ambulance services; certificates; needs assessment

Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Republican 1-0)

Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2019-01-31 - Senate read second time [SB1301 Detail]

Download: Arizona-2019-SB1301-Introduced.html

 

 

 

REFERENCE TITLE: ambulance services; certificates; needs assessment

 

 

 

 

State of Arizona

Senate

Fifty-fourth Legislature

First Regular Session

2019

 

 

 

SB 1301

 

Introduced by

Senator Brophy McGee

 

 

AN ACT

 

Amending sections 36‑2201, 36‑2233 and 36‑2234, Arizona Revised Statutes; relating to emergency medical services.

 

 

(TEXT OF BILL BEGINS ON NEXT PAGE)

 


Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Arizona:

Section 1.  Section 36-2201, Arizona Revised Statutes, is amended to read:

START_STATUTE36-2201.  Definitions

In this chapter, unless the context otherwise requires:

1.  "Administrative medical direction" means supervision of emergency medical care technicians by a base hospital medical director, administrative medical director or basic life support medical director.  For the purposes of this paragraph, "administrative medical director" means a physician who is licensed pursuant to title 32, chapter 13 or 17 and who provides direction within the emergency medical services and trauma system.

2.  "Advanced emergency medical technician" means a person who has been trained in an advanced emergency medical technician program certified by the director or in an equivalent training program and who is certified by the director to render services pursuant to section 36‑2205.

3.  "Advanced life support" means the level of assessment and care identified in the scope of practice approved by the director for the advanced emergency medical technician, emergency medical technician I-99 and paramedic.

4.  "Advanced life support base hospital" means a health care institution that offers general medical and surgical services, that is certified by the director as an advanced life support base hospital and that is affiliated by written agreement with a licensed ambulance service, municipal rescue service, fire department, fire district or health services district for medical direction, evaluation and control of emergency medical care technicians.

5.  "Ambulance" means any publicly or privately owned surface, water or air vehicle, including a helicopter, that contains a stretcher and necessary medical equipment and supplies pursuant to section 36‑2202 and that is especially designed and constructed or modified and equipped to be used, maintained or operated primarily for the transportation of to transport individuals who are sick, injured or wounded or who require medical monitoring or aid.  Ambulance does not include a surface vehicle that is owned and operated by a private sole proprietor, partnership, private corporation or municipal corporation for the emergency transportation and in‑transit care of its employees or a vehicle that is operated to accommodate an incapacitated person or person with a disability who does not require medical monitoring, care or treatment during transport and that is not advertised as having medical equipment and supplies or ambulance attendants.

6.  "Ambulance attendant" means any of the following:

(a)  An emergency medical technician, an advanced emergency medical technician, an emergency medical technician I-99 or a paramedic whose primary responsibility is the care of patients in an ambulance and who meets the standards and criteria adopted pursuant to section 36‑2204.

(b)  An emergency medical responder who is employed by an ambulance service operating under section 36‑2202 and whose primary responsibility is the driving of an ambulance.

(c)  A physician who is licensed pursuant to title 32, chapter 13 or 17.

(d)  A professional nurse who is licensed pursuant to title 32, chapter 15 and who meets the state board of nursing criteria to care for patients in the prehospital care system.

(e)  A professional nurse who is licensed pursuant to title 32, chapter 15 and whose primary responsibility is the care of caring for patients in an ambulance during an interfacility transport.

7.  "Ambulance service" means a person who owns and operates one or more ambulances.

8.  "Basic life support" means the level of assessment and care identified in the scope of practice approved by the director for the emergency medical responder and emergency medical technician.

9.  "Bureau" means the bureau of emergency medical services and trauma system in the department.

10.  "Centralized medical direction communications center" means a facility that is housed within a hospital, medical center or trauma center or a freestanding communication center that meets the following criteria:

(a)  Has the ability to communicate with ambulance services and emergency medical services providers rendering patient care outside of the hospital setting via radio and telephone.

(b)  Is staffed twenty‑four hours a day seven days a week by at least a physician licensed pursuant to title 32, chapter 13 or 17.

11.  "Certificate of necessity" means a certificate that is issued to an ambulance service by the department and that describes the following:

(a)  Service area.

(b)  Level of service.

(c)  Type of service.

(d)  Hours of operation.

(e)  Effective date.

(f)  Expiration date.

(g)  Legal name and address of the ambulance service.

(h)  Any limiting or special provisions the director prescribes.

12.  "Council" means the emergency medical services council.

13.  "Department" means the department of health services.

14.  "Director" means the director of the department of health services.

15.  "Emergency medical care technician" means an individual who has been certified by the department as an emergency medical technician, an advanced emergency medical technician, an emergency medical technician I‑99 or a paramedic.

16.  "Emergency medical responder" as an ambulance attendant means a person who has been trained in an emergency medical responder program certified by the director or in an equivalent training program and who is certified by the director to render services pursuant to section 36‑2205.

17.  "Emergency medical services" means those services required following an accident or an emergency medical situation:

(a)  For on‑site emergency medical care.

(b)  For the transportation of To transport the sick or injured by a licensed ground or air ambulance.

(c)  In the use of Using emergency communications media.

(d)  In the use of Using emergency receiving facilities.

(e)  In administering initial care and preliminary treatment procedures by emergency medical care technicians.

18.  "Emergency medical services provider" means any governmental entity, quasi‑governmental entity or corporation, whether public or private, that renders emergency medical services in this state.

19.  "Emergency medical technician" means a person who has been trained in an emergency medical technician program certified by the director or in an equivalent training program and who is certified by the director as qualified to render services pursuant to section 36‑2205.

20.  "Emergency receiving facility" means a licensed health care institution that offers emergency medical services, is staffed twenty‑four hours a day and has a physician on call.

21.  "Fit and proper" means that the director determines that an applicant for a certificate of necessity or a certificate holder has the expertise, integrity, fiscal competence and resources to provide ambulance service in the service area.

22.  "Medical record" means any patient record, including clinical records, prehospital care records, medical reports, laboratory reports and statements, any file, film, record or report or oral statements relating to diagnostic findings, treatment or outcome of patients, whether written, electronic or recorded, and any information from which a patient or the patient's family might be identified.

23.  "National certification organization" means a national organization that tests and certifies the ability of an emergency medical care technician and whose tests are based on national education standards.

24.  "National education standards" means the emergency medical services education standards of the United States department of transportation or other similar emergency medical services education standards developed by that department or its successor agency.

25.  "Needs assessment" means a study or statistical analysis that examines the need for ground ambulance service within a service area or proposed service area and that takes into account the current or proposed service area's population demographics, the population's current and anticipated medical needs, ambulance response times, interfacility arrival times, existing ambulance services, ambulance service rates, other available medical resources, the financial impact on existing ambulance service providers and the anticipated benefits of adding the proposed services.

25.  26.  "Paramedic" means a person who has been trained in a paramedic program certified by the director or in an equivalent training program and who is certified by the director to render services pursuant to section 36‑2205.

26.  27.  "Physician" means any person licensed pursuant to title 32, chapter 13 or 17.

27.  28.  "Stretcher van" means a vehicle that contains a stretcher and that is operated to accommodate an incapacitated person or person with a disability who does not require medical monitoring, aid, care or treatment during transport.

28.  29.  "Suboperation station" means a physical facility or location at which an ambulance service conducts operations for the dispatch of ambulances and personnel and that may be staffed twenty‑four hours a day or less as determined by system use.

29.  30.  "Trauma center" means any acute care hospital that provides in‑house twenty‑four hour twenty-four-hour daily dedicated trauma surgical services and that is designated pursuant to section 36‑2225.

30.  31.  "Trauma registry" means data collected by the department on trauma patients and on the incidence, causes, severity, outcomes and operation of a trauma system and its components.

31.  32.  "Trauma system" means an integrated and organized arrangement of health care resources having the specific capability to perform triage, transport and provide care.

32.  33.  "Validated testing procedure" means a testing procedure that is inclusive of includes practical skills, or an attestation of attests practical skills proficiency on a form developed by the department by the educational training program, identified pursuant to section 36‑2204, paragraph 2, that is certified as valid by an organization capable of determining testing procedure and testing content validity and that is recommended by the medical direction commission and the emergency medical services council before the director's approval.

33.  34.  "Wheelchair van" means a vehicle that contains or that is designed and constructed or modified to contain a wheelchair and that is operated to accommodate an incapacitated person or a person with a disability who does not require medical monitoring, aid, care or treatment during transport. END_STATUTE

Sec. 2.  Section 36-2233, Arizona Revised Statutes, is amended to read:

START_STATUTE36-2233.  Certificate of necessity to operate an ambulance service; exceptions; service areas

A.  Any person wishing to operate an ambulance service in this state shall apply to the department on a form prescribed by the director for a certificate of necessity accompanied by a needs assessment.

B.  The director shall issue a certificate of necessity if all of the following apply:

1.  The ambulance service has a certificate of registration issued by the department for at least one ambulance pursuant to section 36‑2212.

2.  The director finds that public necessity requires the service or any part of the service proposed by the applicant.

3.  The director finds that the applicant is fit and proper to provide the service.

4.  The applicant has paid the appropriate fees pursuant to section 36‑2240.

5.  The applicant has filed a surety bond pursuant to section 36‑2237.

C.  A certificate of necessity issued pursuant to subsection B of this section shall be for all or part of the service proposed by the applicant as determined necessary by the director for public convenience and necessity.

D.  This section does not require a certificate of necessity for:

1.  Vehicles and persons that are exempt from a certificate of registration pursuant to section 36‑2217.

2.  Ambulance services operating under temporary authority pursuant to section 36‑2242.

E.  The director may grant a service area by one or any combination of the following descriptions:

1.  Metes and bounds.

2.  A city, town or political subdivision not limited to a specific date.  The merger or consolidation of two or more fire districts pursuant to section 48‑820 or 48‑822 does not expand the service area boundaries of an existing certificate of necessity. 

3.  A city, town or political subdivision as of a specific date that does not include annexation. END_STATUTE

Sec. 3.  Section 36-2234, Arizona Revised Statutes, is amended to read:

START_STATUTE36-2234.  Hearings; waiver of hearing; emergency action; judicial review; definition

A.  The director shall require a public hearing on any proposed action related to rates, fares or charges, operating or response times, bases of operation or certificates of necessity unless subsection C, E, or M of this section applies.

B.  A public hearing held pursuant to subsection A of this section shall meet the following requirements:

1.  The hearing shall be held pursuant to title 41, chapter 6, article 10.

2.  The director shall mail notice of the hearing to every ambulance service in the affected region no later than fifteen days before the hearing.

3.  The director may mail notice to other persons who the director determines are interested in the hearing.

4.  In a hearing or rehearing conducted pursuant to this article, an ambulance service may be represented by a corporate officer, an employee or a designee who has been specifically authorized by the ambulance service to represent it.

5.  A certificate of necessity hearing may not last more than ten days unless the administrative law judge determines, in writing, on the final day of the hearing that there is an extraordinary need for additional hearing days.

C.  The director may waive the hearing required under subsection A of this section if notification, including a general description of the proposed action of the department and the time and manner for any interested person to request a hearing, is given and all of the following apply:

1.  Notification of the proposed action has been sent to every ambulance service in the affected region no later than fifteen days before the action.

2.  The director has notified other persons who the director determines are interested in the proposed action no later than fifteen days before the action.

3.  The director has published notice of the proposed action in a newspaper of general circulation in the affected region at least once each week for two consecutive weeks before the action is taken.

4.  The director has received no requests within the fifteen‑day notification period for a hearing to be held on the proposed action.

D.  If the director receives a request pursuant to subsection C, paragraph 4 of this section, the director shall hold a hearing in compliance with subsection B of this section.

E.  The director shall not hold a hearing if a person requests a hearing regarding a rate increase that does not exceed the amount computed as follows:

1.  Determine the percentage growth in the transportation consumer price index of the United States department of labor, bureau of labor statistics, from the end of the second preceding calendar year to the calendar year immediately preceding the calendar year for which the rate increase is requested.

2.  Determine the percentage growth in the medical care consumer price index of the United States department of labor, bureau of labor statistics, from the end of the second preceding calendar year to the calendar year immediately preceding the calendar year for which the rate increase is requested.

3.  Add the amount determined in paragraph 1 of this subsection to the amount determined in paragraph 2 of this subsection and divide the sum by two.

F.  A rate increase authorized pursuant to subsection E of this section is deemed to be fixed by the department at the requested level.  Notwithstanding subsection C of this section, the department shall hold a hearing pursuant to section 36‑2232, subsection E for any proposed uniform rate or charge that exceeds the annual rate increase prescribed in subsection E of this section.  The department shall require the applicants to submit the following information signed by the designated financial officer and the chief executive of the ambulance service who has fiduciary responsibility for providing accurate financial information:

1.  A financial statement for the previous twenty‑four months relating to the certificated areas.

2.  Any additional information the department requires to analyze the request.

G.  If an ambulance service with an established general public rate applies for a contract rate or range of rates that is up to thirty percent less than its established rate, the director shall grant the rate without a public hearing or waiver, and without any right of intervention, unless within ninety days of the filing of a completed application the director determines that the contract rate or range of rates applied for does not accurately reflect the cost and economics of providing the contract services, would adversely affect the service available to the general public in the area of service as designated by its certificate of necessity or would cause any fixed rate, fare or charge to the general public to be adversely affected.

H.  If the department disallows a proposed contract rate pursuant to subsection G of this section, the ambulance service has a right to a hearing for review of the proposed contract rate or range of rates.

I.  The director may adopt rules for the establishment of a contract rate or range of rates that may be implemented and that exceeds the thirty percent rate variance identified pursuant to subsection G of this section.

J.  Subsections G, H and I of this section are limited to contract rates or a range of rates applied for prescheduled, interfacility or convalescent transports.

K.  A service contract between an ambulance service and a political subdivision of this state, including local fire districts, shall be filed with and approved by the department in accordance with the following requirements:

1.  If the contract is the result of a request for proposals or a similar process, the terms of the request for proposals or similar process were approved by the department.

2.  The contract does not prohibit the ambulance service from intervening or participating in future certificate of necessity application processes.

1.  3.  On receipt of the proposed contract, the department has fifteen days to review the contract and notify the ambulance service of any additional information the department requires, recommended corrections or any provision that does or may violate this article.

2.  4.  The ambulance service has fifteen days to provide the department with the information requested or to submit a revised or amended contract if required under paragraph 3 of this subsection.

3.  5.  The contract becomes effective fifteen days after the ambulance service complies with the department's request unless the department determines that any rate or charge or other provisions specified in the contract will cause any fixed rate or charge to the general public rate to be adversely affected or the contract would be in violation of the ambulance service's certificate of necessity.

4.  6.  If the department disallows a proposed contract pursuant to this subsection, the ambulance service has a right to a hearing for review of the proposed contract.

5.  7.  The rates and charges contained in the contract are the rates and charges fixed by the director in a decision or order for the ambulance service and conform to the ambulance service's current or subsequent general public rates and charges.

6.  8.  The area of response is within the ambulance service's certificated area.

L.  In case of emergency, the director may take action providing for immediate suspension of a certificate of registration or a certificate of necessity, or both, under this section without notice or a hearing if the director determines that a potential threat to the public health and safety exists.  If such an action is taken by the director, the director shall conduct a hearing within ten days after the date of the director's action unless the person against whom the action is directed waives the right to have a hearing held within ten days.  If the ten‑day hearing requirement is waived, the director shall set a date mutually agreeable to the interested parties.  The purpose of the hearing is to review the decision of the director to take such an action.  The director shall make findings of fact and may continue, suspend or modify the director's action.

M.  The director shall waive the hearing required under subsection A of this section if geographical changes in suboperation stations do not alter the service area or adversely affect approved response times.

N.  Except as provided in section 41‑1092.08, subsection H, a final decision of the director is subject to judicial review pursuant to title 12, chapter 7, article 6.

O.  For the purposes of this section, "hearing day":

1.  Means any portion of a business day that is used for any hearing‑related activity, including testimony, argument or presentation of evidence.

2.  Does not include prehearing conferences or other administrative matters that occur before the start of the hearing. END_STATUTE

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