Bill Text: NY S01197 | 2023-2024 | General Assembly | Amended
Bill Title: Requires health care plans and payors to have a minimum of twelve and one-half percent of their total expenditures on physical and mental health annually be for primary care services.
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 8-0)
Status: (Introduced) 2024-01-22 - REPORTED AND COMMITTED TO FINANCE [S01197 Detail]
Download: New_York-2023-S01197-Amended.html
STATE OF NEW YORK ________________________________________________________________________ 1197--B 2023-2024 Regular Sessions IN SENATE January 10, 2023 ___________ Introduced by Sens. RIVERA, BROUK, COONEY, MAY, MYRIE, RAMOS, SEPULVEDA -- read twice and ordered printed, and when printed to be committed to the Committee on Health -- reported favorably from said committee, ordered to first and second report, ordered to a third reading, -- committed to the Committee on Rules -- committee discharged, bill amended, ordered reprinted as amended and recommitted to said commit- tee -- committee discharged, bill amended, ordered reprinted as amended and recommitted to said committee AN ACT to amend the insurance law and the social services law, in relation to primary care investment The People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and Assem- bly, do enact as follows: 1 Section 1. The insurance law is amended by adding a new section 3217-k 2 to read as follows: 3 § 3217-k. Primary care spending. (a) Definitions. As used in this 4 section, the following terms shall have the following meanings: 5 (1) "Overall healthcare spending" means the total cost of care for the 6 patient population of a payor or provider entity for a given calendar 7 year, where cost is calculated for such year as the sum of (A) all 8 claims-based spending paid to providers by public and private payors and 9 (B) all non-claim payments for such year, including, but not limited to, 10 incentive payments and care coordination payments. 11 (2) "Plan or payor" means every insurance entity providing managed 12 care products, individual comprehensive accident and health insurance or 13 group or blanket comprehensive accident and health insurance, as defined 14 in this chapter, corporation organized under article forty-three of this 15 chapter providing comprehensive health insurance, entity licensed under 16 article forty-four of this chapter providing comprehensive health insur- 17 ance, every other plan over which the department has jurisdiction, and 18 every third-party payor providing health coverage. EXPLANATION--Matter in italics (underscored) is new; matter in brackets [] is old law to be omitted. LBD03591-03-3S. 1197--B 2 1 (3) "Primary care" means integrated, accessible healthcare, provided 2 by clinicians accountable for addressing most of a patient's healthcare 3 needs, developing a sustained partnership with patients, and practicing 4 in the context of family and community. 5 (4) "Primary care services" means services provided in an outpatient, 6 non-emergency setting by or under the supervision of a physician, nurse 7 practitioner, physician assistant, or midwife, who is practicing general 8 primary care in the following fields, including as evidenced by billing 9 and reporting codes: family practice; general pediatrics; primary care 10 internal medicine; primary care obstetrics; or primary care gynecology. 11 Behavioral or mental health and substance use disorder services are 12 included in primary care services when integrated into a primary care 13 setting, including when provided by a behavioral healthcare psychia- 14 trist, social worker or psychologist. Primary care services shall not 15 include inpatient services, emergency department services, ambulatory 16 surgical center services, or services provided in an urgent care setting 17 that are billed with non-primary care billing and reporting codes. 18 (5) "Primary care spending" means any expenditure of funds made by 19 third party payors, public entities, or the state, for the purpose of 20 paying for primary care services directly or paying to improve the 21 delivery of primary care. Primary care spending includes all payment 22 methods, such as fee-for-service, capitation, incentives, value-based 23 payments or other methodologies, and all non-claim payments including 24 but not limited to incentive payments and care coordination payments. 25 Any spending shall be adjusted appropriately to exclude any portion of 26 the expenditure that is reasonably attributed to inpatient services or 27 other non-primary care services. 28 (b) Reporting. (1) Beginning on April first, two thousand twenty-five, 29 each plan or payor as defined in this section shall annually report to 30 the department the percentage of the plan or payor's overall annual 31 healthcare spending that constituted primary care spending. 32 (2) Nothing herein shall require any plan or payor to report or 33 publicly disclose any specific rates of reimbursement for any specific 34 primary care services. 35 (3) No plan or payor shall require any healthcare provider to provide 36 additional data or information in order to fulfill this reporting 37 requirement. 38 (c) Regulation and publication. (1) The commissioner of health and the 39 superintendent shall each promulgate consistent regulations to carry out 40 the provisions of this section, including but not limited to setting 41 deadlines for the reporting required in this section, and adopting 42 further specific definitions of the primary care services for which 43 costs must be reported under this section, including specific billing 44 and reporting codes. 45 (2) The department of health and the department shall together provide 46 an annual report to the legislature with a summary of the primary care 47 spending data required in this section, and shall also make the report 48 publicly available on both agencies' websites, no later than three 49 months after the data has been collected. The first annual report shall 50 provide the spending information without identifying any individual 51 payor or plan's primary care spending. Each year thereafter, the report 52 spending data shall be published including information specific to each 53 plan or payor. 54 (d) Primary care spending. (1) Beginning on April first, two thousand 55 twenty-six, each plan or payor that reports less than twelve and one- 56 half percent of its total expenditures on physical and mental health isS. 1197--B 3 1 primary care spending, as defined by this section, shall additionally 2 submit to the superintendent a plan to increase primary care spending as 3 a percentage of its total overall healthcare spending by at least one 4 percent each year. Beginning on April first, two thousand twenty-seven 5 and on April first of every subsequent year after such plan has been 6 submitted, and until such time as the plan or payor's reported primary 7 care spending is equal to or more than twelve and one-half percent of 8 that plan or payor's overall healthcare spending, the plan or payor's 9 annual reporting shall include information regarding steps that have 10 been taken to increase its proportion of primary care spending. 11 (2) The commissioner of health and the superintendent may jointly 12 issue guidelines or promulgate regulations regarding the areas on which 13 primary care spending could be increased, including but not limited to: 14 (A) reimbursement; 15 (B) capacity-building, technical assistance and training; 16 (C) upgrading technology, including electronic health record systems 17 and telehealth capabilities; 18 (D) incentive payments, including but not limited to per-member-per- 19 month, value-based-payment arrangements, shared savings, quality-based 20 payments, risk-based payments; and 21 (E) transitioning to value-based-payment arrangements. 22 § 2. The social services law is amended by adding a new section 368-g 23 to read as follows: 24 § 368-g. Primary care spending. 1. Definitions. As used in this 25 section the terms "overall healthcare spending", "plan or payor", 26 "primary care", "primary care services" and "primary care spending" 27 shall have the same meanings as such terms are defined in section thir- 28 ty-two hundred seventeen-k of the insurance law. 29 2. Reporting. (a) Beginning on April first, two thousand twenty-five, 30 each Medicaid managed care provider under section three hundred sixty- 31 four-j of this title and any payor that provides coverage through Medi- 32 caid fee-for-service, as such term is defined in paragraph (e) of subdi- 33 vision thirty-eight of section two of this chapter, shall annually 34 report to the department the percentage of the provider's overall annual 35 healthcare spending that constituted primary care spending. 36 (b) Nothing herein shall require any Medicaid managed care provider to 37 report or publicly disclose any specific rates of reimbursement for any 38 specific primary care services. 39 (c) No Medicaid managed care provider shall require any healthcare 40 provider to provide additional data or information in order to fulfill 41 this reporting requirement. 42 3. Primary care spending. (a) Beginning on April first, two thousand 43 twenty-six, and in each subsequent year, each Medicaid managed care 44 provider under section three hundred sixty-four-j of this title and any 45 payor that provides coverage through Medicaid fee-for-service, as such 46 term is defined in paragraph (e) of subdivision thirty-eight of section 47 two of this chapter, that reports less than twelve and one-half percent 48 of its total expenditures on physical and mental health are on primary 49 care spending shall additionally submit to the commissioner a plan to 50 increase primary care spending as a percentage of its total overall 51 healthcare spending by at least one percent each year. Beginning on 52 April first, two thousand twenty-seven, and in each subsequent year 53 thereafter, until twelve and one-half percent of that provider or 54 payor's expenditures are on primary care spending, the payor or provid- 55 er's annual reporting under this section shall include information onS. 1197--B 4 1 steps that have been taken to increase their proportion of primary care 2 spending. 3 (b) The commissioner and the superintendent of financial services may 4 jointly issue guidelines or promulgate regulations regarding the areas 5 on which spending could be increased, including but not limited to: 6 (i) reimbursement; 7 (ii) capacity-building, technical assistance and training; 8 (iii) upgrading technology, including electronic health record systems 9 and telehealth capabilities; 10 (iv) incentive payments, including but not limited to per-member-per- 11 month, value-based-payment arrangements, shared savings, quality-based 12 payments, risk-based payments; and 13 (v) transitioning to value-based-payment arrangements. 14 (c) The provisions of this section are subject to compliance with all 15 applicable federal and state laws and regulations, including the Centers 16 for Medicare and Medicaid Services approved Medicaid state plan. To the 17 extent required by federal law, the commissioner shall seek any federal 18 approvals necessary to implement this section, including, but not limit- 19 ed to, any state-directed payments, permissions, state plan amendments 20 or federal waivers by the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid 21 Services. The commissioner may also apply for appropriate waivers or 22 state directed payments under federal law and regulation or take other 23 actions to secure federal financial participation to assist in promoting 24 the objectives of this section. 25 § 3. This act shall take effect immediately.