OKLAHOMA: In
the final week of the legislative session, leadership in both chambers
announced the formation of a special joint legislative committee to
study how the new federal health care law affects Oklahoma. Senate Pro
Tem Brian Bingman and House Speaker Kris Steele ordered the formation of
the joint committee and announced that "studying this issue in more
depth makes for healthy legislative process. The scope of this law is
vast, so we need to make sure we are prepared to address this law in a
conservative way that is best for Oklahoma." The committee will have
bipartisan membership. The joint committee will hold a series of public
meetings over the legislative interim focusing on how the ACA affects
Oklahoma. The committee will also explore how to best approach the law
as the state awaits the outcome of its lawsuit challenging the law's
constitutionality. The committee will then make recommendations on how
the state should address the federal health care law.
As a result, legislation that would create an Oklahoma health insurance exchange will not be heard this year.
TEXAS:
The health care collaboratives that would be set up by pending
legislation (Senate Bill 8) authored by Senate Health and Human Services
Chair Jane Nelson are intended to promote higher quality of care at
lower cost. The collaboratives would allow groups of providers, such as
hospitals and doctors, to bargain collectively with the people who pay
them. The goal is to give providers more leverage in price negotiations
with an eye to cutting overall health care costs. But staff at the
Federal Trade Commission (FTC) say giving these collaboratives antitrust
protection could have the opposite effect and could harm consumers.
Staffers have flagged this key provision of the Lieutenant Governor's
health care agenda for the session, indicating that a tool intended to
improve the efficiency and quality of care in Texas might in actuality
"lead to dramatically increased costs and decreased access to health
care for Texas consumers." To get around any antitrust issues, SB 8
specifically gives collaboratives exemption from antitrust laws. The
bill is in the final stages of passage and could be headed to the House
floor at some point in the last 10 days of the legislative session.
Caverta |
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