By Melissa Patrick
Kentucky Health News
With input from 13 stakeholders, a compromise version of a bill to improve ambulance responses to both emergent and non-emergent transfers is headed to the full House for consideration.
Rep. Ken Fleming, R-Louisville |
Previous versions included things like response time requirements, putting regulatory authority in the Cabinet for Health and Family Services and eliminating of the need for any new emergency medical service to get a certificate of need from the state. All those provisions caused an uproar among EMS workers and some of their allied associations, but HB 777 appears to be more palatable, with only a few concerns voiced to the committee Thursday.
"This bill has not been an easy task," Fleming said. "It reflects the stakeholders . . . being open-minded, and their willingness to serve patients, and their determination to do the right thing."
Fleming said the bill "moves the ball forward" in dealing with issues of transportation between health-care facilities, the main impetus for the bill.
"I have many examples where patients were not transferred from one facility to another from either eight hours or several days," he said.
The bill was the brainchild of the Kentucky Hospital Association. Its president, Nancy Galvagni, spoke of long delays that hospitals experience when trying to get patients to the level of care that they need, especially in rural areas. In an earlier interview with Kentucky Health News she told of patients who had died waiting on a patient transfer and psychiatric patients who were being refused transport.
"The problem we're seeking to address isn't a hospital problem. It's not an ambulance problem. It's not a local government problem. It's a patient problem," she said. "And I think we all understand that we just can't do things the way we've always done when people's lives and their health is in the balance."
A key provision in HB 777 would establish a task force to meet between legislative sessions to study emergency medical services and make recommendations to the General Assembly. It would require the Kentucky Board of Emergency Medical Services to create a special committee to study a list of specific issues defined in the bill, such as response times and needs of patients with behavioral-health issues.
Both lawmakers and stakeholders praised the idea of the task force, which was not included in previous versions of the legislation.
The bill would also reform aspects of the certificate-of-need requirements to allow cities, counties and hospitals to transport patients under certain conditions without obtaining a certificate. For example, a hospital could create an ambulance service limited to transporting patients from that hospital.
Galvagni told Kentucky Health News that Kentucky is one of only two states that has a certificate-of-need process for ambulances, which she said creates a barrier to care.
Conjuna Collier, senior vice president of risk management at Masonic Homes of Kentucky, told Kentucky Health News that the certificate-of-need portion of the bill is important due to the challenges ambulance services face in managing emergency calls and inter-facility transfers.
Collier said that they have transfer issues "on a daily or weekly basis," including patients discharged from the hospital early in the morning but not arriving at the next facility until late in the evening to "way up in the middle of the night." She said they also struggle to get Covid-19 patients transferred and get patients to and from dialysis in a timely manner.
"Of course, a heart attack is going to come before picking up a 90-year-old at a dialysis appointment, but then there still is that service that's not getting provided for that resident," she said, later adding, "There just needs to be more of them."Dr. Walt Lubbers, an EMS physician, medical adviser for the Kentucky Board of EMS and a representative of the Kentucky EMS Association, said the bill offered a "reasonable compromise on a whole lot of things."
"It provides good stability for letting the folks that know about EMS continue to regulate EMS, as well as a reasonable change to the complaint process," Lubbers said. "And it recognizes that we don't think we're done and that we can't walk away with this being the only EMS bill that any of us ever think of."HB 777 would also:
- Require the health cabinet to investigate and hold hearings regarding complaints related to ambulance services, while leaving disciplinary enforcement to KBEMS;
- Make it easier for patients to register complaints;
- Give the cabinet complete and immediate access to all data and records of KBEMS and its contractors;
- Make KBEMS an independent agency of state government, rather than part of the Kentucky Community and Technical College System;
- Add KBEMS to the list of boards and commissions for which the Department of Professional Licensing in the Public Protection Cabinet provides administrative services, technical assistance and advice;
- Exempt organ-procurement organization vehicles from speed limits and traffic-flow patterns while transporting a human organ or tissue in an emergency situation; and
- Create a Technical Advisory Committee on Emergency Medical Services to advise regarding Medicaid EMS issues.
Other organizations involved in crafting the bill are the Kentucky League of Cities, the Kentucky Association of Firefighters the Kentucky Psychological Association and Advocacy Network; the Kentucky Association of Counties; the Kentucky Association of Healthcare Facilities;, the nursing-home lobby; the Kentucky Center of Assisted Living; the Kentucky Ambulance Providers Association; the Kentucky Association of Public-Safety Communications Officials; and the Kentucky Emergency Number Association.
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