Lame Duck Look Back: Bill aims to reshape health care delivery
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[January 29, 2021]
By PETER HANCOCK
Capitol News Illinois
phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com
Editor’s note: This story is part of an ongoing “Lame Duck Look Back”
series in which Capitol News Illinois is following up on the major bills
that passed both chambers of the General Assembly in the Jan. 8-13 lame
duck session.
SPRINGFIELD – During the early hours of the
morning on one of the last days of the lame duck session, Illinois
lawmakers passed a sweeping piece of legislation that seeks to revamp
the way hospital services and health care generally are delivered in
communities throughout the state.
The so-called “Hospital Transformation” bill, Senate Bill 1510, House
Floor Amendment 3, was not part of the Legislative Black Caucus’ agenda,
which was the focus of much of the activity during that session. But it
did pass unanimously out of both chambers and will soon head to Gov. JB
Pritzker for his signature.
In short, the bill makes about $150 million a year available to local
communities to form partnerships that will develop and implement plans
that improve medical access, with a focus on the uninsured and Medicaid
users. The funds are meant for “integrated” health care, such as
community-based services, preventive care, obstetric care, chronic
disease management and specialists.
The program specifically targets what are known as “safety net
hospitals,” which serve large numbers of Medicaid and uninsured
patients, as well as “critical access” hospitals,” which are small
hospitals in sparsely-populated rural areas that offer acute care and
emergency medical services.
Funding for the grants will come from a statewide hospital assessment to
earn federal dollars, which lawmakers renewed during the abbreviated
regular session in May, combined with federal matching funds for
Medicaid.
The bill was the result of a yearslong effort by a group called the
Medicaid Working Group, made up of lawmakers from both parties and both
chambers as well as officials from the governor’s office and the
Department of Healthcare and Family Services. The group consults with
hospitals, clinics and other stakeholders to design Medicaid policy.
House Majority Leader Greg Harris, D-Chicago, who is part of that
working group, said during an interview that for the last several years,
it has been focused on trying to design a modern Medicaid system that
reflects a very different health care environment than the one that
existed decades ago.
“When our system was designed, most healthcare was delivered in hospital
settings, in medical surgery settings,” he said. “Now, you know, huge
amounts of that kind of work is being done in outpatient settings,
whether it's diagnostic imaging or specialty care, or same day surgery.
Hospitals are not the central hub for a lot of services like they used
to be.”
The problem being faced in many parts of the state, he said, is that not
all communities have access to the full array of medical services,
resulting in health care disparities that cut across racial and ethnic
lines, income categories, and the divide between urban, suburban and
rural communities.
“So, whether you're living in a densely populated urban area with very
low automobile ownership, some areas with high concentrations of poverty
and environmental factors, how do you plan for the future of good health
care deliveries in those communities, in suburban communities where, you
know, the environmental factors are totally different,” Harris said.
“And then in rural communities in central and southern Illinois, where
you may be a couple of counties away from a hospital, how do you make
sure that quality health care is accessible in all those areas?”
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The bill calls on local communities to conduct a “community needs
assessment” to identify the particular needs of that community and
then form collaborations between hospitals, primary care, preventive
care and specialty care providers, mental health and substance abuse
providers and other local organizations to address those needs.
It also calls on them to submit proposals specifically designed to
improve health care outcomes and reduce health care disparities,
including specific metrics that can be used to track whether or not
the project is meeting its goals.
Beyond that, the bill puts few limitations on the types of proposals
that will be considered. Evan Fazio, a spokesman for the Department
of Healthcare and Family Services, which will administer the grant
program, said that was intentional.
“We want to cast a really wide net and we want this to be about what
the community needs and what the community wants,” he said. “And
since it is a community-first initiative, we want people to kind of
come up with the partnerships and collaborations that they think
could come together to meet the needs of their community.”
Rep. Tom Demmer, R-Dixon, who also serves on the Medicaid Working
Group, said one of the biggest challenges in crafting the bill was
getting all the various players to come to a shared understanding of
what a health care “transformation” should look like and what kinds
of local programs the state was looking for.
“It’s been years in the making. These discussions have literally
been going on for years, trying to craft some definitions and
parameters for just what do we mean by this transformation idea,” he
said.
The bill is what’s known in legislative jargon as an “agreed bill,”
meaning lawmakers from both parties and both chambers, as well as
all of the various interest groups affected by it, came to a general
agreement on its provisions.
That’s a relatively rare occurrence in the Illinois General
Assembly, but both Harris and Demmer said it has become common with
Medicaid legislation, primarily because of the bipartisan nature of
the Medicaid Working Group.
“Over the years, people have really learned to work together, and
people put aside political differences and partisan differences in
order to get really good policy outcomes,” Harris said. “And I think
that has really helped us do good work, and it's really nice to
see.”
“I think this hospital transformation fund is a unique and
innovative way to put additional money in communities that are
struggling with health care today,” Demmer said. “The need has
always been there, but it’s been highlighted by the impact we’ve
seen with COVID in a lot of communities.”
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan
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