Florida 2024 2024 Regular Session

Florida House Bill H7089 Analysis / Analysis

Filed 02/23/2024

                    This docum ent does not reflect the intent or official position of the bill sponsor or House of Representatives. 
STORAGE NAME: h7089.HHS 
DATE: 2/23/2024 
 
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES STAFF ANALYSIS  
 
BILL #: HB 7089          PCB HHS 24-02    Health Care Expenses 
SPONSOR(S): Health & Human Services Committee, Grant 
TIED BILLS:   IDEN./SIM. BILLS:  
 
REFERENCE 	ACTION ANALYST STAFF DIRECTOR or 
BUDGET/POLICY CHIEF 
Orig. Comm.: Health & Human Services 
Committee 
19 Y, 0 N, As CS Lloyd Calamas 
SUMMARY ANALYSIS 
The United States spends more per person on health care than any other high-income country in the world and 
spending has continued to increase over the past few decades.  
 
Health care prices are a primary driver of health care spending. One study found that commercial health 
spending per enrollee increased by 21.8% between 2015 and 2019. The rising prices of health care services 
accounted for approximately two-thirds of that growth, with prices for prescription drugs, provider services 
(e.g., physical examinations, screenings and procedures) and inpatient and outpatient care rising by 18.3%. 
 
Medical costs can result in overwhelming debts to patients, and in some cases, bankruptcy. Nationwide, over 
100 million have some form of medical debt. Four in ten U.S. adults have some form of health care debt. About 
half of adults – including three in ten who do not currently have health care debt – are vulnerable to falling in 
the debt, saying they would be unable to pay a $500 unexpected medical bill without borrowing money. While 
about a third of adults with health care debt owe less than $1,000, even small amounts of debt can have 
significant financial consequences for some.
 
 
HB 7089 increases patient access to health care cost information, and offers a measure of protection from 
unreasonable and burdensome medical debt. The various provisions apply to hospitals, ambulatory surgical 
centers, health insurers, and HMOs. The bill brings provisions from recent federal law and regulation into state 
law; in doing so, the bill requires compliance by facilities and insurers as a condition of state licensure, thus 
ensuring that these provisions will be fully adopted and adequately enforced in Florida. Specifically, the bill: 
 Requires hospitals and ambulatory surgical centers (ASCs) to post a consumer-friendly list of standard 
charges for at least 300 shoppable health care services on a facility website, consistent with federal 
rule. 
 Requires hospitals and ambulatory surgical centers to automatically provide patients with personalized 
pre-treatment estimates on the costs of care within certain timeframes. 
 Requires a health plan, upon receipt of a facility cost estimate, to develop an advanced explanation of 
benefits, in accordance with the federal No Surprises Act of 2020. 
 Prohibits hospitals and ASCs from taking actions to collect medical debt in certain circumstances.  
 Requires hospitals and ASCs to establish an internal grievance process for patients to dispute charges.  
 Increases exemptions from attachment, garnishment, or other legal process to include a single motor 
vehicle and personal property of a debtor of a value up to $10,000 when debt is incurred as a result of 
medical services provided in a licensed hospital facility, and establishes a 3-year statute of limitations 
on bringing legal action to collect medical debt. 
 Specifies that shared savings incentives offered by health plans are to be counted as medical expenses 
for rate development and rate filing purposes, consistent with recent federal regulations. 
 
The bill has no fiscal impact on state or local government. 
 
The bill has an effective date of July 1, 2024. 
   STORAGE NAME: h7089.HHS 	PAGE: 2 
DATE: 2/23/2024 
  
FULL ANALYSIS 
I.  SUBSTANTIVE ANALYSIS 
 
A. EFFECT OF PROPOSED CHANGES: 
 
Background 
 
Health Care Spending 
 
Health spending in the United States has exploded in the last 50 years, totaling $74.1 billion in 1970, 
increasing to $1.4 trillion by 2000, then tripling in 2021 to $4.3 trillion.
1
 Total national health 
expenditures grew by $175 billion in 2022 from 2021 with hospital expenditures and retail prescription 
drugs accounting for approximately one-third of the spending growth.
2
  
 
The United States spends more per person on health care than any other high-income country in the 
world and spending has continued to increase over the past few decades. Health spending per person 
in the U.S. was $12,914 in 2021 and increased for 2022 to $13,493, more than $5,000 greater than any 
other high income nation.
3
 
 
 
                                                
1
 Peterson-Kaiser Family Foundation, Health System Tracker, Health Spending – How has U.S. spending on healthcare changed over 
time?, December 15, 2023, available at https://www.healthsystemtracker.org/chart-collection/u-s-spending-healthcare-changed-
time/#Total%20national%20health%20expenditures,%20US%20$%20Billions,%201970-2022 https://healthsystemtracker.org/chart-
collection/u-s-spending-healthcare-changed-time/ (Last visited on February 18, 2024). 
2
 Id. 
3
 Peterson-Kaiser Family Foundation, Health System Tracker, Health Spending – How does health spending in the U.S. compare to 
other countries?, February 9, 2023, available at (https://www.healthsystemtracker.org/chart-collection/health-spending-u-s-compare-
countries/ (Last visited January 22, 2024). The average amount spent on health per person in comparable countries – $6,125 – is less 
than half of what the U.S. spends.  STORAGE NAME: h7089.HHS 	PAGE: 3 
DATE: 2/23/2024 
  
The Organization for Economic Cooperation Development estimated that total spending in 2019 in its 
member countries averaged 8.8 percent of their gross domestic product (GDP), compared with 16.8 
percent in the U.S.
4
 One study found that United States commercial health spending per enrollee 
increased by 61.6 percent from 2008 to 2022, faster than both Medicaid and Medicare which rose at 
40.8 percent and 21.7 percent, respectively, for the same time period.
5
 The rising prices of health care 
services accounted for approximately two-thirds of that growth, with prices for prescription drugs, 
provider services (physical examinations, screenings and procedures) and inpatient and outpatient care 
rising by 18.3 percent.
6
 The following chart details the factors contributing to the growth in spending, 
per capita, in the United States.
7
 
 
 
 
The following chart illustrates the rate of growth in total national health expenditures from 1970 to 
2022.
8
 
 
                                                
4
 Emma Wagner, et. al., Peterson-KFF Health System Tracker, How does health spending in the U.S. compare to other countries? 
(January 23, 2024), available at https://www.healthsystemtracker.org/chart-collection/health-spending-u-s-compare-
countries/#GDP%20per%20capita%20and%20health%20consumption%20spending%20per%20capita,%202022%20(U.S.%20dollars,
%20PPP%20adjusted) (Last visited February 19, 2024). 
5
Supra, note 1. 
6 
Id. 
7 
Id. 
8
 Id.  STORAGE NAME: h7089.HHS 	PAGE: 4 
DATE: 2/23/2024 
  
 
 
Health Insurance Expenditures 
 
As a percentage of the country’s total expenditures, that number has slowed in recent decades, from a 
high of 12 percent in the 1970s to the current 9.6 percent for the 2020-2022 period; however, health 
care spending still consistently exceeds growth in the country’s gross domestic product (GDP).
9
 
 
Private insurance expenditures have also been growing at a faster pace than either Medicaid or 
Medicare spending. In 1970, private health insurance expenditures represented 20.4 percent of total 
health spending; whereas, for 2022, the percentage had grown to 28.9 percent.
10
 Additionally, per 
enrollee spending by private insurers increased by 61.6 percent from 2008 to 2022, a rate that was 
faster than the per enrollee spending for public programs such as Medicare and Medicaid. From 2021 
to 2022, the rate for private insurers was 4.3 percent while Medicaid rose by 2.2 percent and Medicare 
by 3.8 percent.
11
 
 
Per enrollee spending for those with private health insurance in 2023 to 2024 is expected to increase at 
a faster pace than in 2022 due to an increase in health care utilization and health care costs. This 
growth in the private health insurance market, according to a report by the Office of the Chief Actuary at 
the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS),
12
 is tied to increased enrollment in the 
Marketplace
13
 while additional subsidies were available under the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021 
(ARP).
14
 Beginning in 2021, the ARP legislation expanded the number of individuals eligible for certain 
premium tax credits and also provided certain eligible individuals with increased premium tax credits for 
the purchase of Marketplace coverage. 
 
The CMS Actuary’s report shows an average predicted growth rate in national health expenditures 
(NHE) of 5.4 percent which would outpace the expected average GDP growth rate for the same time 
period of 4.6 percent.
15
  
 
                                                
9
 Id. 
10
 Id. 
11
 Id. 
12
 Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, National Health Expenditures Projections 2022-31: Growth to Stabilize Once Public 
Health Emergency Ends, June 14, 2023, Slide 10, available at https://www.cms.gov/files/document/release-presentation-slides-
national-health-expenditure-projections-2022-31-growth-stabilize-once.pdf (Last visited February 18, 2024). 
13
 The Marketplace refers to the federal marketplace, which may also be called the exchange, created by the Patient Protection and 
Affordable Care Act (PPACA). The purpose of the marketplace is to offer consumers the opportunity to compare a variety of health 
insurance plans with varying costs and benefits but which meet certain minimum requirements and to purchase such plans with 
premium tax credits and subsidies, if eligible. 
14
 American Rescue Plan of 2021, Pub. Law 117-2 (March 11, 2021). 
15
 Id at slide 4.  STORAGE NAME: h7089.HHS 	PAGE: 5 
DATE: 2/23/2024 
  
The chart below illustrates the average annual growth in enrollment per beneficiary spending, and total 
spending, by the designated time period for private health insurance coverage.
16
  
 
 
 
The reductions shown above for the outlier years of 2025 through 2031 are tied to the expiration of the 
Marketplace subsidies. These subsidies exist in current law, and when those subsidies expire, the CMS 
Actuary’s office projects an associated enrollment drop of 10 percent or two million beneficiaries in 
directly purchased health insurance coverage.
17
 
 
Health Care Price Transparency 
 
As consumers bear a greater share of health care costs, and more consumers participate in high 
deductible health plans (HDHP), consumers need clear, factual and easy to access information about 
the cost and quality of health care. Such information is essential for consumers if they are to make 
value-driven health care decisions. To promote consumer involvement and provider accountability, 
health care pricing and other data needs to be free, timely, reliable, and reflect individual health care 
needs and insurance coverage. 
 
Price transparency often refers to the availability of provider-specific information on the cost for a 
specific health care service or set of services to consumers and other interested parties.
18
 Price can 
also be defined as an estimate of a consumer’s complete cost for a health care service or bundle of 
services that reflects any negotiated discounts; is inclusive of all other service or services to the 
consumer, including hospital, physician, and lab fees; and, identifies a consumer’s out-of-pocket cost.
19
 
Further, price transparency is the easy availability of information, including price disclosure match with 
                                                
16
 Supra, note 12. 
17
 Id. 
18
 Government Accounting Office, Meaningful Price Information is Difficult for Consumers to Obtain Prior to Receiving Care, September 
2011, pg. 2, available at https://www.gao.gov/products/gao-11-791 (Last visited January 22, 2024). 
19
 Id.  STORAGE NAME: h7089.HHS 	PAGE: 6 
DATE: 2/23/2024 
  
quality data, which enables patients and other care purchasers to identify, compare, and choose 
providers that meet the consumer’s desired level of quality and value.
20
  
 
Employee Out of Pocket Costs 
 
As health care costs continue to rise, most health insurance buyers are asking their consumers to take 
on a greater share of their costs, increasing both premiums and other out-of-pocket expenses, such as 
higher copayments or deductibles. According to the 2023 Kaiser Family Foundation Employer Health 
Benefits Survey, 30 percent of Americans with private insurance were enrolled in a HDHP in 2023.
21
 
Additionally, employees in most firms, 77 percent, do not have a choice of health plans or benefit 
options, including 26 percent who are in firms where the only offer is a high deductible plan with 
savings option (HDHP/SO). 
 
Most covered workers face additional out-of-pocket costs when they use health care services, such as 
co-payments or coinsurance for physician visits and hospitalizations. For 2023, 90 percent of covered 
workers had a general annual deductible
22
 for single coverage that must be met before most services 
are paid for by their health plan.
23
 Ten years ago, the percentage of covered workers with a general 
annual deductible was 78 percent and 85 percent five years ago.
24
 
 
Among covered workers with a general annual deductible, the 2023 average deductible amount for 
single coverage across all plan types was $1,735 which is similar to the average amount for 2022 of 
$1,763.
25
 Deductibles can differ greatly by a number of factors, including firm size, region, or whether a 
plan incorporates other cost sharing provisions. Looking at costs by firm size in 2023; the average 
amount for single coverage was $2,434 in small firms and $1,478 in large firms.
26
  
 
The 2023 plan deductible averages reflect moderate reductions from the average deductibles for small 
and large group plans in 2022 which were $2,543 and $1,493, respectively. Seventy-four percent of 
covered workers in small firms are in a plan with a deductible of at least $1,000 for single coverage 
compared to 58 percent in large firms;
27
 a similar pattern exists for those in plans with a deductible of at 
least $2,000 (47 percent for small firms vs. 25 percent for large firms).  
 
The chart below shows the percent of workers enrolled in employer-sponsored insurance with an 
annual deductible of $1,000 or more for single coverage by employer size for 2009 through 2023.
28
 
                                                
20
 Healthcare Financial Management Association, Price Transparency in Health Care: Report from the HFMA Price Transparency Task 
Force, pg. 2, available at: https://www.hfma.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/Price20Transparency20Report.pdf (Last visited February 
18, 2024). 
21
 The Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation, 2023 Employer Health Benefits Survey, October 18, 2023, p. 79, available at 
https://www.kff.org/report-section/ehbs-2023-section-4-types-of-plans-offered/ (Last visited  February 19, 2024). 
22
 The term “general annual deductible” means a deductible which applies to both medical and pharmaceutical benefits and which must 
be met by the insured individual before most services are covered by the health plan. See The Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation, 
2023 Employer Health Benefits Survey, October 18, 2023, p.106, available at: https://www.kff.org/report-section/ehbs-2023-section-4-
types-of-plans-offered/ (Last visited February 19, 2024). 
23
 Id. 
24
 Id., and FIG. 7.2 at p.108. 
25
 Id. 
26 
Id., at 107-108. 
27
 Id., at 115 and FIG. 7.13. 
28 
Id., at 116 and FIG.7.14.  STORAGE NAME: h7089.HHS 	PAGE: 7 
DATE: 2/23/2024 
  
 
 
From 2013 to 2023, the average premium contribution required of covered workers with family 
coverage increased 19 percent and if broken down by just the last five years, the average worker 
contribution towards family health insurance coverage has increased by 22 percent compared to a 27 
percent in workers’ wages and 21 percent inflation.
29
 Employer contributions to coverage vary widely 
based on the type of coverage and plan. For small plans, 30 percent of employers pay the entire 
premium for individual coverage of their workers whereas this is only the case with six percent of large 
firm employers. For family coverage, however, only small firm employees contribute more than half the 
premium costs for family coverage, compared to eight percent of covered workers in large firms.
30
 
 
For workers in a HDHP, they may receive contributions from their employer into a savings account 
which may be used to reduce cost sharing amounts or to cover items not included in the employer’s 
benefit package. In 2023, seven percent of covered workers with a HDHP with a health reimbursement 
arrangement (HRA)
31
 and four percent of covered workers in a Health Savings Account (HSA) – 
qualified HDHP received an employer contribution to their accounts that was greater than or equal to 
their annual deductible.
32
 An HRA is defined by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) as an account-
based group health plan provided by an employer to provide for the reimbursement of medical 
expenses under IRS Code section 213(d) and is subject to maximum, fixed-dollar amounts for 
reimbursements within a specified period, usually a plan year.
33
  
 
For those employees with an HDHP and an HRA, 12 percent of those workers received an employer 
contribution that if the amount had been applied to the worker’s annual deductible, the remaining 
deductible would be less than $1,000.
34
 HSA-qualified HDHPs are required by federal law to have an 
                                                
29
 Id. at 7. 
30
 Id. at 9. 
31
 A high deductible health plan with a savings option (HDHP/SOs) are health plans which have a deductible of at least $1,000 for 
individual coverage and $2,000 for family coverage which are paired with a health reimbursement account (HRA), or a high deductible 
health plan that is considered by federal requirements to be a qualified HDHP. Funds in these savings accounts are pre-tax dollars 
which may be used to cover out-of-pocket medical expenses and other plan cost sharing.  
32
 Supra, note 21, at 12. 
33
 Health Reimbursement Arrangements and Other Account Based Group Health Plans, Supplementary Information – Final Rule, 84 
Fed.Reg.119, 28887 (June 20, 2019), available at https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/FR-2019-06-20/pdf/2019-12571.pdf (Last 
visited January 22, 2024). 
34
 Supra, note 21, at 12.  STORAGE NAME: h7089.HHS 	PAGE: 8 
DATE: 2/23/2024 
  
annual out of pocket maximum of no more than $7,500 for single coverage and $15,000 for family 
coverage. For HDHPs with an HRA option that are not grandfathered plans, the out of pocket maximum 
in 2023 was $9,100 for single coverage and $18,200 for family coverage. The average out of pocket 
maximum for 2023 was $5,456 for HDHP/HRAs and $4,415 for HSA-qualified HDHPs.
35
 
 
Such funding arrangements are more likely to be found in firms with more than 200 workers (57 
percent) than smaller firms (29 percent).
36
 Enrollment has increased over the past 10 years in 
HDHP/SOs growing from 10 percent of covered workers in 2013 to 29 percent in 2023.
37
  
 
As the percentage of insured individuals taking on greater shares of their health care costs increases, 
the necessity for easy to access, accurate, and timely information on the availability, cost, and quality of 
health care services becomes more evident. If consumers are to make informed decisions about their 
health care and how to spend their health care funds, consumers need obtainable and readable data 
before and after the delivery of health care services. 
 
 National Price Transparency Studies  
 
To explore how expanding price transparency efforts could produce significant cost savings for the 
healthcare system, the Gary and Mary West Health Policy Center funded an analysis, “Healthcare Price 
Transparency: Policy Approaches and Estimated Impacts on Spending.” As noted by the authors, 
American consumers have historically found it difficult to comparison shop for health care services as 
information about pricing and service delivery is buried in secrecy and shrouded in medical jargon once 
information is uncovered by the consumer.
38
 As Americans take on more of their health care costs, 
research suggests that they are looking for more and better price information.
39
  
 
 
 
One study in 2014, which included a survey of more than 2,000 adults from across the country, found 
that 56 percent of Americans actively searched for price information before obtaining health care, 
                                                
35
 Supra, note 21, at 147. 
36
 Supra, note 21, at 140. 
37
 Supra, note 21, at 142. 
38
 White, C., Ginsburg, P., et al., Gary and Mary West Health Policy Center, Healthcare Price Transparency: Policy Approaches and 
Estimated Impacts on Spending, May 2014, p. 3, available at  https://www.westhealth.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/Price-
Transparency-Policy-Analysis-FINAL-5-2-14.pdf (Last visited February 18, 2024). 
39
 Public Agenda and Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, How Much Will It Cost? How Americans Use Prices in Health Care, March 
2015, page 34, available at https://www.publicagenda.org/reports/how-much-will-it-cost-how-americans-use-prices-in-health-care/ (Last 
visited February 18, 2024).  STORAGE NAME: h7089.HHS 	PAGE: 9 
DATE: 2/23/2024 
  
including 21 percent who compared the price of health care services across multiple providers.
40
 The 
chart below illustrates the finding that, as a consumer's health plan deductible increases, the consumer 
is more likely to seek out price information.
41
 
 
 
 
Individuals who compared prices stated that research affected their health care choices and saved 
them money.
42
 In addition, the study found that most Americans do not equate price with quality of 
care. Seventy-one percent do not believe higher price reflects higher level care quality and 63 percent 
do not believe that lower price is indicative of lower level care quality.
43
 Consumers enrolled in HDHP 
and consumer-directed health plans are more price-sensitive than consumers with plans with less out 
of pocket obligations. Accordingly, these consumers find an estimate of their individual out-of-pocket 
costs more useful than any other kind of health care price transparency tool.
44
 Another study found that 
when they have access to well-designed reports on price and quality, 80 percent of health care 
consumers will select the highest value health care provider.
45
 
 
Florida Price Transparency: Florida Patient's Bill of Rights and Responsibilities 
 
In 1991, the Legislature enacted the Florida Patient’s Bill of Rights and Responsibilities (Patient’s Bill of 
Rights).
46
 The statute established the right of patients to expect medical providers to observe standards 
of care in providing medical treatment and communicating with their patients.
47
 The standards of care 
include, but are not limited to, the following aspects of medical treatment and patient communication: 
 Individual dignity; 
 Provision of information;  
 Financial information and the disclosure of financial information;  
 Access to health care;  
 Experimental research; and 
 Patient’s knowledge of rights and responsibilities. 
                                                
40
 Id., at 3. 
41
 Id., at 13. 
42
 Id., at 4. 
43
 Id., at 14.  
44
 American Institute for Research, Consumer Beliefs and Use of Information About Health Care Cost, Resource Use, and Value, 
Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, October 2012, pg. 4, available at  https://www.air.org/sites/default/files/Resource-rwjf402126.pdf 
(air.org)(Last visited January 22, 2024). 
45
 Hibbard, JH, et al., An Experiment Shows That a Well-Designed Report on Costs and Quality Can Help Consumers Choose High-
Value Health Care, Health Affairs 2012; 31(3): 560-568 ,available at https://www.healthaffairs.org/doi/10.1377/hlthaff.2011.1168 (Last 
visited January 22, 2024). 
46
 S. 1, Ch. 91-127, Laws of Fla. (1991); s. 381.026, F.S. 
47
 S. 381.026(3), F.S.  STORAGE NAME: h7089.HHS 	PAGE: 10 
DATE: 2/23/2024 
  
 
A patient has the right to request certain financial information from health care providers and facilities.
48
 
Specifically, upon request, a health care provider or health care facility must provide a person with a 
reasonable estimate of the cost of medical treatment prior to the provision of treatment.
49
 Estimates 
must be written in language “comprehensible to an ordinary layperson.”
50
 The reasonable estimate 
does not preclude the health care provider or health care facility from exceeding the estimate or making 
additional charges as the patient’s needs or medical condition warrant.
51
 A patient has the right to 
receive a copy of an itemized bill upon request and to receive an explanation of charges upon 
request.
52
 
 
Currently, under the Patient’s Bill of Rights financial information and disclosure provisions: 
 A request is necessary before a health care provider or health care facility must disclose to a 
Medicare-eligible patient whether the provider or facility accepts Medicare payment as full 
payment for medical services and treatment rendered in the provider’s office or health care 
facility. 
 A request is necessary before a health care provider or health care facility is required to furnish 
a person an estimate of charges for medical services before providing the services. The Florida 
Patient’s Bill of Rights and Responsibilities does not require that the components making up the 
estimate be itemized or that the estimate be presented in a manner that is easily understood by 
an ordinary layperson. 
 A licensed facility must place a notice in its reception area that financial information related to 
that facility is available on the website of the Agency for Health Care Administration (AHCA). 
 The facility may indicate that the pricing information is based on a compilation of charges for 
the average patient and that an individual patient’s charges may vary. 
 A patient has the right to receive an itemized bill upon request. 
 
Health care providers and health care facilities are required to make available to patients a summary of 
their rights. The applicable regulatory board or AHCA may impose an administrative fine when a 
provider or facility fails to make available to patients a summary of their rights.
53
 
 
The Patient’s Bill of Rights also authorizes, but does not require, primary care providers
54
 to publish a 
schedule of charges for the medical services offered to patients.
55
 The schedule must include certain 
price information for at least the 50 services most frequently provided by the primary care provider.
56
 
The law also requires the posting of the schedule in a conspicuous place in the reception area of the 
provider’s office and at least 15 square feet in size.
57
 A primary care provider who publishes and 
maintains a schedule of charges is exempt from licensure fees for a single renewal of a professional 
license and from the continuing education requirements for a single two-year period.
58
 
 
The law also requires urgent care centers to publish a schedule of charges for the medical services 
offered to patients.
59
 This applies to any entity that holds itself out to the general public, in any manner, 
as a facility or clinic where immediate, but not emergent, care is provided, expressly including offsite 
facilities of hospitals or hospital-physician joint ventures; and licensed health care clinics that operate in 
three or more locations. The schedule requirements for urgent care centers are the same as those 
established for primary care providers.
60
 The schedule must describe each medical service in language 
                                                
48
 S. 381.026(4)(c), F.S. 
49
 S. 381.026(4)(c)3., F.S. 
50
 Id. 
51
 Id. 
52
 S. 381.026(4)(c)5., F.S. 
53
 S. 381.0261, F.S. 
54
 S. 381.026(2)(d), F.S.; defines primary care providers to include allopathic physicians, osteopathic physicians, and nurses who 
provide medical services that are commonly provided without referral from another health care provider, including family and general 
practice, general pediatrics, and general internal medicine. 
55
 S. 381.026(4)(c)3., F.S. 
56
 Id. 
57
 Id. 
58
 S. 381.026(4)(c)4., F.S. 
59
 S. 395.107(1), F.S. 
60
 S. 395.107(2), F.S.  STORAGE NAME: h7089.HHS 	PAGE: 11 
DATE: 2/23/2024 
  
comprehensible to a layperson. This provision prevents a center from using medical or billing codes, 
Latin phrases, or technical medical jargon as the only description of each medical service. An urgent 
care center that fails to publish and post the schedule of charges is subject to a fine of not more than 
$1,000 per day (until the schedule is published and posted).
61
 
 
Florida Price Transparency: Health Care Facilities 
 
Under s. 395.301, F.S., a health care facility must comply, within 7 days of a written request, a good 
faith estimate of reasonably anticipated charges for the facility to treat the patient’s condition. Upon 
request, the facility must also provide revisions to the estimate. The estimate may represent the 
average charges for that diagnosis related group
62
 or the average charges for that procedure. The 
facility is required to place a notice in the reception area that this information is available. A facility that 
fails to provide the estimate as required may be fined $500 for each instance of the facility’s failure to 
provide the requested information. 
 
Also pursuant to s. 395.301, F.S., a licensed facility must notify each patient during admission and at 
discharge of his or her right to receive an itemized bill upon request. If requested, within seven days of 
discharge or release, the licensed facility must provide an itemized statement, in language 
comprehensible to an ordinary layperson, detailing the specific nature of charges or expenses incurred 
by the patient. This initial bill must contain a statement of specific services received and expenses 
incurred for the items of service, enumerating in detail the constituent components of the services 
received within each department of the licensed facility and including unit price data on rates charged 
by the licensed facility. The patient or patient’s representative may elect to receive this level of detail in 
subsequent billings for services. 
 
Current law also directs these health care facilities to publish information on their websites detailing the 
cost of specific health care services and procedures, as well as information on financial assistance that 
may be available to prospective patients. The facility must disclose to the consumer that these 
averages and ranges of payments are estimates, and that actual charges will be based on the services 
actually provided.
63
 Under s. 408.05, F.S., AHCA contracts with a vendor to collect and publish this cost 
information to consumers on an internet site.
64
 Hospitals and other facilities post a link to this site - 
https://pricing.floridahealthfinder.gov/ - to comply with the price transparency requirements. The cost 
information is searchable, and based on descriptive bundles of commonly performed procedures and 
services. The information must, at a minimum, provide the estimated average payment received and 
the estimated range of payment from all non-governmental payers for the bundles available at the 
facility.
65
 
 
The law also establishes the right of a patient to request a personalized estimate on the costs of care 
from health care practitioners who provide services in a licensed hospital facility or ambulatory surgical 
center.
66
 
 
Regulation of Health Care Facilities and Providers  
 
Oversight of Florida’s health care facilities and health care providers is often a joint effort by the Agency 
for Health Care Administration (AHCA) and the Department of Health (department), depending upon 
the regulatory issue. The AHCA regulates and monitors health care facilities under ch. 395, Part I, F.S., 
including those defined under s. 395.301, F.S. The definition of a health care facility includes, but is not 
limited to hospitals, ambulatory surgical centers, and urgent care facilities. As the regulatory entity for 
                                                
61
 S. 395.107(6), F.S.  
62
 Diagnosis related groups (DRGs) are a patient classification scheme which provides a means of relating the type of patients a 
hospital treats (i.e., its case mix) to the costs incurred by the hospital. DRGs allow facilities to categorize patients based on severity of 
illness, prognosis, treatment difficulty, need for intervention and resource intensity. For more information, see 
https://www.cms.gov/icd10m/version37-fullcode-
cms/fullcode_cms/Design_and_development_of_the_Diagnosis_Related_Group_(DRGs).pdf (last viewed January 22, 2024).  
63
 S. 395.301, F.S. 
64
 S. 408.05(3)(c), F.S. 
65
 Id. 
66
 S. 456.0575(2), F.S.  STORAGE NAME: h7089.HHS 	PAGE: 12 
DATE: 2/23/2024 
  
enforcement of , the AHCA has the ability, within statutory guidelines, to fine entities for failure to 
adhere to the law or take other administrative actions, as permitted. 
 
The AHCA ‘s Bureau of Facility Regulation (bureau) is responsible for the licensure of facilities, 
registration, and federal certification requirements for 27 different facilities and providers. The bureau 
implements statutory standards, targets, and guidelines, conducts surveillance, performs assessments 
and audits, conducts audits, and enforces sanctions and other regulatory actions when necessary.
67
  
 
The Department of Health (department) designates eligible facilities as trauma centers, either as a level 
I, level II, or a pediatric trauma center if the facility meets the statutory requirements outlined in ch. 395, 
Part II, F.S., and in ch. 64J—2, F.A.C. Hospitals must complete applications with the department for the 
appropriate trauma level being sought and certify as to the availability of certain types of providers, 
provide a description of the trauma team, and satisfy quality management protocols.
68
  
 
The department also licenses and regulates health practitioners for the preservation of the health, 
safety, and welfare of the public. The department must investigate complaints and reports about health 
care practitioners which are licensed by the department and may take administrative actions against a 
practitioner to enforce state laws or regulations.
69
 
 
Federal Price Transparency Laws and Regulations 
 
Congress and federal regulatory agencies took steps in 2019 to improve the quantity and quality of 
health care cost information available to patients. Federal price transparency laws and regulations; 
however, does not cover all types of health care facilities. For example, federal transparency 
requirements excluded certain facilities leaving requirements and compliance to the States.  
 
 Hospital Facility Transparency 
 
On November 15, 2019, the CMS finalized regulations
70
 changing payment policies and rates for 
services furnished to Medicare beneficiaries in hospital outpatient departments. In doing so, CMS also 
established new requirements for hospitals to publish standard charges for a wide range of health care 
services offered by such facilities. Specifically, the regulations require hospitals to make public both a 
machine-readable file (MRF) of standard charges and a consumer-friendly presentation of prices for at 
least 300 shoppable health care services. The regulations became effective on January 1, 2021.
71
 
 
The regulations define a shoppable service as one that can be scheduled in advance, effectively giving 
patients the opportunity to select the venue in which to receive the service. This is a more expansive 
designation of shoppable services than currently exists in Florida law. For each shoppable service, a 
hospital must disclose several pricing benchmarks to include: 
 
 The gross charge; 
 The payer-specific negotiated charge; 
 A de-identified minimum negotiated charge; 
 A de-identified maximum negotiated charge; and, 
                                                
67
 Agency for Health Care Administration, State of Agency Organization and Operation (Revised Feb. 14. 2014), Division of Health 
Quality Assurance, Bureau of Health Facility Regulation, available at 
https://ahca.myflorida.com/content/download/4859/file/OrganizationAndOperationStatementRevised.pdf (Last visited February 19. 
2024). 
68
 Florida Department of Health, Trauma Center Designation, Application Process, available athttps://www.floridahealth.gov/licensing-
and-regulation/trauma-system/trauma-center-designation.html (Last visited February 19, 2024).  
69
 Florida Department of Health, Licensing and Regulation, Enforcement, available at https://www.floridahealth.gov/licensing-and-
regulation/enforcement/index.html?utm_source=floridahealth.gov%26utm_medium=text-
link%26utm_campaign=mqa%26utm_term=medical+quality+assurance+file+complaint%26utm_content=https://www.floridahealth.gov/li
censing-and-regulation/ (Last visited February 19, 2024). 
70
 Medicare and Medicaid Programs: CY 2020 Hospital Outpatient PPS Policy Changes and available at: Payment Rates and 
Ambulatory Surgical Center Payment System Policy Changes and Payment Rates. Price Transparency Requirements for Hospitals to 
Make Standard Charges Public, 84 FR 65524 (November 27, 2019)(codified at 45 CFR Part 180). 
71
 Id.  STORAGE NAME: h7089.HHS 	PAGE: 13 
DATE: 2/23/2024 
  
 The discounted cash price. 
 
This information should provide a patient with both a reasonable point estimate of the charge for a 
shoppable service, and also a range in which the actual charge can be expected to fall.  
 
 Compliance Reports 
 
The penalty for facility noncompliance under the federal regulations is a maximum fine of $300 per 
day.
72
 Very early indications suggested that there were varying levels of compliance with the new rules 
among hospital facilities and many facilities complaining about the high cost of implementation.
73
 At 
least one patient advocacy group has consistently posted much lower compliance rates by hospitals in 
its semi-annual reports which highlight the status of each hospital.
74
  
 
A 2021 review of more than 3,500 hospitals found that 55 percent of hospitals were not compliant with 
the rule and had not posted price information for commercial plans or had not posted any prices at all.
75
 
Further, an August 2022 review of 2,000 hospitals found that 16 percent complied with all transparency 
requirements.
76
 Nearly 84 percent of hospitals failed to post MRF containing standard charges, and 
roughly 78 percent of hospitals did not provide a consumer-friendly shoppable services display.
77
 
Another review of more than 6,400 hospitals showed wide-spread non-compliance with the federal 
transparency rule- more than 63 percent of hospitals were not in compliance as of the report date.
78
 
According to that same review, only 38 percent of Florida hospitals were in compliance.
79
  
 
The first fines were not levied by federal CMS until almost 18 months after the rule’s effective date. 
When levied against Northside-Atlanta, the total amount of those fines is less than 0.1 percent of 
Northside Hospital system’s total gross revenues
80
. That assessment is still shown as under review on 
the CMS enforcement website. 
 
A year ago, CMS reported an improving compliance rate as high as 70 percent by hospitals; however, 
CMS has also issued a very high volume of warning letters and corrective actions plans.
81
 In April 2023, 
CMS reported the issuance of over 730 warning letters and 269 requests for corrective action plans.
82
 
More recently, a data transparency vendor reviewed the 2023 compliance rate by facilities and found at 
least 90 percent of facilities had submitted some of the listed mandated services via the required MRF 
requirement. The MRF contains a facility’s cash, list, and negotiated rates for a significant number of 
the facility’s services.
83
 The same report also updated the number of warning letters in the past year to 
a cumulative of 1,000 letters and issuance of 14 civil penalties.
84
 
 
                                                
72
. 45 CFR s. 180.90. The maximum daily fine will be adjusted annually by the Office of Management and Budget. 
73
 Dave Muoio, Hospital, payer price transparency compliance improves, but new requirements are kicking in this year (January 4, 
2024), Fierce Healthcare, available at  Hospital, payer price transparency improves across 2023: report finds (fiercehealthcare.com) 
(Last visited February 18, 2024). 
74
 See Florida Fifth Semi-Annual Hospital Price Transparency Report, http(s://www.patientrightsadvocate.org/s/FL-Florida-Fifth-Semi-
Annual-Hospital-Price-Transparency-Compliance-Report.pdf (Patientsrightsadvocate.org;) (Last visited February 18, 2024). 
75
 John Xuefeng Jiang, et al., Factors associated with compliance to the hospital price transparency final rule: A national landscape 
study, Journal of General Internal Medicine (2021), available at https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11606-021-07237-y (last 
viewed on January 4, 2024). 
76
 Patients’ Rights Advocates, Third semi-annual hospital transparency compliance report, 2022, available at 
https://www,patientrightsadvocates.org/august-semi-annual-compliance-report-2022 (last revisited January 5, 2024).  
77
 Id. 
78
 Foundation for Government Accountability, How America’s Hospitals Are Hiding the Cost of Health Care, pg. 3, August 2022, 
available at https://www.TheFGA.org/paper/americas-hospitals-are-hiding-the-cost-of-health-care. (last viewed on January 4, 2024). As 
of the date of the report, only two hospitals to date had been fined for noncompliance with the transparency rule, both of which were in 
Georgia’s Northside Hospital System.  
79
 Id. at 4. 
80
 Id. at 4. 
81
 American Bar Ass’n., CMS States 70% of Hospitals Are Now Complying With Hospital Price Transparency Rules (April 23, 2023), 
available at: https://www.americanbar.org/groups/health_law/section-news/2023/february/cms-states-hospitals-are-now-complying-with-
hospital-price-transparency-rules/ (Last visited February 18, 2024). 
82
 Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, Hospital Transparency Enforcement Update (April 23, 2023), available at 
https://www.cms.gov/newsroom/fact-sheets/hospital-price-transparncy-enforcement-update (Last visited February 18, 2024).  
83
 Supra, note 76. 
84
 Id.  STORAGE NAME: h7089.HHS 	PAGE: 14 
DATE: 2/23/2024 
  
As mentioned above, CMS maintains a website with a list of facilities assessed civil monetary penalties 
for non-compliance, the non-compliance notices, and the status of any facilities which have requested a 
review of an enforcement activity.
85
 The Office of the Inspector General at HHS has announced its 
plans to review and audit HHS’ monitoring and enforcement of the law and regulations. The Inspector 
General will review HHS’ controls and randomly sample hospitals to determine if those controls are 
sufficient and issue a report later in 2024.
86
 
 
Health Insurer Transparency 
On October 29, 2020, the federal Departments of HHS, Labor, and Treasury finalized regulations
87
 
imposing new transparency requirements on issuers of individual and group health insurance plans.  
 
 Estimates 
 
Central to the new regulations is a requirement for health plans to provide an estimate of an insured's 
cost-sharing liability for covered items or services furnished by a particular provider. Under the final 
rule, health insurance plans must disclose cost-sharing estimates at the request of an enrollee and 
publicly release negotiated rates for in-network providers, historical out-of-network allowed amounts 
and billed charges, and drug pricing information. The rule’s goal is to enable insured patients to 
estimate their out-of-pocket costs before receiving health care to encourage shopping and price 
competition amongst providers.
88
 
 
Each health plan will be required to establish an online shopping tool that will allow insureds to see the 
negotiated rate between their provider and their plan, as well as a personalized estimate of their out-of-
pocket cost for 500 of the most shoppable items and services. This requirement is scheduled to take 
effect on January 1, 2023. Beginning in 2024, health plans must provide personalized cost-sharing 
information to patients across the full range of covered health care services.
89
 
 
 Medical Loss Ratio 
 
The regulations also clarify the treatment of shared savings expenses under medical loss ratio (MLR) 
calculations required by PPACA. The MLR refers to the percentage of insurance premium payments 
that are actually spent on medical claims by an insurer. In general, MLR requirements are intended to 
promote efficiency among insurers.
90
 The PPACA established minimum MLR requirements for group 
and individual health insurance plans.
91
 Under the PPACA, large group plans must dedicate at least 85 
percent of premium payments to medical claims, while small group and individual market plans must 
dedicate at least 80 percent of premium payments to medical claims.
92
 Further, the law requires a 
health plan that does not meet these standards to provide annual rebates to individuals enrolled in the 
plan.
93
 
 
The regulations finalized in October 2020 specify that expenses by a health plan in direct support of a 
shared savings program shall be counted as medical expenditures.
94
 Thus, a health plan providing 
shared savings to members will receive an equivalent credit towards meeting the MLR standards 
                                                
85
  Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, CMS Enforcement Actions, available at : https://www.cms.gov/priorities/key-
initiatives/hospital-price-transparency/enforcement-actions (Last visited: February 18, 2024). 
86
 Department of Health and Human Services, Office of the Inspector General, Hospital Price Transparency, available at: 
https://oig.hhs.gov/reports-and-publications/workplan/summary/wp-summary-0000728.asp (Last visited February 18, 2024). 
87
 Transparency in Coverage, 85 FR 73158 (November 12, 2020)(codified at 29 CFR Part 54, 29 CFR Part 2590, 45 CFR Part 147, and 
45 CFR Part 158). 
88
 Trump Administration Finalizes Transparency Rule for Health Insurers," Health Affairs Blog, November 1, 2020. Available at 
https://www.healthaffairs.org/do/10.1377/hblog20201101.662872/full/ (Last visited January 22, 2024). 
89
 45 CFR Part 180. 
90
 “Explaining Health Care Reform: Medical Loss Ratio (MLR)”, Henry J Kaiser Family Foundation, February 29, 2012. Available at 
https://www.kff.org/health-reform/fact-sheet/explaining-health-care-reform-medical-loss-ratio-mlr/ (Last visited January 22, 2024). 
91
 PPACA, s. 1001; 42 U.S.C. 300gg-18. 
92
 Sections 627.6405, 641.31097, F.S. 
93
 Id. 
94
 45 CFR Part 158.  STORAGE NAME: h7089.HHS 	PAGE: 15 
DATE: 2/23/2024 
  
established by PPACA. In theory, this policy should provide an additional incentive for insurers who 
have not already done so to adopt shared savings programs.  
 
 The Federal No Surprises Act 
 
On December 27, 2020, Congress enacted the No Surprises Act (Act) as part of the Consolidated 
Appropriations Act of 2021.
95
 The Act included a wide-range of provisions aimed at protecting patients 
from surprise billing practices and ensuring that patients have access to accurate information about the 
costs of care. Most sections of the Act went into effect on January 1, 2022, and the Departments of 
Health and Human Services, Treasury, and Labor were tasked with issuing regulations and guidance to 
implement a number of the provisions.
96
 Additional public notice requirements become effective July 1, 
2024 resulting in further hospital charge information being posted for easily accessible viewing.  
 
 Estimates – Facilities  
 
In the realm of price transparency, the Act establishes the concept of an “advanced explanation of 
benefits” that combines information on charges provided by a hospital facility with patient-specific cost 
information supplied by a health insurance plan. The process is triggered when a patient schedules a 
service at a hospital facility or requests cost information on a specific set of services. A hospital facility 
must share a “good faith estimate” of the total expected charges for scheduled items or services, 
including any expected ancillary services, with a health plan (if the patient is insured) or individual (if the 
patient is uninsured).
97
 
 
 Estimates – Health Plans 
 
Once the “good faith estimate” has been shared with a patient’s health plan, the plan must then develop 
a more detailed and “advanced explanation of benefits.” This personalized cost estimate must include 
the following: 
 An indication of whether the facility participates in the patient’s health plan network. If the facility 
is non-participating, information on how the patient can receive services from a participating 
provider; 
 The good-faith estimate prepared by the hospital facility based on billing/diagnostic codes; 
 A good-faith estimate of the amount to be covered by the health plan; 
 A good-faith estimate of the amount of the patient’s out-of-pocket costs; 
 A good-faith estimate of the accrued amounts already met by the patient towards any deductible 
or out-of-pocket maximum under the patient’s health plan; 
 A disclaimer indicating whether the services scheduled are subject to medical management 
techniques (i.e., medical necessity determinations, prior authorization, step therapy, etc.); and, 
 A disclaimer that the information provided is only an estimate of costs and may be subject to 
change.
98
 
 
Furthermore, the Act directed the Secretary of HHS to establish by January 1, 2022, a “patient-provider 
dispute resolution process” to resolve any disputes concerning bills received by uninsured individuals or 
individuals with insurance who received care not covered by insurance that substantially differ from a 
provider’s good faith estimate provided prior to the service being rendered.
99
 If one of the providers or 
facilities billed $400 more than the good faith estimate, the patient may dispute the bill through an 
independent third party.
100
 To be considered, a patient must begin the dispute process within 120 days 
of receipt of the initial bill. The new requirements placed on hospitals and health plans by the Act are 
cumulatively intended to provide patients with increased certainty about the total and out-of-pocket 
                                                
95
 P.L. 116-260. The No Surprises Act is found in Division BB of the Act. 
96
 Id. 
97
 P.L. 116-260, Division BB, Section 112. 
98
 P.L. 116-260, Division BB, Section 111. 
99
 Supra, note 80. 
100
 Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, The No Surprises Act protects people from unexpected medical bills, 
https://www.cms.gov/medical-bill-rights (Last visited February 18, 2024).  STORAGE NAME: h7089.HHS 	PAGE: 16 
DATE: 2/23/2024 
  
costs associated with health care services. In turn, patients may be more equipped to seek out cost-
effective care and avoid unforeseen costs that can lead to financial strain. 
 
Medical Debt 
 
Medical costs can result in overwhelming debts to patients, and in some cases, bankruptcy. 
Nationwide, over 100 million have some form of medical debt.
101
 A 2007 study suggested that illness 
and medical bills contributed to 62.1 percent of all personal bankruptcies filed in the United States 
during that year.
102
 A more recent analysis, which considered only the impact of hospital charges, found 
that four percent of U.S. bankruptcies among non-elderly adults resulted from hospitalizations.
103
 Four 
in ten U.S. adults have some form of health care debt,
104
 including one in eight people who reported 
health care debts of at least $10,000 or more in a 2022 Kaiser Family Foundation poll.
105
  
 
About half of adults – including three in ten who do not currently have health care debt – are vulnerable 
to falling in the debt, saying they would be unable to pay a $500 unexpected medical bill without 
borrowing money.
106
 While about a third of adults with health care debt owe less than $1,000, even 
small amounts of debt can have significant financial consequences for some.
107
 Though a third of those 
with current debt expect to pay it off within a year and about a quarter expect to pay it within one to two 
years, nearly one in five adults with health care debt think they will never be able to pay it off.
108
 
 
 
 
Even when medical costs do not result in personal bankruptcy, the debts often weigh heavily on the 
financial health of patients and their families. According to the Kaiser Family Foundation, about a 
quarter of U.S. adults ages 18-64 say they or someone in their household had problems paying or 
                                                
101
 Kaiser Health News, Diagnosis: Debt – 100 Million People in America Are Saddled with Health Care Debt, June 16, 2022, available 
at https://khn.org/news/article/diagnosis-debt-investigation-100-million-americans-hidden-medical-debt/ (Last visited January 22, 2024). 
102
 David U. Himmelstein, et al. “Medical Bankruptcy in the United States, 2007: Results of a National Study.” American Journal of 
Medicine 2009; 122: 741-6, available at https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/19501347/ (Last visited February 18, 2024) . 
103
 Carlos Dobkin, et al. “Myth and Measurement: The Case of Medical Bankruptcies.” New England Journal of Medicine 2018; 
378:1076-1078, available at https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMp1716604 (Last visited February 19, 2024). 
104
 Lopes, L., Kearney, A., et al, Health Care Debt in the U.S.: The Broad Consequences of Medical and Dental Bills, June 16, 2022 
(using results from the Kaiser Family Foundation Health Care Debt Survey), available at https://www.kff.org/health-costs/report/kff-
health-care-debt-survey/ (Last visited January 22, 2024). 
105
 Id. 
106
 Id. 
107
 Id. 
108
 Id.  STORAGE NAME: h7089.HHS 	PAGE: 17 
DATE: 2/23/2024 
  
having an inability to pay medical bills in the past 12 months.
109
 About three in ten survey respondents 
reported medical debt of $5,000 or more, with 13 percent of respondents indicating medical debt in 
excess of $10,000. Even patients with lower amounts of medical debt reported that the outstanding bills 
led to financial distress, in light of other financial commitments and/or limited income.
110
  
 
Among those who reported problems paying medical bills, 66 percent said the bills were the result of a 
one-time or short-term medical expense such as a hospital stay or an accident, while 33 percent cited 
bills for treatment of chronic conditions that had accumulated over time. Respondents to the Kaiser 
survey reported a wide range of illnesses and injuries that led to an accumulation of medical debt. The 
largest share (36 percent) named a specific disease, symptom, or condition like heart disease or 
gastrointestinal problems, followed by issues related to chronic pain or injuries (16 percent), accidents 
and broken bones (15 percent), surgery (10 percent), dental issues (10 percent), and infections like 
pneumonia and flu (9 percent).
111
  
 
More than two thirds of hospitals sue or take other legal action against patients with outstanding bills. 
Nearly 25 percent sell patient medical debt to collection agencies which pursue patients for years on 
unpaid bills. Further, one in five providers deny nonemergency care to people with outstanding medical 
debt. 
 
Further polling results contained in the 2022 Kaiser report also showed that families who had 
experienced medical debt problems were also more likely to ask about the cost of a medical service or 
doctor’s office visit beforehand than someone who had not had such difficulties (49 percent compared to 
34 percent). Such families were also much more likely to shop around for services for the best price (34 
percent compared to 17 percent) and to attempt to negotiate a lower rate before receiving a health care 
service (22 percent compared to six percent). Impacted families with medical debt also reported a higher 
rate of being asked to pay for health care services up front before services would be delivered.
112
 
 
Personal Credit Ratings 
 
Recognizing the inherent difficulties associated with medical debt, the three major credit rating 
companies in July 2023 agreed to exclude from an individual’s credit report medical debts that have 
been paid off and unpaid medical debts less than $500. This action followed a 2015 settlement 
agreement with several state Attorney Generals which had established a minimum time period of 180 
days before a medical debt could be reported to a credit agency.
113
 The national credit reporting 
companies announced that this time period would be expanded voluntarily to one year in 2022. 
 
With the 2023 agreement and the $500 capped medical debt collection, regulators expect the majority 
of medical debt will fall under this dollar threshold. However, geographic differences in the average 
amount of medical debt exist across the county, including in neighborhoods that are majority Black or 
Hispanic, and in areas with lower median incomes.
114
 
 
When a person first takes out a line of credit as an individual—a first credit card or a loan to pay for 
college, for example—this begins a personal credit history and the process of building a personal credit 
score. This score is linked to a person’s Social Security Number. 
 
From then on, the score reflects one’s personal financial history. If a person always pays bills on time, 
does not use too much of the available credit at once, and avoids negative information like foreclosures 
and charge-offs, the person will develop a good personal credit score, also known as a FICO score. If, 
                                                
109
 The Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation, “The Burden of Medical Debt: Results from the Kaiser Family Foundation/New York Times 
Medical Bills Survey.” January 5, 2016, available at https://www.kff.org/health-costs/report/the-burden-of-medical-debt-results-from-the- 
kaiser-family-foundationnew-york-times-medical-bills-survey/(Last visited January 22, 2024). 
110
 Id. 
111
 Id. 
112
 Id., at 23. 
113
 Consumer Financial and Protection Bureau, Paid and Low-Balance Medical Collections on Consumer Credit Reports, July 27, 2022, 
available at https://www.consumerfinance.gov/data-research/research-reports/paid-and-low-balance-medical-collections-on-consumer-
credit-reports/ (Last visited January 22, 2024). 
114
 Id.  STORAGE NAME: h7089.HHS 	PAGE: 18 
DATE: 2/23/2024 
  
instead, one carries a balance on lines of credit, fails to develop a diverse mix of credit sources—
different credit cards, an automobile loan, and a mortgage, for example—and accrues many “hard 
inquiries” on your credit score (which occurs when upon application for a new source of credit), the 
FICO score will be low. Personal credit scores generally range 350-800; 800 being a “perfect” score. 
 
In 2018-2020, more than a quarter of the nation’s largest hospitals and health systems pursued nearly 
39,000 legal actions regarding consumer medical debt.
115
 
 
Medical Debt Collection Process 
Current law provides a court process for the collection of lawful debts, including medical debts. A 
creditor may sue a debtor and, if the creditor prevails, the creditor may receive a final judgment 
awarding monetary damages. If the debtor does not voluntarily pay the judgment, the creditor has 
several legal means to collect on the debt, including: 
 
 Wage garnishment. 
 Garnishment of money in a bank account. 
 Directing the sheriff to seize assets, sell them, and give the proceeds to the creditor. 
 
In order to protect debtors from being destitute, current law provides that certain property is exempt 
from being taken by a creditor. The Florida Constitution provides that the debtor's homestead and 
$1,000 of personal property is exempt.
116
 Statutory law provides numerous categories of exempt 
property, and federal  law also provides certain exemptions that apply in all of the states.
117
 
 
In addition to the protection from creditors contained in the Florida Constitution, chapter 222, F.S., 
protects other personal property from certain claims of creditors and legal process: garnishment of 
wages for a head of family;
118
 proceeds from life insurance policies;
119
 wages or unemployment 
compensation payments due certain deceased employees;
120
 disability income benefits;
121
 assets in 
qualified tuition programs; medical savings accounts; Coverdell education savings accounts; hurricane 
savings accounts;
122
 $1,000 interest in a motor vehicle; professionally prescribed health aids; certain 
refunds or credits from financial institutions; and $4,000 interest in personal property, if the debtor does 
not claim or receive the benefits of a homestead exemption under the State Constitution.
123
 
 
Bankruptcy is a means by which a person's assets are liquidated in order to pay the person's debts 
under court supervision. The United States Constitution gives Congress the right to uniformly govern 
bankruptcy law.
124
 Bankruptcy courts are operated by the federal government. A debtor (the bankrupt 
person) is not required to give up all of his or her assets in bankruptcy. Certain property is deemed 
"exempt" from the bankruptcy case, and may be kept by the debtor without being subject to creditor 
claims. The Bankruptcy Code provides for exempt property in a bankruptcy case.
125
 In general, a debtor 
may choose to utilize the exempt property listing in state law or the exempt property of the Bankruptcy 
Code. However, federal law allows a state to opt-out of the federal law and thereby insist that debtors 
only utilize state law exemptions.
126
 Florida, like most states, has made the opt-out election to prohibit 
the use of the federal exemptions and require that debtors may only use state law exemptions.
127
 
                                                
115
 Using data from Johns Hopkins University, study authors analyzed the top 100 hospitals in the U.S. (by revenue) to measure debt 
collection methods and frequency, average charges markups and billing scores, and compare that data to safety grades and charity 
care ratings, by hospital type (government, nonprofit and for-profit). See: Michelle McGhee and Will Chase, How America’s top 
hospitals hound patients with predatory billing, AXIOS, (July 2021), available at https://www.axios.com/hospital-billing (Last visited 
February 19, 2024). Twelve Florida hospitals were included in the analysis, with a wide range of scores in each category. 
116
 Art. X, s. 4(a), Fla. Const. 
117
 For example, the federal ERISA law provides that most retirement plans are exempt from creditor claims. 
118
 S. 222.11, F.S. 
119
 S. 222.13, F.S. 
120
 S. 222.15, F.S. 
121
 S. 222.18, F.S. 
122
 S. 222.22, F.S. 
123
 S. 222.25, F.S. 
124
 Art. 1, s. 8, cl. 4, U.S. Const. 
125
 11 U.S.C. s. 522. 
126
 11 U.S.C. s. 522(b). 
127
 S. 222.20, F.S.  STORAGE NAME: h7089.HHS 	PAGE: 19 
DATE: 2/23/2024 
  
 
Statutes of Limitations 
 
A statute of limitations bars a lawsuit’s filing after a certain amount of time elapses following an injury.
128
 
This time period typically begins to run when a cause of action accrues (that is, on the date of the 
injury), but may also begin to run on the date the injury is discovered or on which it would have been 
discovered with reasonable efforts.
129
 In other words, a statute of limitations bars the available civil 
remedy if a lawsuit is not timely filed after an injury. 
 
Chapter 95, F.S., contains the bulk of Florida’s statutes of limitations. Specifically, s. 95.11, F.S., details 
a variety of statutes of limitation for legal actions other than for recovery of real property. Some of the 
limitations require legal actions to be commenced as follows: 
 WITHIN TWENTY YEARS.—An action on a judgment or decree of a court of record in this 
state.
130
 
 WITHIN FIVE YEARS.— 
o An action on a judgment or decree of any court, not of record, of this state or any court 
of the United States, any other state or territory in the United States, or a foreign country. 
o A legal or equitable action on a contract, obligation, or liability founded on a written 
instrument, except for an action to enforce a claim against a payment bond, which shall 
be governed by the applicable provisions of s. 95.11(5)(e), s. 255.05(10), s. 337.18(1), 
or s. 713.23(1)(e), and except for an action for a deficiency judgment governed by s. 
95.11(5)(h), F.S. 
o An action to foreclose a mortgage. 
o An action alleging a willful violation of s. 448.110, F.S. 
o Notwithstanding s. 95.11(b), F.S., an action for breach of a property insurance contract, 
with the period running from the date of loss.
131
 
 WITHIN FOUR YEARS.— 
o An action relating to the determination of paternity, with the time running from the date 
the child reaches the age of majority. 
o An action founded on the design, planning, or construction of an improvement to real 
property, with the time running from the date of the issuance of certain certificates, or the 
date of construction abandonment, whichever is earliest, in general. 
o An action for injury to a person founded on the design, manufacture, distribution, or sale 
of personal property that is not permanently incorporated in an improvement to real 
property, including fixtures. 
o An action founded on a statutory liability. 
o An action for trespass on real property. 
o An action for taking, detaining, or injuring personal property. 
o An action to recover specific personal property. 
o A legal or equitable action founded on fraud. 
o A legal or equitable action on a contract, obligation, or liability not founded on a written 
instrument, including an action for the sale and delivery of goods, wares, and 
merchandise, and on store accounts. 
o An action to rescind a contract. 
o An action for money paid to any governmental authority by mistake or inadvertence. 
o An action for a statutory penalty or forfeiture. 
o An action for assault, battery, false arrest, malicious prosecution, malicious interference, 
false imprisonment, or any other intentional tort, except as provided in subsections (4), 
(5), and (7). 
o Any action not specifically provided for in these statutes. 
o An action alleging a violation, other than a willful violation, of s. 448.110. F.S.
132
 
                                                
128
 Legal Information Institute, Statute of Limitations, https://www.law.cornell.edu/wex/statute_of_limitations (Last visited January 22, 
2024). 
129
 Id. 
130
 S. 95.11(1), F.S. 
131
 S. 95.11(2), F.S. 
132
 S. 95.11(3), F.S.  STORAGE NAME: h7089.HHS 	PAGE: 20 
DATE: 2/23/2024 
  
 WITHIN TWO YEARS.— 
o An action founded on negligence. 
o An action for professional malpractice, other than medical malpractice, whether founded 
on contract or tort; provided that the period of limitations shall run from the time the 
cause of action is discovered or should have been discovered with the exercise of due 
diligence. 
o An action for medical malpractice
133
 with the period running from the time the incident 
giving rise to the action occurred or within two years from the time the incident is 
discovered, or should have been discovered, up to four years. 
o An action for wrongful death. 
o An action founded upon a violation of any provision of chapter 517, F.S. with the period 
running from the time the facts giving rise to the cause of action were discovered or 
should have been discovered with the exercise of due diligence, but not more than five 
years from the date such violation occurred. 
o An action for libel or slander.
134
 
 WITHIN ONE YEAR.— 
o An action for specific performance of a contract. 
o An action to enforce an equitable lien arising from the furnishing of labor, services, or 
material for the improvement of real property. 
o An action to enforce the Uniform Commercial Code - Letters of Credit, ch. 675, F.S. 
o An action against any guaranty association and its insured, with the period running from 
the date of the deadline for filing claims in the order of liquidation. 
o An action to enforce any claim, except certain claims, against a payment bond on which 
the principal is a contractor, subcontractor, or sub-subcontractor from the last furnishing 
of labor, services, or materials or from the last furnishing of labor, services, or materials 
by the contractor if the contractor is the principal on a bond on the same construction 
project, whichever is later. 
o Except for actions described in s. 95.11(8), F.S., , a petition for extraordinary writ, other 
than a petition challenging a criminal conviction, filed by or on behalf of a prisoner as 
defined in s. 57.085, F.S. 
o Except for actions described in s. 95.11(8), F.S., an action brought by or on behalf of a 
prisoner, as defined in s. 57.085, F.S., relating to the conditions of the prisoner’s 
confinement. 
o An action to enforce a claim of a deficiency related to a note secured by a mortgage 
against a residential property that is a one-family to four-family dwelling unit which shall 
run from the day after the certificate is issued by the clerk of court or the day after the 
mortgagee accepts a deed in lieu of foreclosure.
135
 
 
Direct Health Care Agreements 
 
Codified in Florida law in 2028,
136
 direct health care agreements are non-insurance contracts between 
health care providers and patients. Such agreements are not subject to the Florida Insurance Code and 
are not regulated by the Department of Financial Services or the Office of Insurance Regulation.  
 
The direct provider arrangement eliminates third party payors and instead creates a contractual 
relationship between the health care provider and the patient usually with a small monthly fee (usually 
around $70 per individual) for access to the designated scope of benefits. Nationally, the Direct Primary 
Care Coalition reports over 1,600 associated practices.
137
 On the map below, each green dot indicates 
                                                
133
 An “action for medical malpractice” is defined as a claim in tort or in contract for damages because of the death, injury, or monetary 
loss to any person arising out of any medical, dental, or surgical diagnosis, treatment, or care by any provider of health care. See s. 
95.11(4)(c), F.S. 
134
 S. 95.11(4), F.S. 
135
 S. 95.11(5), F.S. 
136
 Ch. Law 2018-89, L.O.F. 
137
 Direct Primary Care Coalition, Direct Primary Care Mapper, available at https://mapper.dpcfrontier.com/ (Last visited January 22, 
2024).  STORAGE NAME: h7089.HHS 	PAGE: 21 
DATE: 2/23/2024 
  
a pure direct primary care model, a red dot a hybrid model, and a blue dot an onsite model. A provider 
with a hybrid model may have a mix of both direct primary care patients as well as other patients.  
 
 
 
The agreement between the parties must adhere to specific statutory requirements to be a valid 
agreement. To be valid, the agreement must:  
 Be in writing. 
 Be signed by the health care provider or an agent of the health care provider and the patient, 
the patient’s legal representative, or the patient’s employer. 
 Allow a party to terminate the agreement by giving the other party at least 30 days’ advance 
written notice. The agreement may provide for immediate termination due to a violation of the 
physician-patient relationship or a breach of the terms of the agreement. 
 Describe the scope of health care services that are covered by the monthly fee. 
 Specify the monthly fee and any fees for health care services not covered by the monthly fee. 
 Specify the duration of the agreement and any automatic renewal provisions. 
 Offer a refund to the patient, the patient’s legal representative, or the patient’s employer of 
monthly fees paid in advance if the health care provider ceases to offer health care services for 
any reason. 
 Contain, in contrasting color and in at least 12-point type, the following statement on the 
signature page: “This agreement is not health insurance and the health care provider will not 
file any claims against the patient’s health insurance policy or plan for reimbursement of any 
health care services covered by the agreement. This agreement does not qualify as minimum 
essential coverage to satisfy the individual shared responsibility provision of the Patient 
Protection and Affordable Care Act, 26 U.S.C. s. 5000A. This agreement is not workers’ 
compensation insurance and does not replace an employer’s obligations under chapter 440.”
138
 
 
Patients who seek services under these agreements may see health care providers for any services for 
which the provider is licensed and has the competency and training to provide.
139
 Currently, direct 
health care arrangements are limited to those providers who are defined as a “health care provider”, 
under s. 624.27, F.S., and licensed as one of the following: 
 Chapter 458 (medical doctors);  
 Chapter 459 (osteopathic doctors); 
 Chapter 460 (chiropractic physicians); 
                                                
138
 S. 624.67(4)(a)-(h), F.S. 
139
 S. 624.67(1)(c), F.S.  STORAGE NAME: h7089.HHS 	PAGE: 22 
DATE: 2/23/2024 
  
 Chapter 461 (podiatrists); 
 Chapter 464 (nursing, including advanced or specialized nursing practice, advanced practice 
registered nurse, licensed practice nurse, or registered nurse); 
 Chapter 466 (dental or dental hygienist); or  
 A health care group practice, who provides health care services to patients.
140
 
 
Health Care Price Transparency and Medical Debt 
 
The bill increases patient access to health care cost information, and offers a measure of protection 
from unreasonable and burdensome medical debt. The various provisions apply to hospitals, 
ambulatory surgical centers, health insurers, and HMOs. The bill brings provisions from recent federal 
law and regulation into the Florida Statutes; in doing so, the bill requires compliance by facilities and 
insurers as a condition of state licensure, thus ensuring that these provisions will be fully adopted and 
adequately enforced in Florida.
141
 
 
Facility Price Transparency 
 
 
 
Facility Billing Estimates 
 
The bill requires that all patients receive cost-of-care information prior to receiving scheduled, 
nonemergency treatment in hospitals and ambulatory surgical centers, and from physicians providing 
services in those facilities. 
 
At present, licensed facilities are required to provide a customized estimate of “reasonably anticipated 
charges” to a patient for treatment of the patient’s specific condition, upon request of the patient. The 
bill makes these personalized estimates mandatory, rather than dependent on patient requests. A 
facility must submit the estimate of charges to a patient’s health plan at least three business days 
before a service is to be furnished, according to the following schedule: 
 
 In the case of a service scheduled less than 10 business days in advance, no later than one 
business day after the service is scheduled.  
 In the case of a service scheduled 10 or more business days in advance, no later than three 
business days after a service is scheduled.  
 
By requiring facilities to provide a good-faith estimate of charges to each patient in advance of 
treatment, the bill mirrors the requirements of the federal No Surprises Act (Act).
142
 Compliance with the 
Act was required by January 1, 2022. The bill subjects ASCs to these requirements, which the federal 
Act does not; to that end, the bill makes its provisions applicable to ASCs beginning January 1, 2026. 
This grants the ASCs additional time to implement the bill requirements, which the hospitals already 
had. 
 
Shoppable Services 
The bill requires each licensed hospital and ambulatory surgical center (ASC) to post a consumer-
friendly list of standard charges for at least 300 shoppable health care services on a facility website. A 
facility that provides less than 300 distinct services will be required to post standard charges for each 
service it does provide.  
 
The bill requires facilities to post pricing information for shoppable services in accordance with the 
definition of “standard charges” established in federal rule.
143
 This information extends beyond the 
                                                
140
 S. 624.27(1)(b), F.S. 
141
 SS. 395.003, 395.301, 408.802, 624.401, and 641.22, F.S. 
142
 The No Surprises Act was enacted as part of the Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2021; (Pub. Law 116-260). 
143
 Supra, note 43.  STORAGE NAME: h7089.HHS 	PAGE: 23 
DATE: 2/23/2024 
  
traditional concept of charges to include negotiated and actual prices paid for selected services. For 
each shoppable service, a hospital or ASC must disclose the following pricing benchmarks: 
 
 The gross charge; 
 The payer-specific negotiated charge; 
 A de-identified minimum negotiated charge; 
 A de-identified maximum negotiated charge; and, 
 The discounted cash price. 
 
This bill is intended to mirror the shoppable services requirement included in the hospital facility 
transparency regulations finalized by the CMS in 2019. The bill requires facilities to disclose the 
relevant cost information as a condition of state licensure, which should result in uniform compliance 
among facilities.  
 
Facility Medical Debt Collection 
 
The bill prohibits hospitals and ASCs from engaging in any “extraordinary collection actions” against a 
patient prior to determining whether that patient is eligible for financial assistance, before providing an 
itemized bill, during an ongoing grievance process, prior to billing any applicable insurance coverage, 
for 30 days after notifying a patient in writing that a collections action will commence, and while the 
patient is negotiating in good faith the final amount of the bill or is complying with the terms of a 
payment plan with the facility. For purposes of the provision, “extraordinary collection action” means 
any action that requires a legal or judicial process, including: 
 
 Placing a lien on an individual’s property; 
 Foreclosing on an individual’s real property; 
 Attaching or seizing an individual’s bank account or any other personal property; 
 Commencing a civil action against an individual; 
 Causing an individual’s arrest; or, 
 Garnishing an individual’s wages. 
 
The bill also establishes a new set of debt collection exemptions in chapter 222, F.S. that apply 
explicitly to debt incurred as a result of medical services provided in hospitals, ambulatory surgical 
centers, or urgent care centers. Under current law, this type of medical debt is subject to the uniform 
exemptions that apply to all types of debt and are described above. The bill increases the ceiling on the 
debt collection exemptions, when the debt results from services provided in a hospital facility or 
ambulatory surgical center, as follows: 
 
 To $10,000 interest in a single motor vehicle (versus the current law exemption of $1,000); 
 To $10,000 interest in personal property, provided that a debtor does not claim the homestead 
exemption under s. 4, Art. X of the state constitution (versus the current law exemption of 
$4,000). 
 
The bill also requires each hospital and ASC to establish an internal grievance process allowing a 
patient to dispute any charges that appear on an itemized statement or bill. When a patient initiates a 
grievance, the facility must then provide an initial response to that patient within 7 business days. 
 
Lastly, the bill creates a three-year statute of limitations for any legal action related to medical debt for 
services rendered by a facility licensed under chapter 395, F.S., such as hospitals, ambulatory surgical 
centers, and urgent care centers. The statute of limitations begins running on the date that the facility 
refers the debt to a third-party collection entity.  
 
Insurer Price Transparency 
 
Shared Savings Programs 
  STORAGE NAME: h7089.HHS 	PAGE: 24 
DATE: 2/23/2024 
  
The bill establishes an accounting standard to remove a barrier to shared savings incentive programs. 
It specifies that insurer shared savings payments to patients shall be counted as medical expenses for 
rate development and rate filing purposes.
144
 This change aligns Florida law with the federal regulations 
that became final in 2020.
145
 
 
Advanced Explanation of Benefits 
The bill requires health plans to issue an advance explanation of benefits statement when a covered 
patient schedules a service in a hospital or ambulatory surgical center. This requirement builds on the 
facility charges estimate provision in the bill. Once a facility notifies a health plan that a patient has 
scheduled a medical service, the health plan must prepare a personalized estimate of costs for the 
patient in accordance with the federal No Surprises Act. A health plan must provide an advanced 
explanation of benefits to the patient according to the following schedule: 
 
 In the case of a service scheduled less than 10 business days in advance, no later than 1 
business day after receiving the estimate of charges from the facility;  
 In the case of a service scheduled 10 or more business days in advance, no later than 3 
business days after receiving the estimate of charges from the facility.  
 
Health insurers and HMOs were required comply with the federal Act by January 1, 2022. 
 
Cash Price Communication 
 
Under the Public Health Services Act, section 2799A-9(a)(2), health insurance issuers that offer 
individual health insurance coverage are prohibited from entering into an agreement with a health care 
provider, network or association of providers, or other service provider offering access to a network of 
providers that would directly or indirectly restrict the issuer from—  
 
 Providing provider-specific price or quality of care information, through a consumer engagement 
tool or any other means, to referring providers, enrollees, or individuals eligible to become 
enrollees of the plan or coverage; or  
  Sharing, for plan design, plan administration, and plan, financial, legal, and quality 
improvement activities, data described in (1) with a business associate, consistent with the 
privacy regulations promulgated pursuant to section 264(c) of HIPAA, GINA, and the ADA.
146
  
 
These regulations further restrict group health plans and health plan issuers from restricting the 
release of provider-specific cost or quality of care information or data, through a consumer 
engagement tool or any other means, to referring providers, the plan sponsor, participants, 
beneficiaries, or enrollees, or individuals eligible to become participants, beneficiaries, or enrollees of 
the plan or coverage.
147
  
 
The first attestation of compliance from health plans and issuers was due on December 31, 2023 and 
will be due annually thereafter.  
 
B. SECTION DIRECTORY: 
Section 1: Amends s. 95.11, F.S., relating to limitations other than for the recovery of real property. 
Section 2: Creates s. 222.26, F.S., relating to additional exemptions from legal process concerning 
medical debt.  
Section 3: Amends s. 395.301, F.S., relating to price transparency; itemized patient statement or 
bill; patient admission status notification.  
                                                
144
 Current law indicates that a shared savings incentive offered by a health plan is “not an administrative expense for rate development 
or rate filing purposes,” but does not affirmatively categorize the expense. SS. 627.6387, 627.6648, and 641.31076, F.S. 
145
 Supra, note 47. 
146
 Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, Gag Clause Prohibition Attestation Compliance, 
https://www.cms.gov/marketplace/about/oversight/other-insurance-protections/gag-clause-prohibition-compliance-attestation (last 
viewed January 22, 2024). 
147
 Id.  STORAGE NAME: h7089.HHS 	PAGE: 25 
DATE: 2/23/2024 
  
Section 4: Creates s. 395.3011, F.S., relating to billing and collection activities.  
Section 5: Amends s. 624.27, F.S., relating to direct health care agreements; exemption from code.  
Section 6: Amends s. 627.446, F.S., relating to advanced explanation of benefits. 
Section 7: Amends s. 627.6387, F.S., relating to shared savings incentive program.  
Section 8: Amends s. 627.6648, F.S., relating to shared savings incentive program.  
Section 9: Amends s. 641.31076, F.S., relating to shared savings incentive program.  
Section 10: Amends s. 475.01, F.S., relating to definitions.  
Section 11: Amends s. 475.611, F.S., relating to definitions.  
Section 12: Amends s. 517.191, F.S., relating to injunction to restrain violations; civil penalties; 
enforcement by Attorney General.  
Section 13: Amends s. 768.28, F.S., relating to waiver of sovereign immunity in tort actions; recovery 
limits; civil liability for damages caused during a riot; limitation on attorney fees; statute 
of limitations; exclusions; indemnification; risk management programs.  
Section 14: Amends s. 787.061, F.S., relating to civil actions by victims of human trafficking.  
Section 15: Creates an unnumbered section of law, relating to ambulatory surgical centers.  
Section 16:  Provides an effective date of July 1, 2024.  
 
II.  FISCAL ANALYSIS & ECONOMIC IMPACT STATEMENT 
 
A. FISCAL IMPACT ON STATE GOVERNMENT: 
 
1. Revenues: 
None. 
 
2. Expenditures: 
The bill has no fiscal impact on state or local governments.  
 
B. FISCAL IMPACT ON LOCAL GOVERNMENTS: 
 
1. Revenues: 
None. 
 
2. Expenditures: 
None. 
 
C. DIRECT ECONOMIC IMPACT ON PRIVATE SECTOR: 
The bill may increase costs for facilities licensed under ch. 395, F.S., by requiring them to issue cost 
estimates for all non-emergency patients, but only if the facilities are out of compliance with the current 
federal requirement to provide these estimates.  
 
Facilities may forego revenues due to the bill’s limits on the use of extraordinary collection activities; 
however, some facilities may already be providing similar due process for patients, such that the bill will 
have little impact on them.  
 
The bill may have a negative, but indeterminate, fiscal impact on health insurers and HMOs, due to the 
costs of producing advanced explanations of benefits for insureds and subscribers, triggered by the 
estimates provided by facilities, but only if these health plans are out of compliance with the current 
federal requirement to provide these to subscribers. 
 
Additionally, the bill’s increased dollar limit on personal property exemptions under ch. 222, F.S., may 
reduce revenues for medical service providers or their collection agents. 
 
D. FISCAL COMMENTS: 
  STORAGE NAME: h7089.HHS 	PAGE: 26 
DATE: 2/23/2024 
  
None. 
 
III.  COMMENTS 
 
A. CONSTITUTIONAL ISSUES: 
 
 1. Applicability of Municipality/County Mandates Provision: 
 
Not applicable. The bill does not appear to affect county or municipal governments. 
 
 2. Other: 
None. 
 
B. RULE-MAKING AUTHORITY: 
The bill or current law provide sufficient authority to all impacted state agencies and boards necessary 
to implement its provisions. 
 
C. DRAFTING ISSUES OR OTHER COMMENTS: 
None. 
 
IV.  AMENDMENTS/COMMITTEE SUBSTITUTE CHANGES 
On February 22, 2024, the Health and Human Services Committee adopted an amendment to PCB HHS 
24-02 and reported the bill favorably as a committee bill. The amendment creates s. 627.644, FS., 
requiring insurers to provide advanced explanations of benefits to enrollees and subscribers, including 
information required by federal laws and regulations. 
 
The analysis is drafted to the committee bill as reported out by the Health and Human Services Committee.