Hawaii 2025 Regular Session

Hawaii House Bill HB1179 Compare Versions

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1-HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES H.B. NO. 1179 THIRTY-THIRD LEGISLATURE, 2025 H.D. 1 STATE OF HAWAII S.D. 2 A BILL FOR AN ACT RELATING TO RURAL EMERGENCY HOSPITALS. BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:
1+HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES H.B. NO. 1179 THIRTY-THIRD LEGISLATURE, 2025 H.D. 1 STATE OF HAWAII S.D. 1 A BILL FOR AN ACT RELATING TO RURAL EMERGENCY HOSPITALS. BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:
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33 HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES H.B. NO. 1179
44 THIRTY-THIRD LEGISLATURE, 2025 H.D. 1
5-STATE OF HAWAII S.D. 2
5+STATE OF HAWAII S.D. 1
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77 HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
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99 H.B. NO.
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1111 1179
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1313 THIRTY-THIRD LEGISLATURE, 2025
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1515 H.D. 1
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1717 STATE OF HAWAII
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19-S.D. 2
19+S.D. 1
2020
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3131 A BILL FOR AN ACT
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3737 RELATING TO RURAL EMERGENCY HOSPITALS.
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4343 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:
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47- SECTION 1. The legislature finds that the federal government has recently authorized the creation of rural emergency hospitals, a new type of medicare provider meant to help address the concerning increase in rural hospital closures nationwide. Rural emergency hospitals provide rural communities with emergency department services, observation care, and tailored outpatient medical and health services, including laboratory and imaging services. By adopting the rural emergency hospital designation, a hospital can focus on these important services while eliminating certain high-cost services that the community is not utilizing, such as inpatient care. This focus allows the hospital to allocate its limited resources to better address needs of the community the hospital serves. The legislature further finds that the creation of the rural emergency hospital designation may be beneficial to the financial health of certain hospitals and the communities they serve. By adopting a rural emergency hospital designation, a hospital can take advantage of medicare reimbursement policies that allow the hospital to adapt to community needs while sustaining budget requirements. Specifically, rural emergency hospitals receive a fixed monthly payment equal to about $3,200,000 annually. In addition, medicare payments for outpatient services such as diagnostic services are five per cent higher for rural emergency hospitals. Significantly, patients do not pay additional fees or premiums for receiving services at a rural emergency hospital. States can also determine their own ways to support rural emergency hospitals through medicaid and commercial reimbursement policies. The legislature also finds that although the cessation of inpatient services may seem like a loss for a community, for many rural hospitals, such as Lanai community hospital, the volume of inpatient care is extremely low. For example, Lanai is a critical access hospital that averages less than one patient per day in its acute inpatient care beds. This low volume illustrates that people are seeking inpatient care at other locations. Despite this low volume, hospitals that maintain inpatient care services must still pay the increasingly high costs of staffing, equipment, and supplies needed to maintain inpatient care. Besides inpatient care, Lanai community hospital currently provides emergency services along with thousands of days of nursing and skilled nursing care. Importantly, if Lanai community hospital becomes a rural emergency hospital, it would be able to surrender its inpatient licensed beds and allow the hospital to expand its availability of long-term care and skilled nursing beds, which are sorely needed by the community. The legislature notes that each rural emergency hospital is responsible for meeting higher‑level patient care needs by having transfer agreements with local trauma centers. The legislature finds that the federal government designed the rural emergency hospital program for hospitals like Lanai community hospital, to allow those hospitals to best meet the health care needs of its communities by emphasizing emergency services, long-term care, and skilled nursing. The legislature also finds that hospitals must first be recognized as a rural emergency hospital at the state level before they can pursue the new rural emergency hospital designation with the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. A state can address licensure through the enactment of legislation, which should also ensure that the medicaid policy protections that currently support hospitals and the services the hospitals provide will continue after those facilities attain a rural emergency hospital designation. Accordingly, the purpose of this Act is to: (1) Provide a statutory framework for the licensure of rural emergency hospitals at the state level; and (2) Provide for the continuation of medicaid policy protections for hospitals transitioning to a rural emergency hospital designation. SECTION 2. Chapter 321, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by adding a new section to part I to be appropriately designated and to read as follows: "§321- Rural emergency hospitals; licensing. (a) The department of health may license a hospital as a rural emergency hospital if the hospital: (1) Elects to receive the medicare designation as a rural emergency hospital; (2) Provides emergency treatment and stabilization services for an average length of stay of twenty-four hours or less; (3) Meets the requirements of title 42 United States Code section 1395x(kkk)(2); and (4) Passes inspection and receives a recommendation from the department to the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services to operate as a rural emergency hospital. (b) For the purposes of this section, "rural emergency hospital" means a hospital licensed under this section that was previously designated and operating as a critical access hospital as of December 27, 2020." SECTION 3. Section 346-1, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by adding a new definition to be appropriately inserted and to read as follows: ""Rural emergency hospital" has the same meaning as defined in section 321- ." SECTION 4. Section 346-59, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (a) to read as follows: "(a) The department shall adopt rules under chapter 91 concerning payment to providers of medical care. The department shall determine the rates of payment due to all providers of medical care, and pay [such] those amounts in accordance with the requirements of the appropriations act and the Social Security Act, as amended. Payments to critical access hospitals and rural emergency hospitals for services rendered to medicaid beneficiaries shall be calculated on a cost basis using medicare reasonable cost principles." SECTION 5. Section 346-59.1, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (g) to read as follows: "(g) For the purposes of this section: "Distant site" means the location of the health care provider delivering services through telehealth at the time the services are provided. "Health care provider" means a provider of services, as defined in title 42 United States Code section 1395x(u), a provider of medical and other health services, as defined in title 42 United States Code section 1395x(s), other practitioners licensed by the State and working within their scope of practice, and any other person or organization who furnishes, bills, or is paid for health care in the normal course of business, including but not limited to primary care providers, mental health providers, oral health providers, physicians and osteopathic physicians licensed under chapter 453, advanced practice registered nurses licensed under chapter 457, psychologists licensed under chapter 465, and dentists licensed under chapter 448. "Interactive telecommunications system" has the same meaning as the term is defined in title 42 Code of Federal Regulations section 410.78(a). "Originating site" means the location where the patient is located, whether accompanied or not by a health care provider, at the time services are provided by a health care provider through telehealth, including but not limited to a health care provider's office, hospital, critical access hospital, rural emergency hospital, rural health clinic, federally qualified health center, a patient's home, and other nonmedical environments such as school-based health centers, university‑based health centers, or the work location of a patient. "Telehealth" means the use of telecommunications services, as defined in section 269-1, to encompass four modalities: store and forward technologies, remote monitoring, live consultation, and mobile health; and which shall include but not be limited to real-time video conferencing-based communication, secure interactive and non-interactive web-based communication, and secure asynchronous information exchange, to transmit patient medical information, including diagnostic-quality digital images and laboratory results for medical interpretation and diagnosis, for the purpose of delivering enhanced health care services and information while a patient is at an originating site and the health care provider is at a distant site. Except as provided through an interactive telecommunications system, standard telephone contacts, facsimile transmissions, or e-mail text, in combination or alone, do not constitute telehealth services." SECTION 6. Section 346D-1, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by adding a new definition to be appropriately inserted and to read as follows: ""Rural emergency hospital" means a rural emergency hospital licensed under section 321- that was previously designated as a critical access hospital." SECTION 7. Section 346D-1.5, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows: "§346D-1.5 Medicaid reimbursement equity. Not later than July 1, 2008, there shall be no distinction between hospital‑based and nonhospital-based reimbursement rates for institutionalized long-term care under medicaid. Reimbursement for institutionalized intermediate care facilities and institutionalized skilled nursing facilities shall be based solely on the level of care rather than the location. This section shall not apply to critical access hospitals. Reimbursement rates for facilities that convert from a critical access hospital to another facility type after April 1, 2025, may maintain a distinction after the facility's conversion." SECTION 8. Section 671-7, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (c) to read as follows: "(c) For the purposes of this section: "Distant site" means the location of the health care provider delivering services through telehealth at the time the services are provided. "Originating site" means the location where the patient is located, whether accompanied or not by a health care provider, at the time services are provided by a health care provider through telehealth, including but not limited to a health care provider's office, hospital, critical access hospital, rural emergency hospital, rural health clinic, federally qualified health center, a patient's home, and other non-medical environments such as school-based health centers, university‑based health centers, or the work location of a patient. "Telehealth" means the use of telecommunications services, as defined in section 269‑1, to encompass four modalities: store and forward technologies, remote monitoring, live consultation, and mobile health; and which shall include but not be limited to real-time video conferencing-based communication, secure interactive and non‑interactive web-based communication, and secure asynchronous information exchange, to transmit patient medical information, including diagnostic-quality digital images and laboratory results for medical interpretation and diagnosis, for the purpose of delivering enhanced health care services and information while a patient is at an originating site and the health care provider is at a distant site. Standard telephone contacts, facsimile transmissions, or e-mail text, in combination or by itself, does not constitute a telehealth service for the purposes of this section." SECTION 9. Act 226, Session Laws of Hawaii 2000, is amended by amending section 6 to read as follows: "SECTION 6. The State's share of matching funds shall be provided through the Hawaii health systems corporation and other designated critical access hospitals' and rural emergency hospitals' appropriations to the extent funding is available. If funding is not available, medicaid reimbursement to critical access hospitals and rural emergency hospitals shall revert back to the existing medicaid payment methodology." SECTION 10. Statutory material to be repealed is bracketed and stricken. New statutory material is underscored. SECTION 11. This Act shall take effect on December 31, 2050; provided that the amendments made to section 346-59.1, Hawaii Revised Statutes, by section 5 of this Act shall not be repealed when that section is reenacted on December 31, 2025, pursuant to section 8 of Act 107, Session Laws of Hawaii 2023.
47+ SECTION 1. The legislature finds that the federal government has recently authorized the creation of rural emergency hospitals, a new type of medicare provider meant to help address the concerning increase in rural hospital closures nationwide. Rural emergency hospitals provide rural communities with emergency department services, observation care, and tailored outpatient medical and health services, including laboratory and imaging services. By adopting the rural emergency hospital designation, a hospital can focus on these important services while eliminating certain high-cost services that the community is not utilizing, such as inpatient care. This focus allows the hospital to allocate its limited resources to better address needs of the community the hospital serves. The legislature further finds that the creation of the rural emergency hospital designation may be beneficial to the financial health of certain hospitals and the communities they serve. By adopting a rural emergency hospital designation, a hospital can take advantage of medicare reimbursement policies that allow the hospital to adapt to community needs while sustaining budget requirements. Specifically, rural emergency hospitals receive a fixed monthly payment equal to about $3,200,000 annually. In addition, medicare payments for outpatient services such as diagnostic services are five per cent higher for rural emergency hospitals. Significantly, patients do not pay additional fees or premiums for receiving services at a rural emergency hospital. States can also determine their own ways to support rural emergency hospitals through medicaid and commercial reimbursement policies. The legislature also finds that although the cessation of inpatient services may seem like a loss for a community, for many rural hospitals, such as Lanai community hospital, the volume of inpatient care is extremely low. For example, Lanai is a critical access hospital that averages less than one patient per day in its acute inpatient care beds. This low volume illustrates that people are seeking inpatient care at other locations. Despite this low volume, hospitals that maintain inpatient care services must still pay the increasingly high costs of staffing, equipment, and supplies needed to maintain inpatient care. Besides inpatient care, Lanai community hospital currently provides emergency services along with thousands of days of nursing and skilled nursing care. Importantly, if Lanai community hospital becomes a rural emergency hospital, it would be able to surrender its inpatient licensed beds and allow the hospital to expand its availability of long-term care and skilled nursing beds, which are sorely needed by the community. The legislature notes that each rural emergency hospital is responsible for meeting higher‑level patient care needs by having transfer agreements with local trauma centers. The legislature finds that the federal government designed the rural emergency hospital program for hospitals like Lanai community hospital, to allow those hospitals to best meet the health care needs of its communities by emphasizing emergency services, long-term care, and skilled nursing. The legislature also finds that hospitals must first be recognized as a rural emergency hospital at the state level before they can pursue the new rural emergency hospital designation with the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. A state can address licensure through the enactment of legislation, which should also ensure that the medicaid policy protections that currently support hospitals and the services the hospitals provide will continue after those facilities attain a rural emergency hospital designation. Accordingly, the purpose of this Act is to: (1) Provide a statutory framework for the licensure of rural emergency hospitals at the state level; and (2) Provide for the continuation of medicaid policy protections for hospitals transitioning to a rural emergency hospital designation. SECTION 2. Chapter 321, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by adding a new section to part I to be appropriately designated and to read as follows: "§321- Rural emergency hospitals; licensing. (a) The department of health may license a hospital as a rural emergency hospital if the hospital: (1) Elects to receive the medicare designation as a rural emergency hospital; (2) Provides emergency treatment and stabilization services for an average length of stay of twenty-four hours or less; (3) Meets the requirements of title 42 United States Code section 1395x(kkk)(2); and (4) Passes inspection and receives a recommendation from the department to the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services to operate as a rural emergency hospital. (b) For the purposes of this section, "rural emergency hospital" means a hospital licensed under this section that was previously designated and operating as a critical access hospital as of December 27, 2020." SECTION 3. Section 346-1, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by adding a new definition to be appropriately inserted and to read as follows: ""Rural emergency hospital" has the same meaning as defined in section 321- ." SECTION 4. Section 346-59, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (a) to read as follows: "(a) The department shall adopt rules under chapter 91 concerning payment to providers of medical care. The department shall determine the rates of payment due to all providers of medical care, and pay [such] those amounts in accordance with the requirements of the appropriations act and the Social Security Act, as amended. Payments to critical access hospitals and rural emergency hospitals for services rendered to medicaid beneficiaries shall be calculated on a cost basis using medicare reasonable cost principles." SECTION 5. Section 346-59.1, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (g) to read as follows: "(g) For the purposes of this section: "Distant site" means the location of the health care provider delivering services through telehealth at the time the services are provided. "Health care provider" means a provider of services, as defined in title 42 United States Code section 1395x(u), a provider of medical and other health services, as defined in title 42 United States Code section 1395x(s), other practitioners licensed by the State and working within their scope of practice, and any other person or organization who furnishes, bills, or is paid for health care in the normal course of business, including but not limited to primary care providers, mental health providers, oral health providers, physicians and osteopathic physicians licensed under chapter 453, advanced practice registered nurses licensed under chapter 457, psychologists licensed under chapter 465, and dentists licensed under chapter 448. "Interactive telecommunications system" has the same meaning as the term is defined in title 42 Code of Federal Regulations section 410.78(a). "Originating site" means the location where the patient is located, whether accompanied or not by a health care provider, at the time services are provided by a health care provider through telehealth, including but not limited to a health care provider's office, hospital, critical access hospital, rural emergency hospital, rural health clinic, federally qualified health center, a patient's home, and other nonmedical environments such as school-based health centers, university‑based health centers, or the work location of a patient. "Telehealth" means the use of telecommunications services, as defined in section 269-1, to encompass four modalities: store and forward technologies, remote monitoring, live consultation, and mobile health; and which shall include but not be limited to real-time video conferencing-based communication, secure interactive and non-interactive web-based communication, and secure asynchronous information exchange, to transmit patient medical information, including diagnostic-quality digital images and laboratory results for medical interpretation and diagnosis, for the purpose of delivering enhanced health care services and information while a patient is at an originating site and the health care provider is at a distant site. Except as provided through an interactive telecommunications system, standard telephone contacts, facsimile transmissions, or e-mail text, in combination or alone, do not constitute telehealth services." SECTION 6. Section 346D-1, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by adding a new definition to be appropriately inserted and to read as follows: ""Rural emergency hospital" means a rural emergency hospital licensed under section 321- that was previously designated as a critical access hospital." SECTION 7. Section 346D-1.5, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows: "§346D-1.5 Medicaid reimbursement equity. Not later than July 1, 2008, there shall be no distinction between hospital‑based and nonhospital-based reimbursement rates for institutionalized long-term care under medicaid. Reimbursement for institutionalized intermediate care facilities and institutionalized skilled nursing facilities shall be based solely on the level of care rather than the location. This section shall not apply to critical access hospitals[.] or rural emergency hospitals." SECTION 8. Section 671-7, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (c) to read as follows: "(c) For purposes of this section: "Distant site" means the location of the health care provider delivering services through telehealth at the time the services are provided. "Originating site" means the location where the patient is located, whether accompanied or not by a health care provider, at the time services are provided by a health care provider through telehealth, including but not limited to a health care provider's office, hospital, critical access hospital, rural emergency hospital, rural health clinic, federally qualified health center, a patient's home, and other non-medical environments such as school-based health centers, university‑based health centers, or the work location of a patient. "Telehealth" means the use of telecommunications services, as defined in section 269‑1, to encompass four modalities: store and forward technologies, remote monitoring, live consultation, and mobile health; and which shall include but not be limited to real-time video conferencing-based communication, secure interactive and non‑interactive web-based communication, and secure asynchronous information exchange, to transmit patient medical information, including diagnostic-quality digital images and laboratory results for medical interpretation and diagnosis, for the purpose of delivering enhanced health care services and information while a patient is at an originating site and the health care provider is at a distant site. Standard telephone contacts, facsimile transmissions, or e-mail text, in combination or by itself, does not constitute a telehealth service for the purposes of this section." SECTION 9. Act 226, Session Laws of Hawaii 2000, is amended by amending section 6 to read as follows: "SECTION 6. The State's share of matching funds shall be provided through the Hawaii health systems corporation and other designated critical access hospitals' and rural emergency hospitals' appropriations to the extent funding is available. If funding is not available, medicaid reimbursement to critical access hospitals and rural emergency hospitals shall revert back to the existing medicaid payment methodology." SECTION 10. Statutory material to be repealed is bracketed and stricken. New statutory material is underscored. SECTION 11. This Act shall take effect on December 31, 2050; provided that the amendments made to section 346-59.1, Hawaii Revised Statutes, by section 5 of this Act shall not be repealed when that section is reenacted on December 31, 2025, pursuant to section 8 of Act 107, Session Laws of Hawaii 2023.
4848
4949 SECTION 1. The legislature finds that the federal government has recently authorized the creation of rural emergency hospitals, a new type of medicare provider meant to help address the concerning increase in rural hospital closures nationwide. Rural emergency hospitals provide rural communities with emergency department services, observation care, and tailored outpatient medical and health services, including laboratory and imaging services. By adopting the rural emergency hospital designation, a hospital can focus on these important services while eliminating certain high-cost services that the community is not utilizing, such as inpatient care. This focus allows the hospital to allocate its limited resources to better address needs of the community the hospital serves.
5050
5151 The legislature further finds that the creation of the rural emergency hospital designation may be beneficial to the financial health of certain hospitals and the communities they serve. By adopting a rural emergency hospital designation, a hospital can take advantage of medicare reimbursement policies that allow the hospital to adapt to community needs while sustaining budget requirements. Specifically, rural emergency hospitals receive a fixed monthly payment equal to about $3,200,000 annually. In addition, medicare payments for outpatient services such as diagnostic services are five per cent higher for rural emergency hospitals. Significantly, patients do not pay additional fees or premiums for receiving services at a rural emergency hospital. States can also determine their own ways to support rural emergency hospitals through medicaid and commercial reimbursement policies.
5252
5353 The legislature also finds that although the cessation of inpatient services may seem like a loss for a community, for many rural hospitals, such as Lanai community hospital, the volume of inpatient care is extremely low. For example, Lanai is a critical access hospital that averages less than one patient per day in its acute inpatient care beds. This low volume illustrates that people are seeking inpatient care at other locations. Despite this low volume, hospitals that maintain inpatient care services must still pay the increasingly high costs of staffing, equipment, and supplies needed to maintain inpatient care.
5454
5555 Besides inpatient care, Lanai community hospital currently provides emergency services along with thousands of days of nursing and skilled nursing care. Importantly, if Lanai community hospital becomes a rural emergency hospital, it would be able to surrender its inpatient licensed beds and allow the hospital to expand its availability of long-term care and skilled nursing beds, which are sorely needed by the community. The legislature notes that each rural emergency hospital is responsible for meeting higher‑level patient care needs by having transfer agreements with local trauma centers.
5656
5757 The legislature finds that the federal government designed the rural emergency hospital program for hospitals like Lanai community hospital, to allow those hospitals to best meet the health care needs of its communities by emphasizing emergency services, long-term care, and skilled nursing.
5858
5959 The legislature also finds that hospitals must first be recognized as a rural emergency hospital at the state level before they can pursue the new rural emergency hospital designation with the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. A state can address licensure through the enactment of legislation, which should also ensure that the medicaid policy protections that currently support hospitals and the services the hospitals provide will continue after those facilities attain a rural emergency hospital designation.
6060
6161 Accordingly, the purpose of this Act is to:
6262
6363 (1) Provide a statutory framework for the licensure of rural emergency hospitals at the state level; and
6464
6565 (2) Provide for the continuation of medicaid policy protections for hospitals transitioning to a rural emergency hospital designation.
6666
6767 SECTION 2. Chapter 321, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by adding a new section to part I to be appropriately designated and to read as follows:
6868
6969 "§321- Rural emergency hospitals; licensing. (a) The department of health may license a hospital as a rural emergency hospital if the hospital:
7070
7171 (1) Elects to receive the medicare designation as a rural emergency hospital;
7272
7373 (2) Provides emergency treatment and stabilization services for an average length of stay of twenty-four hours or less;
7474
7575 (3) Meets the requirements of title 42 United States Code section 1395x(kkk)(2); and
7676
7777 (4) Passes inspection and receives a recommendation from the department to the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services to operate as a rural emergency hospital.
7878
7979 (b) For the purposes of this section, "rural emergency hospital" means a hospital licensed under this section that was previously designated and operating as a critical access hospital as of December 27, 2020."
8080
8181 SECTION 3. Section 346-1, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by adding a new definition to be appropriately inserted and to read as follows:
8282
8383 ""Rural emergency hospital" has the same meaning as defined in section 321- ."
8484
8585 SECTION 4. Section 346-59, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (a) to read as follows:
8686
8787 "(a) The department shall adopt rules under chapter 91 concerning payment to providers of medical care. The department shall determine the rates of payment due to all providers of medical care, and pay [such] those amounts in accordance with the requirements of the appropriations act and the Social Security Act, as amended. Payments to critical access hospitals and rural emergency hospitals for services rendered to medicaid beneficiaries shall be calculated on a cost basis using medicare reasonable cost principles."
8888
8989 SECTION 5. Section 346-59.1, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (g) to read as follows:
9090
9191 "(g) For the purposes of this section:
9292
9393 "Distant site" means the location of the health care provider delivering services through telehealth at the time the services are provided.
9494
9595 "Health care provider" means a provider of services, as defined in title 42 United States Code section 1395x(u), a provider of medical and other health services, as defined in title 42 United States Code section 1395x(s), other practitioners licensed by the State and working within their scope of practice, and any other person or organization who furnishes, bills, or is paid for health care in the normal course of business, including but not limited to primary care providers, mental health providers, oral health providers, physicians and osteopathic physicians licensed under chapter 453, advanced practice registered nurses licensed under chapter 457, psychologists licensed under chapter 465, and dentists licensed under chapter 448.
9696
9797 "Interactive telecommunications system" has the same meaning as the term is defined in title 42 Code of Federal Regulations section 410.78(a).
9898
9999 "Originating site" means the location where the patient is located, whether accompanied or not by a health care provider, at the time services are provided by a health care provider through telehealth, including but not limited to a health care provider's office, hospital, critical access hospital, rural emergency hospital, rural health clinic, federally qualified health center, a patient's home, and other nonmedical environments such as school-based health centers, university‑based health centers, or the work location of a patient.
100100
101101 "Telehealth" means the use of telecommunications services, as defined in section 269-1, to encompass four modalities: store and forward technologies, remote monitoring, live consultation, and mobile health; and which shall include but not be limited to real-time video conferencing-based communication, secure interactive and non-interactive web-based communication, and secure asynchronous information exchange, to transmit patient medical information, including diagnostic-quality digital images and laboratory results for medical interpretation and diagnosis, for the purpose of delivering enhanced health care services and information while a patient is at an originating site and the health care provider is at a distant site. Except as provided through an interactive telecommunications system, standard telephone contacts, facsimile transmissions, or e-mail text, in combination or alone, do not constitute telehealth services."
102102
103103 SECTION 6. Section 346D-1, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by adding a new definition to be appropriately inserted and to read as follows:
104104
105105 ""Rural emergency hospital" means a rural emergency hospital licensed under section 321- that was previously designated as a critical access hospital."
106106
107107 SECTION 7. Section 346D-1.5, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:
108108
109- "§346D-1.5 Medicaid reimbursement equity. Not later than July 1, 2008, there shall be no distinction between hospital‑based and nonhospital-based reimbursement rates for institutionalized long-term care under medicaid. Reimbursement for institutionalized intermediate care facilities and institutionalized skilled nursing facilities shall be based solely on the level of care rather than the location. This section shall not apply to critical access hospitals. Reimbursement rates for facilities that convert from a critical access hospital to another facility type after April 1, 2025, may maintain a distinction after the facility's conversion."
109+ "§346D-1.5 Medicaid reimbursement equity. Not later than July 1, 2008, there shall be no distinction between hospital‑based and nonhospital-based reimbursement rates for institutionalized long-term care under medicaid. Reimbursement for institutionalized intermediate care facilities and institutionalized skilled nursing facilities shall be based solely on the level of care rather than the location. This section shall not apply to critical access hospitals[.] or rural emergency hospitals."
110110
111111 SECTION 8. Section 671-7, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (c) to read as follows:
112112
113- "(c) For the purposes of this section:
113+ "(c) For purposes of this section:
114114
115115 "Distant site" means the location of the health care provider delivering services through telehealth at the time the services are provided.
116116
117117 "Originating site" means the location where the patient is located, whether accompanied or not by a health care provider, at the time services are provided by a health care provider through telehealth, including but not limited to a health care provider's office, hospital, critical access hospital, rural emergency hospital, rural health clinic, federally qualified health center, a patient's home, and other non-medical environments such as school-based health centers, university‑based health centers, or the work location of a patient.
118118
119119 "Telehealth" means the use of telecommunications services, as defined in section 269‑1, to encompass four modalities: store and forward technologies, remote monitoring, live consultation, and mobile health; and which shall include but not be limited to real-time video conferencing-based communication, secure interactive and non‑interactive web-based communication, and secure asynchronous information exchange, to transmit patient medical information, including diagnostic-quality digital images and laboratory results for medical interpretation and diagnosis, for the purpose of delivering enhanced health care services and information while a patient is at an originating site and the health care provider is at a distant site. Standard telephone contacts, facsimile transmissions, or e-mail text, in combination or by itself, does not constitute a telehealth service for the purposes of this section."
120120
121121 SECTION 9. Act 226, Session Laws of Hawaii 2000, is amended by amending section 6 to read as follows:
122122
123123 "SECTION 6. The State's share of matching funds shall be provided through the Hawaii health systems corporation and other designated critical access hospitals' and rural emergency hospitals' appropriations to the extent funding is available. If funding is not available, medicaid reimbursement to critical access hospitals and rural emergency hospitals shall revert back to the existing medicaid payment methodology."
124124
125125 SECTION 10. Statutory material to be repealed is bracketed and stricken. New statutory material is underscored.
126126
127127 SECTION 11. This Act shall take effect on December 31, 2050; provided that the amendments made to section 346-59.1, Hawaii Revised Statutes, by section 5 of this Act shall not be repealed when that section is reenacted on December 31, 2025, pursuant to section 8 of Act 107, Session Laws of Hawaii 2023.
128128
129- Report Title: DOH; Rural Emergency Hospitals; Licensure; Medicaid Description: Creates a framework for the licensure of rural emergency hospitals at the state level by the Department of Health. Provides for the continuation of Medicaid policy protections for hospitals transitioning to a rural emergency hospital designation. Effective 12/31/2050. (SD2) The summary description of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.
129+ Report Title: DOH; Rural Emergency Hospitals; Licensure; Medicaid Description: Creates a framework for the licensure of rural emergency hospitals at the state level by the Department of Health. Provides for the continuation of Medicaid policy protections for hospitals transitioning to a rural emergency hospital designation. Effective 12/31/2050. (SD1) The summary description of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.
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131131
132132
133133
134134
135135 Report Title:
136136
137137 DOH; Rural Emergency Hospitals; Licensure; Medicaid
138138
139139
140140
141141 Description:
142142
143-Creates a framework for the licensure of rural emergency hospitals at the state level by the Department of Health. Provides for the continuation of Medicaid policy protections for hospitals transitioning to a rural emergency hospital designation. Effective 12/31/2050. (SD2)
143+Creates a framework for the licensure of rural emergency hospitals at the state level by the Department of Health. Provides for the continuation of Medicaid policy protections for hospitals transitioning to a rural emergency hospital designation. Effective 12/31/2050. (SD1)
144144
145145
146146
147147
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149149
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151151 The summary description of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.