Texas 2009 81st Regular

Texas House Bill HB1357 Introduced / Bill

Filed 02/01/2025

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                    81R8825 YDB-F
 By: Isett H.B. No. 1357


 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 AN ACT
 relating to the regulation of freestanding emergency medical care
 facilities; providing an administrative penalty; creating an
 offense.
 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 SECTION 1. Subtitle B, Title 4, Health and Safety Code, is
 amended by adding Chapter 254 to read as follows:
 CHAPTER 254. FREESTANDING EMERGENCY MEDICAL CARE FACILITIES
 Sec. 254.001. DEFINITIONS. In this chapter:
 (1)  "Department" means the Department of State Health
 Services.
 (2)  "Emergency care" has the meaning assigned by
 Section 843.002, Insurance Code.
 (3)  "Executive commissioner" means the executive
 commissioner of the Health and Human Services Commission.
 (4)  "Facility" means a freestanding emergency medical
 care facility.
 (5)  "Freestanding emergency medical care facility"
 means a facility, structurally separate and distinct from a
 hospital and not affiliated with a hospital licensed under Chapter
 241, that provides limited emergency care and limited services for
 the treatment of a medical emergency.
 Sec. 254.002.  LICENSE REQUIRED.  (a) Except as provided by
 Section 254.003, a person may not establish or operate a
 freestanding emergency medical care facility in this state without
 a license issued under this chapter.
 (b) Each facility must have a separate license.
 (c)  A license issued under this chapter is not transferable
 or assignable.
 Sec. 254.003.  EXEMPTIONS FROM LICENSING REQUIREMENT. The
 following facilities are not required to be licensed under this
 chapter:
 (1)  an office or clinic of a licensed physician,
 dentist, or podiatrist;
 (2) a licensed nursing home;
 (3) a licensed hospital; or
 (4) a licensed ambulatory surgical center.
 Sec. 254.004.  LICENSE APPLICATION AND ISSUANCE. (a) An
 applicant for a license under this chapter must submit an
 application to the department on a form prescribed by the
 department.
 (b)  Each application must be accompanied by a nonrefundable
 license fee in an amount set by the executive commissioner.
 (c)  The application must contain evidence that there is at
 least one physician and one nurse on the staff of the facility who
 is licensed by the appropriate state licensing board.
 (d)  The department shall issue a license if, after
 inspection and investigation, it finds that the applicant and the
 facility meet the requirements of this chapter and the standards
 adopted under this chapter.
 (e)  The license fee must be paid annually on renewal of the
 license.
 Sec. 254.005.  INSPECTIONS. The department may inspect a
 facility at reasonable times as necessary to ensure compliance with
 this chapter.
 Sec. 254.006.  FEES.  The executive commissioner shall set
 fees imposed by this chapter in amounts reasonable and necessary to
 defray the cost of administering this chapter.
 Sec. 254.007.  FREESTANDING EMERGENCY MEDICAL CARE FACILITY
 LICENSING FUND.  All fees collected under this chapter shall be
 deposited in the state treasury to the credit of the freestanding
 emergency medical care facility licensing fund and may be
 appropriated to the department only to administer and enforce this
 chapter.
 Sec. 254.008.  ADOPTION OF RULES. The executive
 commissioner shall adopt rules necessary to implement this chapter,
 including requirements for the issuance, renewal, denial,
 suspension, and revocation of a license to operate a facility.
 Sec. 254.009.  MINIMUM STANDARDS.  Rules adopted under this
 chapter must contain minimum standards applicable to a facility and
 for:
 (1)  the construction and design of the facility,
 including plumbing, heating, lighting, ventilation, and other
 design standards necessary to ensure the health and safety of
 patients;
 (2)  the number, qualifications, and organization of
 the professional staff and other personnel;
 (3) the administration of the facility;
 (4)  the equipment essential to the health and welfare
 of the patients;
 (5)  the sanitary and hygienic conditions within the
 facility and its surroundings;
 (6)  the contents, maintenance, and release of medical
 records;
 (7)  the minimal level of care and standards for denial
 of care;
 (8)  the provision of laboratory and radiological
 services;
 (9)  the distribution and administration of drugs and
 controlled substances; and
 (10) a quality assurance program for patient care.
 Sec. 254.010.  DENIAL, SUSPENSION, PROBATION, OR REVOCATION
 OF LICENSE.  (a) The department may deny, suspend, or revoke a
 license for a violation of this chapter or a rule adopted under this
 chapter.
 (b)  The denial, suspension, or revocation of a license by
 the department and the appeal from that action are governed by the
 procedures for a contested case hearing under Chapter 2001,
 Government Code.
 (c)  If the department finds that a facility is in repeated
 noncompliance with this chapter or rules adopted under this chapter
 but that the noncompliance does not endanger public health and
 safety, the department may schedule the facility for probation
 rather than suspending or revoking the facility's license. The
 department shall provide notice to the facility of the probation
 and of the items of noncompliance not later than the 10th day before
 the date the probation period begins. The department shall
 designate a period of not less than 30 days during which the
 facility remains under probation. During the probation period, the
 facility must correct the items that were in noncompliance and
 report the corrections to the department for approval.
 (d)  The department may suspend or revoke the license of a
 facility that does not correct items that were in noncompliance or
 that does not comply with this chapter or the rules adopted under
 this chapter within the applicable probation period.
 Sec. 254.011.  EMERGENCY SUSPENSION. (a) The department
 may issue an emergency order to suspend a license issued under this
 chapter if the department has reasonable cause to believe that the
 conduct of a license holder creates an immediate danger to the
 public health and safety.
 (b)  An emergency suspension under this section is effective
 immediately without a hearing on notice to the license holder.
 (c)  On written request of the license holder, the department
 shall conduct a hearing not earlier than the 10th day or later than
 the 30th day after the date the hearing request is received to
 determine if the emergency suspension is to be continued, modified,
 or rescinded.
 (d)  A hearing and any appeal under this section are governed
 by the department's rules for a contested case hearing and Chapter
 2001, Government Code.
 Sec. 254.012.  INJUNCTION. (a) The department may petition
 a district court for a temporary restraining order to restrain a
 continuing violation of the standards or licensing requirements
 provided under this chapter if the department finds that the
 violation creates an immediate threat to the health and safety of
 the patients of a facility.
 (b)  A district court, on petition of the department and on a
 finding by the court that a person is violating the standards or
 licensing requirements provided under this chapter, may by
 injunction:
 (1)  prohibit a person from continuing a violation of
 the standards or licensing requirements provided under this
 chapter;
 (2)  restrain or prevent the establishment or operation
 of a facility without a license issued under this chapter; or
 (3)  grant any other injunctive relief warranted by the
 facts.
 (c)  The attorney general shall institute and conduct a suit
 authorized by this section at the request of the department.
 (d)  Venue for a suit brought under this section is in the
 county in which the facility is located or in Travis County.
 Sec. 254.013.  CRIMINAL PENALTY. (a) A person commits an
 offense if the person violates Section 254.002(a).
 (b) An offense under this section is a Class C misdemeanor.
 (c)  Each day of a continuing violation constitutes a
 separate offense.
 Sec. 254.014.  IMPOSITION OF ADMINISTRATIVE PENALTY. (a)
 The department may impose an administrative penalty on a person
 licensed under this chapter who violates this chapter or a rule or
 order adopted under this chapter. A penalty collected under this
 section or Section 254.015 shall be deposited in the state treasury
 in the general revenue fund.
 (b)  A proceeding to impose the penalty is considered to be a
 contested case under Chapter 2001, Government Code.
 (c)  The amount of the penalty may not exceed $1,000 for each
 violation, and each day a violation continues or occurs is a
 separate violation for purposes of imposing a penalty. The total
 amount of the penalty assessed for a violation continuing or
 occurring on separate days under this subsection may not exceed
 $5,000.
 (d) The amount shall be based on:
 (1)  the seriousness of the violation, including the
 nature, circumstances, extent, and gravity of the violation;
 (2)  the threat to health or safety caused by the
 violation;
 (3) the history of previous violations;
 (4) the amount necessary to deter a future violation;
 (5)  whether the violator demonstrated good faith,
 including when applicable whether the violator made good faith
 efforts to correct the violation; and
 (6) any other matter that justice may require.
 (e)  If the department initially determines that a violation
 occurred, the department shall give written notice of the report by
 certified mail to the person.
 (f) The notice under Subsection (e) must:
 (1) include a brief summary of the alleged violation;
 (2) state the amount of the recommended penalty; and
 (3)  inform the person of the person's right to a
 hearing on the occurrence of the violation, the amount of the
 penalty, or both.
 (g)  Within 20 days after the date the person receives the
 notice under Subsection (e), the person in writing may:
 (1)  accept the determination and recommended penalty
 of the department; or
 (2)  make a request for a hearing on the occurrence of
 the violation, the amount of the penalty, or both.
 (h)  If the person accepts the determination and recommended
 penalty or if the person fails to respond to the notice, the
 commissioner of state health services by order shall approve the
 determination and impose the recommended penalty.
 (i)  If the person requests a hearing, the commissioner of
 state health services shall refer the matter to the State Office of
 Administrative Hearings, which shall promptly set a hearing date
 and give written notice of the time and place of the hearing to the
 person. An administrative law judge of the State Office of
 Administrative Hearings shall conduct the hearing.
 (j)  The administrative law judge shall make findings of fact
 and conclusions of law and promptly issue to the commissioner of
 state health services a proposal for a decision about the
 occurrence of the violation and the amount of a proposed penalty.
 (k)  Based on the findings of fact, conclusions of law, and
 proposal for a decision, the commissioner of state health services
 by order may:
 (1)  find that a violation occurred and impose a
 penalty; or
 (2) find that a violation did not occur.
 (l)  The notice of the order under Subsection (k) that is
 sent to the person in accordance with Chapter 2001, Government
 Code, must include a statement of the right of the person to
 judicial review of the order.
 Sec. 254.015.  PAYMENT AND COLLECTION OF ADMINISTRATIVE
 PENALTY; JUDICIAL REVIEW. (a) Within 30 days after the date an
 order of the commissioner of state health services under Section
 254.014(k) that imposes an administrative penalty becomes final,
 the person shall:
 (1) pay the penalty; or
 (2)  file a petition for judicial review of the
 commissioner's order contesting the occurrence of the violation,
 the amount of the penalty, or both.
 (b)  Within the 30-day period prescribed by Subsection (a), a
 person who files a petition for judicial review may:
 (1) stay enforcement of the penalty by:
 (A)  paying the penalty to the court for placement
 in an escrow account; or
 (B)  giving the court a supersedeas bond approved
 by the court that:
 (i) is for the amount of the penalty; and
 (ii)  is effective until all judicial review
 of the commissioner's order is final; or
 (2)  request the court to stay enforcement of the
 penalty by:
 (A)  filing with the court a sworn affidavit of
 the person stating that the person is financially unable to pay the
 penalty and is financially unable to give the supersedeas bond; and
 (B)  sending a copy of the affidavit to the
 executive commissioner by certified mail.
 (c)  If the commissioner of state health services receives a
 copy of an affidavit under Subsection (b)(2), the commissioner may
 file with the court, within five days after the date the copy is
 received, a contest to the affidavit. The court shall hold a
 hearing on the facts alleged in the affidavit as soon as practicable
 and shall stay the enforcement of the penalty on finding that the
 alleged facts are true. The person who files an affidavit has the
 burden of proving that the person is financially unable to pay the
 penalty or to give a supersedeas bond.
 (d)  If the person does not pay the penalty and the
 enforcement of the penalty is not stayed, the penalty may be
 collected. The attorney general may sue to collect the penalty.
 (e)  If the court sustains the finding that a violation
 occurred, the court may uphold or reduce the amount of the penalty
 and order the person to pay the full or reduced amount of the
 penalty.
 (f)  If the court does not sustain the finding that a
 violation occurred, the court shall order that a penalty is not
 owed.
 (g)  If the person paid the penalty and if the amount of the
 penalty is reduced or the penalty is not upheld by the court, the
 court shall order, when the court's judgment becomes final, that
 the appropriate amount plus accrued interest be remitted to the
 person within 30 days after the date that the judgment of the court
 becomes final. The interest accrues at the rate charged on loans to
 depository institutions by the New York Federal Reserve Bank. The
 interest shall be paid for the period beginning on the date the
 penalty is paid and ending on the date the penalty is remitted.
 (h)  If the person gave a supersedeas bond and the penalty is
 not upheld by the court, the court shall order, when the court's
 judgment becomes final, the release of the bond. If the person gave
 a supersedeas bond and the amount of the penalty is reduced, the
 court shall order the release of the bond after the person pays the
 reduced amount.
 SECTION 2. Section 843.002, Insurance Code, is amended by
 amending Subdivision (7) and adding Subdivision (9-a) to read as
 follows:
 (7) "Emergency care" means health care services
 provided in a hospital emergency facility, freestanding emergency
 medical care facility, or comparable emergency facility to evaluate
 and stabilize medical conditions of a recent onset and severity,
 including severe pain, that would lead a prudent layperson
 possessing an average knowledge of medicine and health to believe
 that the individual's condition, sickness, or injury is of such a
 nature that failure to get immediate medical care could:
 (A) place the individual's health in serious
 jeopardy;
 (B) result in serious impairment to bodily
 functions;
 (C) result in serious dysfunction of a bodily
 organ or part;
 (D) result in serious disfigurement; or
 (E) for a pregnant woman, result in serious
 jeopardy to the health of the fetus.
 (9-a) "Freestanding emergency medical care facility"
 means a facility licensed under Chapter 254, Health and Safety
 Code.
 SECTION 3. Section 1271.155(b), Insurance Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (b) A health care plan of a health maintenance organization
 must provide the following coverage of emergency care:
 (1) a medical screening examination or other
 evaluation required by state or federal law necessary to determine
 whether an emergency medical condition exists shall be provided to
 covered enrollees in a hospital emergency facility or comparable
 facility;
 (2) necessary emergency care shall be provided to
 covered enrollees, including the treatment and stabilization of an
 emergency medical condition; and
 (3) services originated in a hospital emergency
 facility, freestanding emergency medical care facility, or
 comparable emergency facility following treatment or stabilization
 of an emergency medical condition shall be provided to covered
 enrollees as approved by the health maintenance organization,
 subject to Subsections (c) and (d).
 SECTION 4. Section 1301.001, Insurance Code, is amended by
 adding Subdivision (12) to read as follows:
 (12) "Freestanding emergency medical care facility"
 means a facility licensed under Chapter 254, Health and Safety
 Code.
 SECTION 5. Section 1301.155, Insurance Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 Sec. 1301.155. EMERGENCY CARE. (a) In this section,
 "emergency care" means health care services provided in a hospital
 emergency facility, freestanding emergency medical care facility,
 or comparable emergency facility to evaluate and stabilize a
 medical condition of a recent onset and severity, including severe
 pain, that would lead a prudent layperson possessing an average
 knowledge of medicine and health to believe that the person's
 condition, sickness, or injury is of such a nature that failure to
 get immediate medical care could result in:
 (1) placing the person's health in serious jeopardy;
 (2) serious impairment to bodily functions;
 (3) serious dysfunction of a bodily organ or part;
 (4) serious disfigurement; or
 (5) in the case of a pregnant woman, serious jeopardy
 to the health of the fetus.
 (b) If an insured cannot reasonably reach a preferred
 provider, an insurer shall provide reimbursement for the following
 emergency care services at the preferred level of benefits until
 the insured can reasonably be expected to transfer to a preferred
 provider:
 (1) a medical screening examination or other
 evaluation required by state or federal law to be provided in the
 emergency facility of a hospital that is necessary to determine
 whether a medical emergency condition exists;
 (2) necessary emergency care services, including the
 treatment and stabilization of an emergency medical condition; and
 (3) services originating in a hospital emergency
 facility or freestanding emergency medical care facility following
 treatment or stabilization of an emergency medical condition.
 SECTION 6. (a) Not later than September 1, 2010, a
 freestanding emergency medical care facility must obtain a license
 as required by Chapter 254, Health and Safety Code, as added by this
 Act.
 (b) Not later than March 1, 2010, the executive commissioner
 of the Health and Human Services Commission shall adopt rules as
 required by Chapter 254, Health and Safety Code, as added by this
 Act.
 (c) The changes in law made by Sections 3, 4, and 5 of this
 Act apply only to a health insurance policy or evidence of coverage
 delivered, issued for delivery, or renewed on or after March 1,
 2010. A health insurance policy or evidence of coverage delivered,
 issued for delivery, or renewed before that date is governed by the
 law in effect immediately before that date, and that law is
 continued in effect for that purpose.
 SECTION 7. (a) Except as provided by Subsections (b) and
 (c) of this section, this Act takes effect September 1, 2009.
 (b) Sections 254.010, 254.011, 254.012, 254.014, and
 254.015, Health and Safety Code, as added by this Act, and Sections
 843.002, 1271.155, 1301.001, and 1301.155, Insurance Code, as
 amended by this Act, take effect March 1, 2010.
 (c) Section 254.013, Health and Safety Code, as added by
 this Act, takes effect September 1, 2010.