Current:Home > StocksDelaware lawmakers OK bill enabling board of political appointees to oversee hospital budgets -BeyondProfit Compass
Delaware lawmakers OK bill enabling board of political appointees to oversee hospital budgets
View
Date:2025-04-15 02:43:06
DOVER, Del. (AP) — The state House on Tuesday gave final approval to a bill aimed at curtailing the increase in health care costs in Delaware by establishing a state board with authority to impose budgets on the state’s largest hospitals.
The legislation passed the House on a 24-16 vote with two Democrats joining Republicans in voting against the measure. It triggered strong opposition from the medical and business communities.
It now goes to Democratic Gov. John Carney, who released a statement after the vote saying the bill will help lower the growth of health care costs in Delaware.
“I look forward to signing it into law,” he said.
Democratic lawmakers revised the legislation in recent days to address some of the concerns expressed by opponents, including scores of doctors who demonstrated at Legislative Hall over the past several weeks to oppose the measure. The revisions led the Delaware Health Care Association, or DHA, the trade group for Delaware hospitals, to drop its opposition to the measure and adopt a neutral stance.
The bill, modeled on a similar program in Vermont, establishes the Diamond State Hospital Cost Review Board, a board of health care “experts” appointed by the governor. Hospitals would be required to submit detailed annual budgets to the panel, which would be charged with ensuring that hospitals align their price increases with annual health care cost growth benchmarks set by the state.
For 2025 and 2026, the price increase benchmark will be 2%, or the core consumer price index plus 1%, over the previous year’s rates. After that, the benchmark will be tied to health care cost benchmarks established by the state council that also sets Delaware’s official revenue estimates.
A hospital that exceeds the benchmark will be required to submit a performance improvement plan with specific measures and a timetable to rein in costs. If the improvement plan fails to control prices, the state board can require the hospital to submit the next year’s budget for approval. If the hospital and the board cannot agree on that budget, the board can impose a budget on the hospital.
The panel’s decisions could be challenged in Superior Court, but the legislation requires the court to take “due account of the presumption of official regularity and the specialized competence of the board.”
Hospitals that fail to submit required information or adhere to the rules could be assessed a civil penalty of $500,000.
Republicans indicated that the bill could face a court challenge over whether it received enough votes, because it gives a state panel authority over hospital boards. They argue that Delaware’s general corporation law reserves authority to manage the affairs of a corporation, including a hospital corporation, to a board of directors. Any change in the corporation law requires a two-thirds vote in each chamber of the legislature, which the hospital bill failed to obtain.
Opponents of the measure also questioned the wisdom of following Vermont’s lead in allowing the state to set hospital budgets.
“Health care costs are not going down in Vermont,” DHA President and CEO Brian Frazee told a Senate committee at hearing earlier this month. “It’s not working.”
According to the Centers for Medicaid and Medicare Services, the annual cost increase for hospital services in Vermont averaged 6.8% from 1991 to 2020, a period that encompassed the formation of Vermont’s hospital cost review board in 2011. Delaware, with no state review board, also saw a 6.8% average annual cost increase during that period. Only five other states saw higher average annual cost increases.
On a per capita basis, Vermont’s annual growth rate for hospital services averaged 6.4% from 1991 to 2020, second only to South Dakota’s 6.6% average annual growth rate, according to the CMS. In Delaware, the annual per capita growth rate for hospital service costs averaged 5.4% from 1991 to 2020, tied with Montana for the eight-highest percentage increase in the nation
veryGood! (76497)
Related
- Military service academies see drop in reported sexual assaults after alarming surge
- In 'The Fight for Midnight,' a teen boy confronts the abortion debate
- The AG who prosecuted George Floyd's killers has ideas for how to end police violence
- These Cast Reunions at the 2023 SAG Awards Will Have You in Your Feels
- Meet the volunteers risking their lives to deliver Christmas gifts to children in Haiti
- Hundreds of Iranian schoolgirls targeted in mystery poisonings as supreme leader urges death penalty for unforgivable crime
- Cormac McCarthy, American novelist of the stark and dark, dies at 89
- 'Of course we should be here': 'Flower Moon' receives a 9-minute ovation at Cannes
- Trump wants to turn the clock on daylight saving time
- 12 Gifts That Every Outer Banks Fan Will Fall In Love With
Ranking
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- Ozempic-like weight loss drug Wegovy coming to the U.K. market, and it will cost a fraction of what Americans pay
- Cormac McCarthy, American novelist of the stark and dark, dies at 89
- Cosmic rays help reveal corridor hidden in Egypt's Great Pyramid of Giza – but what is it?
- Where will Elmo go? HBO moves away from 'Sesame Street'
- Luis Alberto Urrea pays tribute to WWII's forgotten volunteers — including his mother
- Cuba Gooding Jr. settles a civil sex abuse case just as trial was set to begin
- U.S. intelligence review says very unlikely foreign adversary is behind Havana Syndrome
Recommendation
New data highlights 'achievement gap' for students in the US
'Transformers: Rise of the Beasts' has got your fightin' robots right here
After years of ever-shrinking orchestras, some Broadway musicals are going big
The Academy of American Poets names its first Latino head
Meet first time Grammy nominee Charley Crockett
Zendaya's 2023 SAG Awards Look Has Us Feeling Rosy
Dwyane Wade's Daughter Zaya Granted Legal Name and Gender Change
That Headband You've Seen in Every TikTok Tutorial Is Only $8