State of Illinois
90th General Assembly
Legislation

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90_SB0189

      New Act
          Creates the Health Security Act.  Requires the  State  to
      implement a universal access health care system by January 1,
      2000.   Requires  creation of a Bipartisan Health Care Reform
      Commission by September 1, 1997, to make recommendations  for
      a universal access health care plan. Effective immediately.
                                                     LRB9001614DJcd
                                               LRB9001614DJcd
 1        AN ACT concerning public health.
 2        Be  it  enacted  by  the People of the State of Illinois,
 3    represented in the General Assembly:
 4        Section 1.  Short title.  This Act may be  cited  as  the
 5    Health Security Act.
 6        Section  5.   Legislative findings.  The General Assembly
 7    recognizes  that  an  estimated  1,500,000  Illinoisans   are
 8    without  health  insurance  and  that  health  care costs are
 9    increasing at unacceptable rates.  While we anticipate health
10    care reform at  the  national  level,  the  General  Assembly
11    believes  this State must work to ensure access to the health
12    care system for all citizens of Illinois.  At the same  time,
13    this  State  must  do  a better job of containing health care
14    costs while maintaining  the  quality  of  health  care.  The
15    General  Assembly  finds that community-based, primary health
16    care services provided by a wide range  of  qualified  health
17    care  providers  is  the  most  effective  means of achieving
18    individual and social health.
19        Section 10.  Policy.
20        (a)  It is the policy of the State of Illinois to  ensure
21    that  all residents have access to quality health services at
22    costs that are  affordable.   Comprehensive  health  planning
23    through  the  application  of  a  statewide  health  resource
24    management  plan  linked  to a unified health care budget for
25    Illinois is essential.
26        (b)  On or before January 1, 2000, the State of  Illinois
27    shall implement a health care system that does the following:
28             (1)  Provides  universal  access  to a full range of
29        preventive, acute, and long-term health care services.
30             (2)  Maintains and improves the  quality  of  health
                            -2-                LRB9001614DJcd
 1        care services offered to Illinois residents.
 2             (3)  Provides  portability of coverage regardless of
 3        job status.
 4             (4)  Provides  uniform  benefits  for  all  Illinois
 5        residents.
 6             (5)  Encourages   regional   and   local    consumer
 7        participation  in  decisions  about health care delivery,
 8        financing, and provider supply.
 9             (6)  Controls capital and overall expenditures.
10             (7)  Avoids   unnecessary   duplication    in    the
11        development  and  offering  of health care facilities and
12        services.
13             (8)  Provides a mechanism for implementation of  the
14        results  of  research  to  evaluate  the effectiveness of
15        interventions, providers, and facilities.
16        Section 15.  Bipartisan Health  Care  Reform  Commission.
17    Not  later than September 1, 1997, there shall be created the
18    Bipartisan Health Care Reform Commission ("the  Commission").
19    The Commission shall consist of 26 members.  The Directors of
20    Aging,  Children  and  Family Services, Public Health, Public
21    Aid, and Insurance and the Secretary of  Human  Services  (as
22    head  of  the  successor  agency to the Departments of Mental
23    Health  and  Developmental  Disabilities  and  Rehabilitation
24    Services) shall be  ex  officio  non-voting  members  of  the
25    Commission.   The  remaining  members  shall  be appointed as
26    follows: 5 by the President of the Senate, 5 by the  Minority
27    Leader  of  the  Senate,  5  by  the  Speaker of the House of
28    Representatives, and 5 by the Minority Leader of the House of
29    Representatives. The Commission  shall  include  health  care
30    consumers,  health  care  providers,  health policy analysts,
31    representatives of business, and economists.   Members  shall
32    be  selected  to  provide  a majority representation (no less
33    than 60%) of health care consumers.  This representation  may
                            -3-                LRB9001614DJcd
 1    come  from  representatives of consumer and community groups.
 2    Health care provider representation shall be proportional  to
 3    the  number  of  those  providers involved in the delivery of
 4    health care (such as administrators, nurses, physicians,  and
 5    social  workers).   Selection  of  members  of the Commission
 6    shall be made  to  ensure  proportional  representation  with
 7    respect   to   geography,  culture,  gender,  and  age.   The
 8    Chairperson shall be elected at  the  first  meeting  of  the
 9    Commission  by  the  members of the Commission.  The Governor
10    also  shall  designate  one  or  more  departments  of  State
11    government to provide staff support  and  assistance  to  the
12    Commission.
13        Section 20.  Recommendations for universal access plan.
14        (a)  On  or  before January 1, 2000, the Commission shall
15    submit a report to the General Assembly which  shall  contain
16    (i)  the  Commission's recommendations for a universal access
17    plan based on the concept of regulated  multiple  payers  and
18    (ii)  the Commission's recommendations for a universal access
19    plan based on the concept of a single payer.  The  Commission
20    shall not be limited to the funding concepts described in the
21    preceding  sentence.   The Commission may also consider other
22    alternative funding mechanisms and  make  recommendations  it
23    deems  appropriate.   The plans shall contain recommendations
24    that if implemented will provide universal access to  a  full
25    range   of  preventive,  acute,  and  long-term  health  care
26    services by January 1, 2000.   The Commission shall submit  a
27    preliminary status report to the General Assembly by April 1,
28    1998,   describing   the   progress   of  the  Commission  in
29    accomplishing its goals.
30        (b)  For purposes of this Section:
31             (1)  A single payer system is a method of  financing
32        health  services  predominantly  through  public funds so
33        that every resident of Illinois receives a uniform set of
                            -4-                LRB9001614DJcd
 1        benefits  as  established  by  law  or  rule.    Policies
 2        governing  all  aspects  of  the management of the single
 3        payer system reside with State government,  and  benefits
 4        are administered by a single entity.
 5        The system includes the following features:
 6                  (A)  Universal   coverage   for   all  Illinois
 7             residents.
 8                  (B)  A single governmental  or  nongovernmental
 9             administrative entity which makes payments.
10                  (C)  Portability  of coverage regardless of job
11             status.
12                  (D)  Uniform benefits from a single source  for
13             all   Illinois  residents.   (Private  insurance  is
14             confined   to   services   excluded   from   uniform
15             benefits.)
16                  (E)  A broad-based public  financing  mechanism
17             with  revenues  from  employer,  employee, or public
18             sources, or a combination of those sources.
19                  (F)  A  cap  for  provider  expenditures,   and
20             global budgeting for health care facilities.
21                  (G)  Capital expenditures controlled.
22                  (H)  A binding cap on overall expenditures.
23                  (I)  Policy-making  for  the  system as a whole
24             and accountability reside with State government.
25             (2)  A regulated multiple payer system is  a  method
26        of  financing health services through a mix of public and
27        private funds so that every resident of Illinois receives
28        a uniform set of benefits as established by law or  rule.
29        State   government  is  responsible  for  regulating  the
30        multiple entities that  provide  benefits  to  residents,
31        including  regulations  for enrollment, change in premium
32        rates, payment rates to providers, and  aggregate  health
33        expenditures.   The system includes but is not limited to
34        the following features:
                            -5-                LRB9001614DJcd
 1                  (A)  Health   insurance    may    be    through
 2             employment, regionally or other-based; enrollment is
 3             compulsory and universal.
 4                  (B)  Claims are processed by multiple insurers.
 5                  (C)  Portability of uniform benefits regardless
 6             of job status.
 7                  (D)  A  uniform  benefit  plan for all Illinois
 8             residents available from  a  variety  of  public  or
 9             private payers.  (Services excluded from the uniform
10             benefit  plan  may  be  purchased  through  multiple
11             insurers or health purchasing cooperatives).
12                  (E)  The   system   is  financed  by  employer,
13             employee, or public  sources  or  a  combination  of
14             those  sources; revenues are collected and dispersed
15             by insurers or health purchasing cooperatives.
16                  (F)  Uniform  reimbursement  for  health   care
17             facilities  and  providers  regardless  of  payer or
18             reimbursement mechanism such as  capitation,  either
19             negotiated or regulated.
20                  (G)  Capital expenditures controlled.
21                  (H)  Binding cap on overall expenditures.
22                  (I)  State   government   is   responsible  for
23             regulating multiple insurers  regarding  enrollment,
24             premium   costs,   provider   payments,   and  total
25             expenditures.  Accountability for  operating  within
26             these parameters resides with insurers.
27        (c)  Both  plans  shall provide for the use of the health
28    resource management plan and a unified  health  care  budget.
29    Other  health  care cost containment mechanisms shall include
30    recommendations concerning the following:
31             (1)  An integrated system or systems of health  care
32        delivery.
33             (2)  Incentives  to  be  used  to  contain costs and
34        direct resources.
                            -6-                LRB9001614DJcd
 1             (3)  Uniform benefits that would be  provided  under
 2        each plan.
 3             (4)  Reimbursement   mechanisms   for   health  care
 4        providers.
 5             (5)  Administrative efficiencies.
 6             (6)  Mechanisms for generating  spending  priorities
 7        based  on multidisciplinary standards of care established
 8        by verifiable replicated research  studies  demonstrating
 9        quality   and   cost   effectiveness   of  interventions,
10        providers, and facilities.
11             (7)  Mechanisms for applying  and  implementing  the
12        unified  health  care  budget on a statewide basis to all
13        sectors of the health care system.
14             (8)  Mechanisms   for   reducing   the    cost    of
15        prescription  drugs  both  as part of, and separate from,
16        the uniform benefit plan.
17             (9)  Appropriate  reallocation  of  existing  health
18        care resources.
19             (10)  Equitable financing of each proposal.
20        (d)  In its report, the Commission shall  present,  at  a
21    minimum,  the range of services that would be available under
22    each plan if there were no increase, beyond inflation, in the
23    total  gross  health  care  expenditures   in   Illinois   as
24    determined  by  the  Commission  for  the first year that the
25    health care plan would be in effect.
26        (e)  In  developing  the  plans,  the  Commission   shall
27    incorporate anticipated or actual health care reform measures
28    adopted  at  the  federal level.  The Commission shall review
29    those  changes  to  assess  their  adequacy  of  meeting  and
30    achieving the goals of this Act.
31        Section 25.  Hearings on  universal  access  plans.   The
32    Commission  shall  seek  public comment on the development of
33    the universal access plans.  In seeking public comment on the
                            -7-                LRB9001614DJcd
 1    development of the Commission's recommendations for universal
 2    access plans, the Commission shall hold  at  least  8  public
 3    hearings in different geographical regions of the State.  The
 4    hearings  shall  take place before the Commission's report is
 5    submitted to the  General  Assembly.   The  Commission  shall
 6    consult  with health care providers and health care consumers
 7    in developing the Commission's recommendations for  universal
 8    access plans.
 9        Section  30.  Public education on universal access plans.
10    After submitting its report  to  the  General  Assembly,  the
11    Commission   shall   develop  and  conduct  extensive  public
12    education in different geographic regions of the State on the
13    intent, content, and impact of each of the  universal  access
14    plans  that  have  been  recommended to the General Assembly.
15    All efforts shall be  made  to  communicate  fully  with  the
16    Illinois  public  to enable all sectors to be informed of the
17    Commission's recommendations  for  a  universal  access  plan
18    based  on  the  concept  of regulated multiple payers and the
19    Commission's recommendations  for  a  universal  access  plan
20    based on the concept of a single payer.
21        Section 35.  Long-term care report.
22        (a)  The  Commission's  report  to  the  General Assembly
23    shall include recommendations for  including  long-term  care
24    services  in  the  universal  access  plans.   Long-term care
25    services include  those  long-term  care  services  presently
26    covered  in  Illinois  under Title XIX of the Social Security
27    Act.
28        (b)  Nothing  in  this   Section   shall   preclude   the
29    Commission  from  recommending  cost sharing arrangements for
30    long-term care services, nor  from  recommending  that  those
31    services   be   phased   in   over   time.  The  Commission's
32    recommendations shall support, and  not  serve  to  supplant,
                            -8-                LRB9001614DJcd
 1    informal  care giving by family and friends and shall include
 2    cost-containment  recommendations  for  any  long-term   care
 3    service  suggested  for  inclusion  in  the  universal access
 4    plans.
 5        (c)  The  Commission's  report   shall   estimate   costs
 6    associated   with   each   of  the  long-term  care  services
 7    recommended for inclusion in the universal access  plans  and
 8    may   suggest  independent  financing  mechanisms  for  those
 9    services.  The report shall also set forth the projected cost
10    to the State and its citizens over the next 20 years if there
11    were no change in the present  accessibility,  affordability,
12    or financing of long-term care services in this State.
13        Section  99.  Effective date.  This Act takes effect upon
14    becoming law.

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