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H.C.R. 8
This document includes House Committee Amendments incorporated into the bill on
Mon, Feb 8, 2010 at 12:01 PM by jeyring. -->
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CONCURRENT RESOLUTION ON FEDERAL
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HEALTH CARE REFORM
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2010 GENERAL SESSION
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STATE OF UTAH
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Chief Sponsor: David Clark
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Senate Sponsor:
Wayne L. Niederhauser
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LONG TITLE
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General Description:
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This concurrent resolution of the Legislature and Governor urges Congress to refuse to
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pass any health care legislation that contains certain provisions, urges Congress to pass
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health care legislation with specific provisions, and urges Congress, should it pass
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health reform legislation that further restricts states, to grandfather certain state laws,
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regulations, and practices.
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Highlighted Provisions:
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This resolution:
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. urges Congress to refuse to enact, and the President of the United States to refuse to
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sign, any legislation that imposes further restrictions on any state's ability to regulate
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the payment and delivery of health care, imposes additional financial burden related
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to health care on any state, or limits the ability of consumers and businesses to
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create innovative models for higher quality, lower cost health care;
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. urges Congress to pass, and the President to sign, legislation that grants states
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greater flexibility under federal laws and regulations related to health care and
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encourages states to create health reform demonstration projects with the potential
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for replication elsewhere; and
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. urges that H. [
,
] .H should Congress pass, and the President sign, legislation that
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further
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restricts states in any manner, the legislation recognize states' efforts to reform
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health care by grandfathering any state laws, regulations, or practices intended to contain costs,
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improve quality, increase consumerism, or otherwise implement health system reform
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concepts.
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Special Clauses:
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None
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Be it resolved by the Legislature of the state of Utah, the Governor concurring therein:
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WHEREAS, people's health affects not only their sense of well being, but their capacity
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to contribute to their families, to their employers, and to society at large;
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WHEREAS, the improvement and maintenance of individual health depends to a
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significant extent on the widespread availability of affordable, high quality health care;
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WHEREAS, the widespread availability of affordable, high quality health care is
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threatened by long-term runaway spending in a system that too often delivers suboptimal care;
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WHEREAS, runaway spending and suboptimal care are attributable to various factors,
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but are perpetuated to a large extent by a third-party payer system that fails to reward individual
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effort to preserve and improve one's health and that fails to reward delivery of the most
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effective care at the lowest cost;
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WHEREAS, for many years, Utah has been laying the foundation for genuine long-term
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health system reform;
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WHEREAS, this foundation includes the creation of the Utah Health Data Authority in
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1990 and the subsequent collection and publication of hospital charges by facility and adjusted
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for risk;
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WHEREAS, this foundation includes the establishment in 1993 of the Utah Health
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Information Network, a nationally recognized statewide system for processing health insurance
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claims at a small fraction of the cost often charged by other claims processors;
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WHEREAS, this foundation includes the 2005 requirement that the Utah Health Data
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Authority publish reports that compare health care facilities based on charges, quality, and
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safety;
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WHEREAS, this foundation includes the 2007-08 development of an all-payer database
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that will report payments, as opposed to charges, for entire episodes of medical care, and will
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ultimately allow consumers to choose from among competing providers of treatments for any
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particular condition based on outcomes, price, and other attributes important to the consumer;
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WHEREAS, this foundation includes the 2008-09 creation of the first statewide system
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in the nation for standardized electronic exchange of clinical health information across provider
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systems, including exchange of diagnostic test results and electronic medical record
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information;
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WHEREAS, this foundation includes the 2008 creation of the Health System Reform
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Task Force, a legislative body that has engaged consumers, employers, doctors, hospitals, and
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insurers in a voluntary, cooperative effort spanning two years, and involving thousands of
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hours, to develop a strategic plan for health system reform;
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WHEREAS, this foundation includes the 2009-10 creation of payment and delivery
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reform demonstration projects designed to align third-party payment structures with provider
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practices that result in the highest quality of care for both chronic and acute conditions;
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WHEREAS, this foundation includes the 2009 creation of the nation's second-only
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health insurance exchange, a virtual marketplace where employees may enroll under a defined
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contribution arrangement, select from a range of plans broader than what an employer
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traditionally offers, and fund premiums with contributions from multiple sources;
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WHEREAS, this foundation outlined above is the result of an iterative process of
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creation and refinement that has relied heavily on the input of all major stakeholders in the
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health care system and has been established largely on the basis of cooperation and consensus
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rather than compulsion;
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WHEREAS, many of the perverse incentives that plague our health care system are
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rooted in federal Medicare and Medicaid payment policies, which exert a disproportionate
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influence on the privately funded portions of our health care system;
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WHEREAS, federal proposals for health system reform recently considered by
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Congress emphasize enrollment expansion rather than cost containment, much like boarding
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additional passengers on an already sinking Titantic;
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WHEREAS, those proposals include laudable authorizations for payment and delivery
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reform demonstration projects but otherwise largely lack significant cost containment
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provisions;
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WHEREAS, those proposals include many provisions to improve quality of care but
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fall short of the systemic changes needed to fully link outcomes and payment;
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WHEREAS, states have consistently proven themselves laboratories of policy
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innovation, in spite of sometimes stifling federal regulatory restrictions;
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WHEREAS, the best hope for health system reform lies with individual states, where
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an iterative process of experimentation, evaluation, and modification will minimize the
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unintended consequences of one-size-fits-all national policies and will produce results worth
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replicating; and
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WHEREAS, states are in need of additional financial resources and flexibility to
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experiment rather than additional benefit mandates, Medicaid eligibility mandates, and rating
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restrictions, all of which will inevitably drive up health care spending and costs to states:
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NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED that the Legislature of the state of Utah, the
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Governor concurring therein, urge Congress to refuse to enact, and the President of the United
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States to refuse to sign, any legislation that imposes further restrictions on any state's ability to
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regulate the payment and delivery of health care, imposes additional financial burden related to
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health care on any state, or limits the ability of consumers and businesses to create innovative
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models for higher quality, lower cost health care.
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BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the Legislature and the Governor urge that
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Congress pass, and the President sign, legislation that grants states greater flexibility under
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federal laws and regulations related to health care and encourages states to create health reform
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demonstration projects with the potential for replication elsewhere.
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BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the Legislature and the Governor urge that should
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Congress pass, and the President sign, legislation that further restricts states in any manner,
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H. [
that
] .H
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the legislation recognize states' efforts to reform health care by grandfathering any state laws,
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regulations, or practices intended to contain costs, improve quality, increase consumerism, or
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otherwise implement health system reform concepts.
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BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that a copy of this resolution be sent to the Majority
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Leader of the United States Senate, the Speaker of the United States House of Representatives,
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the President of the United States, and the members of Utah's Congressional delegation.
Legislative Review Note
as of 1-22-10 5:04 PM