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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Anderson
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
02/27/07
HB HJM 67
SHORT TITLE Study Healthcare-Acquired Infections in NM
SB
ANALYST Geisler
ESTIMATED ADDITIONAL OPERATING BUDGET IMPACT (dollars in thousands)
FY07
FY08
FY09 3 Year
Total Cost
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
Total
Minimal,
see narrative
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
Relationship: HB 165 and HB 944.
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Department of Health (DOH)
Health Policy Commission (HPC)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
House Joint Memorial 67 would require that the Department of Health (DOH) create a task force
to conduct a comprehensive review of healthcare-acquired infection studies in the United States,
and would require that task force to write a report regarding the feasibility of healthcare-acquired
infection surveillance in New Mexico. The task force would include a representative from the
New Mexico Association for Professionals in Infection Control and Epidemiology; a
representative of the New Mexico Hospitals and Health Systems Association; a representative of
the New Mexico Medical Review Association; and a representative of the University of New
Mexico Health Sciences Center.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
There would be a minimal cost to DOH to support the taskforce and to develop the required
report.
pg_0002
House Joint Memorial 67 – Page
2
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
There has been significant debate at the national and state levels about the best mechanism to
monitor healthcare-acquired infections. Respected national organizations have met to define
certain types of hospital-acquired infections and the standardized reporting of these infections.
Currently there are no national standards on how to define, detect, report, analyze and track
trends in hospital-acquired infections. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC)
Healthcare Infection Control and Prevention Advisory Committee (HIPAC) concluded in 2005
that there is not enough evidence to determine whether mandatory public reporting of hospital-
acquired infections will reduce infection rates or provide useful information to consumers.
New Mexico has participated in these discussions through its collaboration with the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), Council of State and Territorial Epidemiologists
(CSTE), Association for Professionals in Infection Control and Epidemiology, Inc. (APIC), and
the New Mexico Hospital Association.
The inclusion on the task force of representatives of various New Mexico health care
associations could help to assure that these significant stakeholders would contribute to
determining the feasibility of conducting surveillance for healthcare-acquired infections.
The task force will need to consider the following if healthcare acquired infections are to be
reported:
1) Standardized infection surveillance measures that address both healthcare-associated
infections (outcomes) and healthcare practices that have been shown to reduce the risk of
infection (processes) [i.e., all hospitals must measure the same infections or infection prevention
practices];
2) Standardized methods for collecting, risk-adjusting, analyzing, comparing, and reporting
data;
3) Computer systems that support a standardized data collection and reporting process and
improve the efficiency, accuracy, and effectiveness of infection surveillance programs;
4) The involvement of individuals who have expertise in infection surveillance and prevention
programs when designing, implementing, and evaluating a system for publicly reporting
infection data;
5) A mechanism to ensure that data reported will be useful and not misleading for consumers
and will provide hospitals with the information they need to guide their infection prevention
programs;
6) Education for the consumer on infection-prevention strategies and the meaning of the data
released in public reports;
7) Adequate support for infection surveillance, prevention, and control programs to prevent
infection control personnel and other healthcare resources from being diverted away from
infection prevention activities and towards data collection;
8) Research to determine the impact that public reporting of infection data has on patients,
consumers, and hospitals; and
9) Adequate funding and infrastructure to support a public reporting system for healthcare-
associated infections.
A standardized surveillance system developed by a task force including the representatives of
health care organizations may help to assure that the reporting of healthcare acquired infections
pg_0003
House Joint Memorial 67 – Page
3
does not cause hospitals to be wary of treating certain patients or conditions that run a high risk
for infection.
RELATIONSHIP
HJM 67 relates to HB 165 and HB 944, both of which would amend the Public Health Act to
require that a hospital collect and report on hospital-acquired infection rates for specific clinical
procedures determined by rule of the Department of Health (DOH).
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
HPC provides
:
Reporting on hospital quality data appears to improve hospital performance. There are a
number of studies that show public reporting improves health provider performance. A
Health Affairs (Hibbard, et.al. April 2003) study evaluated the impact on quality
improvement of reporting hospital performance publicly versus privately back to the hospital.
Making performance information public appears to stimulate quality improvement activities in
areas where performance is reported to be low. The findings from this Wisconsin-based study
indicate that there is added value to making this information public. A new study (National
Committee for Quality Assurance-NCQA) finds that the quality of care delivered by health plans
that publicly report on their performance improved markedly in 2003(Source: NCQA).
Collection and use of hospital infection data is a complicated endeavor. Health care providers
say there is no universal method for obtaining infection rate statistics, in part because it is
difficult to determine whether a patient developed an infection while in the hospital. Providers
add that some hospitals are more likely to have higher infection rates because of patient mix, and
a universal standard would need to account for these discrepancies. Hospitals will say laws
requiring data reporting could affect malpractice litigation, reward facilities that are less
persistent in finding infections and force others to hire additional record keeping staff. Some
infection control specialists say CDC data show that only about one third of hospital-acquired
infections are preventable and, even with infection-disclosure mandates, health experts do not
know just how far it is possible to reduce them. A large part of the difficulty in measuring
hospital-acquired infections will be definitional. Will the definition include outpatients treated
within the hospitals. Will it include a home health agency operated by a hospital. Will it include
ambulance service operated by a hospital, but the patient transported may never be in that
hospital. In addition, discovery of infections, and determining the true time when the infection
was acquired, is a difficult task.
New Mexico currently has a process in place through the New Mexico Department of Health for
surveillance of infectious diseases of public health significance. New Mexico’s list of ‘Notifiable
Conditions in New Mexico’ ([7.4.3.13 NMAC 6/30/2006] is maintained and updated in the
context of the National Notifiable Disease Surveillance System and includes a formalized
process for public input. Both the national system and the Notifiable Conditions in New Mexico
do not require reporting of healthcare-acquired infections. There has been significant debate at
the national and state levels about the best mechanism to monitor healthcare-acquired infections.
New Mexico has participated in discussions through its collaboration with the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), Council of State and Territorial Epidemiologists
(CSTE), Association for Professionals in Infection Control and Epidemiology, Inc. (APIC), and
pg_0004
House Joint Memorial 67 – Page
4
the New Mexico Hospital Association.
Some hospitals have begun publicly and voluntarily reporting their outcomes
as a demonstration of accountability to the public they serve. The New Mexico Hospital and
Health Systems Association has developed a voluntary reporting process (see
http://www.nmchecheckpoint.org ) for surgical infection prevention. Twenty two hospitals
out of thirty five hospitals participate in the program. Information on hospitals in NM is
available at the Medicare website http://www.hospitalcompare.hhs.gov/hospital/home2.asp.
In December 2005, the HPC authored a study on Hospital Charges, Quality and Charge Increases
which was done for Reps. Park and Payne as a result of HM 43 in 2005. During this study the
HPC collected considerable information on infection reporting as a part of the public quality
reporting already in place in other states. The HPC currently has 178 articles or reports (some of
which are media reports) on infection reporting done in other states. Much of what is reported on
from other states may be useful to the task force if the memorial passes and the work is
commenced.
GG/mt