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committees of the NM Legislature. The LFC does not assume responsibility for the accuracy of these reports
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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR SPAC
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
1/22/07
2/28/07 HB
SHORT TITLE Health Care Provider Emergency Liability
SB CS/23/aSPAC/aSJC/aSFl/aHHGAC
ANALYST Wilson
ESTIMATED ADDITIONAL OPERATING BUDGET IMPACT (dollars in thousands)
FY07
FY08
FY09 3 Year
Total Cost
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
Total
Unknown Unknown
Recurring Public
Liability
Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
Relates to SB 22, Health Care Provider Emergency Liability.
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Human Services Department (HSD)
Department of Health (DOH)
Health Policy Commission (HPC)
General Services Department (GSD)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of HHGAC Amendment
The House Health & Government Affairs Committee amendment to the to Senate Public Affairs
Committee Substitute for Senate Bill 23 changes a part of the title to COVERAGE UNDER THE
TORT CLAIMS FOR instead of IMMUNITY TO in order to conform the title to the content of
the bill.
Synopsis of SFl Amendment
The Senate Floor amendment requires that in order for the Risk Management Division to insure a
licensed health care provider providing voluntary services, the provider may not have existing
medical liability insurance.
Synopsis of SJC Amendments
The Senate Judiciary Committee amendments to Senate Bill 23 strikes all Senate Public Affairs
pg_0002
CS/Senate Bill 23/aSPAC/aSJC/aSFl/aHHGAC – Page
2
Committee Amendments and deletes the list of 22 medical specialties covered by the legislation,
amending it to read: “health care providers licensed in New Mexico who render voluntary health
care services without compensation in accordance with rules promulgated by the secretary of
health." In addition, the effective date of the provisions of the act is July 1, 2007.
Synopsis of SPAC Amendments
The Senate Public Affairs Committee amendment to Senate Public Affairs Committee Substitute
for Senate Bill 23 adds “certified registered nurse anesthetist" to the list of health care providers
providing voluntary health care services that will be covered under this bill.
Synopsis of Original Bill
The Senate Public Affairs Committee Substitute for Senate Bill 23 amends the definition of“
“public employee" in the Tort Claims Act to exclude all health care providers licensed in New
Mexico who render voluntary services on behalf of a governmental entity without compensation,
thereby providing immunity from tort liability for such providers including optometrists,
chiropractic physicians, dentists, physicians, podiatrists, osteopathic physicians, physician
assistants, certified nurse practitioners, physical therapists, occupational therapists, speech-
language therapists, doctors of oriental medicine, nutritionists, psychologists, certified nurse-
midwives, clinical nurse specialists, registered nurses, dental hygienists, pharmacists, athletic
trainers, anesthesiologist assistants and certified registered nurse anesthetists
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
GSD notes that the governmental entity authorizing volunteer services of these health care
providers will be assessed the cost of the premiums to cover the defense costs should a lawsuit
be filed against the health care provider or the authorizing agency. (By granting limited liability
to the volunteer health care provider, the authorizing agency’s liability will also increase.)
Associated costs will be difficult to predict and will be reflected as an increase in the authorizing
agency’s future rate, based on experience (calculated at 70% of a 5-year average) and exposure
(30%). Exposure will increase immediately because of the added potential liability. Experience
will come into play only after a claim is paid in connection with a volunteer who had been
authorized by a governmental entity to provide services.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
The intent of this bill is to encourage volunteer services of health care providers and maximize
the resources devoted to delivering these services by reducing the liability exposure of the
provider.
HPC notes that free or low cost care centers in New Mexico have a difficult time finding
providers willing to provide volunteer services to the patients of the centers. Physicians in
particular in New Mexico that have retired but are still licensed could be a primary source of
medical care providers for these clinics, but often cannot serve because of the expense of
carrying professional liability coverage. The clinics can employ the physicians, but doing so
greatly increases their professional liability exposure and consequently insurance expense in a
tough financial environment.
pg_0003
CS/Senate Bill 23/aSPAC/aSJC/aSFl/aHHGAC – Page
3
The Risk Management Division (RMD) of GSD provided the following:
Under the Tort Claims Act, the state provides general liability (not just professional or
medical malpractice) coverage to “public employees". This bill is not clear about the
intended extent of coverage.
If the bill is limited to providing professional liability coverage, does the coverage extend
only to the time and activities during which the healthcare provider is actually providing
voluntary professional services or, once defined as a healthcare provider who provides
voluntary services, is the person covered regardless of when or where the act giving rise
to the liability occurred.
If the state either pays or subsidizes insurance coverage for private individuals or
associations, it may conflict with the anti-donation clause in the New Mexico
Constitution.
The Tort Claims Act was passed in response to the New Mexico Supreme Court’s
abolition of the common law doctrine of sovereign immunity. Whether the sovereign
(e.g. government) can extend its cloak of immunity to cover what are clearly non-
governmental entities or individuals is a l question which the courts may well have to
decide if this bill is enacted.
If the intent of this bill is to cover New Mexico private health care providers whose
volunteer service are authorized by a state or local government agency in response to a
local, national or international disaster (e.g. Hurricane Katrina, forest fires, earthquakes in
other countries), the scope of work that is covered by the Tort Claims Act will need to be
defined e.g. are the volunteer and agency authorizing the volunteer covered if sued for
any action at a disaster scene, or only in providing health care that the person is licensed
in New Mexico to provide.
If the healthcare provider both volunteers services and has a professional practice with
private insurance, is the state coverage through RMD primary or secondary.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
RMD believes there could be a significant increase in RMD administrative and legal defense
workload if authorized volunteers and the authorizing agency were sued in connection with
response to disasters.
RELATIONSHIP
Senate Bill 23/SPACS relates to SB 22, Health Care Provider Emergency Liability.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
A physician who is retired and wants to provide medical services must obtain an occurrence
insurance policy which costs approximately $16,700 for a family physician for a full year. New
Mexico is one of a small number of states that does not provide limited liability laws for
volunteer physicians. New Mexico grants immunity only to public employees including
physicians, psychologists, or dentists providing services for the Corrections Department and
Children, Youth & Families.
pg_0004
CS/Senate Bill 23/aSPAC/aSJC/aSFl/aHHGAC – Page
4
ALTERNATIVES
RMD suggests that the DOH could be authorized to establish a registry of health care
professionals willing to provide volunteer services when authorized by the DOH Secretary to
respond to disasters by providing the service that they are licensed in New Mexico to provide.
This may be possible by rule under the existing DOH enabling statutes.
DW/nt