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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Picraux
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
01/18/08
HB 32
SHORT TITLE 24-Hour Nurse Health Phone Advice Line
SB
ANALYST Ortiz
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY08
FY09
$500.0
Recurring
General Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Department of Health
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
House Bill 32 appropriates $500 thousand from the General Fund to DOH to expand the twenty-
four-hour Registered Nurse health access telephone advice line that coordinates services for
consumer health benefits.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The appropriation of $500 thousand contained in this bill is a recurring expense to the General
Fund. Any unexpended or unencumbered balance remaining at the end of FY09 or any fiscal
year shall not revert to the General Fund.
NA-NM received start-up state funding of $500,000 in FY07 and is currently financed through
contracts with Lovelace Health Plan, Presbyterian Health Plan, Presbyterian Pediatric Medical
Group, Bernalillo County and the UNM Health Sciences Center-Coordinated Systems of Care-
Community Access Program (CSC-CAP). The yearly budget is $4.2 million, of which $3.2
million is covered by current contracts.
The appropriation requested in the bill was part of the Department of Health’s budget request for
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House Bill 32 – Page
2
FY09; however, was not part of the LFC’s base budget expansion recommendations for the
Department in FY09.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
DOH reports the advice line is staffed by RNs who provide medical, behavioral, social service
and emergency needs as well as health information to callers. Any person in New Mexico,
regardless of insurance status, can call the line. Over 28,000 calls were received in the first six
months of operation (June-December 2006). Almost 95,000 calls were received in 2007, with
and average of 12,000 calls per month since July 2007. NA-NM data indicates over 61% of the
callers in 2007 who would have gone to the Emergency Room were redirected.
DOH further reports that in 2007 over 30% of services provided were to individuals whose
insurers were not contracted with the service, and over 6.2% of callers identified themselves as
uninsured. The NA-NM believes they cannot continue to absorb the increasing costs of callers
who are not covered by existing contracts. DOH also believes that services such as the nurse
advice line can help the estimated 21% of New Mexicans who have no health insurance by
providing them with useful and timely medical advice.
PERFORMANCE IMPLICATIONS
The Department reports the appropriation contained in the bill supports the DOH Public Health
Program Goal: Improve public health outcomes through public and private partnerships; and,
goal 6 of the Governor’s Performance and Accountability Contract Healthy New Mexico:
Improve the health and human services workforce and infrastructure through improving
infrastructure through public and private partnerships. Progress may be monitored through the
performance measure: “Annual number of calls to the Nurse Advice Hotline".
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
DOH reports the bill will assist NA-NM in continuing to serve the 100,000 callers expected in
2008. In 2007, 15 nurses were set-up to answer calls from their homes in Bernalillo County and
Rio Rancho. Funding could also allow RN staff to be situated in other counties such as
Valencia, Dona Ana, Chavez, Eddy, and San Juan with the nurses most familiar with local
resources. This could also allow for more on-site training of new nurses for eventual placement
in all rural areas statewide. Nurses could work from their homes in any part of the state. NA-
NM spends about eight minutes with each caller, has a full-time staff of 15, and will need
additional staff to meet expected increased demand.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
DOH notes that New Mexico is the first state in the country to create a web-enabled, statewide
health advice line through a public/private partnership. Benefits of a single advice line in NM
include: reducing costly emergency room visits; recruitment and retention of rural doctors by
providing after-hours relief; emergency preparedness through monitoring geographic clusters of
illness, exposures, and concerns; and assignment to a medical home through the “Primary Care
Dispatch" program.
AHO/bb