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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Campos
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
01/29/08
HB
SHORT TITLE Primary Clinic Electronic Records
SB 341
ANALYST Geisler
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY08
FY09
$500.0
Recurring
General
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
Relates to: HB 37 and HB 260
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Department of Health (DOH)
New Mexico Primary Care Association
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
Senate Bill 341 would appropriate $500,000 from the General Fund to the Department of Health
(DOH) for expenditure in FY09 and subsequent fiscal years to implement electronic patient
health records in primary care clinics eligible to receive funds under the Rural Primary Health
Care Act (RPHCA). Any unexpended balance remaining at the end of a fiscal year would not
revert to the General Fund.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
DOH notes that the funding in SB 341 is not a part of DOH’s Executive Budget. Both the Legis-
lative and Executive base budget recommendations contain $150,000 in General Funds to im-
plement electronic patient health records in primary care clinics eligible to receive funds under
the RPHCA to assist primary care clinics in developing analyzable, comprehensive patient re-
cords (Laws 2007, Chapter 21).
pg_0002
Senate Bill 341 – Page
2
The New Mexico Primary Care Association breaks out the budget for this project below, which
includes the use of other funds in addition to the general fund appropriation contained in this bill.
Electronic Health Record Systems Budget
Hardware, Software 90 Clinicians @ $20,000
1,800,000
$
State non-recurring request
500,000
$
DOH Information Technology Appropriation
400,000
$
Clinic Dollar for Dollar Non-State Match
900,000
$
Total
$1,800,000
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
Background on this funding request provided by the New Mexico Primary Care Association
:
The New Mexico Primary Care Association and its member Primary Healthcare organizations
seek to raise the quality of our health care services and prevention programs to the 300,000 pa-
tients we serve at 149 sites in 31 counties. Implementation of Electronic Health Records Systems
(EHRs) is critical to accomplishing these goals. EHRs will enable us to:
1. Achieve cost savings through elimination of unnecessary or duplicative treatment and
diagnostic tests
2. Improve practitioner access to evidence based protocols, decision support tools, and best
practices in disease management and prevention programs
3. Prescribe medications through systems with alerts for adverse drug reactions
4. Devise systems for measuring patient outcomes and incentivizing practitioners for posi-
tive patient outcomes, not only for volume of patients served
5. Involve patients more fully in their healthcare through personal health records and web
portals
6. Seamlessly export information/data to state, federal, and regional registries and databases
7. Reduce mortality and morbidity caused by preventable medical errors
The EHR implementation will involve the collaboration of six to eight organizations, based on
technological maturity, stability, and the commitment to dedicate the time and resources neces-
sary to successfully implement EHRs.
The Primary Care Association and its partner community health centers have a proven model to
implement EHRs in a cost effective manner. We have a proven technical team and through the
power of joint negotiation we can lower implementation to $20,000 per clinician, well below the
national average. Furthermore by utilizing our proven model of network support and training we
can virtually eliminate failures and serious underutilization of system capacity that affect as
many as 90% of individual practices that implement EHR on their own. We are confident that
New Mexico can lead the way in sharing of patient information via registry and exchange, stay
abreast of patient privacy issues, and develop interoperability among New Mexico EHR systems.
pg_0003
Senate Bill 341 – Page
3
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
DOH notes that SB 341 could have administrative impact on DOH, as this appropriation could
require additional staff time for procurement, contracting and monitoring activities of the
RPHCA Program. The program would manage the appropriation with other rural health/primary
care appropriations, and utilize existing staff and administrative resources.
RELATIONSHIP
SB 341 is related to HB 37, the proposed Electronic Medical Records Act, which would require
all health care providers to migrate to electronic health records systems. SB 341 would provide
some financial support to eligible primary care centers that could assist them in complying with
HB 37. Also SB 341 relates to HB 260, which would provide additional funds to eligible pri-
mary care centers for staff compensation increases.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
DOH notes there are several initiatives underway designed to shift healthcare providers in the
United States from paper health records systems to electronic health records systems. The Fed-
eral Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services has set this as a goal, as has the Governor in his
Health Solutions initiative. The shift to electronic systems has the potential to reduce health care
costs through elimination of duplicate tests and procedures and increase health care quality
through the sharing of key information between providers. The cost of this transition could be
significant, and health care safety net providers, such as community-based primary care centers,
do not have sufficient resources for implementing the new systems. SB341 would permit some
eligible centers to begin the transition. The RPHCA Program, administered by DOH, provides
support to 93 clinics statewide through contracts with nonprofit organizations and governmental
entities. In FY2007, these clinics reported approximately 798,000 primary care patient visits.
GG/mt