Drug coverage, telehealth, physician-assisted death. What’s at stake for Florida healthcare in next week’s legislative session? [South Florida Sun-Sentinel]
When the 2023 Legislative Session convenes on Tuesday, state legislators will tackle topics such as the type of healthcare you can get over the phone, how much power a physician’s assistant has to prescribe medication, and possibly even whether women in the state will be further restricted on how many weeks they legally can get an abortion.
A lot is at stake during a year when most of the COVID public health emergency benefits will disappear.
Behind the scenes, lobbyists for hospitals, long-term care facilities, pharmacy chains, and grassroots health and senior care organizations are working to protect their interests. These stakeholders will jockey for their share of funding in the state budget and propose new areas of spending. At the same time, lawmakers will debate new bills that affect your health costs and care.
These are 10 key areas to watch:
Abortion
One of the most explosive issues legislators could take on this session is abortion.
Gov.
Currently, Florida’s 15-week ban is being challenged in the
Physician-assisted death
In what is considered an emotionally complex area of healthcare, Democratic Sen.
If passed, this law would allow doctors to prescribe lethal medication to dying patients who want to end their lives. The fatal diagnosis would need to be confirmed by a second, consulting doctor.
Telehealth
The pandemic paved the way for doctors, therapists and other medical professionals to treat patients via smartphones and computer screens. This session, there are several bills that clarify and expand on the type of services can be provided via telehealth.
Here’s what the various proposals would do:
Medical duties
With staffing shortages plaguing the medical profession, various proposed bills would expand the abilities of certain professionals — particularly when it comes to prescribing or giving out medication.
Here’s what the proposed laws would do:
Prescription drug coverage, costs
Most Floridians are frustrated with medication costs.
Two proposed bills seek to address the frustration. Bill SB 746 requires health insurers to provide notice of prescription drug formulary changes within a certain timeframe and in a specific manner so patients know about cost increases. A formulary is a drug list that include brand names and generics that are covered by an insurer. The bill also would require insurers to submit a report on formulary changes annually.
For Floridians whose insurers partner with a pharmacy benefit manager such as Express Scripts, another proposed bill (SB 46) would require any payments for drugs be applied towards the insured person’s cost-sharing requirements such as deductibles and co-pays. The change would provide cost-saving benefits to the insured and require more transparency from pharmacy benefit managers.
Advertising
There are so many different types of healthcare professionals that it has become confusing to patients to know who is treating them.
To provide some clarity, HB583/SB230 would create a statute laying out the titles and designations that healthcare providers may call themselves, use in advertising and use in a medical setting. Patients would more easily know if they are being treated by a nurse practitioner, licensed medical doctor or a doctor of osteopathic medicine.
The proposed law also would require certain healthcare practitioners to prominently display a copy of their license in a conspicuous area of their practice that is easily visible to patients.
Mental health
A bill now being debated would allow Medicaid beneficiaries with serious mental illness to bypass requirements that they try less expensive options before “stepping up” to drugs that cost more. Advocates believe it will go a long way to help women with postpartum depression and people with depressive disorders. The new measures would apply only to the state’s Medicaid-managed care plans and not to commercial health policies or policies sold in the state group insurance program.
Transgender care
The
Now there’s an effort in the Legislature under the name “Reverse Woke Act” to force
Opponents say the bill is intended to dissuade businesses from supporting their trans workers.
Vaccination
DeSantis has come out strong during the pandemic against vaccine mandates.
Now, a bill titled Protection of Medical Freedom (SB 222) would prohibit Florida’s
Covered medical services
With costs rising, healthcare is no exception. A few proposed bills would help Floridians by extending or requiring insurers to cover certain healthcare costs.
©2023 South Florida Sun-Sentinel. Visit sun-sentinel.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.
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