California Health Reform Bills Closer to Governor’s Desk as They Pass Committees in Second House

[courtesy of California Progress Report]

•SB1522 to ban junk insurance passes Assembly Health Committee
•AB1945 would impose new rules on insurers who cancel insurance policies
•AB2967 to collect cost and quality data from medical providers passes

Hanh-Quach-2008.gifBy Hanh Kim Quach
Health Care Policy Coordinator
Health Access California

Key bills of interest to health advocates were heard in the last two days, in, respectively, the Assembly Health Committee, chaired by Assemblymember Mervyn Dymally, and Senate Health Committee, chaired by Senator Sheila Kuehl.

Hundreds of bills that passed the house where they were introduced must now clear the second house; and the first step of that is to pass policy committees by June 27. A number of bills that would benefit health care consumers were in Assembly and Senate Health committees this week, including a number of key bills that would lay the foundation for comprehensive health reform in the next couple of years. An updated list of bills is available on the Health Access website.

INSURANCE STANDARDS: Among those bills was SB1522 (Steinberg), sponsored by Health Access California, that would weed out junk insurance from the individual insurance market by ensuring that every plan covered doctor, hospital and preventive services. It would also place a cap on out-of-pocket costs. The bill would organize the market into five tiers so that consumers could make apples-to-apples comparisons between plans and require that pricing of those plans was consistent with the level of benefits the plans offered.

In an interesting admission, the Association of California Life and Health Insurance Companies noted that "more transparency would be good." This bill passed out of Assembly Health Committee with little debate on a party line vote. It heads next to the Assembly Appropriations Committee.

On Wednesday, the Senate Health Committee heard more bills being tracked by health advocates including:

DEBATE ON ANTI-RESCISSION BILL

AB1945 (De La Torre) would create an INDEPENDENT REVIEW process when an insurer wishes to rescind a consumer’s health insurance policy. The Department of Managed Health Care and Department of Insurance would also have the final say on whether a policy could be rescinded. Lastly, the bill would standardize health plan questionnaires for consumers applying for coverage in the individual market.