Legislature(1999 - 2000)

03/02/2000 09:03 AM Senate FIN

Audio Topic
* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
txt
COMMITTEE SUBSTITUTE FOR SENATE BILL NO. 256(HES)                                                                               
"An Act relating to regulation of managed health care                                                                           
and allowing physicians to collectively negotiate with                                                                          
a health benefit plan that has substantial market                                                                               
power."                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Senator P. Kelly told the Committee he introduced this bill                                                                     
to address any inequities starting to grow out of the                                                                           
rapidly changing health care industry. He stated that many                                                                      
of the mergers of the past few years were changing the                                                                          
rules for health care providers. He gave an example of the                                                                      
severity of the problem, saying that since 1994 the leading                                                                     
18 insurance companies has been reduced to only six and                                                                         
that more mergers were projected. He asserted that the                                                                          
bargaining power of the insurance companies has increased                                                                       
while the bargaining power of the health care providers has                                                                     
not.                                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Senator P. Kelly attested that this bill contains a                                                                             
mechanism called a "state action doctrine" to address the                                                                       
problem. He shared that this doctrine came out of a US                                                                          
Supreme Court case and that it allows the states to allow                                                                       
health care providers to form groups for the purpose of                                                                         
negotiating with health care companies without being                                                                            
subject to some anti-trust laws. He noted the groups are                                                                        
still overseen by the state and must still adhere to other                                                                      
anti-trust laws.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Senator Phillips declared a conflict of interest due to his                                                                     
employment with Providence Medical Center.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Torgerson noted the bill has two substantive                                                                           
sections, one being the patient and health care provider                                                                        
protection and the other the authority to negotiate with                                                                        
health care providers. He asked what the first section                                                                          
accomplishes.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Senator P. Kelly explained it is part of the necessary                                                                          
structure to enable the negotiation provision.                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
After receiving verification that there were no Health                                                                          
Maintenance Organizations (HMO) operating in Alaska,                                                                            
Senator Green asked if the definition of a "managed care                                                                        
entity" in the bill applies to a self insured group or a                                                                        
preferred provider. She wanted to know if the definition                                                                        
included anything else.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Senator P. Kelly responded that there could be a number of                                                                      
additional companies that would fall under the definition                                                                       
of "managed care entity." He deferred to the Anchorage                                                                          
Independent Physicians organization provide further detail.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
SIGNE ANDERSON, Assistant Attorney General, Fair Business                                                                       
Practices Section, Civil Division, Department of Law                                                                            
testified via teleconference from Anchorage to answer                                                                           
questions on the anti-trust issue.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Torgerson asked why there is an antitrust                                                                              
question.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
JULIA COSTER, Assistant Attorney General, Commercial                                                                            
Section, Civil Division, Department of Law, testified via                                                                       
teleconference from Anchorage to explain that the                                                                               
legislation would involve the Federal Trade Commission's                                                                        
(FTC) enforcement of federal laws.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Anderson added that there is another legal concern                                                                          
regarding the Employment, Retirement, Income and Security                                                                       
Act of 1974 (ERISA) Premption and that she was available to                                                                     
answer questions on that matter as well. She stated that                                                                        
this concern was implicated in Sections 2 and 3 of the                                                                          
bill.                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
RICHARD FEINSTEIN, Assistant Director, Bureau of                                                                                
Competition, Federal Trade Commission, testified via                                                                            
teleconference from Washington DC and clarified that he was                                                                     
authorized by the Commission to offer views on the                                                                              
legislation but that the Commission was not taking an                                                                           
official position nor was he speaking for the Commission.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Torgerson referred to congressional legislation,                                                                       
HR 1304, the Quality Health Care Coalition Act of 1999                                                                          
sponsored by Congressman Thomas Campbell, and asked if the                                                                      
bill was still pending or if it had been enacted.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Feinstein answered the legislation was still pending.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Torgerson noted that his information claimed that                                                                      
this US House of Representatives bill would be the "fix of                                                                      
all fixes" if it were adopted into law. He asked if the                                                                         
witness shared that view.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Feinstein replied that while the bill was a "fix in one                                                                     
sense," the Commission has formally opposed it as detailed                                                                      
in the written testimony presented before congress by                                                                           
Chairman Robert Pitofsky. [Copy on file] Mr. Feinstein                                                                          
clarified that if HR 1304 were passed at the federal level,                                                                     
it would preempt any effort by a state to address                                                                               
collective negotiations by physicians and health plans in                                                                       
any other way.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Feinstein qualified that he only recently received the                                                                      
latest version of SB 256 but that this bill was a variation                                                                     
of a theme seen at the federal level to facilitate                                                                              
collective bargaining by physicians in their dealings with                                                                      
health plans. He stressed that several other states are                                                                         
also considering similar measures.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Feinstein emphasized that the focus of the FTC is                                                                           
whether these proposals are in the best interest of                                                                             
consumers. He understood that there are many concerns about                                                                     
managed care and how it delivers health care and health                                                                         
insurance services. However, he said the Commission had                                                                         
serious questions about whether anti-trust immunity for                                                                         
providers was the best way to address those concerns.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Feinstein referred to a list of issues proposed in SB
256 that directly targeted the concerns articulated about                                                                       
the managed care. He quoted Section 2 (8), "protects the                                                                        
ability of a health care provider to communicate openly                                                                         
with a covered person about all appropriate diagnostic                                                                          
testing and treatment options." He surmised this subsection                                                                     
was intended to address what was sometimes referred to as a                                                                     
"gag clause" and that a number of states had already passed                                                                     
legislation to address this issue. He suggested that if                                                                         
there were specific concerns about the operations of                                                                            
managed care organizations, those concerns should be                                                                            
addressed directly rather than indirectly by creating                                                                           
circumstances in which groups of providers may be able to                                                                       
exercise market power in ways that don't benefit consumers.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Feinstein assured that he completely respected the                                                                          
states' authority to address the issues in the manner they                                                                      
felt most appropriate and in the best interest of its                                                                           
citizens. He stressed that it was not his job to take a                                                                         
bottom line position on whether or not this is good                                                                             
legislation, but was more to give advice on the anti-trust                                                                      
analysis.                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Feinstein pointed out that one provision of the bill is                                                                     
the notion where health plans, health insurers and managed                                                                      
care organizations, have at least 15 percent of the market,                                                                     
there is a presumption that that constitutes considerable                                                                       
market power. In these instances, he continued, the bill                                                                        
gives authorization for collective negotiation with those                                                                       
parties that made up the 15 percent. He warned that this is                                                                     
only a useful measure if there is clear understanding of                                                                        
what the percentage of the market is; and in looking at the                                                                     
geographic or product market in Alaska, he did not think it                                                                     
was clear. He inferred that a determination of the                                                                              
percentage of the market could not be done without a                                                                            
definition of what that would be. He predicted that this                                                                        
legislation could result in some health plans that have a                                                                       
relatively small share of the market would find themselves                                                                      
negotiating with a group that represented 100 percent of                                                                        
the providers.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Feinstein spoke about the general boycotts, strikes and                                                                     
concerted action provisions in the bill as another area                                                                         
that should be reviewed. He quoted the findings in the                                                                          
bill; "the collective bargaining will benefit competition                                                                       
so long as the physicians don't engage in expressed or                                                                          
implied threat of retaliatory collective action including                                                                       
boycotts or strikes." Elsewhere in the language, he read,                                                                       
"competing physicians may not engage in a boycott related                                                                       
to these terms and conditions." He stated that those terms                                                                      
are somewhat ambiguous. He gave a scenario of an attempt at                                                                     
collective negotiations between providers in a given area                                                                       
and the health plan, which did not lead to a satisfactory                                                                       
contract. He said a situation could then arise where the                                                                        
bargaining group would not have contracts, they would                                                                           
withhold their services to the plan and the patients would                                                                      
have to pay for the services out of pocket. He noted the                                                                        
bill did not require health plans to participate in                                                                             
negotiations.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Tape: SFC - 00 #43, Side B    9:50 AM                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Feinstein next addressed the state action doctrine on                                                                       
anti-trust, which he felt was relevant to the Committee's                                                                       
analysis of the bill. He said there were two "prongs" to                                                                        
the doctrine, first was the need a clearly articulated                                                                          
policy of the state to displace competition in the sector                                                                       
that is being regulated and to replace it with regulation.                                                                      
He did not think there was any question that this bill                                                                          
would satisfy that requirement. The second "prong" was the                                                                      
requirement under federal anti-trust law that there be                                                                          
active supervision by the state of the private parties who                                                                      
were hoping to benefit from the state action exemption, and                                                                     
according to Mr. Feinstein, could be more problematic. He                                                                       
stated that it was unclear whether the regulatory apparatus                                                                     
in the bill would meet test of active supervision.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Senator Wilken wanted to know how other states have                                                                             
provided the active supervision.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Feinstein replied that it was probably too early to                                                                         
tell since no other state had such a process implemented as                                                                     
of yet.  He told of similar legislation passed the previous                                                                     
year in Texas and that the attorney general's office in                                                                         
that state was in the process of adopting regulations to                                                                        
oversee the private conduct of the bargaining groups.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Torgerson requested the witness submit his                                                                             
comments as written testimony.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Feinstein referred to written testimony presented on                                                                        
behalf of the Commission to address the federal bill plus                                                                       
two letters written by the Bureau of Competition. One                                                                           
letter he said related to the Texas legislation and the                                                                         
other was sent to the District of Columbia. [Copies on                                                                          
file.]                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
BOB LOHR, Director, Division of Insurance, Department of                                                                        
Community and Economic Development, testified via                                                                               
teleconference from Anchorage focusing on the public cost                                                                       
of the legislation. He stated that identifying what the                                                                         
cost would be was difficult, partly because no other state                                                                      
had established a system that could be used as a model. He                                                                      
stressed that any factor that might provide more equity or                                                                      
address an imbalance in bargaining power could also have                                                                        
the affect of raising consumer prices.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Speaking to the impact on the division, Mr. Lohr referred                                                                       
to the fiscal note that reflects the addition of one fiscal                                                                     
analyst position to analyze the estimated number of                                                                             
contracts that would result from the legislation. He                                                                            
directed the Committee's attention to Section 3 of the bill                                                                     
saying that it stipulates, "It is the responsibility of the                                                                     
division to approve, in advance, the contracts submitted as                                                                     
having the required elements, in the form that is required                                                                      
and not having the prohibited elements." He clarified the                                                                       
amount requested in the fiscal note is very conservative                                                                        
and is based on the likelihood that the participating                                                                           
negotiating parties will customize the contracts. These                                                                         
customized contracts, he stated, would require more                                                                             
analysis since each one would contain detailed provision                                                                        
and there would also be time pressure for the division to                                                                       
make a determination.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Torgerson requested written testimony from all                                                                         
testifiers, noting the helpful points raised.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Senator P. Kelly asked how many contracts the division                                                                          
currently reviews.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
KATY CAMPBELL, Actuary on Life and Health Issues, Division                                                                      
of Insurance, Department of Community and Economic                                                                              
Development replied only two and that they were required                                                                        
filings from Blue Cross. She explained these were standard                                                                      
provision contracts and were not specific to the health                                                                         
plans each employer purchased.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Senator P. Kelly asked if the witness thought the number of                                                                     
contracts the division would review would change                                                                                
dramatically if this bill passed into law.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Campbell referred to the provisions in the legislation                                                                      
stating that the health care services would be required to                                                                      
be detailed in the contract, which were complex and                                                                             
individualized for the groups that were covered. She spoke                                                                      
of the many variations in health plans such as different                                                                        
vision and dental services.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Senator P. Kelly thought the fiscal note seemed high and                                                                        
asked if the division anticipated any standardization of                                                                        
the new contracts.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Ms. Campbell responded that there would be a significant                                                                        
increase in the workload because the contracts currently                                                                        
reviewed by the division do not contain the details for                                                                         
each individual services package.                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
JEROME SELBY, Providence Health Systems testified via                                                                           
teleconference from Anchorage saying he was present to                                                                          
answer questions.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Ms Coster reiterated her earlier comments that the                                                                              
Department of Law thought that the definition of "benefit                                                                       
plan" in Section 3 of the bill would be in conflict with                                                                        
ERISA.                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
GARY SWARTZ testified via teleconference from Fairbanks                                                                         
that because the Alaska Healthcare Network has been under                                                                       
investigation by the FTC for over a year, they are unable                                                                       
to enter contracts, etc. and had become dysfunctional. He                                                                       
noted the network had spent over $100,000 on the                                                                                
investigation saying there was no merit to the accusations                                                                      
and no finding of fact. He shared that he had many                                                                              
discussions with the FTC and that he disagreed with Mr.                                                                         
Feinstein.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Torgerson noted the Committee did not have the                                                                         
written testimony Mr. Schwartz had referred to.                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
DR. MICHAEL CARROLL, Board Member, Alaska Healthcare                                                                            
Network, testified via teleconference from Fairbanks on                                                                         
behalf of both physicians and consumers. He spoke to the                                                                        
uniqueness of Fairbanks in that it has more than one                                                                            
hospital in the community. He believed if physicians were                                                                       
prevented from addressing the health care plans in an                                                                           
organized manner, the consumer is going to suffer. He gave                                                                      
and example of the question of how to define an emergency                                                                       
room visit and emergency room care. He was not interested                                                                       
in interfering with how much money doctors are paid he                                                                          
stressed that he only wanted physicians to be part of the                                                                       
process.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
PAUL SMITH, Attorney, testified via teleconference from San                                                                     
Francisco, California as legal council for the Alaska                                                                           
Healthcare Network. He noted the area of physicians in                                                                          
collective bargaining groups was "fought with practical                                                                         
difficulty" because the anti-trust guidelines were not                                                                          
always clear. He gave an example the discretion between                                                                         
price related terms and non-price-related terms, which was                                                                      
difficult to make. He advised that this legislation would                                                                       
be helpful because it does make that classification.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Smith then drew attention to the correspondence                                                                             
submitted by the FTC claiming that under existing anti-                                                                         
trust laws physicians can comment and express opinions on                                                                       
proposed contracts, which he thought was a fair statement.                                                                      
However, he said that in practice, the boundary between                                                                         
expressing an opinion and engaging in a negotiation was                                                                         
difficult to recognize. He stated that by setting forth a                                                                       
regulated procedure that defines the scope of acceptable                                                                        
conduct, it would provide practical help to physicians and                                                                      
physician organizations who need to engage in these kind of                                                                     
activities.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
HELEN JAMISON testified via teleconference from Chicago                                                                         
that she wished to listen and would be available if                                                                             
something came up needing clarification.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
DWIGHT PERKINS, Deputy Commissioner, Department of Labor                                                                        
and Workforce Development testified that the department has                                                                     
no expertise to handle such anti-trust matters. He had                                                                          
heard that because the federal legislation was stalled,                                                                         
interested parties were attempting to pass new laws in each                                                                     
state and that to date, they were only successful in Texas.                                                                     
He asked that the Committee take time to consider this                                                                          
legislation and that the department had not submitted a                                                                         
fiscal note because of the uncertainty of the actual affect                                                                     
on the department. Stated that he met with group that would                                                                     
be testifying.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Torgerson stated that the department's request to                                                                      
be excused from this legislation was odd, since this                                                                            
legislation addresses a labor issue.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Senator Leman stated that he readily agreed with the                                                                            
witness's testimony saying he did not think it was                                                                              
appropriate for the department to review the legislation.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
MIKE HAUGEN, Executive Director, Alaska Physician and                                                                           
Surgeons testified that the organization was on the front                                                                       
lines of dealing with the contracts. He stressed that the                                                                       
provisions in this legislation were completely voluntary                                                                        
for all parties. He suggested that if the state, the payers                                                                     
or the physicians felt uncomfortable about the process,                                                                         
negotiations would be over.  He added that the legislation                                                                      
requires active state oversight. On the merits of bill, he                                                                      
stressed physicians would be able to communicate amongst                                                                        
themselves without a threat of the FTC.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
GEORGE RHYNEER, Cardiologist, President, Alaska Physicians                                                                      
and Surgeons testified that he was available to answer                                                                          
questions.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Parnell asked Mr. Haugen what would be the benefit                                                                     
to consumers regarding the availability and affordability                                                                       
of health care if this legislation passed. He noted that                                                                        
those opposed to the bill argued that this would drive up                                                                       
the cost of health care.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Haugen responded that this bill would allow physicians                                                                      
to get together and discuss issues such as medical                                                                              
necessity and who determines what is medically necessary.                                                                       
He lamented that these decisions were often left up to a                                                                        
clerk in the insurance company looking at a "cookbook" when                                                                     
a doctor calls for pre-authorization. His organization felt                                                                     
these decisions should be made by a physician and that                                                                          
there should be peer review. Another example he gave was                                                                        
how to define emergency services and the frustrations of                                                                        
trying to deal with an insurance company at the time of an                                                                      
emergency. He concluded that the bill would solve a number                                                                      
of patient protection and physician issues.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Parnell wanted to know how the witness could                                                                           
address the concerns of increased costs saying that when                                                                        
physicians organized, they would talk about their own best                                                                      
interests.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Haugen assured that because of the state's oversight,                                                                       
if the costs got to high, the Division of Insurance could                                                                       
step in on behalf of the public's best interest. He also                                                                        
told of "point of service options," which allow a patient                                                                       
to go outside an established network for services but must                                                                      
pay the difference. This would not cost the employer but                                                                        
would give another choice to the consumer.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Haugen next addressed the concern that the bill will                                                                        
drive up litigation. He used the Texas legislation of an                                                                        
example of how this would probably not happen. Although the                                                                     
new law in Texas includes the right to sue health plans, he                                                                     
pointed out that in three years there have only been five                                                                       
lawsuits filed. Because of this and because of the larger                                                                       
Texas population, he thought the litigation expenses in                                                                         
Alaska would be minimal.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Parnell thought one benefit to the bill would be                                                                       
to bring in competition.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Senator P. Kelly asked for an explanation of how the bill                                                                       
would bring other health care companies into the state. He                                                                      
also asked the witness to respond to the concern raised by                                                                      
the FTC representative regarding active state supervision.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Haugen shared that the State of Pennsylvania drafted                                                                        
good language to address what is required of the state. He                                                                      
responded to Senator P. Kelly's first question saying that                                                                      
it is cost prohibitive for new healthcare carriers to enter                                                                     
the Alaska market due to the population base and the                                                                            
established relationships of existing carriers with local                                                                       
physicians. He stated that if potential carriers could deal                                                                     
with an organization of physicians, without fear of action                                                                      
by the FTC, "new players" could come into the market.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Senator P. Kelly wanted to know if Mr. Haugen was confident                                                                     
that the adoption of the state action doctrine would allow                                                                      
groups of physicians to enter these discussions without the                                                                     
threat of being sued by the FTC.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Haugen was.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
JIM JORDAN, Executive Director, Alaska State Medical                                                                            
Association deferred to written testimony he submitted to                                                                       
the Committee. [Copy on File.]                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
NANCY WELLER, Division of Medical Assistance, Department of                                                                     
Health and Social Services testified that her concern was                                                                       
the affects this bill could have on the Medicaid program.                                                                       
However, the division believed the program was exempted                                                                         
from the bill because it was already heavily regulated by                                                                       
the federal government.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Torgerson clarified that the division did not                                                                          
oppose the bill since the division was not involved.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
GORDON EVANS, Health Insurance Association of America noted                                                                     
he had submitted written testimony. [Copy on file.] He                                                                          
stated that although the previous witnesses did respond to                                                                      
some of his earlier comments, he felt the responses were                                                                        
self-serving. He surmised that the physicians in support of                                                                     
the bill dispute the association's claim that the issue is                                                                      
economics rather than quality of care. He stated that                                                                           
stated that this argument gave the physicians leverage to                                                                       
"prevent the intrusion of a giant third party into the                                                                          
sacred physician-patient relationship." While Mr. Evans                                                                         
agreed that this relationship is sacred, he hadn't heard                                                                        
any physicians turning down insurance payments from this                                                                        
"giant third party."                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Evans addressed the statements that this legislation                                                                        
would establish a voluntary arrangement, which any party                                                                        
could withdraw from if not satisfied. He asked why the bill                                                                     
was needed saying that if the physicians currently thought                                                                      
they provide quality care, the insurance companies would                                                                        
not refuse to work with them. He surmised the answer was to                                                                     
give physicians leverage, noting that three years ago, the                                                                      
average income of an Alaskan doctor was $250,000 and that                                                                       
this bill would only seek to increase their income at the                                                                       
expense of the consumers.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
JEFF DAVIS, Executive Director, Blue Cross-Blue Shield of                                                                       
Alaska testified about previous testimony given before the                                                                      
Senate Health, Education and Social Services Committee. He                                                                      
summarized that the company's perspective was that there is                                                                     
not an imbalance of market power based on the limited                                                                           
success in trying to contract with physicians. He stated                                                                        
that the company has contracts with 700 of the total of                                                                         
1800 physicians practicing in the state. Aetna, he said,                                                                        
had approximately 100 contracts and that other carriers had                                                                     
no contracts.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Davis qualified that the bill contained some patient's                                                                      
rights provisions that the company does support, such as                                                                        
the "gag clause". He stressed that they never have had this                                                                     
clause. However, he noted that other provisions in the bill                                                                     
were confusing and unnecessarily costly. He stated that no                                                                      
carrier in Alaska prohibited patients from obtaining                                                                            
services from physicians outside of the network of                                                                              
contracted physicians although the cost to the patient was                                                                      
higher when he or she did so.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Davis disagreed with the claim that this bill would                                                                         
bring more carriers into the market because the true                                                                            
limitations were economies of scale and distance.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
He stressed that the issue with this legislation would                                                                          
increase costs both regulatory and administrative and that                                                                      
there was a potential that physician costs would increase.                                                                      
He noted that FTC regulations already allow physicians to                                                                       
come to carriers in fairly large blocks to discuss patient                                                                      
care.                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
LEN SORRIN, Assistant General Council, Blue Cross-Blue                                                                          
Shield of Alaska, focused his comments on the collective                                                                        
bargaining/anti-trust provisions of the bill. He stressed                                                                       
that the provisions were certain to increase costs to                                                                           
Alaskan consumers. He pointed out that those provisions are                                                                     
unrelated to the patient protection issues in the bill and                                                                      
that there was no consumer benefit to collective                                                                                
bargaining. He stated that physicians do have the right                                                                         
under federal guidelines to collectively talk about issues                                                                      
related to patient care, but also to negotiate prices with                                                                      
carriers. He admitted that there are some limitations on                                                                        
the physicians' ability to do so but said consumers deserve                                                                     
a substantial quid pro quo from those parties to ensure                                                                         
increased efficiency to the marketplace and improved                                                                            
delivery of health care.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Sorrin asserted that the provisions related to market                                                                       
share were unprecedented in the realm of anti-trust law. He                                                                     
did not know of any case in the health care services                                                                            
industry where 15 percent was determined to be a                                                                                
significant market share. In fact, he added, the US                                                                             
Department of Justice guidelines established a "two-tier                                                                        
safe harbor" of 30 percent for physicians grouping                                                                              
together. He stressed that it makes no economic or legal                                                                        
sense to impose the negotiating provisions for those                                                                            
carriers that only have 15 percent of the marketplace.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Tape: SFC - 00 #44, Side A    10:37 AM                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Sorrin continued saying that under the Justice                                                                              
Department's guidelines, no carrier in the state would fall                                                                     
under the bill's terms.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Sorrin concluded that there was no problem and that                                                                         
this legislation did not offer a solution. He stated that                                                                       
the regulations being drafted in Texas had generated a                                                                          
"firestorm of controversy" and suggested that "we                                                                               
underestimate the regulatory complications that this bill                                                                       
will bring to everyone's life." He added that problems                                                                          
would reemerge each time the contracts were up for                                                                              
negotiation.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Senator P. Kelly rebutted the claim that doctors currently                                                                      
are allowed to get together and negotiate for both terms                                                                        
and conditions and price. He said the FTC had ordered the                                                                       
North Lake Tahoe Medical Group and the Mesa County                                                                              
Physicians Independent Practice Association, Inc. to cease                                                                      
an desist from these activities. He read definition                                                                             
language from one of the two consent decrees, "exchanging                                                                       
or facilitating the exchange of information among                                                                               
physicians concerning the terms and conditions including                                                                        
reimbursement on which any physicians are willing to deal                                                                       
with payers." [Copies on file.] He said while he had not                                                                        
been able to find any information to substantiate the claim                                                                     
that physicians were allowed to gather; he was able to find                                                                     
information that showed where the FTC did not allow the                                                                         
activities.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Torgerson ordered the bill HELD in Committee.                                                                          
                                                                                                                                

Document Name Date/Time Subjects