HB 13-WORKERS' COMPENSATION: MEDICAL FEES  3:14:46 PM CHAIR EGAN announced HB 13 to be up for consideration. REPRESENTATIVE KURT OLSON, sponsor of HB 13, said that this bill made it through both bodies last year, but didn't quite make it. It would update the state's workers' compensation medical fee schedule that hasn't been updated for a long time. The current schedule died on December 31 and was extended by the governor by an Emergency Regulation; it will expire again on June 30, 2011. The current schedule is missing over 2000 service codes; this bill covers a total of 7000. A new schedule would take into account geographic areas, services provided and will be using a national database that is considered to be accurate by the people who are using it now. 3:17:09 PM LINDA HALL, Director, Division of Insurance, Department of Commerce, Community and Economic Development (DCCED), explained that the medical services fee schedule was inadvertently left out of 2004 legislation. Since that time that fee schedule has been in place and they merely made CPI increases to it, which has resulted in the missing of approximately 2000 procedure codes.{ A graph shows the medical benefits cost in Alaska is 75 percent of the system cost compared to 58 percent system cost countrywide. It shows the cost per case in Alaska of $37,000 as compared to $27,000 countrywide. The point of the charts is to show how high the medical costs are in Alaska, which has resulted in for a number of years Alaska having the highest workers' compensation costs in the country. She said she was really pleased this year that Alaska was number two. MS. HALL said generally this bill provides base fee schedule not to exceed "usual, reasonable and customary" fees as established by the board. And the fee schedule will be based on a credible profile of bill charges that are constructed on geographical areas called "geo-zips" and Alaska has three. The only vendor she is aware of at this time that can construct a code for the state is "Ingenix." 3:20:05 PM MISTY STEED, CorVel Corporation, Anchorage, said she has worked quite extensively on some of the programs with the Medical Services Review Committee, specifically on the fee schedule. Her company supports HB 13 the biggest fear being that the employer will not be able to afford its workers' compensation rates in the future, because rates would increase due to the increasing cost of medical procedures if the fee schedule is not in place. 3:21:33 PM CHAIR EGAN thanked everyone for their testimony and held HB 13 for further work. Finding no further business to come before the committee, he adjourned the meeting at 3:21 p.m.