2013 Kentucky Revised Statutes CHAPTER 216 - HEALTH FACILITIES AND SERVICES 216.267 Duties and responsibilities of Kentucky e-Health Network Board -- Permitted functions of the board -- Elements of fully implemented Kentucky e-Health Network.
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216.267 Duties and responsibilities of Kentucky e-Health Network Board -Permitted functions of the board -- Elements of fully implemented
Kentucky e-Health Network.
(1)
(2)
The duties and responsibilities of the board shall be to implement and oversee
the operation of an electronic health network in this Commonwealth, to be
known as the Ke-HN.
The board shall:
(a) Exercise all of the administrative functions of the board;
(b) Appoint an advisory group that shall meet at least quarterly for the
purpose of collaborating with health-care providers and payors, computer
technology companies, telecommunication companies, and other affected
entities to ensure input into the implementation of the Ke-HN;
(c) Review models for an electronic health network;
(d) Oversee the development of comparative business cases for the models
reviewed and choose a model to be implemented in this Commonwealth.
In selecting a model for implementation, the board shall consider the
following elements:
1.
Various models and configurations for Ke-HN, either as developed
from the board's research or as recommended by public and private
experts. Each model or configuration shall be capable of supporting
administrative and clinical functions listed in subsection (4) of this
section, including the capability to integrate with an electronic
Medicaid management information system, provide immediate
health alerts to health-care providers across the state, support
health-care provider education related to the identification and
treatment of rare and unusual diseases, serve as a registry of the
existence and location of advance directives related to health care
or mental health treatment, and serve as a registry of organ
donations. The model chosen may be implemented in phases, as
determined by the board;
2.
Projected costs of the network, indicating those which would be
allocated to state government, health-care providers, insurers, or
others;
3.
Options for financing the start-up, administrative, and maintenance
costs, projected returns on investments, a timetable for realizing
those returns, and any proposed subscription or transaction fees
associated with the Ke-HN;
4.
Procedures intended to secure protected health information in
accordance with HIPAA;
5.
Timetables for implementation of the Ke-HN, whether as a fully
established network, in phases, or through the use of a pilot project
or regional approach to the Ke-HN;
6.
Suggested incentives to promote the use of Ke-HN by health care
providers and payors, and the Medicaid program; and
7.
Incentives, including but not limited to tax credits, low-interest loans,
and grants, under Subchapters 22, 23, 24, 26, and 28 of KRS
Chapter 154 for a company that develops or manufactures software
necessary for the development of the Ke-HN, if the company meets
all the eligibility requirements under the respective subchapter in
KRS Chapter 154;
(e) Receive comments from the advisory group created in paragraph (b) of
this subsection;
(f) Submit a description of the model chosen for implementation to the
Legislative Research Commission for the opportunity for any comments;
(g) If state funds are required for implementation of the model chosen, seek
funding through the appropriations process;
(h) Oversee the implementation of the model chosen subject to the
appropriation of funds. Oversight shall include the following:
1.
Developing any central interchange, including any central server
and software;
2.
Developing the Ke-HN of providers and payors who participate in
the network, which shall be on a voluntary basis;
3.
Making recommendations regarding the features and functions
which shall be included in the distributed components of the
network; and
4.
Performing an outcomes assessment of the benefits achieved by
the network;
(i) Identify and adopt standards for all computer systems communicating
with the Ke-HN, including but not limited to:
1.
The HIPAA standards for electronic transactions as the federal
regulations become final, or more stringent standards for content
and networking as determined by the board;
2.
Medical lexicon for administrative billing and clinical purposes;
3.
Procedure and billing codes; and
4.
Prevalent health care industry standards for software and
networking that ensure that applications work on all types of
computer systems and equipment;
(j) Establish procedures to ensure that Ke-HN transactions are in
compliance with HIPAA guidelines;
(k) Facilitate the implementation of the federal HIPAA guidelines, and identify
any additional variables specific to Kentucky that are required to be in
transactions within the HIPAA guidelines;
(l) Oversee the operations of the Ke-HN, including but not limited to making
recommendations for financing the central interchange for the network
and making recommendations to organizations about implementing the
network in their respective organizations;
(m) Oversee the development of the central interchange that supports
communication between components of the Medicaid management
information system;
(n)
(o)
(p)
(3)
Implement educational efforts about the Ke-HN;
Develop incentives for providers and payors to use the Ke-HN;
Identify options for, adopt, and implement approaches to various aspects
of the Ke-HN necessary for its creation and operation, including but not
limited to technology architecture, governance and oversight,
development and implementation plans, and other areas identified by the
board relating to its charge;
(q) Facilitate the development of private and public partnerships to build the
Ke-HN;
(r) Assign priority in phasing in the network to geographical locations that are
critical to homeland security and protection of the Commonwealth's
energy production;
(s) Collaborate with federal agencies in the development and implementation
of the Ke-HN as a demonstration model for the nation;
(t) Collaborate with the Kentucky Health Care Infrastructure Authority
created under KRS 216.261;
(u) Assist with the securing of state, federal, or private funding for the
Kentucky Health Care Infrastructure Authority created under KRS
216.261;
(v) Stimulate the development of state and local population health
information capacities;
(w) Promulgate administrative regulations in accordance with KRS Chapter
13A necessary to carry out the responsibilities of the board;
(x) Receive and dispense funds appropriated for its use by the General
Assembly or may solicit, apply for, and receive any funds, property, or
services from any person, governmental agency, or organization to carry
out its statutory responsibilities;
(y) Report to the Governor, secretary of the Cabinet for Health and Family
Services, commissioner of the Department of Commercialization and
Innovation, Legislative Research Commission, Interim Joint Committee on
Health and Welfare, and Interim Joint Committee on Banking and
Insurance annually on the development of the Ke-HN and the impact on
quality and cost of health care; and
(z) Collaborate with the Telehealth Board to link functions of the telehealth
network to the Ke-HN, as determined by the Telehealth Board.
The board may:
(a) Use any software program or expand any Medicaid management
information system or electronic provider and payor network developed by
the Medicaid program to support electronic health transactions between
payors, insurers, health-care providers, and patients that are not
Medicaid-related, unless prohibited by federal law or regulation;
(b) Contract, in accordance with KRS Chapter 45A, with an independent third
party or a public or nonprofit e-health corporation for any service
necessary to carry out the responsibilities of the board subject to the
appropriation of funds;
(c)
(4)
Award grants to health-care providers and payors to implement projects
related to health informatics, with highest priority given to health-care
providers and payors that serve rural and inner-city areas of this
Commonwealth;
(d) Enter into an agreement with the University of Kentucky or the University
of Louisville to develop comparative business models or implement any
phase of the Ke-HN, using private or federal funds received by the
university for the purpose designated in the agreement;
(e) Create a public or nonprofit e-health corporation to facilitate public-private
collaboration in development and implementation of the Ke-HN.
1.
A public or nonprofit e-health organization may receive and expend
funds appropriated by the General Assembly and may solicit, apply
for, and receive any funds, grants, contracts, contributions, property,
or services from any person, governmental agency, or other
organization to carry out the responsibilities given to it by the Ke-HN
Board.
2.
Funds appropriated to a public or nonprofit e-health corporation
shall not lapse at the end of a state fiscal year and shall be used
solely for the purposes for which the funds were appropriated.
3.
A public or nonprofit e-health corporation created under this
paragraph shall:
a.
Follow standard accounting practices;
b.
Submit to an annual financial audit by an independent auditor;
c.
Submit a quarterly report of receipts and expenditures to the
secretary of the Cabinet for Health and Family Services and
the Ke-HN Board no later than sixty (60) days after the end of
a quarter; and
d.
Submit an annual financial and progress report to the
Governor, the secretary of the Finance and Administration
Cabinet, and the Interim Joint Committees on Appropriations
and Revenue and Health and Welfare by September 30
following the end of each state fiscal year. The annual report
shall include a report of receipts and expenditures, the financial
audit, and a report on the status and progress of the
corporation's initiatives; and
(f) Promulgate administrative regulations in accordance with KRS Chapter
13A to implement the provisions of paragraph (e) of this subsection.
In its fully implemented form, the Kentucky e-Health Network is envisioned to
support or encourage the following types of electronic transactions or activities
that would be phased in over time:
(a) Automatic drug-drug interaction and allergy alerts;
(b) Automatic preventive medicine alerts;
(c) Electronic access to the results of laboratory, X-ray, or other diagnostic
examinations;
(d) Disease management;
(e)
(f)
(g)
(h)
(i)
(j)
(k)
Disease surveillance and reporting;
Educational offerings for health-care providers;
Health alert system and other applications related to homeland security;
Links to drug formularies and cost information;
Links to evidence-based medical practice;
Links to patient educational materials;
Medical record information transfer to other providers with the patient's
consent;
(l) Physician order entry;
(m) Prescription drug tracking;
(n) Registries for vital statistics, cancer, case management, immunizations,
and other public health registries;
(o) Registry of the existence and location of advance directives related to
health care and mental health treatment;
(p) Registry of organ donations executed under KRS 311.1911 to 311.1959;
(q) Secured electronic consultations between providers and patients;
(r) A single-source insurance credentialing system for health care providers;
and
(s) The following transactions covered by HIPAA:
1.
Electronic health-care claims submission;
2.
Electronic payment;
3.
Coordination of benefits;
4.
Health-care claim status;
5.
Enrollment and disenrollment in a health plan;
6.
Eligibility for a health plan;
7.
Health plan premium payments;
8.
Referral certification and authorization;
9.
First report of injury; and
10. Health claims attachments.
Effective:July 15, 2010
History: Amended 2010 Ky. Acts ch. 161, sec. 29, effective July 15, 2010. -Amended 2007 Ky. Acts ch. 126, sec. 5, effective June 26, 2007. -- Amended
2006 Ky. Acts ch. 210, sec. 13, effective July 12, 2006; and ch. 150, sec. 1,
effective July 12, 2006. -- Created 2005 Ky. Acts ch. 30, sec. 4, effective March
8, 2005.
Legislative Research Commission Note (6/20/2005). 2005 Ky. Acts chs. 11, 85,
95, 97, 98, 99, 123, and 181 instruct the Reviser of Statutes to correct statutory
references to agencies and officers whose names have been changed in 2005
legislation confirming the reorganization of the executive branch. Such a
correction has been made in this section.
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