Section 14083.

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The factors to be considered by the negotiator in negotiating contracts under this article, or in drawing specifications for competitive bidding, include, but are not limited to, all of the following:

(a) Beneficiary access.

(b) Utilization controls.

(c) Ability to render quality services efficiently and economically.

(d) Demonstrated ability to provide or arrange needed specialized services.

(e) Protection against fraud and abuse.

(f) Any other factor which would reduce costs, promote access, or enhance the quality of care.

(g) The capacity to provide a given tertiary service, such as specialized children’s services, on a regional basis.

(h) Recognition of the variations in severity of illness and complexity of care.

(i) Existing labor-management collective bargaining agreements.

(j) The situation of county hospitals and university medical centers contracting with counties for provision of health care to indigent persons entitled to care under Section 17000, which are burdened to a greater extent than private hospitals with bad debts, indirect costs, medical education programs, and capital needs.

(k) The special circumstances of hospitals serving a disproportionate number of Medi-Cal beneficiaries and patients who are not covered by other third-party payers, including the costs associated with assuring an adequate supply of registered nurses.

(l) The costs of providing complex emergency services, including the costs of meeting and maintaining state and local requirements for trauma center designation.

(m) The hospital does any of the following:

(1) Provides additional obstetrical beds.

(2) Contracts with one or more comprehensive perinatal providers.

(3) Permits certified nurse midwives, subject to hospital rules, and consistent with existing laws and regulations, to admit patients to the health facility.

(4) Expands overall obstetrical services in the hospital.

(n) The special circumstances of hospitals whose Medi-Cal inpatient utilization rate exceeds the mean Medicaid inpatient utilization rate by at least one-half of one standard deviation.

(o) The ability and capacity of the contracting hospital in a closed health facility planning area to provide health care services to beneficiaries who are in life-threatening or emergency situations, but have been sufficiently stabilized at another noncontracting facility in order to facilitate transportation to the contracting hospital.

(p) The ability of the contracting hospital to provide a secure environment for the provision of health care services. In this regard, the negotiator shall consider additional security measures that the contracting hospital may have taken to provide a secure environment, including, but not limited to, the use of detection equipment or procedures to detect lethal weapons, the appropriate use of surveillance cameras, limiting access of unauthorized personnel to the emergency department, installation of bullet proof glass as appropriate in designated areas, the use of emergency “panic” buttons to alert local law enforcement agencies, and assigning full-time security personnel to the emergency department.

(Amended by Stats. 2010, Ch. 328, Sec. 244. (SB 1330) Effective January 1, 2011.)


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