Florida Senate - 2026                                    SB 1156
       
       
        
       By Senator Trumbull
       
       
       
       
       
       2-00459B-26                                           20261156__
    1                        A bill to be entitled                      
    2         An act relating to ambulatory surgical centers;
    3         creating ch. 396, F.S., to be entitled “Ambulatory
    4         Surgical Centers”; creating s. 396.201, F.S.;
    5         providing legislative intent; creating s. 396.202,
    6         F.S.; defining terms; creating s. 396.203, F.S.;
    7         specifying requirements for issuance, denial,
    8         suspension, and revocation of ambulatory surgical
    9         center licenses; creating s. 396.204, F.S.; providing
   10         for application fees; creating s. 396.205, F.S.;
   11         providing for minimum standards for specified clinical
   12         and diagnostic results as a condition for issuance or
   13         renewal of a license; creating s. 396.206, F.S.;
   14         requiring the Agency for Health Care Administration to
   15         make or cause to be made specified inspections of
   16         licensed facilities; requiring the agency to accept
   17         surveys or inspections from certain accrediting
   18         organizations in lieu of its own periodic inspections,
   19         provided certain conditions are met; requiring the
   20         agency to develop and adopt by rule certain criteria;
   21         requiring an applicant or a licensee to pay certain
   22         fees at the time of inspection; requiring the agency
   23         to coordinate periodic inspections to minimize costs
   24         and disruption of services; creating s. 396.207, F.S.;
   25         requiring each licensed facility to maintain and
   26         provide upon request records of all inspection reports
   27         pertaining to that facility; providing that such
   28         reports be retained for a specified timeframe;
   29         prohibiting the distribution of specified records;
   30         requiring a licensed facility to provide a copy of its
   31         most recent inspection report to certain parties upon
   32         request; authorizing licensed facilities to charge for
   33         such copies; creating s. 396.208, F.S.; providing that
   34         specified provisions govern the design, construction,
   35         erection, alteration, modification, repair, and
   36         demolition of licensed facilities; requiring the
   37         agency to review facility plans and survey the
   38         construction of licensed facilities; requiring
   39         licensed facilities to submit plans and specifications
   40         to the agency for review; requiring the agency to make
   41         or cause to be made certain inspections or
   42         investigations as it deems necessary; authorizing the
   43         agency to adopt certain rules; requiring the agency to
   44         approve or disapprove facility plans and
   45         specifications within a specified timeframe; providing
   46         an extension under certain circumstances; deeming a
   47         facility plan or specification approved if the agency
   48         fails to act within the specified timeframe; requiring
   49         the agency to set forth in writing its reasons for any
   50         disapprovals; authorizing the agency to charge and
   51         collect specified fees and costs; creating s. 396.209,
   52         F.S.; prohibiting any person from paying or receiving
   53         a commission, bonus, kickback, or rebate or engaging
   54         in any split-fee arrangement for referring a patient
   55         to a licensed facility; requiring agency enforcement;
   56         providing administrative penalties; creating s.
   57         396.211, F.S.; prohibiting a licensed facility from
   58         denying, for a specified reason, the applications of
   59         certain licensed health care practitioners for staff
   60         membership and clinical privileges; requiring a
   61         licensed facility to establish rules and procedures
   62         for consideration of such applications; providing for
   63         the termination of clinical privileges for physician
   64         assistants under certain circumstances; authorizing
   65         certain advanced practice registered nurses to
   66         administer anesthesia subject to certain conditions;
   67         requiring the presence of a circulating nurse in the
   68         operating room for the duration of surgical
   69         procedures; requiring a licensed facility to make
   70         available specified membership or privileges to
   71         certain physicians under certain circumstances;
   72         providing construction; requiring the governing board
   73         of a licensed facility to set standards and procedures
   74         to be applied in considering and acting upon
   75         applications; requiring that such standards and
   76         procedures be made available for public inspection;
   77         requiring a licensed facility to provide in writing,
   78         upon request of an applicant, the reasons for denial
   79         of staff membership or clinical privileges within a
   80         specified timeframe; requiring that a denial be
   81         submitted in writing to the applicant’s respective
   82         regulatory board; providing immunity from monetary
   83         liability to certain persons and entities; providing
   84         that investigations, proceedings, and records produced
   85         or acquired by the governing board or its agent are
   86         not subject to discovery or introduction into evidence
   87         in certain proceedings under certain circumstances;
   88         prohibiting persons in attendance at such meetings
   89         from testifying in civil actions about the evidence
   90         presented or deliberations during such meetings;
   91         providing construction; providing for the award of
   92         specified fees and costs; requiring applicants who
   93         bring an action against certain persons or entities to
   94         post a bond or other security in a certain amount, as
   95         set by the court; creating s. 396.212, F.S.; providing
   96         legislative intent; requiring licensed facilities to
   97         provide for peer review of certain physicians and
   98         develop procedures to conduct such reviews; specifying
   99         requirements for such procedures; requiring that,
  100         under certain circumstances, a peer review panel
  101         investigate and determine whether grounds for
  102         discipline exist with respect to certain staff members
  103         or physicians; requiring the governing board to take
  104         specified actions if certain determinations are made;
  105         providing grounds for such governing board actions;
  106         requiring licensed facilities to report disciplinary
  107         action to the Department of Health’s Division of
  108         Medical Quality Assurance within a specified
  109         timeframe; providing requirements for the report;
  110         requiring the division to review each report and make
  111         certain determinations; providing that such reports
  112         are exempt from public records requirements; providing
  113         immunity from monetary liability to certain persons
  114         and entities; providing construction; providing
  115         administrative penalties; providing that certain
  116         proceedings and records of peer review panels,
  117         committees, and governing boards or agents thereof are
  118         exempt from public records requirements and are not
  119         subject to discovery or introduction into evidence in
  120         certain proceedings; prohibiting persons in attendance
  121         at certain meetings from testifying or being required
  122         to testify in certain civil or administrative actions;
  123         providing construction; providing for the award of
  124         specified fees and costs; requiring persons who bring
  125         an action against certain persons or entities to post
  126         a bond or other security in a certain amount, as set
  127         by the court; creating s. 396.213, F.S.; requiring
  128         licensed facilities to establish an internal risk
  129         management program; specifying requirements for such
  130         program; providing that the governing board of the
  131         licensed facility is responsible for the program;
  132         requiring licensed facilities to hire a risk manager;
  133         specifying requirements for such risk manager;
  134         encouraging licensed facilities to implement certain
  135         innovative approaches; requiring licensed facilities
  136         to annually report specified information to the Agency
  137         for Health Care Administration and the Department of
  138         Health; requiring the agency and the department to
  139         include certain statistical information in their
  140         respective annual reports; requiring the agency to
  141         adopt rules governing the establishment of internal
  142         risk management programs; specifying requirements for
  143         such programs defining the term “adverse incident” for
  144         certain purposes; requiring licensed facilities to
  145         report specified information annually to the agency;
  146         requiring the agency to review the reported
  147         information and make certain determinations; providing
  148         that the reported information is exempt from public
  149         records requirements and is not discoverable or
  150         admissible in civil or administrative actions, with
  151         exceptions; requiring licensed facilities to report
  152         certain adverse incidents to the agency within a
  153         specified timeframe; providing requirements for such
  154         reports; authorizing the agency to grant extensions of
  155         the reporting requirement under certain circumstances
  156         and subject to certain conditions; providing that such
  157         reports are exempt from public records requirements
  158         and are not discoverable or admissible in civil and
  159         administrative actions, with exceptions; authorizing
  160         the agency to investigate reported adverse incidents
  161         and prescribe measures in response to such incidents;
  162         requiring the agency to review adverse incidents and
  163         make certain determinations; requiring the agency to
  164         publish certain reports and summaries within certain
  165         timeframes on its website; prohibiting certain
  166         information from being included in such reports and
  167         summaries; providing a purpose; specifying certain
  168         investigative and reporting requirements for internal
  169         risk managers relating to the investigation and
  170         reporting of allegations of sexual misconduct or
  171         sexual abuse at licensed facilities; specifying
  172         requirements for witnesses to such alleged misconduct
  173         or abuse; defining the term “sexual abuse”; providing
  174         criminal penalties for making a false allegation of
  175         sexual misconduct; requiring the agency to require a
  176         written plan of correction from the licensed facility
  177         for certain violations; requiring the agency to first
  178         seek corrective action from a licensed facility for
  179         certain nonwillful violations; providing
  180         administrative penalties for a facility’s failure to
  181         timely correct the violation or for demonstrating a
  182         pattern of such violations; requiring licensed
  183         facilities to provide the agency with access to all
  184         facility records needed for specified purposes;
  185         providing that such records obtained by the agency are
  186         exempt from public records requirements and are not
  187         discoverable or admissible in civil and administrative
  188         actions, with exceptions; providing an exemption from
  189         public meeting and records requirements for certain
  190         meetings of the committees and governing board of a
  191         licensed facility; requiring the agency to review the
  192         internal risk management program of each licensed
  193         facility as part of its licensure review process;
  194         providing risk managers with immunity from monetary
  195         and civil liability in certain proceedings under
  196         certain circumstances; providing immunity from civil
  197         liability to risk managers and licensed facilities in
  198         certain actions, with an exception; requiring the
  199         agency to report certain investigative results to the
  200         applicable regulatory board; prohibiting coercion,
  201         intimidation, or preclusion of a risk manager;
  202         providing for civil penalties; creating s. 396.214,
  203         F.S.; requiring licensed facilities to comply with
  204         specified requirements for the transportation of
  205         biomedical waste; creating s. 396.215, F.S.; requiring
  206         licensed facilities to adopt a patient safety plan,
  207         appoint a patient safety officer and a patient safety
  208         committee for specified purposes, and conduct a
  209         patient safety culture survey at least biennially;
  210         specifying requirements for such survey; authorizing
  211         facilities to contract for administration of the
  212         survey; requiring that survey data be submitted to the
  213         agency in a certain format; authorizing licensed
  214         facilities to develop an internal action plan for a
  215         certain purpose and submit the plan to the agency;
  216         requiring licensed facilities to develop and implement
  217         policies and procedures for the rendering of certain
  218         medical care; specifying requirements for the policies
  219         and procedures; requiring licensed facilities to train
  220         all nonphysician personnel on the policies and
  221         procedures at least annually; defining the term
  222         “nonphysician personnel”; creating s. 396.216, F.S.;
  223         requiring licensed facilities to adopt specified
  224         protocols for the treatment of victims of child abuse,
  225         abandonment, or neglect; creating s. 396.217, F.S.;
  226         providing requirements for notifying a patient or a
  227         patient’s proxy about adverse incidents; providing
  228         construction; creating s. 396.218, F.S.; requiring the
  229         agency to adopt specified rules relating to minimum
  230         standards for licensed facilities; providing
  231         construction; providing that certain licensed
  232         facilities are allowed a specified timeframe in which
  233         to comply with any newly adopted agency rules;
  234         preempting the adoption of certain rules to the
  235         Florida Building Commission and the State Fire
  236         Marshal; requiring the agency to provide technical
  237         assistance to the commission and the State Fire
  238         Marshal in updating the construction standards
  239         governing licensed facilities; creating s. 396.219,
  240         F.S.; providing for criminal and administrative
  241         penalties; requiring the agency to consider specified
  242         factors in determining the amounts of administrative
  243         fines levied; authorizing the agency to impose an
  244         immediate moratorium on elective admissions to any
  245         licensed facility under certain circumstances;
  246         creating s. 396.221, F.S.; providing powers and duties
  247         of the agency; creating s. 396.222, F.S.; requiring a
  248         licensed facility to provide timely and accurate
  249         financial information and quality of service measures
  250         to certain individuals; requiring a licensed facility
  251         to make available on its website certain information
  252         on payments made to that facility for defined bundles
  253         of services and procedures and other information for
  254         consumers and patients; providing requirements for
  255         such information; requiring that facility websites
  256         provide specified information and notify and inform
  257         patients or prospective patients of certain
  258         information; defining the terms “shoppable health care
  259         service” and “standard charge”; requiring a licensed
  260         facility to provide a written or electronic good faith
  261         estimate of certain charges to a patient or
  262         prospective patient within a certain timeframe;
  263         specifying requirements for such estimates; requiring
  264         a licensed facility to provide to a patient or a
  265         prospective patient specified information regarding
  266         the facility’s financial assistance policy; providing
  267         a civil penalty for failing to timely provide an
  268         estimate of charges to a patient or prospective
  269         patient and the insurer; requiring licensed facilities
  270         to make certain health-related data available on its
  271         website; requiring licensed facilities to take action
  272         to notify the public of the availability of such
  273         information; requiring licensed facilities to provide
  274         an itemized statement or bill to a patient or his or
  275         her survivor or legal guardian within a specified
  276         timeframe upon request and after discharge; specifying
  277         requirements for the statement or bill; requiring
  278         licensed facilities to make available to a patient or
  279         his or her survivor or legal guardian certain records
  280         within a specified timeframe and in a specified
  281         manner; authorizing licensed facilities to charge fees
  282         in a specified amount for copies of such records;
  283         requiring licensed facilities to establish certain
  284         internal processes relating to itemized statements and
  285         bills and grievances; requiring licensed facilities to
  286         disclose certain information relating to the patient’s
  287         cost-sharing obligation; providing an administrative
  288         penalty for failure to disclose such information;
  289         creating s. 396.223, F.S.; defining the term
  290         “extraordinary collection action”; prohibiting certain
  291         collection actions by a licensed facility; creating s.
  292         396.224, F.S.; providing criminal penalties and
  293         disciplinary action for the fraudulent alteration,
  294         defacement, or falsification of medical records;
  295         creating s. 396.225, F.S.; requiring a licensed
  296         facility to furnish, in a timely manner, a true and
  297         correct copy of all patient records to certain
  298         persons; specifying authorized charges for copies of
  299         such records; providing an exception; providing for
  300         confidentiality of patient records; providing
  301         exceptions; authorizing the department to examine
  302         certain records for certain purposes; providing
  303         criminal penalties for the unauthorized release of
  304         information from such records by department agents;
  305         providing content and use requirements and limitations
  306         for confidential patient records released under the
  307         exemptions; authorizing licensed facilities to
  308         prescribe the content and custody of limited-access
  309         records that the facility maintains on its employees;
  310         specifying the types of records that may be limited in
  311         this manner; providing requirements for the release of
  312         such limited-access records; providing an exemption
  313         from public records requirements for such records;
  314         providing exemptions from public records requirements
  315         for specified personal information relating to
  316         employees of licensed facilities who provide direct
  317         patient care or security services and their spouses
  318         and children, and for specified personal information
  319         relating to certain other employees of licensed
  320         facilities and their spouses and children upon their
  321         request; providing exceptions to the exemptions;
  322         amending ss. 39.304, 95.11, 222.26, 381.00316,
  323         381.0035, 381.026, 381.028, 381.915, 383.145, 385.202,
  324         385.211, 390.011, 390.025, 394.4787, 395.001, 395.002,
  325         395.003, 395.1055, 395.10973, 395.3025, 395.607,
  326         395.701, 400.518, 400.93, 400.9905, 400.9935, 401.272,
  327         408.051, 408.07, 408.802, 408.820, 409.905, 409.906,
  328         409.975, 456.013, 456.0135, 456.041, 456.053, 456.056,
  329         456.0575, 456.072, 456.073, 458.3145, 458.320,
  330         458.3265, 458.328, 458.347, 458.351, 459.0085,
  331         459.0137, 459.0138, 459.015, 459.022, 459.026,
  332         460.413, 460.4167, 461.013, 464.012, 465.0125,
  333         465.016, 466.028, 468.505, 486.021, 499.003, 499.0295,
  334         553.80, 627.351, 627.357, 627.6056, 627.6387,
  335         627.6405, 627.64194, 627.6616, 627.6648, 627.736,
  336         627.912, 641.31076, 765.101, 766.101, 766.1016,
  337         766.106, 766.110, 766.1115, 766.118, 766.202, 766.316,
  338         790.338, 812.014, 893.05, 893.13, 945.6041, 985.6441,
  339         1001.42, and 1012.965, F.S.; conforming cross
  340         references and provisions to changes made by the act;
  341         bifurcating fees applicable to ambulatory surgical
  342         centers under ch. 395, F.S., and transferring them to
  343         ch. 396, F.S.; authorizing the agency to maintain its
  344         current fees for ambulatory surgical centers and adopt
  345         certain rules; providing an effective date.
  346          
  347  Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida:
  348  
  349         Section 1. Chapter 396, Florida Statutes, consisting of ss.
  350  396.201-396.225, Florida Statutes, is created and entitled
  351  “Ambulatory Surgical Centers.”
  352         Section 2. Section 396.201, Florida Statutes, is created to
  353  read:
  354         396.201Legislative intent.—It is the intent of the
  355  Legislature to provide for the protection of public health and
  356  safety in the establishment, construction, maintenance, and
  357  operation of ambulatory surgical centers by providing for
  358  licensure of the same and for the development, establishment,
  359  and enforcement of minimum standards with respect thereto.
  360         Section 3. Section 396.202, Florida Statutes, is created to
  361  read:
  362         396.202 Definitions.—As used in this chapter, the term:
  363         (1) “Accrediting organization” means a national accrediting
  364  organization approved by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid
  365  Services whose standards incorporate comparable licensure
  366  regulations required by this state.
  367         (2) “Agency” means the Agency for Health Care
  368  Administration.
  369         (3) “Ambulatory surgical center” means a facility, the
  370  primary purpose of which is to provide elective surgical care,
  371  in which the patient is admitted to and discharged from such
  372  facility within 24 hours, and which is not part of a hospital.
  373  The term does not include a facility existing for the primary
  374  purpose of performing terminations of pregnancy, an office
  375  maintained by a physician for the practice of medicine, or an
  376  office maintained for the practice of dentistry, except that
  377  that any such facility or office that is certified or seeks
  378  certification as a Medicare ambulatory surgical center must be
  379  licensed as an ambulatory surgical center under this chapter.
  380         (4) “Biomedical waste” has the same meaning as provided in
  381  s. 381.0098(2).
  382         (5) “Clinical privileges” means the privileges granted to a
  383  physician or other licensed health care practitioner to render
  384  patient care services in an ambulatory surgical center, but does
  385  not include the privilege of admitting patients.
  386         (6) “Department” means the Department of Health.
  387         (7) “Director” means any member of the official board of
  388  directors as reported in the licensed facility owner’s annual
  389  corporate report to the Department of State or, if no such
  390  report is made, any member of the operating board of directors.
  391  The term does not include members of separate, restricted boards
  392  who serve only in an advisory capacity to the operating board.
  393         (8) “Emergency medical condition” means:
  394         (a) A medical condition manifesting itself by acute
  395  symptoms of sufficient severity, which may include severe pain,
  396  such that the absence of immediate medical attention could
  397  reasonably be expected to result in any of the following:
  398         1. Serious jeopardy to patient health, including for a
  399  pregnant woman or fetus.
  400         2. Serious impairment to bodily functions.
  401         3. Serious dysfunction of any bodily organ or part.
  402         (b) With respect to a pregnant woman:
  403         1. That there is inadequate time to effect safe transfer to
  404  a hospital before delivery;
  405         2. That a transfer may pose a threat to the health and
  406  safety of the patient or fetus; or
  407         3. That there is evidence of the onset and persistence of
  408  uterine contractions or a rupture of the membranes.
  409         (9)“Governmental unit” means the state or any county,
  410  municipality, or other political subdivision, or any department,
  411  division, board, or other agency of any of the foregoing.
  412         (10)Hospital” has the same meaning as in s. 395.002.
  413         (11) “Licensed facility” means an ambulatory surgical
  414  center licensed under this chapter.
  415         (12) “Lifesafety” means the control and prevention of fire
  416  and other life-threatening conditions on a premises for the
  417  purpose of preserving human life.
  418         (13) “Medical staff” means physicians licensed under
  419  chapter 458 or chapter 459 with privileges in a licensed
  420  facility, as well as other licensed health care practitioners
  421  with clinical privileges as approved by a licensed facility’s
  422  governing board.
  423         (14) “Person” means any individual, partnership,
  424  corporation, association, or governmental unit.
  425         (15) “Premises” means those buildings, beds, and equipment
  426  located at the address of the licensed facility, and all other
  427  buildings, beds, and equipment for the provision of ambulatory
  428  surgical care located in such reasonable proximity to the
  429  address of the licensed facility as to appear to the public to
  430  be under the dominion and control of the licensee.
  431         (16) “Validation inspection” means an inspection of the
  432  premises of a licensed facility by the agency to assess whether
  433  a review by an accrediting organization has adequately evaluated
  434  the licensed facility according to minimum state standards.
  435         Section 4. Section 396.203, Florida Statutes, is created to
  436  read:
  437         396.203 Licensure; denial, suspension, and revocation.—
  438         (1)(a) The requirements of part II of chapter 408 apply to
  439  the provision of services that require licensure pursuant to ss.
  440  396.201-396.225 and part II of chapter 408 and to entities
  441  licensed by or applying for such licensure from the Agency for
  442  Health Care Administration pursuant to ss. 396.201-396.225. A
  443  license issued by the agency is required in order to operate an
  444  ambulatory surgical center in this state.
  445         (b)1. It is unlawful for a person to use or advertise to
  446  the public, in any way or by any medium whatsoever, any facility
  447  as an “ambulatory surgical center” unless such facility has
  448  first secured a license under this chapter.
  449         2. This chapter does not apply to commercial business
  450  establishments using the word “ambulatory surgical center” as a
  451  part of a trade name if no treatment of human beings is
  452  performed on the premises of such establishments.
  453         (2) In addition to the requirements of s. 408.807, after a
  454  change of ownership has been approved by the agency, the
  455  transferee is liable for any liability due to the state,
  456  regardless of when identified, resulting from changes to
  457  allowable costs affecting provider reimbursement for Medicaid
  458  participation and related administrative fines.
  459         (3) An ambulatory surgical center must comply with ss.
  460  627.64194 and 641.513 as a condition of licensure.
  461         (4) In addition to the requirements of part II of chapter
  462  408, whenever the agency finds that there has been a substantial
  463  failure to comply with the requirements established under this
  464  chapter or in rules, the agency is authorized to deny, modify,
  465  suspend, or revoke a license.
  466         Section 5. Section 396.204, Florida Statutes, is created to
  467  read:
  468         396.204 Application for license; fees.—In accordance with
  469  s. 408.805, an applicant or a licensee shall pay a fee for each
  470  license application submitted under this chapter, part II of
  471  chapter 408, and applicable rules. The amount of the fee is
  472  established by rule. The license fee required of a facility
  473  licensed under this chapter is established by rule, except that
  474  the minimum license fee is $1,500.
  475         Section 6. Section 396.205, Florida Statutes, is created to
  476  read:
  477         396.205 Minimum standards for clinical laboratory test
  478  results and diagnostic X-ray results; prerequisite for issuance
  479  or renewal of license.—
  480         (1) As a requirement for issuance or renewal of its
  481  license, each licensed facility shall require that all clinical
  482  laboratory tests performed by or for the licensed facility be
  483  performed by a clinical laboratory appropriately certified by
  484  the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services under the federal
  485  Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments and the federal rules
  486  adopted thereunder.
  487         (2) Each licensed facility, as a requirement for issuance
  488  or renewal of its license, shall establish minimum standards for
  489  acceptance of results of diagnostic X rays performed by or for
  490  the licensed facility. Such standards must require licensure or
  491  registration of the source of ionizing radiation under chapter
  492  404.
  493         (3) The results of clinical laboratory tests and diagnostic
  494  X rays performed before admission which meet the minimum
  495  standards required by law must be accepted in lieu of routine
  496  examinations required upon admission and in lieu of clinical
  497  laboratory tests and diagnostic X rays which may be ordered by a
  498  physician for patients of the licensed facility.
  499         Section 7. Section 396.206, Florida Statutes, is created to
  500  read:
  501         396.206 Licensure inspection.—
  502         (1) In addition to the requirement of s. 408.811, the
  503  agency shall make or cause to be made such inspections and
  504  investigations as it deems necessary, including, but not limited
  505  to:
  506         (a) Inspections directed by the Centers for Medicare and
  507  Medicaid Services.
  508         (b) Validation inspections.
  509         (c) Lifesafety inspections.
  510         (d) Licensure complaint investigations, including full
  511  licensure investigations with a review of all licensure
  512  standards as outlined in the administrative rules. Complaints
  513  received by the agency from individuals, organizations, or other
  514  sources are subject to review and investigation by the agency.
  515         (2) The agency shall accept, in lieu of its own periodic
  516  inspections for licensure, the survey or inspection of an
  517  accrediting organization, provided that the accreditation of the
  518  licensed facility is not provisional and provided that the
  519  licensed facility authorizes release of, and the agency receives
  520  the report of, the accrediting organization. The agency shall
  521  develop and adopt by rule criteria for accepting survey reports
  522  of accrediting organizations in lieu of conducting a state
  523  licensure inspection.
  524         (3) In accordance with s. 408.805, an applicant or a
  525  licensee must pay a fee for each license application submitted
  526  under this chapter, part II of chapter 408, and applicable
  527  rules. Each facility licensed under this chapter must pay to the
  528  agency, at the time of inspection, the following fees:
  529         (a) Inspection for licensure.—A fee of at least $400 per
  530  facility.
  531         (b) Inspection for lifesafety only.—A fee of at least $40
  532  per facility.
  533         (4) The agency shall coordinate all periodic inspections
  534  for licensure made by the agency to ensure that the cost to the
  535  facility of such inspections and the disruption of services by
  536  such inspections are minimized.
  537         Section 8. Section 396.207, Florida Statutes, is created to
  538  read:
  539         396.207 Inspection reports.—
  540         (1) Each licensed facility shall maintain as public
  541  information, available upon request, records of all inspection
  542  reports pertaining to that facility. Copies of such reports must
  543  be retained in its records for at least 5 years after the date
  544  the reports are filed and issued.
  545         (2) Any record, report, or document that is confidential
  546  and exempt from s. 119.07(1) may not be distributed or made
  547  available for purposes of compliance with this section unless or
  548  until such confidential status expires.
  549         (3) A licensed facility shall, upon the request of any
  550  person who has completed a written application with intent to be
  551  admitted to such facility, any person who is a patient of such
  552  facility, or any relative, spouse, guardian, or surrogate of any
  553  such person, furnish to the requester a copy of the last
  554  inspection report filed with or issued by the agency pertaining
  555  to the licensed facility, as provided in subsection (1),
  556  provided that the person requesting such report agrees to pay a
  557  reasonable charge to cover copying costs, not to exceed $1 per
  558  page.
  559         Section 9. Section 396.208, Florida Statutes, is created to
  560  read:
  561         396.208 Construction inspections; plan submission and
  562  approval; fees.—
  563         (1)(a) The design, construction, erection, alteration,
  564  modification, repair, and demolition of all licensed health care
  565  facilities are governed by the Florida Building Code and the
  566  Florida Fire Prevention Code under ss. 553.73 and 633.202.
  567         (b)In addition to the requirements of ss. 553.79 and
  568  553.80, the agency shall review facility plans and survey the
  569  construction of any facility licensed under this chapter. All
  570  licensed facilities shall submit plans and specifications to the
  571  agency for review under this section. The agency shall make, or
  572  cause to be made, such construction inspections and
  573  investigations as it deems necessary. The agency may prescribe
  574  by rule that any licensee or applicant desiring to make
  575  specified types of alterations or additions to its facilities or
  576  to construct new facilities shall, before commencing such
  577  alteration, addition, or new construction, submit plans and
  578  specifications therefor to the agency for preliminary inspection
  579  and approval or recommendation with respect to compliance with
  580  applicable provisions of the Florida Building Code or agency
  581  rules and standards.
  582         (c)The agency shall approve or disapprove the plans and
  583  specifications within 60 days after receipt of the fee for
  584  review of plans as required in subsection (2). The agency may be
  585  granted one 15-day extension for the review period if the
  586  director of the agency approves the extension. If the agency
  587  fails to act within the specified timeframe, it is deemed to
  588  have approved the plans and specifications. When the agency
  589  disapproves plans and specifications, it must set forth in
  590  writing the reasons for its disapproval. Conferences and
  591  consultations may be provided as necessary.
  592         (2) The agency may charge an initial fee of $2,000 for
  593  review of plans and construction on all projects, which is
  594  nonrefundable. The agency may also collect a fee, not to exceed
  595  1 percent of the estimated construction cost or the actual cost
  596  of review, whichever is less, for the portion of the review
  597  which encompasses initial review through the initial revised
  598  construction document review. The agency is further authorized
  599  to collect its actual costs on all subsequent portions of the
  600  review and construction inspections. The initial fee payment
  601  must accompany the initial submission of plans and
  602  specifications. Any subsequent payment that is due is payable
  603  upon receipt of the invoice from the agency.
  604         Section 10. Section 396.209, Florida Statutes, is created
  605  to read:
  606         396.209 Rebates prohibited; penalties.—
  607         (1) It is unlawful for any person to pay or receive any
  608  commission, bonus, kickback, or rebate or engage in any split
  609  fee arrangement, in any form whatsoever, with any physician,
  610  surgeon, organization, or person, either directly or indirectly,
  611  for patients referred to a licensed facility.
  612         (2) The agency shall enforce subsection (1). In the case of
  613  an entity not licensed by the agency, administrative penalties
  614  may include:
  615         (a) A fine not to exceed $1,000.
  616         (b) If applicable, a recommendation by the agency to the
  617  appropriate regulatory board that disciplinary action be taken.
  618         Section 11. Section 396.211, Florida Statutes, is created
  619  to read:
  620         396.211 Staff membership and clinical privileges.—
  621         (1) A licensed facility, in considering and acting upon an
  622  application for staff membership or clinical privileges, may not
  623  deny the application of a qualified doctor of medicine licensed
  624  under chapter 458, a doctor of osteopathic medicine licensed
  625  under chapter 459, a doctor of dentistry licensed under chapter
  626  466, or a doctor of podiatric medicine licensed under chapter
  627  461 for such staff membership or clinical privileges within the
  628  scope of his or her respective licensure solely because the
  629  applicant is licensed under any of such chapters.
  630         (2)(a) Each licensed facility shall establish rules and
  631  procedures for consideration of an application for clinical
  632  privileges submitted by a physician assistant licensed pursuant
  633  to s. 458.347 or s. 459.022. Clinical privileges granted to a
  634  physician assistant pursuant to this subsection automatically
  635  terminate upon termination of staff membership of the physician
  636  assistant’s supervising physician.
  637         (b)An advanced practice registered nurse who is certified
  638  as a registered nurse anesthetist licensed under part I of
  639  chapter 464 may administer anesthesia under the onsite medical
  640  direction of a professional licensed under chapter 458, chapter
  641  459, or chapter 466, and in accordance with an established
  642  protocol approved by the medical staff. The medical direction
  643  must specifically address the needs of the individual patient.
  644         (c)A circulating nurse must be present in the operating
  645  room for the duration of a surgical procedure.
  646         (3) When a licensed facility requires, as a precondition to
  647  obtaining staff membership or clinical privileges, the
  648  completion of, eligibility in, or graduation from any program or
  649  society established by or relating to the American Medical
  650  Association or the Liaison Committee on Medical Education, the
  651  licensed facility must also make available such membership or
  652  privileges to physicians who have attained completion of,
  653  eligibility in, or graduation from any equivalent program
  654  established by or relating to the American Osteopathic
  655  Association.
  656         (4) This section does not restrict in any way the authority
  657  of the medical staff of a licensed facility to review for
  658  approval or disapproval all applications for appointment and
  659  reappointment to all categories of staff and to make
  660  recommendations on each applicant to the governing board of the
  661  facility, including the delineation of privileges to be granted
  662  in each case. In making such recommendations and in the
  663  delineation of privileges, each applicant must be considered
  664  individually pursuant to criteria for a doctor licensed under
  665  chapter 458, chapter 459, chapter 461, or chapter 466; or for an
  666  advanced practice registered nurse licensed under part I of
  667  chapter 464, as applicable. The applicant’s eligibility for
  668  staff membership or clinical privileges must be determined by
  669  the applicant’s background, experience, health, training, and
  670  demonstrated competency; the applicant’s adherence to applicable
  671  professional ethics; the applicant’s reputation; and the
  672  applicant’s ability to work with others, and by such other
  673  elements as determined by the governing board consistent with
  674  this chapter.
  675         (5) The governing board of each licensed facility shall set
  676  standards and procedures to be applied by the licensed facility
  677  and its medical staff in considering and acting upon
  678  applications for staff membership or clinical privileges. Such
  679  standards and procedures must be made available for public
  680  inspection.
  681         (6) Upon the written request of the applicant, any licensed
  682  facility that has denied staff membership or clinical privileges
  683  to an applicant specified in subsection (1) or subsection (2)
  684  must, within 30 days after such request, provide the applicant
  685  with the reasons for such denial in writing. A denial of staff
  686  membership or clinical privileges to any applicant must be
  687  submitted, in writing, to the applicant’s respective regulatory
  688  board.
  689         (7) There is no monetary liability on the part of, and no
  690  cause of action for injunctive relief or damages may arise
  691  against, any licensed facility, its governing board or governing
  692  board members, medical staff, or disciplinary board or against
  693  its agents, investigators, witnesses, or employees, or against
  694  any other person, for any action arising out of or related to
  695  carrying out this section, absent intentional fraud.
  696         (8) The investigations, proceedings, and records of the
  697  board, or its agent with whom there is a specific written
  698  contract for the purposes of this section, as described in this
  699  section are not subject to discovery or introduction into
  700  evidence in any civil action against a provider of professional
  701  health services arising out of matters that are the subject of
  702  evaluation and review by such board, and any person who was in
  703  attendance at a meeting of such board or its agent is not
  704  permitted or required to testify in any such civil action as to
  705  any evidence or other matters produced or presented during the
  706  proceedings of such board or its agent or as to any findings,
  707  recommendations, evaluations, opinions, or other actions of such
  708  board or its agent or any members thereof. However, information,
  709  documents, or records otherwise available from original sources
  710  are not to be construed as immune from discovery or use in any
  711  such civil action merely because they were presented during
  712  proceedings of such board; nor may any person who testifies
  713  before such board or who is a member of such board be prevented
  714  from testifying as to matters within his or her knowledge, but
  715  such witness cannot be asked about his or her testimony before
  716  such a board or opinions formed by him or her as a result of
  717  such board hearings.
  718         (9)(a) If the defendant prevails in an action brought by an
  719  applicant against any person or entity that initiated,
  720  participated in, was a witness in, or conducted any review as
  721  authorized by this section, the court must award reasonable
  722  attorney fees and costs to the defendant.
  723         (b) As a condition of an applicant bringing any action
  724  against any person or entity that initiated, participated in,
  725  was a witness in, or conducted any review as authorized by this
  726  section and before any responsive pleading is due, the applicant
  727  must post a bond or other security, as set by the court having
  728  jurisdiction in the action, in an amount sufficient to pay the
  729  costs and attorney fees.
  730         Section 12. Section 396.212, Florida Statutes, is created
  731  to read:
  732         396.212 Licensed facilities; peer review; disciplinary
  733  powers; agency or partnership with physicians.—
  734         (1) It is the intent of the Legislature that good faith
  735  participants in the process of investigating and disciplining
  736  physicians pursuant to the state-mandated peer review process
  737  shall, in addition to receiving immunity from retaliatory tort
  738  suits pursuant to s. 456.073(12), be protected from federal
  739  antitrust suits filed under the Sherman Antitrust Act, 15 U.S.C.
  740  ss. 1 et seq. Such intent is within the public policy of the
  741  state to secure the provision of quality medical services to the
  742  public.
  743         (2) Each licensed facility, as a condition of licensure,
  744  shall provide for peer review of physicians who deliver health
  745  care services at the facility. Each licensed facility shall
  746  develop written, binding procedures by which such peer review
  747  must be conducted. Such procedures must include all of the
  748  following:
  749         (a) A mechanism for choosing the membership of the body or
  750  bodies that conduct peer review.
  751         (b) Adoption of rules of order for the peer review process.
  752         (c) Fair review of the case with the physician involved.
  753         (d) A mechanism to identify and avoid conflicts of interest
  754  on the part of the peer review panel members.
  755         (e) Recording of agendas and minutes that do not contain
  756  confidential material, for review by the Division of Health
  757  Quality Assurance of the agency.
  758         (f) A review, at least annually, of the peer review
  759  procedures by the governing board of the licensed facility.
  760         (g) Focusing the peer review process on reviewing
  761  professional practices at the facility to reduce morbidity and
  762  mortality and to improve patient care.
  763         (3) If reasonable belief exists that conduct by a staff
  764  member or physician who delivers health care services at the
  765  licensed facility may constitute one or more grounds for
  766  discipline as provided in this subsection, a peer review panel
  767  must investigate and determine whether grounds for discipline
  768  exist with respect to such staff member or physician. The
  769  governing board of a licensed facility, after considering the
  770  recommendations of its peer review panel, shall suspend, deny,
  771  revoke, or curtail the privileges, or reprimand, counsel, or
  772  require education, of any such staff member or physician after a
  773  final determination has been made that one or more of the
  774  following grounds exist:
  775         (a) Incompetence.
  776         (b) Being found to be a habitual user of intoxicants or
  777  drugs to the extent that the staff member or physician is deemed
  778  dangerous to himself, herself, or others.
  779         (c) Mental or physical impairment that may adversely affect
  780  patient care.
  781         (d) Being found liable by a court of competent jurisdiction
  782  for medical negligence or malpractice involving negligent
  783  conduct.
  784         (e) One or more settlements exceeding $10,000 for medical
  785  negligence or malpractice involving negligent conduct by the
  786  staff member or physician.
  787         (f) Medical negligence other than as specified in paragraph
  788  (d) or paragraph (e).
  789         (g) Failure to comply with the policies, procedures, or
  790  directives of the risk management program or any quality
  791  assurance committees of any licensed facility.
  792         (4) Pursuant to ss. 458.337 and 459.016, any disciplinary
  793  action taken under subsection (3) must be reported in writing to
  794  the Division of Medical Quality Assurance of the Department of
  795  Health within 30 working days after its initial occurrence,
  796  regardless of the pendency of appeals to the governing board of
  797  the licensed facility. The report must identify the disciplined
  798  practitioner, the action taken, and the reason for such action.
  799  All final disciplinary actions taken under subsection (3), if
  800  different from those reported to the agency within 30 days after
  801  its initial occurrence, must be reported within 10 working days
  802  to the Division of Medical Quality Assurance in writing and must
  803  specify the disciplinary action taken and the specific grounds
  804  therefor. The division shall review each report and determine
  805  whether it potentially involved conduct by the licensee which is
  806  subject to disciplinary action, in which case s. 456.073
  807  applies. The reports are not subject to inspection under s.
  808  119.07(1) even if the division’s investigation results in a
  809  finding of probable cause.
  810         (5) There is no monetary liability on the part of, and no
  811  cause of action for damages may rise against, any licensed
  812  facility, its governing board or governing board members, peer
  813  review panel, medical staff, or disciplinary body, or its
  814  agents, investigators, witnesses, or employees; a committee of a
  815  licensed facility; or any other person for any action taken
  816  without intentional fraud in carrying out this section.
  817         (6) For a single incident or series of isolated incidents
  818  that are nonwillful violations of the reporting requirements of
  819  this section or part II of chapter 408, the agency shall first
  820  seek to obtain corrective action by the licensed facility. If
  821  correction is not demonstrated within the timeframe established
  822  by the agency or if there is a pattern of nonwillful violations
  823  of this section or part II of chapter 408, the agency may impose
  824  an administrative fine, not to exceed $5,000 for any violation
  825  of the reporting requirements of this section or part II of
  826  chapter 408. The administrative fine for repeated nonwillful
  827  violations may not exceed $10,000 for any violation. The
  828  administrative fine for each intentional and willful violation
  829  may not exceed $25,000 per violation, per day. The fine for an
  830  intentional and willful violation of this section or part II of
  831  chapter 408 may not exceed $250,000. In determining the amount
  832  of fine to be levied, the agency shall be guided by s.
  833  396.219(2)(b).
  834         (7) The proceedings and records of peer review panels,
  835  committees, and governing boards or agents thereof which relate
  836  solely to actions taken in carrying out this section are not
  837  subject to inspection under s. 119.07(1); and meetings held
  838  pursuant to achieving the objectives of such panels, committees,
  839  and governing boards or agents thereof are not open to the
  840  public under chapter 286.
  841         (8) The investigations, proceedings, and records of the
  842  peer review panel, a committee of an ambulatory surgical center,
  843  a disciplinary board, or a governing board, or agents thereof
  844  with whom there is a specific written contract for that purpose,
  845  as described in this section, are not subject to discovery or
  846  introduction into evidence in any civil or administrative action
  847  against a provider of professional health services arising out
  848  of the matters that are the subject of evaluation and review by
  849  such group or its agent, and a person who was in attendance at a
  850  meeting of such group or its agent is not permitted and may not
  851  be required to testify in any such civil or administrative
  852  action as to any evidence or other matters produced or presented
  853  during the proceedings of such group or its agent or as to any
  854  findings, recommendations, evaluations, opinions, or other
  855  actions of such group or its agent or any members thereof.
  856  However, information, documents, or records otherwise available
  857  from original sources are not to be construed as immune from
  858  discovery or use in any such civil or administrative action
  859  merely because such information, documents, or records were
  860  presented during proceedings of such group, and any person who
  861  testifies before such group or who is a member of such group may
  862  not be prevented from testifying as to matters within his or her
  863  knowledge, but such witness may not be asked about his or her
  864  testimony before such a group or opinions formed by him or her
  865  as a result of such group hearings.
  866         (9)(a) If the defendant prevails in an action brought by a
  867  staff member or physician who delivers health care services at
  868  the licensed facility against any person or entity that
  869  initiated, participated in, was a witness in, or conducted any
  870  review as authorized by this section, the court must award
  871  reasonable attorney fees and costs to the defendant.
  872         (b) As a condition of any staff member or physician
  873  bringing any action against any person or entity that initiated,
  874  participated in, was a witness in, or conducted any review as
  875  authorized by this section and before any responsive pleading is
  876  due, the staff member or physician must post a bond or other
  877  security, as set by the court having jurisdiction in the action,
  878  in an amount sufficient to pay the costs and attorney fees.
  879         Section 13. Section 396.213, Florida Statutes, is created
  880  to read:
  881         396.213 Internal risk management program.—
  882         (1) Every licensed facility shall, as a part of its
  883  administrative functions, establish an internal risk management
  884  program that includes all of the following components:
  885         (a) The investigation and analysis of the frequency and
  886  causes of general categories and specific types of adverse
  887  incidents to patients.
  888         (b) The development of appropriate measures to minimize the
  889  risk of adverse incidents to patients, including, but not
  890  limited to:
  891         1. Risk management and risk prevention education and
  892  training of all nonphysician personnel as follows:
  893         a.Such education and training of all nonphysician
  894  personnel as part of their initial orientation; and
  895         b.At least 1 hour of such education and training annually
  896  for all personnel of the licensed facility working in clinical
  897  areas and providing patient care, except those persons licensed
  898  as health care practitioners who are required to complete
  899  continuing education coursework pursuant to chapter 456 or the
  900  practitioner’s respective practice act.
  901         2. A prohibition, except when emergency circumstances
  902  require otherwise, against a staff member of the licensed
  903  facility attending a patient in the recovery room, unless the
  904  staff member is authorized to attend the patient in the recovery
  905  room and is in the company of at least one other person.
  906  However, a licensed facility is exempt from the two-person
  907  requirement if it has:
  908         a.Live visual observation;
  909         b.Electronic observation; or
  910         c.Any other reasonable measure taken to ensure patient
  911  protection and privacy.
  912         3.A prohibition against an unlicensed person assisting or
  913  participating in any surgical procedure unless the licensed
  914  facility has authorized the person to do so following a
  915  competency assessment, and such assistance or participation is
  916  done under the direct and immediate supervision of a licensed
  917  physician and is not otherwise an activity that may be performed
  918  only by a licensed health care practitioner.
  919         4.Development, implementation, and ongoing evaluation of
  920  procedures, protocols, and systems to accurately identify
  921  patients, planned procedures, and the correct site of planned
  922  procedures so as to minimize the performance of a surgical
  923  procedure on the wrong patient, a wrong surgical procedure, a
  924  wrong-site surgical procedure, or a surgical procedure otherwise
  925  unrelated to the patient’s diagnosis or medical condition.
  926         (c) The analysis of patient grievances that relate to
  927  patient care and the quality of medical services.
  928         (d) A system for informing a patient or an individual
  929  identified pursuant to s. 765.401(1) that the patient was the
  930  subject of an adverse incident, as defined in subsection (5).
  931  Such notice must be given by an appropriately trained person
  932  designated by the licensed facility as soon as practicable to
  933  allow the patient an opportunity to minimize damage or injury.
  934         (e) The development and implementation of an incident
  935  reporting system based upon the affirmative duty of all health
  936  care providers and all agents and employees of the licensed
  937  facility to report adverse incidents to the risk manager, or to
  938  his or her designee, within 3 business days after the occurrence
  939  of such incidents.
  940         (2) The internal risk management program is the
  941  responsibility of the governing board of the licensed facility.
  942  Each licensed facility shall hire a risk manager who is
  943  responsible for implementation and oversight of the facility’s
  944  internal risk management program and who demonstrates
  945  competence, through education or experience, in all of the
  946  following areas:
  947         (a) Applicable standards of health care risk management.
  948         (b) Applicable federal, state, and local health and safety
  949  laws and rules.
  950         (c) General risk management administration.
  951         (d) Patient care.
  952         (e) Medical care.
  953         (f) Personal and social care.
  954         (g) Accident prevention.
  955         (h) Departmental organization and management.
  956         (i) Community interrelationships.
  957         (j) Medical terminology.
  958         (3) In addition to the programs mandated by this section,
  959  other innovative approaches intended to reduce the frequency and
  960  severity of medical malpractice and patient injury claims are
  961  encouraged and their implementation and operation facilitated.
  962  Such additional approaches may include extending internal risk
  963  management programs to health care providers’ offices and the
  964  assuming of provider liability by a licensed facility for acts
  965  or omissions occurring within the licensed facility. Each
  966  licensed facility shall annually report to the agency and the
  967  department the name and judgments entered against each health
  968  care practitioner for which it assumes liability. The agency and
  969  the department shall, in their respective annual reports,
  970  include statistics that report the number of licensed facilities
  971  that assume such liability and the number of health care
  972  practitioners, by profession, for whom they assume liability.
  973         (4) The agency shall adopt rules governing the
  974  establishment of internal risk management programs to meet the
  975  needs of individual licensed facilities. Each internal risk
  976  management program shall include the use of incident reports to
  977  be filed with a responsible individual who is competent in risk
  978  management techniques, such as an insurance coordinator, in the
  979  employ of each licensed facility or who is retained by the
  980  licensed facility as a consultant. The individual responsible
  981  for the risk management program shall have free access to all
  982  medical records of the licensed facility. The incident reports
  983  are part of the workpapers of the attorney defending the
  984  licensed facility in litigation relating to the licensed
  985  facility and are subject to discovery, but are not admissible as
  986  evidence in court. A person filing an incident report is not
  987  subject to civil suit by virtue of such incident report. As a
  988  part of each internal risk management program, the incident
  989  reports must be used to develop categories of incidents which
  990  identify problem areas. Once identified, procedures must be
  991  adjusted to correct the problem areas.
  992         (5) For purposes of reporting to the agency pursuant to
  993  this section, the term “adverse incident” means an event over
  994  which health care personnel could exercise control and which is
  995  associated in whole or in part with medical intervention, rather
  996  than the condition for which such intervention occurred, and
  997  which:
  998         (a) Results in one of the following outcomes:
  999         1.Death;
 1000         2.Brain or spinal damage;
 1001         3.Permanent disfigurement;
 1002         4.Fracture or dislocation of bones or joints;
 1003         5.A resulting limitation of neurological, physical, or
 1004  sensory function which continues after discharge from the
 1005  licensed facility; or
 1006         6.Any condition that required specialized medical
 1007  attention or surgical intervention resulting from nonemergency
 1008  medical intervention, other than an emergency medical condition,
 1009  to which the patient has not given his or her informed consent;
 1010         (b) Was the performance of a surgical procedure on the
 1011  wrong patient, a wrong surgical procedure, a wrong-site surgical
 1012  procedure, or a surgical procedure otherwise unrelated to the
 1013  patient’s diagnosis or medical condition;
 1014         (c) Required the surgical repair of damage resulting to a
 1015  patient from a planned surgical procedure, where the damage was
 1016  not a recognized specific risk, as disclosed to the patient and
 1017  documented through the informed-consent process; or
 1018         (d) Was a procedure to remove unplanned foreign objects
 1019  remaining from a surgical procedure.
 1020         (6)(a) Each licensed facility subject to this section shall
 1021  submit an annual report to the agency summarizing the adverse
 1022  incident reports that have been filed in the facility for that
 1023  year. The report must include:
 1024         1.The total number of adverse incidents.
 1025         2.A listing, by category, of the types of operations,
 1026  diagnostic or treatment procedures, or other actions causing the
 1027  injuries, and the number of incidents occurring within each
 1028  category.
 1029         3.A listing, by category, of the types of injuries caused
 1030  and the number of incidents occurring within each category.
 1031         4.A code number using the health care professional’s
 1032  licensure number and a separate code number identifying all
 1033  other individuals directly involved in adverse incidents to
 1034  patients, the relationship of the individual to the licensed
 1035  facility, and the number of incidents in which each individual
 1036  has been directly involved. Each licensed facility shall
 1037  maintain names of the health care professionals and individuals
 1038  identified by code numbers for purposes of this section.
 1039         5.A description of all malpractice claims filed against
 1040  the licensed facility, including the total number of pending and
 1041  closed claims and the nature of the incident which led to, the
 1042  persons involved in, and the status and disposition of each
 1043  claim. Each report must update status and disposition for all
 1044  prior claims pending.
 1045         (b) The information reported to the agency pursuant to
 1046  paragraph (a) which relates to persons licensed under chapter
 1047  458, chapter 459, chapter 461, or chapter 466 must be reviewed
 1048  by the agency. The agency shall determine whether any of the
 1049  incidents potentially involved conduct by a health care
 1050  professional who is subject to disciplinary action, in which
 1051  case s. 456.073 applies.
 1052         (c) The report submitted to the agency must also contain
 1053  the name of the risk manager of the licensed facility, a copy of
 1054  the policies and procedures governing the measures taken by the
 1055  licensed facility and its risk manager to reduce the risk of
 1056  injuries and adverse incidents, and the results of such
 1057  measures. The annual report is confidential and is not available
 1058  to the public pursuant to s. 119.07(1) or any other law
 1059  providing access to public records. The annual report is not
 1060  discoverable or admissible in any civil or administrative
 1061  action, except in disciplinary proceedings by the agency or the
 1062  appropriate regulatory board. The annual report is not available
 1063  to the public as part of the record of investigation for and
 1064  prosecution in disciplinary proceedings made available to the
 1065  public by the agency or the appropriate regulatory board.
 1066  However, the agency or the appropriate regulatory board shall
 1067  make available, upon written request by a health care
 1068  professional against whom probable cause has been found, any
 1069  such records which form the basis of the determination of
 1070  probable cause.
 1071         (7) Any of the following adverse incidents, whether
 1072  occurring in the licensed facility or arising from health care
 1073  services administered before the patient’s admission to the
 1074  licensed facility, must be reported by the licensed facility to
 1075  the agency within 15 calendar days after its occurrence:
 1076         (a) The death of a patient;
 1077         (b) Brain or spinal damage to a patient;
 1078         (c) The performance of a surgical procedure on the wrong
 1079  patient;
 1080         (d) The performance of a wrong-site surgical procedure;
 1081         (e) The performance of a wrong surgical procedure;
 1082         (f) The performance of a surgical procedure that is
 1083  medically unnecessary or otherwise unrelated to the patient’s
 1084  diagnosis or medical condition;
 1085         (g) The surgical repair of damage resulting to a patient
 1086  from a planned surgical procedure, where the damage is not a
 1087  recognized specific risk, as disclosed to the patient and
 1088  documented through the informed-consent process; or
 1089         (h) The performance of procedures to remove unplanned
 1090  foreign objects remaining from a surgical procedure.
 1091  
 1092  The agency may grant extensions to this reporting requirement
 1093  for no more than 15 days upon justification submitted in writing
 1094  to the agency by the licensed facility administrator. The agency
 1095  may require an additional, final report. These reports are not
 1096  available to the public pursuant to s. 119.07(1) or any other
 1097  law providing access to public records, nor discoverable or
 1098  admissible in any civil or administrative action, except in
 1099  disciplinary proceedings by the agency or the appropriate
 1100  regulatory board, nor available to the public as part of the
 1101  record of investigation for and prosecution in disciplinary
 1102  proceedings made available to the public by the agency or the
 1103  appropriate regulatory board. However, the agency or the
 1104  appropriate regulatory board shall make available, upon written
 1105  request by a health care professional against whom probable
 1106  cause has been found, any such records that form the basis of
 1107  the determination of probable cause. The agency may, as it deems
 1108  appropriate, investigate any such incident and prescribe
 1109  measures that must or may be taken in response to the incident.
 1110  The agency shall review each incident and determine whether it
 1111  potentially involved conduct by the health care professional,
 1112  who would be subject to disciplinary action, in which case s.
 1113  456.073 applies.
 1114         (8) The agency shall publish on the agency’s website, at
 1115  least quarterly, a summary and trend analysis of adverse
 1116  incident reports received pursuant to this section, which may
 1117  not include information that would identify the patient, the
 1118  reporting facility, or the health care practitioners involved.
 1119  The agency shall publish on the agency’s website an annual
 1120  summary and trend analysis of all adverse incident reports and
 1121  malpractice claims information provided by licensed facilities
 1122  in their annual reports, which may not include information that
 1123  would identify the patient, the reporting facility, or the
 1124  practitioners involved. The purpose of the publication of the
 1125  summary and trend analysis is to promote the rapid dissemination
 1126  of information relating to adverse incidents and malpractice
 1127  claims to assist licensed facilities in avoiding similar
 1128  incidents and reduce morbidity and mortality.
 1129         (9) The internal risk manager of each licensed facility
 1130  shall:
 1131         (a) Investigate every allegation of sexual misconduct which
 1132  is made against a member of the licensed facility’s staff who
 1133  has direct patient contact, when the allegation is that the
 1134  sexual misconduct occurred at the facility or on the grounds of
 1135  the facility.
 1136         (b) Report every allegation of sexual misconduct to the
 1137  administrator of the licensed facility.
 1138         (c) Notify the family or guardian of the victim, if a
 1139  minor, that an allegation of sexual misconduct has been made and
 1140  that an investigation is being conducted.
 1141         (d) Report to the department every allegation of sexual
 1142  misconduct by a licensed health care practitioner which involves
 1143  a patient.
 1144         (10) Any witness who witnessed or who possesses actual
 1145  knowledge of the act that is the basis of an allegation of
 1146  sexual abuse shall:
 1147         (a) Notify the local police; and
 1148         (b) Notify the risk manager and the administrator.
 1149  
 1150  For purposes of this subsection, the term “sexual abuse” means
 1151  acts of a sexual nature committed for the sexual gratification
 1152  of anyone upon or in the presence of a vulnerable adult as
 1153  defined in s. 415.102, without the vulnerable adult’s informed
 1154  consent, or upon or in the presence of a minor. The term
 1155  includes, but is not limited to, the acts defined in s.
 1156  794.011(1)(j), fondling, exposure of a vulnerable adult’s or
 1157  minor’s sexual organs, or the use of the vulnerable adult or
 1158  minor to solicit for or engage in prostitution or sexual
 1159  performance. The term does not include any act intended for a
 1160  valid medical purpose or any act which may reasonably be
 1161  construed to be a normal caregiving action.
 1162         (11) A person who, with malice or with intent to discredit
 1163  or harm a licensed facility or any person, makes a false
 1164  allegation of sexual misconduct against a member of a licensed
 1165  facility’s staff commits a misdemeanor of the second degree,
 1166  punishable as provided in s. 775.082 or s. 775.083.
 1167         (12) In addition to any penalty imposed pursuant to this
 1168  section or part II of chapter 408, the agency shall require a
 1169  written plan of correction from the licensed facility. For a
 1170  single incident or series of isolated incidents that are
 1171  nonwillful violations of the reporting requirements of this
 1172  section or part II of chapter 408, the agency shall first seek
 1173  to obtain corrective action by the licensed facility. If the
 1174  correction is not demonstrated within the timeframe established
 1175  by the agency or if there is a pattern of nonwillful violations
 1176  of this section or part II of chapter 408, the agency may impose
 1177  an administrative fine, not to exceed $5,000 for any violation
 1178  of the reporting requirements of this section or part II of
 1179  chapter 408. The administrative fine for repeated nonwillful
 1180  violations may not exceed $10,000 for any violation. The
 1181  administrative fine for each intentional and willful violation
 1182  may not exceed $25,000 per violation, per day. The fine for an
 1183  intentional and willful violation of this section or part II of
 1184  chapter 408 may not exceed $250,000. In determining the amount
 1185  of fine to be levied, the agency shall be guided by s.
 1186  396.219(2)(b).
 1187         (13) The agency shall be given access to all licensed
 1188  facility records necessary to carry out this section. The
 1189  records obtained by the agency under subsection (6), subsection
 1190  (7), or subsection (9) are not available to the public under s.
 1191  119.07(1), nor discoverable or admissible in any civil or
 1192  administrative action, except in disciplinary proceedings by the
 1193  agency or the appropriate regulatory board, nor are records
 1194  obtained pursuant to s. 456.071 available to the public as part
 1195  of the record of investigation for and prosecution in
 1196  disciplinary proceedings made available to the public by the
 1197  agency or the appropriate regulatory board. However, the agency
 1198  or the appropriate regulatory board shall make available, upon
 1199  written request by a health care practitioner against whom
 1200  probable cause has been found, any such records that form the
 1201  basis of the determination of probable cause, except that, with
 1202  respect to medical review committee records, s. 766.101
 1203  controls.
 1204         (14) The meetings of the committees and governing board of
 1205  a licensed facility held solely for the purpose of achieving the
 1206  objectives of risk management as provided by this section may
 1207  not be open to the public under chapter 286. The records of such
 1208  meetings are confidential and exempt from s. 119.07(1), except
 1209  as provided in subsection (13).
 1210         (15) The agency shall review, as part of its licensure
 1211  review process, the internal risk management program at each
 1212  licensed facility regulated by this section to determine whether
 1213  the program meets standards established in statutes and rules,
 1214  whether the program is being conducted in a manner designed to
 1215  reduce adverse incidents, and whether the program is
 1216  appropriately reporting incidents under this section.
 1217         (16) There is no monetary liability on the part of, and no
 1218  cause of action for damages may arise against, any risk manager
 1219  for the implementation and oversight of the internal risk
 1220  management program in a facility licensed under this chapter as
 1221  required by this section, for any act or proceeding undertaken
 1222  or performed within the scope of the functions of such internal
 1223  risk management program, if the risk manager acts without
 1224  intentional fraud.
 1225         (17) A privilege against civil liability is granted to any
 1226  risk manager or licensed facility with regard to information
 1227  furnished pursuant to this chapter, unless the risk manager or
 1228  facility acted in bad faith or with malice in providing such
 1229  information.
 1230         (18) If the agency, through its receipt of any report
 1231  required under this section or through any investigation, has a
 1232  reasonable belief that conduct by a staff member or employee of
 1233  a licensed facility is grounds for disciplinary action by the
 1234  appropriate regulatory board, the agency must report this fact
 1235  to such regulatory board.
 1236         (19) It is unlawful for any person to coerce, intimidate,
 1237  or preclude a risk manager from lawfully executing his or her
 1238  reporting obligations pursuant to this chapter. Such unlawful
 1239  action is subject to civil monetary penalties not to exceed
 1240  $10,000 per violation.
 1241         Section 14. Section 396.214, Florida Statutes, is created
 1242  to read:
 1243         396.214 Identification, segregation, and separation of
 1244  biomedical waste.—Each licensed facility shall comply with the
 1245  requirements in s. 381.0098 relating to biomedical waste. Any
 1246  transporter or potential transporter of such waste must be
 1247  notified of the existence and locations of such waste.
 1248         Section 15. Section 396.215, Florida Statutes, is created
 1249  to read:
 1250         396.215 Patient safety.—
 1251         (1) Each licensed facility shall adopt a patient safety
 1252  plan. A plan adopted to implement the requirements of 42 C.F.R.
 1253  s. 416.43 is deemed to comply with this requirement.
 1254         (2) Each licensed facility shall appoint a patient safety
 1255  officer and a patient safety committee, which must include at
 1256  least one person who is neither employed by nor practicing at
 1257  the facility, for the purpose of promoting the health and safety
 1258  of patients, reviewing and evaluating the quality of patient
 1259  safety measures used by the facility, and assisting in the
 1260  implementation of the facility patient safety plan.
 1261         (3) Each licensed facility shall, at least biennially,
 1262  conduct a patient safety culture survey using the applicable
 1263  Survey on Patient Safety Culture developed by the federal Agency
 1264  for Healthcare Research and Quality. Each licensed facility
 1265  shall conduct the survey anonymously to encourage completion of
 1266  the survey by staff working in or employed by the facility. Each
 1267  licensed facility may contract to administer the survey. Each
 1268  licensed facility shall biennially submit the survey data to the
 1269  agency in a format specified by rule, which must include the
 1270  survey participation rate. Each licensed facility may develop an
 1271  internal action plan between conducting surveys to identify
 1272  measures to improve the survey and submit the plan to the
 1273  agency.
 1274         (4)Each licensed facility shall:
 1275         (a) Develop and implement policies and procedures for the
 1276  rendering of appropriate medical care for persons at risk of
 1277  forming venous thromboembolisms which reflect evidence-based
 1278  best practices relating to, at a minimum:
 1279         1. Assessing patients for risk of venous thromboembolism
 1280  using a nationally recognized risk assessment tool.
 1281         2. Treatment options for a patient diagnosed with venous
 1282  thromboembolism.
 1283         (b) Train all nonphysician personnel at least annually on
 1284  the policies and procedures developed under this subsection. For
 1285  purposes of this subsection, the term “nonphysician personnel”
 1286  means all personnel of the licensed facility working in clinical
 1287  areas and providing patient care, except those persons licensed
 1288  as health care practitioners.
 1289         Section 16. Section 396.216, Florida Statutes, is created
 1290  to read:
 1291         396.216 Cases of child abuse, abandonment, or neglect;
 1292  duties.—Each licensed facility shall adopt protocols that, at a
 1293  minimum, require the facility to:
 1294         (1) Incorporate a facility policy that every staff member
 1295  has an affirmative duty to report, pursuant to chapter 39, any
 1296  actual or suspected case of child abuse, abandonment, or
 1297  neglect; and
 1298         (2) In any case involving suspected child abuse,
 1299  abandonment, or neglect, designate, at the request of the
 1300  Department of Children and Families, a staff physician to act as
 1301  a liaison between the licensed facility and the Department of
 1302  Children and Families office that is investigating the suspected
 1303  abuse, abandonment, or neglect, and the Child Protection Team,
 1304  as defined in s. 39.01, when the case is referred to such a
 1305  team.
 1306         Section 17. Section 396.217, Florida Statutes, is created
 1307  to read:
 1308         396.217 Duty to notify patients.—An appropriately trained
 1309  person designated by each licensed facility shall inform each
 1310  patient, or an individual identified pursuant to s. 765.401(1),
 1311  in person about adverse incidents that result in serious harm to
 1312  the patient. Notifications of outcomes of care that result in
 1313  harm to the patient under this section do not constitute an
 1314  acknowledgment or admission of liability, and may not be
 1315  introduced as evidence.
 1316         Section 18. Section 396.218, Florida Statutes, is created
 1317  to read:
 1318         396.218 Rules and enforcement.—
 1319         (1) The agency shall adopt rules pursuant to ss. 120.536(1)
 1320  and 120.54 to implement this chapter, which must include
 1321  reasonable and fair minimum standards for ensuring that:
 1322         (a) Sufficient numbers and qualified types of personnel and
 1323  occupational disciplines are on duty and available at all times
 1324  to provide necessary and adequate patient care and safety.
 1325         (b) Infection control, housekeeping, sanitary conditions,
 1326  and medical record procedures that will adequately protect
 1327  patient care and safety are established and implemented.
 1328         (c) A comprehensive emergency management plan is prepared
 1329  and updated annually. Standards for such plans must be included
 1330  in the rules adopted by the agency after consulting with the
 1331  Division of Emergency Management. At a minimum, the rules must
 1332  provide for plan components that address emergency evacuation
 1333  transportation; adequate sheltering arrangements; postdisaster
 1334  activities, including emergency power, food, and water;
 1335  postdisaster transportation; supplies; staffing; emergency
 1336  equipment; individual identification of residents and transfer
 1337  of records; and responding to family inquiries. The
 1338  comprehensive emergency management plan is subject to review and
 1339  approval by the local emergency management agency. During its
 1340  review, the local emergency management agency shall ensure that
 1341  the following agencies, at a minimum, are given the opportunity
 1342  to review the plan: the Agency for Health Care Administration,
 1343  the Department of Elderly Affairs, the Department of Health, and
 1344  the Division of Emergency Management. Also, appropriate
 1345  volunteer organizations must be given the opportunity to review
 1346  the plan. The local emergency management agency shall complete
 1347  its review within 60 days and either approve the plan or advise
 1348  the licensed facility of necessary revisions.
 1349         (d) Licensed facilities are established, organized, and
 1350  operated consistently with established standards and rules.
 1351         (e) Licensed facility beds conform to minimum space,
 1352  equipment, and furnishings standards as specified by the agency.
 1353         (f) Each licensed facility has a quality improvement
 1354  program designed to enhance quality of care and to emphasize
 1355  quality patient outcomes, corrective action for problems,
 1356  governing board review, and reporting to the agency of
 1357  standardized data elements necessary to analyze quality of care
 1358  outcomes. The agency shall use existing data, when available,
 1359  and may not duplicate the efforts of other state agencies in
 1360  order to obtain such data.
 1361         (g) Licensed facilities make available on their websites,
 1362  and in a hard copy format upon request, a description of and a
 1363  link to the patient charge and performance outcome data
 1364  collected from licensed facilities pursuant to s. 408.061.
 1365         (2)The agency shall adopt rules that establish minimum
 1366  standards for pediatric patient care in ambulatory surgical
 1367  centers to ensure the safe and effective delivery of surgical
 1368  care to children. Such standards must include quality of care,
 1369  nurse staffing, physician staffing, and equipment standards.
 1370  Ambulatory surgical centers may not provide operative procedures
 1371  to children under 18 years of age which require a length of stay
 1372  past midnight unless such standards are established by rule.
 1373         (3) Any rule adopted under this chapter by the agency may
 1374  not deny a license to a facility required to be licensed under
 1375  this chapter solely by reason of the school or system of
 1376  practice employed or permitted to be employed by physicians
 1377  therein, provided that such school or system of practice is
 1378  recognized by the laws of this state. However, this subsection
 1379  does not limit the powers of the agency to provide and require
 1380  minimum standards for the maintenance and operation of, and for
 1381  the treatment of patients in, those licensed facilities that
 1382  receive federal aid, in order to meet minimum standards related
 1383  to such matters in such licensed facilities which may now or
 1384  hereafter be required by appropriate federal officers or
 1385  agencies pursuant to federal law or rules adopted pursuant
 1386  thereto.
 1387         (4) Any licensed facility that is in operation at the time
 1388  of adoption of any applicable rule under this chapter must be
 1389  given a reasonable time, under the particular circumstances, but
 1390  not to exceed 1 year after the date of such adoption, within
 1391  which to comply with such rule.
 1392         (5) The agency may not adopt any rule governing the design,
 1393  construction, erection, alteration, modification, repair, or
 1394  demolition of any ambulatory surgical center. It is the intent
 1395  of the Legislature to preempt that function to the Florida
 1396  Building Commission and the State Fire Marshal through adoption
 1397  and maintenance of the Florida Building Code and the Florida
 1398  Fire Prevention Code. However, the agency shall provide
 1399  technical assistance to the commission and the State Fire
 1400  Marshal in updating the construction standards of the Florida
 1401  Building Code and the Florida Fire Prevention Code which govern
 1402  ambulatory surgical centers.
 1403         Section 19. Section 396.219, Florida Statutes, is created
 1404  to read:
 1405         396.219 Criminal and administrative penalties; moratorium.—
 1406         (1) In addition to the penalties provided in s. 408.812, a
 1407  person establishing, conducting, managing, or operating any
 1408  facility without a license under this chapter commits a
 1409  misdemeanor and, upon conviction, shall be fined not more than
 1410  $500 for the first offense and not more than $1,000 for each
 1411  subsequent offense, and each day of continuing violation after
 1412  conviction is considered a separate offense.
 1413         (2)(a) The agency may impose an administrative fine, not to
 1414  exceed $1,000 per violation, per day, for the violation of any
 1415  provision of this chapter, part II of chapter 408, or applicable
 1416  rules. Each day of violation constitutes a separate violation
 1417  and is subject to a separate fine.
 1418         (b) In determining the amount of fine to be levied for a
 1419  violation, as provided in paragraph (a), the following factors
 1420  must be considered:
 1421         1.The severity of the violation, including the probability
 1422  that death or serious harm to the health or safety of any person
 1423  will result or has resulted, the severity of the actual or
 1424  potential harm, and the extent to which the provisions of this
 1425  chapter were violated.
 1426         2.Actions taken by the licensee to correct the violations
 1427  or to remedy complaints.
 1428         3.Any previous violations of the licensee.
 1429         (c) The agency may impose an administrative fine for the
 1430  violation of s. 641.3154 or, if sufficient claims due a provider
 1431  from a health maintenance organization do not exist to enable
 1432  the take-back of an overpayment, as provided under s.
 1433  641.3155(5), for the violation of s. 641.3155(5). The
 1434  administrative fine for a violation cited in this paragraph
 1435  shall be in the amounts specified in s. 641.52(5), and paragraph
 1436  (a) does not apply.
 1437         (3) In accordance with part II of chapter 408, the agency
 1438  may impose an immediate moratorium on elective admissions to any
 1439  licensed facility, building, or portion thereof, or service,
 1440  when the agency determines that any condition in the licensed
 1441  facility presents a threat to public health or safety.
 1442         (4) The agency shall impose a fine of $500 for each
 1443  instance of the licensed facility’s failure to provide the
 1444  information required by rules adopted pursuant to s.
 1445  396.218(1)(g).
 1446         Section 20. Section 396.221, Florida Statutes, is created
 1447  to read:
 1448         396.221 Powers and duties of the agency.—The agency shall:
 1449         (1) Adopt rules pursuant to ss. 120.536(1) and 120.54 to
 1450  implement this chapter and part II of chapter 408 conferring
 1451  duties upon it.
 1452         (2)Enforce the special-occupancy provisions of the Florida
 1453  Building Code which apply to ambulatory surgical centers in
 1454  conducting any inspection authorized by this chapter and part II
 1455  of chapter 408.
 1456         Section 21. Section 396.222, Florida Statutes, is created
 1457  to read:
 1458         396.222 Price transparency; itemized patient statement or
 1459  bill; patient admission status notification.—
 1460         (1) A facility licensed under this chapter shall provide
 1461  timely and accurate financial information and quality of service
 1462  measures to patients and prospective patients of the facility,
 1463  or to patients’ survivors or legal guardians, as appropriate.
 1464  Such information must be provided in accordance with this
 1465  section and rules adopted by the agency pursuant to this chapter
 1466  and s. 408.05.
 1467         (a) Each licensed facility shall make available to the
 1468  public on its website information on payments made to that
 1469  facility for defined bundles of services and procedures. The
 1470  payment data must be presented and searchable in accordance
 1471  with, and through a hyperlink to, the system established by the
 1472  agency and its vendor using the descriptive service bundles
 1473  developed under s. 408.05(3)(c). At a minimum, the licensed
 1474  facility shall provide the estimated average payment received
 1475  from all payors, excluding Medicaid and Medicare, for the
 1476  descriptive service bundles available at that facility and the
 1477  estimated payment range for such bundles. Using plain language,
 1478  comprehensible to an ordinary layperson, the licensed facility
 1479  shall disclose that the information on average payments and the
 1480  payment ranges is an estimate of costs that may be incurred by
 1481  the patient or prospective patient and that actual costs will be
 1482  based on the services actually provided to the patient. The
 1483  licensed facility’s website must:
 1484         1.Provide information to prospective patients on the
 1485  licensed facility’s financial assistance policy, including the
 1486  application process, payment plans, and discounts, and the
 1487  facility’s charity care policy and collection procedures.
 1488         2.If applicable, notify patients and prospective patients
 1489  that services may be provided in the licensed facility by that
 1490  facility as well as by other health care providers who may
 1491  separately bill the patient and that such health care providers
 1492  may or may not participate with the same health insurers or
 1493  health maintenance organizations as the facility.
 1494         3.Inform patients and prospective patients that they may
 1495  request from the licensed facility and other health care
 1496  providers a more personalized estimate of charges and other
 1497  information, and inform patients that they should contact each
 1498  health care practitioner who will provide services in the
 1499  facility to determine the health insurers and health maintenance
 1500  organizations with which the health care practitioner
 1501  participates as a network provider or preferred provider.
 1502         4.Provide the names, mailing addresses, and telephone
 1503  numbers of the health care practitioners and medical practice
 1504  groups with which it contracts to provide services in the
 1505  licensed facility and instructions on how to contact the
 1506  practitioners and groups to determine the health insurers and
 1507  health maintenance organizations with which they participate as
 1508  network providers or preferred providers.
 1509         (b) Each licensed facility shall post on its website a
 1510  consumer-friendly list of standard charges for at least 300
 1511  shoppable health care services, or an Internet-based price
 1512  estimator tool that meets federal standards. If a licensed
 1513  facility provides fewer than 300 distinct shoppable health care
 1514  services, it must make available on its website the standard
 1515  charges for each service it provides. As used in this paragraph,
 1516  the term:
 1517         1.“Shoppable health care service” means a service that can
 1518  be scheduled by a health care consumer in advance. The term
 1519  includes, but is not limited to, the services described in s.
 1520  627.6387(2)(e) and any services defined in regulations or
 1521  guidance issued by the United States Department of Health and
 1522  Human Services.
 1523         2.“Standard charge” has the same meaning as that term is
 1524  defined in regulations or guidance issued by the United States
 1525  Department of Health and Human Services for purposes of
 1526  ambulatory surgical center price transparency.
 1527         (c)1. Before providing any nonemergency medical service,
 1528  each licensed facility shall provide in writing or by electronic
 1529  means a good faith estimate of reasonably anticipated charges
 1530  for the treatment of a patient’s or prospective patient’s
 1531  specific condition. The licensed facility is not required to
 1532  adjust the estimate for any potential insurance coverage. The
 1533  licensed facility must provide the estimate to the patient’s
 1534  health insurer, as defined in s. 627.446(1), and the patient at
 1535  least 3 business days before the date such service is to be
 1536  provided, but no later than 1 business day after the date such
 1537  service is scheduled or, in the case of a service scheduled at
 1538  least 10 business days in advance, no later than 3 business days
 1539  after the date the service is scheduled. The licensed facility
 1540  shall provide the estimate to the patient no later than 3
 1541  business days after the date the patient requests an estimate.
 1542  The estimate may be based on the descriptive service bundles
 1543  developed by the agency under s. 408.05(3)(c) unless the patient
 1544  or prospective patient requests a more personalized and specific
 1545  estimate that accounts for the specific condition and
 1546  characteristics of the patient or prospective patient. The
 1547  licensed facility shall inform the patient or prospective
 1548  patient that he or she may contact his or her health insurer for
 1549  additional information concerning cost-sharing responsibilities.
 1550         2.In the estimate, the licensed facility shall provide to
 1551  the patient or prospective patient information on the facility’s
 1552  financial assistance policy, including the application process,
 1553  payment plans, and discounts and the facility’s charity care
 1554  policy and collection procedures.
 1555         3.The estimate must clearly identify any facility fee and,
 1556  if applicable, include a statement notifying the patient or
 1557  prospective patient that a facility fee is included in the
 1558  estimate, the purpose of the fee, and that the patient may pay
 1559  less for the procedure or service at another facility or in
 1560  another health care setting.
 1561         4.The licensed facility shall notify the patient or
 1562  prospective patient of any revision to the estimate.
 1563         5.In the estimate, the licensed facility shall notify the
 1564  patient or prospective patient that services may be provided by
 1565  the facility as well as by other health care providers that may
 1566  separately bill the patient, if applicable.
 1567         6.Failure to timely provide the estimate pursuant to this
 1568  paragraph shall result in a daily fine of $1,000 until the
 1569  estimate is provided to the patient or prospective patient and
 1570  the health insurer. The total fine per patient estimate may not
 1571  exceed $10,000.
 1572         (d) Each licensed facility shall make available on its
 1573  website a hyperlink to the health-related data, including
 1574  quality measures and statistics that are disseminated by the
 1575  agency pursuant to s. 408.05. The licensed facility shall also
 1576  take action to notify the public that such information is
 1577  electronically available and provide a hyperlink to the agency’s
 1578  website.
 1579         (e)1. Upon request, and after the patient’s discharge or
 1580  release from a licensed facility, the facility shall provide to
 1581  the patient or to the patient’s survivor or legal guardian, as
 1582  applicable, an itemized statement or a bill detailing in plain
 1583  language, comprehensible to an ordinary layperson, the specific
 1584  nature of charges or expenses incurred by the patient. The
 1585  initial statement or bill must be provided within 7 days after
 1586  the patient’s discharge or release or after a request for such
 1587  statement or bill, whichever is later. The initial statement or
 1588  bill must contain a statement of specific services received and
 1589  expenses incurred by date and provider for such services,
 1590  enumerating in detail as prescribed by the agency the
 1591  constituent components of the services received within each
 1592  department of the licensed facility and including unit price
 1593  data on rates charged by the licensed facility. The statement or
 1594  bill must also clearly identify any facility fee and explain the
 1595  purpose of the fee. The statement or bill must identify each
 1596  item as paid, pending payment by a third party, or pending
 1597  payment by the patient, and must include the amount due, if
 1598  applicable. If an amount is due from the patient, a due date
 1599  must be included. The initial statement or bill must direct the
 1600  patient or the patient’s survivor or legal guardian, as
 1601  applicable, to contact the patient’s insurer or health
 1602  maintenance organization regarding the patient’s cost-sharing
 1603  responsibilities.
 1604         2.Any subsequent statement or bill provided to a patient
 1605  or to the patient’s survivor or legal guardian, as applicable,
 1606  relating to the episode of care must include all of the
 1607  information required by subparagraph 1., with any revision
 1608  clearly delineated.
 1609         3.Each statement or bill provided pursuant to this
 1610  subsection:
 1611         a.Must include notice of physicians and other health care
 1612  providers who bill separately.
 1613         b.May not include any generalized category of expenses
 1614  such as “other” or “miscellaneous” or similar categories.
 1615         (2) Each itemized statement or bill must prominently
 1616  display the telephone number of the licensed facility’s patient
 1617  liaison who is responsible for expediting the resolution of any
 1618  billing dispute between the patient, or the patient’s survivor
 1619  or legal guardian, and the billing department.
 1620         (3) A licensed facility shall make available to a patient
 1621  or his or her survivor or legal guardian all records necessary
 1622  for verification of the accuracy of the patient’s statement or
 1623  bill within 10 business days after the request for such records.
 1624  The records must be made available in the licensed facility’s
 1625  offices and through electronic means that comply with the Health
 1626  Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996, 42 U.S.C.
 1627  s. 1320d, as amended. Such records must be available before and
 1628  after payment of the statement or bill. The licensed facility
 1629  may not charge the patient or his or her survivor or legal
 1630  guardian for making such verification records available;
 1631  however, the facility may charge fees for providing copies of
 1632  records as specified in s. 396.225(1).
 1633         (4) Each licensed facility shall establish a method for
 1634  reviewing and responding to questions from patients or their
 1635  survivors or legal guardians concerning the patient’s itemized
 1636  statement or bill. Such response must be provided within 7
 1637  business days after the date a question is received. If the
 1638  patient is not satisfied with the response, the facility must
 1639  provide the patient or his or her survivor or legal guardian
 1640  with the contact information of the agency to which the issue
 1641  may be sent for review.
 1642         (5) Each licensed facility shall establish an internal
 1643  process for reviewing and responding to grievances from
 1644  patients. Such process must allow a patient or his or her
 1645  survivor or legal guardian to dispute charges that appear on the
 1646  patient’s itemized statement or bill. The licensed facility
 1647  shall prominently post on its website and indicate in bold print
 1648  on each itemized statement or bill the instructions for
 1649  initiating a grievance and the direct contact information
 1650  required to initiate the grievance process. The licensed
 1651  facility shall provide an initial response to a patient
 1652  grievance within 7 business days after the patient or his or her
 1653  survivor or legal guardian formally files a grievance disputing
 1654  all or a portion of an itemized statement or bill.
 1655         (6) Each licensed facility shall disclose to a patient, a
 1656  prospective patient, or a patient’s legal guardian whether a
 1657  cost-sharing obligation for a particular covered health care
 1658  service or item exceeds the charge that applies to an individual
 1659  who pays cash or the cash equivalent for the same health care
 1660  service or item in the absence of health insurance coverage.
 1661  Failure to provide a disclosure in compliance with this
 1662  subsection may result in a fine not to exceed $500 per incident.
 1663         Section 22. Section 396.223, Florida Statutes, is created
 1664  to read:
 1665         396.223 Billing and collection activities.—
 1666         (1) As used in this section, the term “extraordinary
 1667  collection action” means any of the following actions taken by a
 1668  licensed facility against an individual in relation to obtaining
 1669  payment of a bill for care:
 1670         (a) Selling the individual’s debt to another party.
 1671         (b) Reporting adverse information about the individual to
 1672  consumer credit reporting agencies or credit bureaus.
 1673         (c)Actions that require a legal or judicial process,
 1674  including, but not limited to:
 1675         1.Placing a lien on the individual’s property;
 1676         2.Foreclosing on the individual’s real property;
 1677         3.Attaching or seizing the individual’s bank account or
 1678  any other personal property;
 1679         4.Commencing a civil action against the individual;
 1680         5.Causing the individual’s arrest; or
 1681         6. Garnishing the individual’s wages.
 1682         (2) A licensed facility may not engage in an extraordinary
 1683  collection action against an individual to obtain payment for
 1684  services:
 1685         (a) Before the licensed facility has made reasonable
 1686  efforts to determine whether the individual is eligible for
 1687  assistance under its financial assistance policy for the care
 1688  provided and, if eligible, before a decision is made by the
 1689  facility on the patient’s application for such financial
 1690  assistance.
 1691         (b) Before the licensed facility has provided the
 1692  individual with an itemized statement or bill.
 1693         (c) During an ongoing grievance process as described in s.
 1694  395.301(6) or an ongoing appeal of a claim adjudication.
 1695         (d) Before billing any applicable insurer and allowing the
 1696  insurer to adjudicate a claim.
 1697         (e) For 30 days after notifying the patient in writing, by
 1698  certified mail or by other traceable delivery method, that a
 1699  collection action will commence absent additional action by the
 1700  patient. This paragraph does not apply to a sale of debt
 1701  governed by a contract executed by the facility which provides
 1702  that the debt may not incur interest or fees and that no other
 1703  extraordinary collection actions may be taken by the purchaser
 1704  of the debt which could otherwise be taken by the licensed
 1705  facility, as described in subsection (1), and that the debt will
 1706  be returned to the facility if the debt buyer determines the
 1707  individual is eligible for assistance under the facility’s
 1708  financial assistance policy.
 1709         (f) While the individual:
 1710         1.Negotiates in good faith the final amount of a bill for
 1711  services rendered; or
 1712         2.Complies with all terms of a payment plan with the
 1713  licensed facility.
 1714         Section 23. Section 396.224, Florida Statutes, is created
 1715  to read:
 1716         396.224 Patient records; penalties for alteration.—
 1717         (1) A person who fraudulently alters, defaces, or falsifies
 1718  any medical record, or causes or procures any of these offenses
 1719  to be committed, commits a misdemeanor of the second degree,
 1720  punishable as provided in s. 775.082 or s. 775.083.
 1721         (2) A conviction under subsection (1) is also grounds for
 1722  restriction, suspension, or termination of a license.
 1723         Section 24. Section 396.225, Florida Statutes, is created
 1724  to read:
 1725         396.225 Patient and personnel records; copies;
 1726  examination.—
 1727         (1) A licensed facility shall, upon written request, and
 1728  only after discharge of the patient, furnish, in a timely
 1729  manner, without delays for legal review, to any person admitted
 1730  to the licensed facility for care and treatment or treated at
 1731  the licensed facility, or to any such person’s guardian,
 1732  curator, or personal representative, or in the absence of one of
 1733  those persons, to the next of kin of a decedent or the parent of
 1734  a minor, or to anyone designated by such person in writing, a
 1735  true and correct copy of all patient records, including X rays,
 1736  and insurance information concerning such person, which records
 1737  are in the possession of the licensed facility, provided that
 1738  the person requesting such records agrees to pay a charge. The
 1739  exclusive charge for copies of patient records may include sales
 1740  tax and actual postage, and, except for nonpaper records that
 1741  are subject to a charge not to exceed $2, may not exceed $1 per
 1742  page. A fee of up to $1 may be charged for each year of records
 1743  requested. These charges apply to all records furnished, whether
 1744  directly from the licensed facility or from a copy service
 1745  providing these services on behalf of the licensed facility.
 1746  However, a patient whose records are copied or searched for the
 1747  purpose of continuing to receive medical care is not required to
 1748  pay a charge for copying or for the search. The licensed
 1749  facility shall further allow any such person to examine the
 1750  original records in its possession, or microforms or other
 1751  suitable reproductions of the records, upon such reasonable
 1752  terms as must be imposed to ensure that the records will not be
 1753  damaged, destroyed, or altered.
 1754         (2) Patient records are confidential and may not be
 1755  disclosed without the consent of the patient or his or her legal
 1756  representative, but appropriate disclosure may be made without
 1757  such consent to:
 1758         (a) Licensed facility personnel, attending physicians, or
 1759  other health care practitioners and providers currently involved
 1760  in the care or treatment of the patient for use only in
 1761  connection with the treatment of the patient.
 1762         (b) Licensed facility personnel only for administrative
 1763  purposes or risk management and quality assurance functions.
 1764         (c) The agency, for purposes of health care cost
 1765  containment.
 1766         (d) In any civil or criminal action, unless otherwise
 1767  prohibited by law, upon the issuance of a subpoena from a court
 1768  of competent jurisdiction and proper notice by the party seeking
 1769  such records to the patient or his or her legal representative.
 1770         (e) The department upon a subpoena issued pursuant to s.
 1771  456.071, but the records obtained must be used solely for the
 1772  purpose of the department and the appropriate regulatory board
 1773  in its investigation, prosecution, and appeal of disciplinary
 1774  proceedings. If the department requests copies of the records,
 1775  the licensed facility must charge no more than its actual
 1776  copying costs, including reasonable staff time. The records must
 1777  be sealed and must not be available to the public pursuant to s.
 1778  119.07(1) or any other statute providing access to records, nor
 1779  may they be available to the public as part of the record of
 1780  investigation for and prosecution in disciplinary proceedings
 1781  made available to the public by the department or the
 1782  appropriate regulatory board. However, the department shall make
 1783  available, upon written request by a health care practitioner
 1784  against whom probable cause has been found, any such record that
 1785  forms the basis of the determination of probable cause.
 1786         (f) The Medicaid Fraud Control Unit in the Department of
 1787  Legal Affairs pursuant to s. 409.920.
 1788         (g) The Department of Financial Services, or an agent,
 1789  employee, or independent contractor of the department who is
 1790  auditing for unclaimed property pursuant to chapter 717.
 1791         (h) If applicable to a licensed facility, a regional poison
 1792  control center for purposes of treating a poison episode under
 1793  evaluation, case management of poison cases, or compliance with
 1794  data collection and reporting requirements of s. 395.1027 and
 1795  the professional organization that certifies poison control
 1796  centers in accordance with federal law.
 1797         (i) The Department of Children and Families, its agent, or
 1798  its contracted entity, for the purposes of investigations of or
 1799  services for cases of abuse, neglect, or exploitation of
 1800  children or vulnerable adults.
 1801         (j) Organ procurement organizations, tissue banks, and eye
 1802  banks required to conduct death records reviews pursuant to s.
 1803  395.2050.
 1804         (3) The Department of Health may examine patient records of
 1805  a licensed facility, whether held by the licensed facility or
 1806  the agency, for the purpose of epidemiological investigations.
 1807  The unauthorized release of information by agents of the
 1808  department which would identify an individual patient is a
 1809  misdemeanor of the first degree, punishable as provided in s.
 1810  775.082 or s. 775.083.
 1811         (4) Patient records must contain information required for
 1812  completion of birth, death, and fetal death certificates.
 1813         (5)(a) If the content of any record of patient treatment is
 1814  provided under this section, the recipient, if other than the
 1815  patient or the patient’s representative, may use such
 1816  information only for the purpose provided and may not further
 1817  disclose any information to any other person or entity, unless
 1818  expressly permitted by the written consent of the patient. A
 1819  general authorization for the release of medical information is
 1820  not sufficient for this purpose. The content of such patient
 1821  treatment record is confidential and exempt from s. 119.07(1)
 1822  and s. 24(a), Art. I of the State Constitution.
 1823         (b) Absent a specific written release or authorization
 1824  permitting utilization of patient information for solicitation
 1825  or marketing the sale of goods or services, any use of patient
 1826  information for those purposes is prohibited.
 1827         (6) A licensed facility may prescribe the content and
 1828  custody of limited-access records that the facility may maintain
 1829  on its employees. Such records are limited to information
 1830  regarding evaluations of employee performance, including records
 1831  forming the basis for evaluation and subsequent actions, and
 1832  must be open to inspection only by the employee and by officials
 1833  of the licensed facility who are responsible for the supervision
 1834  of the employee. The custodian of limited-access employee
 1835  records shall release information from such records to other
 1836  employers or only upon authorization in writing from the
 1837  employee or upon order of a court of competent jurisdiction. Any
 1838  licensed facility releasing such records pursuant to this
 1839  chapter is considered to be acting in good faith and may not be
 1840  held liable for information contained in such records, absent a
 1841  showing that the facility maliciously falsified such records.
 1842  Such limited-access employee records are exempt from s.
 1843  119.07(1) for a period of 5 years from the date such records are
 1844  designated limited-access records.
 1845         (7) The home addresses, telephone numbers, and photographs
 1846  of employees of any licensed facility who provide direct patient
 1847  care or security services; the home addresses, telephone
 1848  numbers, and places of employment of the spouses and children of
 1849  such persons; and the names and locations of schools and day
 1850  care facilities attended by the children of such persons are
 1851  confidential and exempt from s. 119.07(1) and s. 24(a), Art. I
 1852  of the State Constitution. However, any state or federal agency
 1853  that is authorized to have access to such information by any
 1854  provision of law shall be granted such access in the furtherance
 1855  of its statutory duties, notwithstanding this subsection. The
 1856  Department of Financial Services, or an agent, employee, or
 1857  independent contractor of the department who is auditing for
 1858  unclaimed property pursuant to chapter 717, shall be granted
 1859  access to the name, address, and social security number of any
 1860  employee owed unclaimed property.
 1861         (8) The home addresses, telephone numbers, and photographs
 1862  of employees of any licensed facility who have a reasonable
 1863  belief, based upon specific circumstances that have been
 1864  reported in accordance with the procedure adopted by the
 1865  licensed facility, that release of the information may be used
 1866  to threaten, intimidate, harass, inflict violence upon, or
 1867  defraud the employee or any member of the employee’s family; the
 1868  home addresses, telephone numbers, and places of employment of
 1869  the spouses and children of such persons; and the names and
 1870  locations of schools and day care facilities attended by the
 1871  children of such persons are confidential and exempt from s.
 1872  119.07(1) and s. 24(a), Art. I of the State Constitution.
 1873  However, any state or federal agency that is authorized to have
 1874  access to such information by any provision of law shall be
 1875  granted such access in the furtherance of its statutory duties,
 1876  notwithstanding this subsection. The licensed facility shall
 1877  maintain the confidentiality of the personal information only if
 1878  the employee submits a written request for confidentiality to
 1879  the licensed facility.
 1880         Section 25. Subsection (3) of section 39.304, Florida
 1881  Statutes, is amended to read:
 1882         39.304 Photographs, medical examinations, X rays, and
 1883  medical treatment of abused, abandoned, or neglected child.—
 1884         (3) Any facility licensed under chapter 395 or chapter 396
 1885  shall provide to the department, its agent, or a Child
 1886  Protection Team that contracts with the department any
 1887  photograph or report on examinations made or X rays taken
 1888  pursuant to this section, or copies thereof, for the purpose of
 1889  investigation or assessment of cases of abuse, abandonment,
 1890  neglect, or exploitation of children.
 1891         Section 26. Subsection (4) of section 95.11, Florida
 1892  Statutes, is amended to read:
 1893         95.11 Limitations other than for the recovery of real
 1894  property.—Actions other than for recovery of real property shall
 1895  be commenced as follows:
 1896         (4) WITHIN THREE YEARS.—An action to collect medical debt
 1897  for services rendered by a facility licensed under chapter 395
 1898  or chapter 396, provided that the period of limitations shall
 1899  run from the date on which the facility refers the medical debt
 1900  to a third party for collection.
 1901         Section 27. Section 222.26, Florida Statutes, is amended to
 1902  read:
 1903         222.26 Additional exemptions from legal process concerning
 1904  medical debt.—If a debt is owed for medical services provided by
 1905  a facility licensed under chapter 395 or chapter 396, the
 1906  following property is exempt from attachment, garnishment, or
 1907  other legal process in an action on such debt:
 1908         (1) A debtor’s interest, not to exceed $10,000 in value, in
 1909  a single motor vehicle as defined in s. 320.01(1).
 1910         (2) A debtor’s interest in personal property, not to exceed
 1911  $10,000 in value, if the debtor does not claim or receive the
 1912  benefits of a homestead exemption under s. 4, Art. X of the
 1913  State Constitution.
 1914         Section 28. Paragraph (d) of subsection (3) of section
 1915  381.00316, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 1916         381.00316 Discrimination by governmental and business
 1917  entities based on health care choices; prohibition.—
 1918         (3)
 1919         (d) A hospital licensed under chapter 395 or an ambulatory
 1920  surgical center licensed under chapter 396 licensed facility as
 1921  defined in s. 395.002 may not discriminate in providing health
 1922  care to a patient based solely on that patient’s vaccination
 1923  status with a COVID-19 vaccine.
 1924         Section 29. Subsections (1) and (2) of section 381.0035,
 1925  Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
 1926         381.0035 Educational course on HIV and AIDS; employees and
 1927  clients of certain health care facilities.—
 1928         (1) The Department of Health shall require all employees
 1929  and clients of facilities licensed under chapter 393, chapter
 1930  394, or chapter 397 and employees of facilities licensed under
 1931  chapter 395 or chapter 396, part II, part III, or part IV of
 1932  chapter 400, or part I of chapter 429 to complete a one-time
 1933  educational course on the modes of transmission, infection
 1934  control procedures, clinical management, and prevention of human
 1935  immunodeficiency virus and acquired immune deficiency syndrome
 1936  with an emphasis on appropriate behavior and attitude change.
 1937  Such instruction shall include information on current Florida
 1938  law and its impact on testing, confidentiality of test results,
 1939  and treatment of patients and any protocols and procedures
 1940  applicable to human immunodeficiency counseling and testing,
 1941  reporting, the offering of HIV testing to pregnant women, and
 1942  partner notification issues pursuant to ss. 381.004 and 384.25.
 1943  An employee who has completed the educational course required in
 1944  this subsection is not required to repeat the course upon
 1945  changing employment to a different facility licensed under
 1946  chapter 393, chapter 394, chapter 395, chapter 396, chapter 397,
 1947  part II, part III, or part IV of chapter 400, or part I of
 1948  chapter 429.
 1949         (2) Facilities licensed under chapter 393, chapter 394,
 1950  chapter 395, chapter 396, or chapter 397, part II, part III, or
 1951  part IV of chapter 400, or part I of chapter 429 shall maintain
 1952  a record of employees and dates of attendance at human
 1953  immunodeficiency virus and acquired immune deficiency syndrome
 1954  educational courses.
 1955         Section 30. Paragraph (b) of subsection (2) and subsection
 1956  (6) of section 381.026, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
 1957         381.026 Florida Patient’s Bill of Rights and
 1958  Responsibilities.—
 1959         (2) DEFINITIONS.—As used in this section and s. 381.0261,
 1960  the term:
 1961         (b) “Health care facility” means a facility licensed under
 1962  chapter 395 or chapter 396.
 1963         (6) SUMMARY OF RIGHTS AND RESPONSIBILITIES.—Any health care
 1964  provider who treats a patient in an office or any health care
 1965  facility licensed under chapter 395 or chapter 396 that provides
 1966  emergency services and care or outpatient services and care to a
 1967  patient, or admits and treats a patient, shall adopt and make
 1968  available to the patient, in writing, a statement of the rights
 1969  and responsibilities of patients, including the following:
 1970  
 1971                SUMMARY OF THE FLORIDA PATIENT’S BILL              
 1972                   OF RIGHTS AND RESPONSIBILITIES                  
 1973  
 1974         Florida law requires that your health care provider or
 1975  health care facility recognize your rights while you are
 1976  receiving medical care and that you respect the health care
 1977  provider’s or health care facility’s right to expect certain
 1978  behavior on the part of patients. You may request a copy of the
 1979  full text of this law from your health care provider or health
 1980  care facility. A summary of your rights and responsibilities
 1981  follows:
 1982         A patient has the right to be treated with courtesy and
 1983  respect, with appreciation of his or her individual dignity, and
 1984  with protection of his or her need for privacy.
 1985         A patient has the right to a prompt and reasonable response
 1986  to questions and requests.
 1987         A patient has the right to know who is providing medical
 1988  services and who is responsible for his or her care.
 1989         A patient has the right to know what patient support
 1990  services are available, including whether an interpreter is
 1991  available if he or she does not speak English.
 1992         A patient has the right to bring any person of his or her
 1993  choosing to the patient-accessible areas of the health care
 1994  facility or provider’s office to accompany the patient while the
 1995  patient is receiving inpatient or outpatient treatment or is
 1996  consulting with his or her health care provider, unless doing so
 1997  would risk the safety or health of the patient, other patients,
 1998  or staff of the facility or office or cannot be reasonably
 1999  accommodated by the facility or provider.
 2000         A patient has the right to know what rules and regulations
 2001  apply to his or her conduct.
 2002         A patient has the right to be given by the health care
 2003  provider information concerning diagnosis, planned course of
 2004  treatment, alternatives, risks, and prognosis.
 2005         A patient has the right to refuse any treatment, except as
 2006  otherwise provided by law.
 2007         A patient has the right to be given, upon request, full
 2008  information and necessary counseling on the availability of
 2009  known financial resources for his or her care.
 2010         A patient who is eligible for Medicare has the right to
 2011  know, upon request and in advance of treatment, whether the
 2012  health care provider or health care facility accepts the
 2013  Medicare assignment rate.
 2014         A patient has the right to receive, upon request, prior to
 2015  treatment, a reasonable estimate of charges for medical care.
 2016         A patient has the right to receive a copy of a reasonably
 2017  clear and understandable, itemized bill and, upon request, to
 2018  have the charges explained.
 2019         A patient has the right to impartial access to medical
 2020  treatment or accommodations, regardless of race, national
 2021  origin, religion, handicap, or source of payment.
 2022         A patient has the right to treatment for any emergency
 2023  medical condition that will deteriorate from failure to provide
 2024  treatment.
 2025         A patient has the right to know if medical treatment is for
 2026  purposes of experimental research and to give his or her consent
 2027  or refusal to participate in such experimental research.
 2028         A patient has the right to express grievances regarding any
 2029  violation of his or her rights, as stated in Florida law,
 2030  through the grievance procedure of the health care provider or
 2031  health care facility which served him or her and to the
 2032  appropriate state licensing agency.
 2033         A patient is responsible for providing to the health care
 2034  provider, to the best of his or her knowledge, accurate and
 2035  complete information about present complaints, past illnesses,
 2036  hospitalizations, medications, and other matters relating to his
 2037  or her health.
 2038         A patient is responsible for reporting unexpected changes
 2039  in his or her condition to the health care provider.
 2040         A patient is responsible for reporting to the health care
 2041  provider whether he or she comprehends a contemplated course of
 2042  action and what is expected of him or her.
 2043         A patient is responsible for following the treatment plan
 2044  recommended by the health care provider.
 2045         A patient is responsible for keeping appointments and, when
 2046  he or she is unable to do so for any reason, for notifying the
 2047  health care provider or health care facility.
 2048         A patient is responsible for his or her actions if he or
 2049  she refuses treatment or does not follow the health care
 2050  provider’s instructions.
 2051         A patient is responsible for assuring that the financial
 2052  obligations of his or her health care are fulfilled as promptly
 2053  as possible.
 2054         A patient is responsible for following health care facility
 2055  rules and regulations affecting patient care and conduct.
 2056         Section 31. Paragraph (f) of subsection (3), paragraph (a)
 2057  of subsection (6), and paragraph (b) of subsection (7) of
 2058  section 381.028, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
 2059         381.028 Adverse medical incidents.—
 2060         (3) DEFINITIONS.—As used in s. 25, Art. X of the State
 2061  Constitution and this act, the term:
 2062         (f) “Health care facility” means a facility licensed under
 2063  chapter 395 or chapter 396.
 2064         (6) USE OF RECORDS.—
 2065         (a) This section does not repeal or otherwise alter any
 2066  existing restrictions on the discoverability or admissibility of
 2067  records relating to adverse medical incidents otherwise provided
 2068  by law, including, but not limited to, those contained in ss.
 2069  395.0191, 395.0193, 395.0197, 396.211, 396.212, 396.213,
 2070  766.101, and 766.1016, or repeal or otherwise alter any immunity
 2071  provided to, or prohibition against compelling testimony by,
 2072  persons providing information or participating in any peer
 2073  review panel, medical review committee, hospital committee, or
 2074  other hospital board otherwise provided by law, including, but
 2075  not limited to, ss. 395.0191, 395.0193, 396.211, 396.212,
 2076  766.101, and 766.1016.
 2077         (7) PRODUCTION OF RECORDS.—
 2078         (b)1. Using the process provided in s. 395.0197 or s.
 2079  396.213, as applicable, the health care facility shall be
 2080  responsible for identifying records as records of an adverse
 2081  medical incident, as defined in s. 25, Art. X of the State
 2082  Constitution.
 2083         2. Using the process provided in s. 458.351, the health
 2084  care provider shall be responsible for identifying records as
 2085  records of an adverse medical incident, as defined in s. 25,
 2086  Art. X of the State Constitution, occurring in an office
 2087  setting.
 2088         Section 32. Paragraph (b) of subsection (9) and paragraph
 2089  (d) of subsection (12) of section 381.915, Florida Statutes, is
 2090  amended to read:
 2091         381.915 Casey DeSantis Cancer Research Program.—
 2092         (9)
 2093         (b) To be eligible for grant funding under this subsection,
 2094  a licensed or certified health care provider, facility, or
 2095  entity must meet at least one of the following criteria:
 2096         1. Operates as a licensed hospital that has a minimum of 30
 2097  percent of its current cancer patients residing in rural or
 2098  underserved areas.
 2099         2. Operates as a licensed health care clinic or facility
 2100  that employs or contracts with at least one physician licensed
 2101  under chapter 458 or chapter 459 who is board certified in
 2102  oncology and that administers chemotherapy treatments for
 2103  cancer.
 2104         3. Operates as a licensed facility that employs or
 2105  contracts with at least one physician licensed under chapter 458
 2106  or chapter 459 who is board certified in oncology and that
 2107  administers radiation therapy treatments for cancer.
 2108         4. Operates as a licensed health care clinic or facility
 2109  that provides cancer screening services at no cost or a minimal
 2110  cost to patients.
 2111         5. Operates as a rural hospital as defined in s.
 2112  395.602(2)(b).
 2113         6. Operates as a critical access hospital as defined in s.
 2114  408.07(14).
 2115         7. Operates as a specialty hospital as defined in s.
 2116  395.002(27)(a) s. 395.002(28)(a) which provides cancer treatment
 2117  for patients from birth to 18 years of age.
 2118         8. Operates as a licensed hospital that is accredited by
 2119  the American College of Surgeons as a Comprehensive Community
 2120  Cancer Program or Integrated Network Cancer Program.
 2121         9. Engages in biomedical research intended to develop
 2122  therapies, medical pharmaceuticals, treatment protocols, or
 2123  medical procedures intended to cure cancer or improve the
 2124  quality of life of cancer patients.
 2125         10. Educates or trains students, postdoctoral fellows, or
 2126  licensed or certified health care practitioners in the
 2127  screening, diagnosis, or treatment of cancer.
 2128         (12)
 2129         (d) Applications for incubator funding may be submitted by
 2130  any Florida-based specialty hospital as defined in s.
 2131  395.002(27)(a) s. 395.002(28)(a) which provides cancer treatment
 2132  for patients from birth to 18 years of age. All qualified
 2133  applicants must have equal access and opportunity to compete for
 2134  research funding. Incubator grants must be recommended by the
 2135  collaborative and awarded by the department on the basis of
 2136  scientific merit, as determined by a competitively open and
 2137  peer-reviewed process to ensure objectivity, consistency, and
 2138  high quality.
 2139         Section 33. Paragraph (d) of subsection (2) of section
 2140  383.145, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 2141         383.145 Newborn, infant, and toddler hearing screening.—
 2142         (2) DEFINITIONS.—As used in this section, the term:
 2143         (d) “Hospital” means a facility as defined in s. 395.002 s.
 2144  395.002(13) and licensed under chapter 395 and part II of
 2145  chapter 408.
 2146         Section 34. Subsection (1) of section 385.202, Florida
 2147  Statutes, is amended to read:
 2148         385.202 Statewide cancer registry.—
 2149         (1) Each facility licensed under chapter 395 or chapter 396
 2150  and each freestanding radiation therapy center as defined in s.
 2151  408.07 shall report to the Department of Health such
 2152  information, specified by the department, by rule, which
 2153  indicates diagnosis, stage of disease, medical history,
 2154  laboratory data, tissue diagnosis, and radiation, surgical, or
 2155  other methods of diagnosis or treatment for each cancer
 2156  diagnosed or treated by the facility or center. Failure to
 2157  comply with this requirement may be cause for registration or
 2158  licensure suspension or revocation.
 2159         Section 35. Subsection (2) of section 385.211, Florida
 2160  Statutes, is amended to read:
 2161         385.211 Refractory and intractable epilepsy treatment and
 2162  research at recognized medical centers.—
 2163         (2) Notwithstanding chapter 893, medical centers recognized
 2164  pursuant to s. 381.925, or an academic medical research
 2165  institution legally affiliated with a licensed children’s
 2166  specialty hospital as defined in s. 395.002 which s. 395.002(28)
 2167  that contracts with the Department of Health, may conduct
 2168  research on cannabidiol and low-THC cannabis. This research may
 2169  include, but is not limited to, the agricultural development,
 2170  production, clinical research, and use of liquid medical
 2171  derivatives of cannabidiol and low-THC cannabis for the
 2172  treatment for refractory or intractable epilepsy. The authority
 2173  for recognized medical centers to conduct this research is
 2174  derived from 21 C.F.R. parts 312 and 316. Current state or
 2175  privately obtained research funds may be used to support the
 2176  activities described in this section.
 2177         Section 36. Subsection (8) of section 390.011, Florida
 2178  Statutes, is amended to read:
 2179         390.011 Definitions.—As used in this chapter, the term:
 2180         (8) “Hospital” means a facility as defined in s. 395.002 s.
 2181  395.002(12) and licensed under chapter 395 and part II of
 2182  chapter 408.
 2183         Section 37. Paragraphs (a) and (c) of subsection (4) of
 2184  section 390.025, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
 2185         390.025 Abortion referral or counseling agencies;
 2186  penalties.—
 2187         (4) The following are exempt from the requirement to
 2188  register pursuant to subsection (3):
 2189         (a) Facilities licensed pursuant to this chapter, chapter
 2190  395, chapter 396, chapter 400, or chapter 408;
 2191         (c) Health care practitioners, as defined in s. 456.001,
 2192  who, in the course of their practice outside of a facility
 2193  licensed pursuant to this chapter, chapter 395, chapter 396,
 2194  chapter 400, or chapter 408, refer five or fewer patients for
 2195  abortions each month.
 2196         Section 38. Subsection (7) of section 394.4787, Florida
 2197  Statutes, is amended to read:
 2198         394.4787 Definitions; ss. 394.4786, 394.4787, 394.4788, and
 2199  394.4789.—As used in this section and ss. 394.4786, 394.4788,
 2200  and 394.4789:
 2201         (7) “Specialty psychiatric hospital” means a hospital
 2202  licensed by the agency pursuant to s. 395.002 s. 395.002(28) and
 2203  part II of chapter 408 as a specialty psychiatric hospital.
 2204         Section 39. Section 395.001, Florida Statutes, is amended
 2205  to read:
 2206         395.001 Legislative intent.—It is the intent of the
 2207  Legislature to provide for the protection of public health and
 2208  safety in the establishment, construction, maintenance, and
 2209  operation of hospitals and ambulatory surgical centers by
 2210  providing for licensure of same and for the development,
 2211  establishment, and enforcement of minimum standards with respect
 2212  thereto.
 2213         Section 40. Subsections (3), (10), (17), (23), and (28) of
 2214  section 395.002, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
 2215         395.002 Definitions.—As used in this chapter:
 2216         (3) “Ambulatory surgical center” means a facility, the
 2217  primary purpose of which is to provide elective surgical care,
 2218  in which the patient is admitted to and discharged from such
 2219  facility within 24 hours, and which is not part of a hospital.
 2220  However, a facility existing for the primary purpose of
 2221  performing terminations of pregnancy, an office maintained by a
 2222  physician for the practice of medicine, or an office maintained
 2223  for the practice of dentistry may not be construed to be an
 2224  ambulatory surgical center, provided that any facility or office
 2225  which is certified or seeks certification as a Medicare
 2226  ambulatory surgical center shall be licensed as an ambulatory
 2227  surgical center pursuant to s. 395.003.
 2228         (9)(10) “General hospital” means any facility which meets
 2229  the provisions of subsection (11) (12) and which regularly makes
 2230  its facilities and services available to the general population.
 2231         (16)(17) “Licensed facility” means a hospital or ambulatory
 2232  surgical center licensed in accordance with this chapter.
 2233         (22)(23) “Premises” means those buildings, beds, and
 2234  equipment located at the address of the licensed facility and
 2235  all other buildings, beds, and equipment for the provision of
 2236  hospital or ambulatory surgical care located in such reasonable
 2237  proximity to the address of the licensed facility as to appear
 2238  to the public to be under the dominion and control of the
 2239  licensee. For any licensee that is a teaching hospital as
 2240  defined in s. 408.07, reasonable proximity includes any
 2241  buildings, beds, services, programs, and equipment under the
 2242  dominion and control of the licensee that are located at a site
 2243  with a main address that is within 1 mile of the main address of
 2244  the licensed facility; and all such buildings, beds, and
 2245  equipment may, at the request of a licensee or applicant, be
 2246  included on the facility license as a single premises.
 2247         (27)(28) “Specialty hospital” means any facility which
 2248  meets the provisions of subsection (11) (12), and which
 2249  regularly makes available either:
 2250         (a) The range of medical services offered by general
 2251  hospitals but restricted to a defined age or gender group of the
 2252  population;
 2253         (b) A restricted range of services appropriate to the
 2254  diagnosis, care, and treatment of patients with specific
 2255  categories of medical or psychiatric illnesses or disorders; or
 2256         (c) Intensive residential treatment programs for children
 2257  and adolescents as defined in subsection (15) (16).
 2258         Section 41. Subsection (1) and paragraph (d) of subsection
 2259  (5) of section 395.003, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
 2260         395.003 Licensure; denial, suspension, and revocation.—
 2261         (1)(a) The requirements of part II of chapter 408 apply to
 2262  the provision of services that require licensure pursuant to ss.
 2263  395.001-395.1065 and part II of chapter 408 and to entities
 2264  licensed by or applying for such licensure from the Agency for
 2265  Health Care Administration pursuant to ss. 395.001-395.1065. A
 2266  license issued by the agency is required in order to operate a
 2267  hospital or ambulatory surgical center in this state.
 2268         (b)1. It is unlawful for a person to use or advertise to
 2269  the public, in any way or by any medium whatsoever, any facility
 2270  as a “hospital” or “ambulatory surgical center” unless such
 2271  facility has first secured a license under this chapter part.
 2272         2. This part does not apply to veterinary hospitals or to
 2273  commercial business establishments using the word “hospital” or
 2274  “ambulatory surgical center” as a part of a trade name if no
 2275  treatment of human beings is performed on the premises of such
 2276  establishments.
 2277         (5)
 2278         (d) A hospital, an ambulatory surgical center, a specialty
 2279  hospital, or an urgent care center shall comply with ss.
 2280  627.64194 and 641.513 as a condition of licensure.
 2281         Section 42. Subsections (2), (3), and (9) of section
 2282  395.1055, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
 2283         395.1055 Rules and enforcement.—
 2284         (2) Separate standards may be provided for general and
 2285  specialty hospitals, ambulatory surgical centers, and statutory
 2286  rural hospitals as defined in s. 395.602.
 2287         (3) The agency shall adopt rules that establish minimum
 2288  standards for pediatric patient care in ambulatory surgical
 2289  centers to ensure the safe and effective delivery of surgical
 2290  care to children in ambulatory surgical centers. Such standards
 2291  must include quality of care, nurse staffing, physician
 2292  staffing, and equipment standards. Ambulatory surgical centers
 2293  may not provide operative procedures to children under 18 years
 2294  of age which require a length of stay past midnight until such
 2295  standards are established by rule.
 2296         (8)(9) The agency may not adopt any rule governing the
 2297  design, construction, erection, alteration, modification,
 2298  repair, or demolition of any public or private hospital or,
 2299  intermediate residential treatment facility, or ambulatory
 2300  surgical center. It is the intent of the Legislature to preempt
 2301  that function to the Florida Building Commission and the State
 2302  Fire Marshal through adoption and maintenance of the Florida
 2303  Building Code and the Florida Fire Prevention Code. However, the
 2304  agency shall provide technical assistance to the commission and
 2305  the State Fire Marshal in updating the construction standards of
 2306  the Florida Building Code and the Florida Fire Prevention Code
 2307  which govern hospitals and, intermediate residential treatment
 2308  facilities, and ambulatory surgical centers.
 2309         Section 43. Subsection (3) of section 395.10973, Florida
 2310  Statutes, is amended to read:
 2311         395.10973 Powers and duties of the agency.—It is the
 2312  function of the agency to:
 2313         (3) Enforce the special-occupancy provisions of the Florida
 2314  Building Code which apply to hospitals and, intermediate
 2315  residential treatment facilities, and ambulatory surgical
 2316  centers in conducting any inspection authorized by this chapter
 2317  and part II of chapter 408.
 2318         Section 44. Subsection (8) of section 395.3025, Florida
 2319  Statutes, is amended to read:
 2320         395.3025 Patient and personnel records; copies;
 2321  examination.—
 2322         (8) Patient records at hospitals and ambulatory surgical
 2323  centers are exempt from disclosure under s. 119.07(1), except as
 2324  provided by subsections (1)-(5).
 2325         Section 45. Subsection (3) of section 395.607, Florida
 2326  Statutes, is amended to read:
 2327         395.607 Rural emergency hospitals.—
 2328         (3) Notwithstanding s. 395.002 s. 395.002(12), a rural
 2329  emergency hospital is not required to offer acute inpatient care
 2330  or care beyond 24 hours, or to make available treatment
 2331  facilities for surgery, obstetrical care, or similar services in
 2332  order to be deemed a hospital as long as it maintains its
 2333  designation as a rural emergency hospital, and may be required
 2334  to make such services available only if it ceases to be
 2335  designated as a rural emergency hospital.
 2336         Section 46. Paragraph (c) of subsection (1) of section
 2337  395.701, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 2338         395.701 Annual assessments on net operating revenues for
 2339  inpatient and outpatient services to fund public medical
 2340  assistance; administrative fines for failure to pay assessments
 2341  when due; exemption.—
 2342         (1) For the purposes of this section, the term:
 2343         (c) “Hospital” means a health care institution as defined
 2344  in s. 395.002 s. 395.002(12), but does not include any hospital
 2345  operated by a state agency.
 2346         Section 47. Paragraph (b) of subsection (3) of section
 2347  400.518, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 2348         400.518 Prohibited referrals to home health agencies.—
 2349         (3)
 2350         (b) A physician who violates this section is subject to
 2351  disciplinary action by the appropriate board under s. 458.331(2)
 2352  or s. 459.015(2). A hospital or ambulatory surgical center that
 2353  violates this section is subject to s. 395.0185(2). An
 2354  ambulatory surgical center that violates this section is subject
 2355  to s. 396.209.
 2356         Section 48. Paragraph (h) of subsection (5) of section
 2357  400.93, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 2358         400.93 Licensure required; exemptions; unlawful acts;
 2359  penalties.—
 2360         (5) The following are exempt from home medical equipment
 2361  provider licensure, unless they have a separate company,
 2362  corporation, or division that is in the business of providing
 2363  home medical equipment and services for sale or rent to
 2364  consumers at their regular or temporary place of residence
 2365  pursuant to the provisions of this part:
 2366         (h) Hospitals licensed under chapter 395 and ambulatory
 2367  surgical centers licensed under chapter 396 395.
 2368         Section 49. Paragraphs (a) through (d) of subsection (4) of
 2369  section 400.9905, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
 2370         400.9905 Definitions.—
 2371         (4) “Clinic” means an entity where health care services are
 2372  provided to individuals and which tenders charges for
 2373  reimbursement for such services, including a mobile clinic and a
 2374  portable equipment provider. As used in this part, the term does
 2375  not include and the licensure requirements of this part do not
 2376  apply to:
 2377         (a) Entities licensed or registered by the state under
 2378  chapter 395 or chapter 396; entities licensed or registered by
 2379  the state and providing only health care services within the
 2380  scope of services authorized under their respective licenses
 2381  under ss. 383.30-383.332, chapter 390, chapter 394, chapter 397,
 2382  this chapter except part X, chapter 429, chapter 463, chapter
 2383  465, chapter 466, chapter 478, chapter 484, or chapter 651; end
 2384  stage renal disease providers authorized under 42 C.F.R. part
 2385  494; providers certified and providing only health care services
 2386  within the scope of services authorized under their respective
 2387  certifications under 42 C.F.R. part 485, subpart B, subpart H,
 2388  or subpart J; providers certified and providing only health care
 2389  services within the scope of services authorized under their
 2390  respective certifications under 42 C.F.R. part 486, subpart C;
 2391  providers certified and providing only health care services
 2392  within the scope of services authorized under their respective
 2393  certifications under 42 C.F.R. part 491, subpart A; providers
 2394  certified by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid services
 2395  under the federal Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments and
 2396  the federal rules adopted thereunder; or any entity that
 2397  provides neonatal or pediatric hospital-based health care
 2398  services or other health care services by licensed practitioners
 2399  solely within a hospital licensed under chapter 395.
 2400         (b) Entities that own, directly or indirectly, entities
 2401  licensed or registered by the state pursuant to chapter 395 or
 2402  chapter 396; entities that own, directly or indirectly, entities
 2403  licensed or registered by the state and providing only health
 2404  care services within the scope of services authorized pursuant
 2405  to their respective licenses under ss. 383.30-383.332, chapter
 2406  390, chapter 394, chapter 397, this chapter except part X,
 2407  chapter 429, chapter 463, chapter 465, chapter 466, chapter 478,
 2408  chapter 484, or chapter 651; end-stage renal disease providers
 2409  authorized under 42 C.F.R. part 494; providers certified and
 2410  providing only health care services within the scope of services
 2411  authorized under their respective certifications under 42 C.F.R.
 2412  part 485, subpart B, subpart H, or subpart J; providers
 2413  certified and providing only health care services within the
 2414  scope of services authorized under their respective
 2415  certifications under 42 C.F.R. part 486, subpart C; providers
 2416  certified and providing only health care services within the
 2417  scope of services authorized under their respective
 2418  certifications under 42 C.F.R. part 491, subpart A; providers
 2419  certified by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid services
 2420  under the federal Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments and
 2421  the federal rules adopted thereunder; or any entity that
 2422  provides neonatal or pediatric hospital-based health care
 2423  services by licensed practitioners solely within a hospital
 2424  licensed under chapter 395.
 2425         (c) Entities that are owned, directly or indirectly, by an
 2426  entity licensed or registered by the state pursuant to chapter
 2427  395 or chapter 396; entities that are owned, directly or
 2428  indirectly, by an entity licensed or registered by the state and
 2429  providing only health care services within the scope of services
 2430  authorized pursuant to their respective licenses under ss.
 2431  383.30-383.332, chapter 390, chapter 394, chapter 397, this
 2432  chapter except part X, chapter 429, chapter 463, chapter 465,
 2433  chapter 466, chapter 478, chapter 484, or chapter 651; end-stage
 2434  renal disease providers authorized under 42 C.F.R. part 494;
 2435  providers certified and providing only health care services
 2436  within the scope of services authorized under their respective
 2437  certifications under 42 C.F.R. part 485, subpart B, subpart H,
 2438  or subpart J; providers certified and providing only health care
 2439  services within the scope of services authorized under their
 2440  respective certifications under 42 C.F.R. part 486, subpart C;
 2441  providers certified and providing only health care services
 2442  within the scope of services authorized under their respective
 2443  certifications under 42 C.F.R. part 491, subpart A; providers
 2444  certified by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid services
 2445  under the federal Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments and
 2446  the federal rules adopted thereunder; or any entity that
 2447  provides neonatal or pediatric hospital-based health care
 2448  services by licensed practitioners solely within a hospital
 2449  under chapter 395.
 2450         (d) Entities that are under common ownership, directly or
 2451  indirectly, with an entity licensed or registered by the state
 2452  pursuant to chapter 395 or chapter 396; entities that are under
 2453  common ownership, directly or indirectly, with an entity
 2454  licensed or registered by the state and providing only health
 2455  care services within the scope of services authorized pursuant
 2456  to their respective licenses under ss. 383.30-383.332, chapter
 2457  390, chapter 394, chapter 397, this chapter except part X,
 2458  chapter 429, chapter 463, chapter 465, chapter 466, chapter 478,
 2459  chapter 484, or chapter 651; end-stage renal disease providers
 2460  authorized under 42 C.F.R. part 494; providers certified and
 2461  providing only health care services within the scope of services
 2462  authorized under their respective certifications under 42 C.F.R.
 2463  part 485, subpart B, subpart H, or subpart J; providers
 2464  certified and providing only health care services within the
 2465  scope of services authorized under their respective
 2466  certifications under 42 C.F.R. part 486, subpart C; providers
 2467  certified and providing only health care services within the
 2468  scope of services authorized under their respective
 2469  certifications under 42 C.F.R. part 491, subpart A; providers
 2470  certified by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid services
 2471  under the federal Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments and
 2472  the federal rules adopted thereunder; or any entity that
 2473  provides neonatal or pediatric hospital-based health care
 2474  services by licensed practitioners solely within a hospital
 2475  licensed under chapter 395.
 2476  
 2477  Notwithstanding this subsection, an entity shall be deemed a
 2478  clinic and must be licensed under this part in order to receive
 2479  reimbursement under the Florida Motor Vehicle No-Fault Law, ss.
 2480  627.730-627.7405, unless exempted under s. 627.736(5)(h).
 2481         Section 50. Paragraph (i) of subsection (1) of section
 2482  400.9935, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 2483         400.9935 Clinic responsibilities.—
 2484         (1) Each clinic shall appoint a medical director or clinic
 2485  director who shall agree in writing to accept legal
 2486  responsibility for the following activities on behalf of the
 2487  clinic. The medical director or the clinic director shall:
 2488         (i) Ensure that the clinic publishes a schedule of charges
 2489  for the medical services offered to patients. The schedule must
 2490  include the prices charged to an uninsured person paying for
 2491  such services by cash, check, credit card, or debit card. The
 2492  schedule may group services by price levels, listing services in
 2493  each price level. The schedule must be posted in a conspicuous
 2494  place in the reception area of any clinic that is considered an
 2495  urgent care center as defined in s. 395.002 s. 395.002(30)(b)
 2496  and must include, but is not limited to, the 50 services most
 2497  frequently provided by the clinic. The posting may be a sign
 2498  that must be at least 15 square feet in size or through an
 2499  electronic messaging board that is at least 3 square feet in
 2500  size. The failure of a clinic, including a clinic that is
 2501  considered an urgent care center, to publish and post a schedule
 2502  of charges as required by this section shall result in a fine of
 2503  not more than $1,000, per day, until the schedule is published
 2504  and posted.
 2505         Section 51. Paragraph (b) of subsection (2) of section
 2506  401.272, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 2507         401.272 Emergency medical services community health care.—
 2508         (2) Notwithstanding any other provision of law to the
 2509  contrary:
 2510         (b) Paramedics and emergency medical technicians shall
 2511  operate under the medical direction of a physician through two
 2512  way communication or pursuant to established standing orders or
 2513  protocols and within the scope of their training when a patient
 2514  is not transported to an emergency department or is transported
 2515  to a facility other than a hospital as defined in s. 395.002 s.
 2516  395.002(12).
 2517         Section 52. Subsections (4) and (5) of section 408.051,
 2518  Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
 2519         408.051 Florida Electronic Health Records Exchange Act.—
 2520         (4) EMERGENCY RELEASE OF IDENTIFIABLE HEALTH RECORD.—A
 2521  health care provider may release or access an identifiable
 2522  health record of a patient without the patient’s consent for use
 2523  in the treatment of the patient for an emergency medical
 2524  condition, as defined in s. 395.002 s. 395.002(8), when the
 2525  health care provider is unable to obtain the patient’s consent
 2526  or the consent of the patient representative due to the
 2527  patient’s condition or the nature of the situation requiring
 2528  immediate medical attention. A health care provider who in good
 2529  faith releases or accesses an identifiable health record of a
 2530  patient in any form or medium under this subsection is immune
 2531  from civil liability for accessing or releasing an identifiable
 2532  health record.
 2533         (5) HOSPITAL DATA.—A hospital as defined in s. 395.002 s.
 2534  395.002(12) which maintains certified electronic health record
 2535  technology must make available admission, transfer, and
 2536  discharge data to the agency’s Florida Health Information
 2537  Exchange program for the purpose of supporting public health
 2538  data registries and patient care coordination. The agency may
 2539  adopt rules to implement this subsection.
 2540         Section 53. Subsection (6) of section 408.07, Florida
 2541  Statutes, is amended to read:
 2542         408.07 Definitions.—As used in this chapter, with the
 2543  exception of ss. 408.031-408.045, the term:
 2544         (6) “Ambulatory surgical center” means a facility licensed
 2545  as an ambulatory surgical center under chapter 396 395.
 2546         Section 54. Subsection (9) of section 408.802, Florida
 2547  Statutes, is amended to read:
 2548         408.802 Applicability.—This part applies to the provision
 2549  of services that require licensure as defined in this part and
 2550  to the following entities licensed, registered, or certified by
 2551  the agency, as described in chapters 112, 383, 390, 394, 395,
 2552  400, 429, 440, and 765:
 2553         (9) Ambulatory surgical centers, as provided under part I
 2554  of chapter 396 395.
 2555         Section 55. Subsection (9) of section 408.820, Florida
 2556  Statutes, is amended to read:
 2557         408.820 Exemptions.—Except as prescribed in authorizing
 2558  statutes, the following exemptions shall apply to specified
 2559  requirements of this part:
 2560         (9) Ambulatory surgical centers, as provided under part I
 2561  of chapter 396 395, are exempt from s. 408.810(7)-(10).
 2562         Section 56. Subsection (8) of section 409.905, Florida
 2563  Statutes, is amended to read:
 2564         409.905 Mandatory Medicaid services.—The agency may make
 2565  payments for the following services, which are required of the
 2566  state by Title XIX of the Social Security Act, furnished by
 2567  Medicaid providers to recipients who are determined to be
 2568  eligible on the dates on which the services were provided. Any
 2569  service under this section shall be provided only when medically
 2570  necessary and in accordance with state and federal law.
 2571  Mandatory services rendered by providers in mobile units to
 2572  Medicaid recipients may be restricted by the agency. Nothing in
 2573  this section shall be construed to prevent or limit the agency
 2574  from adjusting fees, reimbursement rates, lengths of stay,
 2575  number of visits, number of services, or any other adjustments
 2576  necessary to comply with the availability of moneys and any
 2577  limitations or directions provided for in the General
 2578  Appropriations Act or chapter 216.
 2579         (8) NURSING FACILITY SERVICES.—The agency shall pay for 24
 2580  hour-a-day nursing and rehabilitative services for a recipient
 2581  in a nursing facility licensed under part II of chapter 400 or
 2582  in a rural hospital, as defined in s. 395.602, or in a Medicare
 2583  certified skilled nursing facility operated by a hospital, as
 2584  defined in s. 395.002 by s. 395.002(10), that is licensed under
 2585  part I of chapter 395, and in accordance with provisions set
 2586  forth in s. 409.908(2)(a), which services are ordered by and
 2587  provided under the direction of a licensed physician. However,
 2588  if a nursing facility has been destroyed or otherwise made
 2589  uninhabitable by natural disaster or other emergency and another
 2590  nursing facility is not available, the agency must pay for
 2591  similar services temporarily in a hospital licensed under part I
 2592  of chapter 395 provided federal funding is approved and
 2593  available. The agency shall pay only for bed-hold days if the
 2594  facility has an occupancy rate of 95 percent or greater. The
 2595  agency is authorized to seek any federal waivers to implement
 2596  this policy.
 2597         Section 57. Subsection (3) of section 409.906, Florida
 2598  Statutes, is amended to read:
 2599         409.906 Optional Medicaid services.—Subject to specific
 2600  appropriations, the agency may make payments for services which
 2601  are optional to the state under Title XIX of the Social Security
 2602  Act and are furnished by Medicaid providers to recipients who
 2603  are determined to be eligible on the dates on which the services
 2604  were provided. Any optional service that is provided shall be
 2605  provided only when medically necessary and in accordance with
 2606  state and federal law. Optional services rendered by providers
 2607  in mobile units to Medicaid recipients may be restricted or
 2608  prohibited by the agency. Nothing in this section shall be
 2609  construed to prevent or limit the agency from adjusting fees,
 2610  reimbursement rates, lengths of stay, number of visits, or
 2611  number of services, or making any other adjustments necessary to
 2612  comply with the availability of moneys and any limitations or
 2613  directions provided for in the General Appropriations Act or
 2614  chapter 216. If necessary to safeguard the state’s systems of
 2615  providing services to elderly and disabled persons and subject
 2616  to the notice and review provisions of s. 216.177, the Governor
 2617  may direct the Agency for Health Care Administration to amend
 2618  the Medicaid state plan to delete the optional Medicaid service
 2619  known as “Intermediate Care Facilities for the Developmentally
 2620  Disabled.” Optional services may include:
 2621         (3) AMBULATORY SURGICAL CENTER SERVICES.—The agency may pay
 2622  for services provided to a recipient in an ambulatory surgical
 2623  center licensed under part I of chapter 396 395, by or under the
 2624  direction of a licensed physician or dentist.
 2625         Section 58. Paragraph (b) of subsection (1) of section
 2626  409.975, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 2627         409.975 Managed care plan accountability.—In addition to
 2628  the requirements of s. 409.967, plans and providers
 2629  participating in the managed medical assistance program shall
 2630  comply with the requirements of this section.
 2631         (1) PROVIDER NETWORKS.—Managed care plans must develop and
 2632  maintain provider networks that meet the medical needs of their
 2633  enrollees in accordance with standards established pursuant to
 2634  s. 409.967(2)(c). Except as provided in this section, managed
 2635  care plans may limit the providers in their networks based on
 2636  credentials, quality indicators, and price.
 2637         (b) Certain providers are statewide resources and essential
 2638  providers for all managed care plans in all regions. All managed
 2639  care plans must include these essential providers in their
 2640  networks. Statewide essential providers include:
 2641         1. Faculty plans of Florida medical schools.
 2642         2. Regional perinatal intensive care centers as defined in
 2643  s. 383.16(2).
 2644         3. Hospitals licensed as specialty children’s hospitals as
 2645  defined in s. 395.002 s. 395.002(28).
 2646         4. Accredited and integrated systems serving medically
 2647  complex children which comprise separately licensed, but
 2648  commonly owned, health care providers delivering at least the
 2649  following services: medical group home, in-home and outpatient
 2650  nursing care and therapies, pharmacy services, durable medical
 2651  equipment, and Prescribed Pediatric Extended Care.
 2652         5. Florida cancer hospitals that meet the criteria in 42
 2653  U.S.C. s. 1395ww(d)(1)(B)(v).
 2654  
 2655  Managed care plans that have not contracted with all statewide
 2656  essential providers in all regions as of the first date of
 2657  recipient enrollment must continue to negotiate in good faith.
 2658  Payments to physicians on the faculty of nonparticipating
 2659  Florida medical schools shall be made at the applicable Medicaid
 2660  rate. Payments for services rendered by regional perinatal
 2661  intensive care centers shall be made at the applicable Medicaid
 2662  rate as of the first day of the contract between the agency and
 2663  the plan. Except for payments for emergency services, payments
 2664  to nonparticipating specialty children’s hospitals, and payments
 2665  to nonparticipating Florida cancer hospitals that meet the
 2666  criteria in 42 U.S.C. s. 1395ww(d)(1)(B)(v), shall equal the
 2667  highest rate established by contract between that provider and
 2668  any other Medicaid managed care plan.
 2669         Section 59. Subsection (7) of section 456.013, Florida
 2670  Statutes, is amended to read:
 2671         456.013 Department; general licensing provisions.—
 2672         (7) The boards, or the department when there is no board,
 2673  shall require the completion of a 2-hour course relating to
 2674  prevention of medical errors as part of the biennial renewal
 2675  process. The 2-hour course counts toward the total number of
 2676  continuing education hours required for the profession. The
 2677  course must be approved by the board or department, as
 2678  appropriate, and must include a study of root-cause analysis,
 2679  error reduction and prevention, and patient safety. In addition,
 2680  the course approved by the Board of Medicine and the Board of
 2681  Osteopathic Medicine must include information relating to the
 2682  five most misdiagnosed conditions during the previous biennium,
 2683  as determined by the board. If the course is being offered by a
 2684  facility licensed under pursuant to chapter 395 or chapter 396
 2685  for its employees, the board may approve up to 1 hour of the 2
 2686  hour course to be specifically related to error reduction and
 2687  prevention methods used in that facility.
 2688         Section 60. Subsection (5) of section 456.0135, Florida
 2689  Statutes, is amended to read:
 2690         456.0135 General background screening provisions.—
 2691         (5) In addition to the offenses listed in s. 435.04, all
 2692  persons required to undergo background screening under this
 2693  section, other than those licensed under s. 465.022, must not
 2694  have an arrest awaiting final disposition for, must not have
 2695  been found guilty of, regardless of adjudication, or entered a
 2696  plea of nolo contendere or guilty to, and must not have been
 2697  adjudicated delinquent and the record not have been sealed or
 2698  expunged for an offense under s. 784.03 or any similar offense
 2699  of another jurisdiction relating to battery, if the victim is a
 2700  vulnerable adult as defined in s. 415.102 or a patient or
 2701  resident of a facility licensed under chapter 395, chapter 396,
 2702  chapter 400, or chapter 429.
 2703         Section 61. Subsection (5) of section 456.041, Florida
 2704  Statutes, is amended to read:
 2705         456.041 Practitioner profile; creation.—
 2706         (5) The Department of Health shall include the date of a
 2707  hospital or ambulatory surgical center disciplinary action taken
 2708  by a licensed hospital or an ambulatory surgical center, in
 2709  accordance with the requirements of ss. 395.013 and 396.212 s.
 2710  395.0193, in the practitioner profile. The department shall
 2711  state whether the action related to professional competence and
 2712  whether it related to the delivery of services to a patient.
 2713         Section 62. Paragraph (n) of subsection (3) of section
 2714  456.053, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 2715         456.053 Financial arrangements between referring health
 2716  care providers and providers of health care services.—
 2717         (3) DEFINITIONS.—For the purpose of this section, the word,
 2718  phrase, or term:
 2719         (n) “Referral” means any referral of a patient by a health
 2720  care provider for health care services, including, without
 2721  limitation:
 2722         1. The forwarding of a patient by a health care provider to
 2723  another health care provider or to an entity which provides or
 2724  supplies designated health services or any other health care
 2725  item or service; or
 2726         2. The request or establishment of a plan of care by a
 2727  health care provider, which includes the provision of designated
 2728  health services or other health care item or service.
 2729         3. The following orders, recommendations, or plans of care
 2730  do shall not constitute a referral by a health care provider:
 2731         a. By a radiologist for diagnostic-imaging services.
 2732         b. By a physician specializing in the provision of
 2733  radiation therapy services for such services.
 2734         c. By a medical oncologist for drugs and solutions to be
 2735  prepared and administered intravenously to such oncologist’s
 2736  patient, as well as for the supplies and equipment used in
 2737  connection therewith to treat such patient for cancer and the
 2738  complications thereof.
 2739         d. By a cardiologist for cardiac catheterization services.
 2740         e. By a pathologist for diagnostic clinical laboratory
 2741  tests and pathological examination services, if furnished by or
 2742  under the supervision of such pathologist pursuant to a
 2743  consultation requested by another physician.
 2744         f. By a health care provider who is the sole provider or
 2745  member of a group practice for designated health services or
 2746  other health care items or services that are prescribed or
 2747  provided solely for such referring health care provider’s or
 2748  group practice’s own patients, and that are provided or
 2749  performed by or under the supervision of such referring health
 2750  care provider or group practice if such supervision complies
 2751  with all applicable Medicare payment and coverage rules for
 2752  services; provided, however, a physician licensed pursuant to
 2753  chapter 458, chapter 459, chapter 460, or chapter 461 or an
 2754  advanced practice registered nurse registered under s. 464.0123
 2755  may refer a patient to a sole provider or group practice for
 2756  diagnostic imaging services, excluding radiation therapy
 2757  services, for which the sole provider or group practice billed
 2758  both the technical and the professional fee for or on behalf of
 2759  the patient, if the referring physician or advanced practice
 2760  registered nurse registered under s. 464.0123 has no investment
 2761  interest in the practice. The diagnostic imaging service
 2762  referred to a group practice or sole provider must be a
 2763  diagnostic imaging service normally provided within the scope of
 2764  practice to the patients of the group practice or sole provider.
 2765  The group practice or sole provider may accept no more than 15
 2766  percent of their patients receiving diagnostic imaging services
 2767  from outside referrals, excluding radiation therapy services.
 2768  However, the 15 percent limitation of this sub-subparagraph and
 2769  the requirements of subparagraph (4)(a)2. do not apply to a
 2770  group practice entity that owns an accountable care organization
 2771  or an entity operating under an advanced alternative payment
 2772  model according to federal regulations if such entity provides
 2773  diagnostic imaging services and has more than 30,000 patients
 2774  enrolled per year.
 2775         g. By a health care provider for services provided by an
 2776  ambulatory surgical center licensed under chapter 396 395.
 2777         h. By a urologist for lithotripsy services.
 2778         i. By a dentist for dental services performed by an
 2779  employee of or health care provider who is an independent
 2780  contractor with the dentist or group practice of which the
 2781  dentist is a member.
 2782         j. By a physician for infusion therapy services to a
 2783  patient of that physician or a member of that physician’s group
 2784  practice.
 2785         k. By a nephrologist for renal dialysis services and
 2786  supplies, except laboratory services.
 2787         l. By a health care provider whose principal professional
 2788  practice consists of treating patients in their private
 2789  residences for services to be rendered in such private
 2790  residences, except for services rendered by a home health agency
 2791  licensed under chapter 400. For purposes of this sub
 2792  subparagraph, the term “private residences” includes patients’
 2793  private homes, independent living centers, and assisted living
 2794  facilities, but does not include skilled nursing facilities.
 2795         m. By a health care provider for sleep-related testing.
 2796         Section 63. Subsection (3) of section 456.056, Florida
 2797  Statutes, is amended to read:
 2798         456.056 Treatment of Medicare beneficiaries; refusal,
 2799  emergencies, consulting physicians.—
 2800         (3) If treatment is provided to a beneficiary for an
 2801  emergency medical condition as defined in s. 395.002 s.
 2802  395.002(8)(a), the physician must accept Medicare assignment
 2803  provided that the requirement to accept Medicare assignment for
 2804  an emergency medical condition does shall not apply to treatment
 2805  rendered after the patient is stabilized, or the treatment that
 2806  is unrelated to the original emergency medical condition. For
 2807  the purpose of this subsection, the term “stabilized” means is
 2808  defined to mean with respect to an emergency medical condition,
 2809  that no material deterioration of the condition is likely within
 2810  reasonable medical probability.
 2811         Section 64. Subsection (2) of section 456.0575, Florida
 2812  Statutes, is amended to read:
 2813         456.0575 Duty to notify patients.—
 2814         (2) Upon request by a patient, before providing
 2815  nonemergency medical services in a facility licensed under
 2816  chapter 395 or chapter 396, a health care practitioner shall
 2817  provide, in writing or by electronic means, a good faith
 2818  estimate of reasonably anticipated charges to treat the
 2819  patient’s condition at the facility. The health care
 2820  practitioner shall provide the estimate to the patient within 7
 2821  business days after receiving the request and is not required to
 2822  adjust the estimate for any potential insurance coverage. The
 2823  health care practitioner shall inform the patient that the
 2824  patient may contact his or her health insurer or health
 2825  maintenance organization for additional information concerning
 2826  cost-sharing responsibilities. The health care practitioner
 2827  shall provide information to uninsured patients and insured
 2828  patients for whom the practitioner is not a network provider or
 2829  preferred provider which discloses the practitioner’s financial
 2830  assistance policy, including the application process, payment
 2831  plans, discounts, or other available assistance, and the
 2832  practitioner’s charity care policy and collection procedures.
 2833  Such estimate does not preclude the actual charges from
 2834  exceeding the estimate. Failure to provide the estimate in
 2835  accordance with this subsection, without good cause, shall
 2836  result in disciplinary action against the health care
 2837  practitioner and a daily fine of $500 until the estimate is
 2838  provided to the patient. The total fine may not exceed $5,000.
 2839         Section 65. Paragraph (t) of subsection (1) of section
 2840  456.072, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 2841         456.072 Grounds for discipline; penalties; enforcement.—
 2842         (1) The following acts shall constitute grounds for which
 2843  the disciplinary actions specified in subsection (2) may be
 2844  taken:
 2845         (t) Failing to identify through written notice, which may
 2846  include the wearing of a name tag, or orally to a patient the
 2847  type of license under which the practitioner is practicing. Any
 2848  advertisement for health care services naming the practitioner
 2849  must identify the type of license the practitioner holds. This
 2850  paragraph does not apply to a practitioner while the
 2851  practitioner is providing services in a facility licensed under
 2852  chapter 394, chapter 395, chapter 396, chapter 400, or chapter
 2853  429. Each board, or the department where there is no board, is
 2854  authorized by rule to determine how its practitioners may comply
 2855  with this disclosure requirement.
 2856         Section 66. Paragraph (b) of subsection (12) of section
 2857  456.073, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 2858         456.073 Disciplinary proceedings.—Disciplinary proceedings
 2859  for each board shall be within the jurisdiction of the
 2860  department.
 2861         (12)
 2862         (b) No facility licensed under chapter 395 or chapter 396,
 2863  health maintenance organization certificated under part I of
 2864  chapter 641, physician licensed under chapter 458, or
 2865  osteopathic physician licensed under chapter 459 shall
 2866  discharge, threaten to discharge, intimidate, or coerce any
 2867  employee or staff member by reason of such employee’s or staff
 2868  member’s report to the department about a physician licensed
 2869  under chapter 458, chapter 459, chapter 460, chapter 461, or
 2870  chapter 466 who may be guilty of incompetence, impairment, or
 2871  unprofessional conduct so long as such report is given without
 2872  intentional fraud or malice.
 2873         Section 67. Subsection (3) of section 458.3145, Florida
 2874  Statutes, is amended to read:
 2875         458.3145 Medical faculty certificate.—
 2876         (3) The holder of a medical faculty certificate issued
 2877  under this section has all rights and responsibilities
 2878  prescribed by law for the holder of a license issued under s.
 2879  458.311, except as specifically provided otherwise by law. Such
 2880  responsibilities include compliance with continuing medical
 2881  education requirements as set forth by rule of the board. A
 2882  hospital licensed under chapter 395, an or ambulatory surgical
 2883  center licensed under chapter 396 395, a health maintenance
 2884  organization certified under chapter 641, an insurer as defined
 2885  in s. 624.03, a multiple-employer welfare arrangement as defined
 2886  in s. 624.437, or any other entity in this state, in considering
 2887  and acting upon an application for staff membership, clinical
 2888  privileges, or other credentials as a health care provider, may
 2889  not deny the application of an otherwise qualified physician for
 2890  such staff membership, clinical privileges, or other credentials
 2891  solely because the applicant is a holder of a medical faculty
 2892  certificate under this section.
 2893         Section 68. Subsection (2) of section 458.320, Florida
 2894  Statutes, is amended to read:
 2895         458.320 Financial responsibility.—
 2896         (2) Physicians who perform surgery in an ambulatory
 2897  surgical center licensed under chapter 396 395 and, as a
 2898  continuing condition of hospital staff privileges, physicians
 2899  who have staff privileges must also establish financial
 2900  responsibility by one of the following methods:
 2901         (a) Establishing and maintaining an escrow account
 2902  consisting of cash or assets eligible for deposit in accordance
 2903  with s. 625.52 in the per claim amounts specified in paragraph
 2904  (b). The required escrow amount set forth in this paragraph may
 2905  not be used for litigation costs or attorney attorney’s fees for
 2906  the defense of any medical malpractice claim.
 2907         (b) Obtaining and maintaining professional liability
 2908  coverage in an amount not less than $250,000 per claim, with a
 2909  minimum annual aggregate of not less than $750,000 from an
 2910  authorized insurer as defined under s. 624.09, from a surplus
 2911  lines insurer as defined under s. 626.914(2), from a risk
 2912  retention group as defined under s. 627.942, from the Joint
 2913  Underwriting Association established under s. 627.351(4),
 2914  through a plan of self-insurance as provided in s. 627.357, or
 2915  through a plan of self-insurance which meets the conditions
 2916  specified for satisfying financial responsibility in s. 766.110.
 2917  The required coverage amount set forth in this paragraph may not
 2918  be used for litigation costs or attorney attorney’s fees for the
 2919  defense of any medical malpractice claim.
 2920         (c) Obtaining and maintaining an unexpired irrevocable
 2921  letter of credit, established pursuant to chapter 675, in an
 2922  amount not less than $250,000 per claim, with a minimum
 2923  aggregate availability of credit of not less than $750,000. The
 2924  letter of credit must be payable to the physician as beneficiary
 2925  upon presentment of a final judgment indicating liability and
 2926  awarding damages to be paid by the physician or upon presentment
 2927  of a settlement agreement signed by all parties to such
 2928  agreement when such final judgment or settlement is a result of
 2929  a claim arising out of the rendering of, or the failure to
 2930  render, medical care and services. The letter of credit may not
 2931  be used for litigation costs or attorney attorney’s fees for the
 2932  defense of any medical malpractice claim. The letter of credit
 2933  must be nonassignable and nontransferable. The letter of credit
 2934  must be issued by any bank or savings association organized and
 2935  existing under the laws of this state or any bank or savings
 2936  association organized under the laws of the United States which
 2937  has its principal place of business in this state or has a
 2938  branch office that is authorized under the laws of this state or
 2939  of the United States to receive deposits in this state.
 2940  
 2941  This subsection shall be inclusive of the coverage in subsection
 2942  (1).
 2943         Section 69. Paragraph (a) of subsection (1) of section
 2944  458.3265, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 2945         458.3265 Pain-management clinics.—
 2946         (1) REGISTRATION.—
 2947         (a)1. As used in this section, the term:
 2948         a. “Board eligible” means successful completion of an
 2949  anesthesia, physical medicine and rehabilitation, rheumatology,
 2950  or neurology residency program approved by the Accreditation
 2951  Council for Graduate Medical Education or the American
 2952  Osteopathic Association for a period of 6 years from successful
 2953  completion of such residency program.
 2954         b. “Chronic nonmalignant pain” means pain unrelated to
 2955  cancer which persists beyond the usual course of disease or the
 2956  injury that is the cause of the pain or more than 90 days after
 2957  surgery.
 2958         c. “Pain-management clinic” or “clinic” means any publicly
 2959  or privately owned facility:
 2960         (I) That advertises in any medium for any type of pain
 2961  management services; or
 2962         (II) Where in any month a majority of patients are
 2963  prescribed opioids, benzodiazepines, barbiturates, or
 2964  carisoprodol for the treatment of chronic nonmalignant pain.
 2965         2. Each pain-management clinic must register with the
 2966  department or hold a valid certificate of exemption pursuant to
 2967  subsection (2).
 2968         3. The following clinics are exempt from the registration
 2969  requirement of paragraphs (c)-(m) and must apply to the
 2970  department for a certificate of exemption:
 2971         a. A clinic licensed as a hospital under facility pursuant
 2972  to chapter 395 or an ambulatory surgical center under chapter
 2973  396;
 2974         b. A clinic in which the majority of the physicians who
 2975  provide services in the clinic primarily provide surgical
 2976  services;
 2977         c. A clinic owned by a publicly held corporation whose
 2978  shares are traded on a national exchange or on the over-the
 2979  counter market and whose total assets at the end of the
 2980  corporation’s most recent fiscal quarter exceeded $50 million;
 2981         d. A clinic affiliated with an accredited medical school at
 2982  which training is provided for medical students, residents, or
 2983  fellows;
 2984         e. A clinic that does not prescribe controlled substances
 2985  for the treatment of pain;
 2986         f. A clinic owned by a corporate entity exempt from federal
 2987  taxation under 26 U.S.C. s. 501(c)(3);
 2988         g. A clinic wholly owned and operated by one or more board
 2989  eligible or board-certified anesthesiologists, physiatrists,
 2990  rheumatologists, or neurologists; or
 2991         h. A clinic wholly owned and operated by a physician
 2992  multispecialty practice where one or more board-eligible or
 2993  board-certified medical specialists, who have also completed
 2994  fellowships in pain medicine approved by the Accreditation
 2995  Council for Graduate Medical Education or who are also board
 2996  certified in pain medicine by the American Board of Pain
 2997  Medicine or a board approved by the American Board of Medical
 2998  Specialties, the American Board of Physician Specialties, or the
 2999  American Osteopathic Association, perform interventional pain
 3000  procedures of the type routinely billed using surgical codes.
 3001         Section 70. Paragraph (a) of subsection (1) and paragraph
 3002  (a) of subsection (2) of section 458.328, Florida Statutes, are
 3003  amended to read:
 3004         458.328 Office surgeries.—
 3005         (1) REGISTRATION.—
 3006         (a)1. An office in which a physician performs a liposuction
 3007  procedure in which more than 1,000 cubic centimeters of
 3008  supernatant fat is temporarily or permanently removed, a Level
 3009  II office surgery, or a Level III office surgery must register
 3010  with the department. A facility licensed under chapter 390, or
 3011  chapter 395, or chapter 396 may not be registered under this
 3012  section.
 3013         2. The department must complete an inspection of any office
 3014  seeking registration under this section before the office may be
 3015  registered.
 3016         (2) STANDARDS OF PRACTICE.—
 3017         (a) A physician may not perform any surgery or procedure
 3018  identified in paragraph (1)(a) in a setting other than an office
 3019  surgery setting registered under this section or a facility
 3020  licensed under chapter 390, or chapter 395, or chapter 396, as
 3021  applicable. The board shall impose a fine of $5,000 per incident
 3022  on a physician who violates this paragraph.
 3023         Section 71. Paragraph (g) of subsection (4) of section
 3024  458.347, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 3025         458.347 Physician assistants.—
 3026         (4) PERFORMANCE OF PHYSICIAN ASSISTANTS.—
 3027         (g) A supervisory physician may delegate to a licensed
 3028  physician assistant the authority to, and the licensed physician
 3029  assistant acting under the direction of the supervisory
 3030  physician may, order any medication for administration to the
 3031  supervisory physician’s patient in a facility licensed under
 3032  chapter 395, chapter 396, or part II of chapter 400,
 3033  notwithstanding any provisions in chapter 465 or chapter 893
 3034  which may prohibit this delegation.
 3035         Section 72. Paragraph (f) of subsection (4) of section
 3036  458.351, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 3037         458.351 Reports of adverse incidents in office practice
 3038  settings.—
 3039         (4) For purposes of notification to the department pursuant
 3040  to this section, the term “adverse incident” means an event over
 3041  which the physician or licensee could exercise control and which
 3042  is associated in whole or in part with a medical intervention,
 3043  rather than the condition for which such intervention occurred,
 3044  and which results in the following patient injuries:
 3045         (f) Any condition that required the transfer of a patient
 3046  to a hospital licensed under chapter 395 from an ambulatory
 3047  surgical center licensed under chapter 396 395 or any facility
 3048  or any office maintained by a physician for the practice of
 3049  medicine which is not licensed under chapter 395.
 3050         Section 73. Subsection (2) of section 459.0085, Florida
 3051  Statutes, is amended to read:
 3052         459.0085 Financial responsibility.—
 3053         (2) Osteopathic physicians who perform surgery in an
 3054  ambulatory surgical center licensed under chapter 396 395 and,
 3055  as a continuing condition of hospital staff privileges,
 3056  osteopathic physicians who have staff privileges must also
 3057  establish financial responsibility by one of the following
 3058  methods:
 3059         (a) Establishing and maintaining an escrow account
 3060  consisting of cash or assets eligible for deposit in accordance
 3061  with s. 625.52 in the per-claim amounts specified in paragraph
 3062  (b). The required escrow amount set forth in this paragraph may
 3063  not be used for litigation costs or attorney attorney’s fees for
 3064  the defense of any medical malpractice claim.
 3065         (b) Obtaining and maintaining professional liability
 3066  coverage in an amount not less than $250,000 per claim, with a
 3067  minimum annual aggregate of not less than $750,000 from an
 3068  authorized insurer as defined under s. 624.09, from a surplus
 3069  lines insurer as defined under s. 626.914(2), from a risk
 3070  retention group as defined under s. 627.942, from the Joint
 3071  Underwriting Association established under s. 627.351(4),
 3072  through a plan of self-insurance as provided in s. 627.357, or
 3073  through a plan of self-insurance that meets the conditions
 3074  specified for satisfying financial responsibility in s. 766.110.
 3075  The required coverage amount set forth in this paragraph may not
 3076  be used for litigation costs or attorney attorney’s fees for the
 3077  defense of any medical malpractice claim.
 3078         (c) Obtaining and maintaining an unexpired, irrevocable
 3079  letter of credit, established pursuant to chapter 675, in an
 3080  amount not less than $250,000 per claim, with a minimum
 3081  aggregate availability of credit of not less than $750,000. The
 3082  letter of credit must be payable to the osteopathic physician as
 3083  beneficiary upon presentment of a final judgment indicating
 3084  liability and awarding damages to be paid by the osteopathic
 3085  physician or upon presentment of a settlement agreement signed
 3086  by all parties to such agreement when such final judgment or
 3087  settlement is a result of a claim arising out of the rendering
 3088  of, or the failure to render, medical care and services. The
 3089  letter of credit may not be used for litigation costs or
 3090  attorney attorney’s fees for the defense of any medical
 3091  malpractice claim. The letter of credit must be nonassignable
 3092  and nontransferable. The letter of credit must be issued by any
 3093  bank or savings association organized and existing under the
 3094  laws of this state or any bank or savings association organized
 3095  under the laws of the United States which has its principal
 3096  place of business in this state or has a branch office that is
 3097  authorized under the laws of this state or of the United States
 3098  to receive deposits in this state.
 3099  
 3100  This subsection shall be inclusive of the coverage in subsection
 3101  (1).
 3102         Section 74. Paragraph (a) of subsection (1) of section
 3103  459.0137, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 3104         459.0137 Pain-management clinics.—
 3105         (1) REGISTRATION.—
 3106         (a)1. As used in this section, the term:
 3107         a. “Board eligible” means successful completion of an
 3108  anesthesia, physical medicine and rehabilitation, rheumatology,
 3109  or neurology residency program approved by the Accreditation
 3110  Council for Graduate Medical Education or the American
 3111  Osteopathic Association for a period of 6 years from successful
 3112  completion of such residency program.
 3113         b. “Chronic nonmalignant pain” means pain unrelated to
 3114  cancer which persists beyond the usual course of disease or the
 3115  injury that is the cause of the pain or more than 90 days after
 3116  surgery.
 3117         c. “Pain-management clinic” or “clinic” means any publicly
 3118  or privately owned facility:
 3119         (I) That advertises in any medium for any type of pain
 3120  management services; or
 3121         (II) Where in any month a majority of patients are
 3122  prescribed opioids, benzodiazepines, barbiturates, or
 3123  carisoprodol for the treatment of chronic nonmalignant pain.
 3124         2. Each pain-management clinic must register with the
 3125  department or hold a valid certificate of exemption pursuant to
 3126  subsection (2).
 3127         3. The following clinics are exempt from the registration
 3128  requirement of paragraphs (c)-(m) and must apply to the
 3129  department for a certificate of exemption:
 3130         a. A clinic licensed as a hospital under facility pursuant
 3131  to chapter 395 or an ambulatory surgical center under chapter
 3132  396;
 3133         b. A clinic in which the majority of the physicians who
 3134  provide services in the clinic primarily provide surgical
 3135  services;
 3136         c. A clinic owned by a publicly held corporation whose
 3137  shares are traded on a national exchange or on the over-the
 3138  counter market and whose total assets at the end of the
 3139  corporation’s most recent fiscal quarter exceeded $50 million;
 3140         d. A clinic affiliated with an accredited medical school at
 3141  which training is provided for medical students, residents, or
 3142  fellows;
 3143         e. A clinic that does not prescribe controlled substances
 3144  for the treatment of pain;
 3145         f. A clinic owned by a corporate entity exempt from federal
 3146  taxation under 26 U.S.C. s. 501(c)(3);
 3147         g. A clinic wholly owned and operated by one or more board
 3148  eligible or board-certified anesthesiologists, physiatrists,
 3149  rheumatologists, or neurologists; or
 3150         h. A clinic wholly owned and operated by a physician
 3151  multispecialty practice where one or more board-eligible or
 3152  board-certified medical specialists, who have also completed
 3153  fellowships in pain medicine approved by the Accreditation
 3154  Council for Graduate Medical Education or the American
 3155  Osteopathic Association or who are also board-certified in pain
 3156  medicine by the American Board of Pain Medicine or a board
 3157  approved by the American Board of Medical Specialties, the
 3158  American Board of Physician Specialties, or the American
 3159  Osteopathic Association, perform interventional pain procedures
 3160  of the type routinely billed using surgical codes.
 3161         Section 75. Paragraph (a) of subsection (1) and paragraph
 3162  (a) of subsection (2) of section 459.0138, Florida Statutes, are
 3163  amended to read:
 3164         459.0138 Office surgeries.—
 3165         (1) REGISTRATION.—
 3166         (a)1. An office in which a physician performs a liposuction
 3167  procedure in which more than 1,000 cubic centimeters of
 3168  supernatant fat is temporarily or permanently removed, a Level
 3169  II office surgery, or a Level III office surgery must register
 3170  with the department. A facility licensed under chapter 390, or
 3171  chapter 395, or chapter 396 may not be registered under this
 3172  section.
 3173         2. The department must complete an inspection of any office
 3174  seeking registration under this section before the office may be
 3175  registered.
 3176         (2) STANDARDS OF PRACTICE.—
 3177         (a) A physician may not perform any surgery or procedure
 3178  identified in paragraph (1)(a) in a setting other than an office
 3179  surgery setting registered under this section or a facility
 3180  licensed under chapter 390, or chapter 395, or chapter 396, as
 3181  applicable. The board shall impose a fine of $5,000 per incident
 3182  on a physician who violates this paragraph.
 3183         Section 76. Paragraph (ll) of subsection (1) and
 3184  subsections (7) and (9) of section 459.015, Florida Statutes,
 3185  are amended to read:
 3186         459.015 Grounds for disciplinary action; action by the
 3187  board and department.—
 3188         (1) The following acts constitute grounds for denial of a
 3189  license or disciplinary action, as specified in s. 456.072(2):
 3190         (ll) Failing to report to the department any licensee under
 3191  chapter 458 or under this chapter who the osteopathic physician
 3192  or physician assistant knows has violated the grounds for
 3193  disciplinary action set out in the law under which that person
 3194  is licensed and who provides health care services in a facility
 3195  licensed under chapter 395 or chapter 396, or a health
 3196  maintenance organization certificated under part I of chapter
 3197  641, in which the osteopathic physician or physician assistant
 3198  also provides services.
 3199         (7) Upon the department’s receipt from the Agency for
 3200  Health Care Administration pursuant to s. 395.0197 or s. 396.213
 3201  of the name of an osteopathic physician whose conduct may
 3202  constitute grounds for disciplinary action by the department,
 3203  the department shall investigate the occurrences upon which the
 3204  report was based and determine if action by the department
 3205  against the osteopathic physician is warranted.
 3206         (9) When an investigation of an osteopathic physician is
 3207  undertaken, the department shall promptly furnish to the
 3208  osteopathic physician or his or her attorney a copy of the
 3209  complaint or document which resulted in the initiation of the
 3210  investigation. For purposes of this subsection, such documents
 3211  include, but are not limited to: the pertinent portions of an
 3212  annual report submitted to the department pursuant to s.
 3213  395.0197(6) or s. 396.213(6); a report of an adverse incident
 3214  which is provided to the department pursuant to s. 395.0197 or
 3215  s. 396.213; a report of peer review disciplinary action
 3216  submitted to the department pursuant to s. 395.0193(4), s.
 3217  396.212(4), or s. 459.016, provided that the investigations,
 3218  proceedings, and records relating to such peer review
 3219  disciplinary action shall continue to retain their privileged
 3220  status even as to the licensee who is the subject of the
 3221  investigation, as provided by ss. 395.0193(8), 396.212(8), and
 3222  459.016(3); a report of a closed claim submitted pursuant to s.
 3223  627.912; a presuit notice submitted pursuant to s. 766.106(2);
 3224  and a petition brought under the Florida Birth-Related
 3225  Neurological Injury Compensation Plan, pursuant to s.
 3226  766.305(2). The osteopathic physician may submit a written
 3227  response to the information contained in the complaint or
 3228  document which resulted in the initiation of the investigation
 3229  within 45 days after service to the osteopathic physician of the
 3230  complaint or document. The osteopathic physician’s written
 3231  response shall be considered by the probable cause panel.
 3232         Section 77. Paragraph (f) of subsection (4) of section
 3233  459.022, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 3234         459.022 Physician assistants.—
 3235         (4) PERFORMANCE OF PHYSICIAN ASSISTANTS.—
 3236         (f) A supervisory physician may delegate to a licensed
 3237  physician assistant the authority to, and the licensed physician
 3238  assistant acting under the direction of the supervisory
 3239  physician may, order any medication for administration to the
 3240  supervisory physician’s patient in a facility licensed under
 3241  chapter 395, chapter 396, or part II of chapter 400,
 3242  notwithstanding any provisions in chapter 465 or chapter 893
 3243  which may prohibit this delegation.
 3244         Section 78. Paragraph (f) of subsection (4) of section
 3245  459.026, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 3246         459.026 Reports of adverse incidents in office practice
 3247  settings.—
 3248         (4) For purposes of notification to the department pursuant
 3249  to this section, the term “adverse incident” means an event over
 3250  which the physician or licensee could exercise control and which
 3251  is associated in whole or in part with a medical intervention,
 3252  rather than the condition for which such intervention occurred,
 3253  and which results in the following patient injuries:
 3254         (f) Any condition that required the transfer of a patient
 3255  to a hospital licensed under chapter 395 from an ambulatory
 3256  surgical center licensed under chapter 396 395 or any facility
 3257  or any office maintained by a physician for the practice of
 3258  medicine which is not licensed under chapter 395.
 3259         Section 79. Paragraph (ee) of subsection (1) of section
 3260  460.413, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 3261         460.413 Grounds for disciplinary action; action by board or
 3262  department.—
 3263         (1) The following acts constitute grounds for denial of a
 3264  license or disciplinary action, as specified in s. 456.072(2):
 3265         (ee) Failing to report to the department any licensee under
 3266  chapter 458 or under chapter 459 who the chiropractic physician
 3267  or chiropractic physician’s assistant knows has violated the
 3268  grounds for disciplinary action set out in the law under which
 3269  that person is licensed and who provides health care services in
 3270  a facility licensed under chapter 395 or chapter 396, or a
 3271  health maintenance organization certificated under part I of
 3272  chapter 641, in which the chiropractic physician or chiropractic
 3273  physician’s assistant also provides services.
 3274         Section 80. Paragraph (c) of subsection (1) of section
 3275  460.4167, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 3276         460.4167 Proprietorship by persons other than licensed
 3277  chiropractic physicians.—
 3278         (1) A person may not employ a chiropractic physician
 3279  licensed under this chapter or engage a chiropractic physician
 3280  licensed under this chapter as an independent contractor to
 3281  provide services that chiropractic physicians are authorized to
 3282  offer under this chapter, unless the person is any of the
 3283  following:
 3284         (c) An entity that is wholly owned, directly or indirectly,
 3285  by an entity licensed or registered by the state under chapter
 3286  395 or chapter 396.
 3287         Section 81. Paragraph (aa) of subsection (1) and paragraph
 3288  (b) of subsection (5) of section 461.013, Florida Statutes, are
 3289  amended to read:
 3290         461.013 Grounds for disciplinary action; action by the
 3291  board; investigations by department.—
 3292         (1) The following acts constitute grounds for denial of a
 3293  license or disciplinary action, as specified in s. 456.072(2):
 3294         (aa) Failing to report to the department any licensee under
 3295  chapter 458 or chapter 459 who the podiatric physician knows has
 3296  violated the grounds for disciplinary action set out in the law
 3297  under which that person is licensed and who provides health care
 3298  services in a facility licensed under chapter 395 or chapter
 3299  396, or a health maintenance organization certificated under
 3300  part I of chapter 641, in which the podiatric physician also
 3301  provides services.
 3302         (5)
 3303         (b) Upon the department’s receipt from the Agency for
 3304  Health Care Administration pursuant to s. 395.0197 or s. 396.213
 3305  of the name of the podiatric physician whose conduct may
 3306  constitute grounds for disciplinary action by the department,
 3307  the department shall investigate the occurrences upon which the
 3308  report was based and determine if action by the department
 3309  against the podiatric physician is warranted.
 3310         Section 82. Paragraph (e) of subsection (3) of section
 3311  464.012, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 3312         464.012 Licensure of advanced practice registered nurses;
 3313  fees; controlled substance prescribing.—
 3314         (3) An advanced practice registered nurse shall perform
 3315  those functions authorized in this section within the framework
 3316  of an established protocol that must be maintained on site at
 3317  the location or locations at which an advanced practice
 3318  registered nurse practices, unless the advanced practice
 3319  registered nurse is registered and practicing under s. 464.0123.
 3320  In the case of multiple supervising physicians in the same
 3321  group, an advanced practice registered nurse must enter into a
 3322  supervisory protocol with at least one physician within the
 3323  physician group practice. A practitioner currently licensed
 3324  under chapter 458, chapter 459, or chapter 466 shall maintain
 3325  supervision for directing the specific course of medical
 3326  treatment. Within the established framework, an advanced
 3327  practice registered nurse may:
 3328         (e) Order any medication for administration to a patient in
 3329  a facility licensed under chapter 395, chapter 396, or part II
 3330  of chapter 400, notwithstanding any provisions in chapter 465 or
 3331  chapter 893.
 3332         Section 83. Paragraph (e) of subsection (1) of section
 3333  465.0125, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 3334         465.0125 Consultant pharmacist license; application,
 3335  renewal, fees; responsibilities; rules.—
 3336         (1) The department shall issue or renew a consultant
 3337  pharmacist license upon receipt of an initial or renewal
 3338  application that conforms to the requirements for consultant
 3339  pharmacist initial licensure or renewal as adopted by the board
 3340  by rule and a fee set by the board not to exceed $250. To be
 3341  licensed as a consultant pharmacist, a pharmacist must complete
 3342  additional training as required by the board.
 3343         (e) For purposes of this subsection, the term “health care
 3344  facility” means a an ambulatory surgical center or hospital
 3345  licensed under chapter 395, an ambulatory surgical center
 3346  licensed under chapter 396, an alcohol or chemical dependency
 3347  treatment center licensed under chapter 397, an inpatient
 3348  hospice licensed under part IV of chapter 400, a nursing home
 3349  licensed under part II of chapter 400, an ambulatory care center
 3350  as defined in s. 408.07, or a nursing home component under
 3351  chapter 400 within a continuing care facility licensed under
 3352  chapter 651.
 3353         Section 84. Paragraph (o) of subsection (1) of section
 3354  465.016, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 3355         465.016 Disciplinary actions.—
 3356         (1) The following acts constitute grounds for denial of a
 3357  license or disciplinary action, as specified in s. 456.072(2):
 3358         (o) Failing to report to the department any licensee under
 3359  chapter 458 or under chapter 459 who the pharmacist knows has
 3360  violated the grounds for disciplinary action set out in the law
 3361  under which that person is licensed and who provides health care
 3362  services in a facility licensed under chapter 395 or chapter
 3363  396, or a health maintenance organization certificated under
 3364  part I of chapter 641, in which the pharmacist also provides
 3365  services. However, a person who the licensee knows is unable to
 3366  practice medicine or osteopathic medicine with reasonable skill
 3367  and safety to patients by reason of illness or use of alcohol,
 3368  drugs, narcotics, chemicals, or any other type of material, or
 3369  as a result of a mental or physical condition, may be reported
 3370  to a consultant operating an impaired practitioner program as
 3371  described in s. 456.076 rather than to the department.
 3372         Section 85. Paragraph (hh) of subsection (1) of section
 3373  466.028, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 3374         466.028 Grounds for disciplinary action; action by the
 3375  board.—
 3376         (1) The following acts constitute grounds for denial of a
 3377  license or disciplinary action, as specified in s. 456.072(2):
 3378         (hh) Failing to report to the department any licensee under
 3379  chapter 458 or chapter 459 who the dentist knows has violated
 3380  the grounds for disciplinary action set out in the law under
 3381  which that person is licensed and who provides health care
 3382  services in a facility licensed under chapter 395 or chapter
 3383  396, or a health maintenance organization certificated under
 3384  part I of chapter 641, in which the dentist also provides
 3385  services.
 3386         Section 86. Paragraph (l) of subsection (1) of section
 3387  468.505, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 3388         468.505 Exemptions; exceptions.—
 3389         (1) Nothing in this part may be construed as prohibiting or
 3390  restricting the practice, services, or activities of:
 3391         (l) A person employed by a nursing facility exempt from
 3392  licensing under s. 395.002 s. 395.002(12), or a person exempt
 3393  from licensing under s. 464.022.
 3394         Section 87. Paragraph (d) of subsection (11) of section
 3395  486.021, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 3396         486.021 Definitions.—As used in this chapter, unless the
 3397  context otherwise requires, the term:
 3398         (11) “Practice of physical therapy” means the performance
 3399  of physical therapy assessments and the treatment of any
 3400  disability, injury, disease, or other health condition of human
 3401  beings, or the prevention of such disability, injury, disease,
 3402  or other health condition, and the rehabilitation of such
 3403  disability, injury, disease, or other health condition by
 3404  alleviating impairments, functional movement limitations, and
 3405  disabilities by designing, implementing, and modifying treatment
 3406  interventions through therapeutic exercise; functional movement
 3407  training in self-management and in-home, community, or work
 3408  integration or reintegration; manual therapy; massage; airway
 3409  clearance techniques; maintaining and restoring the
 3410  integumentary system and wound care; physical agent or modality;
 3411  mechanical or electrotherapeutic modality; patient-related
 3412  instruction; the use of apparatus and equipment in the
 3413  application of such treatment, prevention, or rehabilitation;
 3414  the performance of tests of neuromuscular functions as an aid to
 3415  the diagnosis or treatment of any human condition; or the
 3416  performance of electromyography as an aid to the diagnosis of
 3417  any human condition only upon compliance with the criteria set
 3418  forth by the Board of Medicine.
 3419         (d) This subsection does not authorize a physical therapist
 3420  to implement a plan of treatment for a patient currently being
 3421  treated in a facility licensed under pursuant to chapter 395 or
 3422  chapter 396.
 3423         Section 88. Subsection (22) of section 499.003, Florida
 3424  Statutes, is amended to read:
 3425         499.003 Definitions of terms used in this part.—As used in
 3426  this part, the term:
 3427         (22) “Health care facility” means a health care facility
 3428  licensed under chapter 395 or chapter 396.
 3429         Section 89. Subsection (5) of section 499.0295, Florida
 3430  Statutes, is amended to read:
 3431         499.0295 Experimental treatments for terminal conditions.—
 3432         (5) A hospital or health care facility licensed under
 3433  chapter 395 or chapter 396, as applicable, is not required to
 3434  provide new or additional services unless those services are
 3435  approved by the hospital or health care facility.
 3436         Section 90. Paragraph (c) of subsection (1) of section
 3437  553.80, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 3438         553.80 Enforcement.—
 3439         (1) Except as provided in paragraphs (a)-(g), each local
 3440  government and each legally constituted enforcement district
 3441  with statutory authority shall regulate building construction
 3442  and, where authorized in the state agency’s enabling
 3443  legislation, each state agency shall enforce the Florida
 3444  Building Code required by this part on all public or private
 3445  buildings, structures, and facilities, unless such
 3446  responsibility has been delegated to another unit of government
 3447  under s. 553.79(11).
 3448         (c) In addition to the requirements of s. 553.79 and this
 3449  section, facilities subject to the provisions of chapter 395,
 3450  chapter 396, and parts II and VIII of chapter 400 shall have
 3451  facility plans reviewed and construction surveyed by the state
 3452  agency authorized to do so under the requirements of chapter 395
 3453  and parts II and VIII of chapter 400 and the certification
 3454  requirements of the Federal Government. Facilities subject to
 3455  the provisions of part IV of chapter 400 may have facility plans
 3456  reviewed and shall have construction surveyed by the state
 3457  agency authorized to do so under the requirements of part IV of
 3458  chapter 400 and the certification requirements of the Federal
 3459  Government.
 3460  
 3461  The governing bodies of local governments may provide a schedule
 3462  of fees, as authorized by s. 125.56(2) or s. 166.222 and this
 3463  section, for the enforcement of the provisions of this part.
 3464  Such fees shall be used solely for carrying out the local
 3465  government’s responsibilities in enforcing the Florida Building
 3466  Code. The authority of state enforcing agencies to set fees for
 3467  enforcement shall be derived from authority existing on July 1,
 3468  1998. However, nothing contained in this subsection shall
 3469  operate to limit such agencies from adjusting their fee schedule
 3470  in conformance with existing authority.
 3471         Section 91. Paragraph (h) of subsection (4) of section
 3472  627.351, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 3473         627.351 Insurance risk apportionment plans.—
 3474         (4) MEDICAL MALPRACTICE RISK APPORTIONMENT; ASSOCIATION
 3475  CONTRACTS AND PURCHASES.—
 3476         (h) As used in this subsection, the term:
 3477         1. “Health care provider” means hospitals licensed under
 3478  chapter 395; physicians licensed under chapter 458; osteopathic
 3479  physicians licensed under chapter 459; podiatric physicians
 3480  licensed under chapter 461; dentists licensed under chapter 466;
 3481  chiropractic physicians licensed under chapter 460; naturopaths
 3482  licensed under chapter 462; nurses licensed under part I of
 3483  chapter 464; midwives licensed under chapter 467; physician
 3484  assistants licensed under chapter 458 or chapter 459; physical
 3485  therapists and physical therapist assistants licensed under
 3486  chapter 486; health maintenance organizations certificated under
 3487  part I of chapter 641; ambulatory surgical centers licensed
 3488  under chapter 396 395; other medical facilities as defined in
 3489  subparagraph 2.; blood banks, plasma centers, industrial
 3490  clinics, and renal dialysis facilities; or professional
 3491  associations, partnerships, corporations, joint ventures, or
 3492  other associations for professional activity by health care
 3493  providers.
 3494         2. “Other medical facility” means a facility the primary
 3495  purpose of which is to provide human medical diagnostic services
 3496  or a facility providing nonsurgical human medical treatment, to
 3497  which facility the patient is admitted and from which facility
 3498  the patient is discharged within the same working day, and which
 3499  facility is not part of a hospital. However, a facility existing
 3500  for the primary purpose of performing terminations of pregnancy
 3501  or an office maintained by a physician or dentist for the
 3502  practice of medicine may not be construed to be an “other
 3503  medical facility.”
 3504         3. “Health care facility” means any hospital licensed under
 3505  chapter 395, health maintenance organization certificated under
 3506  part I of chapter 641, ambulatory surgical center licensed under
 3507  chapter 396 395, or other medical facility as defined in
 3508  subparagraph 2.
 3509         Section 92. Paragraph (b) of subsection (1) of section
 3510  627.357, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 3511         627.357 Medical malpractice self-insurance.—
 3512         (1) DEFINITIONS.—As used in this section, the term:
 3513         (b) “Health care provider” means any:
 3514         1. Hospital licensed under chapter 395.
 3515         2. Physician licensed, or physician assistant licensed,
 3516  under chapter 458.
 3517         3. Osteopathic physician or physician assistant licensed
 3518  under chapter 459.
 3519         4. Podiatric physician licensed under chapter 461.
 3520         5. Health maintenance organization certificated under part
 3521  I of chapter 641.
 3522         6. Ambulatory surgical center licensed under chapter 396
 3523  395.
 3524         7. Chiropractic physician licensed under chapter 460.
 3525         8. Psychologist licensed under chapter 490.
 3526         9. Optometrist licensed under chapter 463.
 3527         10. Dentist licensed under chapter 466.
 3528         11. Pharmacist licensed under chapter 465.
 3529         12. Registered nurse, licensed practical nurse, or advanced
 3530  practice registered nurse licensed or registered under part I of
 3531  chapter 464.
 3532         13. Other medical facility.
 3533         14. Professional association, partnership, corporation,
 3534  joint venture, or other association established by the
 3535  individuals set forth in subparagraphs 2., 3., 4., 7., 8., 9.,
 3536  10., 11., and 12. for professional activity.
 3537         Section 93. Section 627.6056, Florida Statutes, is amended
 3538  to read:
 3539         627.6056 Coverage for ambulatory surgical center service.
 3540  An No individual health insurance policy providing coverage on
 3541  an expense-incurred basis or individual service or indemnity
 3542  type contract issued by a nonprofit corporation, of any kind or
 3543  description, may not shall be issued unless coverage provided
 3544  for any service performed in an ambulatory surgical center, as
 3545  defined in s. 396.202 s. 395.002, is provided if such service
 3546  would have been covered under the terms of the policy or
 3547  contract as an eligible inpatient service.
 3548         Section 94. Paragraph (a) of subsection (2) of section
 3549  627.6387, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 3550         627.6387 Shared savings incentive program.—
 3551         (2) As used in this section, the term:
 3552         (a) “Health care provider” means a hospital or facility
 3553  licensed under chapter 395 or chapter 396; an entity licensed
 3554  under chapter 400; a health care practitioner as defined in s.
 3555  456.001; a blood bank, plasma center, industrial clinic, or
 3556  renal dialysis facility; or a professional association,
 3557  partnership, corporation, joint venture, or other association
 3558  for professional activity by health care providers. The term
 3559  includes entities and professionals outside of this state with
 3560  an active, unencumbered license for an equivalent facility or
 3561  practitioner type issued by another state, the District of
 3562  Columbia, or a possession or territory of the United States.
 3563         Section 95. Subsection (3) of section 627.6405, Florida
 3564  Statutes, is amended to read:
 3565         627.6405 Decreasing inappropriate utilization of emergency
 3566  care.—
 3567         (3) As a disincentive for insureds to inappropriately use
 3568  emergency department services for nonemergency care, health
 3569  insurers may require higher copayments for urgent care or
 3570  primary care provided in an emergency department and higher
 3571  copayments for use of out-of-network emergency departments.
 3572  Higher copayments may not be charged for the utilization of the
 3573  emergency department for emergency care. For the purposes of
 3574  this section, the term “emergency care” has the same meaning as
 3575  the term “emergency services and care” as defined in s. 395.002
 3576  s. 395.002(9) and includes services provided to rule out an
 3577  emergency medical condition.
 3578         Section 96. Paragraph (b) of subsection (1) of section
 3579  627.64194, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 3580         627.64194 Coverage requirements for services provided by
 3581  nonparticipating providers; payment collection limitations.—
 3582         (1) As used in this section, the term:
 3583         (b) “Facility” means a licensed facility as defined in s.
 3584  395.002 s. 395.002(17) and an urgent care center as defined in
 3585  s. 395.002.
 3586         Section 97. Section 627.6616, Florida Statutes, is amended
 3587  to read:
 3588         627.6616 Coverage for ambulatory surgical center service.—A
 3589  No group health insurance policy providing coverage on an
 3590  expense-incurred basis, or group service or indemnity-type
 3591  contract issued by a nonprofit corporation, or self-insured
 3592  group health benefit plan or trust, of any kind or description,
 3593  may not shall be issued unless coverage provided for any service
 3594  performed in an ambulatory surgical center, as defined in s.
 3595  396.202 s. 395.002, is provided if such service would have been
 3596  covered under the terms of the policy or contract as an eligible
 3597  inpatient service.
 3598         Section 98. Paragraph (a) of subsection (2) of section
 3599  627.6648, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 3600         627.6648 Shared savings incentive program.—
 3601         (2) As used in this section, the term:
 3602         (a) “Health care provider” means a hospital or facility
 3603  licensed under chapter 395 or chapter 396; an entity licensed
 3604  under chapter 400; a health care practitioner as defined in s.
 3605  456.001; a blood bank, plasma center, industrial clinic, or
 3606  renal dialysis facility; or a professional association,
 3607  partnership, corporation, joint venture, or other association
 3608  for professional activity by health care providers. The term
 3609  includes entities and professionals outside this state with an
 3610  active, unencumbered license for an equivalent facility or
 3611  practitioner type issued by another state, the District of
 3612  Columbia, or a possession or territory of the United States.
 3613         Section 99. Paragraph (a) of subsection (1) of section
 3614  627.736, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 3615         627.736 Required personal injury protection benefits;
 3616  exclusions; priority; claims.—
 3617         (1) REQUIRED BENEFITS.—An insurance policy complying with
 3618  the security requirements of s. 627.733 must provide personal
 3619  injury protection to the named insured, relatives residing in
 3620  the same household unless excluded under s. 627.747, persons
 3621  operating the insured motor vehicle, passengers in the motor
 3622  vehicle, and other persons struck by the motor vehicle and
 3623  suffering bodily injury while not an occupant of a self
 3624  propelled vehicle, subject to subsection (2) and paragraph
 3625  (4)(e), to a limit of $10,000 in medical and disability benefits
 3626  and $5,000 in death benefits resulting from bodily injury,
 3627  sickness, disease, or death arising out of the ownership,
 3628  maintenance, or use of a motor vehicle as follows:
 3629         (a) Medical benefits.—Eighty percent of all reasonable
 3630  expenses for medically necessary medical, surgical, X-ray,
 3631  dental, and rehabilitative services, including prosthetic
 3632  devices and medically necessary ambulance, hospital, and nursing
 3633  services if the individual receives initial services and care
 3634  pursuant to subparagraph 1. within 14 days after the motor
 3635  vehicle accident. The medical benefits provide reimbursement
 3636  only for:
 3637         1. Initial services and care that are lawfully provided,
 3638  supervised, ordered, or prescribed by a physician licensed under
 3639  chapter 458 or chapter 459, a dentist licensed under chapter
 3640  466, a chiropractic physician licensed under chapter 460, or an
 3641  advanced practice registered nurse registered under s. 464.0123
 3642  or that are provided in a hospital or in a facility that owns,
 3643  or is wholly owned by, a hospital. Initial services and care may
 3644  also be provided by a person or entity licensed under part III
 3645  of chapter 401 which provides emergency transportation and
 3646  treatment.
 3647         2. Upon referral by a provider described in subparagraph
 3648  1., follow-up followup services and care consistent with the
 3649  underlying medical diagnosis rendered pursuant to subparagraph
 3650  1. which may be provided, supervised, ordered, or prescribed
 3651  only by a physician licensed under chapter 458 or chapter 459, a
 3652  chiropractic physician licensed under chapter 460, a dentist
 3653  licensed under chapter 466, or an advanced practice registered
 3654  nurse registered under s. 464.0123, or, to the extent permitted
 3655  by applicable law and under the supervision of such physician,
 3656  osteopathic physician, chiropractic physician, or dentist, by a
 3657  physician assistant licensed under chapter 458 or chapter 459 or
 3658  an advanced practice registered nurse licensed under chapter
 3659  464. Follow-up Followup services and care may also be provided
 3660  by the following persons or entities:
 3661         a. A hospital licensed under chapter 395 or an ambulatory
 3662  surgical center licensed under chapter 396 395.
 3663         b. An entity wholly owned by one or more physicians
 3664  licensed under chapter 458 or chapter 459, chiropractic
 3665  physicians licensed under chapter 460, advanced practice
 3666  registered nurses registered under s. 464.0123, or dentists
 3667  licensed under chapter 466 or by such practitioners and the
 3668  spouse, parent, child, or sibling of such practitioners.
 3669         c. An entity that owns or is wholly owned, directly or
 3670  indirectly, by a hospital or hospitals.
 3671         d. A physical therapist licensed under chapter 486, based
 3672  upon a referral by a provider described in this subparagraph.
 3673         e. A health care clinic licensed under part X of chapter
 3674  400 which is accredited by an accrediting organization whose
 3675  standards incorporate comparable regulations required by this
 3676  state, or
 3677         (I) Has a medical director licensed under chapter 458,
 3678  chapter 459, or chapter 460;
 3679         (II) Has been continuously licensed for more than 3 years
 3680  or is a publicly traded corporation that issues securities
 3681  traded on an exchange registered with the United States
 3682  Securities and Exchange Commission as a national securities
 3683  exchange; and
 3684         (III) Provides at least four of the following medical
 3685  specialties:
 3686         (A) General medicine.
 3687         (B) Radiography.
 3688         (C) Orthopedic medicine.
 3689         (D) Physical medicine.
 3690         (E) Physical therapy.
 3691         (F) Physical rehabilitation.
 3692         (G) Prescribing or dispensing outpatient prescription
 3693  medication.
 3694         (H) Laboratory services.
 3695         3. Reimbursement for services and care provided in
 3696  subparagraph 1. or subparagraph 2. up to $10,000 if a physician
 3697  licensed under chapter 458 or chapter 459, a dentist licensed
 3698  under chapter 466, a physician assistant licensed under chapter
 3699  458 or chapter 459, or an advanced practice registered nurse
 3700  licensed under chapter 464 has determined that the injured
 3701  person had an emergency medical condition.
 3702         4. Reimbursement for services and care provided in
 3703  subparagraph 1. or subparagraph 2. is limited to $2,500 if a
 3704  provider listed in subparagraph 1. or subparagraph 2. determines
 3705  that the injured person did not have an emergency medical
 3706  condition.
 3707         5. Medical benefits do not include massage therapy as
 3708  defined in s. 480.033 or acupuncture as defined in s. 457.102,
 3709  regardless of the person, entity, or licensee providing massage
 3710  therapy or acupuncture, and a licensed massage therapist or
 3711  licensed acupuncturist may not be reimbursed for medical
 3712  benefits under this section.
 3713         6. The Financial Services Commission shall adopt by rule
 3714  the form that must be used by an insurer and a health care
 3715  provider specified in sub-subparagraph 2.b., sub-subparagraph
 3716  2.c., or sub-subparagraph 2.e. to document that the health care
 3717  provider meets the criteria of this paragraph. Such rule must
 3718  include a requirement for a sworn statement or affidavit.
 3719  
 3720  Only insurers writing motor vehicle liability insurance in this
 3721  state may provide the required benefits of this section, and
 3722  such insurer may not require the purchase of any other motor
 3723  vehicle coverage other than the purchase of property damage
 3724  liability coverage as required by s. 627.7275 as a condition for
 3725  providing such benefits. Insurers may not require that property
 3726  damage liability insurance in an amount greater than $10,000 be
 3727  purchased in conjunction with personal injury protection. Such
 3728  insurers shall make benefits and required property damage
 3729  liability insurance coverage available through normal marketing
 3730  channels. An insurer writing motor vehicle liability insurance
 3731  in this state who fails to comply with such availability
 3732  requirement as a general business practice violates part IX of
 3733  chapter 626, and such violation constitutes an unfair method of
 3734  competition or an unfair or deceptive act or practice involving
 3735  the business of insurance. An insurer committing such violation
 3736  is subject to the penalties provided under that part, as well as
 3737  those provided elsewhere in the insurance code.
 3738         Section 100. Paragraph (a) of subsection (1) of section
 3739  627.912, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 3740         627.912 Professional liability claims and actions; reports
 3741  by insurers and health care providers; annual report by office.—
 3742         (1)(a) Each self-insurer authorized under s. 627.357 and
 3743  each commercial self-insurance fund authorized under s. 624.462,
 3744  authorized insurer, surplus lines insurer, risk retention group,
 3745  and joint underwriting association providing professional
 3746  liability insurance to a practitioner of medicine licensed under
 3747  chapter 458, to a practitioner of osteopathic medicine licensed
 3748  under chapter 459, to a podiatric physician licensed under
 3749  chapter 461, to a dentist licensed under chapter 466, to a
 3750  hospital licensed under chapter 395, to a crisis stabilization
 3751  unit licensed under part IV of chapter 394, to a health
 3752  maintenance organization certificated under part I of chapter
 3753  641, to clinics included in chapter 390, or to an ambulatory
 3754  surgical center as defined in s. 396.202 s. 395.002, and each
 3755  insurer providing professional liability insurance to a member
 3756  of The Florida Bar shall report to the office as set forth in
 3757  paragraph (c) any written claim or action for damages for
 3758  personal injuries claimed to have been caused by error,
 3759  omission, or negligence in the performance of such insured’s
 3760  professional services or based on a claimed performance of
 3761  professional services without consent.
 3762         Section 101. Paragraph (a) of subsection (2) of section
 3763  641.31076, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 3764         641.31076 Shared savings incentive program.—
 3765         (2) As used in this section, the term:
 3766         (a) “Health care provider” means a hospital or facility
 3767  licensed under chapter 395 or chapter 396; an entity licensed
 3768  under chapter 400; a health care practitioner as defined in s.
 3769  456.001; a blood bank, plasma center, industrial clinic, or
 3770  renal dialysis facility; or a professional association,
 3771  partnership, corporation, joint venture, or other association
 3772  for professional activity by health care providers. The term
 3773  includes entities and professionals outside this state with an
 3774  active, unencumbered license for an equivalent facility or
 3775  practitioner type issued by another state, the District of
 3776  Columbia, or a possession or territory of the United States.
 3777         Section 102. Subsection (2) of section 765.101, Florida
 3778  Statutes, is amended to read:
 3779         765.101 Definitions.—As used in this chapter, the term:
 3780         (2) “Attending physician” means the physician who has
 3781  primary responsibility for the treatment and care of the patient
 3782  while the patient receives such treatment or care in a hospital
 3783  as defined in s. 395.002 s. 395.002(12).
 3784         Section 103. Paragraph (a) of subsection (1) of section
 3785  766.101, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 3786         766.101 Medical review committee, immunity from liability.—
 3787         (1) As used in this section:
 3788         (a) The term “medical review committee” or “committee”
 3789  means:
 3790         1.a. A committee of a hospital licensed under chapter 395
 3791  or an ambulatory surgical center licensed under chapter 396 395
 3792  or a health maintenance organization certificated under part I
 3793  of chapter 641;
 3794         b. A committee of a physician-hospital organization, a
 3795  provider-sponsored organization, or an integrated delivery
 3796  system;
 3797         c. A committee of a state or local professional society of
 3798  health care providers;
 3799         d. A committee of a medical staff of a licensed hospital or
 3800  nursing home, provided the medical staff operates pursuant to
 3801  written bylaws that have been approved by the governing board of
 3802  the hospital or nursing home;
 3803         e. A committee of the Department of Corrections or the
 3804  Correctional Medical Authority as created under s. 945.602, or
 3805  employees, agents, or consultants of either the department or
 3806  the authority or both;
 3807         f. A committee of a professional service corporation formed
 3808  under chapter 621 or a corporation organized under part I of
 3809  chapter 607 or chapter 617, which is formed and operated for the
 3810  practice of medicine as defined in s. 458.305(3), and which has
 3811  at least 25 health care providers who routinely provide health
 3812  care services directly to patients;
 3813         g. A committee of the Department of Children and Families
 3814  which includes employees, agents, or consultants to the
 3815  department as deemed necessary to provide peer review,
 3816  utilization review, and mortality review of treatment services
 3817  provided pursuant to chapters 394, 397, and 916;
 3818         h. A committee of a mental health treatment facility
 3819  licensed under chapter 394 or a community mental health center
 3820  as defined in s. 394.907, provided the quality assurance program
 3821  operates pursuant to the guidelines that have been approved by
 3822  the governing board of the agency;
 3823         i. A committee of a substance abuse treatment and education
 3824  prevention program licensed under chapter 397 provided the
 3825  quality assurance program operates pursuant to the guidelines
 3826  that have been approved by the governing board of the agency;
 3827         j. A peer review or utilization review committee organized
 3828  under chapter 440;
 3829         k. A committee of the Department of Health, a county health
 3830  department, healthy start coalition, or certified rural health
 3831  network, when reviewing quality of care, or employees of these
 3832  entities when reviewing mortality records; or
 3833         l. A continuous quality improvement committee of a pharmacy
 3834  licensed pursuant to chapter 465,
 3835  
 3836  which committee is formed to evaluate and improve the quality of
 3837  health care rendered by providers of health service, to
 3838  determine that health services rendered were professionally
 3839  indicated or were performed in compliance with the applicable
 3840  standard of care, or that the cost of health care rendered was
 3841  considered reasonable by the providers of professional health
 3842  services in the area; or
 3843         2. A committee of an insurer, self-insurer, or joint
 3844  underwriting association of medical malpractice insurance, or
 3845  other persons conducting review under s. 766.106.
 3846         Section 104. Paragraph (a) of subsection (1) and subsection
 3847  (4) of section 766.1016, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
 3848         766.1016 Patient safety data privilege.—
 3849         (1) As used in this section, the term:
 3850         (a) “Patient safety data” means reports made to patient
 3851  safety organizations, including all health care data,
 3852  interviews, memoranda, analyses, root cause analyses, products
 3853  of quality assurance or quality improvement processes,
 3854  corrective action plans, or information collected or created by
 3855  a health care facility licensed under chapter 395 or chapter
 3856  396, or a health care practitioner as defined in s. 456.001(4),
 3857  as a result of an occurrence related to the provision of health
 3858  care services which exacerbates an existing medical condition or
 3859  could result in injury, illness, or death.
 3860         (4) The exchange of patient safety data among health care
 3861  facilities licensed under chapter 395 or chapter 396, or health
 3862  care practitioners as defined in s. 456.001(4), or patient
 3863  safety organizations which does not identify any patient shall
 3864  not constitute a waiver of any privilege established in this
 3865  section.
 3866         Section 105. Paragraph (d) of subsection (2) of section
 3867  766.106, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 3868         766.106 Notice before filing action for medical negligence;
 3869  presuit screening period; offers for admission of liability and
 3870  for arbitration; informal discovery; review.—
 3871         (2) PRESUIT NOTICE.—
 3872         (d) Following the initiation of a suit alleging medical
 3873  negligence with a court of competent jurisdiction, and service
 3874  of the complaint upon a prospective defendant, the claimant
 3875  shall provide a copy of the complaint to the Department of
 3876  Health and, if the complaint involves a facility licensed under
 3877  chapter 395, the Agency for Health Care Administration. The
 3878  requirement of providing the complaint to the Department of
 3879  Health or the Agency for Health Care Administration does not
 3880  impair the claimant’s legal rights or ability to seek relief for
 3881  his or her claim. The Department of Health or the Agency for
 3882  Health Care Administration shall review each incident that is
 3883  the subject of the complaint and determine whether it involved
 3884  conduct by a licensee which is potentially subject to
 3885  disciplinary action, in which case, for a licensed health care
 3886  practitioner, s. 456.073 applies and, for a licensed facility,
 3887  part I of chapter 395 applies, and for a licensed ambulatory
 3888  surgical center, chapter 396 applies.
 3889         Section 106. Subsection (3) of section 766.110, Florida
 3890  Statutes, is amended to read:
 3891         766.110 Liability of health care facilities.—
 3892         (3) In order to ensure comprehensive risk management for
 3893  diagnosis of disease, a health care facility, including a
 3894  hospital as defined in s. 395.002 or an ambulatory surgical
 3895  center, as defined in s. 396.202 chapter 395, may use scientific
 3896  diagnostic disease methodologies that use information regarding
 3897  specific diseases in health care facilities and that are adopted
 3898  by the facility’s medical review committee.
 3899         Section 107. Paragraph (d) of subsection (3) of section
 3900  766.1115, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 3901         766.1115 Health care providers; creation of agency
 3902  relationship with governmental contractors.—
 3903         (3) DEFINITIONS.—As used in this section, the term:
 3904         (d) “Health care provider” or “provider” means:
 3905         1. A birth center licensed under chapter 383.
 3906         2. An ambulatory surgical center licensed under chapter 396
 3907  395.
 3908         3. A hospital licensed under chapter 395.
 3909         4. A physician or physician assistant licensed under
 3910  chapter 458.
 3911         5. An osteopathic physician or osteopathic physician
 3912  assistant licensed under chapter 459.
 3913         6. A chiropractic physician licensed under chapter 460.
 3914         7. A podiatric physician licensed under chapter 461.
 3915         8. A registered nurse, nurse midwife, licensed practical
 3916  nurse, or advanced practice registered nurse licensed or
 3917  registered under part I of chapter 464 or any facility which
 3918  employs nurses licensed or registered under part I of chapter
 3919  464 to supply all or part of the care delivered under this
 3920  section.
 3921         9. A midwife licensed under chapter 467.
 3922         10. A health maintenance organization certificated under
 3923  part I of chapter 641.
 3924         11. A health care professional association and its
 3925  employees or a corporate medical group and its employees.
 3926         12. Any other medical facility the primary purpose of which
 3927  is to deliver human medical diagnostic services or which
 3928  delivers nonsurgical human medical treatment, and which includes
 3929  an office maintained by a provider.
 3930         13. A dentist or dental hygienist licensed under chapter
 3931  466.
 3932         14. A free clinic that delivers only medical diagnostic
 3933  services or nonsurgical medical treatment free of charge to all
 3934  low-income recipients.
 3935         15. Any other health care professional, practitioner,
 3936  provider, or facility under contract with a governmental
 3937  contractor, including a student enrolled in an accredited
 3938  program that prepares the student for licensure as any one of
 3939  the professionals listed in subparagraphs 4.-9.
 3940  
 3941  The term includes any nonprofit corporation qualified as exempt
 3942  from federal income taxation under s. 501(a) of the Internal
 3943  Revenue Code, and described in s. 501(c) of the Internal Revenue
 3944  Code, which delivers health care services provided by licensed
 3945  professionals listed in this paragraph, any federally funded
 3946  community health center, and any volunteer corporation or
 3947  volunteer health care provider that delivers health care
 3948  services.
 3949         Section 108. Subsection (4) and paragraph (b) of subsection
 3950  (6) of section 766.118, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
 3951         766.118 Determination of noneconomic damages.—
 3952         (4) LIMITATION ON NONECONOMIC DAMAGES FOR NEGLIGENCE OF
 3953  PRACTITIONERS PROVIDING EMERGENCY SERVICES AND CARE.
 3954  Notwithstanding subsections (2) and (3), with respect to a cause
 3955  of action for personal injury or wrongful death arising from
 3956  medical negligence of practitioners providing emergency services
 3957  and care, as defined in s. 395.002 s. 395.002(9), or providing
 3958  services as provided in s. 401.265, or providing services
 3959  pursuant to obligations imposed by 42 U.S.C. s. 1395dd to
 3960  persons with whom the practitioner does not have a then-existing
 3961  health care patient-practitioner relationship for that medical
 3962  condition:
 3963         (a) Regardless of the number of such practitioner
 3964  defendants, noneconomic damages may shall not exceed $150,000
 3965  per claimant.
 3966         (b) Notwithstanding paragraph (a), the total noneconomic
 3967  damages recoverable by all claimants from all such practitioners
 3968  may shall not exceed $300,000.
 3969  
 3970  The limitation provided by this subsection applies only to
 3971  noneconomic damages awarded as a result of any act or omission
 3972  of providing medical care or treatment, including diagnosis that
 3973  occurs prior to the time the patient is stabilized and is
 3974  capable of receiving medical treatment as a nonemergency
 3975  patient, unless surgery is required as a result of the emergency
 3976  within a reasonable time after the patient is stabilized, in
 3977  which case the limitation provided by this subsection applies to
 3978  any act or omission of providing medical care or treatment which
 3979  occurs prior to the stabilization of the patient following the
 3980  surgery.
 3981         (6) LIMITATION ON NONECONOMIC DAMAGES FOR NEGLIGENCE OF A
 3982  PRACTITIONER PROVIDING SERVICES AND CARE TO A MEDICAID
 3983  RECIPIENT.—Notwithstanding subsections (2), (3), and (5), with
 3984  respect to a cause of action for personal injury or wrongful
 3985  death arising from medical negligence of a practitioner
 3986  committed in the course of providing medical services and
 3987  medical care to a Medicaid recipient, regardless of the number
 3988  of such practitioner defendants providing the services and care,
 3989  noneconomic damages may not exceed $300,000 per claimant, unless
 3990  the claimant pleads and proves, by clear and convincing
 3991  evidence, that the practitioner acted in a wrongful manner. A
 3992  practitioner providing medical services and medical care to a
 3993  Medicaid recipient is not liable for more than $200,000 in
 3994  noneconomic damages, regardless of the number of claimants,
 3995  unless the claimant pleads and proves, by clear and convincing
 3996  evidence, that the practitioner acted in a wrongful manner. The
 3997  fact that a claimant proves that a practitioner acted in a
 3998  wrongful manner does not preclude the application of the
 3999  limitation on noneconomic damages prescribed elsewhere in this
 4000  section. For purposes of this subsection:
 4001         (b) The term “practitioner,” in addition to the meaning
 4002  prescribed in subsection (1), includes a any hospital or
 4003  ambulatory surgical center as defined and licensed under chapter
 4004  395 or an ambulatory surgical center as defined and licensed
 4005  under chapter 396.
 4006         Section 109. Subsection (4) of section 766.202, Florida
 4007  Statutes, is amended to read:
 4008         766.202 Definitions; ss. 766.201-766.212.—As used in ss.
 4009  766.201-766.212, the term:
 4010         (4) “Health care provider” means a any hospital or
 4011  ambulatory surgical center as defined and licensed under chapter
 4012  395; an ambulatory surgical center as defined and licensed under
 4013  chapter 396; a birth center licensed under chapter 383; any
 4014  person licensed under chapter 458, chapter 459, chapter 460,
 4015  chapter 461, chapter 462, chapter 463, part I of chapter 464,
 4016  chapter 466, chapter 467, part XIV of chapter 468, or chapter
 4017  486; a health maintenance organization certificated under part I
 4018  of chapter 641; a blood bank; a plasma center; an industrial
 4019  clinic; a renal dialysis facility; or a professional association
 4020  partnership, corporation, joint venture, or other association
 4021  for professional activity by health care providers.
 4022         Section 110. Section 766.316, Florida Statutes, is amended
 4023  to read:
 4024         766.316 Notice to obstetrical patients of participation in
 4025  the plan.—Each hospital with a participating physician on its
 4026  staff and each participating physician, other than residents,
 4027  assistant residents, and interns deemed to be participating
 4028  physicians under s. 766.314(4)(c), under the Florida Birth
 4029  Related Neurological Injury Compensation Plan shall provide
 4030  notice to the obstetrical patients as to the limited no-fault
 4031  alternative for birth-related neurological injuries. Such notice
 4032  shall be provided on forms furnished by the association and
 4033  shall include a clear and concise explanation of a patient’s
 4034  rights and limitations under the plan. The hospital or the
 4035  participating physician may elect to have the patient sign a
 4036  form acknowledging receipt of the notice form. Signature of the
 4037  patient acknowledging receipt of the notice form raises a
 4038  rebuttable presumption that the notice requirements of this
 4039  section have been met. Notice need not be given to a patient
 4040  when the patient has an emergency medical condition as defined
 4041  in s. 395.002 s. 395.002(8)(b) or when notice is not
 4042  practicable.
 4043         Section 111. Subsections (1), (2), (5), (6), and (8) of
 4044  section 790.338, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
 4045         790.338 Medical privacy concerning firearms; prohibitions;
 4046  penalties; exceptions.—
 4047         (1) A health care practitioner licensed under chapter 456
 4048  or a health care facility licensed under chapter 395 or chapter
 4049  396 may not intentionally enter any disclosed information
 4050  concerning firearm ownership into the patient’s medical record
 4051  if the practitioner knows that such information is not relevant
 4052  to the patient’s medical care or safety, or the safety of
 4053  others.
 4054         (2) A health care practitioner licensed under chapter 456
 4055  or a health care facility licensed under chapter 395 or chapter
 4056  396 shall respect a patient’s right to privacy and should
 4057  refrain from making a written inquiry or asking questions
 4058  concerning the ownership of a firearm or ammunition by the
 4059  patient or by a family member of the patient, or the presence of
 4060  a firearm in a private home or other domicile of the patient or
 4061  a family member of the patient. Notwithstanding this provision,
 4062  a health care practitioner or health care facility that in good
 4063  faith believes that this information is relevant to the
 4064  patient’s medical care or safety, or the safety of others, may
 4065  make such a verbal or written inquiry.
 4066         (5) A health care practitioner licensed under chapter 456
 4067  or a health care facility licensed under chapter 395 or chapter
 4068  396 may not discriminate against a patient based solely upon the
 4069  patient’s exercise of the constitutional right to own and
 4070  possess firearms or ammunition.
 4071         (6) A health care practitioner licensed under chapter 456
 4072  or a health care facility licensed under chapter 395 or chapter
 4073  396 shall respect a patient’s legal right to own or possess a
 4074  firearm and should refrain from unnecessarily harassing a
 4075  patient about firearm ownership during an examination.
 4076         (8) Violations of the provisions of subsections (1)-(4)
 4077  constitute grounds for disciplinary action under ss. 456.072(2),
 4078  and 395.1055, and 396.218, as applicable.
 4079         Section 112. Paragraph (b) of subsection (2) of section
 4080  812.014, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 4081         812.014 Theft.—
 4082         (2)
 4083         (b)1. If the property stolen is valued at $20,000 or more,
 4084  but less than $100,000;
 4085         2. If the property stolen is cargo valued at less than
 4086  $50,000 that has entered the stream of interstate or intrastate
 4087  commerce from the shipper’s loading platform to the consignee’s
 4088  receiving dock;
 4089         3. If the property stolen is emergency medical equipment,
 4090  valued at $300 or more, that is taken from a facility licensed
 4091  under chapter 395 or from an aircraft or vehicle permitted under
 4092  chapter 401; or
 4093         4. If the property stolen is law enforcement equipment,
 4094  valued at $300 or more, that is taken from an authorized
 4095  emergency vehicle, as defined in s. 316.003,
 4096  
 4097  the offender commits grand theft in the second degree,
 4098  punishable as a felony of the second degree, as provided in s.
 4099  775.082, s. 775.083, or s. 775.084. Emergency medical equipment
 4100  means mechanical or electronic apparatus used to provide
 4101  emergency services and care as defined in s. 395.002 s.
 4102  395.002(9) or to treat medical emergencies. Law enforcement
 4103  equipment means any property, device, or apparatus used by any
 4104  law enforcement officer as defined in s. 943.10 in the officer’s
 4105  official business. However, if the property is stolen during a
 4106  riot or an aggravated riot prohibited under s. 870.01 and the
 4107  perpetration of the theft is facilitated by conditions arising
 4108  from the riot; or within a county that is subject to a state of
 4109  emergency declared by the Governor under chapter 252, the theft
 4110  is committed after the declaration of emergency is made, and the
 4111  perpetration of the theft is facilitated by conditions arising
 4112  from the emergency, the theft is a felony of the first degree,
 4113  punishable as provided in s. 775.082, s. 775.083, or s. 775.084.
 4114  As used in this paragraph, the term “conditions arising from the
 4115  riot” means civil unrest, power outages, curfews, or a reduction
 4116  in the presence of or response time for first responders or
 4117  homeland security personnel and the term “conditions arising
 4118  from the emergency” means civil unrest, power outages, curfews,
 4119  voluntary or mandatory evacuations, or a reduction in the
 4120  presence of or response time for first responders or homeland
 4121  security personnel. A person arrested for committing a theft
 4122  during a riot or an aggravated riot or within a county that is
 4123  subject to a state of emergency may not be released until the
 4124  person appears before a committing magistrate at a first
 4125  appearance hearing. For purposes of sentencing under chapter
 4126  921, a felony offense that is reclassified under this paragraph
 4127  is ranked one level above the ranking under s. 921.0022 or s.
 4128  921.0023 of the offense committed.
 4129         Section 113. Paragraph (b) of subsection (1) of section
 4130  893.05, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 4131         893.05 Practitioners and persons administering controlled
 4132  substances in their absence.—
 4133         (1)
 4134         (b) Pursuant to s. 458.347(4)(g), s. 459.022(4)(f), or s.
 4135  464.012(3), as applicable, a practitioner who supervises a
 4136  licensed physician assistant or advanced practice registered
 4137  nurse may authorize the licensed physician assistant or advanced
 4138  practice registered nurse to order controlled substances for
 4139  administration to a patient in a facility licensed under chapter
 4140  395, chapter 396, or part II of chapter 400.
 4141         Section 114. Paragraph (h) of subsection (1) of section
 4142  893.13, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 4143         893.13 Prohibited acts; penalties.—
 4144         (1)
 4145         (h) Except as authorized by this chapter, a person may not
 4146  sell, manufacture, or deliver, or possess with intent to sell,
 4147  manufacture, or deliver, a controlled substance in, on, or
 4148  within 1,000 feet of the real property comprising a mental
 4149  health facility, as that term is used in chapter 394; a health
 4150  care facility licensed under chapter 395 or chapter 396 which
 4151  provides substance abuse treatment; a licensed service provider
 4152  as defined in s. 397.311; a facility providing services that
 4153  include clinical treatment, intervention, or prevention as
 4154  described in s. 397.311(27); a recovery residence as defined in
 4155  s. 397.311; an assisted living facility as defined in chapter
 4156  429; or a pain management clinic as defined in s.
 4157  458.3265(1)(a)1.c. or s. 459.0137(1)(a)1.c. A person who
 4158  violates this paragraph with respect to:
 4159         1. A controlled substance named or described in s.
 4160  893.03(1)(a), (1)(b), (1)(d), (2)(a), (2)(b), or (2)(c)5.
 4161  commits a felony of the first degree, punishable as provided in
 4162  s. 775.082, s. 775.083, or s. 775.084.
 4163         2. A controlled substance named or described in s.
 4164  893.03(1)(c), (2)(c)1., (2)(c)2., (2)(c)3., (2)(c)6., (2)(c)7.,
 4165  (2)(c)8., (2)(c)9., (2)(c)10., (3), or (4) commits a felony of
 4166  the second degree, punishable as provided in s. 775.082, s.
 4167  775.083, or s. 775.084.
 4168         3. Any other controlled substance, except as lawfully sold,
 4169  manufactured, or delivered, must be sentenced to pay a $500 fine
 4170  and to serve 100 hours of public service in addition to any
 4171  other penalty prescribed by law.
 4172         Section 115. Paragraph (b) of subsection (1) of section
 4173  945.6041, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 4174         945.6041 Inmate medical services.—
 4175         (1) As used in this section, the term:
 4176         (b) “Health care provider” means:
 4177         1. A hospital licensed under chapter 395.
 4178         2. A physician or physician assistant licensed under
 4179  chapter 458.
 4180         3. An osteopathic physician or physician assistant licensed
 4181  under chapter 459.
 4182         4. A podiatric physician licensed under chapter 461.
 4183         5. A health maintenance organization certificated under
 4184  part I of chapter 641.
 4185         6. An ambulatory surgical center licensed under chapter 396
 4186  395.
 4187         7. A professional association, partnership, corporation,
 4188  joint venture, or other association established by the
 4189  individuals set forth in subparagraphs 2., 3., and 4. for
 4190  professional activity.
 4191         8. An other medical facility.
 4192         a. As used in this subparagraph, the term “other medical
 4193  facility” means:
 4194         (I) A facility the primary purpose of which is to provide
 4195  human medical diagnostic services, or a facility providing
 4196  nonsurgical human medical treatment which discharges patients on
 4197  the same working day that the patients are admitted; and
 4198         (II) A facility that is not part of a hospital.
 4199         b. The term does not include a facility existing for the
 4200  primary purpose of performing terminations of pregnancy, or an
 4201  office maintained by a physician or dentist for the practice of
 4202  medicine.
 4203         Section 116. Paragraph (a) of subsection (1) of section
 4204  985.6441, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 4205         985.6441 Health care services.—
 4206         (1) As used in this section, the term:
 4207         (a) “Health care provider” means:
 4208         1. A hospital licensed under chapter 395.
 4209         2. A physician or physician assistant licensed under
 4210  chapter 458.
 4211         3. An osteopathic physician or physician assistant licensed
 4212  under chapter 459.
 4213         4. A podiatric physician licensed under chapter 461.
 4214         5. A health maintenance organization certificated under
 4215  part I of chapter 641.
 4216         6. An ambulatory surgical center licensed under chapter 396
 4217  395.
 4218         7. A professional association, partnership, corporation,
 4219  joint venture, or other association established by the
 4220  individuals set forth in subparagraphs 2.-4. for professional
 4221  activity.
 4222         8. An other medical facility.
 4223         a. As used in this subparagraph, the term “other medical
 4224  facility” means:
 4225         (I) A facility the primary purpose of which is to provide
 4226  human medical diagnostic services, or a facility providing
 4227  nonsurgical human medical treatment which discharges patients on
 4228  the same working day that the patients are admitted; and
 4229         (II) A facility that is not part of a hospital.
 4230         b. The term does not include a facility existing for the
 4231  primary purpose of performing terminations of pregnancy, or an
 4232  office maintained by a physician or dentist for the practice of
 4233  medicine.
 4234         Section 117. Paragraph (b) of subsection (28) of section
 4235  1001.42, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
 4236         1001.42 Powers and duties of district school board.—The
 4237  district school board, acting as a board, shall exercise all
 4238  powers and perform all duties listed below:
 4239         (28) UNACCOMPANIED HOMELESS YOUTH.—Provide to each student
 4240  who is an unaccompanied homeless youth certified under s.
 4241  743.067 a card that includes information on the rights and
 4242  benefits for such youth, as well as the contact information for
 4243  the school district’s liaison for homeless children and youths.
 4244  The card must be similar in size to the student identification
 4245  card issued to students in the district and include all of the
 4246  following information:
 4247         (b) On the back of the card, the following statement:
 4248  
 4249         Section 743.067, Florida Statutes, provides that this
 4250         certified youth may consent to medical care; dental
 4251         care; behavioral health care services, including
 4252         psychological counseling and treatment, psychiatric
 4253         treatment, and substance abuse prevention and
 4254         treatment services; and surgical diagnosis and
 4255         treatment, including preventative care and care by a
 4256         facility licensed under chapter 394, chapter 395,
 4257         chapter 396, or chapter 397 and any forensic medical
 4258         examination for the purpose of investigating any
 4259         felony offense under chapter 784, chapter 787, chapter
 4260         794, chapter 800, or chapter 827, for himself or
 4261         herself or his or her child, if the certified youth is
 4262         unmarried, is the parent of the child, and has actual
 4263         custody of the child.
 4264         Section 118. Subsection (1) of section 1012.965, Florida
 4265  Statutes, is amended to read:
 4266         1012.965 Payment of costs of civil action against
 4267  employees.—
 4268         (1) An employee or agent under the right of control of a
 4269  university board of trustees who, pursuant to the university
 4270  board’s policies or rules, renders medical care or treatment at
 4271  any hospital or health care facility with which the university
 4272  board maintains an affiliation agreement whereby the hospital or
 4273  health care facility provides to the university board a clinical
 4274  setting for health care education, research, and services, is
 4275  shall not be deemed to be an agent of any person other than the
 4276  university board in any civil action resulting from any act or
 4277  omission of the employee or agent while rendering said medical
 4278  care or treatment. For this subsection to apply, the patient
 4279  shall be provided separate written conspicuous notice by the
 4280  university board of trustees or by the hospital or health care
 4281  facility, and shall acknowledge receipt of this notice, in
 4282  writing, unless impractical by reason of an emergency, either
 4283  personally or through another person authorized to give consent
 4284  for him or her, that he or she will receive care provided by
 4285  university board’s employees and liability, if any, that may
 4286  arise from that care is limited as provided by law. Compliance
 4287  by a hospital or health care facility with the requirements of
 4288  chapter 395, chapter 396, or s. 766.110(1) may shall not be used
 4289  as evidence in any civil action to establish an employment or
 4290  agency relationship between the hospital or health care facility
 4291  and an employee or agent of the university board of trustees
 4292  providing services within the hospital or health care facility.
 4293         Section 119. This act shall take effect July 1, 2026.
 4294  
 4295