TALLAHASSEE, Fla., May 28, 2015 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- As Florida lawmakers prepare to enter the extended legislative session next month, the Floridians for Better Community Care and other advocates from across Florida's ambulatory surgical care community are urging lawmakers to advance legislation (HB 23A) that would expand recovery times for patients seeking same-day surgical procedures in the state's 400 Ambulatory Surgery Centers (ASC).  Proponents of the measure stress that the new policy would prevent costly admissions to healthcare settings following surgery, therefore lowering healthcare costs throughout the state.

An antiquated Florida law currently requires that surgical patients receiving care in ASCs must be discharged by close of business, even if they would benefit from additional recuperative care.  As a result, this law has resulted in frequent and costly admissions to hospitals.  In response, this legislation would allow patients to recuperate following surgery in an ASC for up to 23 hours, which would significantly reduce the costs and risks associated with patient transfer.

Underscoring the merits of this policy is the fact that 35 U.S. states have already adopted this reform, recognizing that improved recovery times lead to better patient care and lower healthcare costs for patients, employers and taxpayers.   Just last week, Maryland became the latest state to embrace this common-sense reform when it passed a law allowing 23-hour stays in the ambulatory surgical care setting.  Furthermore, the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) has also issued policy in support of 23-hour recovery care.

"Florida's legislature should join the majority of states allowing 23-hour recovery care by enacting this policy in the extended legislative session," said Kathleen Myers, an administrator with the Orlando Center for Outpatient Surgery who is advocating for passage of HB 23A.  "This policy has received broad, bipartisan support. It's time to make this policy law."

Florida's current law creates unnecessary costs to patients, employers, and the healthcare system because many patients – who might only need another few hours to recuperate from anesthesia or post-surgical pain – instead have to be transferred to other settings for continued post-surgical care.

"Patients should have the option to fully recover following same-day surgery in the setting they prefer, which offers convenience, fewer infection risks, and lower costs," added Myers.  "That's why we are urging our state lawmakers to improve patient choice and save valuable taxpayer dollars by adopting this common-sense reform."

On average, Medicare reimburses ASCs at a rate that is nearly half (55 percent) of the amount Medicare pays to hospital outpatient departments (HOPDs). ASCs generated $7.5 billion in federal Medicare savings from 2008-2011, which translates into lower costs for patients, their families and their employers.

Ambulatory surgery centers are freestanding community-based facilities, regulated by federal and state entities and are evaluated by independent parties for state licensure, Medicare certification, and accreditation. In 2013, more than 1.5 million surgical procedures were safely performed in ASCs statewide.

 

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SOURCE Floridians for Better Community Care

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