AB 1592, as amended, Beth Gaines. California Diabetes Program.
Existing law establishes the State Department of Public Health and sets forth its powers and duties, including, but not limited to, the administration of the California Diabetes Program.
This bill would require thebegin delete departmentend deletebegin insert State Department of Public Healthend insert to submit a report to the Legislature by December 31 of each odd-numbered year that is to include, among other things, an assessment of the benefits of implemented programs and activities aimed at preventing and controlling diabetes, and detailed action plans for combating diabetes with a range of actionable items for consideration by the Legislature that will aid in attaining
the goals set forth by thebegin delete State Department of Public Healthend deletebegin insert departmentend insert in the California Wellness Plan for 2014 and the Diabetes Burdenbegin delete Report, andend deletebegin insert Report. The billend insert would require the department to make the biannual reports available on its Internet Web site. The bill would authorize the department to use statistical data from externalbegin delete sources and requiresend deletebegin insert sources, and would requireend insert the State Department of Health Care Services to provide the
department with any relevant statistical data for purposes of creating the biannual reports.begin delete The bill would require the department to ensure that all grant funds from the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and other federal sources for the California Diabetes Program are expended for the purpose of diabetes prevention, treatment, and awareness pursuant to the grant requirements, and the creation of the biannual reports.end delete
The bill would also make related findings and declarations.
Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: yes. State-mandated local program: no.
The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
Article 1 (commencing with Section 104250) is
2added to Chapter 4 of Part 1 of Division 103 of the Health and
3Safety Code, to read:
4
The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:
8(a) It is reported by the California Diabetes Program that one
9in seven adult Californians has diabetes, and the numbers are rising
10rapidly. The actual number of those whose lives are affected by
11diabetes is unknown and stands to be much higher when factoring
12in the incidence of type 1 diabetes and undiagnosed gestational
13diabetes.
14(b) California has the greatest number of annual new cases of
15diabetes in the United States.
16(c) The incidence of diabetes amongst all Californians has
17increased 32 percent over the
past decade.
18(d) Over 11.4 million people in California have prediabetes, a
19condition that is a precursor to full onset type 2 diabetes. This
20suggests that the total population of those diagnosed will continue
21to rise in the absence of interventions.
22(e) The prevalence of diagnosed gestational diabetes in
23California has increased 60 percent in just seven years, from 3.3
P3 1percent of hospital deliveries in 1998 to 5.3 percent of hospital
2deliveries in 2005, with the federal Centers for Disease Control
3and Prevention stating that the diagnosis rate could run as high as
418.3 percent.
5(f) The fiscal impact to the State of California, including total
6health care and related costs for the treatment of diabetes, was over
7$35.9
billion in 2010.
8(g) A recent study of a large state with a sizable diabetes
9population found that the rate of diagnosed diabetes in the state’s
10Medicaid population is nearly double that of its general population.
11(h) There is no cure for any type of diabetes.
12(i) Diabetes when left untreated can lead to serious and costly
13complications and a reduced lifespan.
14(j) Many of these serious complications can be delayed or
15avoided with timely diagnosis, effective patient self-care, and
16improved social awareness.
17(k) The State Department of Public Health has created the
18California Wellness Plan for 2014 that
provides a set of desired
19outcomes regarding diabetes in the state.
20(l) The State Department of Public Health will complete a
21Diabetes Burden Report by December 31, 2014, and will include
22in the report, information on the prevalence of diabetes in
23California compared to the rest of the United States, risk factors
24for developing diabetes and diabetes complications, and the
25prevalence of obesity, inactivity, and cardiovascular disease risk
26factors among individuals with diabetes as compared to individuals
27without diabetes in California. The report will address the
28prevalence of prediabetes, complications of diabetes, and diabetes
29mortality in California as compared to the rest of the United States.
30The report will also outline the department’s programs and
31activities that address the burden of diabetes in California.
32(m) It is the intent of the Legislature to require the State
33Department of Public Health, as part of the California Diabetes
34Program, to create a diabetes action plan that provides policy
35guidance to prevent, treat, and increase awareness of diabetes and
36to aid the state in complying with the goals set forth by the State
37Department of Public Health in the California Wellness Plan for
382014 and the Diabetes Burden Report.
(a) The State Department of Public Health, as part of
40the California Diabetes Program, shall submit a report to the
P4 1Legislature by December 31 of each odd-numbered year that shall
2include all of the following:
3(1) An assessment of the benefits of implemented programs and
4activities aimed at preventing and controlling diabetes. The
5assessment shall document both of the following:
6(A) The amount and source for any funding directed to the State
7Department of Public Health and the State Department of Health
8Care Services from the Legislature for programs and activities
9aimed at reaching those with
diabetes.
10(B) The amount and source for any funding directed to the State
11Department of Public Health and the State Department of Health
12Care Services that may be used for the purposes of the action plans
13required pursuant to paragraph (3).
14(2) A description of the level of coordination between the State
15Department of Public Health and the State Department of Health
16Care Services in preventing, treating, managing, and increasing
17awareness of all forms of diabetes and its complications within
18the Medi-Cal population.
19(3) Detailed action plans for combating diabetes with a range
20of actionable items for consideration by the Legislature that will
21aid in attaining the goals set forth by the State Department of
Public
22Health in the California Wellness Plan for 2014 and the Diabetes
23Burden Report.
24(4) A detailed budget blueprint identifying needs, costs, and
25resources required to implement the action plans required pursuant
26to paragraph (3) for consideration by the Legislature. The budget
27blueprint to the Legislature shall include a cost-benefit analysis to
28assist in prioritizing plans by level of efficiency.
29(b) The State Department of Public Health shall make the
30biannual reports available on its Internet Web site.
31(c) A report submitted pursuant to subdivision (a) shall be
32submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government
33Code.
(a) In order to reduce potential costs incurred by the
35State Department of Public Health in the process of creating the
36biannual reports as required pursuant to Section 104251, the State
37Department of Public Health may use statistical data from external
38sources.
39(b) (1) The State Department of Health Care Services shall
40provide to the State Department of Public Health any relevant
P5 1statistical data for the purposes of the creation of the biannual
2report.
3(2) To ensure patient privacy, all data transferred to the State
4Department of Public Health from the State Department of Health
5Care
Services shall conform to requirements described in the
6federal Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of
71996 (Public Law 104-191).
The State Department of Public Health shall ensure
9that all grant funds from the federal Centers for Disease Control
10and Prevention and other federal sources for the California Diabetes
11Program are expended for the purpose of diabetes prevention,
12treatment, awareness pursuant to the grant requirements, and the
13creation of the biannual reports as required pursuant to Section
14104251.
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