BILL NUMBER: SB 971	INTRODUCED
	BILL TEXT


INTRODUCED BY   Senator Pavley

                        FEBRUARY 8, 2010

   An act to add Article 5 (commencing with Section 125286.1) to
Chapter 2 of Part 5 of Division 106 of the Health and Safety Code,
relating to genetic disease services.


	LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST


   SB 971, as introduced, Pavley. Bleeding disorders: blood clotting
products.
   Existing law, the Holden-Moscone-Garamendi Genetically Handicapped
Person's Program, requires the Director of Health Care Services to
establish and administer a program for the medical care of persons
with genetically handicapping conditions, including hemophilia.
   This bill would impose specified requirements on providers of
blood clotting products for home use used for the treatment and
prevention of symptoms associated with bleeding disorders, including
all forms of hemophilia. This bill would require the California State
Board of Pharmacy to administer and enforce these provisions.
   Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: yes.
State-mandated local program: no.


THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA DO ENACT AS FOLLOWS:

  SECTION 1.  Article 5 (commencing with Section 125286.1) is added
to Chapter 2 of Part 5 of Division 106 of the Health and Safety Code,
to read:

      Article 5.  Standards of Service for Providers of Blood
Clotting Products for Home Use Act


   125286.1.  This article shall be known, and may be cited, as the
Standards of Service for Providers of Blood Clotting Products for
Home Use Act.
   125286.2.  The Legislature hereby finds and declares all of the
following:
   (a) Hemophilia is a rare, hereditary, bleeding disorder affecting
at least 4,000 persons in California and is a chronic, lifelong, and
incurable, but treatable, disease.
   (b) Von Willebrand disease is a human bleeding disorder caused by
a hereditary deficiency or abnormality of the von Willebrand Factor
in human blood, which is a protein that helps clot blood. Von
Willebrand disease is a chronic, lifelong, incurable, but treatable,
disease affecting at least 360,000 Californians.
   (c) Until the 1970s, people with severe hemophilia suffered from
uncontrollable internal bleeding, crippling orthopedic deformities,
and a shortened lifespan. More recently, the production of highly
purified blood clotting factors have provided people with hemophilia
and other bleeding disorders with the opportunity to lead normal
lives, free of pain and crippling arthritis.
   (d) The preferred method of treatment of hemophilia today is
intravenous injection, or infusion, of prescription blood clotting
products several times per week, along with case management and
specialized medical care at a federally designated regional
hemophilia treatment center.
   (e) Pharmacies and other entities specializing in the delivery of
blood clotting products and related equipment, supplies, and services
for home use form a growing enterprise in California. All of these
entities are licensed by the state or are located at federally
designated regional hemophilia treatment centers, or both.
   (f) Timely access to federally designated regional hemophilia
centers and appropriate products and services in the home, including
infusion of blood clotting products and related equipment, and
supplies and services for persons with hemophilia and other bleeding
disorders, reduces mortality and bleeding-related hospitalizations,
and is extremely cost effective, according to the federal Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention and the Medical and Scientific
Advisory Council of the National Hemophilia Foundation.
   (g) Eligible persons with hemophilia or other bleeding disorders
may receive treatment through the Genetically Handicapped Persons
Program, the California Children's Services Program, and Medi-Cal.
Access to quality blood clotting products for home use and related
equipment, supplies, and services for people with hemophilia or other
bleeding disorders promotes cost containment in each of these
publicly funded programs as well as in the health insurance and
health care industries more generally.
   (h) For the benefit of persons with hemophilia or other bleeding
disorders, as well as for cost containment in health care, the
purposes of this article are to do the following:
   (1) Establish standards of service for entities that deliver blood
clotting products and related equipment, supplies, and services for
home use.
   (2) Promote access to a full range of essential, cost effective,
lifesaving, blood clotting products and related equipment, supplies,
and high-quality services for home use for persons with hemophilia
and other bleeding disorders.
   125286.3.  Unless context otherwise requires, the following
definitions shall apply for purposes of this article:
   (a) "340B Program" means an outpatient pharmacy licensed to
dispense blood clotting products in California and that is
conditionally or fully designated as a covered entity under the
Veterans Health Care Act of 1992 (Public Law 102-585), which enacted
Section 340B of the Public Health Service Act (41 U.S.C. Sec. 201 et
seq.).
   (b) "Assay" means the amount of a particular constituent of a
mixture or of the biological or pharmacological potency of a drug.
   (c) "Ancillary infusion equipment and supplies" means the
equipment and supplies required to infuse a blood clotting product
into a human vein, including, but not limited to, syringes, needles,
sterile gauze, field pads, gloves, alcohol swabs, numbing creams,
tourniquets, medical tape, sharps or equivalent biohazard waste
containers, and cold compression packs.
   (d) "Bleeding disorder" means a medical condition characterized by
a severe deficiency or absence of one or more essential blood
clotting proteins in the human blood, often called "factors,"
including all forms of hemophilia and other bleeding disorders that
result in uncontrollable bleeding or abnormal blood clotting.
   (e) "Blood clotting product" means an intravenously administered
medicine manufactured from human plasma or recombinant biotechnology
techniques, approved for distribution by the federal Food and Drug
Administration, that is used for the treatment and prevention of
symptoms associated with bleeding disorders. Blood clotting products
include, but are not limited to, Factor VII, Factor VIIa, Factor
VIII, and Factor IX products, von Willebrand Factor products, bypass
products for patients with inhibitors, and activated prothrombin
complex concentrates.
   (f) "Consumer" means a person needing a blood clotting product for
home use.
   (g) "Emergency" means a situation in which a prudent layperson
could reasonably believe that the consumer's condition requires
immediate medical attention.
   (h) "Hemophilia" means a human bleeding disorder caused by a
hereditary deficiency of the Factors I, II, V, VIII, IX, XI, XII, or
XIII blood clotting protein in human blood.
   (i) "Hemophilia treatment center" means a facility for the
treatment of bleeding disorders, including, but not limited to,
hemophilia, that receives funding from the federal government
sources, including, but not limited to, the federal Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention and the federal Health Resources and
Services Administration (HRSA) of the United States Department of
Health and Human Services.
   (j) "Home nursing services" means specialized nursing care
provided in the home setting to assist a patient in the
reconstitution and administration of blood clotting products.
   (k) "Home use" means infusion or other use of a blood clotting
product in a place other than a state-recognized hemophilia treatment
center. Places where home use occurs include, without limitation, a
home or physician office.
   (l) "Provider of blood clotting products for home use" means a
seller and provider of blood clotting products, ancillary infusion
equipment, home nursing services, and patient assistance for the
management of bleeding disorders for home use. These providers
include, without limitation, 340B programs, other pharmacies, and,
when treatment is not provided onsite, hemophilia treatment centers.
   125286.4.  Each provider of blood clotting products for home use
shall meet all of the following requirements:
   (a) Have sufficient knowledge and understanding of bleeding
disorders and the medical and psychosocial management thereof,
including, but not limited to, home therapy.
   (b) Have sufficient clinical experience providing services to
persons with bleeding disorders and a sufficient nonclinical
understanding of bleeding disorders that enables the provider to know
when patients have an appropriate supply of clotting factor on hand
and about proper refrigeration of clotting factors.
   (c) Ensure that its customer service staff meets the requirements
of subdivisions (a) and (b).
   (d) Have a pharmacist available at all times, 24 hours a day,
seven days a week, every day of the year, either onsite or on call,
to fill prescriptions for blood clotting products.
   (e) Supply blood clotting products and home nursing services, as
prescribed by the consumer's treating physician, and, pursuant to
Section 4073 of the Business and Professions Code, not make any
substitutions of blood clotting products or assay amounts.
   (f) Ask the prescribing physician which specific blood clotting
product is intended whenever a prescription does not indicate the
specific product and then use the product named in the physician's
response.
   (g) Supply all brands of blood clotting products approved by the
federal Food and Drug Administration in multiple assay ranges (low,
medium, and high, as applicable) and vial sizes, including products
manufactured from human plasma and those manufactured with
recombinant biotechnology techniques.
   (h) Supply all necessary ancillary infusion equipment and supplies
with each prescription, as needed.
   (i) Maintain adequate stocks of blood clotting products and
ancillary infusion equipment and supplies.
   (j) Store and ship, or otherwise deliver, all blood clotting
products in conformity with all state and federally mandated
standards, including, but not limited to, the standards set forth in
the product's approved package insert (PI).
   (k) When home nursing services are prescribed by the treating
physician, provide these services either directly or through a
qualified third party with experience in infusing bleeding disorders
and coordinate pharmacy services with the third party when one is
used to provide home nursing services.
   (l) Upon receiving a nonemergency prescription, ship the
prescribed blood clotting products and ancillary infusion equipment
and supplies to the consumer within:
   (1)  Two business days or less for established consumers.
   (2) Three business days or less for new consumers.
   (m) Upon receiving a prescription for an emergency situation,
deliver prescribed blood products, ancillary infusion equipment and
supplies, medications, and home nursing services to the consumer
within 12 hours after receipt of the prescription.
   (n) Maintain 24-hour oncall service seven days a week for every
day of the year, adequately screen phone calls for emergencies, and
respond to all phone calls within one hour or less.
   (o) Provide consumers who have ordered their products with a
designated contact phone number for reporting problems with a
delivery and respond to these calls immediately.
   (p) Provide patients with notification of recalls and withdrawals
of blood clotting products and ancillary infusion equipment within 24
hours and participate in the National Patient Notification System
for blood clotting product recalls.
   (q) Provide language translation services, both over the phone and
in person, as needed by the consumer.
   (r) Have a detailed plan for meeting the requirements of this
article in the event of a natural or manmade disaster or other
disruption of normal business operations.
   (s) Provide for proper collection, removal, and disposal of
hazardous waste pursuant to state and federal law, including, but not
limited to, sharps containers for the removal and disposal of
medical waste.
   (t) Clearly inform the consumer of his or her copay, deductible,
and coinsurance payment responsibilities each time he or she orders a
blood clotting product.
   (u) Provide consumers with a copy of all billing invoices.
   (v) Provide appropriate and necessary recordkeeping and
documentation as required by state and federal law and retain copies
of the patient's prescriptions.
   (w) Comply with the privacy and confidentiality requirements of
the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996
(HIPAA).
   125286.5.  The California State Board of Pharmacy shall administer
and enforce this article.