Senators Maher and Anwar Support Free School Lunch Legislation As It Receives Public Hearing In Children’s Committee

Senators Maher and Anwar Support Free School Lunch Legislation As It Receives Public Hearing In Children’s Committee


Today, as legislation that would expand school meal programs to ensure no student goes hungry received a public hearing in the Children’s Committee, State Senator Ceci Maher (D-Wilton), Senate Chair of the Children’s Committee, and State Senator Saud Anwar (D-South Windsor), Senate Chair of the Public Health Committee and former Chair of the Children’s Committee, gave the bill their support. The bill in question would expand school meal programs for all students, with funding through State Board of Education grants, and is a response to the end of federal programs that provided universal K-12 meals during the COVID-19 pandemic and ended in late 2022.

“”One in six children in the United States struggles with hunger, and one in eight in Connecticut,” said Sen. Maher. “For the last nearly three years, one of the few silver linings of the pandemic was federal policies making sure every student learning wasn’t doing so on an empty stomach. With those programs gone, countless families and students are struggling. But those programs also proved we can do this, and we can do it in a way that protects students and families. I’m grateful for the testimony from so many supporters of this bill and hope to see this bill become law.”

“Studies show that children at risk of hunger are more likely to experience developmental issues. They’re more likely to have lower math scores, more likely to repeat a grade. Hungry children can’t properly learn. Young children who experience food insecurity early in life are more likely to lag behind their peers in school,” said Sen. Anwar. “This isn’t just a crisis of hunger on its own but an alarming threat that could hamper Connecticut children’s long-term development. We need to take strides to support public health, our children and our families, too many of which are struggling today. Free school lunches will provide benefits in the short- and long-terms alike.”

Senate Bill 929, “An Act Expanding School Meal Programs To Provide Free School Meals To All Students,” seeks to provide free school meals to all students, doing so by creating grants for schools and school boards through the State Board of Education. Sens. Maher and Anwar in January stood with school officials from across the state to advocate for free student lunches upon the ending of federal funding support in late 2022.

Written testimony provided to the Children’s Committee prior to Tuesday’s public hearing was universally supportive of Senate Bill 929, with a wide-ranging show of support from parents, teachers, school officials and a number of organizational leaders. Their reasons for support were numerous; Karen Asetta, school business manager for East Hampton Public Schools, said the end of school lunch support may drop student participation in East Hampton school lunch programs by as much as 40%, requiring layoffs among workers who remained in schools during the worst conditions of the COVID-19 pandemic to feed hungry students. Abby Kassman-Harned, director of food and nutrition services for Tolland Public Schools, noted that students in school cafeterias are now foregoing free meals, despite qualifying for them, due to stigma.

Lisa Cacace, food service manager for Cromwell High School, said the end of “free” lunches led to a drop of almost 20% of students receiving lunch and that “as the students come through the line almost all of them ask how much money they do or don’t have. They should not be worried about this. They should be receiving a balanced meal and focus on learning.”

Paul Sworkin, a pediatrician and Executive Vice President for Child Community Health at Connecticut Children’s Medical Center, said that nearly 40% of families the hospital system screens experience food insecurity. “As a developmental-behavioral pediatrician I can assure you that kids cannot learn to their fullest potential if they are hungry,” Sworkin said. “By making no-cost school lunch available to all children, we can destigmatize free school lunch and best of all, help ensure that hunger does not harm any child’s readiness to learn during the school day.”

“Nearly 92,000 children, or 12.6%, in Connecticut are food insecure with thousands more in households that are just getting by,” said Jason Jakubowski, President and CEO of Connecticut Foodshare. “Of those 92,000 children, 25% of them do not qualify for government assistance.” He noted that CT Foodshare saw a “significant increase” in attendance at food pantries when school meal programs started. “We, as a society, have both the resources and the ability to feed our school children – and if the federal government will no longer cover the expense of school meals, then we (as a state) need to,” Jakubowski said.

Sen. Needleman Introduces Legislation To Extend PURA Ratepayer Shutoff Moratorium Through October 31, Provide Additional Protections For Customers

Sen. Needleman Introduces Legislation To Extend PURA Ratepayer Shutoff Moratorium Through October 31, Provide Additional Protections For Customers


With many families around Connecticut still struggling with high costs, inflation and the after-effects of the COVID-19 pandemic, State Senator Norm Needleman (D-Essex), Senate Chair of the Energy & Technology Committee, has introduced legislation to extend the Public Utilities Regulatory Authority’s shutoff moratorium for ratepayers struggling to make ends meet through October 31. The bill would extend the moratorium that currently is expected to end on May 1.

“Almost three years after the start of the pandemic, our state still has a moratorium on utility shutoffs, protecting many from further financial harm,” said Sen. Needleman. “However, in that time, there have been other financial pressures only adding to the gravity of the situation in countless households. Extending the moratorium through to the fall would more time for thousands of Connecticut households to work toward paying their bills and prevent winter or summer shutoffs when heating and air conditioning are increasingly necessary.”

“This bill goes further,” Sen. Needleman continued. “It would allow up to three years of amortization, or longer, regarding interest on unpaid balances of customers delinquent bills. The bill also allows PURA to distribute up to $1 million per year to organizations or individuals providing legal services, who would aid residents negotiating with service companies when attempting to determine payback plans and interest on unpaid balances. These changes will provide more reasonable payback terms for customers, preventing financial cliffs that could threaten their stability.”

Senate Bill 198, “An Act Concerning The Public Utilities Regulatory Authority Shutoff Moratorium and Payment Terms for Delinquent Utility Customers,” would amend the general statutes to extend PURA’s utility shutoff moratorium for hardship customers until October 31, 2023. It would further adjust existing guidelines allowing for PURA to provide account interest amortization for up to 36 months or longer for utility customers, allowing for longer-term payoff plans. PURA would also gain the ability to distribute up to $1 million per year to legal services providers to support customers with utility bill or arrearage payments, including helping customers negotiating the amortization periods of up to three years or longer.

In late August 2022, state regulators again extended the shut-off moratorium that began in March 2020. Currently, the moratorium is planned to end in May; lawmakers have not set a defined date for a potential extension, but such an extension would prevent utility companies from threatening customers with power shutoffs upon its end. In August 2022, Connecticut utilities reported as much as $171 million in bills overdue by more than 60 days, but nearly 25,000 low-income customers would potentially lose electric or gas service. Advocates for low-income customers said at the time that utilities could use overdue bills to press the finances of those customers in an attempt to receive payment.

SENATOR DUFF DEMANDS EQUITABLE SCHOOL FUNDING IN STATE BUDGET

SENATOR DUFF DEMANDS EQUITABLE SCHOOL FUNDING IN STATE BUDGET

HARTFORD – State Senator Bob Duff (D-Norwalk) joined over a hundred state legislators, religious leaders and education advocates today to call for the passage of House Bill 5003, which would fully and equitably fund all K-12 Connecticut school students for the first time and would culminate work that Sen. Duff began back in 2017 on creating a more equitable school funding formula in the state.

Beginning with the 2024-25 school year, the bill would fully fund the Connecticut’s Education Cost Sharing (ECS) grant to municipalities; expand need-based funding to charter, magnet, and other public schools of choice; and allow school districts to properly address the ongoing effects of the pandemic on student learning and mental health after federal COVID-relief funds run out.

“We can no longer afford to, or wait to, leave kids behind in any community. Only through a fully funded state education cost sharing formula can we achieve that,” Sen. Duff said. “In 2017 we had a bipartisan budget, part of which was a brand-new education cost sharing formula. The existing formula wasn’t serving our kids well. But this new formula wasn’t going to be fully phased-in until after 10 years – not until 2028. Today we’re standing here demanding that we fully fund the ECS formula this year and get it done. Together with the leadership of Senate President Martin Looney, Education Committee Co-Chair Senator Doug McCrory, and our Senate Bill 1 – which will create stronger oversight on how schools spend state funds – we can get this across the finish line.”

On Friday, nearly 200 advocates testified in support of H.B. 5003 during a joint public hearing of the Education and Appropriations Committees; hundreds more submitted written testimony urging the legislature to pass the bill.

The 2023 legislative session will conclude on June 7.

SEN. NEEDLEMAN WELCOMES $1.12 MILLION IN FEDERAL FUNDS FOR LOCAL SCHOOL MENTAL HEALTH WORKERS

SEN. NEEDLEMAN WELCOMES $1.12 MILLION IN FEDERAL FUNDS FOR LOCAL SCHOOL MENTAL HEALTH WORKERS


State Senator Norm Needleman (D-Essex) today welcomed news that the state Department of Education will distribute a total of $1,122,286.97 in federal American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) funds over the next three years to four school districts in the 33rd Senate District to hire and maintain school mental health workers in the 2023, 2024 and 2025 school years. Portland Schools, East Hampton Schools, East Haddam Schools and Regional School District 17 (Haddam-Killingworth) will receive these funds in the next three years.

Priority was given to districts with a high ratio of students to school mental health workers and a high rate of student use of school mental health services. Portland Schools will receive $316,355.87 over three years; East Hampton Schools will receive $238,121.10 over three years; East Haddam Schools will receive $270,810 over three years; and Regional School District will receive $297,000 over three years.

“For several years now, my colleagues and I have worked to provide support for children’s mental health, amid a growing crisis putting pressure on our youth,” said Sen. Needleman. “It is reassuring to know students who may be at risk or who may be struggling will have professionals who they can confide in and receive help from. This will make an important difference in our communities and I’m glad we can support local children who may be in need.”

This is the first of three rounds of grants aimed at increasing the number of mental health workers in schools that are being administered by the state using ARPA funding. A second round – the School Mental Health Specialists Grant – will soon provide grants totaling $15 million. A third grant program will provide $8 million to summer camps and school-based summer programming for mental health support.

The federal ARPA funds were approved by Democrats in Congress in 2021, and were part of the 2022’s Connecticut State Senate Bill 1, “AN ACT CONCERNING CHILDHOOD MENTAL AND PHYSICAL HEALTH SERVICES IN SCHOOLS,” which was Sen. Needleman and the Senate Democrats’ priority bill for the year to expand health services in schools.

Senate Democrats Announce “A Healthier CT” Agenda

Senate Democrats Announce “A Healthier CT” Agenda

Addresses issues of children’s mental health care, health care access, and Medicaid access and services

HARTFORD, CT — Today, the Senate Democratic Majority of the Connecticut General Assembly announced the third of its legislative priorities for the 2023 session, A Healthier CT. The proposals address issues of children’s mental health care, health care access, and Medicaid access and services.

Today’s announcement marks the third of four successive days of public policy statements from Senate Democrats on a wide variety of issues confronting Connecticut and its residents: improved personal safety, strengthening education and Connecticut’s workforce, improving mental and physical health, and lowering costs for consumers.

“Health care coverage and access is a perpetual issue that we will focus on this legislative session,” said Senate President Martin M. Looney (D-New Haven). “Everyone in Connecticut, regardless of income, deserves quality health care and this year we will continue our vigilant work to protect consumers.”

“The pandemic’s impact on our children has been immeasurable. The increase of anxiety, depression, and other mental health issues in Connecticut’s youth is very real and concerning,” said Senate Majority Leader Bob Duff (D-Norwalk). “Senate Democrats will build upon our success over the past two years and continue to work to improve the quality and availability of mental health care services for children in Connecticut.”

Today’s announcement focuses on specific public policy areas, including:

Children’s Health

SB 2: AN ACT CONCERNING THE MENTAL, PHYSICAL AND EMOTIONAL WELLNESS OF CHILDREN, to improve access to mental, physical and emotional health services for children and provide a continuum of care in the delivery of such services.

Amid the demand for children’s mental health services, unfortunately in many cases there is a shortage of staff to administer services, and an ever-growing number of children experiencing mental health issues provoked by stress, anxiety, worry, nervousness, etc. In Connecticut, children are experiencing emotional hardship but are being placed on waitlists to receive the help and care they need. There is a shortage in mental health services. For providers, there are too many patients and not enough funding to treat them.

Children’s mental health concerns have increased since the coronavirus pandemic. Children had to navigate through an unprecedented change in their lives at home, through school, and the lack of activities.

Even before the COVID-19 pandemic, as many as one in six children in the United States experienced mental health disorders. That rate has only increased in recent years; in 2021, the Connecticut Mirror reported that as many as 47 children per day experiencing mental health crises waited in the emergency department of Connecticut Children’s Hospital, which experts said was a significant escalation from prior years; at Yale New Haven Children’s Hospital, the rate of children experiencing mental health crises more than doubled from March to May 2021, and the rate of hours of care provided to children experiencing mental health crises more than doubled as the pandemic progressed.

In 2021, the Comprehensive Needs of Children in the State Task Force was created to take a harder look at the underlying issues of children’s health. In 2022, the task force was extended. In 2022, legislation was passed that worked to support, expand, and create preventative programs to reduce conditions conducive to children developing mental health disorders. Currently, the task force is supposed to study the comprehensive needs of children in the state and the extent to which such needs are being met by educators, community members and local and state agencies. They are set to provide recommendations to meet the demand for infant and toddler care in the state by increasing access to and enrollment in child care centers, group child care homes and family child care homes, and identify resources to assist such centers and homes in meeting such demand. The task force is also responsible for studying the feasibility of adjusting school start times to improve students’ mental and physical well-being.

Senate Bill 2 will:

  • Implement recommendations from last year’s Comprehensive Needs of Children in the State Task Force
  • Expand and improve existing mental and physical health programs
  • Provide additional funding to school-based health centers
  • Ensure all children, no matter what gender, have equitable and safe access to school, support systems, and healthcare
  • Collaborate with state and local agencies to provide access to healthy food in our schools
  • Evaluate pathways for creating sanctuary libraries
  • Provide resources to help appropriately identify and diagnose both children in need of assistance due to the fallout of the pandemic and children in need of increased help and intervention more broadly

Connecticut is not the only state to address children’s mental health. According to the National Academy For State Health Policy, States have pursued a range of approaches including 26 states allocating federal and state funding to increase school-based mental health services, 12 states supporting strategic planning to improve school mental health systems, 24 states providing education and resources for school staff and students, and 10 states guiding school mental health policies.

In Arkansas, legislators did something similar to Connecticut and implemented a strategic planning tool to improve school mental health systems. Lawmakers established a study be done on Mental Health and Behavioral Health and worked to study and develop a report on mental health screening and suicide prevention policies for children in schools.

In Florida, legislators also passed a law similar to Connecticut that helps guide school mental health policies. This law in Florida requires that school health services plans indicate that school and law enforcement staff must attempt to contact a mental health professional for a student in crisis, and that behavioral health providers and school resource officers must attempt to verbally de-escalate crises.

“We often hear about mental health issues of children caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, certainly the instability of the pandemic created issues for some that they did not previously have, but children have needed support for mental health challenges even before COVID-19 closed schools and brought about uncertainty”, said Sen. Ceci Maher (D-Wilton). “As Senate Chair of the Children’s Committee, I am confident we are on the right track with Senate Bill 2, as we look to broaden and expand access for every child that needs it. Nationwide we are seeing states taking children’s mental health more seriously, putting dollars and resources towards helping our young people deal with very serious challenges, such as anxiety and depression, challenges that left uncared for can be catastrophic. Connecticut has always positioned itself as a leader, and I believe we can build off the momentum set forth in previous legislative sessions to pass a good bill that addresses children’s mental health needs appropriately and comprehensively.”

Health Care Protections

SB 6: AN ACT CONCERNING PRESCRIPTION DRUG AFFORDABILITY AND PROTECTIONS FOR CONNECTICUT’S HEALTH CARE CONSUMERS, to provide for more affordable and accessible prescription drugs and allow for increased and more transparent access to health care.

Senate Bill 6 will

  • Join the ArrayRX program to standardize and lower prescription drug costs
  • Make prescription drugs more affordable for all of Connecticut’s residents
  • Improve step therapy practices
  • Create a ‘Gold Card’ for prior authorization. This means insurers cannot require prior authorization for a drug or service when such requests by a doctor have been approved 90+% of the time in the past six months. So if a doctor obtains gold card status for a particular drug or service, prior authorization could not be required for that particular drug or service
  • In 2019, West Virginia adopted a version of the Gold Card Law. In 2021, the Texas legislature passed the Gold Card Law, and adopted a version more favorable to patients and doctors. Connecticut’s proposal will be modeled after Texas. Currently, Vermont has a pilot program for Medicaid and private insurers
  • Shrink the current 15-day deadline for non-urgent care and the 72 hour deadline for urgent care
  • Require staffing on weekends by insurers of prior authorization staff
  • Require 24/7 staffing to respond to prior authorization
  • Require insurance to accept prior authorization requests electronically
  • Ensure insurance coverage of hormones prescribed to women for developmental or other issues is equal to coverage for men
  • Extend the period within which the insured person must notify the health carrier about the birth of a child from 61 days after birth to 121 days after birth or the hospital discharge date

“On top of being very costly, our health care system can be cumbersome, inefficient and flat out fail people in need of, and deserving of, good care,” said Sen. Jorge Cabrera (D-Hamden). “Prior authorization is just another way a system that is supposed to be helping people, instead creates headaches and delays care. We have some of the best health care physicians in our state and prior authorization gets in their way as well. With Senate Bill 6, we are dealing with this problem directly and removing this roadblock as we continue to identify ways to make care more accessible, affordable, and less burdensome. As Senate Chair of the Insurance and Real Estate Committee, I am optimistic we will pass a bill that really helps people and serves as a model for addressing issues caused by prior authorization, as many states across the country look for ways to deal with this problem as well.”

“SB6 is about the Senate Democrats saying to the people, the patients in Connecticut as well as the physicians and all care providers, we hear you,” said Senator Saud Anwar (D-South Windsor). “We will help you continue to provide excellent care and for the people you will receive quality care and we will reduce the various barriers to care. We will help reduce the cost of medicines.”

Prior Authorization

Right now, there is an administrative hurdle created by the health insurance industry to commonly delay access to care for patients and serve as an imposition into the patient/physician relationship and decision-making process. This being, Prior Authorization. Prior authorization processes can harm patient outcomes and create a tremendous obstacle to treatment decisions deemed most appropriate by physicians. Prior authorization requirements (even for services that are ultimately approved) invariably delay care and keep physicians on the phone with health plans, detracting from time that could be spent on patient care. It also contributes to consolidation of providers.

Currently in Connecticut, for emergency medical care, insurers cannot require prior authorization. For urgent medical care, insurers must respond to requests within 48 hours, or 72 hours if such 48 hour period overlaps with part of the weekend. (If it is a substance abuse urgent matter, then the deadline is 24 hours). For non-urgent medical care, insurers must respond within 15 days, with the possibility of a 15-day extension.

Also, in Connecticut under current law, the state has tried to address some specific issues, with specific laws applying to chronic disease, brand medically necessary drugs, how a prior authorization can be repealed by an insurer, etc.

In a 2021 survey of physicians conducted by the American Medical Association (AMA):

  • 93% of respondents reported that prior authorization requirements created delays in accessing necessary care
  • 82% of physicians reported that prior authorization can lead to patients abandoning a recommended course of treatment
  • 34% of respondents reported that prior authorization requirements have led to a serious adverse medical event for a patient with nearly one quarter reporting that prior authorization delays have led to a patient’s hospitalization

In a 2022 survey of physicians conducted by CSMS of its membership:

  • 70% of respondents said they spent at least 9 hours per week dealing with health insurer prior authorizations; 11% spent at least 26 hours and 19% spent more than 35 hours per week
  • 42% of respondents indicated that prior authorizations requests are ultimately approved more than 90% of the time and 30% of respondents indicated that prior authorization requests are ultimately approved between 70 and 90% of the time
  • 63% of respondents submitted at least 11 prior authorization requests per week; 14% submit at least 31 requests per week and 19% greater than 40 prior authorization requests per week on average

Newborn Insurance

SB6 will also expand time to enroll newborns onto insurance, meaning it would extend the period for which a parent would need to provide notice of the birth of a newborn and pay any required premium or subscription fee to continue the newborns coverage.

Currently, certain health insurance policies that cover family members must cover newborns from birth for a set period before requiring payment to continue the coverage. Infants in the Hartford NICU often stay for weeks and months at a time as they receive highly specialized care. In Fiscal Year 2021, Connecticut Children’s treated 850 patients across the NICU; 206 of which stayed greater than 30 days. The average length of stay for these patients was 77 days. As it relates to this bill, CT Children’s has supported an extended period of time to notify insurers as navigating the complexities of enrollment is often the last thing on a parent’s mind when their newborn is receiving care in a NICU.

Modernizing Health Care Services

SB 10: AN ACT MODERNIZING SUPPORT SERVICES FOR VULNERABLE POPULATIONS, to ensure all vulnerable persons in the state receive the maximum amount of Medicaid care and support services available in a modernized delivery system

Connecticut Medicaid, which is administered by the Department of Social Services, is a major health plan that covers over 800,000 Connecticut citizens, which is 22% of the state population. In 2011, Connecticut ended contracts it had with Aetna, UnitedHealthcare’s AmeriChoice division, and a nonprofit insurer, Community Health Network of Connecticut (CHNCT). Connecticut assumed risk of 529,000 people in the state’s Husky Health program, a group that included adults and family members covered by Medicaid and children in the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP). Connecticut adopted a self-insured system similar to what large employers use and contracted with three companies to provide administrative services under administrative services only (ASO) contracts and approve payments for hospitals, physicians and other providers serving Medicaid and CHIP members,

HUSKY provides health coverage to 3.5 million people, meaning 1 in 4 CT residents are covered by Husky. Medicaid offers home care and long-term services, support, and health care coverage to people with limited income and resources. It expands health coverage for low-income adults and individuals and those living with disabilities. CHIP, the Children’s Health Insurance Program, covers uninsured children in families with incomes that are modest but too high to qualify for Medicaid. These two major health coverage programs are a major source of health care coverage that provides medical, behavioral health, dental, pharmacy, long-term services and supports LTSS, and non-emergency medical transportation.

Medicaid covers a wide range of services, within federal guidelines. Examples of mandatory services include inpatient hospital, outpatient hospital, nursing facilities, family planning, medical transportation, and early and periodic screening. Medicaid can also provide optional services, which Connecticut has elected to cover a broad range of them. Examples include, prescription drugs, dental services, hospice, personal care, care management, and home and community-based services.

Healthcare is a human right that too many Connecticut residents struggle to afford. It becomes problematic when a family is trying to afford their every-day life necessities while paying for coverage of prescription drugs they cannot afford. Nearly 200,000 residents lack health insurance altogether. Americans pay much more for pharmaceuticals than other people in other countries. Three in ten Americans report cutting pills in half, skipping doses, or substituting drugs because of the high cost of prescription drugs.

Senate Bill 10 will work to:

  • Increase access to Medicaid to those in need
  • Increase access to essential services for those using Medicaid
  • Provide more services to low-income individuals who require health insurance

“I am excited that under the leadership of Senator Looney and Senator Duff, 2023 is going to be a banner year for health reform,” said Senator Matt Lesser (D-Middletown). “We have a historic opportunity to expand Medicaid and our new CoveredConnecticut Program, helping kids, the poor, the elderly and people with disabilities get access to health care. And after 15 years of treading water we can finally take steps to ensure that specialists and health centers and front line providers are compensated fairly. The benefits of Medicaid don’t just extend to the poor – this is going to be a banner year for prescription drug reform as well, and we can leverage the state’s HUSKY program to bring down hospital and drug prices for everyone, tackling health care monopolies head on and bringing real relief to Connecticut residents.”

“We know our state’s population is aging and that vulnerable people need supports – ones they too often don’t get,” said Senator Martha Marx (D-New London). “Our medical systems have not fully caught up with technology advances and improvements in care delivery efficiency. We can, and should, change that. By maximizing the value of Medicaid and modernizing how we deliver these vital services, we can ensure our older residents remain cared for now and for years to come, meeting needs they have today.”

“Too many of our residents need healthcare services they cannot afford,” said Sen. Jan Hochadel (D-Meriden). “As Chair of the Aging Committee I am dedicated to finding solutions that enable affordable and accessible healthcare for our seniors. Expanding Medicaid services allows for improved quality of care to those over 65 with limited income.”

Senate Democrats Announce “A Healthier CT” Agenda

Senate Democrats Announce “A Healthier CT” Agenda

Addresses issues of children’s mental health care, health care access, and Medicaid access and services

HARTFORD, CT — Today, the Senate Democratic Majority of the Connecticut General Assembly announced the third of its legislative priorities for the 2023 session, A Healthier CT. The proposals address issues of children’s mental health care, health care access, and Medicaid access and services.

Today’s announcement marks the third of four successive days of public policy statements from Senate Democrats on a wide variety of issues confronting Connecticut and its residents: improved personal safety, strengthening education and Connecticut’s workforce, improving mental and physical health, and lowering costs for consumers.

“Health care coverage and access is a perpetual issue that we will focus on this legislative session,” said Senate President Martin M. Looney (D-New Haven). “Everyone in Connecticut, regardless of income, deserves quality health care and this year we will continue our vigilant work to protect consumers.”

“The pandemic’s impact on our children has been immeasurable. The increase of anxiety, depression, and other mental health issues in Connecticut’s youth is very real and concerning,” said Senate Majority Leader Bob Duff (D-Norwalk). “Senate Democrats will build upon our success over the past two years and continue to work to improve the quality and availability of mental health care services for children in Connecticut.”

Today’s announcement focuses on specific public policy areas, including:

Children’s Health

SB 2: AN ACT CONCERNING THE MENTAL, PHYSICAL AND EMOTIONAL WELLNESS OF CHILDREN, to improve access to mental, physical and emotional health services for children and provide a continuum of care in the delivery of such services.

Amid the demand for children’s mental health services, unfortunately in many cases there is a shortage of staff to administer services, and an ever-growing number of children experiencing mental health issues provoked by stress, anxiety, worry, nervousness, etc. In Connecticut, children are experiencing emotional hardship but are being placed on waitlists to receive the help and care they need. There is a shortage in mental health services. For providers, there are too many patients and not enough funding to treat them.

Children’s mental health concerns have increased since the coronavirus pandemic. Children had to navigate through an unprecedented change in their lives at home, through school, and the lack of activities.

Even before the COVID-19 pandemic, as many as one in six children in the United States experienced mental health disorders. That rate has only increased in recent years; in 2021, the Connecticut Mirror reported that as many as 47 children per day experiencing mental health crises waited in the emergency department of Connecticut Children’s Hospital, which experts said was a significant escalation from prior years; at Yale New Haven Children’s Hospital, the rate of children experiencing mental health crises more than doubled from March to May 2021, and the rate of hours of care provided to children experiencing mental health crises more than doubled as the pandemic progressed.

In 2021, the Comprehensive Needs of Children in the State Task Force was created to take a harder look at the underlying issues of children’s health. In 2022, the task force was extended. In 2022, legislation was passed that worked to support, expand, and create preventative programs to reduce conditions conducive to children developing mental health disorders. Currently, the task force is supposed to study the comprehensive needs of children in the state and the extent to which such needs are being met by educators, community members and local and state agencies. They are set to provide recommendations to meet the demand for infant and toddler care in the state by increasing access to and enrollment in child care centers, group child care homes and family child care homes, and identify resources to assist such centers and homes in meeting such demand. The task force is also responsible for studying the feasibility of adjusting school start times to improve students’ mental and physical well-being.

Senate Bill 2 will:

  • Implement recommendations from last year’s Comprehensive Needs of Children in the State Task Force
  • Expand and improve existing mental and physical health programs
  • Provide additional funding to school-based health centers
  • Ensure all children, no matter what gender, have equitable and safe access to school, support systems, and healthcare
  • Collaborate with state and local agencies to provide access to healthy food in our schools
  • Evaluate pathways for creating sanctuary libraries
  • Provide resources to help appropriately identify and diagnose both children in need of assistance due to the fallout of the pandemic and children in need of increased help and intervention more broadly

Connecticut is not the only state to address children’s mental health. According to the National Academy For State Health Policy, States have pursued a range of approaches including 26 states allocating federal and state funding to increase school-based mental health services, 12 states supporting strategic planning to improve school mental health systems, 24 states providing education and resources for school staff and students, and 10 states guiding school mental health policies.

In Arkansas, legislators did something similar to Connecticut and implemented a strategic planning tool to improve school mental health systems. Lawmakers established a study be done on Mental Health and Behavioral Health and worked to study and develop a report on mental health screening and suicide prevention policies for children in schools.

In Florida, legislators also passed a law similar to Connecticut that helps guide school mental health policies. This law in Florida requires that school health services plans indicate that school and law enforcement staff must attempt to contact a mental health professional for a student in crisis, and that behavioral health providers and school resource officers must attempt to verbally de-escalate crises.

“We often hear about mental health issues of children caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, certainly the instability of the pandemic created issues for some that they did not previously have, but children have needed support for mental health challenges even before COVID-19 closed schools and brought about uncertainty”, said Sen. Ceci Maher (D-Wilton). “As Senate Chair of the Children’s Committee, I am confident we are on the right track with Senate Bill 2, as we look to broaden and expand access for every child that needs it. Nationwide we are seeing states taking children’s mental health more seriously, putting dollars and resources towards helping our young people deal with very serious challenges, such as anxiety and depression, challenges that left uncared for can be catastrophic. Connecticut has always positioned itself as a leader, and I believe we can build off the momentum set forth in previous legislative sessions to pass a good bill that addresses children’s mental health needs appropriately and comprehensively.”

Health Care Protections

SB 6: AN ACT CONCERNING PRESCRIPTION DRUG AFFORDABILITY AND PROTECTIONS FOR CONNECTICUT’S HEALTH CARE CONSUMERS, to provide for more affordable and accessible prescription drugs and allow for increased and more transparent access to health care.

Senate Bill 6 will

  • Join the ArrayRX program to standardize and lower prescription drug costs
  • Make prescription drugs more affordable for all of Connecticut’s residents
  • Improve step therapy practices
  • Create a ‘Gold Card’ for prior authorization. This means insurers cannot require prior authorization for a drug or service when such requests by a doctor have been approved 90+% of the time in the past six months. So if a doctor obtains gold card status for a particular drug or service, prior authorization could not be required for that particular drug or service
  • In 2019, West Virginia adopted a version of the Gold Card Law. In 2021, the Texas legislature passed the Gold Card Law, and adopted a version more favorable to patients and doctors. Connecticut’s proposal will be modeled after Texas. Currently, Vermont has a pilot program for Medicaid and private insurers
  • Shrink the current 15-day deadline for non-urgent care and the 72 hour deadline for urgent care
  • Require staffing on weekends by insurers of prior authorization staff
  • Require 24/7 staffing to respond to prior authorization
  • Require insurance to accept prior authorization requests electronically
  • Ensure insurance coverage of hormones prescribed to women for developmental or other issues is equal to coverage for men
  • Extend the period within which the insured person must notify the health carrier about the birth of a child from 61 days after birth to 121 days after birth or the hospital discharge date

“On top of being very costly, our health care system can be cumbersome, inefficient and flat out fail people in need of, and deserving of, good care,” said Sen. Jorge Cabrera (D-Hamden). “Prior authorization is just another way a system that is supposed to be helping people, instead creates headaches and delays care. We have some of the best health care physicians in our state and prior authorization gets in their way as well. With Senate Bill 6, we are dealing with this problem directly and removing this roadblock as we continue to identify ways to make care more accessible, affordable, and less burdensome. As Senate Chair of the Insurance and Real Estate Committee, I am optimistic we will pass a bill that really helps people and serves as a model for addressing issues caused by prior authorization, as many states across the country look for ways to deal with this problem as well.”

“SB6 is about the Senate Democrats saying to the people, the patients in Connecticut as well as the physicians and all care providers, we hear you,” said Senator Saud Anwar (D-South Windsor). “We will help you continue to provide excellent care and for the people you will receive quality care and we will reduce the various barriers to care. We will help reduce the cost of medicines.”

Prior Authorization

Right now, there is an administrative hurdle created by the health insurance industry to commonly delay access to care for patients and serve as an imposition into the patient/physician relationship and decision-making process. This being, Prior Authorization. Prior authorization processes can harm patient outcomes and create a tremendous obstacle to treatment decisions deemed most appropriate by physicians. Prior authorization requirements (even for services that are ultimately approved) invariably delay care and keep physicians on the phone with health plans, detracting from time that could be spent on patient care. It also contributes to consolidation of providers.

Currently in Connecticut, for emergency medical care, insurers cannot require prior authorization. For urgent medical care, insurers must respond to requests within 48 hours, or 72 hours if such 48 hour period overlaps with part of the weekend. (If it is a substance abuse urgent matter, then the deadline is 24 hours). For non-urgent medical care, insurers must respond within 15 days, with the possibility of a 15-day extension.

Also, in Connecticut under current law, the state has tried to address some specific issues, with specific laws applying to chronic disease, brand medically necessary drugs, how a prior authorization can be repealed by an insurer, etc.

In a 2021 survey of physicians conducted by the American Medical Association (AMA):

  • 93% of respondents reported that prior authorization requirements created delays in accessing necessary care
  • 82% of physicians reported that prior authorization can lead to patients abandoning a recommended course of treatment
  • 34% of respondents reported that prior authorization requirements have led to a serious adverse medical event for a patient with nearly one quarter reporting that prior authorization delays have led to a patient’s hospitalization

In a 2022 survey of physicians conducted by CSMS of its membership:

  • 70% of respondents said they spent at least 9 hours per week dealing with health insurer prior authorizations; 11% spent at least 26 hours and 19% spent more than 35 hours per week
  • 42% of respondents indicated that prior authorizations requests are ultimately approved more than 90% of the time and 30% of respondents indicated that prior authorization requests are ultimately approved between 70 and 90% of the time
  • 63% of respondents submitted at least 11 prior authorization requests per week; 14% submit at least 31 requests per week and 19% greater than 40 prior authorization requests per week on average

Newborn Insurance

SB6 will also expand time to enroll newborns onto insurance, meaning it would extend the period for which a parent would need to provide notice of the birth of a newborn and pay any required premium or subscription fee to continue the newborns coverage.

Currently, certain health insurance policies that cover family members must cover newborns from birth for a set period before requiring payment to continue the coverage. Infants in the Hartford NICU often stay for weeks and months at a time as they receive highly specialized care. In Fiscal Year 2021, Connecticut Children’s treated 850 patients across the NICU; 206 of which stayed greater than 30 days. The average length of stay for these patients was 77 days. As it relates to this bill, CT Children’s has supported an extended period of time to notify insurers as navigating the complexities of enrollment is often the last thing on a parent’s mind when their newborn is receiving care in a NICU.

Modernizing Health Care Services

SB 10: AN ACT MODERNIZING SUPPORT SERVICES FOR VULNERABLE POPULATIONS, to ensure all vulnerable persons in the state receive the maximum amount of Medicaid care and support services available in a modernized delivery system

Connecticut Medicaid, which is administered by the Department of Social Services, is a major health plan that covers over 800,000 Connecticut citizens, which is 22% of the state population. In 2011, Connecticut ended contracts it had with Aetna, UnitedHealthcare’s AmeriChoice division, and a nonprofit insurer, Community Health Network of Connecticut (CHNCT). Connecticut assumed risk of 529,000 people in the state’s Husky Health program, a group that included adults and family members covered by Medicaid and children in the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP). Connecticut adopted a self-insured system similar to what large employers use and contracted with three companies to provide administrative services under administrative services only (ASO) contracts and approve payments for hospitals, physicians and other providers serving Medicaid and CHIP members,

HUSKY provides health coverage to 3.5 million people, meaning 1 in 4 CT residents are covered by Husky. Medicaid offers home care and long-term services, support, and health care coverage to people with limited income and resources. It expands health coverage for low-income adults and individuals and those living with disabilities. CHIP, the Children’s Health Insurance Program, covers uninsured children in families with incomes that are modest but too high to qualify for Medicaid. These two major health coverage programs are a major source of health care coverage that provides medical, behavioral health, dental, pharmacy, long-term services and supports LTSS, and non-emergency medical transportation.

Medicaid covers a wide range of services, within federal guidelines. Examples of mandatory services include inpatient hospital, outpatient hospital, nursing facilities, family planning, medical transportation, and early and periodic screening. Medicaid can also provide optional services, which Connecticut has elected to cover a broad range of them. Examples include, prescription drugs, dental services, hospice, personal care, care management, and home and community-based services.

Healthcare is a human right that too many Connecticut residents struggle to afford. It becomes problematic when a family is trying to afford their every-day life necessities while paying for coverage of prescription drugs they cannot afford. Nearly 200,000 residents lack health insurance altogether. Americans pay much more for pharmaceuticals than other people in other countries. Three in ten Americans report cutting pills in half, skipping doses, or substituting drugs because of the high cost of prescription drugs.

Senate Bill 10 will work to:

  • Increase access to Medicaid to those in need
  • Increase access to essential services for those using Medicaid
  • Provide more services to low-income individuals who require health insurance

“I am excited that under the leadership of Senator Looney and Senator Duff, 2023 is going to be a banner year for health reform,” said Senator Matt Lesser (D-Middletown). “We have a historic opportunity to expand Medicaid and our new CoveredConnecticut Program, helping kids, the poor, the elderly and people with disabilities get access to health care. And after 15 years of treading water we can finally take steps to ensure that specialists and health centers and front line providers are compensated fairly. The benefits of Medicaid don’t just extend to the poor – this is going to be a banner year for prescription drug reform as well, and we can leverage the state’s HUSKY program to bring down hospital and drug prices for everyone, tackling health care monopolies head on and bringing real relief to Connecticut residents.”

“We know our state’s population is aging and that vulnerable people need supports – ones they too often don’t get,” said Senator Martha Marx (D-New London). “Our medical systems have not fully caught up with technology advances and improvements in care delivery efficiency. We can, and should, change that. By maximizing the value of Medicaid and modernizing how we deliver these vital services, we can ensure our older residents remain cared for now and for years to come, meeting needs they have today.”

“Too many of our residents need healthcare services they cannot afford,” said Sen. Jan Hochadel (D-Meriden). “As Chair of the Aging Committee I am dedicated to finding solutions that enable affordable and accessible healthcare for our seniors. Expanding Medicaid services allows for improved quality of care to those over 65 with limited income.”

Senate Democrats Announce “A Healthier CT” Agenda

Senate Democrats Announce “A Healthier CT” Agenda

Addresses issues of children’s mental health care, health care access, and Medicaid access and services

HARTFORD, CT — Today, the Senate Democratic Majority of the Connecticut General Assembly announced the third of its legislative priorities for the 2023 session, A Healthier CT. The proposals address issues of children’s mental health care, health care access, and Medicaid access and services.

Today’s announcement marks the third of four successive days of public policy statements from Senate Democrats on a wide variety of issues confronting Connecticut and its residents: improved personal safety, strengthening education and Connecticut’s workforce, improving mental and physical health, and lowering costs for consumers.

“Health care coverage and access is a perpetual issue that we will focus on this legislative session,” said Senate President Martin M. Looney (D-New Haven). “Everyone in Connecticut, regardless of income, deserves quality health care and this year we will continue our vigilant work to protect consumers.”

“The pandemic’s impact on our children has been immeasurable. The increase of anxiety, depression, and other mental health issues in Connecticut’s youth is very real and concerning,” said Senate Majority Leader Bob Duff (D-Norwalk). “Senate Democrats will build upon our success over the past two years and continue to work to improve the quality and availability of mental health care services for children in Connecticut.”

Today’s announcement focuses on specific public policy areas, including:

Children’s Health

SB 2: AN ACT CONCERNING THE MENTAL, PHYSICAL AND EMOTIONAL WELLNESS OF CHILDREN, to improve access to mental, physical and emotional health services for children and provide a continuum of care in the delivery of such services.

Amid the demand for children’s mental health services, unfortunately in many cases there is a shortage of staff to administer services, and an ever-growing number of children experiencing mental health issues provoked by stress, anxiety, worry, nervousness, etc. In Connecticut, children are experiencing emotional hardship but are being placed on waitlists to receive the help and care they need. There is a shortage in mental health services. For providers, there are too many patients and not enough funding to treat them.

Children’s mental health concerns have increased since the coronavirus pandemic. Children had to navigate through an unprecedented change in their lives at home, through school, and the lack of activities.

Even before the COVID-19 pandemic, as many as one in six children in the United States experienced mental health disorders. That rate has only increased in recent years; in 2021, the Connecticut Mirror reported that as many as 47 children per day experiencing mental health crises waited in the emergency department of Connecticut Children’s Hospital, which experts said was a significant escalation from prior years; at Yale New Haven Children’s Hospital, the rate of children experiencing mental health crises more than doubled from March to May 2021, and the rate of hours of care provided to children experiencing mental health crises more than doubled as the pandemic progressed.

In 2021, the Comprehensive Needs of Children in the State Task Force was created to take a harder look at the underlying issues of children’s health. In 2022, the task force was extended. In 2022, legislation was passed that worked to support, expand, and create preventative programs to reduce conditions conducive to children developing mental health disorders. Currently, the task force is supposed to study the comprehensive needs of children in the state and the extent to which such needs are being met by educators, community members and local and state agencies. They are set to provide recommendations to meet the demand for infant and toddler care in the state by increasing access to and enrollment in child care centers, group child care homes and family child care homes, and identify resources to assist such centers and homes in meeting such demand. The task force is also responsible for studying the feasibility of adjusting school start times to improve students’ mental and physical well-being.

Senate Bill 2 will:

  • Implement recommendations from last year’s Comprehensive Needs of Children in the State Task Force
  • Expand and improve existing mental and physical health programs
  • Provide additional funding to school-based health centers
  • Ensure all children, no matter what gender, have equitable and safe access to school, support systems, and healthcare
  • Collaborate with state and local agencies to provide access to healthy food in our schools
  • Evaluate pathways for creating sanctuary libraries
  • Provide resources to help appropriately identify and diagnose both children in need of assistance due to the fallout of the pandemic and children in need of increased help and intervention more broadly

Connecticut is not the only state to address children’s mental health. According to the National Academy For State Health Policy, States have pursued a range of approaches including 26 states allocating federal and state funding to increase school-based mental health services, 12 states supporting strategic planning to improve school mental health systems, 24 states providing education and resources for school staff and students, and 10 states guiding school mental health policies.

In Arkansas, legislators did something similar to Connecticut and implemented a strategic planning tool to improve school mental health systems. Lawmakers established a study be done on Mental Health and Behavioral Health and worked to study and develop a report on mental health screening and suicide prevention policies for children in schools.

In Florida, legislators also passed a law similar to Connecticut that helps guide school mental health policies. This law in Florida requires that school health services plans indicate that school and law enforcement staff must attempt to contact a mental health professional for a student in crisis, and that behavioral health providers and school resource officers must attempt to verbally de-escalate crises.

“We often hear about mental health issues of children caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, certainly the instability of the pandemic created issues for some that they did not previously have, but children have needed support for mental health challenges even before COVID-19 closed schools and brought about uncertainty”, said Sen. Ceci Maher (D-Wilton). “As Senate Chair of the Children’s Committee, I am confident we are on the right track with Senate Bill 2, as we look to broaden and expand access for every child that needs it. Nationwide we are seeing states taking children’s mental health more seriously, putting dollars and resources towards helping our young people deal with very serious challenges, such as anxiety and depression, challenges that left uncared for can be catastrophic. Connecticut has always positioned itself as a leader, and I believe we can build off the momentum set forth in previous legislative sessions to pass a good bill that addresses children’s mental health needs appropriately and comprehensively.”

Health Care Protections

SB 6: AN ACT CONCERNING PRESCRIPTION DRUG AFFORDABILITY AND PROTECTIONS FOR CONNECTICUT’S HEALTH CARE CONSUMERS, to provide for more affordable and accessible prescription drugs and allow for increased and more transparent access to health care.

Senate Bill 6 will

  • Join the ArrayRX program to standardize and lower prescription drug costs
  • Make prescription drugs more affordable for all of Connecticut’s residents
  • Improve step therapy practices
  • Create a ‘Gold Card’ for prior authorization. This means insurers cannot require prior authorization for a drug or service when such requests by a doctor have been approved 90+% of the time in the past six months. So if a doctor obtains gold card status for a particular drug or service, prior authorization could not be required for that particular drug or service
  • In 2019, West Virginia adopted a version of the Gold Card Law. In 2021, the Texas legislature passed the Gold Card Law, and adopted a version more favorable to patients and doctors. Connecticut’s proposal will be modeled after Texas. Currently, Vermont has a pilot program for Medicaid and private insurers
  • Shrink the current 15-day deadline for non-urgent care and the 72 hour deadline for urgent care
  • Require staffing on weekends by insurers of prior authorization staff
  • Require 24/7 staffing to respond to prior authorization
  • Require insurance to accept prior authorization requests electronically
  • Ensure insurance coverage of hormones prescribed to women for developmental or other issues is equal to coverage for men
  • Extend the period within which the insured person must notify the health carrier about the birth of a child from 61 days after birth to 121 days after birth or the hospital discharge date

“On top of being very costly, our health care system can be cumbersome, inefficient and flat out fail people in need of, and deserving of, good care,” said Sen. Jorge Cabrera (D-Hamden). “Prior authorization is just another way a system that is supposed to be helping people, instead creates headaches and delays care. We have some of the best health care physicians in our state and prior authorization gets in their way as well. With Senate Bill 6, we are dealing with this problem directly and removing this roadblock as we continue to identify ways to make care more accessible, affordable, and less burdensome. As Senate Chair of the Insurance and Real Estate Committee, I am optimistic we will pass a bill that really helps people and serves as a model for addressing issues caused by prior authorization, as many states across the country look for ways to deal with this problem as well.”

“SB6 is about the Senate Democrats saying to the people, the patients in Connecticut as well as the physicians and all care providers, we hear you,” said Senator Saud Anwar (D-South Windsor). “We will help you continue to provide excellent care and for the people you will receive quality care and we will reduce the various barriers to care. We will help reduce the cost of medicines.”

Prior Authorization

Right now, there is an administrative hurdle created by the health insurance industry to commonly delay access to care for patients and serve as an imposition into the patient/physician relationship and decision-making process. This being, Prior Authorization. Prior authorization processes can harm patient outcomes and create a tremendous obstacle to treatment decisions deemed most appropriate by physicians. Prior authorization requirements (even for services that are ultimately approved) invariably delay care and keep physicians on the phone with health plans, detracting from time that could be spent on patient care. It also contributes to consolidation of providers.

Currently in Connecticut, for emergency medical care, insurers cannot require prior authorization. For urgent medical care, insurers must respond to requests within 48 hours, or 72 hours if such 48 hour period overlaps with part of the weekend. (If it is a substance abuse urgent matter, then the deadline is 24 hours). For non-urgent medical care, insurers must respond within 15 days, with the possibility of a 15-day extension.

Also, in Connecticut under current law, the state has tried to address some specific issues, with specific laws applying to chronic disease, brand medically necessary drugs, how a prior authorization can be repealed by an insurer, etc.

In a 2021 survey of physicians conducted by the American Medical Association (AMA):

  • 93% of respondents reported that prior authorization requirements created delays in accessing necessary care
  • 82% of physicians reported that prior authorization can lead to patients abandoning a recommended course of treatment
  • 34% of respondents reported that prior authorization requirements have led to a serious adverse medical event for a patient with nearly one quarter reporting that prior authorization delays have led to a patient’s hospitalization

In a 2022 survey of physicians conducted by CSMS of its membership:

  • 70% of respondents said they spent at least 9 hours per week dealing with health insurer prior authorizations; 11% spent at least 26 hours and 19% spent more than 35 hours per week
  • 42% of respondents indicated that prior authorizations requests are ultimately approved more than 90% of the time and 30% of respondents indicated that prior authorization requests are ultimately approved between 70 and 90% of the time
  • 63% of respondents submitted at least 11 prior authorization requests per week; 14% submit at least 31 requests per week and 19% greater than 40 prior authorization requests per week on average

Newborn Insurance

SB6 will also expand time to enroll newborns onto insurance, meaning it would extend the period for which a parent would need to provide notice of the birth of a newborn and pay any required premium or subscription fee to continue the newborns coverage.

Currently, certain health insurance policies that cover family members must cover newborns from birth for a set period before requiring payment to continue the coverage. Infants in the Hartford NICU often stay for weeks and months at a time as they receive highly specialized care. In Fiscal Year 2021, Connecticut Children’s treated 850 patients across the NICU; 206 of which stayed greater than 30 days. The average length of stay for these patients was 77 days. As it relates to this bill, CT Children’s has supported an extended period of time to notify insurers as navigating the complexities of enrollment is often the last thing on a parent’s mind when their newborn is receiving care in a NICU.

Modernizing Health Care Services

SB 10: AN ACT MODERNIZING SUPPORT SERVICES FOR VULNERABLE POPULATIONS, to ensure all vulnerable persons in the state receive the maximum amount of Medicaid care and support services available in a modernized delivery system

Connecticut Medicaid, which is administered by the Department of Social Services, is a major health plan that covers over 800,000 Connecticut citizens, which is 22% of the state population. In 2011, Connecticut ended contracts it had with Aetna, UnitedHealthcare’s AmeriChoice division, and a nonprofit insurer, Community Health Network of Connecticut (CHNCT). Connecticut assumed risk of 529,000 people in the state’s Husky Health program, a group that included adults and family members covered by Medicaid and children in the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP). Connecticut adopted a self-insured system similar to what large employers use and contracted with three companies to provide administrative services under administrative services only (ASO) contracts and approve payments for hospitals, physicians and other providers serving Medicaid and CHIP members,

HUSKY provides health coverage to 3.5 million people, meaning 1 in 4 CT residents are covered by Husky. Medicaid offers home care and long-term services, support, and health care coverage to people with limited income and resources. It expands health coverage for low-income adults and individuals and those living with disabilities. CHIP, the Children’s Health Insurance Program, covers uninsured children in families with incomes that are modest but too high to qualify for Medicaid. These two major health coverage programs are a major source of health care coverage that provides medical, behavioral health, dental, pharmacy, long-term services and supports LTSS, and non-emergency medical transportation.

Medicaid covers a wide range of services, within federal guidelines. Examples of mandatory services include inpatient hospital, outpatient hospital, nursing facilities, family planning, medical transportation, and early and periodic screening. Medicaid can also provide optional services, which Connecticut has elected to cover a broad range of them. Examples include, prescription drugs, dental services, hospice, personal care, care management, and home and community-based services.

Healthcare is a human right that too many Connecticut residents struggle to afford. It becomes problematic when a family is trying to afford their every-day life necessities while paying for coverage of prescription drugs they cannot afford. Nearly 200,000 residents lack health insurance altogether. Americans pay much more for pharmaceuticals than other people in other countries. Three in ten Americans report cutting pills in half, skipping doses, or substituting drugs because of the high cost of prescription drugs.

Senate Bill 10 will work to:

  • Increase access to Medicaid to those in need
  • Increase access to essential services for those using Medicaid
  • Provide more services to low-income individuals who require health insurance

“I am excited that under the leadership of Senator Looney and Senator Duff, 2023 is going to be a banner year for health reform,” said Senator Matt Lesser (D-Middletown). “We have a historic opportunity to expand Medicaid and our new CoveredConnecticut Program, helping kids, the poor, the elderly and people with disabilities get access to health care. And after 15 years of treading water we can finally take steps to ensure that specialists and health centers and front line providers are compensated fairly. The benefits of Medicaid don’t just extend to the poor – this is going to be a banner year for prescription drug reform as well, and we can leverage the state’s HUSKY program to bring down hospital and drug prices for everyone, tackling health care monopolies head on and bringing real relief to Connecticut residents.”

“We know our state’s population is aging and that vulnerable people need supports – ones they too often don’t get,” said Senator Martha Marx (D-New London). “Our medical systems have not fully caught up with technology advances and improvements in care delivery efficiency. We can, and should, change that. By maximizing the value of Medicaid and modernizing how we deliver these vital services, we can ensure our older residents remain cared for now and for years to come, meeting needs they have today.”

“Too many of our residents need healthcare services they cannot afford,” said Sen. Jan Hochadel (D-Meriden). “As Chair of the Aging Committee I am dedicated to finding solutions that enable affordable and accessible healthcare for our seniors. Expanding Medicaid services allows for improved quality of care to those over 65 with limited income.”

Senate Democrats Announce “A Healthier CT” Agenda

Senate Democrats Announce “A Healthier CT” Agenda

Addresses issues of children’s mental health care, health care access, and Medicaid access and services

HARTFORD, CT — Today, the Senate Democratic Majority of the Connecticut General Assembly announced the third of its legislative priorities for the 2023 session, A Healthier CT. The proposals address issues of children’s mental health care, health care access, and Medicaid access and services.

Today’s announcement marks the third of four successive days of public policy statements from Senate Democrats on a wide variety of issues confronting Connecticut and its residents: improved personal safety, strengthening education and Connecticut’s workforce, improving mental and physical health, and lowering costs for consumers.

“Health care coverage and access is a perpetual issue that we will focus on this legislative session,” said Senate President Martin M. Looney (D-New Haven). “Everyone in Connecticut, regardless of income, deserves quality health care and this year we will continue our vigilant work to protect consumers.”

“The pandemic’s impact on our children has been immeasurable. The increase of anxiety, depression, and other mental health issues in Connecticut’s youth is very real and concerning,” said Senate Majority Leader Bob Duff (D-Norwalk). “Senate Democrats will build upon our success over the past two years and continue to work to improve the quality and availability of mental health care services for children in Connecticut.”

Today’s announcement focuses on specific public policy areas, including:

Children’s Health

SB 2: AN ACT CONCERNING THE MENTAL, PHYSICAL AND EMOTIONAL WELLNESS OF CHILDREN, to improve access to mental, physical and emotional health services for children and provide a continuum of care in the delivery of such services.

Amid the demand for children’s mental health services, unfortunately in many cases there is a shortage of staff to administer services, and an ever-growing number of children experiencing mental health issues provoked by stress, anxiety, worry, nervousness, etc. In Connecticut, children are experiencing emotional hardship but are being placed on waitlists to receive the help and care they need. There is a shortage in mental health services. For providers, there are too many patients and not enough funding to treat them.

Children’s mental health concerns have increased since the coronavirus pandemic. Children had to navigate through an unprecedented change in their lives at home, through school, and the lack of activities.

Even before the COVID-19 pandemic, as many as one in six children in the United States experienced mental health disorders. That rate has only increased in recent years; in 2021, the Connecticut Mirror reported that as many as 47 children per day experiencing mental health crises waited in the emergency department of Connecticut Children’s Hospital, which experts said was a significant escalation from prior years; at Yale New Haven Children’s Hospital, the rate of children experiencing mental health crises more than doubled from March to May 2021, and the rate of hours of care provided to children experiencing mental health crises more than doubled as the pandemic progressed.

In 2021, the Comprehensive Needs of Children in the State Task Force was created to take a harder look at the underlying issues of children’s health. In 2022, the task force was extended. In 2022, legislation was passed that worked to support, expand, and create preventative programs to reduce conditions conducive to children developing mental health disorders. Currently, the task force is supposed to study the comprehensive needs of children in the state and the extent to which such needs are being met by educators, community members and local and state agencies. They are set to provide recommendations to meet the demand for infant and toddler care in the state by increasing access to and enrollment in child care centers, group child care homes and family child care homes, and identify resources to assist such centers and homes in meeting such demand. The task force is also responsible for studying the feasibility of adjusting school start times to improve students’ mental and physical well-being.

Senate Bill 2 will:

  • Implement recommendations from last year’s Comprehensive Needs of Children in the State Task Force
  • Expand and improve existing mental and physical health programs
  • Provide additional funding to school-based health centers
  • Ensure all children, no matter what gender, have equitable and safe access to school, support systems, and healthcare
  • Collaborate with state and local agencies to provide access to healthy food in our schools
  • Evaluate pathways for creating sanctuary libraries
  • Provide resources to help appropriately identify and diagnose both children in need of assistance due to the fallout of the pandemic and children in need of increased help and intervention more broadly

Connecticut is not the only state to address children’s mental health. According to the National Academy For State Health Policy, States have pursued a range of approaches including 26 states allocating federal and state funding to increase school-based mental health services, 12 states supporting strategic planning to improve school mental health systems, 24 states providing education and resources for school staff and students, and 10 states guiding school mental health policies.

In Arkansas, legislators did something similar to Connecticut and implemented a strategic planning tool to improve school mental health systems. Lawmakers established a study be done on Mental Health and Behavioral Health and worked to study and develop a report on mental health screening and suicide prevention policies for children in schools.

In Florida, legislators also passed a law similar to Connecticut that helps guide school mental health policies. This law in Florida requires that school health services plans indicate that school and law enforcement staff must attempt to contact a mental health professional for a student in crisis, and that behavioral health providers and school resource officers must attempt to verbally de-escalate crises.

“We often hear about mental health issues of children caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, certainly the instability of the pandemic created issues for some that they did not previously have, but children have needed support for mental health challenges even before COVID-19 closed schools and brought about uncertainty”, said Sen. Ceci Maher (D-Wilton). “As Senate Chair of the Children’s Committee, I am confident we are on the right track with Senate Bill 2, as we look to broaden and expand access for every child that needs it. Nationwide we are seeing states taking children’s mental health more seriously, putting dollars and resources towards helping our young people deal with very serious challenges, such as anxiety and depression, challenges that left uncared for can be catastrophic. Connecticut has always positioned itself as a leader, and I believe we can build off the momentum set forth in previous legislative sessions to pass a good bill that addresses children’s mental health needs appropriately and comprehensively.”

Health Care Protections

SB 6: AN ACT CONCERNING PRESCRIPTION DRUG AFFORDABILITY AND PROTECTIONS FOR CONNECTICUT’S HEALTH CARE CONSUMERS, to provide for more affordable and accessible prescription drugs and allow for increased and more transparent access to health care.

Senate Bill 6 will

  • Join the ArrayRX program to standardize and lower prescription drug costs
  • Make prescription drugs more affordable for all of Connecticut’s residents
  • Improve step therapy practices
  • Create a ‘Gold Card’ for prior authorization. This means insurers cannot require prior authorization for a drug or service when such requests by a doctor have been approved 90+% of the time in the past six months. So if a doctor obtains gold card status for a particular drug or service, prior authorization could not be required for that particular drug or service
  • In 2019, West Virginia adopted a version of the Gold Card Law. In 2021, the Texas legislature passed the Gold Card Law, and adopted a version more favorable to patients and doctors. Connecticut’s proposal will be modeled after Texas. Currently, Vermont has a pilot program for Medicaid and private insurers
  • Shrink the current 15-day deadline for non-urgent care and the 72 hour deadline for urgent care
  • Require staffing on weekends by insurers of prior authorization staff
  • Require 24/7 staffing to respond to prior authorization
  • Require insurance to accept prior authorization requests electronically
  • Ensure insurance coverage of hormones prescribed to women for developmental or other issues is equal to coverage for men
  • Extend the period within which the insured person must notify the health carrier about the birth of a child from 61 days after birth to 121 days after birth or the hospital discharge date

“On top of being very costly, our health care system can be cumbersome, inefficient and flat out fail people in need of, and deserving of, good care,” said Sen. Jorge Cabrera (D-Hamden). “Prior authorization is just another way a system that is supposed to be helping people, instead creates headaches and delays care. We have some of the best health care physicians in our state and prior authorization gets in their way as well. With Senate Bill 6, we are dealing with this problem directly and removing this roadblock as we continue to identify ways to make care more accessible, affordable, and less burdensome. As Senate Chair of the Insurance and Real Estate Committee, I am optimistic we will pass a bill that really helps people and serves as a model for addressing issues caused by prior authorization, as many states across the country look for ways to deal with this problem as well.”

“SB6 is about the Senate Democrats saying to the people, the patients in Connecticut as well as the physicians and all care providers, we hear you,” said Senator Saud Anwar (D-South Windsor). “We will help you continue to provide excellent care and for the people you will receive quality care and we will reduce the various barriers to care. We will help reduce the cost of medicines.”

Prior Authorization

Right now, there is an administrative hurdle created by the health insurance industry to commonly delay access to care for patients and serve as an imposition into the patient/physician relationship and decision-making process. This being, Prior Authorization. Prior authorization processes can harm patient outcomes and create a tremendous obstacle to treatment decisions deemed most appropriate by physicians. Prior authorization requirements (even for services that are ultimately approved) invariably delay care and keep physicians on the phone with health plans, detracting from time that could be spent on patient care. It also contributes to consolidation of providers.

Currently in Connecticut, for emergency medical care, insurers cannot require prior authorization. For urgent medical care, insurers must respond to requests within 48 hours, or 72 hours if such 48 hour period overlaps with part of the weekend. (If it is a substance abuse urgent matter, then the deadline is 24 hours). For non-urgent medical care, insurers must respond within 15 days, with the possibility of a 15-day extension.

Also, in Connecticut under current law, the state has tried to address some specific issues, with specific laws applying to chronic disease, brand medically necessary drugs, how a prior authorization can be repealed by an insurer, etc.

In a 2021 survey of physicians conducted by the American Medical Association (AMA):

  • 93% of respondents reported that prior authorization requirements created delays in accessing necessary care
  • 82% of physicians reported that prior authorization can lead to patients abandoning a recommended course of treatment
  • 34% of respondents reported that prior authorization requirements have led to a serious adverse medical event for a patient with nearly one quarter reporting that prior authorization delays have led to a patient’s hospitalization

In a 2022 survey of physicians conducted by CSMS of its membership:

  • 70% of respondents said they spent at least 9 hours per week dealing with health insurer prior authorizations; 11% spent at least 26 hours and 19% spent more than 35 hours per week
  • 42% of respondents indicated that prior authorizations requests are ultimately approved more than 90% of the time and 30% of respondents indicated that prior authorization requests are ultimately approved between 70 and 90% of the time
  • 63% of respondents submitted at least 11 prior authorization requests per week; 14% submit at least 31 requests per week and 19% greater than 40 prior authorization requests per week on average

Newborn Insurance

SB6 will also expand time to enroll newborns onto insurance, meaning it would extend the period for which a parent would need to provide notice of the birth of a newborn and pay any required premium or subscription fee to continue the newborns coverage.

Currently, certain health insurance policies that cover family members must cover newborns from birth for a set period before requiring payment to continue the coverage. Infants in the Hartford NICU often stay for weeks and months at a time as they receive highly specialized care. In Fiscal Year 2021, Connecticut Children’s treated 850 patients across the NICU; 206 of which stayed greater than 30 days. The average length of stay for these patients was 77 days. As it relates to this bill, CT Children’s has supported an extended period of time to notify insurers as navigating the complexities of enrollment is often the last thing on a parent’s mind when their newborn is receiving care in a NICU.

Modernizing Health Care Services

SB 10: AN ACT MODERNIZING SUPPORT SERVICES FOR VULNERABLE POPULATIONS, to ensure all vulnerable persons in the state receive the maximum amount of Medicaid care and support services available in a modernized delivery system

Connecticut Medicaid, which is administered by the Department of Social Services, is a major health plan that covers over 800,000 Connecticut citizens, which is 22% of the state population. In 2011, Connecticut ended contracts it had with Aetna, UnitedHealthcare’s AmeriChoice division, and a nonprofit insurer, Community Health Network of Connecticut (CHNCT). Connecticut assumed risk of 529,000 people in the state’s Husky Health program, a group that included adults and family members covered by Medicaid and children in the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP). Connecticut adopted a self-insured system similar to what large employers use and contracted with three companies to provide administrative services under administrative services only (ASO) contracts and approve payments for hospitals, physicians and other providers serving Medicaid and CHIP members,

HUSKY provides health coverage to 3.5 million people, meaning 1 in 4 CT residents are covered by Husky. Medicaid offers home care and long-term services, support, and health care coverage to people with limited income and resources. It expands health coverage for low-income adults and individuals and those living with disabilities. CHIP, the Children’s Health Insurance Program, covers uninsured children in families with incomes that are modest but too high to qualify for Medicaid. These two major health coverage programs are a major source of health care coverage that provides medical, behavioral health, dental, pharmacy, long-term services and supports LTSS, and non-emergency medical transportation.

Medicaid covers a wide range of services, within federal guidelines. Examples of mandatory services include inpatient hospital, outpatient hospital, nursing facilities, family planning, medical transportation, and early and periodic screening. Medicaid can also provide optional services, which Connecticut has elected to cover a broad range of them. Examples include, prescription drugs, dental services, hospice, personal care, care management, and home and community-based services.

Healthcare is a human right that too many Connecticut residents struggle to afford. It becomes problematic when a family is trying to afford their every-day life necessities while paying for coverage of prescription drugs they cannot afford. Nearly 200,000 residents lack health insurance altogether. Americans pay much more for pharmaceuticals than other people in other countries. Three in ten Americans report cutting pills in half, skipping doses, or substituting drugs because of the high cost of prescription drugs.

Senate Bill 10 will work to:

  • Increase access to Medicaid to those in need
  • Increase access to essential services for those using Medicaid
  • Provide more services to low-income individuals who require health insurance

“I am excited that under the leadership of Senator Looney and Senator Duff, 2023 is going to be a banner year for health reform,” said Senator Matt Lesser (D-Middletown). “We have a historic opportunity to expand Medicaid and our new CoveredConnecticut Program, helping kids, the poor, the elderly and people with disabilities get access to health care. And after 15 years of treading water we can finally take steps to ensure that specialists and health centers and front line providers are compensated fairly. The benefits of Medicaid don’t just extend to the poor – this is going to be a banner year for prescription drug reform as well, and we can leverage the state’s HUSKY program to bring down hospital and drug prices for everyone, tackling health care monopolies head on and bringing real relief to Connecticut residents.”

“We know our state’s population is aging and that vulnerable people need supports – ones they too often don’t get,” said Senator Martha Marx (D-New London). “Our medical systems have not fully caught up with technology advances and improvements in care delivery efficiency. We can, and should, change that. By maximizing the value of Medicaid and modernizing how we deliver these vital services, we can ensure our older residents remain cared for now and for years to come, meeting needs they have today.”

“Too many of our residents need healthcare services they cannot afford,” said Sen. Jan Hochadel (D-Meriden). “As Chair of the Aging Committee I am dedicated to finding solutions that enable affordable and accessible healthcare for our seniors. Expanding Medicaid services allows for improved quality of care to those over 65 with limited income.”

Senate Democrats Announce “A Healthier CT” Agenda

Senate Democrats Announce “A Healthier CT” Agenda

Addresses issues of children’s mental health care, health care access, and Medicaid access and services

HARTFORD, CT — Today, the Senate Democratic Majority of the Connecticut General Assembly announced the third of its legislative priorities for the 2023 session, A Healthier CT. The proposals address issues of children’s mental health care, health care access, and Medicaid access and services.

Today’s announcement marks the third of four successive days of public policy statements from Senate Democrats on a wide variety of issues confronting Connecticut and its residents: improved personal safety, strengthening education and Connecticut’s workforce, improving mental and physical health, and lowering costs for consumers.

“Health care coverage and access is a perpetual issue that we will focus on this legislative session,” said Senate President Martin M. Looney (D-New Haven). “Everyone in Connecticut, regardless of income, deserves quality health care and this year we will continue our vigilant work to protect consumers.”

“The pandemic’s impact on our children has been immeasurable. The increase of anxiety, depression, and other mental health issues in Connecticut’s youth is very real and concerning,” said Senate Majority Leader Bob Duff (D-Norwalk). “Senate Democrats will build upon our success over the past two years and continue to work to improve the quality and availability of mental health care services for children in Connecticut.”

Today’s announcement focuses on specific public policy areas, including:

Children’s Health

SB 2: AN ACT CONCERNING THE MENTAL, PHYSICAL AND EMOTIONAL WELLNESS OF CHILDREN, to improve access to mental, physical and emotional health services for children and provide a continuum of care in the delivery of such services.

Amid the demand for children’s mental health services, unfortunately in many cases there is a shortage of staff to administer services, and an ever-growing number of children experiencing mental health issues provoked by stress, anxiety, worry, nervousness, etc. In Connecticut, children are experiencing emotional hardship but are being placed on waitlists to receive the help and care they need. There is a shortage in mental health services. For providers, there are too many patients and not enough funding to treat them.

Children’s mental health concerns have increased since the coronavirus pandemic. Children had to navigate through an unprecedented change in their lives at home, through school, and the lack of activities.

Even before the COVID-19 pandemic, as many as one in six children in the United States experienced mental health disorders. That rate has only increased in recent years; in 2021, the Connecticut Mirror reported that as many as 47 children per day experiencing mental health crises waited in the emergency department of Connecticut Children’s Hospital, which experts said was a significant escalation from prior years; at Yale New Haven Children’s Hospital, the rate of children experiencing mental health crises more than doubled from March to May 2021, and the rate of hours of care provided to children experiencing mental health crises more than doubled as the pandemic progressed.

In 2021, the Comprehensive Needs of Children in the State Task Force was created to take a harder look at the underlying issues of children’s health. In 2022, the task force was extended. In 2022, legislation was passed that worked to support, expand, and create preventative programs to reduce conditions conducive to children developing mental health disorders. Currently, the task force is supposed to study the comprehensive needs of children in the state and the extent to which such needs are being met by educators, community members and local and state agencies. They are set to provide recommendations to meet the demand for infant and toddler care in the state by increasing access to and enrollment in child care centers, group child care homes and family child care homes, and identify resources to assist such centers and homes in meeting such demand. The task force is also responsible for studying the feasibility of adjusting school start times to improve students’ mental and physical well-being.

Senate Bill 2 will:

  • Implement recommendations from last year’s Comprehensive Needs of Children in the State Task Force
  • Expand and improve existing mental and physical health programs
  • Provide additional funding to school-based health centers
  • Ensure all children, no matter what gender, have equitable and safe access to school, support systems, and healthcare
  • Collaborate with state and local agencies to provide access to healthy food in our schools
  • Evaluate pathways for creating sanctuary libraries
  • Provide resources to help appropriately identify and diagnose both children in need of assistance due to the fallout of the pandemic and children in need of increased help and intervention more broadly

Connecticut is not the only state to address children’s mental health. According to the National Academy For State Health Policy, States have pursued a range of approaches including 26 states allocating federal and state funding to increase school-based mental health services, 12 states supporting strategic planning to improve school mental health systems, 24 states providing education and resources for school staff and students, and 10 states guiding school mental health policies.

In Arkansas, legislators did something similar to Connecticut and implemented a strategic planning tool to improve school mental health systems. Lawmakers established a study be done on Mental Health and Behavioral Health and worked to study and develop a report on mental health screening and suicide prevention policies for children in schools.

In Florida, legislators also passed a law similar to Connecticut that helps guide school mental health policies. This law in Florida requires that school health services plans indicate that school and law enforcement staff must attempt to contact a mental health professional for a student in crisis, and that behavioral health providers and school resource officers must attempt to verbally de-escalate crises.

“We often hear about mental health issues of children caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, certainly the instability of the pandemic created issues for some that they did not previously have, but children have needed support for mental health challenges even before COVID-19 closed schools and brought about uncertainty”, said Sen. Ceci Maher (D-Wilton). “As Senate Chair of the Children’s Committee, I am confident we are on the right track with Senate Bill 2, as we look to broaden and expand access for every child that needs it. Nationwide we are seeing states taking children’s mental health more seriously, putting dollars and resources towards helping our young people deal with very serious challenges, such as anxiety and depression, challenges that left uncared for can be catastrophic. Connecticut has always positioned itself as a leader, and I believe we can build off the momentum set forth in previous legislative sessions to pass a good bill that addresses children’s mental health needs appropriately and comprehensively.”

Health Care Protections

SB 6: AN ACT CONCERNING PRESCRIPTION DRUG AFFORDABILITY AND PROTECTIONS FOR CONNECTICUT’S HEALTH CARE CONSUMERS, to provide for more affordable and accessible prescription drugs and allow for increased and more transparent access to health care.

Senate Bill 6 will

  • Join the ArrayRX program to standardize and lower prescription drug costs
  • Make prescription drugs more affordable for all of Connecticut’s residents
  • Improve step therapy practices
  • Create a ‘Gold Card’ for prior authorization. This means insurers cannot require prior authorization for a drug or service when such requests by a doctor have been approved 90+% of the time in the past six months. So if a doctor obtains gold card status for a particular drug or service, prior authorization could not be required for that particular drug or service
  • In 2019, West Virginia adopted a version of the Gold Card Law. In 2021, the Texas legislature passed the Gold Card Law, and adopted a version more favorable to patients and doctors. Connecticut’s proposal will be modeled after Texas. Currently, Vermont has a pilot program for Medicaid and private insurers
  • Shrink the current 15-day deadline for non-urgent care and the 72 hour deadline for urgent care
  • Require staffing on weekends by insurers of prior authorization staff
  • Require 24/7 staffing to respond to prior authorization
  • Require insurance to accept prior authorization requests electronically
  • Ensure insurance coverage of hormones prescribed to women for developmental or other issues is equal to coverage for men
  • Extend the period within which the insured person must notify the health carrier about the birth of a child from 61 days after birth to 121 days after birth or the hospital discharge date

“On top of being very costly, our health care system can be cumbersome, inefficient and flat out fail people in need of, and deserving of, good care,” said Sen. Jorge Cabrera (D-Hamden). “Prior authorization is just another way a system that is supposed to be helping people, instead creates headaches and delays care. We have some of the best health care physicians in our state and prior authorization gets in their way as well. With Senate Bill 6, we are dealing with this problem directly and removing this roadblock as we continue to identify ways to make care more accessible, affordable, and less burdensome. As Senate Chair of the Insurance and Real Estate Committee, I am optimistic we will pass a bill that really helps people and serves as a model for addressing issues caused by prior authorization, as many states across the country look for ways to deal with this problem as well.”

“SB6 is about the Senate Democrats saying to the people, the patients in Connecticut as well as the physicians and all care providers, we hear you,” said Senator Saud Anwar (D-South Windsor). “We will help you continue to provide excellent care and for the people you will receive quality care and we will reduce the various barriers to care. We will help reduce the cost of medicines.”

Prior Authorization

Right now, there is an administrative hurdle created by the health insurance industry to commonly delay access to care for patients and serve as an imposition into the patient/physician relationship and decision-making process. This being, Prior Authorization. Prior authorization processes can harm patient outcomes and create a tremendous obstacle to treatment decisions deemed most appropriate by physicians. Prior authorization requirements (even for services that are ultimately approved) invariably delay care and keep physicians on the phone with health plans, detracting from time that could be spent on patient care. It also contributes to consolidation of providers.

Currently in Connecticut, for emergency medical care, insurers cannot require prior authorization. For urgent medical care, insurers must respond to requests within 48 hours, or 72 hours if such 48 hour period overlaps with part of the weekend. (If it is a substance abuse urgent matter, then the deadline is 24 hours). For non-urgent medical care, insurers must respond within 15 days, with the possibility of a 15-day extension.

Also, in Connecticut under current law, the state has tried to address some specific issues, with specific laws applying to chronic disease, brand medically necessary drugs, how a prior authorization can be repealed by an insurer, etc.

In a 2021 survey of physicians conducted by the American Medical Association (AMA):

  • 93% of respondents reported that prior authorization requirements created delays in accessing necessary care
  • 82% of physicians reported that prior authorization can lead to patients abandoning a recommended course of treatment
  • 34% of respondents reported that prior authorization requirements have led to a serious adverse medical event for a patient with nearly one quarter reporting that prior authorization delays have led to a patient’s hospitalization

In a 2022 survey of physicians conducted by CSMS of its membership:

  • 70% of respondents said they spent at least 9 hours per week dealing with health insurer prior authorizations; 11% spent at least 26 hours and 19% spent more than 35 hours per week
  • 42% of respondents indicated that prior authorizations requests are ultimately approved more than 90% of the time and 30% of respondents indicated that prior authorization requests are ultimately approved between 70 and 90% of the time
  • 63% of respondents submitted at least 11 prior authorization requests per week; 14% submit at least 31 requests per week and 19% greater than 40 prior authorization requests per week on average

Newborn Insurance

SB6 will also expand time to enroll newborns onto insurance, meaning it would extend the period for which a parent would need to provide notice of the birth of a newborn and pay any required premium or subscription fee to continue the newborns coverage.

Currently, certain health insurance policies that cover family members must cover newborns from birth for a set period before requiring payment to continue the coverage. Infants in the Hartford NICU often stay for weeks and months at a time as they receive highly specialized care. In Fiscal Year 2021, Connecticut Children’s treated 850 patients across the NICU; 206 of which stayed greater than 30 days. The average length of stay for these patients was 77 days. As it relates to this bill, CT Children’s has supported an extended period of time to notify insurers as navigating the complexities of enrollment is often the last thing on a parent’s mind when their newborn is receiving care in a NICU.

Modernizing Health Care Services

SB 10: AN ACT MODERNIZING SUPPORT SERVICES FOR VULNERABLE POPULATIONS, to ensure all vulnerable persons in the state receive the maximum amount of Medicaid care and support services available in a modernized delivery system

Connecticut Medicaid, which is administered by the Department of Social Services, is a major health plan that covers over 800,000 Connecticut citizens, which is 22% of the state population. In 2011, Connecticut ended contracts it had with Aetna, UnitedHealthcare’s AmeriChoice division, and a nonprofit insurer, Community Health Network of Connecticut (CHNCT). Connecticut assumed risk of 529,000 people in the state’s Husky Health program, a group that included adults and family members covered by Medicaid and children in the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP). Connecticut adopted a self-insured system similar to what large employers use and contracted with three companies to provide administrative services under administrative services only (ASO) contracts and approve payments for hospitals, physicians and other providers serving Medicaid and CHIP members,

HUSKY provides health coverage to 3.5 million people, meaning 1 in 4 CT residents are covered by Husky. Medicaid offers home care and long-term services, support, and health care coverage to people with limited income and resources. It expands health coverage for low-income adults and individuals and those living with disabilities. CHIP, the Children’s Health Insurance Program, covers uninsured children in families with incomes that are modest but too high to qualify for Medicaid. These two major health coverage programs are a major source of health care coverage that provides medical, behavioral health, dental, pharmacy, long-term services and supports LTSS, and non-emergency medical transportation.

Medicaid covers a wide range of services, within federal guidelines. Examples of mandatory services include inpatient hospital, outpatient hospital, nursing facilities, family planning, medical transportation, and early and periodic screening. Medicaid can also provide optional services, which Connecticut has elected to cover a broad range of them. Examples include, prescription drugs, dental services, hospice, personal care, care management, and home and community-based services.

Healthcare is a human right that too many Connecticut residents struggle to afford. It becomes problematic when a family is trying to afford their every-day life necessities while paying for coverage of prescription drugs they cannot afford. Nearly 200,000 residents lack health insurance altogether. Americans pay much more for pharmaceuticals than other people in other countries. Three in ten Americans report cutting pills in half, skipping doses, or substituting drugs because of the high cost of prescription drugs.

Senate Bill 10 will work to:

  • Increase access to Medicaid to those in need
  • Increase access to essential services for those using Medicaid
  • Provide more services to low-income individuals who require health insurance

“I am excited that under the leadership of Senator Looney and Senator Duff, 2023 is going to be a banner year for health reform,” said Senator Matt Lesser (D-Middletown). “We have a historic opportunity to expand Medicaid and our new CoveredConnecticut Program, helping kids, the poor, the elderly and people with disabilities get access to health care. And after 15 years of treading water we can finally take steps to ensure that specialists and health centers and front line providers are compensated fairly. The benefits of Medicaid don’t just extend to the poor – this is going to be a banner year for prescription drug reform as well, and we can leverage the state’s HUSKY program to bring down hospital and drug prices for everyone, tackling health care monopolies head on and bringing real relief to Connecticut residents.”

“We know our state’s population is aging and that vulnerable people need supports – ones they too often don’t get,” said Senator Martha Marx (D-New London). “Our medical systems have not fully caught up with technology advances and improvements in care delivery efficiency. We can, and should, change that. By maximizing the value of Medicaid and modernizing how we deliver these vital services, we can ensure our older residents remain cared for now and for years to come, meeting needs they have today.”

“Too many of our residents need healthcare services they cannot afford,” said Sen. Jan Hochadel (D-Meriden). “As Chair of the Aging Committee I am dedicated to finding solutions that enable affordable and accessible healthcare for our seniors. Expanding Medicaid services allows for improved quality of care to those over 65 with limited income.”

Senate Democrats Announce “A Healthier CT” Agenda

Senate Democrats Announce “A Healthier CT” Agenda

Addresses issues of children’s mental health care, health care access, and Medicaid access and services

HARTFORD, CT — Today, the Senate Democratic Majority of the Connecticut General Assembly announced the third of its legislative priorities for the 2023 session, A Healthier CT. The proposals address issues of children’s mental health care, health care access, and Medicaid access and services.

Today’s announcement marks the third of four successive days of public policy statements from Senate Democrats on a wide variety of issues confronting Connecticut and its residents: improved personal safety, strengthening education and Connecticut’s workforce, improving mental and physical health, and lowering costs for consumers.

“Health care coverage and access is a perpetual issue that we will focus on this legislative session,” said Senate President Martin M. Looney (D-New Haven). “Everyone in Connecticut, regardless of income, deserves quality health care and this year we will continue our vigilant work to protect consumers.”

“The pandemic’s impact on our children has been immeasurable. The increase of anxiety, depression, and other mental health issues in Connecticut’s youth is very real and concerning,” said Senate Majority Leader Bob Duff (D-Norwalk). “Senate Democrats will build upon our success over the past two years and continue to work to improve the quality and availability of mental health care services for children in Connecticut.”

Today’s announcement focuses on specific public policy areas, including:

Children’s Health

SB 2: AN ACT CONCERNING THE MENTAL, PHYSICAL AND EMOTIONAL WELLNESS OF CHILDREN, to improve access to mental, physical and emotional health services for children and provide a continuum of care in the delivery of such services.

Amid the demand for children’s mental health services, unfortunately in many cases there is a shortage of staff to administer services, and an ever-growing number of children experiencing mental health issues provoked by stress, anxiety, worry, nervousness, etc. In Connecticut, children are experiencing emotional hardship but are being placed on waitlists to receive the help and care they need. There is a shortage in mental health services. For providers, there are too many patients and not enough funding to treat them.

Children’s mental health concerns have increased since the coronavirus pandemic. Children had to navigate through an unprecedented change in their lives at home, through school, and the lack of activities.

Even before the COVID-19 pandemic, as many as one in six children in the United States experienced mental health disorders. That rate has only increased in recent years; in 2021, the Connecticut Mirror reported that as many as 47 children per day experiencing mental health crises waited in the emergency department of Connecticut Children’s Hospital, which experts said was a significant escalation from prior years; at Yale New Haven Children’s Hospital, the rate of children experiencing mental health crises more than doubled from March to May 2021, and the rate of hours of care provided to children experiencing mental health crises more than doubled as the pandemic progressed.

In 2021, the Comprehensive Needs of Children in the State Task Force was created to take a harder look at the underlying issues of children’s health. In 2022, the task force was extended. In 2022, legislation was passed that worked to support, expand, and create preventative programs to reduce conditions conducive to children developing mental health disorders. Currently, the task force is supposed to study the comprehensive needs of children in the state and the extent to which such needs are being met by educators, community members and local and state agencies. They are set to provide recommendations to meet the demand for infant and toddler care in the state by increasing access to and enrollment in child care centers, group child care homes and family child care homes, and identify resources to assist such centers and homes in meeting such demand. The task force is also responsible for studying the feasibility of adjusting school start times to improve students’ mental and physical well-being.

Senate Bill 2 will:

  • Implement recommendations from last year’s Comprehensive Needs of Children in the State Task Force
  • Expand and improve existing mental and physical health programs
  • Provide additional funding to school-based health centers
  • Ensure all children, no matter what gender, have equitable and safe access to school, support systems, and healthcare
  • Collaborate with state and local agencies to provide access to healthy food in our schools
  • Evaluate pathways for creating sanctuary libraries
  • Provide resources to help appropriately identify and diagnose both children in need of assistance due to the fallout of the pandemic and children in need of increased help and intervention more broadly

Connecticut is not the only state to address children’s mental health. According to the National Academy For State Health Policy, States have pursued a range of approaches including 26 states allocating federal and state funding to increase school-based mental health services, 12 states supporting strategic planning to improve school mental health systems, 24 states providing education and resources for school staff and students, and 10 states guiding school mental health policies.

In Arkansas, legislators did something similar to Connecticut and implemented a strategic planning tool to improve school mental health systems. Lawmakers established a study be done on Mental Health and Behavioral Health and worked to study and develop a report on mental health screening and suicide prevention policies for children in schools.

In Florida, legislators also passed a law similar to Connecticut that helps guide school mental health policies. This law in Florida requires that school health services plans indicate that school and law enforcement staff must attempt to contact a mental health professional for a student in crisis, and that behavioral health providers and school resource officers must attempt to verbally de-escalate crises.

“We often hear about mental health issues of children caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, certainly the instability of the pandemic created issues for some that they did not previously have, but children have needed support for mental health challenges even before COVID-19 closed schools and brought about uncertainty”, said Sen. Ceci Maher (D-Wilton). “As Senate Chair of the Children’s Committee, I am confident we are on the right track with Senate Bill 2, as we look to broaden and expand access for every child that needs it. Nationwide we are seeing states taking children’s mental health more seriously, putting dollars and resources towards helping our young people deal with very serious challenges, such as anxiety and depression, challenges that left uncared for can be catastrophic. Connecticut has always positioned itself as a leader, and I believe we can build off the momentum set forth in previous legislative sessions to pass a good bill that addresses children’s mental health needs appropriately and comprehensively.”

Health Care Protections

SB 6: AN ACT CONCERNING PRESCRIPTION DRUG AFFORDABILITY AND PROTECTIONS FOR CONNECTICUT’S HEALTH CARE CONSUMERS, to provide for more affordable and accessible prescription drugs and allow for increased and more transparent access to health care.

Senate Bill 6 will

  • Join the ArrayRX program to standardize and lower prescription drug costs
  • Make prescription drugs more affordable for all of Connecticut’s residents
  • Improve step therapy practices
  • Create a ‘Gold Card’ for prior authorization. This means insurers cannot require prior authorization for a drug or service when such requests by a doctor have been approved 90+% of the time in the past six months. So if a doctor obtains gold card status for a particular drug or service, prior authorization could not be required for that particular drug or service
  • In 2019, West Virginia adopted a version of the Gold Card Law. In 2021, the Texas legislature passed the Gold Card Law, and adopted a version more favorable to patients and doctors. Connecticut’s proposal will be modeled after Texas. Currently, Vermont has a pilot program for Medicaid and private insurers
  • Shrink the current 15-day deadline for non-urgent care and the 72 hour deadline for urgent care
  • Require staffing on weekends by insurers of prior authorization staff
  • Require 24/7 staffing to respond to prior authorization
  • Require insurance to accept prior authorization requests electronically
  • Ensure insurance coverage of hormones prescribed to women for developmental or other issues is equal to coverage for men
  • Extend the period within which the insured person must notify the health carrier about the birth of a child from 61 days after birth to 121 days after birth or the hospital discharge date

“On top of being very costly, our health care system can be cumbersome, inefficient and flat out fail people in need of, and deserving of, good care,” said Sen. Jorge Cabrera (D-Hamden). “Prior authorization is just another way a system that is supposed to be helping people, instead creates headaches and delays care. We have some of the best health care physicians in our state and prior authorization gets in their way as well. With Senate Bill 6, we are dealing with this problem directly and removing this roadblock as we continue to identify ways to make care more accessible, affordable, and less burdensome. As Senate Chair of the Insurance and Real Estate Committee, I am optimistic we will pass a bill that really helps people and serves as a model for addressing issues caused by prior authorization, as many states across the country look for ways to deal with this problem as well.”

“SB6 is about the Senate Democrats saying to the people, the patients in Connecticut as well as the physicians and all care providers, we hear you,” said Senator Saud Anwar (D-South Windsor). “We will help you continue to provide excellent care and for the people you will receive quality care and we will reduce the various barriers to care. We will help reduce the cost of medicines.”

Prior Authorization

Right now, there is an administrative hurdle created by the health insurance industry to commonly delay access to care for patients and serve as an imposition into the patient/physician relationship and decision-making process. This being, Prior Authorization. Prior authorization processes can harm patient outcomes and create a tremendous obstacle to treatment decisions deemed most appropriate by physicians. Prior authorization requirements (even for services that are ultimately approved) invariably delay care and keep physicians on the phone with health plans, detracting from time that could be spent on patient care. It also contributes to consolidation of providers.

Currently in Connecticut, for emergency medical care, insurers cannot require prior authorization. For urgent medical care, insurers must respond to requests within 48 hours, or 72 hours if such 48 hour period overlaps with part of the weekend. (If it is a substance abuse urgent matter, then the deadline is 24 hours). For non-urgent medical care, insurers must respond within 15 days, with the possibility of a 15-day extension.

Also, in Connecticut under current law, the state has tried to address some specific issues, with specific laws applying to chronic disease, brand medically necessary drugs, how a prior authorization can be repealed by an insurer, etc.

In a 2021 survey of physicians conducted by the American Medical Association (AMA):

  • 93% of respondents reported that prior authorization requirements created delays in accessing necessary care
  • 82% of physicians reported that prior authorization can lead to patients abandoning a recommended course of treatment
  • 34% of respondents reported that prior authorization requirements have led to a serious adverse medical event for a patient with nearly one quarter reporting that prior authorization delays have led to a patient’s hospitalization

In a 2022 survey of physicians conducted by CSMS of its membership:

  • 70% of respondents said they spent at least 9 hours per week dealing with health insurer prior authorizations; 11% spent at least 26 hours and 19% spent more than 35 hours per week
  • 42% of respondents indicated that prior authorizations requests are ultimately approved more than 90% of the time and 30% of respondents indicated that prior authorization requests are ultimately approved between 70 and 90% of the time
  • 63% of respondents submitted at least 11 prior authorization requests per week; 14% submit at least 31 requests per week and 19% greater than 40 prior authorization requests per week on average

Newborn Insurance

SB6 will also expand time to enroll newborns onto insurance, meaning it would extend the period for which a parent would need to provide notice of the birth of a newborn and pay any required premium or subscription fee to continue the newborns coverage.

Currently, certain health insurance policies that cover family members must cover newborns from birth for a set period before requiring payment to continue the coverage. Infants in the Hartford NICU often stay for weeks and months at a time as they receive highly specialized care. In Fiscal Year 2021, Connecticut Children’s treated 850 patients across the NICU; 206 of which stayed greater than 30 days. The average length of stay for these patients was 77 days. As it relates to this bill, CT Children’s has supported an extended period of time to notify insurers as navigating the complexities of enrollment is often the last thing on a parent’s mind when their newborn is receiving care in a NICU.

Modernizing Health Care Services

SB 10: AN ACT MODERNIZING SUPPORT SERVICES FOR VULNERABLE POPULATIONS, to ensure all vulnerable persons in the state receive the maximum amount of Medicaid care and support services available in a modernized delivery system

Connecticut Medicaid, which is administered by the Department of Social Services, is a major health plan that covers over 800,000 Connecticut citizens, which is 22% of the state population. In 2011, Connecticut ended contracts it had with Aetna, UnitedHealthcare’s AmeriChoice division, and a nonprofit insurer, Community Health Network of Connecticut (CHNCT). Connecticut assumed risk of 529,000 people in the state’s Husky Health program, a group that included adults and family members covered by Medicaid and children in the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP). Connecticut adopted a self-insured system similar to what large employers use and contracted with three companies to provide administrative services under administrative services only (ASO) contracts and approve payments for hospitals, physicians and other providers serving Medicaid and CHIP members,

HUSKY provides health coverage to 3.5 million people, meaning 1 in 4 CT residents are covered by Husky. Medicaid offers home care and long-term services, support, and health care coverage to people with limited income and resources. It expands health coverage for low-income adults and individuals and those living with disabilities. CHIP, the Children’s Health Insurance Program, covers uninsured children in families with incomes that are modest but too high to qualify for Medicaid. These two major health coverage programs are a major source of health care coverage that provides medical, behavioral health, dental, pharmacy, long-term services and supports LTSS, and non-emergency medical transportation.

Medicaid covers a wide range of services, within federal guidelines. Examples of mandatory services include inpatient hospital, outpatient hospital, nursing facilities, family planning, medical transportation, and early and periodic screening. Medicaid can also provide optional services, which Connecticut has elected to cover a broad range of them. Examples include, prescription drugs, dental services, hospice, personal care, care management, and home and community-based services.

Healthcare is a human right that too many Connecticut residents struggle to afford. It becomes problematic when a family is trying to afford their every-day life necessities while paying for coverage of prescription drugs they cannot afford. Nearly 200,000 residents lack health insurance altogether. Americans pay much more for pharmaceuticals than other people in other countries. Three in ten Americans report cutting pills in half, skipping doses, or substituting drugs because of the high cost of prescription drugs.

Senate Bill 10 will work to:

  • Increase access to Medicaid to those in need
  • Increase access to essential services for those using Medicaid
  • Provide more services to low-income individuals who require health insurance

“I am excited that under the leadership of Senator Looney and Senator Duff, 2023 is going to be a banner year for health reform,” said Senator Matt Lesser (D-Middletown). “We have a historic opportunity to expand Medicaid and our new CoveredConnecticut Program, helping kids, the poor, the elderly and people with disabilities get access to health care. And after 15 years of treading water we can finally take steps to ensure that specialists and health centers and front line providers are compensated fairly. The benefits of Medicaid don’t just extend to the poor – this is going to be a banner year for prescription drug reform as well, and we can leverage the state’s HUSKY program to bring down hospital and drug prices for everyone, tackling health care monopolies head on and bringing real relief to Connecticut residents.”

“We know our state’s population is aging and that vulnerable people need supports – ones they too often don’t get,” said Senator Martha Marx (D-New London). “Our medical systems have not fully caught up with technology advances and improvements in care delivery efficiency. We can, and should, change that. By maximizing the value of Medicaid and modernizing how we deliver these vital services, we can ensure our older residents remain cared for now and for years to come, meeting needs they have today.”

“Too many of our residents need healthcare services they cannot afford,” said Sen. Jan Hochadel (D-Meriden). “As Chair of the Aging Committee I am dedicated to finding solutions that enable affordable and accessible healthcare for our seniors. Expanding Medicaid services allows for improved quality of care to those over 65 with limited income.”