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SB 1412

Domestic and foreign corporations; corporations transacting business in Commonwealth, etc.

2025 Regular Session Introduced by Ryan McDougle and 1 co-sponsor

Florida SB 1412 modernizes home health by granting multi‑agency administrator flexibility and replacing strict performance metrics with adaptable AHCA standards focused on patient

Acts of Assembly Chapter text (CHAP0345)
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Bill Summary · SB 1412

Note on source materials
- The packet you provided included multiple unrelated bills labeled “SB 1412” from different states and subjects (e.g., municipal administrative adjudication, housing, Arizona family‑offense statute). This summary focuses on the Florida Senate bill identified in the committee reports and analyses (SB 1412, introduced Feb. 19, 2025, by Senator Calatayud) concerning Home Health Agencies (Home Health Care Services). If you intended a different SB 1412, tell me which jurisdiction/version and I will summarize that one.

Summary: SB 1412 (Florida) — Home Health Care Services
Purpose and intent
- Modernize and increase operational flexibility for licensed home health agencies (HHAs) in Florida and revise the state’s Excellence in Home Health Program so standards apply across different agency types, payors, and patient populations.

Effective date and fiscal note
- Effective July 1, 2025.
- Committee fiscal analyses report no state fiscal impact.

Key provisions and statutory changes
1. Administrator authority (amends s. 400.476, F.S.)
- Removes the current geographic restriction on how many HHAs a single administrator may manage.
- Allows one HHA administrator to manage multiple HHAs that share identical controlling interests regardless of physical location (current law limited management to up to five HHAs within a single AHCA geographic service area or contiguous counties).

  1. Direct‑employee visit requirement (amends s. 400.487, F.S.)

    • Eliminates the statutory requirement that initial admission visits, all service evaluation visits, and discharge visits be performed by a direct employee of the admitting HHA when nursing services are ordered.
    • Retains a requirement that nursing services provided by direct employees be monitored and managed by the admitting HHA.
    • (Note: “direct employee” remains defined under s. 400.462(10) — employees for whom the agency or its payroll contractor pays withholding taxes.)
  2. Excellence in Home Health Program (amends s. 400.52, F.S.)

    • Replaces the program’s prior metric‑heavy eligibility and ranking requirements with a directive that the Agency for Health Care Administration (AHCA) adopt standards adaptable to all HHA types regardless of payor, patient population, or service designation.
    • Minimum domains AHCA must address include:
      • Patient/client satisfaction (communication and willingness to recommend).
      • Service excellence (for skilled providers: clinical outcomes such as reduced adverse events, unplanned emergency care, hospitalizations; for non‑skilled providers: support for activities of daily living, personal care quality, client well‑being).
      • Workforce stability and development (employee satisfaction, retention, training appropriate to services).
      • Innovation in care delivery (use of technologies, caregiver education programs, tailored approaches).
    • The bill replaces prior requirements that included specific percentile benchmark metrics and some eligibility criteria (e.g., 24‑month operation and no serious deficiencies) with AHCA‑adopted, adaptable standards (the bill text truncates full detail).

Who is affected
- Home health agencies (currently about 2,646 licensed in Florida), their administrators, direct employees and contractors, and patients receiving home health services.
- AHCA (rulemaking responsibility to adopt new, adaptable program standards).
- Potentially, payors and referral sources who evaluate agency quality under the revised Excellence program.

Potential impacts and considerations
- Increased administrative flexibility: eases corporate/management structuring for multi‑agency operators by removing location limits on administrator oversight (could facilitate centralized management across regions).
- Workforce and care‑delivery changes: allowing non‑direct employees to perform certain required visits may expand use of contractors/management companies but retains admitting agency oversight responsibilities.
- Program modernization: reworking Excellence in Home Health aims to make recognition meaningful across diverse agency models (skilled vs. non‑skilled), but replaces detailed statewide percentile benchmarks with agency‑adopted standards — the effectiveness will depend on AHCA’s implementing rules.
- Oversight and continuity of care: stakeholders may weigh increased operational flexibility against concerns about continuity, accountability, and quality of initial and discharge care if those visits are provided by non‑employees.

Legislative status (from provided materials)
- Introduced Feb. 19, 2025 (Sen. Calatayud).
- Favorable committee reports (Health Policy; Appropriations — Health & Human Services; Rules).
- Effective July 1, 2025 (per bill text).

If you want: I can
- Extract the exact amended statutory text (s. 400.476, 400.487, 400.52) and present side‑by‑side “before vs. after” language;
- Draft a short one‑page explainer for HHAs describing compliance steps and likely rulemaking timelines by AHCA.

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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