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Bill

Bill

LC 4036

Generally revise hospital reporting laws

2025 Regular Session

Overhauls hospital reporting laws, redefining required data, submission timelines, and privacy rules to boost transparency and accountability.

(LC) Draft Died in Process
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Bill Summary · LC 4036

Summary of LC 4036 — Generally revise hospital reporting laws

Quick overview

  • Bill number: LC 4036
  • Title: Generally revise hospital reporting laws
  • Subject: Health; Health Care Services; Safety
  • Classification: bill
  • Introduced: December 15, 2024
  • Current status: Draft died in process (LC)
  • Legislative actions:
    • 2024-12-15: Drafter Assigned
    • 2025-05-22: Draft Died in Process

Note: The official text of the bill is not provided here, so this summary focuses on the available metadata and the general implications of a title that proposes broad revisions to hospital reporting requirements.

What the bill appears to aim to do

  • The bill title indicates an intent to "generally revise" hospital reporting laws. While specific provisions are not provided, such language typically signals a comprehensive update to how hospitals report data to state authorities, which could cover:
    • Types of data hospitals must submit (e.g., patient safety events, infection rates, adverse outcomes, staffing metrics, financial disclosures, patient experience measures).
    • Methods and frequency of reporting.
    • Data submission formats and electronic reporting standards.
    • Data privacy, security, and access controls.
    • Enforcement mechanisms, penalties for noncompliance, and timelines.
    • Public reporting or dashboards to increase transparency.

Due to the absence of the bill text, the above areas are inferred from the title and common features of hospital reporting reforms, not a statement of enacted provisions.

Who is affected

  • Hospitals and health systems that would be required to collect, compile, and transmit specified data.
  • State or local health agencies responsible for receiving, validating, and publishing reporting data.
  • Healthcare providers and administrators who oversee data collection and reporting workflows.
  • Public stakeholders (patients, researchers, policymakers) who rely on hospital reporting data for transparency and quality assessment.

Procedural and timeline considerations

  • Introduced: Dec 15, 2024 (Draft assigned to drafter on that date)
  • Status progression: Draft died in process as of May 22, 2025. This indicates the bill did not advance to committee or floor consideration during the session.
  • Implication of status: With the bill designated as “died in process,” it is unlikely to become law in its current form unless reintroduced in a future session. If reintroduced, it would restart the usual legislative process, including drafting, committee review, and potential amendments.

Potential impact if enacted (hypothetical)

  • A more standardized or expanded set of hospital reporting requirements.
  • Increased administrative burden on hospitals to collect and submit data, possibly improving transparency and quality metrics.
  • Changes to data privacy rules and how data can be used by state agencies and the public.
  • Possible need for new systems, training, or budget allocations to support reporting efforts.

Next steps for readers

  • If monitoring this issue, track any future reintroduction of LC 4036 or similar measures in subsequent sessions.
  • Review the full bill text when available to understand exact data types, reporting timelines, penalties, and implementation schedules.
  • For hospitals, prepare to assess existing data collection capabilities and gaps relative to typical hospital reporting reforms.

If you’d like, I can help locate the official bill text or provide a comparison if a similar measure is introduced in a future session.

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

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