The bill requires health benefit plans to provide coverage for doula
services in the same scope and duration of coverage for doula services that will be included in the department of health care policy and financing's request for federal authorization of doula services under the Colorado Medical Assistance Act (medical assistance program). Doulas providing services must meet the same qualifications for and submit to the same regulation as individuals providing doula services as recommended in the report of the department of public health and environment resulting from the stakeholder process for doula services under the medical assistance program.
Coverage for doula services will be implemented for large
employer health benefit plans issued or renewed in this state on and after July 1, 2025. For small group and individual plans, doula services will be implemented if the division of insurance and the federal department of health and human services determine that the benefit does not require state defrayal of the cost of the benefit or the division of insurance determines defrayal is not required and the federal department fails to respond to the divison's request for confirmation of the determination within 365 days after the request is made.
The bill authorizes the department of public health and
environment (department) to partner with the designated state perinatal care quality collaborative (perinatal quality collaborative) to track the statewide implementation of the recommendations of the Colorado maternal mortality review committee, implement perinatal health quality improvement programs with hospitals that provide labor and delivery or neonatal care services (hospital) to improve infant and maternal health outcomes, and address disparate care outcomes among certain populations and of those living in frontier areas of the state.
The bill requires hospitals to submit specified data to the perinatal
quality collaborative concerning disparities in perinatal health care and health-care outcomes; to annually participate in at least one maternal or infant health quality improvement initiative (initiative), as determined by the hospitals; and to report to the perinatal quality collaborative regarding the implementation and outcomes of the initiative. The bill authorizes financial support for hospitals in rural and frontier areas of the state, hospitals that serve a higher number of medical assistance patients or uninsured patients, and hospitals with lower-acuity maternal or neonatal levels of care.
In collaboration with the department, the bill requires the perinatal
quality collaborative to issue an annual report on clinical quality improvements in maternal and infant health outcomes and related data that can be shared with hospitals and health facilities, policymakers, and others and posted on the internet.
The bill requires coverage of over-the-counter, prescribed choline
supplements for pregnant people to fulfill the federal food and drug administration's daily adequate intake for pregnant people.