(1) The
legislature finds that Washington state has the highest incidence
of breast cancer in the nation. Despite this, mortality rates
from breast cancer have declined due largely to early screening
and detection. Invasive cervical cancer is the most preventable
type of cancer. The Pap test, used to detect early signs of this
disease, has been called "medicine's most successful screening
test." Applied consistently, invasive cervical cancer could
nearly be eliminated. The legislature further finds that
increasing access to breast and cervical cancer screening is
critical to reducing incidence and mortality rates, and
eliminating the disparities of this disease in women in
Washington state. Furthermore, the legislature finds there is a
need for a permanent program providing early detection and
screening to the women and families of Washington state.
It is the intent of the legislature to establish an early
detection breast and cervical cancer screening program as a
voluntary screening program directed at reducing mortalities
through early detection to be offered to eligible women only as
funds are available.
(2) As used in this section:
(a) "Eligible woman" means a woman who is age forty to
sixty-four, and whose income is at or below two hundred fifty
percent of the federal poverty level, as published annually by
the federal department of health and human services. Priority
enrollment shall be given to women as defined by the federal
national breast and cervical cancer early detection program,
under P.L. 101-354.
(b) "Approved providers" means those state-supported health
providers, radiology facilities, and cytological laboratories
that are recognized by the department as meeting the minimum
program policies and procedures adopted by the department to
qualify under the federal national breast and cervical cancer
early detection program, and are designated as eligible for
funding by the department.
(c) "Comprehensive" means a screening program that focuses
on breast and cervical cancer screening as a preventive health
measure, and includes diagnostic and case management services.
(3) The department of health is authorized to administer a
state-supported early detection breast and cervical cancer
screening program to assist eligible women with preventive health
services. To the extent of available funding, eligible women may
be enrolled in the early detection breast and cervical cancer
screening program and additional eligible women may be enrolled
to the extent that grants and contributions from community
sources provide sufficient funds for expanding the program.
(4) Funds appropriated for the state program shall be used
only to operate early detection breast and cervical cancer
screening programs that have been approved by the department, or
to increase access to existing state-approved programs, and shall
not supplant federally supported breast and cervical cancer early
detection programs.
(5) Enrollment in the early detection breast and cervical
cancer screening program shall not result in expenditures that
exceed the amount that has been appropriated for the program in
the operating budget. If it appears that continued enrollment
will result in expenditures exceeding the appropriated level for
a particular fiscal year, the department may freeze new
enrollment in the program. Nothing in this section prevents the
department from continuing enrollment in the program if there are
adequate private or public funds in addition to those
appropriated in the biennial budget to support the cost of such
enrollment.
(6) The department shall establish a medical advisory
committee composed of interested medical professionals and
consumer liaisons with expertise in a variety of areas relevant
to breast and cervical health to provide expert medical advice
and guidance. The medical advisory committee shall address
national, state, and local concerns regarding best practices in
the field of early prevention and detection for breast and
cervical cancer and assist the early detection breast and
cervical cancer screening program in implementing program policy
that follows the best practices of high quality health care for
clinical, diagnostic, pathologic, radiological, and oncology
services.
[2006 c 55 § 1.]