(1) The office
shall serve as a coordinating body for public and private efforts
to improve quality in health care, promote cost-effectiveness in
health care, and plan health facility and health service
availability. In addition, the office shall facilitate access to
health care data collected by public and private organizations as
needed to conduct its planning responsibilities.
(2) The office shall:
(a) Conduct strategic health planning activities related to
the preparation of the strategy, as specified in this chapter;
(b) Develop a computerized system for accessing, analyzing,
and disseminating data relevant to strategic health planning
responsibilities. The office may contract with an organization
to create the computerized system capable of meeting the needs of
the office;
(c) Maintain access to deidentified data collected and
stored by any public and private organizations as necessary to
support its planning responsibilities, including state purchased
health care program data, hospital discharge data, and private
efforts to collect utilization and claims-related data. The
office is authorized to enter into any data sharing agreements
and contractual arrangements necessary to obtain data or to
distribute data. Among the sources of deidentified data that the
office may access are any databases established pursuant to the
recommendations of the health information infrastructure advisory
board established by chapter 261, Laws of 2005. The office may
store limited data sets as necessary to support its activities.
Unless specifically authorized, the office shall not collect data
directly from the records of health care providers and health
care facilities, but shall make use of databases that have
already collected such information; and
(d) Conduct research and analysis or arrange for research
and analysis projects to be conducted by public or private
organizations to further the purposes of the strategy.
(3) The office shall establish a technical advisory
committee to assist in the development of the strategy. Members
of the committee shall include health economists, health
planners, representatives of government and nongovernment health
care purchasers, representatives of state agencies that use or
regulate entities with an interest in health planning,
representatives of acute care facilities, representatives of
long-term care facilities, representatives of community-based
long-term care providers, representatives of health care
providers, a representative of one or more federally recognized
Indian tribes, and representatives of health care consumers. The
committee shall include members with experience in the provision
of health services to rural communities.
[2007 c 259 § 51.]