GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF NORTH CAROLINA
SESSION LAW 2001-242
AN ACT TO AMEND THE DEFINITION OF "AMBULATORY SURGICAL FACILITY" BY REDUCING THE NUMBER OF REQUIRED OPERATING ROOMS FROM TWO TO ONE AND TO AMEND THE DEFINITION OF "NEW INSTITUTIONAL HEALTH SERVICE" BY INCLUDING CONSTRUCTION, DEVELOPMENT, ESTABLISHMENT, INCREASE IN NUMBER, OR RELOCATION OF AN OPERATING ROOM OR OPERATING ROOMS AND TO EXTEND THE DETERMINATIVE EFFECT OF THE STATE MEDICAL FACILITIES PLAN TO ALL OPERATING ROOMS and to repeal S.L. 2000-135.
The General Assembly of North Carolina enacts:
SECTION 1. G.S. 131E-146 reads as rewritten:
As used in this Part, unless otherwise specified:
(1) 'Ambulatory surgical
facility' means a facility designed for the provision of a specialty ambulatory
surgical program or a multispecialty ambulatory surgical program. An ambulatory
surgical facility serves patients who require local, regional or general
anesthesia and a period of post-operative observation. An ambulatory surgical
facility may only admit patients for a period of less than 24 hours and must
provide at least two one designated operating roomsroom
and at least one designated recovery room, have available the necessary
equipment and trained personnel to handle emergencies, provide adequate quality
assurance and assessment by an evaluation and review committee, and maintain
adequate medical records for each patient. An ambulatory surgical facility may
be operated as a part of a physician or dentist's office, provided the facility
is licensed under G.S. Chapter 131E, Article 6, Part D, but the performance of
incidental, limited ambulatory surgical procedures which do not constitute an
ambulatory surgical program as defined in subdivision (1a) and which are
performed in a physician or dentist's office does not make that office an
ambulatory surgical facility.
(1a) 'Ambulatory surgical program' means a formal program for providing on a same-day basis those surgical procedures which require local, regional or general anesthesia and a period of post-operative observation to patients whose admission for more than 24 hours is determined, prior to surgery, to be medically unnecessary.
(2) 'Commission' means the North Carolina Medical Care Commission."
SECTION 2. G.S. 131E-176 reads as rewritten:
"§ 131E-176. Definitions.
As used in this Article, unless the context clearly requires otherwise, the following terms have the meanings specified:
…
(1a) 'Ambulatory surgical facility'
means a facility designed for the provision of a specialty ambulatory surgical
program or a multispecialty ambulatory surgical program. An ambulatory surgical
facility serves patients who require local, regional or general anesthesia and
a period of post-operative observation. An ambulatory surgical facility may
only admit patients for a period of less than 24 hours and must provide at
least two one designated operating roomsroom and at
least one designated recovery room, have available the necessary equipment and
trained personnel to handle emergencies, provide adequate quality assurance and
assessment by an evaluation and review committee, and maintain adequate medical
records for each patient. An ambulatory surgical facility may be operated as a
part of a physician or dentist's office, provided the facility is licensed
under G.S. Chapter 131E, Article 6, Part D, but the performance of incidental,
limited ambulatory surgical procedures which do not constitute an ambulatory
surgical program as defined in subdivision (1b) and which are performed in a
physician's or dentist's office does not make that office an ambulatory
surgical facility.
…
(16) 'New institutional health services' means any of the following:
…
u. The construction, development, establishment, increase in the number, or relocation of an operating room or operating rooms, other than the relocation of an operating room or operating rooms within the same building or on the same grounds or to grounds not separated by more than a public right-of-way adjacent to the grounds where the operating room is or operating rooms are currently located."
SECTION 3. G.S. 131E-183(a)(1) reads as rewritten:
"(a) The Department shall review all applications utilizing the criteria outlined in this subsection and shall determine that an application is either consistent with or not in conflict with these criteria before a certificate of need for the proposed project shall be issued.
(1) The proposed project
shall be consistent with applicable policies and need determinations in the
State Medical Facilities Plan, the need determination of which constitutes a
determinative limitation on the provision of any health service, health service
facility, health service facility beds, dialysis stations, ambulatory
surgical operating rooms, or home health offices that may be
approved."
SECTION 4. S.L. 2000-135 is repealed.
SECTION 5. This act is effective when it becomes law. This act shall not apply to any project which was not a new institutional health service as defined in G.S. 131E-176(16) prior to the effective date of this act and for which there has been a capital expenditure exceeding fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) or there was a legally binding obligation for a capital expenditure exceeding fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) in effect on or before the effective date of this act and which was reasonably expected to be completed by December 31, 2002. A facility or office that was not licensed as an ambulatory surgical facility prior to the effective date of this act shall not become an ambulatory surgical facility by virtue of the amendment set forth in Sections 1 and 2 of this act and may not be licensed as an ambulatory surgical facility under Part D of Article 6 of Chapter 131E of the General Statutes without a certificate of need.
In the General Assembly read three times and ratified this the 13th day of June, 2001.
s/ Beverly E. Perdue
President of the Senate
s/ James B. Black
Speaker of the House of Representatives
s/ Michael F. Easley
Governor
Approved 2:08 p.m. this 23rd day of June, 2001