HBA-SEB S.B. 862 76(R)    BILL ANALYSIS


Office of House Bill AnalysisS.B. 862
By: Gallegos
Public Health
4/30/1999
Engrossed



BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE 

Currently, organ allocation is governed by the federal Organ Procurement
and Transplantation Act, which gives the U.S. Department of Health and
Human Services jurisdiction over the national organ allocation program. The
United Network for Organ Sharing  is a private organization contracted to
administer the national Organ Procurement Transplant Network, which directs
organ allocation. Under this system, organs are offered first to local
patients waiting at transplant centers served by one of the three organ
procurement organizations in Texas.  

S.B. 862 requires a qualified organ procurement organization to distribute
a vascular organ for transplantation to an individual on a waiting list at
a transplant center in this state.  This bill authorizes the organization
to transfer a vascular organ to an out-of-state recipient  if a suitable
recipient in this state cannot be found in a reasonable amount of time or
if the transfer is made in accordance with a reciprocal agreement with an
out-of-state organ procurement organization.  This bill also establishes a
public task force on organ allocation to examine the technical and policy
issues surrounding the current organ allocation policy in this state and to
develop and implement an optimum organ allocation policy for Texas. 

RULEMAKING AUTHORITY

It is the opinion of the Office of House Bill Analysis that this bill does
not expressly delegate any additional rulemaking authority to a state
officer, department, agency, or institution. 

SECTION BY SECTION ANALYSIS

SECTION 1.  Amends Section 692.002, Health and Safety Code, by amending
Subdivision (9) and adding Subdivisions (10) and (11), to redefine
"qualified organ or tissue procurement organization" and to define
"transplant center" and "waiting list." 

SECTION 2.  Amends Section 692.005, Health and Safety Code, to authorize a
qualified organ procurement organization to be a donee of gifts of bodies
or parts for distribution to another person who is authorized to be a
donee, to be used for transplantation.  Redesignates Subdivisions (2)-(6)
to (3)-(7).   

SECTION 3.  Amends Section 692.006(a), Health and Safety Code, to provide
that a qualified organ procurement organization in this state is considered
the specified donee if the person dies in this state and does not specify
the donee and the gift is a vascular organ that is suitable for
transplantation. Authorizes the attending physician to accept the gift as
donee at the time of death or after death for any other gift that is not
made to a specified donee.  

SECTION 4. Amends Chapter 692, Health and Safety Code, by adding Section
692.0145, as follows: 

Sec. 692.0145.  DISTRIBUTION OF VASCULAR ORGANS FOR TRANSPLANTATION.
Requires a qualified organ procurement organization to distribute a
vascular organ for transplantation to an individual on a waiting list at a
transplant center in this state if the organization receives the gift of a
vascular organ that is suitable for transplantation. Authorizes the
organization to transfer a vascular organ to an out-of-state recipient  if
a suitable recipient in this state cannot be found in a reasonable amount
of time or if the  transfer is made in accordance with a reciprocal
agreement with an out-of-state organ procurement organization. 

SECTION 5.  Amends Chapter 692, Health and Safety Code, by adding Section
692.0147, as follows: 

Sec. 692.0147.  OPTIMUM ORGAN ALLOCATION POLICY.  (a)  Defines "department"
and "task force."   

(b)  Requires the Texas Department of Health (TDH) to establish a 13-member
public task force on organ allocation in this state by July 1, 1999.  Sets
forth the composition of the task force.   

(c)  Requires the task force, by October 1, 2000, to examine the technical
and policy issues surrounding the current organ allocation policy in this
state and to develop and implement an optimum organ allocation policy for
Texas.  Requires the policy to consider specific criteria, including
federal guidelines, the utility of each organ recovered, the efficiency and
productivity of each organ procurement region, waiting times at each
transplant center in this state, standardized listing criteria for
transplant candidates, the role that local transplant centers and referral
patterns play in providing access to care in this state, community efforts
to encourage organ procurement, and  the need to encourage organ sharing
within each region of the state.    

(d)  Requires the task force, not later than December 1, 2000, to submit a
detailed, written report to the governor and the legislature.  Requires the
report to include the components of the optimum organ allocation policy and
the recommendations for legislation that the task force considers necessary
to implement the optimum organ allocation policy, if appropriate. 

(e)  Requires TDH to provide administrative support and services to the
task force. 

(f)  Provides that task force members receive no compensation for their
service. 

(g)  Authorizes TDH to receive and accept gifts, grants, donations, and any
other type of funds or things of value from any source to carry out the
duties and responsibilities of the task force, in addition to any funds
appropriated. 

(h)  Provides that this section expires and the task force is abolished
December 31, 2000. 

SECTION 6.Emergency clause.
  Effective date: upon passage.