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HB 4040Modifies the requirements for screening a hospital patient for presumptive eligibility for financial assistance.

Congress · introduced 2026-01-15

Digest: The Act changes the rules for how certain health care is given in this state. The Act alters how certain health care providers are licensed or regulated. The Act changes some insurance rules. The Act changes some pharmacy and drug rules. The Act takes effect when signed. (Flesch Readability Score: 79.7). Modifies the requirements for screening a hospital patient for presumptive eligibility for financial assistance. [<i>Prohibits the Oregon Health Authority from requiring certain home health agencies to comply with Medicare conditions of participation.</i>] [<i>Modifies the requirements for how the Department of Human Services must publish Residential Care Quality Measurement Program data.</i>] Removes the requirement that an applicant for a residential care facility administrator license hold a bachelor's degree in a health or social service related field. Allows a person residing in a correctional facility to receive prerelease medical assistance benefits under certain circumstances. [<i>Prohibits the authority or a coordinated care organization from requiring prior authorization for medical assistance coverage for repairing complex rehabilitation technology if the repair costs $1,500 or less.</i>] Modifies the requirements for meetings held by the Health Evidence Review Commission. Modifies the composition of the Medicaid Advisory Committee. Modifies the eligibility requirements for parent providers who are paid to provide attendant care services to their children. {See A-Eng Bill for omitted text.} Allows a full-time dentistry student enrolled in an out-of-state dental education program to practice dentistry without a license if the student is supervised by a faculty member of a dental education program accredited by the Commission on Dental Accreditation of the American Dental Association. Requires casualty or health insurance policies to provide coverage for medically necessary anesthesia services, regardless of duration, for any covered procedures. Requires dental insurers to follow certain rules for payment and denial of claims. Requires the Legislative Policy and Research Director to develop and propose to the [<i>Legislative Policy and Research Committee</i>] <b>committees with jurisdiction over health care</b> an insurance coverage mandate impact statement policy. Directs the [<i>committee</i>] <b>committees</b> to perform due diligence in considering the proposal and authorizes the [<i>committee</i>] <b>committees</b> to modify the proposal if the [<i>committee</i>] <b>committees</b> so [<i>determines</i>]<b> determine</b>, and then to adopt the policy. Repeals requirement that enrollees in individual or group policies or certificates of health insurance [<i>or members of coordinated care organizations</i>] be assigned by <b>their</b> insurer [<i>or organization</i>] to primary care providers under certain circumstances. Specifies exemptions from the requirement that pharmacy services administrative organizations must register with the Department of Consumer and Business Services as third party administrators. {See A-Eng Bill for omitted text.}<b> Modifies requirements for the Prescription Drug Affordability Board's annual affordability determination for insulin products.</b> Allows licensees of the Occupational Therapy Licensing Board and the Oregon Board of Physical Therapy to provide psilocybin services as licensed psilocybin service facilitators while providing occupational therapy or physical therapy services. {See A-Eng Bill for omitted text.} Lowers the age at which a naturopathic physician may request a retired license status from 70 years of age to [60] 65 years of age. Includes nurse practitioners and physician associates in the definition of "attending physician" for purposes of the treatment of workers’ compensable injuries. Declares an emergency, effective on passage.

Latest action: Chapter Number Assigned

Sponsors

No sponsorships on file.

Action timeline

  1. · state_lower First reading. Referred to Speaker's desk.
  2. · state_lower Referred to Health Care.
  3. · state_lower Public Hearing held.
  4. · state_lower Public Hearing held.
  5. · state_lower Work Session held.
  6. · state_lower Recommendation: Do pass with amendments, be printed A-Engrossed, and be referred to Ways and Means.
  7. · state_lower Referred to Ways and Means by order of Speaker.
  8. · state_lower Assigned to Subcommittee On Human Services.
  9. · state_lower Work Session held.
  10. · state_lower Returned to Full Committee.
  11. · state_lower Work Session held.
  12. · state_lower Recommendation: Do pass.
  13. · state_lower Second reading.
  14. · state_lower Third reading. Carried by Nosse. Passed.
  15. · state_upper First reading. Referred to President's desk.
  16. · state_upper Referred to Ways and Means.
  17. · state_upper Recommendation: Do pass the A-Eng. bill.
  18. · state_upper Second reading.
  19. · state_upper Third reading. Carried by Patterson. Passed.
  20. · state_lower Speaker signed.
  21. · state_upper President signed.
  22. · state_lower Governor signed.
  23. · state_lower Chapter 109, (2026 Laws): Effective date April 7, 2026.

Text versions

No text versions on file yet — same ingest as the action timeline populates these. Each version has direct links to the XML / HTML / PDF at govinfo.gov.

Predicted vote

Aggregated from: actual roll-call votes (when present) → sponsor → cosponsor → party median (predicts YES when ≥25% of the caucus sponsored/cosponsored). Each row labels its confidence tier so you can see why a position was predicted.

0 predicted yes (0%) · 543 predicted no (100%) · 0 unknown (0%)

By party: · R: 0 yes / 277 no · D: 0 yes / 263 no · I: 0 yes / 3 no

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