(1) Legislative declaration. The general assembly finds and declares that:
- (a) The final report of the blue ribbon commission for health care reform, created in section 10-16-131 before its repeal, issued in January 2008, and the report of the health care cost analysis task force, created in section 25.5-11-103 before its repeal, issued on September 1, 2021, both clearly showed that a single, nonprofit system for health care can save money, cover everyone in the state, and support better health care;
- (b) To achieve better, more affordable, and fairer health care, the people of Colorado need answers to very important questions regarding universal health care; and
- (c) An analysis of draft model legislation for a universal health-care system is important in order to determine whether such a system would achieve the goals of better, more affordable, and fairer health care for all Coloradans.
(2) Definitions. As used in this section:
- (a) Federal act means the federal Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, Pub.L. 111-148, as amended by the federal Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act of 2010, Pub.L. 111-152.
(b)
- (I) Health-care provider or provider means a person that is licensed, certified, registered, or otherwise permitted by state law to administer health care in the ordinary course of business or in the practice of a profession.
- (II) Health-care provider or provider includes a professional service corporation, limited liability company, or registered limited liability partnership organized pursuant to state law for the practice of a health-care profession.
- (c) Medicaid means the medical assistance programs established pursuant to the Colorado Medical Assistance Act, articles 4 to 6 of title 25.5.
- (d) Medicare means federal insurance or assistance provided by the Health Insurance for the Aged Act, Title XVIII of the federal Social Security Act, 42 U.S.C. sec. 1395 et seq.
(e)
- (I) Reproductive health care means health care and other medical services related to the reproductive processes, functions, and systems at all stages of life.
- (II) Reproductive health care includes family planning and contraceptive care; abortion care; prenatal, postnatal, and delivery care; fertility care; sterilization services; and prevention of and treatments for sexually transmitted infections and reproductive cancers.
(f)
- (I) Resident means an individual who is living, other than temporarily, within the state and who intends to establish Colorado as the individual's primary state of residence.
- (II) Resident includes Colorado residents who are temporarily living in another state or who are traveling out of state.
- (g) Universal health-care system means a single-payer, nonprofit health-care payment system that is publicly financed and privately delivered, under which every resident of the state has access to adequate and affordable health care.
(3)
(a)
- (I) No later than July 1, 2025, the Colorado school of public health shall research and select draft model legislation that proposes a universal health-care system for Colorado that directly compensates providers.
- (II) The Colorado school of public health shall make the draft model legislation it selects publicly available on its website so that interested parties may evaluate and review the draft model legislation.
(b) The draft model legislation selected must be created by a Colorado nonprofit organization that prioritizes a universal health-care system that:
- (I) Provides comprehensive benefits for medical care, including dental, hearing, vision, and mental health;
- (II) Provides long-term care and support services to all residents at least at the level of coverage available to those residents who are eligible to receive medical assistance, as defined in section 25.5-4-103 (13);
- (III) Requires health-care decisions to be made by patients and the patients' health-care providers;
- (IV) Allows patients to choose among all providers that participate in the universal health-care system;
- (V) Provides comprehensive health-care benefits to all Colorado residents;
- (VI) Is funded by premiums, which premiums are in amounts that are determined based on an individual's ability to pay;
- (VII) Prohibits deductibles and copayments;
- (VIII) Ensures fair drug and hospital prices, as well as fair payment to providers;
- (IX) Is delivered through a publicly administered nonprofit enterprise that is the sole agency paying for health-care costs in the state; and
- (X) Is designed to prioritize benefits and access to care for patients while preventing barriers to care that are imposed for the purpose of increasing profits.
(4) The Colorado school of public health shall analyze the draft model legislation selected pursuant to subsection (3) of this section. The analysis may:
- (a) Include an estimate of the first-, second-, fifth-, and tenth-year costs for operating a universal health-care system;
- (b) Identify reimbursement rates for health-care providers at levels that result in net income that will attract and retain necessary health-care providers;
- (c) Consider a program to cover health-care benefits at one hundred twenty percent of medicare rates for residents and at other reimbursement levels as determined appropriate by the Colorado school of public health;
- (d) Consider whether the benefits outlined in the draft model legislation are the same as the benefits required by the federal act and by state law;
- (e) Identify health-care expenditures by payer;
- (f) Identify costs based on an individual's ability to pay;
- (g) Describe incentives and financial implications for hospitals from a global-budgeting-based reimbursement system compared to a fee-for-service-based reimbursement system;
(h) Describe how a universal health-care system provides the following:
- (I) Services required by the federal act and by state law;
- (II) Services covered under medicare;
- (III) Medicaid services and benefits that meet or exceed current services and benefits with provider reimbursement rates that are equivalent to or higher than current medicaid reimbursement rates;
- (IV) Medicaid services and benefits for individuals with disabilities who do not otherwise qualify for medicaid;
- (V) Coverage for women's health-care services and comprehensive reproductive health care to the extent that those services are allowable by state law;
- (VI) Vision, hearing, and dental services;
- (VII) Access to primary and specialty health-care services in rural Colorado and other underserved areas or populations; and
- (VIII) Behavioral health, mental health, and substance use disorder services;
- (i) Consider other collateral costs as determined by the Colorado school of public health;
- (j) Provide a general cost estimate and suggest potential additional revenue sources to cover long-term care and support services for all residents;
- (k) Estimate the impact of implementing a universal health-care system on various socioeconomic groups, including a racial equity impact assessment;
- (l) Estimate the impact of implementing a universal health-care system on health-care facilities, private health insurance companies, and the Colorado option health insurance plan;
- (m) Estimate the impact of implementing a universal health-care system on health plans that are regulated by the federal Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, 29 U.S.C. sec. 1001 et seq., including multiemployer Taft-Hartley health-care trust funds;
- (n) Evaluate the feasibility of implementing a universal health-care system by expanding or modifying the Colorado option health insurance plan;
- (o) Estimate the impact of a universal health-care system on the cost and development of specialty pharmaceuticals and treatment for rare diseases;
- (p) Estimate the impact of a universal health-care system on the price of pharmaceuticals; and
- (q) Provide any additional information the Colorado school of public health finds relevant.
- (5) The Colorado school of public health may utilize an actuarial consultant in conducting the analysis pursuant to subsection (4) of this section.
- (6) On or before December 31, 2026, the Colorado school of public health shall submit a report detailing its findings from the analysis completed pursuant to subsection (4) of this section to the house of representatives health and human services committee and the senate health and human services committee, or their successor committees.
(7)
- (a) The Colorado school of public health shall submit an application to the all-payer health claims database scholarship grant program, established in section 25.5-1-204.5, to acquire funding to cover any data or software costs that may be incurred by the Colorado school of public health in conducting the analysis required pursuant to subsection (4) of this section.
- (b) The Colorado school of public health may seek, accept, and expend gifts, grants, and donations from private and public sources to access the all-payer claims database.
(8)
- (a) The Colorado school of public health may seek, accept, and expend gifts, grants, or donations from private or public sources for the purpose of conducting the required research and analysis.
- (b) Unless the Colorado school of public health receives an amount of appropriations, gifts, grants, and donations or money from the grant program pursuant to subsection (7) of this section sufficient to cover the costs of the research and analysis, and the department of health care policy and financing receives enough money in gifts, grants, and donations to implement the statewide health-care analysis collaborative pursuant to section 25.5-1-135, the Colorado school of public health shall not implement this section.
- (9) This section is repealed, effective December 1, 2027.
Source: L. 2025: Entire section added, (SB 25-045), ch. 191, p. 847, § 1, effective May 14.