During the 2019 legislative session, in response to the continued, and in some cases, worsening health disparities for Oregonians, Representative Keny-Guyer, Representative Tina Kotek, Senator Lew Frederick, Representative Alonso Leon, and Senator Monnes Anderson, introduced HB 2011, an updated version of Oregon's CCCE law, HB 2611 (2013), as chief sponsors of the bill. With this action, the state legislature continued to build upon over 20 years of the state's cooperative CCCE work with culturally-specific community-based organizations representing people experiencing racial/ethnic health care disparities, health care professional boards, and other diverse stakeholders with shared goals of eliminating health care disparities and advancing health equity for historically and contemporarily marginalized communities.
According to Speaker of the House Tina Kotek's testimony on April 2, 2019, in support of the bill to the House Committee on Health Care,
- African Americans, Asian Americans, Pacific Islanders, and Latinos all reported worse access to care than their white peers in 2015, 2016 and 2017
- Non-white patients are less likely to be prescribed pain medication, less likely to have their pain taken seriously, and less likely to feel heard by their clinician
- In Oregon, 22 percent of transgender Oregonians reported being refused medical care
- In 2017, 8 of 16 CCOs regressed on their satisfaction with care metric.
HB 2011 (2019), which has now become law, directs (instead of voluntarily allows) specified health care professional boards to require people authorized to practice the profession regulated by the board to complete cultural competency continuing education. OHA-OEI's role specific to approving high quality CCCE training that meets agency criteria for approval will continue. These criteria are reflective of four domains of culturally competent practice and training:
- Self-awareness & self-assessment of provider's beliefs, attitudes, emotions, & values
- Acquisition of provider knowledge
- Acquisition of provider skills
- Specific educational approaches for acquisition of provider knowledge and skills
Per Section 1(2)(d) of the updated law, OEI will continue to share, through the online registry above, agency-approved high quality CCCE trainings as a resource for Oregon's health care professional boards and their respective licensees/members. The new CCCE requirements will become operative on July 1, 2021. Thus, fulfilling the state's original intent years ago, of requiring CCCE for health care professionals, as a means of improving provider-patient interactions and subsequently, health outcomes— not just for people experiencing racial/ethnic health disparities, but for all historically and contemporarily marginalized people in Oregon.
Permanent Rules, (Chapter 943, Division 90) rules, filed to implement HB 2611 (2013) and HB 2011 (2019), effective July 1, 2021
No current Rules Advisory Committee (RAC) meetings are planned at this time.
For more information about current and proposed OEI rules, please check OEI rulemaking web page.