Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee signed legislation into law on May 21, 2024, that modifies Tennessee's certificate of need (CON) requirements.
The law makes several changes to the existing CON law, including exempting more healthcare providers from needing to apply, while keeping most of the current CON requirements in place for providers and services such as home health, hospice, outpatient diagnostic centers, cardiac catheterization and others.
Among newly exempted healthcare providers are intellectual disability institutional habilitation facilities, ambulatory surgery centers, long-term care hospitals, freestanding emergency departments and linear accelerators. Additionally, the following healthcare services or providers no longer have CON requirements: burn units, neonatal intensive care units (NICUs) and open heart surgery. The CON requirement for the initiation of MRI services or increasing the number of MRI services was also removed.
The changes to the CON law have a number of different effective dates. The removal of the requirement for an intellectual disability institutional habilitation facilities takes effect on Dec. 1, 2025, and the CON requirement for linear accelerators will be removed on Dec. 1, 2027. The CON requirement for burn units and NICUs will be removed effective Dec. 1, 2025, and the CON requirement for open heart surgery will not be removed until Dec. 1, 2029.
The bill mandates that the Tennessee Health Facilities Commission create a plan to study, for at least six years, the impact of CON reform and facilities licensure in the healthcare industry, which could foreshadow further reform efforts by the legislature.
For additional information, please contact the authors. To receive Holland & Knight's monthly Tennessee Certificate of Need Update, please subscribe here.
Information contained in this alert is for the general education and knowledge of our readers. It is not designed to be, and should not be used as, the sole source of information when analyzing and resolving a legal problem, and it should not be substituted for legal advice, which relies on a specific factual analysis. Moreover, the laws of each jurisdiction are different and are constantly changing. This information is not intended to create, and receipt of it does not constitute, an attorney-client relationship. If you have specific questions regarding a particular fact situation, we urge you to consult the authors of this publication, your Holland & Knight representative or other competent legal counsel.