ENROLLED
H. B. 4685



(By Delegates Leach, Morgan, Perdue and Long)



[Passed March 11, 2006; in effect ninety days from passage.]



AN ACT to amend the Code of West Virginia, 1931, as amended, by
adding thereto a new article, designated §16-5U-1, §16-5U-2
and §16-5U-3, all relating to the "Arthritis Prevention
Education Act"; establishing an arthritis prevention and
treatment education program; requiring the Bureau for Public
Health to establish strategies to promote and maintain an
arthritis prevention education program; and establishing an
interagency council on arthritis.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of West Virginia:

That the Code of West Virginia, 1931, as amended, be amended
by adding thereto a new article, designated §16-5U-1, §16-5U-2 and
§16-5U-3, all to read as follows:
ARTICLE 5U. ARTHRITIS PREVENTION EDUCATION ACT.
§16-5U-1. Short title.

This article may be known and cited as the "West Virginia
Arthritis Prevention Education Act."
§16-5U-2. Responsibilities of Bureau for Public Health.

(a) The Bureau for Public Health shall establish strategies to
promote and maintain an arthritis prevention education program in
order to raise public awareness, to educate consumers and to
educate and train health professionals, teachers and human service
providers, to include the following components:

(1) The bureau shall develop strategies for raising public
awareness of the causes and nature of arthritis, personal risk
factors, the value of prevention and early detection and options
for diagnosing and treating the disease that include, but are not
limited to, the following:

(A) Community forums;

(B) Health information and risk factor assessment at public
events;

(C) Targeting at-risk populations;

(D) Providing reliable information to policymakers; and

(E) Distributing information through county health
departments, schools, area agencies on aging, employer wellness
programs, physicians, hospitals, health maintenance organizations,
women's groups, nonprofit organizations, community-based
organizations and departmental offices;

(2) The bureau shall develop strategies for educating consumers about risk factors, diet and exercise, diagnostic
procedures and their indications for use, risks and benefits of
drug therapies currently approved by the United States Food and
Drug Administration, environmental safety and injury prevention and
the availability of self-help diagnostic, treatment and
rehabilitation services;

(3) The bureau may develop strategies for educating physicians
and health professionals and training community service providers
on the most up-to-date, accurate scientific and medical information
on arthritis prevention, diagnosis and treatment, therapeutic
decision-making, including guidelines for detecting and treating
the disease in special populations, risks and benefits of
medications and research advances;

(4) The bureau may conduct a needs assessment to identify:

(A) Research being conducted within the state;

(B) Available up-to-date technical assistance and educational
materials and programs nationwide;

(C) The level of public and professional awareness about
arthritis;

(D) The needs of arthritis patients, their families and
caregivers;

(E) The needs of health care providers, including physicians,
nurses, managed care organizations and other health care providers;

(F) The services available to the arthritis patient;

(G) The existence of arthritis treatment programs;

(H) The existence of arthritis support groups;

(I) The existence of rehabilitation services; and

(5) The bureau may replicate and use successful arthritis
programs and enter into contracts and purchase materials or
services from organizations with appropriate expertise and
knowledge of arthritis.

(b) Based on the needs assessment conducted pursuant to this
section, the bureau may develop and maintain a resource guide to
include arthritis-related services. This guide shall include a
description of diagnostic testing procedures, appropriate
indications for their use, drug therapies currently approved by the
United States Food and Drug Administration, and a cautionary
statement about the current status of arthritis research,
prevention and treatment. The statement shall also indicate that
the bureau does not license, certify, or in any way approve
arthritis programs or centers in the state.

(c) The bureau may promulgate rules in accordance with the
provisions of article three, chapter twenty-nine-a of this code
necessary to implement the provisions of this article.

(d) Nothing in this article may be construed or interpreted to
mean that arthritis treatment or arthritis education are required
to be provided by the bureau or the council created in section
three of this article. Nothing contained in this article may be construed to mandate funding for arthritis education or any of the
programs contained in this article or to require any appropriation
by the Legislature.
§16-5U-3. Interagency council on arthritis.

(a) There is hereby established the interagency council on
arthritis. The Director of Public Health shall chair the council.
The council shall have representatives from appropriate state
departments and agencies including, but not limited to, the
entities with responsibility for aging, health care reform
implementation, education and public welfare.

(b) The council shall:

(1) Coordinate arthritis programs conducted by or through the
Bureau for Public Health;

(2) Establish a mechanism for sharing information on arthritis
among all officials and employees involved in carrying out
arthritis-related programs;

(3) Review and coordinate the most promising areas of
education, prevention and treatment concerning arthritis;

(4) Assist the Bureau for Public Health and other offices in
developing and coordinating plans for education and health
promotion on arthritis;

(5) Establish mechanisms to use the results of research
concerning arthritis in the development of relevant policies and
programs; and

(6) Prepare a report that describes educational initiatives on
arthritis and transmit the report to the Legislature and the
Governor and make the report available to the public.

(c) The council shall establish and coordinate the advisory
panel on arthritis which will provide nongovernmental input
regarding the program. Membership shall include, but is not
limited to, persons with arthritis, public health educators,
arthritis experts, providers of arthritis health care, persons
knowledgeable in health promotion and education and representatives
of national arthritis organizations or their state and regional
affiliates.
