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A09630 Summary:

BILL NOA09630
 
SAME ASSAME AS S07043
 
SPONSORGunther
 
COSPNSR
 
MLTSPNSR
 
Add Art 35 §§35.01 - 35.07, Ment Hyg L
 
Prevents discrimination against persons with physical or mental disabilities in regards to organ donations.
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A09630 Text:



 
                STATE OF NEW YORK
        ________________________________________________________________________
 
                                          9630
 
                   IN ASSEMBLY
 
                                    January 26, 2018
                                       ___________
 
        Introduced  by M. of A. GUNTHER -- read once and referred to the Commit-
          tee on Mental Health
 
        AN ACT to amend the mental hygiene law, in relation to fairness in organ
          donations to persons with physical or mental disabilities
 
          The People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and  Assem-
        bly, do enact as follows:

     1    Section  1.  The mental hygiene law is amended by adding a new article
     2  35 to read as follows:
     3                                 ARTICLE 35
     4                         ORGAN DONATION FAIRNESS ACT
     5  Section 35.01 Legislative intent.
     6          35.03 Definitions.
     7          35.05 Discrimination prohibited.
     8          35.07 Enforcement.
     9  § 35.01 Legislative intent.
    10    The legislature finds that:
    11    (a) A mental or physical disability does not diminish a person's right
    12  to health care;
    13    (b) The Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, 42 USC 12101, prohib-
    14  its discrimination against persons with disabilities, yet many  individ-
    15  uals  with  disabilities  still  experience  discrimination in accessing
    16  critical health care services;
    17    (c) Individuals with mental and  physical  disabilities  have  histor-
    18  ically  been  denied  life-saving organ transplants based on assumptions
    19  that their lives are less worthy, that they are incapable  of  complying
    20  with  post-transplant  medical  regimens,  or  that  they  lack adequate
    21  support systems to ensure such compliance;
    22    (d) Although  organ  transplant  centers  must  consider  medical  and
    23  psychosocial  criteria  when  determining  if  a  patient is suitable to
    24  receive an organ transplant,  transplant  centers  that  participate  in
    25  Medicare,  Medicaid,  and other federal funding programs are required to
    26  use patient selection criteria that result in a fair and non-discrimina-
    27  tory distribution of organs; and
 
         EXPLANATION--Matter in italics (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
                              [ ] is old law to be omitted.
                                                                   LBD13479-01-7

        A. 9630                             2
 
     1    (e) New York residents in need of organ transplants  are  entitled  to
     2  assurances that they will not encounter discrimination on the basis of a
     3  disability.
     4  § 35.03 Definitions.
     5    As used in this article:
     6    (a) the term "disability" shall have the same meaning set forth in the
     7  Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 as amended by the ADA Amendments
     8  Act of 2008, at 42 USC 12102.
     9    (b) the term "auxiliary aids and services" shall include:
    10    1. qualified interpreters or other effective methods of making aurally
    11  delivered materials available to individuals with hearing impairments;
    12    2.  qualified  readers,  taped  texts,  or  other effective methods of
    13  making visually delivered materials available to individuals with visual
    14  impairments;
    15    3. provision of information in a format that is accessible  for  indi-
    16  viduals  with  cognitive,  neurological,  developmental, or intellectual
    17  disabilities;
    18    4. provision of supported decision making services;
    19    5. acquisition or modification of equipment or devices; and
    20    6. other similar services and actions.
    21    (c) the term "qualified individual" shall mean an individual who, with
    22  or without the support networks available to them, provision of auxilia-
    23  ry aids and services, or reasonable modifications to policies  or  prac-
    24  tices,  meets  the essential eligibility requirements for the receipt of
    25  an anatomical gift.
    26    (d) the term "reasonable modifications to policies or practices" shall
    27  include:
    28    1. communication with individuals responsible for supporting an  indi-
    29  vidual with post-surgical and post-transplantation care, including medi-
    30  cation; and
    31    2.  consideration  of  support  networks  available to the individual,
    32  including  family,  friends,  and  home  and  community-based  services,
    33  including  home  and  community-based  services funded through Medicaid,
    34  Medicare, another health plan in which the individual  is  enrolled,  or
    35  any  program or source of funding available to the individual, in deter-
    36  mining whether the individual is able  to  comply  with  post-transplant
    37  medical requirements.
    38    (e) the term "anatomical gift" shall mean a donation of all or part of
    39  a  human  body to take effect after the donor's death for the purpose of
    40  transplantation or transfusion.
    41    (f) the term "organ transplant"  shall  mean  the  transplantation  or
    42  transfusion  of  a part of a human body into the body of another for the
    43  purpose of treating or curing a medical condition.
    44    (g) the term "supported decision making" shall include the  use  of  a
    45  support  person  or  persons  in order to assist an individual in making
    46  medical decisions, communicate information to the individual, or  ascer-
    47  tain an individual's wishes, including:
    48    1.  inclusion of the individual's attorney-in-fact, health care proxy,
    49  or any person of the individual's choice  in  communications  about  the
    50  individual's medical care;
    51    2. permitting the individual to designate a person of their choice for
    52  the  purposes of supporting that individual in communicating, processing
    53  information, or making medical decisions;
    54    3. provision of auxiliary aids and services to facilitate the individ-
    55  ual's ability to communicate  and  process  health-related  information,
    56  including the use of assistive communication technology;

        A. 9630                             3
 
     1    4.  provision  of information to persons designated by the individual,
     2  consistent with the provisions of the Health Insurance  Portability  and
     3  Accountability  Act  of 1996, 42 USC 1301, and other applicable laws and
     4  regulations governing disclosure of health information;
     5    5.  provision of health information in a format that is readily under-
     6  standable by the individual; and
     7    6. if the individual has a court-appointed guardian or other  individ-
     8  ual  responsible  for making medical decisions on behalf of the individ-
     9  ual, any measures to ensure that the individual is included in decisions
    10  involving his or her own health care and that medical decisions  are  in
    11  accordance with the individual's own expressed interests.
    12    (h) the term "covered entity" shall mean:
    13    1.  any  licensed provider of health care services, including licensed
    14  health care practitioners, hospitals, nursing facilities,  laboratories,
    15  intermediate  care facilities, psychiatric residential treatment facili-
    16  ties, institutions for individuals with  intellectual  or  developmental
    17  disabilities, and prison health centers; or
    18    2.  any  entity  responsible  for  matching  anatomical gift donors to
    19  potential recipients.
    20  § 35.05 Discrimination prohibited.
    21    (a) A covered entity shall not, solely on the  basis  of  a  qualified
    22  individual's mental or physical disability:
    23    1.  deem  an  individual  ineligible  to receive an anatomical gift or
    24  organ transplant;
    25    2. deny medical and related services related to organ transplantation,
    26  including evaluation, surgery, counseling, post-operative treatment  and
    27  services;
    28    3.  refuse  to  refer  the  individual to a transplant center or other
    29  related specialist for the purpose of evaluation or receipt of an  organ
    30  transplant;
    31    4.  refuse to place an individual on an organ transplant waiting list,
    32  or placement of the individual at a lower-priority position on the  list
    33  than  the  position at which he or she would have been placed if not for
    34  his or her disability; or
    35    5. decline insurance coverage for any procedure  associated  with  the
    36  receipt of the anatomical gift, including post-transplantation care.
    37    (b)  Notwithstanding subdivision (a) of this section, a covered entity
    38  may take an individual's disability into account when  making  treatment
    39  or  coverage recommendations or decisions, solely to the extent that the
    40  physical or mental disability has been found by a physician or  surgeon,
    41  following an individualized evaluation of the potential recipient, to be
    42  medically  significant  to  the  provision  of  the anatomical gift. The
    43  provisions of this section shall not be deemed to require  referrals  or
    44  recommendations  for,  or  the  performance  of, medically inappropriate
    45  organ transplants.
    46    (c) If an individual has the necessary support system  to  assist  the
    47  individual  in  complying  with post-transplant medical requirements, an
    48  individual's inability to independently comply with  those  requirements
    49  shall  not  be  deemed  to  be medically significant for the purposes of
    50  subdivision (b) of this section.
    51    (d) A covered entity shall make reasonable modifications in  policies,
    52  practices,  or procedures, when such modifications are necessary to make
    53  services such as transplantation-related counseling, information, cover-
    54  age, or treatment available to qualified individuals with  disabilities,
    55  unless  the  entity can demonstrate that making such modifications would
    56  fundamentally alter the nature of such services.

        A. 9630                             4
 
     1    (e) A covered entity shall take such steps  as  may  be  necessary  to
     2  ensure that no qualified individual with a disability is denied services
     3  such  as  transplantation-related  counseling, information, coverage, or
     4  treatment because of the absence of auxiliary aids and services,  unless
     5  the  entity  can  demonstrate that taking such steps would fundamentally
     6  alter the nature of the services being offered or  would  result  in  an
     7  undue burden.
     8    (f)  A  covered entity shall otherwise comply with the requirements of
     9  Titles II and III of the Americans with Disabilities Act, 42 USC  12131,
    10  and ADA Amendments Act of 2008.
    11    (g)  The  provisions  of  this section shall apply to each part of the
    12  organ transplant process.
    13  § 35.07 Enforcement.
    14    (a) The remedy for violations of this article shall  be  the  same  as
    15  those  available under Titles II and III of the Americans with Disabili-
    16  ties Act, 42 USC 12131.
    17    (b) The court shall accord priority on its calendar and  expeditiously
    18  proceed  with an action brought to seek any remedy authorized by law for
    19  purposes of enforcing compliance with the provisions of this article.
    20    § 2. This act shall take effect immediately.
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