•  Summary 
  •  
  •  Actions 
  •  
  •  Committee Votes 
  •  
  •  Floor Votes 
  •  
  •  Memo 
  •  
  •  Text 
  •  
  •  LFIN 
  •  
  •  Chamber Video/Transcript 

S07495 Summary:

BILL NOS07495A
 
SAME ASNo Same As
 
SPONSORPERSAUD
 
COSPNSRHINCHEY
 
MLTSPNSR
 
Add §§267-c & 267-d, Pub Health L
 
Enacts the menopause awareness improvement act; establishes a menopause education program; establishes course work or training in menopausal health; directs the commissioner of labor to conduct a study on the impact of menopause on the workforce.
Go to top

S07495 Text:



 
                STATE OF NEW YORK
        ________________________________________________________________________
 
                                         7495--A
 
                               2025-2026 Regular Sessions
 
                    IN SENATE
 
                                     April 17, 2025
                                       ___________
 
        Introduced  by Sens. PERSAUD, HINCHEY -- read twice and ordered printed,
          and when printed to be committed to the Committee on Women's Issues --
          recommitted to the Committee on  Women's  Issues  in  accordance  with
          Senate  Rule  6, sec. 8 -- committee discharged, bill amended, ordered
          reprinted as amended and recommitted to said committee

        AN ACT to amend the public health law, in relation to enacting the meno-
          pause awareness improvement act
 
          The People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and  Assem-
        bly, do enact as follows:
 
     1    Section  1. This act shall be known and may be cited as the "menopause
     2  awareness improvement act".
     3    § 2. Legislative findings. Whereas, by 2030, the world  population  of
     4  menopausal  and  postmenopausal  people  is projected to increase to 1.2
     5  billion, with 27 million new entrants each year;
     6    Whereas, each year people in the United States  enter  the  menopausal
     7  transition  with  little  clinical guidance on what to expect during and
     8  after this transition;
     9    Whereas, according to the United States Department of Health and Human
    10  Services, at least three out of four people experience hot flashes,  the
    11  most common menopause symptom; and other symptoms including memory loss,
    12  urinary problems, sleep disturbances, depression, and anxiety;
    13    Whereas, menopausal symptoms can be severe and affect daily activities
    14  and  quality of life for an extended period, with hot flashes lasting an
    15  average of seven to nine years, and a third of people experiencing vaso-
    16  motor symptoms for a decade or longer;
    17    Whereas, studies show that Black and Hispanic  people  may  experience
    18  menopause  earlier,  with  more  intense  menopausal symptoms, and for a
    19  longer period of time;
    20    Whereas, as many as 40 percent of menopausal people say their symptoms
    21  interfered with their work performance or productivity weekly, and near-
 
         EXPLANATION--Matter in italics (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
                              [ ] is old law to be omitted.
                                                                   LBD10136-04-6

        S. 7495--A                          2
 
     1  ly one in five say they have left or considered  leaving  the  workforce
     2  because of their symptoms;
     3    Whereas,  many  people  are unsure what accommodations their employers
     4  offer for menopause and are unsure  about  workplace  culture  regarding
     5  menopause;
     6    Whereas,  menopause  symptoms  cost  American people an estimated $1.8
     7  billion in lost working time per year;
     8    Whereas, due to medical innovation, a variety of effective  treatments
     9  for symptoms are available to help address symptoms during perimenopause
    10  and  menopause,  including,  but  not  limited  to,  hormone therapy and
    11  nonhormone medication;
    12    Whereas, according to the United States Department of Health and Human
    13  Services,  menopause  may  increase  the  risk  of  osteoporosis,  heart
    14  disease, and stroke;
    15    Whereas,  there  is a need for additional clinical research and treat-
    16  ment options to manage menopause symptoms;
    17    Whereas, many physicians, including obstetricians  and  gynecologists,
    18  have  limited  time  to  assess  menopause  symptoms  during visits with
    19  patients; and
    20    Whereas, many physicians have limited training on menopause, and  only
    21  approximately  30  percent  of  obstetrician  and  gynecology  residency
    22  program directors report that menopause curriculum is part  of  resident
    23  training.
    24    § 3. The public health law is amended by adding a new section 267-c to
    25  read as follows:
    26    §  267-c. Menopause education program. 1. The commissioner, in consul-
    27  tation with clinical  practitioners  and  nonprofit  organizations  that
    28  promote  the health of people during menopause, shall, on or before July
    29  first,  two  thousand  twenty-eight,  establish  a  menopause  education
    30  program  to  improve  patient  and  clinician awareness of the menopause
    31  transition.  The department shall create informational  materials  about
    32  menopause  and shall periodically distribute throughout the state public
    33  service announcements using newspapers, television, radio stations,  the
    34  internet,  and social media as well as in-person and interactive virtual
    35  public communications. Such informational material about menopause shall
    36  include, but not be limited to, symptoms  and  trajectories  of  changes
    37  across  the  menopausal  transition  and  the post-menopause transition,
    38  related chronic conditions, and the entire range  of  treatment  options
    39  that  may  be  prescribed  by a health care provider for those symptoms,
    40  changes, and conditions, as well as available  screening  tools.    Such
    41  materials  shall include, but not be limited to, detailed information on
    42  the differential impacts of  the  menopause  transition  across  diverse
    43  demographic  groups,  including, but not limited to, variations based on
    44  race, ethnicity, and socioeconomic status.
    45    2. The commissioner shall, on or before January  first,  two  thousand
    46  twenty-nine  and every year thereafter, submit a report to the governor,
    47  the temporary president of the senate, and the speaker of the assembly a
    48  qualitative  assessment  of  the  menopause  education  program  and   a
    49  description of the activities conducted thereunder.
    50    § 4. The public health law is amended by adding a new section 267-d to
    51  read as follows:
    52    §  267-d.  Course  work  or  training in menopausal health. 1. (a) The
    53  department, in consultation with clinical  practitioners  and  nonprofit
    54  organizations  that  promote  the health of people during menopause, may
    55  create guidelines  regarding  course  work  or  training  in  menopausal
    56  health.   Such guidelines shall be created if the department, in consul-

        S. 7495--A                          3
 
     1  tation with clinical  practitioners  and  nonprofit  organizations  that
     2  promote  the  health  of people during menopause, determines that physi-
     3  cians practicing in the state are not adequately trained  on  menopausal
     4  health  issues and course work or training in menopausal health is need-
     5  ed.
     6    (b) Every physician practicing in the state shall, within one year  of
     7  the creation of guidelines regarding course work or training in menopau-
     8  sal  health under paragraph (a) of this subdivision and every four years
     9  thereafter, complete course work or training, appropriate to the profes-
    10  sional's practice,  approved  by  the  department  regarding  menopausal
    11  health.  Such  course  work or training shall also be completed by every
    12  medical student and medical resident in the state as part of the  orien-
    13  tation  programs  conducted  by  medical  schools  and medical residency
    14  programs.
    15    (c) Every physician shall  provide  to  the  department  documentation
    16  demonstrating  the  completion  of  and competence in the course work or
    17  training required under paragraph (b) of this subdivision.
    18    (d) The department shall provide an exemption  from  the  requirements
    19  imposed by paragraph (b) of this subdivision to anyone who requests such
    20  an  exemption  and  who:  (i)  clearly  demonstrates to the department's
    21  satisfaction that there would be no need for  such  person  to  complete
    22  such course work or training because of the nature of their practice; or
    23  (ii)  that  such  person has completed course work or training deemed by
    24  the department to be equivalent to the  standards  for  course  work  or
    25  training  approved  by the department pursuant to this section. An indi-
    26  vidual granted an exemption must  reapply  to  continue  such  exemption
    27  every four years.
    28    2.  The  department  may,  subject to appropriation, provide grants to
    29  entities providing course work or training in  menopausal  health  under
    30  subdivision one of this section for:
    31    (a)  training  on  communication and management of menopausal symptoms
    32  and related chronic conditions;
    33    (b) establishing, maintaining, or improving academic units or programs
    34  that provide menopausal health training, including  clinical  experience
    35  and  research,  to improve the ability to recognize, diagnose, and treat
    36  menopause symptoms and related chronic conditions; and
    37    (c) developing evidence-based practices  or  recommendations  for  the
    38  design  of  programs  for  education  on  menopause symptoms and related
    39  chronic conditions.
    40    § 5. The commissioner of labor, in conjunction with  the  commissioner
    41  of health, shall conduct a study on the impact of menopause on the work-
    42  force  and  the breadth of menopause related workforce policies, includ-
    43  ing, but not limited to, health insurance coverage of  therapeutics  for
    44  menopause symptoms, access to menopause health care professionals, meno-
    45  pause  awareness policies, healthcare spending accounts that can be used
    46  for menopause related services, and cooling  rooms.  Such  commissioners
    47  shall  also  develop  best practices for workplaces regarding menopause.
    48  Such commissioners shall, within two years of the effective date of this
    49  act, submit a report including such best practices to the governor,  the
    50  temporary  president  of  the senate, and the speaker of the assembly on
    51  the findings of such study and shall publish such report on the  depart-
    52  ment of labor's website.
    53    § 6. This act shall take effect immediately.
Go to top