Bill

Bill > S703


NJ S703

NJ S703
Requires certain health care professionals to undergo explicit and implicit bias training.


summary

Introduced
01/14/2020
In Committee
02/24/2021
Crossed Over
03/25/2021
Passed
03/25/2021
Dead
Signed/Enacted/Adopted
05/11/2021

Introduced Session

2020-2021 Regular Session

Bill Summary

This bill requires every hospital that provides inpatient maternity services and every birthing center licensed in the State pursuant to P.L.1971, c.136 (C.26:2H-1 et seq.) to implement an evidence-based implicit bias training program for all health professionals who provide perinatal treatment and care to pregnant women at the hospital or birthing center. The training program would include, but not be limited to: identifying previous and current unconscious biases and misinformation when providing perinatal treatment and care to pregnant women; identifying personal, interpersonal, institutional, and cultural barriers to inclusion; information about the effects of historical and contemporary exclusion and oppression of minority communities; information about cultural identity across racial and ethnic groups; information about communicating more effectively across racial, ethnic, religious, and gender identities; information about reproductive justice; discussions on power dynamics and organizational decision-making and their effects on implicit bias, and on health inequities and racial and ethnic disparities within the field of perinatal care, and how implicit bias may contribute to pregnancy-related deaths and maternal and infant health outcomes; and corrective measures to decrease implicit bias at the interpersonal and institutional levels. A health care professional who provides perinatal treatment and care to pregnant women at a hospital or birthing center would be required to complete the training program and a refresher course, every two years. The refresher course would be designed to provide the health care professional with updated information about racial, ethnic, and cultural identity, and best practices in decreasing interpersonal and institutional implicit bias. Upon successful completion of the training program, the health care professional would receive a certification from the hospital or birthing center. As defined in the bill, "implicit bias" means a bias in judgment or behavior that results from subtle cognitive processes, including implicit prejudice and implicit stereotypes, that often operate at a level below conscious awareness and without intentional control. "Implicit stereotypes" means the unconscious attributions of particular qualities to a member of a certain social group, influenced by experience, and based on learned associations between various qualities and social categories, including race and gender.

AI Summary

This bill requires every hospital that provides inpatient maternity services and every birthing center licensed in the State to implement an evidence-based explicit and implicit bias training program for all health professionals and certain supportive services staff who provide perinatal treatment and care to pregnant persons. The training program must cover topics such as identifying unconscious biases, personal and institutional barriers to inclusion, information on the effects of historical and contemporary exclusion, effective communication across identities, reproductive justice, power dynamics, and corrective measures to decrease implicit bias. Health care professionals must complete the training program and a refresher course every two years, and receive a certification upon successful completion. The bill also requires certain licensing boards to include one credit of continuing education on explicit and implicit bias as a condition of licensure or certification renewal for relevant health care professionals.

Committee Categories

Budget and Finance, Health and Social Services

Sponsors (11)

Last Action

Approved P.L.2021, c.79. (on 05/11/2021)

bill text


bill summary

Loading...

bill summary

Loading...
Loading...