summary
Introduced
02/12/2025
02/12/2025
In Committee
02/12/2025
02/12/2025
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead
03/04/2025
03/04/2025
Introduced Session
2025 Regular Session
Bill Summary
The bill creates the "Medical Ethics Defense Act" (act). The act recognizes that a health-care professional, health-care institution, and health-care payer (health-care provider) has a right of conscience. The act: ! Defines "conscience" to mean the ethical, moral, or religious beliefs or principles held by a health-care provider and recognizes institutional entities or corporate bodies as also having a conscience as determined by reference to the governing documents of the entity or body; and ! Allows a health-care provider to refuse to participate in or pay for a medical procedure, treatment, or service that violates the health-care provider's conscience. The right of conscience is limited to a particular medical procedure, treatment, or service. Further, a health-care payer is prohibited from refusing to pay for services that are specified in the health-care payer's contract. The act shall not be construed to conflict with the requirement to provide emergency medical treatment. A health-care provider: ! Shall not be discriminated against in any manner as a result of the health-care provider exercising its right of conscience; and ! Is immune from civil, criminal, or administrative liability for exercising its right of conscience. The act authorizes a religious health-care provider to make employment staffing, contracting, and administrative decisions consistent with its religious beliefs if it holds itself out to the public as religious and has internal operating procedures that implement its religious purpose or mission. The act provides protection against discrimination to a health-care provider that provides information about a violation of the act or other law to an employer or a state or federal agency or official or that testifies or participates in proceedings relating to the violation. Additionally, the act prohibits: ! Administrative agencies from denying or revoking a license, certification, or registration, or threatening to do so, based upon an individual health-care professional engaging in free speech under the United States constitution (constitution) or section 10 of article II of the state constitution; or ! The state from contracting with, recognizing, approving, or requiring an individual to obtain certifications or credentials from a specialty board or other recognizing agency that refuses to certify or revokes credentials based upon an individual's engagement in free speech under the constitution. A state entity that regulates the provision of medical treatments, procedures, or services shall promptly notify a health-care provider of any complaint received by the entity that is based on an exercise of free speech and that may result in revocation of the health-care provider's license, certification, or registration. A party aggrieved by a violation of the act may commence a civil action and, if a violation has occurred, is entitled to injunctive and declaratory relief and an award of monetary damages and attorney fees.
AI Summary
This bill, titled the "Medical Ethics Defense Act," aims to protect the right of conscience for health-care providers in Colorado. The bill defines "conscience" as the ethical, moral, or religious beliefs held by health-care professionals, institutions, or payers. It establishes that health-care providers cannot be required to participate in or pay for medical procedures, treatments, or services that violate their conscience. The legislation provides broad protections, covering a wide range of health-care professionals including doctors, nurses, researchers, and medical staff. Key provisions include preventing discrimination against health-care providers who exercise their right of conscience, offering whistleblower protections, and safeguarding free speech rights. The bill allows aggrieved parties to seek civil remedies, including injunctive relief and monetary damages, if their rights are violated. Importantly, the legislation emphasizes that the right of conscience is limited to specific procedures that conflict with a provider's beliefs and does not exempt providers from their other professional obligations. The bill's legislative declaration highlights the historical importance of conscience rights, tracing them back to the Hippocratic Oath and framing them as a fundamental, unalienable right that needs protection in the face of evolving medical technologies and patient rights.
Committee Categories
Justice
Sponsors (1)
Last Action
House Committee on Judiciary Postpone Indefinitely (on 03/04/2025)
Official Document
bill text
bill summary
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bill summary
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bill summary
Document Type | Source Location |
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State Bill Page | https://leg.colorado.gov/bills/hb25-1255 |
Fiscal Note FN1 | https://leg.colorado.gov/sites/default/files/documents/2025A/bills/fn/2025a_hb1255_00.pdf |
BillText | https://leg.colorado.gov/sites/default/files/documents/2025A/bills/2025a_1255_01.pdf |
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