Hawaii 2022 Regular Session

Hawaii Senate Bill SB842 Compare Versions

Only one version of the bill is available at this time.
OldNewDifferences
11 THE SENATE S.B. NO. 842 THIRTY-FIRST LEGISLATURE, 2021 STATE OF HAWAII A BILL FOR AN ACT RELATING TO CHILDREN. BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:
22
33 THE SENATE S.B. NO. 842
44 THIRTY-FIRST LEGISLATURE, 2021
55 STATE OF HAWAII
66
77 THE SENATE
88
99 S.B. NO.
1010
1111 842
1212
1313 THIRTY-FIRST LEGISLATURE, 2021
1414
1515
1616
1717 STATE OF HAWAII
1818
1919
2020
2121
2222
2323
2424
2525
2626
2727
2828
2929
3030
3131 A BILL FOR AN ACT
3232
3333
3434
3535
3636
3737 RELATING TO CHILDREN.
3838
3939
4040
4141
4242
4343 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:
4444
4545
4646
4747 SECTION 1. The legislature finds that the State has a paramount interest in protecting all human life. Accordingly, any infant born alive, even after an attempted abortion, is a legal person for all purposes under the federal and state constitutions, and under other federal and state laws. The legislature also finds that nationwide, nearly six thousand abortions reportedly occurred after twenty weeks of gestation, a time during which a fetus could be viable. Further, Canadian statistics report that four hundred and ninety-one live births occurred over a nine-year period that resulted in subsequent neonatal deaths after an attempted abortion. Without proper legal protection, newborn infants who have unexpectedly survived an abortion procedure may be denied appropriate life-saving or life-sustaining medical care and treatment and be left to die. The legislature further finds that protecting an infant whose live birth occurred in spite of an attempted abortion does not infringe on a woman's right to choose or obtain an abortion under existing federal or state law, or interfere with the ability of licensed health care professionals to provide legal abortions. The purpose of this Act is to ensure the protection and promotion of the health and well-being of all infants who survive abortion attempts in the State by: (1) Mandating that healthcare providers provide medically appropriate and reasonable life-saving and life-sustaining medical care and treatment to all born-alive infants; and (2) Establishing penalties for failing to provide that medical care and treatment. SECTION 2. The Hawaii Revised Statutes is amended by adding a new chapter to be appropriately designated and to read as follows: "CHAPTER ABORTION SURVIVORS PROTECTION ACT § -1 Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, unless the context requires otherwise: "Abortion" means the use or prescription of any instrument, medicine, drug, or any other substance or device to intentionally: (1) End the life of the unborn child of a woman known to be pregnant; or (2) Terminate the pregnancy of a woman known to be pregnant, with an intention other than: (A) After viability, to produce a live birth and preserve the life and health of the child born alive; or (B) To remove a dead unborn child. "Attempt", with respect to abortion, means conduct that under the circumstances as the actor believes them to be, constitutes a substantial step in a course of conduct planned to culminate in performing an abortion. "Born alive" or "live birth" means the complete expulsion or extraction of a viable infant from his or her mother, regardless of the state of gestational development, that after expulsion or extraction, whether or not the umbilical cord has been cut or the placenta is attached, shows evidence of life, including: (1) Breathing; (2) A heartbeat; (3) Umbilical cord pulsations; (4) Definite movement of voluntary muscles; or (5) Any other evidence of life according to standard medical practice. "Consent" means the voluntary agreement or acquiescence by a person of age and with the requisite mental capacity who is not under duress or coercion and who has knowledge or understanding of the act or action to which the person agreed or acquiesced. "Healthcare provider" means any person providing aid or assistance to a physician or a nurse, or any person authorized to provide healthcare to the mother during an abortion. "Infant" means a human child who has been completely expulsed or extracted from the child's mother regardless of the stage of gestational development, until the age of thirty days post birth. "Nurse" means a person who has been or is currently licensed under chapter 457. "Physician" means: (1) A physician or surgeon licensed to practice medicine or osteopathy pursuant to chapter 453; or (2) A person who is not a physician or surgeon so licensed but nevertheless directly performs or attempts to perform an abortion. "Unborn child" means a human fetus, beginning at fertilization, until the point of being born alive. § -2 Requirements and responsibilities. (a) A person shall not deny or deprive an infant born alive of nourishment with the intent to cause or allow the death of the infant for any reason. (b) A person shall not deprive an infant born alive of medically appropriate and reasonable medical care and treatment or surgical care. (c) This section shall not be construed to prohibit an infant's parent or guardian from refusing to give consent to medical treatment or surgical care that is not medically necessary or reasonable, including care or treatment that: (1) Is not necessary to save the life of the infant; (2) Has a potential risk of harm to the infant's life or health that outweighs the potential benefit to the infant of the treatment or care; or (3) Will do no more than temporarily prolong the act of dying, as in the case of non-viable infant, when death is imminent. (d) The physician performing an abortion shall take all medically appropriate and reasonable steps to preserve the life and health of an infant born alive. If an abortion is performed in a hospital but a live birth nevertheless occurs, the physician attending the abortion shall provide immediate medical care to the infant, inform the mother of the live birth, and request transfer of the infant to an on-duty resident or emergency care physician who shall provide medically appropriate and reasonable care and treatment to the infant. If an abortion is performed in a hospital but a live birth nevertheless occurs, the physician attending the abortion shall provide medically appropriate and reasonable care and treatment to the infant. (e) If the physician described in subsection (d) is unable to perform the duties of subsection (d) because the physician is assisting the woman on whom the abortion was performed, an attending physician's assistant, nurse, or other healthcare provider shall assume the duties described in subsection (d). (f) Any infant born alive, including one born in the course of an abortion procedure, shall be treated as a legal person under the laws of this State, with the same rights to medically appropriate and reasonable care and treatment. (g) If, before the abortion, the mother has stated in writing that she does not wish to maintain custody of the infant in the event that the infant is born alive, and this writing is not retracted before the attempted abortion, the infant, if born alive, shall immediately become a ward under the care of the department of human services. (h) No person shall use, or authorize to be used, any born alive infant for any type of scientific research or other kind of experimentation, except as necessary to protect the life and health of the infant born alive. (i) Any physician, nurse, other healthcare provider, or employee of a hospital, a physician's office or clinic who has knowledge of failure to comply with this section shall immediately report the failure to law enforcement. § -3 Criminal penalties. (a) Any physician, nurse, or other healthcare provider who intentionally performs an overt act that kills an infant born alive shall be guilty of the offense of murder in the second degree under section 707-701.5. (b) Any physician, nurse, or other healthcare provider who recklessly fails to provide medically appropriate and reasonable care and treatment to an infant born alive, where, as a result of that failure, the infant dies, shall be guilty of the offense of manslaughter under section 707-702. (c) If any physician, nurse, other healthcare provider, or person, including a parent or guardian, conceals the corpse of an infant with the intent to conceal the fact of the infant's birth or to prevent a determination of whether the infant was born alive or dead, that person shall be guilt of the offense of concealing the corpse of an infant under section 709-901. (d) Any physician, nurse, other healthcare provider, or person, including a parent or guardian, who knowingly violates section -2(h) shall be fined not more than $10,000 or imprisoned not more than five years, or both. (e) The mother of a child born alive may not be prosecuted for conspiracy in or as an accomplice to violating subsection (b). § -4 Civil action. (a) If a child is born alive and a healthcare provider violates section -2(d), the woman upon whom the abortion was performed or attempted may, in a civil action against any person who committed the violation, obtain appropriate relief. Any civil action may be based on a claim that the death of or injury to the infant born alive was a result of simple negligence, gross negligence, wantonness, willfulness, intentional conduct or another violation of the legal standard of care. (b) Appropriate relief in a civil action under this section includes: (1) Objective verifiable money damages occasioned by the violation of subsection -2(d); (2) Damages up to three times the cost of the abortion or attempted abortion; (3) Punitive damages; and (4) Other appropriate relief pursuant to applicable law. (c) Any conviction under section -3 shall be admissible in a civil suit as prima facie evidence of a failure to provide medically appropriate and reasonable care and treatment to a born alive infant. (d) The court shall award a reasonable attorneys fee as part of the costs to a prevailing plaintiff in a civil action under this section. (e) If a defendant in a civil action under this subsection prevails and the court finds that the plaintiff's suit was frivolous, the court shall award a reasonable attorneys fee in favor of the defendant against the plaintiff. (f) Except as provided in subsection (e), in a civil action under this section, no damages, attorneys fee or other monetary relief may be assessed against the woman upon whom the abortion was performed. § -5 Professional disciplinary action. Failure to comply with the requirements of this chapter shall provide a basis for professional disciplinary action under chapter 453, chapter 457, or any other appropriate chapter, or any appropriate combination thereof, for the suspension or revocation of any license for physicians, licensed and registered nurses, or other licensed or regulated persons. Any conviction of any person for any failure to comply with the requirements of this chapter shall result in the automatic suspension of his or her license for a period of no less than one year. § -6 Construction. (a) Nothing in this chapter shall be construed to affirm, deny, expand, or contract any legal status or legal right applicable to natural persons at any point before being born alive. (b) Nothing in this chapter shall be construed to affect existing federal or state law regarding abortion. Nothing in this chapter shall be construed to restrict a woman's right to obtain an abortion pursuant to applicable law, nor shall it be construed to restrict the ability of any licensed healthcare providers to perform an abortion in accordance with applicable law. (c) Nothing in this chapter shall be construed as creating or recognizing a right to abortion. (d) Nothing in this chapter shall be construed to alter generally accepted medical standards." SECTION 3. Section 453-8, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (a) to read as follows: "(a) In addition to any other actions authorized by law, any license to practice medicine and surgery may be revoked, limited, or suspended by the board at any time in a proceeding before the board, or may be denied, for any cause authorized by law, including [but not limited to the following]: (1) Procuring, or aiding or abetting in procuring, a criminal abortion; (2) Failure to comply with chapter ; [(2)] (3) Employing any person to solicit patients for one's self; [(3)] (4) Engaging in false, fraudulent, or deceptive advertising, including [but not limited to]: (A) Making excessive claims of expertise in one or more medical specialty fields; (B) Assuring a permanent cure for an incurable disease; or (C) Making any untruthful and improbable statement in advertising one's medical or surgical practice or business; [(4)] (5) Being habituated to the excessive use of drugs or alcohol; or being addicted to, dependent on, or a habitual user of a narcotic, barbiturate, amphetamine, hallucinogen, or other drug having similar effects; [(5)] (6) Practicing medicine while the ability to practice is impaired by alcohol, drugs, physical disability, or mental instability; [(6)] (7) Procuring a license through fraud, misrepresentation, or deceit, or knowingly permitting an unlicensed person to perform activities requiring a license; [(7)] (8) Professional misconduct, hazardous negligence causing bodily injury to another, or manifest incapacity in the practice of medicine or surgery; [(8)] (9) Incompetence or multiple instances of negligence, including [but not limited to] the consistent use of medical service, which is inappropriate or unnecessary; [(9)] (10) Conduct or practice contrary to recognized standards of ethics of the medical profession as adopted by the Hawaii Medical Association, the American Medical Association, the Hawaii Association of Osteopathic Physicians and Surgeons, or the American Osteopathic Association; [(10)] (11) Violation of the conditions or limitations upon which a limited or temporary license is issued; [(11)] (12) Revocation, suspension, or other disciplinary action by another state or federal agency of a license, certificate, or medical privilege; [(12)] (13) Conviction, whether by nolo contendere or otherwise, of a penal offense substantially related to the qualifications, functions, or duties of a physician or osteopathic physician, notwithstanding any statutory provision to the contrary; [(13)] (14) Violation of chapter 329, the uniform controlled substances act, or any rule adopted thereunder except as provided in section 329-122; [(14)] (15) Failure to report to the board, in writing, any disciplinary decision issued against the licensee or the applicant in another jurisdiction within thirty days after the disciplinary decision is issued; or [(15)] (16) Submitting to or filing with the board any notice, statement, or other document required under this chapter, which is false or untrue or contains any material misstatement or omission of fact." SECTION 4. Section 457-12, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (a) to read as follows: "(a) In addition to any other actions authorized by law, the board shall have the power to deny, revoke, limit, or suspend any license to practice nursing as a registered nurse or as a licensed practical nurse applied for or issued by the board in accordance with this chapter, and to fine or to otherwise discipline a licensee for any cause authorized by law, including [but not limited to the following]: (1) Fraud or deceit in procuring or attempting to procure a license to practice nursing as a registered nurse or as a licensed practical nurse; (2) Gross immorality; (3) Unfitness or incompetence by reason of negligence, habits, or other causes; (4) Habitual intemperance, addiction to, or dependency on alcohol or other habit-forming substances; (5) Mental incompetence; (6) Unprofessional conduct as defined by the board in accordance with its own rules; (7) Wilful or repeated violation of any of the provisions of this chapter or any rule adopted by the board; (8) Revocation, suspension, limitation, or other disciplinary action by another state of a nursing license; (9) Conviction, whether by nolo contendere or otherwise, of a penal offense substantially related to the qualifications, functions, or duties of a nurse, notwithstanding any statutory provision to the contrary; (10) Failure to report to the board any disciplinary action taken against the licensee in another jurisdiction within thirty days after the disciplinary action becomes final; (11) Submitting to or filing with the board any notice, statement, or other document required under this chapter, which is false or untrue or contains any material misstatement of fact, including a false attestation of compliance with continuing competency requirements; (12) Failure to comply with chapter ; [(12)] (13) Violation of the conditions or limitations upon which any license is issued; or [(13)] (14) Violation of chapter 329, the uniform controlled substances act, or any rule adopted thereunder except as provided in section 329-122." SECTION 5. Section 709-901, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows: "§709-901 Concealing the corpse of an infant. (1) A person commits the offense of concealing the corpse of an infant if the person conceals the corpse of a new-born child with intent to conceal the fact of [its] the child's birth or to prevent a determination of whether [it] the child was born dead or alive. (2) If an abortion as defined in section -1 is attempted but a live birth nevertheless occurs, the surviving infant shall be considered a new-born child for the purposes of this section. [(2)] (3) Concealing the corpse of an infant is a misdemeanor." SECTION 6. This Act does not affect rights and duties that matured, penalties that were incurred, and proceedings that were begun before its effective date. SECTION 7. Statutory material to be repealed is bracketed and stricken. New statutory material is underscored. SECTION 8. This Act shall take effect on July 1, 2021; provided that the amendments made to section 457-12, Hawaii Revised Statutes, by section 4 of this Act shall not be repealed when that section is reenacted on June 30, 2023, pursuant to section 6 of Act 66, Session Laws of Hawaii 2017. INTRODUCED BY: _____________________________
4848
4949 SECTION 1. The legislature finds that the State has a paramount interest in protecting all human life. Accordingly, any infant born alive, even after an attempted abortion, is a legal person for all purposes under the federal and state constitutions, and under other federal and state laws. The legislature also finds that nationwide, nearly six thousand abortions reportedly occurred after twenty weeks of gestation, a time during which a fetus could be viable. Further, Canadian statistics report that four hundred and ninety-one live births occurred over a nine-year period that resulted in subsequent neonatal deaths after an attempted abortion. Without proper legal protection, newborn infants who have unexpectedly survived an abortion procedure may be denied appropriate life-saving or life-sustaining medical care and treatment and be left to die.
5050
5151 The legislature further finds that protecting an infant whose live birth occurred in spite of an attempted abortion does not infringe on a woman's right to choose or obtain an abortion under existing federal or state law, or interfere with the ability of licensed health care professionals to provide legal abortions.
5252
5353 The purpose of this Act is to ensure the protection and promotion of the health and well-being of all infants who survive abortion attempts in the State by:
5454
5555 (1) Mandating that healthcare providers provide medically appropriate and reasonable life-saving and life-sustaining medical care and treatment to all born-alive infants; and
5656
5757 (2) Establishing penalties for failing to provide that medical care and treatment.
5858
5959 SECTION 2. The Hawaii Revised Statutes is amended by adding a new chapter to be appropriately designated and to read as follows:
6060
6161 "CHAPTER
6262
6363 ABORTION SURVIVORS PROTECTION ACT
6464
6565 § -1 Definitions. For the purposes of this chapter, unless the context requires otherwise:
6666
6767 "Abortion" means the use or prescription of any instrument, medicine, drug, or any other substance or device to intentionally:
6868
6969 (1) End the life of the unborn child of a woman known to be pregnant; or
7070
7171 (2) Terminate the pregnancy of a woman known to be pregnant, with an intention other than:
7272
7373 (A) After viability, to produce a live birth and preserve the life and health of the child born alive; or
7474
7575 (B) To remove a dead unborn child.
7676
7777 "Attempt", with respect to abortion, means conduct that under the circumstances as the actor believes them to be, constitutes a substantial step in a course of conduct planned to culminate in performing an abortion.
7878
7979 "Born alive" or "live birth" means the complete expulsion or extraction of a viable infant from his or her mother, regardless of the state of gestational development, that after expulsion or extraction, whether or not the umbilical cord has been cut or the placenta is attached, shows evidence of life, including:
8080
8181 (1) Breathing;
8282
8383 (2) A heartbeat;
8484
8585 (3) Umbilical cord pulsations;
8686
8787 (4) Definite movement of voluntary muscles; or
8888
8989 (5) Any other evidence of life according to standard medical practice.
9090
9191 "Consent" means the voluntary agreement or acquiescence by a person of age and with the requisite mental capacity who is not under duress or coercion and who has knowledge or understanding of the act or action to which the person agreed or acquiesced.
9292
9393 "Healthcare provider" means any person providing aid or assistance to a physician or a nurse, or any person authorized to provide healthcare to the mother during an abortion.
9494
9595 "Infant" means a human child who has been completely expulsed or extracted from the child's mother regardless of the stage of gestational development, until the age of thirty days post birth.
9696
9797 "Nurse" means a person who has been or is currently licensed under chapter 457.
9898
9999 "Physician" means:
100100
101101 (1) A physician or surgeon licensed to practice medicine or osteopathy pursuant to chapter 453; or
102102
103103 (2) A person who is not a physician or surgeon so licensed but nevertheless directly performs or attempts to perform an abortion.
104104
105105 "Unborn child" means a human fetus, beginning at fertilization, until the point of being born alive.
106106
107107 § -2 Requirements and responsibilities. (a) A person shall not deny or deprive an infant born alive of nourishment with the intent to cause or allow the death of the infant for any reason.
108108
109109 (b) A person shall not deprive an infant born alive of medically appropriate and reasonable medical care and treatment or surgical care.
110110
111111 (c) This section shall not be construed to prohibit an infant's parent or guardian from refusing to give consent to medical treatment or surgical care that is not medically necessary or reasonable, including care or treatment that:
112112
113113 (1) Is not necessary to save the life of the infant;
114114
115115 (2) Has a potential risk of harm to the infant's life or health that outweighs the potential benefit to the infant of the treatment or care; or
116116
117117 (3) Will do no more than temporarily prolong the act of dying, as in the case of non-viable infant, when death is imminent.
118118
119119 (d) The physician performing an abortion shall take all medically appropriate and reasonable steps to preserve the life and health of an infant born alive. If an abortion is performed in a hospital but a live birth nevertheless occurs, the physician attending the abortion shall provide immediate medical care to the infant, inform the mother of the live birth, and request transfer of the infant to an on-duty resident or emergency care physician who shall provide medically appropriate and reasonable care and treatment to the infant.
120120
121121 If an abortion is performed in a hospital but a live birth nevertheless occurs, the physician attending the abortion shall provide medically appropriate and reasonable care and treatment to the infant.
122122
123123 (e) If the physician described in subsection (d) is unable to perform the duties of subsection (d) because the physician is assisting the woman on whom the abortion was performed, an attending physician's assistant, nurse, or other healthcare provider shall assume the duties described in subsection (d).
124124
125125 (f) Any infant born alive, including one born in the course of an abortion procedure, shall be treated as a legal person under the laws of this State, with the same rights to medically appropriate and reasonable care and treatment.
126126
127127 (g) If, before the abortion, the mother has stated in writing that she does not wish to maintain custody of the infant in the event that the infant is born alive, and this writing is not retracted before the attempted abortion, the infant, if born alive, shall immediately become a ward under the care of the department of human services.
128128
129129 (h) No person shall use, or authorize to be used, any born alive infant for any type of scientific research or other kind of experimentation, except as necessary to protect the life and health of the infant born alive.
130130
131131 (i) Any physician, nurse, other healthcare provider, or employee of a hospital, a physician's office or clinic who has knowledge of failure to comply with this section shall immediately report the failure to law enforcement.
132132
133133 § -3 Criminal penalties. (a) Any physician, nurse, or other healthcare provider who intentionally performs an overt act that kills an infant born alive shall be guilty of the offense of murder in the second degree under section 707-701.5.
134134
135135 (b) Any physician, nurse, or other healthcare provider who recklessly fails to provide medically appropriate and reasonable care and treatment to an infant born alive, where, as a result of that failure, the infant dies, shall be guilty of the offense of manslaughter under section 707-702.
136136
137137 (c) If any physician, nurse, other healthcare provider, or person, including a parent or guardian, conceals the corpse of an infant with the intent to conceal the fact of the infant's birth or to prevent a determination of whether the infant was born alive or dead, that person shall be guilt of the offense of concealing the corpse of an infant under section 709-901.
138138
139139 (d) Any physician, nurse, other healthcare provider, or person, including a parent or guardian, who knowingly violates section -2(h) shall be fined not more than $10,000 or imprisoned not more than five years, or both.
140140
141141 (e) The mother of a child born alive may not be prosecuted for conspiracy in or as an accomplice to violating subsection (b).
142142
143143 § -4 Civil action. (a) If a child is born alive and a healthcare provider violates section -2(d), the woman upon whom the abortion was performed or attempted may, in a civil action against any person who committed the violation, obtain appropriate relief. Any civil action may be based on a claim that the death of or injury to the infant born alive was a result of simple negligence, gross negligence, wantonness, willfulness, intentional conduct or another violation of the legal standard of care.
144144
145145 (b) Appropriate relief in a civil action under this section includes:
146146
147147 (1) Objective verifiable money damages occasioned by the violation of subsection -2(d);
148148
149149 (2) Damages up to three times the cost of the abortion or attempted abortion;
150150
151151 (3) Punitive damages; and
152152
153153 (4) Other appropriate relief pursuant to applicable law.
154154
155155 (c) Any conviction under section -3 shall be admissible in a civil suit as prima facie evidence of a failure to provide medically appropriate and reasonable care and treatment to a born alive infant.
156156
157157 (d) The court shall award a reasonable attorneys fee as part of the costs to a prevailing plaintiff in a civil action under this section.
158158
159159 (e) If a defendant in a civil action under this subsection prevails and the court finds that the plaintiff's suit was frivolous, the court shall award a reasonable attorneys fee in favor of the defendant against the plaintiff.
160160
161161 (f) Except as provided in subsection (e), in a civil action under this section, no damages, attorneys fee or other monetary relief may be assessed against the woman upon whom the abortion was performed.
162162
163163 § -5 Professional disciplinary action. Failure to comply with the requirements of this chapter shall provide a basis for professional disciplinary action under chapter 453, chapter 457, or any other appropriate chapter, or any appropriate combination thereof, for the suspension or revocation of any license for physicians, licensed and registered nurses, or other licensed or regulated persons. Any conviction of any person for any failure to comply with the requirements of this chapter shall result in the automatic suspension of his or her license for a period of no less than one year.
164164
165165 § -6 Construction. (a) Nothing in this chapter shall be construed to affirm, deny, expand, or contract any legal status or legal right applicable to natural persons at any point before being born alive.
166166
167167 (b) Nothing in this chapter shall be construed to affect existing federal or state law regarding abortion. Nothing in this chapter shall be construed to restrict a woman's right to obtain an abortion pursuant to applicable law, nor shall it be construed to restrict the ability of any licensed healthcare providers to perform an abortion in accordance with applicable law.
168168
169169 (c) Nothing in this chapter shall be construed as creating or recognizing a right to abortion.
170170
171171 (d) Nothing in this chapter shall be construed to alter generally accepted medical standards."
172172
173173 SECTION 3. Section 453-8, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (a) to read as follows:
174174
175175 "(a) In addition to any other actions authorized by law, any license to practice medicine and surgery may be revoked, limited, or suspended by the board at any time in a proceeding before the board, or may be denied, for any cause authorized by law, including [but not limited to the following]:
176176
177177 (1) Procuring, or aiding or abetting in procuring, a criminal abortion;
178178
179179 (2) Failure to comply with chapter ;
180180
181181 [(2)] (3) Employing any person to solicit patients for one's self;
182182
183183 [(3)] (4) Engaging in false, fraudulent, or deceptive advertising, including [but not limited to]:
184184
185185 (A) Making excessive claims of expertise in one or more medical specialty fields;
186186
187187 (B) Assuring a permanent cure for an incurable disease; or
188188
189189 (C) Making any untruthful and improbable statement in advertising one's medical or surgical practice or business;
190190
191191 [(4)] (5) Being habituated to the excessive use of drugs or alcohol; or being addicted to, dependent on, or a habitual user of a narcotic, barbiturate, amphetamine, hallucinogen, or other drug having similar effects;
192192
193193 [(5)] (6) Practicing medicine while the ability to practice is impaired by alcohol, drugs, physical disability, or mental instability;
194194
195195 [(6)] (7) Procuring a license through fraud, misrepresentation, or deceit, or knowingly permitting an unlicensed person to perform activities requiring a license;
196196
197197 [(7)] (8) Professional misconduct, hazardous negligence causing bodily injury to another, or manifest incapacity in the practice of medicine or surgery;
198198
199199 [(8)] (9) Incompetence or multiple instances of negligence, including [but not limited to] the consistent use of medical service, which is inappropriate or unnecessary;
200200
201201 [(9)] (10) Conduct or practice contrary to recognized standards of ethics of the medical profession as adopted by the Hawaii Medical Association, the American Medical Association, the Hawaii Association of Osteopathic Physicians and Surgeons, or the American Osteopathic Association;
202202
203203 [(10)] (11) Violation of the conditions or limitations upon which a limited or temporary license is issued;
204204
205205 [(11)] (12) Revocation, suspension, or other disciplinary action by another state or federal agency of a license, certificate, or medical privilege;
206206
207207 [(12)] (13) Conviction, whether by nolo contendere or otherwise, of a penal offense substantially related to the qualifications, functions, or duties of a physician or osteopathic physician, notwithstanding any statutory provision to the contrary;
208208
209209 [(13)] (14) Violation of chapter 329, the uniform controlled substances act, or any rule adopted thereunder except as provided in section 329-122;
210210
211211 [(14)] (15) Failure to report to the board, in writing, any disciplinary decision issued against the licensee or the applicant in another jurisdiction within thirty days after the disciplinary decision is issued; or
212212
213213 [(15)] (16) Submitting to or filing with the board any notice, statement, or other document required under this chapter, which is false or untrue or contains any material misstatement or omission of fact."
214214
215215 SECTION 4. Section 457-12, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (a) to read as follows:
216216
217217 "(a) In addition to any other actions authorized by law, the board shall have the power to deny, revoke, limit, or suspend any license to practice nursing as a registered nurse or as a licensed practical nurse applied for or issued by the board in accordance with this chapter, and to fine or to otherwise discipline a licensee for any cause authorized by law, including [but not limited to the following]:
218218
219219 (1) Fraud or deceit in procuring or attempting to procure a license to practice nursing as a registered nurse or as a licensed practical nurse;
220220
221221 (2) Gross immorality;
222222
223223 (3) Unfitness or incompetence by reason of negligence, habits, or other causes;
224224
225225 (4) Habitual intemperance, addiction to, or dependency on alcohol or other habit-forming substances;
226226
227227 (5) Mental incompetence;
228228
229229 (6) Unprofessional conduct as defined by the board in accordance with its own rules;
230230
231231 (7) Wilful or repeated violation of any of the provisions of this chapter or any rule adopted by the board;
232232
233233 (8) Revocation, suspension, limitation, or other disciplinary action by another state of a nursing license;
234234
235235 (9) Conviction, whether by nolo contendere or otherwise, of a penal offense substantially related to the qualifications, functions, or duties of a nurse, notwithstanding any statutory provision to the contrary;
236236
237237 (10) Failure to report to the board any disciplinary action taken against the licensee in another jurisdiction within thirty days after the disciplinary action becomes final;
238238
239239 (11) Submitting to or filing with the board any notice, statement, or other document required under this chapter, which is false or untrue or contains any material misstatement of fact, including a false attestation of compliance with continuing competency requirements;
240240
241241 (12) Failure to comply with chapter ;
242242
243243 [(12)] (13) Violation of the conditions or limitations upon which any license is issued; or
244244
245245 [(13)] (14) Violation of chapter 329, the uniform controlled substances act, or any rule adopted thereunder except as provided in section 329-122."
246246
247247 SECTION 5. Section 709-901, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:
248248
249249 "§709-901 Concealing the corpse of an infant. (1) A person commits the offense of concealing the corpse of an infant if the person conceals the corpse of a new-born child with intent to conceal the fact of [its] the child's birth or to prevent a determination of whether [it] the child was born dead or alive.
250250
251251 (2) If an abortion as defined in section -1 is attempted but a live birth nevertheless occurs, the surviving infant shall be considered a new-born child for the purposes of this section.
252252
253253 [(2)] (3) Concealing the corpse of an infant is a misdemeanor."
254254
255255 SECTION 6. This Act does not affect rights and duties that matured, penalties that were incurred, and proceedings that were begun before its effective date.
256256
257257 SECTION 7. Statutory material to be repealed is bracketed and stricken. New statutory material is underscored.
258258
259259 SECTION 8. This Act shall take effect on July 1, 2021; provided that the amendments made to section 457-12, Hawaii Revised Statutes, by section 4 of this Act shall not be repealed when that section is reenacted on June 30, 2023, pursuant to section 6 of Act 66, Session Laws of Hawaii 2017.
260260
261261
262262
263263 INTRODUCED BY: _____________________________
264264
265265 INTRODUCED BY:
266266
267267 _____________________________
268268
269269
270270
271271
272272
273273 Report Title: Abortion Survivors; Born Alive Infant; Penalties Description: Ensures the protection and promotion of the health and well-being of all infants born alive in the State. Mandates medically appropriate and reasonable life-saving and life-sustaining medical care and treatment to all born alive infants. Establishes civil and criminal penalties. The summary description of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.
274274
275275
276276
277277
278278
279279 Report Title:
280280
281281 Abortion Survivors; Born Alive Infant; Penalties
282282
283283
284284
285285 Description:
286286
287287 Ensures the protection and promotion of the health and well-being of all infants born alive in the State. Mandates medically appropriate and reasonable life-saving and life-sustaining medical care and treatment to all born alive infants. Establishes civil and criminal penalties.
288288
289289
290290
291291
292292
293293
294294
295295 The summary description of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.