Texas 2015 84th Regular

Texas Senate Bill SB1574 Engrossed / Bill

Filed 04/23/2015

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                    By: Uresti, Campbell S.B. No. 1574


 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 AN ACT
 relating to emergency response employees or volunteers and others
 exposed or potentially exposed to certain diseases or parasites.
 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 SECTION 1.  Article 18.22(a), Code of Criminal Procedure, is
 amended to read as follows:
 (a)  A person who is arrested for a misdemeanor or felony and
 who during the commission of that offense or an arrest following the
 commission of that offense causes an emergency response employee or
 volunteer, as defined by Section 81.003, Health and Safety Code, [a
 peace officer] to come into contact with the person's bodily fluids
 shall, at the direction of the court having jurisdiction over the
 arrested person, undergo a medical procedure or test designed to
 show or help show whether the person has a communicable disease.
 The court may direct the person to undergo the procedure or test on
 its own motion or on the request of the emergency response employee
 or volunteer [peace officer]. If the person refuses to submit
 voluntarily to the procedure or test, the court shall require the
 person to submit to the procedure or test. Notwithstanding any
 other law, the person performing the procedure or test shall make
 the test results available to the local health authority and the
 designated infection control officer of the entity that employs or
 uses the services of the affected emergency response employee or
 volunteer, and the local health authority or the designated
 infection control officer of the affected employee or volunteer
 shall notify the emergency response employee or volunteer [peace
 officer] of the test result. The state may not use the fact that a
 medical procedure or test was performed on a person under this
 article, or use the results of the procedure or test, in any
 criminal proceeding arising out of the alleged offense.
 SECTION 2.  Section 607.102, Government Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 Sec. 607.102.  NOTIFICATION. An [A firefighter or]
 emergency response employee or volunteer, as defined by Section
 81.003, Health and Safety Code, [medical technician] who is exposed
 to methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus or a disease caused
 by a select agent or toxin identified or listed under 42 C.F.R.
 Section 73.3 is entitled to receive notification of the exposure in
 the manner prescribed by Section 81.048, Health and Safety Code.
 SECTION 3.  Section 81.003, Health and Safety Code, is
 amended by adding Subdivisions (1-a) and (1-b) and amending
 Subdivision (8) to read as follows:
 (1-a)  "Emergency response employee or volunteer"
 means an individual acting in the course and scope of employment or
 service as a volunteer as emergency medical service personnel, a
 peace officer, a detention officer, a county jailer, or a fire
 fighter.
 (1-b)  "Designated infection control officer" means
 the person serving as an entity's designated infection control
 officer under Section 81.012.
 (8)  "Reportable disease" means a [includes only a]
 disease that is designated as [or condition included in the list of]
 reportable under Section 81.048 [diseases].
 SECTION 4.  Subchapter A, Chapter 81, Health and Safety
 Code, is amended by adding Sections 81.012 and 81.013 to read as
 follows:
 Sec. 81.012.  DESIGNATED INFECTION CONTROL OFFICER. (a)  An
 entity that employs or uses the services of an emergency response
 employee or volunteer shall nominate a designated infection control
 officer and an alternate designated infection control officer to:
 (1)  receive notification of a potential exposure to a
 reportable disease from a health care facility;
 (2)  notify the appropriate health care providers of a
 potential exposure to a reportable disease;
 (3)  act as a liaison between the entity's emergency
 response employees or volunteers who may have been exposed to a
 reportable disease during the course and scope of employment or
 service as a volunteer and the destination hospital of the patient
 who was the source of the potential exposure;
 (4)  investigate and evaluate an exposure incident,
 using current evidence-based information on the possible risks of
 communicable disease presented by the exposure incident; and
 (5)  monitor all follow-up treatment provided to the
 affected emergency response employee or volunteer, in accordance
 with applicable federal, state, and local law.
 (b)  The executive commissioner by rule shall prescribe the
 qualifications required for a person to be eligible to be
 designated as an infection control officer under this section.  The
 qualifications must include a requirement that the person be
 trained as a health care provider or have training in the control of
 infectious and communicable diseases.
 (c)  The entity that employs or uses the services of an
 emergency response employee or volunteer is responsible for
 notifying the local health authorities or local health care
 facilities, according to any local rules or procedures, that the
 entity has a designated infection control officer or alternate
 designated infection control officer.
 Sec. 81.013.  CONSIDERATION OF FEDERAL LAW AND REGULATIONS.
 The executive commissioner shall review the Ryan White HIV/AIDS
 Treatment Extension Act of 2009 (Pub. L. No. 111-87) or any
 successor law and any regulations adopted under the law and
 determine whether adopting by rule any part of the federal law or
 regulations is in the best interest of the state to further achieve
 the purposes of this chapter.  If the executive commissioner
 determines that adopting the federal law or regulations is in the
 best interest of the state to further achieve the purposes of this
 chapter, the executive commissioner may by rule adopt all or a part
 of the federal law or regulations.
 SECTION 5.  Section 81.046(c), Health and Safety Code, is
 amended to read as follows:
 (c)  Medical or epidemiological information may be released:
 (1)  for statistical purposes if released in a manner
 that prevents the identification of any person;
 (2)  with the consent of each person identified in the
 information;
 (3)  to medical personnel treating the individual,
 appropriate state agencies in this state or another state, a health
 authority or local health department in this state or another
 state, or federal, county, or district courts to comply with this
 chapter and related rules relating to the control and treatment of
 communicable diseases and health conditions or under another state
 or federal law that expressly authorizes the disclosure of this
 information;
 (4)  to appropriate federal agencies, such as the
 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention of the United States
 Public Health Service, but the information must be limited to the
 name, address, sex, race, and occupation of the patient, the date of
 disease onset, the probable source of infection, and other
 requested information relating to the case or suspected case of a
 communicable disease or health condition; [or]
 (5)  to medical personnel to the extent necessary in a
 medical emergency to protect the health or life of the person
 identified in the information; or
 (6)  to a designated infection control officer.
 SECTION 6.  The heading to Section 81.048, Health and Safety
 Code, is amended to read as follows:
 Sec. 81.048.  NOTIFICATION OF EMERGENCY RESPONSE EMPLOYEE OR
 VOLUNTEER [PERSONNEL, PEACE OFFICERS, DETENTION OFFICERS, COUNTY
 JAILERS, AND FIRE FIGHTERS].
 SECTION 7.  Sections 81.048(b) and (c), Health and Safety
 Code, and Section 81.048(g), Health and Safety Code, as amended by
 S.B. 219, Acts of the 84th Legislature, Regular Session, 2015, are
 amended to read as follows:
 (b)  Notice of a positive or negative test result for a
 reportable disease designated under Subsection (a) shall be given
 to an emergency response employee or volunteer [medical service
 personnel, peace officer, detention officer, county jailer, or fire
 fighter] as provided by this section if:
 (1)  the emergency response employee or volunteer
 [medical service personnel, peace officer, detention officer,
 county jailer, or fire fighter] delivered a person to a hospital as
 defined by Section 74.001, Civil Practice and Remedies Code;
 (2)  the hospital has knowledge that the person has a
 reportable disease and has medical reason to believe that the
 person had the disease when the person was admitted to the hospital;
 and
 (3)  the emergency response employee or volunteer
 [medical service personnel, peace officer, detention officer,
 county jailer, or fire fighter] was exposed to the reportable
 disease during the course and scope of the person's employment or
 service as a volunteer [of duty].
 (c)  Notice of the possible exposure shall be given:
 (1)  by the hospital to the local health authority;
 (2)  by the hospital to the designated infection
 control officer of [local health authority to the director of the
 appropriate department of] the entity that employs or uses the
 services of the affected emergency response employee or volunteer
 [emergency medical service personnel, peace officer, detention
 officer, county jailer, or fire fighter]; and
 (3)  by the local health authority or the designated
 infection control officer of the entity that employs or uses the
 services of the affected emergency response employee or volunteer
 [director] to the employee or volunteer affected.
 (g)  A hospital that gives notice of a possible exposure
 under Subsection (c) or a local health authority or designated
 infection control officer that receives notice of a possible
 exposure under Subsection (c) may give notice of the possible
 exposure to a person other than the affected emergency response
 employee or volunteer [emergency medical personnel, a peace
 officer, a detention officer, a county jailer, or a fire fighter] if
 the person demonstrates that the person was exposed to the
 reportable disease while providing emergency care.  The executive
 commissioner shall adopt rules to implement this subsection.
 SECTION 8.  Section 81.050(b), Health and Safety Code, as
 amended by S.B. 219, Acts of the 84th Legislature, Regular Session,
 2015, and Section 81.050(h), Health and Safety Code, are amended to
 read as follows:
 (b)  A person whose occupation or whose volunteer service is
 included in one or more of the following categories may request the
 department or a health authority to order testing of another person
 who may have exposed the person to a reportable disease:
 (1)  a law enforcement officer;
 (2)  a fire fighter;
 (3)  an emergency medical service employee or
 paramedic;
 (4)  a correctional officer;
 (5)  an employee, contractor, or volunteer, other than
 a correctional officer, who performs a service in a correctional
 facility as defined by Section 1.07, Penal Code, or a secure
 correctional facility or secure detention facility as defined by
 Section 51.02, Family Code; [or]
 (6)  an employee of a juvenile probation department; or
 (7)  any other emergency response employee or
 volunteer.
 (h)  The department or the department's designee shall
 inform the person who requested the order and the designated
 infection control officer of the person who requested the order, if
 that person is an emergency response employee or volunteer, of the
 results of the test. If the person subject to the order is found to
 have a reportable disease, the department or the department's
 designee shall inform that person and the person who requested the
 order of the need for medical follow-up and counseling services.
 The department or the department's designee shall develop protocols
 for coding test specimens to ensure that any identifying
 information concerning the person tested will be destroyed as soon
 as the testing is complete.
 SECTION 9.  Sections 81.095(a) and (b), Health and Safety
 Code, are amended to read as follows:
 (a)  In a case of accidental exposure of a health care worker
 to blood or other body fluids of a patient in a licensed hospital,
 the hospital, following a report of the exposure incident, shall
 take reasonable steps to test the patient for hepatitis B, [or]
 hepatitis C, HIV, or any reportable disease.
 (b)  This subsection applies only in a case of accidental
 exposure of certified emergency medical services personnel, an
 emergency response employee or volunteer [a firefighter, a peace
 officer], or a first responder who renders assistance at the scene
 of an emergency or during transport to the hospital to blood or
 other body fluids of a patient who is transported to a licensed
 hospital. The hospital receiving the patient, following a report
 of the exposure incident, shall take reasonable steps to test the
 patient for hepatitis B, [or] hepatitis C, HIV, or any reportable
 disease if the report shows there is significant risk to the person
 exposed. The organization that employs the person or for which the
 person works as a volunteer in connection with rendering the
 assistance is responsible for paying the costs of the test. The
 hospital shall provide the test results to the department or to the
 local health authority and to the designated infection control
 officer of the entity employing or using the services of an affected
 emergency response employee or volunteer, which are responsible for
 following the procedures prescribed by Section 81.050(h) to inform
 the person exposed and, if applicable, the patient regarding the
 test results. The hospital shall follow applicable reporting
 requirements prescribed by Subchapter C.  This subsection does not
 impose a duty on a hospital to provide any further testing,
 treatment, or services or to perform further procedures.
 SECTION 10.  Section 81.0955(a), Health and Safety Code, and
 Section 81.0955(b), Health and Safety Code, as amended by S.B. 219,
 Acts of the 84th Legislature, Regular Session, 2015, are amended to
 read as follows:
 (a)  This section applies only to the accidental exposure to
 the blood or other body fluids of a person who dies at the scene of
 an emergency or during transport to the hospital involving an
 emergency response employee or volunteer [certified emergency
 medical services personnel, a firefighter, a peace officer,] or
 another [a] first responder who renders assistance at the scene of
 an emergency or during transport of a person to the hospital.
 (b)  A hospital, certified emergency medical services
 personnel, a justice of the peace, a medical examiner, or a
 physician on behalf of the person exposed, following a report of the
 exposure incident, shall take reasonable steps to have [test] the
 deceased person tested for reportable [communicable] diseases.  The
 hospital, certified emergency medical services personnel, justice
 of the peace, medical examiner, or physician shall provide the test
 results to the department or to the local health authority and to
 the designated infection control officer of an affected emergency
 response employee or volunteer responsible for following the
 procedures prescribed by Section 81.050(h) to inform the person
 exposed, and, if applicable, the department or the local health
 authority shall inform the next of kin of the deceased person
 regarding the test results.  The hospital, certified emergency
 medical services personnel, medical examiner, or physician shall
 follow applicable reporting requirements prescribed by Subchapter
 C.  This subsection does not impose a duty on a hospital, certified
 emergency medical services personnel, a medical examiner, or a
 physician to provide any further testing, treatment, or services or
 to perform further procedures.  This subsection does not impose a
 duty on a justice of the peace to order that further testing,
 treatment, or services be provided or further procedures be
 performed.  The executive commissioner shall adopt rules to
 implement this subsection.
 SECTION 11.  Section 81.103(b), Health and Safety Code, is
 amended to read as follows:
 (b)  A test result may be released to:
 (1)  the department under this chapter;
 (2)  a local health authority if reporting is required
 under this chapter;
 (3)  the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention of
 the United States Public Health Service if reporting is required by
 federal law or regulation;
 (4)  the physician or other person authorized by law
 who ordered the test;
 (5)  a physician, nurse, or other health care personnel
 who have a legitimate need to know the test result in order to
 provide for their protection and to provide for the patient's
 health and welfare;
 (6)  the person tested or a person legally authorized
 to consent to the test on the person's behalf;
 (7)  the spouse of the person tested if the person tests
 positive for AIDS or HIV infection, antibodies to HIV, or infection
 with any other probable causative agent of AIDS;
 (8)  a person authorized to receive test results under
 Article 21.31, Code of Criminal Procedure, concerning a person who
 is tested as required or authorized under that article;
 (9)  a person exposed to HIV infection as provided by
 Section 81.050; [and]
 (10)  a county or district court to comply with this
 chapter or rules relating to the control and treatment of
 communicable diseases and health conditions; and
 (11)  a designated infection control officer of an
 affected emergency response employee or volunteer.
 SECTION 12.  Section 81.107(a), Health and Safety Code, as
 amended by S.B. 219, Acts of the 84th Legislature, Regular Session,
 2015, is amended to read as follows:
 (a)  In a case of accidental exposure to blood or other body
 fluids under Section 81.102(a)(5)(D), the health care agency or
 facility may test a person who may have exposed the health care
 worker or other emergency response employee or volunteer to HIV
 without the person's specific consent to the test.
 SECTION 13.  Not later than December 1, 2015, the executive
 commissioner of the Health and Human Services Commission shall
 adopt the rules required by Section 81.012, Health and Safety Code,
 as added by this Act.
 SECTION 14.  This Act takes effect September 1, 2015.