BILL ANALYSIS
S.B. 177
By: Middleton
Public Health
Committee Report (Unamended)
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE
Many public and private entities within Texas, such as the San Antonio Independent School District and Houston Methodist, have required COVID-19 vaccinations for their employees. Additionally, the federal government required COVID-19 vaccinations for staff of Medicare or Medicaid providers and suppliers through a Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services regulation.
Requiring COVID-19 vaccinations to continue employment or to receive benefits is inconsistent with informed consent. Canterbury v. Spence was the landmark federal case that established the concept of informed consent regarding medical procedures. According to the American Medical Association, informed consent to medical treatment is fundamental in both ethics and law. Individuals have the right to be informed of the potential risks and benefits of a medical treatment, so that each may make the informed decision to decline or consent to a medical treatment.
SB 177, the Texas COVID-19 Vaccine Freedom Act, seeks to require informed consent before the administration of a COVID-19 vaccine to an individual.
CRIMINAL JUSTICE IMPACT
It is the committee's opinion that this bill does not expressly create a criminal offense, increase the punishment for an existing criminal offense or category of offenses, or change the eligibility of a person for community supervision, parole, or mandatory supervision.
RULEMAKING AUTHORITY
It is the committee's opinion that this bill does not expressly grant any additional rulemaking authority to a state officer, department, agency, or institution.
ANALYSIS
S.B. 177 amends the Health and Safety Code to establish the following prohibitions with respect to COVID-19 vaccination:
ˇ a prohibition against a person compelling or coercing an individual lawfully residing in Texas into obtaining a medical treatment involving the administration of any COVID-19 vaccine contrary to the individual's vaccination preference;
ˇ a prohibition against a health care provider providing to an individual lawfully residing in Texas a medical treatment involving the administration of any COVID-19 vaccine, unless the provider obtains the individual's informed consent before administering the COVID-19 vaccine; and
ˇ a prohibition against a person taking an adverse action or imposing a penalty of any kind against an individual lawfully residing in Texas for their refusal or failure to obtain a
medical treatment involving the administration of a COVID-19 vaccine.
These prohibitions apply only to the extent they do not conflict with the final rule adopted by the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) and published at 86 Fed. Reg. 61555 regarding COVID-19 vaccinations for Medicare- and Medicaid-certified health care providers and suppliers. The bill defines "COVID-19" as the 2019 novel coronavirus disease.
S.B. 177 exempts an individual employed by or providing services or receiving training in a health care facility that requires the individual to obtain a COVID-19 vaccination from the vaccination requirement if the individual requests orally or in writing an exemption in accordance with federal law based on a sincerely held religious belief, observance, or practice that is incompatible with the administration of the vaccine or based on a recognized medical condition for which vaccines are contraindicated. The bill defines "health care facility" as a facility that is a provider of services, as defined by the federal Social Security Act, which includes a hospital, critical access hospital, rural emergency hospital, skilled nursing facility, comprehensive outpatient rehabilitation facility, home health agency, or hospice program.
S.B. 177 establishes that an individual lacks the capacity to provide informed consent for a medical treatment involving the administration of a COVID-19 vaccine if the individual has been compelled or coerced into obtaining the COVID-19 vaccine contrary to their vaccination preference. The bill further establishes that a health care provider who advises or recommends the administration of a COVID-19 vaccine is not considered to have compelled or coerced an individual into obtaining a vaccine based solely on that advice or recommendation. The bill defines "health care provider" as an individual licensed or otherwise authorized by the state to administer vaccines.
S.B. 177 makes a health care provider who violates that prohibition against providing medical treatment involving the administration of a COVID-19 vaccine without obtaining informed consent liable to the individual who is the subject of the violation for a minimum of $5,000 in damages. The bill authorizes the prevailing party to recover reasonable expenses, including court costs, reasonable attorney's fees, investigation costs, witness fees, and deposition expenses, incurred as a result of the action for those damages. The bill authorizes a health care provider to assert an affirmative defense to such an action that the individual or an individual legally authorized to consent on behalf of the individual stated to the provider before the COVID-19 vaccine was administered that the informed consent was voluntarily provided.
S.B. 177 authorizes the attorney general to bring an action for injunctive relief against a person to prevent the person from violating the bill's provisions and authorizes a court to include in such an issued injunction reasonable requirements to prevent further violations of the bill's provisions.
S.B. 177 provides for the severability of its provisions and sets out legislative findings regarding the following:
ˇ the state's responsibility for ensuring that individuals lawfully residing in Texas have the right to provide or withhold consent for any medical treatment;
ˇ federal regulations, court decisions, and an American Medical Association opinion that, as applicable, provide for informed consent for a medical treatment, an individual's right to make their own medical decisions, and states to provide individual liberties more expansive than those conferred by the U.S. Constitution;
ˇ how attempted compulsory COVID-19 vaccination has occurred or is occurring inside and outside of Texas and is contrary to and inconsistent with these principles;
ˇ how federal regulations requiring an individual who works or receives training in a health care facility, including a hospital, to obtain a COVID-19 vaccine provide an exemption on the basis of a sincerely held religious belief, observance, or practice or due to a recognized medical condition for which vaccines are contraindicated; and
ˇ the effect of the bill's provisions requiring informed consent for medical treatments
involving COVID-19 vaccination.
S.B. 177 applies only to conduct that occurs on or after the bill's effective date.
EFFECTIVE DATE
On passage, or, if the bill does not receive the necessary vote, September 1, 2023.