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H2362 • 2025

An Act relative to chaperones for medical exams

An Act relative to chaperones for medical exams

Healthcare
Active

The official status still shows this bill as active or still awaiting another formal step.

Sponsor
Armini, Jennifer Balinsky
Last action
2026-01-05
Official status
Accompanied a new draft, see H4868
Effective date
Not listed

Plain English Breakdown

Using official source text because the generated explanation was unavailable or could not be confirmed against the official bill text.

An Act relative to chaperones for medical exams

An Act relative to chaperones for medical exams By Representatives Armini of Marblehead and Higgins of Leominster, a petition (accompanied by bill, House, No.

What This Bill Does

  • An Act relative to chaperones for medical exams By Representatives Armini of Marblehead and Higgins of Leominster, a petition (accompanied by bill, House, No.
  • 2362) of Jennifer Balinsky Armini, Natalie M.
  • Higgins and others relative to chaperones for medical exams.
  • Public Health.

Limits and Unknowns

  • This entry is temporarily using official source text because the generated explanation could not be confirmed against the official bill text during the last sync.

Bill History

  1. 2026-01-05 House

    Accompanied a new draft, see H4868

  2. 2025-11-24 House

    Reporting date extended to Friday, December 19, 2025

  3. 2025-10-20 House

    Reporting date extended to Thursday, November 20, 2025

  4. 2025-09-11 House

    Reporting date extended to Tuesday, October 21, 2025

  5. 2025-06-16 Joint

    Hearing scheduled for 06/23/2025 from 09:00 AM-01:00 PM in A-1

  6. 2025-06-16 Joint

    Hearing rescheduled to 06/23/2025 from 09:00 AM-01:00 PM in B-1

  7. 2025-02-27 House

    Referred to the committee on Public Health

  8. 2025-02-27 Senate

    Senate concurred

Official Summary Text

An Act relative to chaperones for medical exams
By Representatives Armini of Marblehead and Higgins of Leominster, a petition (accompanied by bill, House, No. 2362) of Jennifer Balinsky Armini, Natalie M. Higgins and others relative to chaperones for medical exams. Public Health.

Current Bill Text

Read the full stored bill text
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Bill H.2362

Chapter 111 of the General Laws, as most recently amended by section 21 of chapter 186 of the acts of 2024, is hereby further amended by adding the following section:-

Section 249. (a) A health care provider, as defined in section 1, shall offer a trained chaperone to be physically present for all: (i) genital and rectal examinations regardless of gender; and (ii) breast examinations for patients who identify as female.

(b) The patient shall have the choice to either accept or decline the presence of a chaperone during the examination. A health care provider shall ensure that a chaperone is available: (i) before any breast, genital or rectal examination can be performed on the patient; and (ii) to act in accordance with the patient’s preference.

(c) A health care provider shall ensure that the chaperone is: (i) not a friend or relative of the patient; (ii) not a friend or relative of the person performing the medical exam; and (iii) licensed by the board of registration in medicine pursuant to section 2 of chapter 112.

(d) A chaperone during a breast, genital or rectal examination may not participate in actions that would obstruct or distract the chaperone from observing the person providing the medical examination's behavior and actions throughout the exam, procedure or clinical encounter.

(e) The presence or absence of a chaperone for all breast, genital and rectal examinations shall be documented in the patient chart.

(f) The patient may decline the presence of a chaperone for a breast, genital and rectal examination pursuant to subsection (b). If the patient declines, the person providing the medical examination may:

(i) defer the breast, genital or rectal examination if, in the person providing the medical examination’s best judgment that deferring the examination is in the best interest of the patient; or

(ii) perform the examination and document the patient's consent to proceed without the presence of a chaperone.

(g) A health care provider shall not be required under this section to offer a chaperone to be present in circumstances when it is likely that failure to examine the patient would result in significant and imminent harm to the patient, such as during a medical emergency.

(i) A health care provider shall not be required under this section to offer a chaperone if a chaperone is already present in the normal course of the medical examination.

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