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HB1157 • 2026

Drugs, Prescription

AN ACT to amend Tennessee Code Annotated, Title 53 and Title 68, relative to relative to drug labels.

Healthcare Labor
Active

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

Sponsor
Lynn, Bowling
Last action
2025-04-04
Official status
Effective date(s) 03/28/2025
Effective date
Not listed

Plain English Breakdown

The bill summary text is truncated and may contain incomplete information.

Restore Trust in Public Health Messaging Act

This bill stops Tennessee health departments and state agencies from sharing information about FDA-regulated products that doesn't match what's on the product label.

What This Bill Does

  • Prohibits Tennessee health departments, local health departments, and state executive branch entities from promoting or distributing misleading information about FDA-approved drugs, vaccines, and medical devices.
  • Requires these entities to include warnings when referring people to outside sources for information about FDA-regulated products.
  • Establishes a process by which individuals can report violations of this act to the comptroller of the treasury.
  • Requires health departments and state agencies to review their communications and remove any materials that don't follow FDA labeling rules by July 1, 2025.
  • Imposes penalties on entities or employees who violate these rules, including fines up to $50,000 and loss of funding for a period of one to ten years.

Who It Names or Affects

  • Tennessee Department of Health
  • Local health departments in Tennessee
  • State executive branch agencies

Terms To Know

FDA-approved
A product that the FDA has given a license after reviewing its safety and effectiveness.
Emergency use authorized product
A medical product approved for use during public health emergencies before full approval is granted.

Limits and Unknowns

  • The bill does not specify the exact penalties or fines that will be imposed beyond a maximum of $50,000.
  • It's unclear how much it will cost to implement and enforce this act.
  • The impact on healthcare providers and patients who rely on public health information is uncertain.

Amendments

These notes stay tied to the official amendment files and metadata from the legislature.

Amendment 1-0 to HB1157

Plain English: The amendment adds new sections to Tennessee law that restrict state officials from promoting information about vaccines, masks, and emergency use products unless it accurately reflects FDA-approved or authorized labeling.

  • Adds definitions for terms such as 'FDA-authorized', 'Labeling', and 'Vaccine'.
  • Prohibits the Department of Health and other state entities from distributing misleading information about FDA-regulated vaccines, masks, or emergency use products.
  • Requires the commissioner to establish a review process by July 1, 2025, to ensure compliance with FDA labeling standards in all communications.
  • The amendment text is truncated and does not provide complete details about penalties for violations or full enforcement mechanisms.
Amendment 1-0 to SB1031

Plain English: The amendment adds new sections to Tennessee law that restrict state officials from promoting information about vaccines, masks, and emergency use products unless it accurately reflects FDA-approved labeling.

  • Adds definitions for terms such as 'FDA-authorized', 'Labeling', and 'Vaccine'.
  • Prohibits the Department of Health and other state entities from distributing misleading or inaccurate information regarding FDA-regulated vaccines, masks, and emergency use products.
  • Requires the commissioner to establish a review process by July 1, 2025, to ensure compliance with FDA labeling standards in all communications.
  • The amendment text is incomplete at the end, so some details about corrective actions upon notice of violation are not provided.
  • Specific penalties and enforcement mechanisms for violations are referenced but not detailed within this excerpt.
Amendment 2-0 to SB1031

Plain English: The amendment changes certain words in existing laws about drug labels to give more flexibility and options instead of strict requirements.

  • Changes 'shall' to 'may' in several sections, allowing for more discretion rather than mandatory actions.
  • Replaces 'Is subject' with 'May be subject', giving a possibility instead of certainty.
  • Substitutes 'Is ineligible' with 'May be ineligible', providing an option rather than a strict rule.
  • Adds a new section about headings in the law, stating they are for reference only but should still be included by the Tennessee Code Commission.
  • The exact impact of these changes on how drug labels are handled is not fully explained and may require further interpretation.

Bill History

  1. 2025-04-04 Tennessee General Assembly

    Effective date(s) 03/28/2025

  2. 2025-04-04 Tennessee General Assembly

    Pub. Ch. 108

  3. 2025-04-04 Tennessee General Assembly

    Comp. became Pub. Ch. 108

  4. 2025-03-28 Tennessee General Assembly

    Signed by Governor.

  5. 2025-03-20 Tennessee General Assembly

    Transmitted to Governor for his action.

  6. 2025-03-19 Tennessee General Assembly

    Signed by Senate Speaker

  7. 2025-03-19 Tennessee General Assembly

    Signed by H. Speaker

  8. 2025-03-19 Tennessee General Assembly

    Enrolled; ready for sig. of H. Speaker.

  9. 2025-03-17 Tennessee General Assembly

    Passed Senate, Ayes 26, Nays 6

  10. 2025-03-17 Tennessee General Assembly

    Senate substituted House Bill for companion Senate Bill.

  11. 2025-03-17 Tennessee General Assembly

    Received from House, Passed on First Consideration

  12. 2025-03-17 Tennessee General Assembly

    Engrossed; ready for transmission to Sen.

  13. 2025-03-17 Tennessee General Assembly

    Passed H., as am., Ayes 77, Nays 17, PNV 0

  14. 2025-03-17 Tennessee General Assembly

    H. adopted am. (Amendment 1 - HA0069)

  15. 2025-03-17 Tennessee General Assembly

    Companion House Bill substituted

  16. 2025-03-14 Tennessee General Assembly

    Placed on Senate Regular Calendar for 3/17/2025

  17. 2025-03-13 Tennessee General Assembly

    H. Placed on Regular Calendar for 3/17/2025

  18. 2025-03-13 Tennessee General Assembly

    Sponsor(s) Added.

  19. 2025-03-13 Tennessee General Assembly

    Senate Reset on calendar for 3/17/2025

  20. 2025-03-13 Tennessee General Assembly

    Senate adopted Amendment (Amendment 2 - SA0079)

  21. 2025-03-13 Tennessee General Assembly

    Senate adopted Amendment (Amendment 1 - SA0078)

  22. 2025-03-12 Tennessee General Assembly

    Placed on cal. Calendar & Rules Committee for 3/13/2025

  23. 2025-03-11 Tennessee General Assembly

    Rec. for pass. if am., ref. to Calendar & Rules Committee

  24. 2025-03-11 Tennessee General Assembly

    Placed on Senate Regular Calendar for 3/13/2025

  25. 2025-03-05 Tennessee General Assembly

    Placed on cal. Health Committee for 3/11/2025

  26. 2025-03-05 Tennessee General Assembly

    Recommended for passage with amendment/s, refer to Senate Calendar Committee Ayes 6, Nays 1 PNV 2

  27. 2025-03-04 Tennessee General Assembly

    Action def. in Health Committee to 3/11/2025

  28. 2025-02-26 Tennessee General Assembly

    Placed on cal. Health Committee for 3/4/2025

  29. 2025-02-26 Tennessee General Assembly

    Rec for pass if am by s/c ref. to Health Committee

  30. 2025-02-26 Tennessee General Assembly

    Placed on Senate Health and Welfare Committee calendar for 3/5/2025

  31. 2025-02-19 Tennessee General Assembly

    Placed on s/c cal Health Subcommittee for 2/26/2025

  32. 2025-02-12 Tennessee General Assembly

    Assigned to s/c Health Subcommittee

  33. 2025-02-12 Tennessee General Assembly

    P2C, ref. to Health Committee

  34. 2025-02-12 Tennessee General Assembly

    Passed on Second Consideration, refer to Senate Health and Welfare Committee

  35. 2025-02-10 Tennessee General Assembly

    Intro., P1C.

  36. 2025-02-10 Tennessee General Assembly

    Introduced, Passed on First Consideration

  37. 2025-02-06 Tennessee General Assembly

    Filed for introduction

  38. 2025-02-05 Tennessee General Assembly

    Filed for introduction

Official Summary Text

PROHIBITION ON MESSAGING

This bill enacts the "Restore Trust in Public Health Messaging Act," which prohibits the department of
health, commissioner of health, an employee or agent of the department, an employee or agent of a local health department, and the state executive branch from directly or indirectly promoting, distributing, or endorsing information regarding an FDA-regul
a
ted product in a manner that conflicts with or does not accurately reflect the FDA-approved or FDA-authorized label for such product. This prohibition includes the following:



The use of any state grants or other funds, federal grants or funds distributed by this state, or other forms of inducements that may lead to the dissemination of such information.



Information concerning general categories or types of FDA-regulated products where no specific product is referenced. Information that references a general category or type must (i) be universally true for all products within the general category or type under current FDA regulations or (ii) provide qualifications or disclaimers that highlight the exceptions or limitations based on individual product labels.

If the commissioner, an employee or agent of the department, an employee or agent of a local health department, or the state executive branch refers a healthcare provider or the general public to information about FDA-regulated products from sources
not covered by this bill, then this bill requires the referral to include a warning that the entity for which the employee or agent is providing such information is not regulated by this bill.

This bill provides that the provisions above do not prohibit
the commissioner, the state executive branch, or another person subject to this bill from publicly expressing criticism of or disagreement with product authorization, approval, or labeling decisions by the FDA.

This bill requires the commissioner and the
state executive branch to do all of the following:



No later than July 1, 2025, establish an internal review process to ensure compliance with FDA labeling standards in all communications, educational materials, and public health campaign.



On or before January 15 of each year, submit an annual report to the comptroller of the treasury, the clerk of the senate, the clerk of the house of representatives, and the legislative librarian that details the efforts of the commissioner and the state executive branch to comply with this bill. The report must include, but is not limited to, a description of any violations and corrective actions taken to address such violations.

This bill authorizes an individual to report a violation or suspected violation of this
bill to the comptroller of the treasury. The comptroller of the treasury must do all of the following:



On or before July 1, 2025, establish a process by which individuals may submit information concerning violations or suspected violations of this bill.



Investigate complaints concerning alleged or suspected violations of this bill and complaints of retaliation against an individual who reported an alleged or suspected violation.



Upon finding that a violation occurred, notify in writing the violator and the director or chief executive of the entity for which the violator is an employee or agent.



Assess penalties pursuant to this bill.

CORRECTIVE ACTION UPON NOTICE OF VIOLATION

Within 10 days of receiving a notice from the comptroller of the treasury t
hat an entity or an employee or agent of an entity has violated this bill, this bill requires the director or chief executive of such entity to immediately cease the dissemination of any information deemed to be in violation of this bill and issue a corre
c
tion notice that (i) clearly states the nature of the violation; (ii) explains how the entity or employee or agent is correcting the violation; and (iii) is disseminated in the same manner, to the same extent, and to the same recipients as the original in
f
ormation found to violate this bill.

REMOVAL OF NONCONFORMING MATERIALS

No later than July 1, 2025, this bill requires the department, the commissioner, each local health department, the state executive branch, and each recipient of a federal grant, sta
te grant, or other funds or inducements distributed by this state to begin to remove from public distribution all existing informational materials, whether in printed or electronic format, that are not in compliance with this bill. The removal of such ma
t
erials must be completed on or before January 15, 2026.

PENALTIES

This bill provides that an employee or agent of the department, a local health department, or the state executive branch who violates this bill is subject to disciplinary action, which ma
y include termination of employment or agency agreement. A violation by an entity that receives state grants or funds, federal grants or funds distributed by this state, or other forms of financial inducement:



Is subject to a civil penalty not to exceed three times the amount of state resources misused in the commission of the violation, or $50,000, whichever is greater.



Is ineligible to receive grants, funds, or other inducements for a period of one to 10 years, to be determined by the comptroller of the treasury, based on the severity of the violation.

ON MARCH 13, 2025, THE SENATE ADOPTED AMENDMENTS #1 AND #2 AND RESET SENATE BILL 1031, AS AMENDED.

AMENDMENT #1 makes the following revisions:



Defines "emergency use authorized product," as used in the bill, as a medical product that the federal food and drug administration has authorized for use during a public health emergency under the "Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act."



Defines "labeling," as used in the bill, as the FDA-approved product information and includes prescribing information, carton and container labeling, medication guides, patient package inserts, and instructions for use.



Defines "mask," as used in the bill, as a face covering, such as a surgical mask, medical-grade N95, or cloth facial covering worn for medical purposes.



Defines "vaccine," as used in the bill, as a substance intended for use in humans to stimulate the body's immune response against an infectious disease or pathogen, including products intended to provide passive immunity, such as monoclonal antibodies.



Revises the prohibition on the department of health, commissioner of health, an employee or agent of the department, an employee or agent of a local health department, and the state executive branch from directly or indirectly promoting, distributing, or endorsing information regarding an FDA-regulated product in a manner that conflicts with or does not accurately reflect the FDA-approved or FDA-authorized label for such product to, instead, prohibit such persons and entities from directly or indirectly promoting, distributing, or endorsing information regarding an FDA-regulated vaccine, mask, or emergency use authorized product that (i) conflicts with or does not accurately reflect the FDA-approved or FDA-authorized labeling for such vaccine, mask, or emergency use authorized product; or (ii) implies that safety or effectiveness has been established for coadministration of the vaccine, mask, or emergency use authorized product when adequately powered and well-controlled clinical trials needed to substantiate such representations have not been completed.



Changes references from "products" to "vaccines, masks, or emergency use authorized products" throughout the bill.



Requires the annual report to be submitted to the attorney general instead of the comptroller of the treasury.



Requires the attorney general, instead of the comptroller of the treasury, to (i) establish a process by which information concerning violations and suspected violations may be submitted (ii) investigate complaints and assess penalties, and (iii) otherwise enforce the bill.

AMENDMENT #2 makes the following revisions:



Authorizes, instead of requires, the attorney general to (i) establish a process by which individuals may submit information concerning violations or suspected violations and (ii) investigate complaints and assess penalties.



Authorizes, instead of requires, an entity violating the bill to be subject to a civil penalty and be ineligible to receive grants, funds, or other inducements for a period of one-10 years, to be determined by the attorney general, based on the severity of the violation.



Authorizes, instead of requires, the director or chief executive, within 10 days of receiving a notice from the attorney general that their entity or an employee or agent of their entity has violated the bill, to (i) immediately cease the dissemination of any information deemed to be in violation of the bill and (ii) issue a correction notice.

ON MARCH 17, 2025, THE HOUSE ADOPTED AMENDMENT
#1 AND PASSED HOUSE BILL 1157, AS AMENDED.

AMENDMENT #1 incorporates the changes described in the summaries for Senate Amendments # 1 and #2.

Current Bill Text

Read the full stored bill text
SENATE BILL 1031
By Bowling

HOUSE BILL 1157
By Lynn

HB1157
002259
- 1 -

AN ACT to amend Tennessee Code Annotated, Title 53
and Title 68, relative to relative to drug labels.

WHEREAS, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is the federal agency responsible
for protecting public health by ensuring the safety, efficacy, and security of human and
veterinary drugs, biological products, medical devices, our nation's food supply, cosmetics, and
products that emit radiation; and
WHEREAS, a 2024 Congressional Report titled "We Can Do This: An Assessment of the
Department of Health and Human Services' COVID-19 Public Health Campaign" recommended
that, in order to prevent a recurrence of communication failures that undermine public health,
"HHS and its agencies should abide by the FDA's product labeling guidelines" and "HHS and its
agencies should be barred from promoting information regarding an FDA-regulated product that
does not reflect the FDA-approved label"; and
WHEREAS, to restore and maintain trust in public health messaging, all communications
from public health agencies about FDA-approved products must be grounded in verified data
and scientific research, free from unproven claims or promotional language that could mislead
consumers; now, therefore,
BE IT ENACTED BY THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF TENNESSEE:
SECTION 1. This act is known and may be cited as the "Restore Trust in Public Health
Messaging Act."
SECTION 2. Tennessee Code Annotated, Title 68, Chapter 1, is amended by adding
the following as a new part:
68-1-1701. Part definitions.

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As used in this part:
(1) "Commissioner" means the commissioner of health;
(2) "Department" means the department of health;
(3) "FDA" means the federal food and drug administration;
(4) "FDA-approved" means the FDA has granted a product a license
following a comprehensive pre-market clinical trial review process, determined
that the product's benefits outweigh its risks for the intended use, and made the
grant of such license contingent upon ongoing post-marketing surveillance to
assess whether the product maintains its safety and efficacy under real-world
conditions;
(5) "FDA-authorized" means the use of a product is permitted through an
emergency use authorization protocol which allows the use of medical products
during public health emergencies based on available evidence, prior to full
approval;
(6) "Local health department" means a county or regional health
department in this state; and
(7) "State executive branch" means the governor, members of the
governor's cabinet, the leadership of an executive branch agency or department
of this state other than the commissioner of health, and an executive branch
agency or department of this state other than the department.
68-1-1702. Prohibition on messaging.
(a) The department, commissioner, an employee or agent of the department, an
employee or agent of a local health department, and the state executive branch shall not
directly or indirectly promote, distribute, or endorse information regarding an FDA-

- 3 - 002259

regulated product in a manner that conflicts with or does not accurately reflect the FDA-
approved or FDA-authorized label for such product.
(b) Subsection (a) includes:
(1) The use of any state grants or other funds, federal grants or funds
distributed by this state, or other forms of inducements that may lead to the
dissemination of such information; and
(2) Information concerning general categories or types of FDA-regulated
products where no specific product is referenced. Information that references a
general category or type must:
(A) Be universally true for all products within the general category
or type under current FDA regulations; or
(B) Provide qualifications or disclaimers that highlight the
exceptions or limitations based on individual product labels.
(c) If the commissioner, an employee or agent of the department, an employee
or agent of a local health department, or the state executive branch refers a healthcare
provider or the general public to information about FDA-regulated products from sources
not covered by this part, then the referral must include a warning that the entity for which
the employee or agent is providing such information is not regulated by this part.
(d) This section does not prohibit the commissioner, the state executive branch,
or another person subject to this part, from publicly expressing criticism of or
disagreement with product authorization, approval, or labeling decisions by the FDA.
68-1-1703.
(a) The commissioner and the state executive branch shall:

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(1) No later than July 1, 2025, establish an internal review process to
ensure compliance with FDA labeling standards in all communications,
educational materials, and public health campaign; and
(2) No later than January 15, 2026, and on or before January 15 of each
subsequent year, submit an annual report to the comptroller of the treasury, the
clerk of the senate, the clerk of the house of representatives, and the legislative
librarian that details the efforts of the commissioner and the state executive
branch to comply with this part. The report must include, but is not limited to, a
description of any violations and corrective actions taken to address such
violations.
(b) An individual may report a violation or suspected violation of this part to the
comptroller of the treasury.
(c) The comptroller of the treasury shall:
(1) On or before July 1, 2025, establish a process by which individuals
may submit information concerning violations or suspected violations of this part;
(2) Investigate complaints concerning alleged or suspected violations of
this part and complaints of retaliation against an individual who reported an
alleged or suspected violation of this part;
(3) Upon finding that a violation occurred, notify in writing the violator and
the director or chief executive of the entity for which the violator is an employee
or agent; and
(4) Assess penalties pursuant to § 68-1-1706(b).
68-1-1704. Corrective action upon notice of violation.

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Within ten (10) days of receiving a notice from the comptroller of the treasury
pursuant to § 68-1-1703(c)(3) that an entity or an employee or agent of an entity has
violated this part, the director or chief executive of such entity shall:
(1) Immediately cease the dissemination of any information deemed to
be in violation of this part; and
(2) Issue a correction notice that:
(A) Clearly states the nature of the violation;
(B) Explains how the entity or employee or agent is correcting the
violation; and
(C) Is disseminated in the same manner, to the same extent, and
to the same recipients as the original information found to violate this part.
68-1-1705. Removal of nonconforming materials.
No later than July 1, 2025, the department; the commissioner; each local health
department; the state executive branch; and each recipient of a federal grant, state
grant, or other funds or inducements distributed by this state shall begin to remove from
public distribution all existing informational materials, whether in printed or electronic
format, that are not in compliance with this part. The removal of such materials must be
completed on or before January 15, 2026.
68-1-1706. Penalties.
(a) An employee or agent of the department, a local health department, or the
state executive branch who violates this part is subject to disciplinary action, which may
include termination of employment or agency agreement.
(b) A violation of this part by an entity that receives state grants or funds, federal
grants or funds distributed by this state, or other forms of financial inducement:

- 6 - 002259

(1) Is subject to a civil penalty not to exceed three (3) times the amount
of state resources misused in the commission of the violation of this part, or fifty
thousand dollars ($50,000), whichever is greater; and
(2) Is ineligible to receive grants, funds, or other inducements for a period
of one (1) to ten (10) years, to be determined by the comptroller of the treasury,
based on the severity of the violation.
SECTION 3. If any provision of this act or its application to any person or circumstance
is held invalid, then the invalidity does not affect other provisions or applications of the act that
can be given effect without the invalid provision or application, and to that end, the provisions of
this act are severable.
SECTION 4. This act takes effect upon becoming a law, the public welfare requiring it.