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HB0222 • 2025

Medical Ethics Defense Act-2.

AN ACT relating to public health and safety; allowing health care professionals, health care institutions and health care payers the right not to participate in or pay for health care services as specified; authorizing religious-based health care organizations to make decisions consistent with religious beliefs; prohibiting discrimination for making health care decisions based on conscience; prohibiting adverse licensing actions based on protected expressive activity; specifying liability and damages for notice requirements; providing immunity; providing definitions; specifying applicability; requiring rulemaking; and providing for effective dates.

Healthcare Labor
Inactive

Wyoming marks this bill as inactive, which usually means it is no longer moving in the current session.

Sponsor
Representative Ottman
Last action
2025-03-03
Official status
inactive
Effective date
3/1/2025

Plain English Breakdown

The bill did not pass and is inactive, so its exact effects cannot be determined.

Medical Ethics Defense Act-2

This act allows healthcare professionals and institutions in Wyoming the right not to participate in or pay for certain health care services if it goes against their ethical, moral, or religious beliefs.

What This Bill Does

  • Gives healthcare workers, hospitals, and insurance companies the right to refuse participation in or payment for specific medical treatments that go against their conscience.
  • Protects these entities from discrimination when they choose not to provide certain services based on their beliefs.
  • Allows religious-based health care organizations to make decisions according to their religious principles.
  • Prevents licensing boards from taking negative actions against healthcare professionals who express protected opinions or engage in related activities.

Who It Names or Affects

  • Healthcare workers, hospitals, and insurance companies
  • Patients seeking certain health care services

Terms To Know

Conscience
The ethical, moral or religious beliefs that guide a person's decisions.
Healthcare payer
An entity that pays for health care services, such as insurance companies and employers.

Limits and Unknowns

  • The bill did not pass in the current session and is marked as inactive.
  • It does not specify which specific health care services are covered under this act.
  • Details on enforcement mechanisms or penalties for violations are not provided.

Bill History

  1. 2025-03-03 Senate

    S:Died in Committee Returned Bill Pursuant to SR 5-4

  2. 2025-02-28 Senate

    S No report prior to CoW Cutoff

  3. 2025-02-27 Senate

    S10 - Labor:Do Pass Failed 2-3-0-0-0

  4. 2025-02-18 Senate

    S Introduced and Referred to S10 - Labor

  5. 2025-02-12 Senate

    S Received for Introduction

  6. 2025-02-12 House

    H 3rd Reading:Passed 51-9-2-0-0

  7. 2025-02-11 House

    H 2nd Reading:Passed

  8. 2025-02-10 House

    H COW:Passed

  9. 2025-02-03 House

    H Placed on General File

  10. 2025-02-03 House

    H10 - Labor:Recommend Do Pass 7-1-0-1-0

  11. 2025-01-27 House

    H Introduced and Referred to H10 - Labor

  12. 2025-01-17 House

    H Received for Introduction

  13. 2025-01-16 LSO

    Bill Number Assigned

Current Bill Text

Read the full stored bill text
25LSO-0687
2025
STATE OF WYOMING
25LSO-0687
Numbered
2.0

HOUSE BILL NO. HB0222

Medical Ethics Defense Act-2.

Sponsored by: Representative(s) Ottman and Singh and Senator(s) Hutchings, Pearson and Steinmetz

A BILL

for

AN ACT relating to public health and safety; allowing health care professionals, health care institutions and health care payers the right not to participate in or pay for health care services as specified; authorizing religious-based health care organizations to make decisions consistent with religious beliefs; prohibiting discrimination for making health care decisions based on conscience; prohibiting adverse licensing actions based on protected expressive activity; specifying liability and damages for notice requirements; providing immunity; providing definitions; specifying applicability; requiring rulemaking; and providing for effective dates.

Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Wyoming:

Section 1
.

W.S. 35
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34
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101 through 35
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34
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106 are created to read:

CHAPTER 34
MEDICAL ETHICS DEFENSE ACT

35
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34
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101.

Short title.

This chapter shall be known and may be cited as the "Medical Ethics Defense Act."

35
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34
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102.

Definitions.

(a)

As used in this act:

(i)

"Conscience" means the ethical, moral or religious beliefs or principles held by any health care professional, health care institution or health care payer. For health care institutions and health care payers, conscience shall be determined by reference to the health care institution's or health care payer's governing documents, including any published ethical, moral or religious guidelines or directives, mission statements, constitutions, articles of incorporation, bylaws, policies or regulations;

(ii)

"Discrimination" means an adverse action against or the communication of a threat of adverse action to any health care professional, health care institution or health care payer as a result of a decision by the health care professional, health care institution or health care payer not to participate in or pay for a health care service that violates the conscience of the health care professional, health care institution or health care payer. "Discrimination" shall not include:

(A)

Declining to use, or the refusal to use or purchase health care services from a specific health care professional, health care institution or health care payer if that health care professional, health care institution or health care payer exercises the right not to participate in or pay for health care services that violate its conscience;

(B)

Good faith efforts to accommodate conscientious objections of a health care professional, health care institution or health care payer.

(iii)

"Health care institution" means as defined by W.S. 35
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22
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402(a)(x);

(iv)

"Health care payer" means any employer, health plan, health maintenance organization, insurance company, management services corporation or any other entity that pays for or arranges for the payment of any health care service provided to any person, whether the payment is made in whole or in part;

(v)

"Health care professional" means any person who may be or is asked to participate in any health care service, including doctors, nurse practitioners, physician assistants, nurses, nurse aides, allied health professionals, medical assistants, hospital employees, clinic employees, nursing home employees, pharmacists, pharmacy technicians, pharmacy employees, medical school faculty and students, nursing school faculty and students, psychology and counseling faculty and students, medical researchers, laboratory technicians, psychologists, psychiatrists, counselors, mental health professionals, social workers or any other person who facilitates or participates in a health care service;

(vi)

"Health care service" means medical research or health care provided to any person at any time over the course of treatment, including testing, diagnosis, referral, the prescribing, dispensing or administering of any drug, medication or device, psychological therapy or counseling, research, prognosis, therapy, record making or record keeping, notes relating to treatment, the preparation for or performance of a surgery or procedure or any other medical care or service provided by any health care professional;

(vii)

"This act" means W.S. 35
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34
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101 through 35
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34
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106.

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34
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103.

Rights of conscience for health care professionals, health care institutions and health care payers.

(a)

Each health care professional, health care institution and health care payer shall have the right not to participate in or pay for a health care service that violates the health care professional's, health care institution's or health care payer's conscience. No health care professional, health care institution or health care payer shall be required to participate in or pay for any health care service that violates the health care professional's, health care institution's or health care payer's conscience. The right of conscience provided under this subsection shall:

(i)

Be limited to a specific health care service;

(ii)

Not be construed to waive or modify any duty a health care professional, health care institution or health care payer has to provide or pay for health care services that do not violate the health care professional's, health care institution's or health care payer's conscience;

(iii)

Not be construed to waive or modify any duty of a health care professional or health care institution to provide other health care services or emergency medical treatment under 42 U.S.C. § 1395dd.

(b)

The right of conscience provided under subsection (a) of this section shall not be construed to undermine the right of a religious health care professional, health care institution or health care payer that holds itself out to the public as religious, states in its governing documents that it has a religious purpose or mission and has internal operating policies and procedures that implement its religious beliefs to make employment, staffing, contracting and admitting privilege decisions consistent with its religious beliefs.

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34
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104.

Participation in health care services; discrimination prohibited.

(a)

No person or entity, including the state and its political subdivisions, shall discriminate against any health care professional, health care institution or health care payer for exercising the right not to participate in or pay for health care services that violate the right of conscience under this act.

(b)

No person or entity, including the state and its political subdivisions, shall discriminate against a health care professional or health care institution for:

(i)

Providing a health care professional's employer, the department of health or the attorney general of Wyoming information relating to any violation of or any act or omission that the health care professional or health care institution reasonably believes violates this act; or

(ii)

Testifying, assisting, participating or agreeing to testify, assist or participate in a proceeding concerning a violation of this act.

(c)

Unless the disclosure is specifically prohibited by law, no health care professional shall be subject to discrimination for disclosing any information that the health care professional reasonably believes violates:

(i)

Any federal or state law, rule or regulation;

(ii)

Any standard of care or other ethical guidelines for the provision of any health care service; or

(iii)

Gross mismanagement, a gross waste of funds, an abuse of authority, practice or methods of treatment that may place a patient's health at risk or a substantial and specific danger to public health or safety.

(d)

The state, any political subdivision, the department of health or a board, certifying agency or licensing agency shall not discriminate against, reprimand, sanction or revoke or threaten to revoke a license, certificate, certification or registration of a health care professional for engaging in speech or expressive activity protected by the first amendment to the United States constitution unless the state, political subdivision, department, board or agency demonstrates beyond a reasonable doubt that the health care professional's speech was the direct cause of physical harm to a person with whom the health care professional had established a health care professional
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patient relationship within the immediately preceding three (3) years before the incident of physical harm.

(e)

Not later than fourteen (14) days after receipt, the department of health or any board, certifying agency or licensing agency, as applicable to the health care professional, shall provide a health care professional with notice of any complaint or action to suspend or revoke the health care professional's license, certificate, certification or registration. The department or a board or agency that fails to provide notice under this subsection shall be liable for damages of five hundred dollars ($500.00) for each full or partial week that the notice is not provided to the health care professional. This subsection shall not apply if notice of a complaint or action is required to be provided within a shorter period of time under another provision of law.

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34
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105.

Right of conscience and right of refusal; immunity from liability.

(a)

No health care professional, health care institution or health care payer shall be subject to civil or criminal liability for exercising the right not to participate in or pay for any health care service that violates the right of conscience provided in W.S. 35
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34
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103(a).

(b)

No health care institution shall be subject to civil or criminal liability for a health care professional employed, contracted or granted admitting privileges by the health care institution for the health care professional exercising the professional's right not to participate in a health care service that violates the right of conscience provided under W.S. 35
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34
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103(a).

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34
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106.

Health care services and right of conscience; civil remedies.

A health care professional, health care institution or health care payer may bring a civil action for damages or injunctive relief, or both, in a court of competent jurisdiction for any alleged violation of this act.

Section 2.

(a)

This act shall apply to health care services provided, and health care payment obligations, that were provided or arose on and after July 1, 2025.

(b)

This act shall not be construed to supersede any law of the state that is equally as protective of the conscience or more protective of the conscience than this act.

Section 3.

The department of insurance and the department of health shall promulgate all rules necessary to implement this act.

Section 4
.

(a)

Except as provided in subsection (b) of this section, this act is effective July 1, 2025
.

(b)

Sections 3 and 4 of this act are effective immediately upon completion of all acts necessary for a bill to become law as provided by Article 4, Section 8 of the Wyoming Constitution.

(END)

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HB0222