Bill Text: NY A01133 | 2019-2020 | General Assembly | Introduced

NOTE: There are more recent revisions of this legislation. Read Latest Draft
Bill Title: Amends procedures for making anatomical gifts; specifies persons authorized to make an anatomical gift under certain circumstances; provides procedures for amending and revoking gifts.

Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 2-0)

Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2019-12-06 - enacting clause stricken [A01133 Detail]

Download: New_York-2019-A01133-Introduced.html


                STATE OF NEW YORK
        ________________________________________________________________________
                                          1133
                               2019-2020 Regular Sessions
                   IN ASSEMBLY
                                    January 14, 2019
                                       ___________
        Introduced  by  M.  of  A.  GOTTFRIED  --  read once and referred to the
          Committee on Health
        AN ACT to amend the public health law, in relation  to  definitions  and
          conforming  changes  pertaining  to  anatomical  gifts;  and to repeal
          certain provisions of such law relating thereto (Part A); to amend the
          public health law, in relation to changes in anatomical  gift  consent
          (Part  B);  and to amend the public health law, in relation to changes
          in anatomical gift revocation and amendment (Part C)
          The People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and  Assem-
        bly, do enact as follows:
     1    Section  1.  Legislative intent. The purpose of this legislation is to
     2  enact changes to follow  the  Uniform  Anatomical  Gift  Act  (UAGA)  as
     3  updated  in  2006 by the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform
     4  State Laws to enhance the  organ  donation  process.  Most  states  have
     5  adopted  these  changes.  While New York has made recent improvements to
     6  our organ donation rules and  participation  rates,  we  are  still  way
     7  behind most states and, as a result, still face a severe organ shortage.
     8  It  is  estimated that bringing New York's anatomical gift consent rules
     9  into agreement with UAGA would produce an additional 100 donors - for  a
    10  total of 200-300 additional organs available - over five years.
    11    §  2. This act enacts into law changes to the anatomical gift process.
    12  Each component is wholly contained within a Part identified as  Parts  A
    13  through  C.  The  effective date for each particular provision contained
    14  within such Part is set forth in the last  section  of  such  Part.  Any
    15  provision  in  any section contained within a Part, including the effec-
    16  tive date of the Part, which makes a reference to  a  section  "of  this
    17  act,"  when  used in connection with that particular component, shall be
    18  deemed to mean and refer to the corresponding section  of  the  Part  in
    19  which  it  is  found.  Section  three of this act sets forth the general
    20  effective date of this act.
         EXPLANATION--Matter in italics (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
                              [ ] is old law to be omitted.
                                                                   LBD03867-01-9

        A. 1133                             2
     1                                   PART A
     2                     Definitions and conforming changes
     3    Section  1. Section 4300 of the public health law, as added by chapter
     4  466 of the laws of 1970, is amended to read as follows:
     5    § 4300. Definitions. As used in  this  section,  the  following  terms
     6  shall have the following meanings:
     7    1.  "Bank  or storage facility" or "bank" means a hospital, laboratory
     8  or other facility licensed or approved under the laws of any  state  for
     9  storage  of human bodies or parts thereof, for use in medical education,
    10  research, therapy, or transplantation [to individuals].
    11    2. "Decedent" means a deceased individual of any  age  whose  body  or
    12  part is or may be the source of an anatomical gift and includes a still-
    13  born infant or fetus.
    14    3.  "Donor"  means  an  individual [who makes a gift of all or part of
    15  his] whose body or part is the subject of an anatomical gift.
    16    4. "Hospital" means a hospital licensed, accredited, or approved under
    17  the laws of any state and includes a hospital  operated  by  the  United
    18  States  Government,  a  state,  or  a  subdivision thereof, although not
    19  required to be licensed under state laws.
    20    5. "Part" of a body includes organs, tissues, eyes,  bones,  arteries,
    21  blood,  other fluids [and] or other portions of a human body, and "part"
    22  includes "parts".
    23    6. "Person" means an individual, corporation,  government  or  govern-
    24  mental subdivision or agency, business trust, estate, trust, partnership
    25  or association, or any other legal entity.
    26    7.  "Physician"  or "surgeon" means a physician or surgeon licensed or
    27  authorized to practice under the laws of any state.
    28    8. "State" includes  any  state,  district,  commonwealth,  territory,
    29  insular  possession,  and  any  other  area  subject  to the legislative
    30  authority of the United States of America.
    31    9. "Reasonably available" means able to be contacted by a  procurement
    32  organization without undue effort and willing and able to act in a time-
    33  ly  manner  consistent  with existing medical criteria necessary for the
    34  making of an anatomical gift.
    35    10. "Domestic partner" means a person who,  with  respect  to  another
    36  person:
    37    (a) is formally a party in a domestic partnership or similar relation-
    38  ship  with  the  other  person, entered into pursuant to the laws of the
    39  United States or any state, local or foreign jurisdiction, or registered
    40  as the domestic partner of the person with any  registry  maintained  by
    41  the  employer  of  either  party  or any state, municipality, or foreign
    42  jurisdiction; or
    43    (b) is formally recognized as a beneficiary or  covered  person  under
    44  the other person's employment benefits or health insurance; or
    45    (c)  is  dependent  or mutually interdependent on the other person for
    46  support, as evidenced by the totality of the circumstances indicating  a
    47  mutual  intent  to  be  domestic  partners including but not limited to:
    48  common ownership or joint leasing of real or personal  property;  common
    49  householding,  shared  income  or  shared  expenses; children in common;
    50  signs of intent to marry or become domestic partners under paragraph (a)
    51  or (b) of this subdivision; or the length of the  personal  relationship
    52  of the persons. Each party to a domestic partnership shall be considered
    53  to be the domestic partner of the other party.  "Domestic partner" shall
    54  not  include  a  person who is related to the other person by blood in a
    55  manner that would bar marriage to the other person in  New  York  state.

        A. 1133                             3
     1  "Domestic  partner"  shall  also not include any person who is less than
     2  eighteen years of age or who is the adopted child of the other person or
     3  who is related by blood in a manner that would bar marriage in New  York
     4  state to a person who is the lawful spouse of the other person.
     5    11.  "Anatomical  gift" or "gift" means a donation of all or part of a
     6  human body to take effect after the donor's death  for  the  purpose  of
     7  transplantation, therapy, research, or education.
     8    12.  "Document  of  gift"  means an organ donor card, driver's license
     9  authorization to make an anatomical gift, pursuant to paragraph  (a)  of
    10  subdivision  one of section five hundred four of the vehicle and traffic
    11  law, authorization to make an anatomical gift pursuant  to  any  of  the
    12  methods  in  subdivision five of section forty-three hundred ten of this
    13  article,  or  any  other  written  authorization  for  organ  or  tissue
    14  donation. The term includes a statement or symbol on a driver's license,
    15  identification card, or enrollment in a donor registry.
    16    13.  "Donee"  means  an  individual  or entity authorized to accept an
    17  anatomical gift pursuant to forty-three hundred two of this article.
    18    14. "Guardian" means a person appointed by a court to  make  decisions
    19  regarding  the  support, care, education, health, or welfare of an indi-
    20  vidual. The term does not include a guardian ad litem.
    21    15. "Organ procurement organization" means a person designated by  the
    22  Secretary  of  the United States Department of Health and Human Services
    23  as an organ procurement organization.
    24    16. "Parent" means a parent whose parental rights have not been termi-
    25  nated.
    26    17. "Disinterested witness" means a witness  other  than  the  spouse,
    27  child,  parent,  sibling,  grandchild,  grandparent,  or guardian of the
    28  individual who makes, amends, revokes, or refuses to make an  anatomical
    29  gift,  or  another  adult who exhibited special care and concern for the
    30  individual.
    31    18. "Record" means information that is inscribed on a tangible  medium
    32  or that is stored in an electronic or other medium and is retrievable in
    33  perceivable form.
    34    19.  "Procurement  organization"  means an eye bank, organ procurement
    35  organization, or tissue bank.
    36    20. "Eye bank" means a person that is licensed, accredited,  or  regu-
    37  lated  under  federal or state law to engage in the recovery, screening,
    38  testing, processing, storage, or distribution of human eyes or  portions
    39  of human eyes.
    40    21.  "Tissue  bank"  means  a  person that is licensed, accredited, or
    41  regulated under federal or state law to solicit, retrieve, perform donor
    42  selection and/or testing,  preserve,  transport,  allocate,  distribute,
    43  acquire,  process, store or arrange for the storage of human tissues for
    44  transplantation, transfer, therapy, artificial insemination or implanta-
    45  tion, including autogeneic procedures.
    46    § 2. Subdivision 5 of  section  4303  of  the  public  health  law  is
    47  REPEALED.
    48    § 3. This act shall take effect immediately.
    49                                   PART B
    50                     Changes in anatomical gift consent
    51    Section  1. Section 4301 of the public health law, as amended by chap-
    52  ter 348 of the laws of 2009, subdivision 1 as amended by chapter 248  of
    53  the laws of 2016, is amended to read as follows:

        A. 1133                             4
     1    §  4301. Persons who may execute an anatomical gift.  1. (a) Any indi-
     2  vidual of sound mind and eighteen years of age or more may [give all  or
     3  any part of his or her body] make an anatomical gift to take effect upon
     4  their death for any purpose specified in section forty-three hundred two
     5  of  this  article, [the gift to take effect upon death] limit an anatom-
     6  ical gift to one or more of those purposes, or refuse to make an anatom-
     7  ical gift.  In any case where the donor  has  a  properly  executed  [an
     8  organ  donor  card, driver's license authorization to make an anatomical
     9  gift, pursuant to paragraph (a)  of  subdivision  one  of  section  five
    10  hundred  four of the vehicle and traffic law, registered in the New York
    11  state organ and tissue donor registry under section forty-three  hundred
    12  ten  of  this  article, or has otherwise given written authorization for
    13  organ or tissue donation,] document of gift, authorization for  donation
    14  shall not be rescinded [by an objection by a member of any of the class-
    15  es  specified  in  paragraphs (a) through (h) of subdivision two of this
    16  section,] or amended by any other person except upon a showing that  the
    17  donor  revoked the authorization pursuant to section forty-three hundred
    18  five of this article.
    19    (b) Any person who is sixteen or seventeen years of age and  of  sound
    20  mind  may  [give  all or any part of his or her body] make an anatomical
    21  gift to take effect upon  their  death  for  any  purpose  specified  in
    22  section  forty-three  hundred  two  of  this  article, [the gift to take
    23  effect upon death] limit an anatomical gift to  one  or  more  of  those
    24  purposes,  or  refuse to make an anatomical gift.  In any case where the
    25  donor has a properly executed [an organ  donor  card,  driver's  license
    26  authorization  to  make an anatomical gift, pursuant to paragraph (a) of
    27  subdivision one of section five hundred four of the vehicle and  traffic
    28  law,  or  has  otherwise given written authorization for organ or tissue
    29  donation] document of gift, notice of such gift shall be provided to the
    30  donor's parents or [legal] guardians, and authorization for donation may
    31  be rescinded or amended by an objection by a parent or [legal]  guardian
    32  of the donor at the time of death and prior to the recovery of any organ
    33  or tissue if the donor is less than eighteen years of age. An anatomical
    34  gift  made by an individual more than sixteen years of age but less than
    35  eighteen shall otherwise not be rescinded, except upon  a  showing  that
    36  the  donor  revoked  the  authorization  pursuant to section forty-three
    37  hundred five of this article.  Upon the donor reaching the age of  eigh-
    38  teen, the donor's consent to donate his or her organs or tissue shall be
    39  regarded  as consent for authorization to make an anatomical gift pursu-
    40  ant to paragraph (a) of this subdivision.
    41    (c) In the absence of an express, contrary indication by the donor, an
    42  anatomical gift of a part is neither a refusal to give other parts nor a
    43  limitation on an individual's ability to make an anatomical  gift  under
    44  subdivision two of section forty-three hundred one of this article.
    45    2.  [Any  of  the  following persons, in the order of priority stated,
    46  may, when persons in prior classes are not reasonably  available,  will-
    47  ing, and able to act, at the time of death, and in the absence of actual
    48  notice  of  contrary  indications  by  the decedent, or actual notice of
    49  opposition by a member of the same class or  prior  class  specified  in
    50  paragraph  (a), (b), (c), (d), (e), (f), (g) or (h) of this subdivision,
    51  or reason to believe that] (a) In the absence of  a  gift  made  by  the
    52  donor under subdivision one of this section, and in the absence of actu-
    53  al  notice  of contrary indications by the decedent, including religious
    54  or moral objections, an anatomical gift [is contrary to  the  decedent's
    55  religious or moral beliefs, give all or any part] of the decedent's body
    56  may  be  made  by  any member of the following classes of persons who is

        A. 1133                             5
     1  reasonably available, in the order of priority listed, for  any  purpose
     2  specified in section forty-three hundred two of this article:
     3    [(a)]  (i)  the  person designated as the decedent's health care agent
     4  under article twenty-nine-C of this  chapter,  subject  to  any  written
     5  statement in the health care proxy form,
     6    [(b)]  (ii) the person designated as the decedent's agent in a written
     7  instrument under article forty-two of this chapter, subject to any writ-
     8  ten statement in the written instrument,
     9    [(c)] (iii) the spouse, if not legally separated from the patient,  or
    10  the domestic partner,
    11    [(d)] (iv) a son or daughter eighteen years of age or older,
    12    [(e)] (v) either parent,
    13    [(f)] (vi) a brother or sister eighteen years of age or older,
    14    [(g)] (vii) adult grandchildren of the decedent,
    15    (viii) a grandparent of the decedent,
    16    (ix) an adult who exhibited special care and concern for the decent,
    17    (x) a guardian of the person of the decedent at the time of his death,
    18  or
    19    [(h)]  (xi)  any  other  person  authorized or under the obligation to
    20  dispose of the body.
    21    (b) If there is more than one member of a class listed in subparagraph
    22  (iv), (vi), (vii) or (viii) of paragraph (a) of this  subdivision  enti-
    23  tled  to  make  an  anatomical gift, an anatomical gift may be made by a
    24  member of the class unless that member or a person knows of an objection
    25  by another member of the class. If an objection is known, the  gift  may
    26  be  made  only by a majority of the members of the class who are reason-
    27  ably available.
    28    3. [For the purposes of this  section,  "reasonably  available"  means
    29  that  a person to be contacted can be contacted without undue effort and
    30  willing and able to act in a  timely  manner  consistent  with  existing
    31  medical criteria necessary for the making of an anatomical gift.
    32    4. For the purposes of this section, "domestic partner" means a person
    33  who, with respect to another person:
    34    (a) is formally a party in a domestic partnership or similar relation-
    35  ship  with  the  other  person, entered into pursuant to the laws of the
    36  United States or any state, local or foreign jurisdiction, or registered
    37  as the domestic partner of the person with any  registry  maintained  by
    38  the  employer  of  either  party  or any state, municipality, or foreign
    39  jurisdiction; or
    40    (b) is formally recognized as a beneficiary or  covered  person  under
    41  the other person's employment benefits or health insurance; or
    42    (c)  is  dependent  or mutually interdependent on the other person for
    43  support, as evidenced by the totality of the circumstances indicating  a
    44  mutual  intent  to  be  domestic  partners including but not limited to:
    45  common ownership or joint leasing of real or personal  property;  common
    46  householding,  shared  income  or  shared  expenses; children in common;
    47  signs of intent to marry or become domestic partners under paragraph (a)
    48  or (b) of this subdivision; or the length of the  personal  relationship
    49  of the persons.
    50    Each  party  to  a  domestic partnership shall be considered to be the
    51  domestic partner of  the  other  party.  "Domestic  partner"  shall  not
    52  include a person who is related to the other person by blood in a manner
    53  that would bar marriage to the other person in New York state. "Domestic
    54  partner"  shall  also  not  include any person who is less than eighteen
    55  years of age or who is the adopted child of the other person or  who  is
    56  related  by  blood in a manner that would bar marriage in New York state

        A. 1133                             6

     1  to a person who is the lawful spouse of the other person.] An anatomical
     2  gift may not be made by a person  listed  in  subdivision  two  of  this
     3  section if:
     4    (a) a person in a prior class is reasonably available;
     5    (b) the person proposing to make an anatomical gift knows of a refusal
     6  or  contrary  indications  by the decedent, including that an anatomical
     7  gift is contrary to the decedent's religious or moral beliefs; or
     8    (c) the person proposing to  make  an  anatomical  gift  knows  of  an
     9  objection to making an anatomical gift by a member of the person's class
    10  or a prior class.
    11    4.  Any gift by a person designated in subdivision two of this section
    12  shall be by a document signed by him or her or made by his or her  tele-
    13  graphic, recorded telephonic, or other recorded message. Where a gift is
    14  made under this subdivision, either: (a) the donor shall indicate in the
    15  document  or  message  that  he  or she has no actual notice of contrary
    16  indications by the decedent and no reason to believe that an  anatomical
    17  gift is contrary to the decedent's religious or moral beliefs; or (b) an
    18  agent  of  the federally designated organ procurement organization or of
    19  the donee shall make reasonable effort to inquire of the donor or other-
    20  wise determine that the donor has no actual  notice  of  contrary  indi-
    21  cations by the decedent and no reason to believe that an anatomical gift
    22  is contrary to the decedent's religious or moral beliefs.
    23    5.  The  donee  shall  not accept the gift under the following circum-
    24  stances:
    25    (a) the donee has actual notice of contrary indication  by  the  dece-
    26  dent;
    27    (b)  where  [the  donor has not properly executed an organ donor card,
    28  driver's license authorization to make] an anatomical gift[, pursuant to
    29  paragraph (a) of subdivision one of section five  hundred  four  of  the
    30  vehicle  and  traffic  law,  registered  in the New York state organ and
    31  tissue donor registry under section  forty-three  hundred  ten  of  this
    32  article,  or  otherwise  given written authorization for organ or tissue
    33  donation, or has revoked any such authorization, and the gift is opposed
    34  by a person or persons in the highest priority available of the  classes
    35  specified  in  paragraph  (a),  (b),  (c),  (d), (e), (f), (g) or (h) of
    36  subdivision two of] is not properly made pursuant to this section; or
    37    (c) the donee has reason to believe that an anatomical gift is contra-
    38  ry to the decedent's religious or moral beliefs.
    39    6. A gift of all or part of a body authorizes any  examination  neces-
    40  sary to assure medical acceptability of gift for the purposes intended.
    41    7.  The  rights  of the donee created by the gift are paramount to the
    42  rights of others except as provided by section forty-three hundred eight
    43  of this article.
    44    8. The person who documents the making, amending  or  revoking  of  an
    45  anatomical  gift, acting reasonably and in good faith in accordance with
    46  this article, may accept an anatomical gift under this article made by a
    47  person who represents that he or she  is  entitled  to  consent  to  the
    48  donation.
    49    § 2. This act shall take effect on the one hundred eightieth day after
    50  it shall have become a law; provided, however, that effective immediate-
    51  ly,  the  commissioner  of  health shall make regulations and take other
    52  actions reasonably necessary to implement this act on that date.
    53                                   PART C
    54             Changes in anatomical gift revocation and amendment

        A. 1133                             7
     1    Section 1. Section 4305 of the public health law, as added by  chapter
     2  466 of the laws of 1970, is amended to read as follows:
     3    §  4305. [Revocation] Amendments or revocation of the gift. 1. [If the
     4  will, card, or other document or executed copy thereof has  been  deliv-
     5  ered  to  a  specified donee, the donor] An individual who has created a
     6  document of gift may amend or revoke the gift by:
     7    (a) [the execution and delivery to the donee of a signed statement]  a
     8  record signed by the donor, or
     9    (b)  an  oral  statement  of  revocation  made  in the presence of two
    10  persons, [communicated to the donee] at least one of whom is a disinter-
    11  ested witness, or
    12    (c) a later-executed document of gift that expressly amends or revokes
    13  a previous anatomical gift or portion of an anatomical gift, or
    14    (d) a statement during a terminal illness or injury  addressed  to  an
    15  attending physician and communicated to the donee, or
    16    [(d)]  (e) a signed card or document, found on his or her person or in
    17  his or her effects.
    18    2. (a) Subject to paragraphs (b) and (c) of this subdivision, an indi-
    19  vidual authorized to make an anatomical gift pursuant to subdivision two
    20  of section forty-three hundred one of this article shall revoke or amend
    21  such gift by:
    22    (i) a record signed by the donor, or
    23    (ii) an oral statement of revocation  made  in  the  presence  of  two
    24  persons, at least one of whom is a disinterested witness, or
    25    (iii)  a  later-executed  document  of  gift  that expressly amends or
    26  revokes a previous anatomical gift or portion of an anatomical gift.
    27    (b) If more than one member of a class listed  in  subparagraph  (iv),
    28  (vi),  (vii)  or  (viii)  of paragraph (a) of subdivision two of section
    29  forty-three hundred one of this article is reasonably available, a  gift
    30  made  pursuant  to subdivision two of section forty-three hundred one of
    31  this article may be amended only if a majority of the reasonably  avail-
    32  able  members  agree  to  the amending of the gift, or revoked only if a
    33  majority of the reasonably available members agree to  the  revoking  of
    34  the  gift  or  if  they  are equally divided as to whether to revoke the
    35  gift.
    36    (c) A revocation is effective only if, before  an  incision  has  been
    37  made  to  remove  a part from the donor's body or before invasive proce-
    38  dures have begun to prepare the recipient, the procurement organization,
    39  transplant hospital, or physician or technician knows of the revocation.
    40    3. Any document of gift[ which has not been delivered  to  the  donee]
    41  may  be  revoked in the manner set out in subdivision one or two of this
    42  section or by destruction, cancellation, or mutilation of  the  document
    43  and all executed copies thereof.
    44    [3.]    4.  Any  gift  made by a will may be revoked or amended in the
    45  manner provided for revocation or amendment of wills or as  provided  in
    46  subdivision one of this section.
    47    5.  In  the absence of contrary indications by the donor, a revocation
    48  or amendment of an anatomical gift is not  a  refusal  to  make  another
    49  anatomical  gift,  either  by  the  donor or another person specified in
    50  subdivision two of section forty-three hundred one of this article.
    51    § 2. This act shall take effect on the one hundred eightieth day after
    52  it shall have become a law; provided, however, that effective immediate-
    53  ly, the commissioner of health shall make  regulations  and  take  other
    54  actions reasonably necessary to implement this act on that date.
    55    § 3. Severability. If any provision of this act, or any application of
    56  any  provision  of  this act, is held to be invalid, or to violate or be

        A. 1133                             8
     1  inconsistent with any federal law or regulation, that shall  not  affect
     2  the  validity or effectiveness of any other provision of this act, or of
     3  any other application of any provision of this act, which can  be  given
     4  effect  without  that  provision  or  application;  and to that end, the
     5  provisions and applications of this act are severable.
     6    § 4. This act shall take effect immediately; provided,  however,  that
     7  the applicable effective dates of Parts A through C of this act shall be
     8  as specifically set forth in the last sections of such Parts.
feedback