Bill Text: NY A08556 | 2023-2024 | General Assembly | Introduced


Bill Title: Permits the commissioner of health to share deidentified information as strictly necessary to respond to a public health emergency or an imminent threat to public health, or to consult and cooperate with the appropriate agencies of the federal government or of other states in accordance with the functions, powers, and duties of the department, and may share identified information in such circumstances only when strictly necessary and with the consent of the patient.

Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 1-0)

Status: (Introduced) 2024-01-29 - substituted by s8093 [A08556 Detail]

Download: New_York-2023-A08556-Introduced.html



                STATE OF NEW YORK
        ________________________________________________________________________

                                          8556

                   IN ASSEMBLY

                                     January 9, 2024
                                       ___________

        Introduced  by M. of A. REYES -- read once and referred to the Committee
          on Codes

        AN ACT to amend the executive law and the civil practice law and  rules,
          in relation to sharing of certain information

          The  People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and Assem-
        bly, do enact as follows:

     1    Section 1. Subdivision 2 of section 837-x of  the  executive  law,  as
     2  amended  and such section as renumbered by a chapter of the laws of 2023
     3  amending the criminal procedure law, the executive law, the civil  prac-
     4  tice  law and rules, the insurance law and the education law relating to
     5  legally protected health activity providers, as proposed in  legislative
     6  bills numbers S.1066-B and A.1709-B, is amended to read as follows:
     7    2. (a) No state or local government employee or entity or other person
     8  acting  on  behalf  of state or local government shall cooperate with or
     9  provide information to any out-of-state individual or out-of-state agen-
    10  cy or department regarding any legally protected health activity in this
    11  state, or otherwise expend or use time,  moneys,  facilities,  property,
    12  equipment,  personnel  or other resources in furtherance of any investi-
    13  gation or proceeding that seeks to impose civil or criminal liability or
    14  professional sanctions upon a person or entity for any legally protected
    15  health activity occurring in this state; except that the commissioner of
    16  health may share  deidentified  information  as  strictly  necessary  to
    17  respond  to  a  public  health emergency or an imminent threat to public
    18  health, or to consult and cooperate with the appropriate agencies of the
    19  federal government or of other states in accordance with the  functions,
    20  powers,  and  duties  of  the  department  as outlined under section two
    21  hundred one of the public health law, and may share identified  informa-
    22  tion  in  such  circumstances  only when strictly necessary and with the
    23  consent of the patient. For purposes  of  this  section,  "deidentified"
    24  means  that the information cannot identify or be made to identify or be
    25  associated with a particular individual, directly or indirectly, and  is
    26  subject to technical safeguards and policies and procedures that prevent
    27  reidentification, whether intentionally or unintentionally, of any indi-
    28  vidual.

         EXPLANATION--Matter in italics (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
                              [ ] is old law to be omitted.
                                                                   LBD04071-10-4

        A. 8556                             2

     1    (b) Nothing in this section shall prohibit the investigation of any
     2    reproductive health services rendered in violation of the laws of this
     3  state,  provided  that  no information relating to any medical procedure
     4  performed on a specific individual may be shared  with  an  out-of-state
     5  agency  or  any other individual. Nothing in this section shall prohibit
     6  compliance with a valid, court-issued subpoena or warrant which does not
     7  relate to a law seeking to impose civil or criminal liability or profes-
     8  sional sanctions for a legally protected health activity, or in response
     9  to the written request of a person who is the subject of such an  inves-
    10  tigation  or  proceeding,  to  the  extent  necessary,  in each case, to
    11  fulfill such request.
    12    (c) Nothing in this section shall  prohibit disclosure of deidentified
    13  information in compliance with federal grant reporting  requirements  or
    14  other reporting requirements under federal law.
    15    (d)  This section shall not be construed to allow for the provision of
    16  any information to any individual or out-of-state agency  or  department
    17  which would not otherwise be available under state law.
    18    § 2. Paragraph 1 of subdivision (g) of section 3119 of the civil prac-
    19  tice law and rules, as amended by a chapter of the laws of 2023 amending
    20  the  criminal  procedure  law, the executive law, the civil practice law
    21  and rules, the insurance law and the education law relating  to  legally
    22  protected  health  activity  providers, as proposed in legislative bills
    23  numbers S.1066-B and A.1709-B, is amended to read as follows:
    24    (1) Out-of-state proceedings regarding legally protected health activ-
    25  ities. Notwithstanding any other provisions of this section or any other
    26  law, no court or county clerk shall  issue  a    subpoena    under  this
    27  section  in  connection  with an out-of-state proceeding relating to any
    28  legally protected health activity which occurred in this  state,  unless
    29  such  out-of-state  proceeding  (i)  sounds in tort or contract, (ii) is
    30  actionable, in an equivalent or similar manner, under the laws  of  this
    31  state,  and  (iii)  was brought by the patient who received reproductive
    32  health services as defined  in  paragraph  (a)  of  subdivision  one  of
    33  section  570.17  of  the  criminal procedure law, or the patient's legal
    34  representative, so long as the  patient  gives  express  consent  unless
    35  express consent is not feasible due to patient injury or death.
    36    §  3.  This  act  shall  take  effect on the same date and in the same
    37  manner as a chapter of the laws of 2023 amending the criminal  procedure
    38  law,  the executive law, the civil practice law and rules, the insurance
    39  law and the education law relating to legally protected health  activity
    40  providers,  as  proposed  in  legislative  bills  numbers  S.1066-B  and
    41  A.1709-B, takes effect.
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