Authorizes the commissioner of health to conduct a study and issue a report examining the unmet health and resource needs facing pregnant women in New York and the impact of limited service pregnancy centers on the ability of women to obtain accurate, non-coercive health care information and timely access to a comprehensive range of reproductive and sexual health care services.
NEW YORK STATE ASSEMBLY MEMORANDUM IN SUPPORT OF LEGISLATION submitted in accordance with Assembly Rule III, Sec 1(f)
 
BILL NUMBER: A5499
SPONSOR: Glick
 
TITLE OF BILL:
An act authorizing the commissioner of health to conduct a study and
issue a report examining the unmet health and resource needs facing
pregnant women in New York and the impact of limited service pregnancy
centers on the ability of women to obtain accurate, non-coercive health
care information and timely access to a comprehensive range of reproduc-
tive and sexual health care services
 
PURPOSE OR GENERAL IDEA OF BILL:
Authorizes the Commissioner of Health to conduct a study and issue a
report examining the unmet health and resource needs facing pregnant
women in New York and the impact of limited services pregnancy centers
on the ability of women to obtain accurate, non-coercive health care
information and timely access to a comprehensive range of reproductive
and sexual health care services in alignment with their health care
needs and that supports personal decision-making.
 
SUMMARY OF PROVISIONS:
Section 1: Defines "limited services pregnancy center." Section 2:
Authorization of study and study scope.
Section 3: Study timeline and taskforce structure. The study will
commence no later than six months following the effective date of this
act.
Section 4: Effective Date.
 
JUSTIFICATION:
Decisions about pregnancy are time sensitive - whether a woman chooses
to continue her pregnancy and needs prenatal care or wants to end her
pregnancy and needs an abortion. If a woman becomes pregnant and chooses
to continue the pregnancy, having a healthy pregnancy is critical both
to her health and to ensuring positive pregnancy outcomes.
The federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention urges that
comprehensive prenatal care begins as soon as a woman decides to become
pregnant. Like prenatal care, delayed access to abortion and emergency
contraception poses a threat to public health. Abortion is one of the
safest health care procedures, but delays in accessing abortion increase
the risk of complications, as well as financial burdens, and may elimi-
nate a women's ability to obtain care altogether, severely limiting her
reproductive health options.
New York State has prioritized improving access to adequate and early
prenatal care, timely abortion care, and emergency contraception, as
well as, and in connection to, reducing maternal mortality and morbidity
rates and disparities. To that end, identifying gaps in health care and
unmet resource and pregnancy-support needs, in particular for low-income
communities, is critical to achieving optimal health outcomes for women
who are or may be pregnant. In New York there exist unlicensed entities
that offer limited pregnancy-related services, such as pregnancy tests
or ultrasonography, run by organizations that have the core goal of
persuading pregnant women and teens to choose to continue the pregnancy.
Research by the Government Accountability Office and by advocacy organ-
izations in many states, including New York, have documented that some
such entities engage in misleading or deceptive practices. Some of these
practices include providing inaccurate medical information, promising
monetary support, or imitating reproductive health clinics so as to lead
women to believe they are either receiving comprehensive counseling on
their options or are in fact in a licensed facility that provides or
refers for comprehensive reproductive health care services. In past
studies, some of these entities provide inaccurate, misleading, or stig-
matizing information about abortion and contraception, or even about a
woman's own health status or pregnancy.
The State of New York respects the right of individuals to express and
promote their opinions and beliefs, including those on pregnancy and
abortion. In addition, the legislature also finds that the State has a
strong interest in ensuring that individuals seeking medical care and
pregnancy-related services are able to find these services seamlessly
without interference or coercion.
Meeting the health and resource needs of pregnant women, as well as the
potential negative impact of certain practices by unlicensed facilities
that offer limited pregnancy services, are matters of state concern and
understanding those practices, how to address any resulting harms, and
how to support pregnant women's unfulfilled health care and resource
needs are important exercises of the legislature's constitutional
mandate to protect the public health.
 
PRIOR LEGISLATIVE HISTORY:
2020 - Passed Assembly
2019 - Ordered to Third Reading
 
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS:
To be determined.
 
EFFECTIVE DATE:
This act shall take effect immediately.
STATE OF NEW YORK
________________________________________________________________________
5499
2021-2022 Regular Sessions
IN ASSEMBLY
February 19, 2021
___________
Introduced by M. of A. GLICK, SIMON, GOTTFRIED, GRIFFIN, L. ROSENTHAL,
EPSTEIN, OTIS, ROZIC, LUPARDO -- read once and referred to the Commit-
tee on Health
AN ACT authorizing the commissioner of health to conduct a study and
issue a report examining the unmet health and resource needs facing
pregnant women in New York and the impact of limited service pregnancy
centers on the ability of women to obtain accurate, non-coercive
health care information and timely access to a comprehensive range of
reproductive and sexual health care services
The People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and Assem-bly, do enact as follows:
1 Section 1. Definition. As used in this act, "limited services preg-
2 nancy center" means a facility or entity, including a mobile facility,
3 the primary purpose of which is to provide services to clients who are
4 or may be pregnant, that:
5 1. (a) is not a health care facility licensed by the state of New York
6 under article 28 of the public health law or articles 31 and 32 of the
7 mental hygiene law; or
8 (b) is not providing services under the direction of a health care
9 provider licensed under title 8 of the education law who is acting with-
10 in his or her scope of practice; and
11 2. fails to provide or refer for the full range of comprehensive
12 reproductive and sexual health care services reimbursed under the
13 state's Medicaid program including, but not limited to contraception,
14 testing and treatment of sexually transmitted infections, abortion care,
15 and prenatal care.
16 § 2. Authorization of study and study scope. 1. The commissioner of
17 health (hereinafter "the commissioner") is hereby authorized and
18 directed to conduct a study and issue a report examining the unmet
19 health and resource needs facing pregnant women in New York and the
20 impact of limited service pregnancy centers on the ability of women to
EXPLANATION--Matter in italics (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
[] is old law to be omitted.
LBD02570-01-1
A. 5499 2
1 obtain accurate, non-coercive health care information and timely access
2 to a comprehensive range of reproductive and sexual health care services
3 in alignment with their health care needs and that supports personal
4 decision-making.
5 2. The commissioner may request, and shall receive upon request, data
6 and information from such entities and other relevant sources to meet
7 the purposes of the study. This information shall include but not be
8 limited to:
9 (a) what state and/or federal funds or tax or other subsidies, if any,
10 are directly or indirectly allocated to limited service pregnancy
11 centers in the state and the names and locations of such organizations
12 receiving government funding;
13 (b) whether the limited service pregnancy centers in the state are
14 part of larger umbrella organizations that operate limited service preg-
15 nancy centers across the country, and if so, whether those umbrella
16 organizations receive state and/or federal funding;
17 (c) the services provided by limited service pregnancy centers and
18 what services are most frequently sought at limited service pregnancy
19 centers;
20 (d) the number of women who access services at limited service preg-
21 nancy centers, the geographic regions in which each woman accessing the
22 services of these centers resides, the distance to the nearest licensed
23 medical facility providing these services, the prices charged for such
24 services, and the basic demographic information about each woman,
25 including race, age, and marital status. Basic demographic information
26 included in any report shall be published in the aggregate so that it is
27 impossible to identify any particular individual;
28 (e) whether pregnancy centers hold themselves out to the public,
29 either in person, through community participation or events or through
30 their advertising or websites, as medical facilities or entities in
31 which comprehensive, all-options pregnancy counseling is provided;
32 (f) whether women seeking or accessing services at limited service
33 pregnancy centers are seeking comprehensive options counseling or
34 services at medical facilities and whether women have experienced a
35 delay in receiving health care, including abortion or the initiation of
36 prenatal care, due to a visit to a limited service pregnancy center;
37 (g) whether limited service pregnancy centers enroll women in any
38 public benefits programs or connect women to other services, and if so,
39 which services limited service pregnancy centers connect women to;
40 (h) the nature of information given to clients or potential clients at
41 pregnancy centers and the nature of limited service pregnancy centers'
42 operational manuals, handbooks or guidelines in connection to the
43 provision of services to clients;
44 (i) the number of state-certified medical professionals on staff or
45 volunteering at limited service pregnancy centers and the number who are
46 providing medical services or counseling on site during regular business
47 hours at limited service pregnancy centers and whether pregnancy centers
48 inform women whether or not they have any medical professionals on the
49 premises, on staff, or in a volunteer capacity; and
50 (j) whether limited service pregnancy centers collect medical informa-
51 tion and what other information is collected upon intake, how limited
52 service pregnancy centers handle medical and other client records, and
53 whether the medical records are in compliance with federal and state
54 requirements governing medical privacy.
55 § 3. Study timeline and taskforce structure. The study will commence
56 no later than six months following the effective date of this act. The
A. 5499 3
1 commissioner shall establish a temporary taskforce of nine members to
2 support the department of health in the development of the study, the
3 review of the findings and the establishment of specific recommendations
4 for solutions to address any service gaps or negative impact in the
5 state identified through the study. The taskforce shall have adequate
6 geographical representation and include but not necessarily be limited
7 to: a representative of the division of consumer protection; a member of
8 the New York state department of health advisory council on maternal
9 mortality and morbidity; a member of American college of obstetricians
10 and gynecologists whose practice includes the provision of all pregnancy
11 related care, including birth and termination of pregnancy; an individ-
12 ual with professional experience in the fields of reproductive rights,
13 health and/or justice; a member with professional experience and exper-
14 tise in the first amendment and free speech rights; and a staff member
15 from the Bureau Of Social Justice within the office of the New York
16 state attorney general. The taskforce shall be appointed as follows:
17 three members to be appointed by the governor; three members to be
18 appointed by the temporary president of the senate; and three members to
19 be appointed by the speaker of the assembly. The commissioner shall
20 issue a report to the governor and the legislature, and publish the
21 report on its public website, containing the findings and policy recom-
22 mendations no later than eighteen months following the effective date of
23 this act. The report may include de-identified patient information in
24 the aggregate, but shall not include personally identifiable informa-
25 tion.
26 § 4. This act shall take effect immediately.