Current:Home > reviewsRepublican lawmaker says Kentucky’s newly passed shield bill protects IVF services -GrowthProspect
Republican lawmaker says Kentucky’s newly passed shield bill protects IVF services
View
Date:2025-04-17 06:01:29
FRANKFORT, Ky. (AP) — Kentucky legislation shielding doctors and other health providers from criminal liability was written broadly enough to apply to in vitro fertilization services, a Republican lawmaker said Friday as the bill won final passage.
The measure, which now goes to Democratic Gov. Andy Beshear, would accomplish what other bills sought to do to safeguard access to IVF services, GOP state Sen. Whitney Westerfield said in an interview. The other bills have made no progress in Kentucky’s GOP supermajority legislature with only a few days left in this year’s session.
Westerfield, an abortion opponent who chairs the Senate Judiciary Committee, said during the 37-0 Senate roll call vote that the bill’s definition of health care providers was broad enough to apply to IVF services.
“It was important to me to make that clear that providers can do what they do every day, and what moms and dads are counting on them to do every day to provide their services without fear of being prosecuted unduly,” Westerfield said in the interview afterward. “And I feel confident the bill is going to do that.”
In vitro fertilization emerged as a political issue across the U.S. in February after the Alabama Supreme Court ruled that in wrongful death lawsuits in that state, embryos outside the uterus had the same legal protections as children. Major medical providers in Alabama paused IVF services until Alabama’s governor signed a quickly passed law protecting IVF providers from legal liability.
While IVF is popular, some anti-abortion advocates have been pushing to recognize embryos and fetuses as humans as a step toward banning abortion.
The Kentucky legislation — House Bill 159 — would shield health care providers from criminal liability for any “harm or damages” alleged to have occurred from “an act or omission relating to the provision of health services.” That legal protection would not apply in cases of gross negligence or when there was malicious or intentional misconduct.
The measure originated in the Kentucky House, where its lead sponsor, Republican state Rep. Patrick Flannery, said it was intended to apply to all health care providers –- including nurses, doctors and other health providers. The bill won 94-0 House passage last month.
During the House debate, supporters said their motivation was to protect frontline health workers from prosecution for inadvertent mistakes.
The legislation drew only a short discussion Friday in the Senate, and Westerfield was the only senator to raise the IVF issue.
He said afterward that he doesn’t think Kentucky courts would make the same ruling that the Alabama court did. But legislative action was important, he said, to reassure those providing IVF services that “they can keep doing their jobs” and that couples feel “safe knowing that they can go down that path knowing it’s not going to be interrupted.”
After the Alabama court ruling, Westerfield filed a bill to limit liability for health care providers if there is a loss or damage to a human embryo. That bill and a separate one to protect IVF providers from criminal liability when providing fertility services have stalled in committees.
Democratic state Sen. Cassie Chambers Armstrong, lead sponsor of the other bill, supported the measure that won final passage Friday but said she’d prefer one that’s more direct.
“It would behoove us to advance one of the bills that specifically addresses IVF, because then it is very clear,” she said in an interview.
As for the measure that passed, she said: “I do believe that this is a good bill that does have a plausible reading that would provide IVF protection. It’s not as clear as I would like, but it is a step in the right direction.”
___
Associated Press Writer Geoff Mulvihill contributed to this report from Cherry Hill, New Jersey.
veryGood! (246)
Related
- New Mexico governor seeks funding to recycle fracking water, expand preschool, treat mental health
- Rita Ora Shares How Husband Taika Waititi Changed Her After “Really Low” Period
- Here's Why Love Is Blind's Paul and Micah Broke Up Again After Filming
- Hurricane-damaged roofs in Puerto Rico remain a problem. One group is offering a fix
- McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
- Lionel Richie Shares Biggest Lesson on Royal Protocol Ahead of King Charles III's Coronation
- Puerto Rico has lost more than power. The vast majority of people have no clean water
- Money will likely be the central tension in the U.N.'s COP27 climate negotiations
- Federal court filings allege official committed perjury in lawsuit tied to Louisiana grain terminal
- Inside Aaron Carter’s Rocky Journey After Child Star Success
Ranking
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Triathlon
- 'The Great Displacement' looks at communities forever altered by climate change
- Investors have trillions to fight climate change. Developing nations get little of it
- How King Charles III and the Royal Family Are Really Doing Without the Queen
- All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
- Three Takeaways From The COP27 Climate Conference
- See Alba Baptista Marvelously Support Boyfriend Chris Evans at Ghosted Premiere in NYC
- Aaron Carter's Former Fiancée Melanie Martin Questions His Cause of Death After Autopsy Released
Recommendation
Paige Bueckers vs. Hannah Hidalgo highlights women's basketball games to watch
How Senegal's artists are changing the system with a mic and spray paint
Biden says U.S. will rise to the global challenge of climate change
The Scorpion Renaissance Is Upon Us
New Mexico governor seeks funding to recycle fracking water, expand preschool, treat mental health
Why experts say you shouldn't bag your leaves this fall
California plans to cut incentives for home solar, worrying environmentalists
Mississippi River Basin adapts as climate change brings extreme rain and flooding