HB 22-1267
signedCulturally Relevant Training Health Professionals
Plain-English Summary
AI-generatedHouse Bill 22-1267, titled "Culturally Relevant Training for Health Professionals," requires the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment to establish a grant program that funds nonprofit organizations and health-care provider associations to create training programs. These programs aim to educate healthcare professionals on how to better serve priority populations such as people experiencing homelessness, individuals with disabilities, veterans, and members of the LGBTQ+ community, among others. The bill also mandates that regulatory bodies encourage their licensees to participate in these training courses. With $900,000 allocated from the general fund, this initiative is now signed into law, meaning it will proceed as planned to improve healthcare equity for diverse groups in Colorado.
Official Summary
The act requires the office of health equity (office) in the department of public health and environment to: On or before January 1, 2023, create a culturally relevant and affirming health-care training grant program (program) to provide money to nonprofit entities and statewide associations of health-care providers to develop new, culturally responsive training programs for priority populations; and Contract with a third-party administrator to administer the program. "Priority populations" is defined as people experiencing homelessness; people involved with the criminal justice system; black people, indigenous people, and people of color; American Indians and Alaska natives; veterans; people who are lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, or questioning; people of disproportionately affected sexual orientations and gender identities; people who have AIDS or HIV; older adults; children and families; and people with disabilities, including people who are deaf and hard of hearing, people who are blind and deafblind, people with brain injuries, people with intellectual and developmental disabilities, people with other co-occurring disabilities; and other populations as deemed appropriate by the office of behavioral health. The third-party administrator is required to: Issue a grant application for nonprofit entities and statewide associations of health-care providers who wish to participate in the program to develop culturally relevant and affirming health-care training for health-care professionals; and Submit the list of the qualified applicants for the program to the health equity commission in the office for approval. Each regulator in the division of professions and occupations in the department of regulatory agencies for the applicable health-care professional is required to provide information concerning the training courses available to the licensee, certificate holder, or registrant. The regulator is required to encourage participation in the training courses. $900,000 is appropriated from the general fund to the department of public health and environment for allocation to the office to administer and support the program. (Note: This summary applies to this bill as enacted.)
Details
- Chamber
- House
- First action
- 2022-06-08
- Latest action
- 2022-02-25
- Last action desc.
- Introduced In House - Assigned to Public & Behavioral Health & Human Services
- OpenStates
- View source ↗
Sponsors
- Alex Valdez (primary) · Democratic
- Andy Boesenecker (primary) · Democratic