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SB 25-130

signed

Providing Emergency Medical Services

Plain-English Summary

AI-generated

Senate Bill 25-130, which has been signed into law in Colorado, ensures that hospitals, freestanding emergency departments, and other health-care facilities must provide emergency medical services to anyone who requests them or is referred for such care. The bill requires these facilities to log whether treatment was given, refused, or not needed, and it prohibits them from denying care based on discriminatory reasons, the patient's ability to pay, or transferring a patient unless certain conditions are met. This law aims to protect patients by preventing hospitals from penalizing healthcare providers who refuse to transfer unstable emergency patients and ensures that no one is turned away due to discrimination or inability to pay.

Official Summary

The act requires hospitals, freestanding emergency departments, and licensed health-care facilities that hold themselves out to the public as providing emergency care (facility) to provide emergency medical services to a person who presents to the facility when the person requests or a request is made on the person's behalf for emergency medical services. For each person who presents to a facility and requests emergency medical services or for each request made on the person's behalf for emergency medical services, the act requires the facility to input into a central log whether the person refused treatment or was denied treatment; whether no treatment was required; or whether the person was transferred, admitted and treated, stabilized and transferred, or discharged. The act prohibits a facility from: Denying or discriminating in providing emergency medical services to a patient for a discriminatory or unlawful reason; Penalizing or taking adverse action against a health-care provider for refusing to transfer a patient with an emergency medical condition that has not been stabilized; Delaying providing emergency medical services to a person in order to inquire about the person's ability to pay for the services; and Transferring or discharging a patient with an emergency medical condition unless certain conditions are met. A facility or health-care provider does not violate the act's requirements if certain conditions are met. The act authorizes the department of public health and environment to investigate a facility that negligently violates the requirements of the act. A physician who negligently violates the act engages in unprofessional conduct and is subject to professional discipline. If a civil monetary penalty is imposed, the act requires the maximum civil monetary penalty to be reduced by any civil monetary penalty imposed pursuant to the federal "Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act" for the same violation. The act appropriates $82,768 from the health facilities general licensure cash fund to the department of public health and environment for use by the health facilities and emergency medical services division. (Note: This summary applies to this bill as enacted.)

Details

Chamber
Senate
First action
2025-05-14
Latest action
2025-02-05
Last action desc.
Introduced In Senate - Assigned to Judiciary
OpenStates
View source ↗

Sponsors

Votes

REPASS
2025-05-06 · Senate · passYes: 23 · No: 12 · Other:
CONCUR
2025-05-06 · Senate · passYes: 35 · No: 0 · Other:
BILL
2025-05-03 · House · passYes: 42 · No: 21 · Other:
AMD
2025-05-02 · House · failYes: 20 · No: 41 · Other:
AMD
2025-05-02 · House · failYes: 20 · No: 42 · Other:
AMD
2025-05-02 · House · failYes: 20 · No: 42 · Other:
AMD
2025-05-02 · House · failYes: 21 · No: 40 · Other:
AMD
2025-05-02 · House · failYes: 20 · No: 42 · Other:
AMD
2025-05-02 · House · failYes: 19 · No: 42 · Other:
AMD
2025-05-02 · House · failYes: 20 · No: 42 · Other:
BILL
2025-04-23 · Senate · passYes: 23 · No: 12 · Other: