HB 25-1176
signedBehavioral Health Treatment Stigma for Providers
Plain-English Summary
AI-generatedHB 25-1176 in Colorado is a bill that aims to reduce stigma around mental health and substance use disorders for medical professionals. It requires the state's medical board to update licensing applications so they no longer ask doctors about past or current health issues that don't affect their ability to practice safely and ethically. The bill also ensures that doctors can refer themselves to support programs without having to disclose personal health information to the board unless it currently impacts patient safety. This means that doctors with a history of mental health conditions or substance use disorders, if they are now stable and capable of practicing safely, won't have to reveal this past information when applying for or renewing their license. The bill has been signed into law, meaning these changes will be implemented as part of the licensing process in Colorado.
Official Summary
The act requires the following regarding the application for a license to practice medicine in Colorado (application) and the questionnaire accompanying the form for a license renewal (questionnaire): The Colorado medical board (board) must consider the recommendations of the Federation of State Medical Boards and the requirements of the federal "Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990" when developing the application questions; The application and questionnaire must not require the disclosure of personal medical or health information that is not relevant to the applicant's ability to provide safe, competent, and ethical patient care at the time of application; The application and questionnaire must not include questions seeking information about past health-related conditions that do not impact an applicant's ability to practice safe, competent, and ethical patient care at the time of application; and The board shall include information in the application about the board's peer health assistance program, the applicant's ability to self-refer to the peer health assistance program at any time, and the applicant's ability to self-refer in lieu of disclosure to the board. The act clarifies that an individual subject to the licensing requirements of the "Colorado Medical Practice Act" is not required to disclose a physical illness, physical condition, behavioral health disorder, mental health disorder, or substance use disorder that no longer impacts the individual's ability to practice the applicable health-care profession or occupation with reasonable skill and safety to patients or clients. Current law requires that if a health-care professional has a physical illness, physical condition, or behavioral or mental health disorder that renders the person unable to practice the applicable health-care profession or occupation with reasonable skill and safety to patients or clients, the licensee, registrant, or certificate holder shall notify the regulator that regulates the person's profession or occupation of the physical illness, physical condition, or behavioral or mental health disorder. The act requires that a health-care professional must additionally provide notice of a substance use disorder and specifies that the health-care professional is required only to provide notice of a current physical illness, physical condition, behavioral health disorder, mental health disorder, or substance use disorder. (Note: This summary applies to this bill as enacted.)
Details
- Chamber
- House
- First action
- 2025-05-31
- Latest action
- 2025-02-10
- Last action desc.
- Introduced In House - Assigned to Health & Human Services
- OpenStates
- View source ↗
Sponsors
- Rebekah Stewart (primary) · Democratic
- Cleave Simpson (primary) · Republican
- Jennifer Bacon (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Andy Boesenecker (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Brandi Bradley (cosponsor) · Republican
- Kyle Brown (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Sean Camacho (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Chad Clifford (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Monica Duran (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Regina English (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Lisa Feret (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Meg Froelich (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Lori Garcia Sander (cosponsor) · Republican
- Lorena García (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Lindsay Gilchrist (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Eliza Hamrick (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Jamie Jackson (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Dusty Johnson (cosponsor) · Republican
- Junie Joseph (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Sheila Lieder (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Mandy Lindsay (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Meghan Lukens (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Javier Mabrey (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Julie McCluskie (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Karen McCormick (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Naquetta Ricks (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Manny Rutinel (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Gretchen Rydin (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Katie Stewart (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Brianna Titone (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Alex Valdez (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Judy Amabile (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Matt Ball (cosponsor) · Democratic
- John Carson (cosponsor) · Republican
- Lisa Cutter (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Lindsey Daugherty (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Tony Exum (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Lisa Frizell (cosponsor) · Republican
- Julie Gonzales (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Iman Jodeh (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Cathy Kipp (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Barbara Kirkmeyer (cosponsor) · Republican
- Janice Marchman (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Kyle Mullica (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Byron Pelton (cosponsor) · Republican
- Rod Pelton (cosponsor) · Republican
- Dylan Roberts (cosponsor) · Democratic