Genome Statute and Legislation Database
The Genome Statute and Legislation Database is comprised of state statutes and bills introduced during the 2002-2024 U.S. state legislative sessions.
State | Primary Link | Topic(s) | Bill Status Sort descending | Summary |
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New Hampshire | State StatuteNew Hampshire: NHS 141-H:1, 141-H:2, and 141:H-6 | Privacy | Statute | No individual or his/her family member may be required to undergo genetic testing as a condition of doing business with another person. Genetic testing may not be performed on any individual or anywhere on any resident of the state based on bodily materials obtained within the state without prior written and informed consent with some exceptions. Additional provisions address disclosure of results. The statutes establish a right to civil action by aggrieved individuals. |
Vermont | State StatuteVermont: VSA 18 9331 et seq. | Health Insurance Nondiscrimination, Other Lines of Insurance Nondiscrimination | Statute | A policy of insurance may not be underwritten or conditioned on a requirement to undergo genetic testing or the results of genetic testing. Civil and criminal penalties are set forth for violations. |
Alaska | State StatuteAlaska: AS 21.36.480 | Health Insurance Nondiscrimination | Statute | Health care insurers offering individual or group plans must comply with the genetic information nondiscrimination requirements established under 42 USC 300gg-53, or 42 U.S.C. 300gg-1(b)(3), 42 U.S.C. 300gg-1(c) - (f), and 42 U.S.C. 300gg-91, respectively. |
Hawaii | State StatuteHawaii: HRS 431:10A-118, 431:10A-404.5, 432:1-607, 432:2-404.5, an… | Health Insurance Nondiscrimination, Privacy | Statute | No insurer providing accident and health or sickness insurance coverage or extended health_insurance_coverage, mutual benefit society, fraternal benefit society, or health maintenance organization may use an individual's or a family member's genetic information or a request for genetic services to (1) deny or limit any coverage or (2) establish eligibility, continuation, enrollment, or premium payment. These entities may not request or require collection or disclosure of genetic information of an individual or family member or disclose genetic information without written consent. |
Missouri | State StatuteMissouri: MRS 375.1300 and 375.1306.1 | Employment Nondiscrimination | Statute | An employer may not use genetic information or genetic test results of an employee or prospective employee to distinguish between, discriminate against, or restrict any right or benefit otherwise due or available to such employee or prospective employee. Exceptions are provided for the underwriting of group life, disability income and long-term care insurance, actions required by law or regulation, action taken with written permission of an employee or prospective employee, and the use of genetic information when it is directly related to job performance and assigned responsibilities. |
South Carolina | State StatuteSouth Carolina: SCCL 38-41-45, 38-71-670, 38-71-840, 38-71-860 and… | Health Insurance Nondiscrimination | Statute | Group health insurers may not establish rules for eligibility or continued eligibility based on a health status-related factor, including genetic information or impose a pre-existing condition exclusion based on genetic information. The sections of the statutes pertaining to Individual health insurance and multiple employer self-insured health plans define health status-related factor to include genetic information. Genetic information may not be treated as a pre-existing condition in the absence of a diagnosis within the South Carolina health insurance pool. |
California | State StatuteCalifornia: Cal. Ins. Code 10950 et seq. and Health and Safety Co… | Health Insurance Nondiscrimination | Statute | The statutes require carriers and health care service plans offering plan contracts in the individual market, other than individual grandfathered plan coverage, to offer to the responsible party for a child coverage for the child that does not exclude or limit coverage due to any preexisting condition of the child. A health care service plan may not condition the issuance or offering of individual coverage on certain factors, including genetic information. |
Maryland | State StatuteMaryland: Md. Health 19-214.1 | Other Topics | Statute | Prohibits a hospital from withholding financial assistance or from denying a patient's application for financial assistance based on genetic information. |
New Mexico | State StatuteNew Mexico: NMSA 52-3-32.1 | Other Topics | Statute | If a firefighter is diagnosed with breast cancer after five years of employment, and if it is diagnosed before the age of forty without a breast cancer 1 or breast cancer 2 genetic predisposition to breast cancer, the disease is presumed to be proximately caused by employment as a firefighter. |
Washington | State StatuteWashington: RCW 49.44.180 | Employment Nondiscrimination | Statute | A person, firm, corporation, or the state of Washington, its political subdivisions, or municipal corporations may not require any employee or prospective employee to submit genetic information or submit to screening for genetic information as a condition of employment or continued employment. |
Last updated: February 8, 2024