
H. B. 2362
(By Delegates Fleischauer, Webster, Brown,
Hatfield, Doyle and Amores)
[Introduced January 16, 2003; referred to the
Committee on the Judiciary.]
A BILL to amend chapter sixteen of the code of West Virginia, one
thousand nine hundred thirty-one, as amended, by adding
thereto two new articles, designated articles two-i and two-j;
and to amend chapter thirty-three of said code by adding
thereto a new article, designated article seventeen, all
relating to
requiring a
physician to obtain the informed
consent of his or her patient before ending the patient's
pregnancy by inducing an abortion.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of West Virginia:

That chapter sixteen of the code of West Virginia, one
thousand nine hundred thirty-one, as amended, be amended by adding
thereto two new articles, designated articles two-i and two-j; and
that chapter thirty-three of said code be amended by adding thereto
a new article, designated article seventeen, to read as follows:
CHAPTER 16. PUBLIC HEALTH.
ARTICLE 2I. INFORMED CONSENT FOR ABORTIONS.






§16-2I-1. Definitions.


For the purposes of this article, the words or phrases defined
in this section have the meanings ascribed to them. These
definitions are applicable unless a different meaning clearly
appears from the context.

(1) "Abortion" means the deliberately induced termination of
a woman's pregnancy by the outside intervention of a physician,
other than with the intent to cause a live birth. As used in this
article, the word "abortion" is a limited legal term. It is not to
have attributed to it its broader medical meaning or definition,
and does not include a spontaneous abortion or a traumatic
abortion. Abortion does not mean the use of an intrauterine device
or birth control pill to inhibit or prevent ovulation,
fertilization or the implantation of a fertilized ovum within the
uterus.

(2) "Conception" or "fertilization" means a process that
consists of the penetration and impregnation of the female
reproductive cell (the ovum) by the male reproductive cell (the
spermatozoon), and their subsequent fusion.

(3) "Department" means the department of health and human
resources.

(4) "Facility" or "medical facility" means any public or
private hospital, clinic, center, medical school, medical training institution, health care facility, physician's office, infirmary,
dispensary, ambulatory surgical treatment center or other
institution or location in which persons receive medical care.

(5) "Health care professional" means a physician licensed to
practice in this state, a registered nurse, a licensed practical
nurse, a physician's assistant, or any other health care
professional licensed to practice in this state.

(6) "Iatrogenic trauma" means trauma inflicted on a patient
while a physician is administering professional medical care to the
patient.

(7) "Medical emergency" means a condition which, on the basis
of the physician's good faith clinical judgment, so complicates the
medical condition of a pregnant female as to necessitate the
immediate abortion of her pregnancy to avert her death or for which
a delay will create serious risk of substantial and irreversible
impairment of a major bodily function.

(8) "Physician" means any medical doctor or osteopath licensed
to practice medicine in this state.

(9) "Pregnancy" means the condition of a woman having an
embryo or fetus in her body, usually in the uterus, commencing with
conception. The provisions of this article are not applicable to
an ectopic pregnancy.

(10) "Probable gestational age of the embryo or fetus" means
the reasonably probable gestational age of the embryo or fetus at
the time the abortion is planned to be performed, in the judgment
of an attending physician.

(12) "Spontaneous abortion" means the termination of a
woman's pregnancy that occurs without intentional intervention.

(13) "Stable internet website" means a website that, to the
extent reasonably practicable, is safeguarded from having its
content altered other than by the department of health and human
resources.

(14) "Traumatic abortion" means an unintentional termination
of the pregnancy of a woman that has been caused by accidental
injury, iatrogenic trauma, or psychological stress.
§16-2I-3. Informed consent; exchange of information and questions
between physician and patient.
(a) A physician shall obtain the informed consent of his or
her patient before ending the patient's pregnancy by inducing an
abortion. Informed consent is reached through consultation,
counseling and the use of informational and educational materials
by the physician and the patient. Consent to an abortion is
informed consent if the physician or his or her medical personnel
and the patient discharge the following responsibilities,
facilitating an exchange of information and questions that
culminates in the patient's agreement to a specific medical or
surgical intervention:
(1) The physician ascertains that the patient was provided with the informational materials described in section four of this
article at some time after conception but before the
twenty-four-hour period immediately preceding the time when the
procedure is to be performed;
(2) The physician advises the patient that under the
Constitution of the United States and the Constitution of the state
of West Virginia, that she has the right to terminate her
pregnancy, that her decision is a liberty that is protected against
state interference, and that her decision is free from unwarranted
governmental intrusion into matters that affect a person so
fundamentally as the decision as to whether to bear or beget a
child.
(3) The physician solicits from the patient the information
necessary to decide the choice of a proposed abortion procedure and
to adapt the disclosure of risks and benefits to the particular
patient;
(4) The physician tells the patient how long she has been
pregnant and the probable gestational age at the time the abortion
is to be induced;
(5) The physician discusses with the patient the choice of
the specific procedure proposed to end the patient's pregnancy and
explains how the procedure will be performed;
(6) The physician discusses with the patient the medical
indications for the procedure, if any, including both fetal and maternal indications;
(7) The physician discusses with the patient any reasonably
foreseeable risks, complications or discomforts that the patient
may experience, including, but not limited to, the risks of
infection, hemorrhage, danger to subsequent pregnancies and
infertility, or any other reasonably foreseeable medical risk.
(8) The physician discusses the possible benefits associated
with the abortion procedure;
(9) The physician explains to the patient any reasonable
alternative procedure or treatment that might be beneficial to the
patient;
(10) The physician explains to the patient the importance of
prenatal care if she decides to carry the fetus to term,
particularly with regard to preventing birth defects;
(11) The physician discusses the medical risks associated with
carrying a fetus to term, including, when medically accurate, the
risks of hyperemesis gravidarum, placenta previa, intrauterine
growth retardation (IUGR), gestational diabetes, hypertensive
disorders of pregnancy, preterm labor and premature rupture of
membranes, bleeding, hemorrhage, and placental abruption, pregnancy
loss, and other common medical complications that may occur during
pregnancy;
(12) The physician discusses the possible symptoms and risks
that may be involved with postpartum distress;
(13) The physician confirms that the patient has been
informed, by telephone or in person, by the physician who is to
perform the abortion, by a referring physician, or by medical
personnel of either physician, at least twenty-four hours before
the abortion:
(A) That medical assistance benefits may be available for
prenatal care, childbirth and neonatal care;
(B) That the father is liable to assist in the support of her
child, even in instances in which the father has offered to pay for
the abortion;
(14) The physician provides the patient with information as to
organizations, programs and services that are available to assist
a safe and healthful pregnancy.
(15) The physician affords the patient the opportunity to ask
any questions she may have in following the abortion procedure or
carrying the fetus to term, and attempts to answer the questions to
the patient's satisfaction;
(16) The physician informs the patient that consent to
abortion must be voluntarily given, explains to the patient that
consent may be withdrawn by her until a particular time in her
treatment, and accurately describes that time as it pertains to her
procedure;
(17) The patient provides information to the physician or his
or her medical personnel which is, within the patient's knowledge, accurate and complete; and
(18) If the patient decides to have the procedure performed,
she certifies in writing, before the procedure is performed:
(A) That the procedure to be performed has been identified
and that she has been informed how it is to be performed;
(B) That she has been informed of physical and psychological
risks, complications or discomforts that she may experience,
associated with her condition;
(C) That reasonable alternate procedures or treatments, if
any, have been explained to her;
(D) That any questions that she may have had regarding the
procedure have been answered to her satisfaction;
(E) That the information required to be provided to her in
accordance with section four of this article has been provided; and
(F) That she voluntarily and freely authorizes the physician
to perform the procedure.
(b) If, in the medical judgment of the physician, the results
of a physical examination or tests or the availability of other
relevant information subsequently indicates a need for a revision
of the information previously provided to the patient, that revised
information may be communicated to, and discussed with, the patient
at any time prior to inducing an abortion.
§16-2I-4.
Information materials related to informed consent.
(a) Before the first day of September two thousand two, the
department of health and human resources shall cause to be
published, in English and in each language which is the primary
language of two percent or more of the state's population, and
shall cause to be available on the state website provided for in
section five of this article, the following printed materials in
such a way as to ensure that the information is easily
comprehensible:
(1) Geographically indexed materials designed to inform the
female of public and private agencies and services available to
assist a female through pregnancy, upon childbirth, and while the
child is dependent, including adoption agencies, which materials
shall include a comprehensive list of the agencies available, a
description of the services they offer, and a description of the
manner, including telephone numbers, in which they might be
contacted or, at the option of the department of health and human
resources, printed materials including a toll-free, twenty-four
hour a day telephone number which may be called to obtain, orally,
such a list and description of agencies in the locality of the
caller and of the services they offer;
(2) Materials designed to inform the female of the probable
anatomical and physiological characteristics of the embryo or fetus
at two-week gestational increments from the time when a female can
be known to be pregnant to full term, including any relevant
information on the possibility of the embryo or fetus's survival and pictures or drawings representing the development of embryos or
fetuses at two-week gestational increments: Provided, That any
pictures or drawings must contain the dimensions of the fetus and
must be realistic and appropriate for the stage of pregnancy
depicted. The materials shall be objective, nonjudgmental, and
designed to convey only accurate scientific information about the
embryo or fetus at the various gestational ages. The material
shall also contain objective information describing the methods of
abortion procedures commonly employed, the medical risks commonly
associated with each procedure, and the possible detrimental
psychological effects of abortion;
(3) Materials designed to inform the female of the medical
risks commonly associated with carrying a fetus to term,
including, when medically accurate, the risks of hyperemesis
gravidarum, placenta previa, intrauterine growth retardation
(IUGR), gestational diabetes, hypertensive disorders of pregnancy,
preterm labor and premature rupture of membranes, bleeding,
hemorrhage, and placental abruption, pregnancy loss, and other
common medical complications that may occur during pregnancy;
(4) Materials designed to inform the female of the possible
symptoms and risks that may be involved with postpartum distress;
(5) Materials designed to inform the female that under the
Constitution of the United States and the Constitution of the state
of West Virginia, that she has the right to terminate her pregnancy, that her decision is a liberty that is protected against
state interference, and that her decision is free from unwarranted
governmental intrusion into matters that affect a person so
fundamentally as the decision as to whether to bear or beget a
child;
(6) Materials designed to teach the social, psychological and
health gains to be realized by utilizing methods of birth control
or abstaining from sexual activity; and
(7) Other materials designed to help a person evaluate the
factors to be weighed in reaching a decision as to whether a
pregnancy should be terminated by abortion.
(b) The materials referred to in subsection (a) of this
section shall be printed in a typeface large enough to be clearly
legible. The website provided for in section six of this article
shall be maintained at a minimum resolution of seventy dots per
inch. All pictures appearing on the website shall be a minimum of
200x300 pixels. All letters on the website shall be a minimum of
eleven point font. All information and pictures shall be
accessible with an industry standard browser, requiring no
additional plug-ins.
(c) The materials required under this section shall be
available at no cost from the department upon request and in
appropriate number to any person or medical facility.
§16-2I-5. Informed consent information and education advisory committee.
There shall be an informed consent information and education
advisory committee of not less than five and not more than ten
members to serve as advisors and consultants to the Secretary of
the Department. The role of the committee is to guide the
department in the development of objective, medically and factually
accurate print and web materials in compliance with the provisions
of section four of this article. The committee shall meet at the
call of the Secretary or otherwise at least twice each year. The
members of the committee shall annually elect one of its members to
serve as chairman.
The advisory committee shall be appointed by the secretary,
and shall include among its members representatives from the
department involved in family planning, the West Virginia medical
association, the West Virginia nurses association, the women's
health center and other state and nongovernmental agencies
concerned with the establishment, operation or utilization of
women's health services and facilities.
The members shall serve for five-year terms, or until
replaced, except that in the first year one fifth of the members
shall be named for a one-year term, one fifth for a two-year term,
one fifth for a three-year term, one fifth for a four-year term,
and one fifth for a five-year term. Thereafter each member shall
be appointed for five years or until his or her successor is appointed. In the case of a vacancy the appointee shall serve the
remainder of the unexpired term.
Members of the advisory committee shall be eligible to succeed
themselves. Members of the advisory committee shall serve without
compensation but shall be entitled to reimbursement for all
reasonable and necessary expenses actually incurred in the
performance of the duties of their office.
§16-2I-6. Internet website.
The department of health and human resources shall develop and
maintain a stable internet website to provide the information
described under section four of this article. No information
regarding who uses the website may be collected or maintained. The
department of health and human resources shall monitor the website
on a daily basis to prevent and correct tampering.
§16-2I-7. Procedure in case of medical emergency.
When a medical emergency compels the performance of an
abortion, the physician shall inform the female, prior to the
abortion if possible, of the medical indications supporting the
physician's judgment that an abortion is necessary to avert her
death or that a twenty-four hour delay will create serious risk of
substantial and irreversible impairment of a major bodily function.
§16-2I-8. Reporting requirements.
(a) Before the first day of September, two thousand two, the
department of health and human resources shall prepare a reporting form for physicians containing a reprint of this article and
listing:
(1) The number of females to whom the physician provided the
information described in subsection (a), section three of this
article; of that number, the number provided by telephone and the
number provided in person; and of each of those numbers, the number
provided in the capacity of a referring physician and the number
provided in the capacity of a physician who is to perform the
abortion;
(2) The number of females to whom the physician or an agent of
the physician provided the information described in section three
of this article; of that number, the number provided by telephone
and the number provided in person; of each of those numbers, the
number provided in the capacity of a referring physician and the
number provided in the capacity of a physician who is to perform
the abortion; and of each of those numbers, the number provided by
the physician and the number provided by medical personnel of the
physician;
(3) The number of females who availed themselves of the
opportunity to obtain a copy of the printed information described
in section four of this article other than on the website, and the
number who did not; and of each of those numbers, the number who,
to the best of the reporting physician's information and belief,
went on to obtain the abortion; and
(4) The number of abortions performed by the physician in
which information otherwise required to be provided at least
twenty-four hours before the abortion was not so provided because
an immediate abortion was necessary to avert the female's death,
and the number of abortions in which the information was not so
provided because a delay would create serious risk of substantial
and irreversible impairment of a major bodily function.
(b) The division of health shall ensure that copies of the
reporting forms described in subsection (a) of this section are
provided:
(1) Before the first day of September two thousand two, to all
physicians licensed to practice in this state;
(2) To each physician who subsequently becomes newly licensed
to practice in this state, at the same time as official
notification to that physician that the physician is so licensed;
and
(3) By the first day of December of each year, other than the
calendar year in which forms are distributed in accordance with
subdivision (1) of this subsection, to all physicians licensed to
practice in this state.
(c) By the twenty-eighth day of February of each year, each
physician who provided, or whose agent provided, information to one
or more females in accordance with section three of this article,
during the previous calendar year shall submit to the department of
health and human resources, a copy of the form described in
subsection (a) of this section, with the requested data entered
accurately and completely.
(d) Reports that are not submitted by the end of a grace
period of thirty days following the due date are subject to a late
fee of five hundred dollars for each additional thirty-day period
or portion of a thirty-day period they are overdue. Any physician
required to report in accordance with this section who has not
submitted a report, or has submitted only an incomplete report,
more than one year following the due date, may, in an action
brought by the department of health and human resources, be
directed by a court of competent jurisdiction to submit a complete
report within a period stated by court order or be subject to
sanctions for civil contempt.
(e) By the first day of August of each year, the department of
health and human resources shall issue a public report providing
statistics for the previous calendar year compiled from all of the
reports covering that year submitted in accordance with this
section for each of the items listed in subsection (a) of this
section. Each report shall also provide the statistics for all
previous calendar years, adjusted to reflect any additional
information from late or corrected reports. The department of
health and human resources shall take care to ensure that none of
the information included in the public reports could reasonably
lead to the identification of any individual providing information
in accordance with subsection (a), (b) or (c) of this section.
(f) The department of health and human resources may propose
rules for legislative approval in accordance with the provisions of
article three, chapter twenty-nine-a of this code which alter the
dates established by subdivision (3), subsection (b), or
subsections (c) or (e) of this section, or consolidate the forms or
reports described in this section with other forms or reports to
achieve administrative convenience or fiscal savings or to reduce
the burden of reporting requirements, so long as reporting forms
are sent to all licensed physicians in the state at least once
every year and the report described in subsection (e) of this
section is issued at least once every year.
§16-2I-9. Violation remedies.
(a) Any person, medical peer review committee, firm,
corporation, member of the West Virginia board of medicine or
public officer may make a complaint to the board of medicine
charging a physician with a violation of this article.
(b) Any physician who violates the provisions of this article
is subject to sanctions by the board of medicine. For the first
violation, the board of medicine shall issue a written reprimand to
the physician. For the second violation, the board of medicine
shall impose a civil penalty in an amount of not less than five
hundred dollars nor more than one thousand dollars. For the third violation, the board of medicine shall impose a civil penalty in an
amount of not less than one thousand dollars nor more than five
thousand dollars. For the fourth violation, the board of medicine
shall suspend the physician's license for not less than one year.
For a subsequent violation, the board of medicine shall revoke the
physician's license.
ARTICLE 2J. EMERGENCY CONTRACEPTION.
§16-2J-1. Legislative findings.
The Legislature finds:
(1) Crimes of sexual assault cause significant physical,
emotional, and psychological trauma to the victims, and this trauma
is compounded by a victim's fear of becoming pregnant and bearing
a child as a result of the sexual assault;
(2) Each year over thirty-two thousand women become pregnant
in the United States as the result of sexual assault and
approximately fifty percent of these pregnancies end in abortion;
(3) Standards of emergency care established by the American
Medical Association require that sexual assault victims be
counseled about their risk of pregnancy and offered emergency
contraception;
(4) Many hospitals do not make emergency contraception
available to sexual assault victims;
(5) As approved for use by the federal food and drug
administration, emergency contraception can significantly reduce the risk of pregnancy;
(6) By providing emergency contraception to sexual assault
victims in a timely manner, the trauma of sexual assault can be
significantly reduced;
§16-2J-2. Definitions.
For the purposes of this article, the words or phrases defined
in this section have the meanings ascribed to them. These
definitions are applicable unless a different meaning clearly
appears from the context.
(1) "Emergency contraception" means any drug or device
approved by the federal food and drug administration that may
prevent pregnancy after intercourse.
(2) "Emergency care to sexual assault victims" means medical
examinations, procedures, and services provided by a health care
facility to a sexual assault victim following an alleged sexual
assault.
(3) "Sexual assault victim" or "victim" means a female person
alleged to have been the victim of an offense defined in article
eight-b, chapter sixty-one of this code.
§16-2J-3. Emergency care to include informing sexual assault
victim of emergency contraception; providing emergency
contraception.
(a) It shall be the standard of care for hospitals that
provide emergency care to sexual assault victims in this state to:
(1) Provide each sexual assault victim with medically and
factually accurate and unbiased written and oral information about
emergency contraception;
(2) Orally inform each sexual assault victim of her option to
be provided emergency contraception at the health care facility;
and
(3) Provide emergency contraception immediately at the health
care facility to each sexual assault victim who requests it:
Provided, That if the emergency contraception is in a form to be
orally administered, the provision must include the initial dose,
which the sexual assault victim can take at the hospital, and any
follow-up dose, which the sexual assault victim can self-administer
later.
(b) Every hospital providing services to alleged sexual
assault victims must develop a protocol that ensures that each
victim of sexual assault will receive medically and factually
accurate and written and oral information about emergency
contraception; the indications and counter-indications and risks
associated with the use of emergency contraception; and a
description of how and when victims may be provided emergency
contraception upon the written order of a licensed physician.
The department shall approve the protocol if it finds that the
implementation of the protocol would provide sufficient protection
for a victim of an alleged sexual assault.
(c) Each health care facility shall ensure that each person
who provides care to sexual assault victims is provided with
medically and factually accurate and unbiased information about
emergency contraception.
(d) In addition to any other remedies, the department of
health and human resources shall respond to complaints and shall
periodically determine whether health care facilities are complying
with this section. The department may use all means available to
verify compliance with this section. If the department determines
that a health care facility is not in compliance, the department
shall:
(1) Impose a fine of five thousand dollars for each sexual
assault victim denied medically and factually accurate and unbiased
information about emergency contraception or who is not offered or
provided emergency contraception;
(2) Impose a fine of five thousand dollars for failure to
comply with subsection (b) of this section. For every thirty days
that the health care facility is not in compliance with subsection
(c) of this section, an additional fine of five thousand dollars
shall be imposed; and
(3) After two violations, suspend or revoke the certificate of
authority or deny the health care facility's application for
certificate of authority.

CHAPTER 33. INSURANCE.
ARTICLE 17. CONTRACEPTIVE COVERAGE.
§33-17-1. Definitions.
For the purposes of this article, the words or phrases defined
in this section have the meanings ascribed to them. These
definitions are applicable unless a different meaning clearly
appears from the context.
(1) "Covered person" means a policy holder, subscriber,
certificate holder, enrollee, or other individual who is
participating in, or receiving coverage under, a health insurance
plan.
(2) "Health insurance plan" means any individual or group
plan, policy, certificate, subscriber contract, or contract of
insurance provided by a managed care plan, preferred provider
agreement, or health maintenance organization that is delivered,
issued, renewed, modified, amended or extended by a health insurer
in this state that pays for or purchases health care services for
covered persons.
(3) "Health insurer" means a disability insurer, health care
insurer, health maintenance organization, accident and sickness
insurer, fraternal benefit society, nonprofit hospital service
corporation, health service corporation, health care service plan,
preferred provider organization or arrangement, or multiple
employer welfare arrangement.
(4) "Outpatient contraceptive services" means consultations, examinations, procedures and medical services, provided on an
outpatient basis and related to the use of contraceptive drugs and
devices to prevent pregnancy.
§33-17-2. Parity for contraceptive drugs, devices and outpatient
services.
(a) Health insurance plans that provide benefits for
prescription drugs or devices shall not exclude or restrict
benefits to covered persons for any prescription contraceptive drug
or device approved by the federal food and drug administration.
(4) Health insurance plans that provide benefits for
outpatient services provided by a health care professional shall
not exclude or restrict outpatient contraceptive services for
covered persons.
§33-17-3. Extraordinary surcharges prohibited.
A health insurance plan is prohibited from:
(1) Imposing deductibles, copayments, other cost-sharing
mechanisms, or waiting periods for prescription contraceptive drugs
or devices greater than deductibles, copayments, other cost-sharing
mechanisms, or waiting periods for other covered prescription drugs
or devices.
(2) Imposing deductibles, copayments, other cost-sharing
mechanisms, or waiting periods for outpatient contraceptive
services greater than such deductibles, copayments, other
cost-sharing mechanisms, or waiting periods for other covered outpatient services.
§33-17-4. Additional prohibitions.
A health insurance plan is prohibited from:
(1) Denying eligibility, continued eligibility, enrollment, or
renewal of coverage to any individual because of their use or
potential use of contraceptives.
(2) Providing monetary payments or rebates to covered persons
to encourage them to accept less than the minimum protections
available under this section.
(3) Penalizing, or otherwise reducing or limiting the
reimbursement of a health care professional because such
professional prescribed contraceptive drugs or devices, or provided
contraceptive services.
(4) Providing incentives, monetary or otherwise, to a health
care professional to induce such professional to withhold
contraceptive drugs, devices or services from covered persons.
§33-17-5. Enforcement.
In addition to any remedies at common law, the insurance
commissioner shall receive and review written complaints regarding
compliance with this section. The insurance commissioner may use
all investigatory tools available to verify compliance with this
section. If the insurance commissioner determines that a health
insurance plan is not in compliance with any section in this
article, the commissioner shall:
(1) Impose a fine of $10,000 per violation of this section. An
additional $10,000 shall be imposed for every 30 days that a health
insurance plan is not in compliance; and/or
(2) Suspend or revoke the certificate of authority or deny the
health insurer's application for a certificate of authority.