Mississippi
2020 Mississippi Code | Title 41 - Public Health | Chapter 107 - Health Care Rights of Conscience
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§ 41-107-1. Title
This chapter may be known and cited as the "Mississippi Health Care Rights
of Conscience Act."
§ 41-107-3. Definitions.
As used in this chapter:
(a) "Health care service" means any phase of patient medical care,
treatment or procedure, including, but not limited to, the following:
patient referral, counseling, therapy, testing, diagnosis or prognosis,
research, instruction, prescribing, dispensing or administering any device,
drug, or medication, surgery, or any other care or treatment rendered by
health care providers or health care institutions.
(b) "Health care provider" means any individual who may be asked
to participate in any way in a health care service, including, but not
limited to: a physician, physician's assistant, nurse, nurses' aide, medical
assistant, hospital employee, clinic employee, nursing home employee,
pharmacist, pharmacy employee, researcher, medical or nursing school
faculty, student or employee, counselor, social worker or any professional,
paraprofessional, or any other person who furnishes, or assists in the
furnishing of, a health care procedure.
(c) "Health care institution" means any public or private
organization, corporation, partnership, sole proprietorship, association,
agency, network, joint venture, or other entity that is involved in
providing health care services, including, but not limited to: hospitals,
clinics, medical centers, ambulatory surgical centers, private physician's
offices, pharmacies, nursing homes, university medical schools and nursing
schools, medical training facilities, or other institutions or locations
where health care procedures are provided to any person.
(d) "Health care payer" means any entity or employer that
contracts for, pays for, or arranges for the payment of, in whole or in
part, a health care service, including, but not limited to, health
maintenance organizations, health plans, insurance companies or management
services organizations.
(e) "Employer" means any individual or entity that pays for or
provides health benefits or health insurance coverage as a benefit to its
employees, whether through a third party, a health maintenance organization,
a program of self-insurance, or some other means.
(f) "Participate" in a health care service means to counsel,
advise, provide, perform, assist in, refer for, admit for purposes of
providing, or participate in providing, any health care service or any form
of such service.
(g) "Pay" or "payment" means pay, contract for, or otherwise
arrange for the payment of, in whole or in part.
(h) "Conscience" means the religious, moral or ethical principles
held by a health care provider, the health care institution or health care
payer. For purposes of this chapter, a health care institution or health
care payer's conscience shall be determined by reference to its existing or
proposed religious, moral or ethical guidelines, mission statement,
constitution, bylaws, articles of incorporation, regulations or other
relevant documents.
§ 41-107-5. Rights of Conscience of Health Care Providers.
(1) Rights of Conscience. A health care provider has the
right not to participate, and no health care provider shall be required to
participate in a health care service that violates his or her conscience.
However, this subsection does not allow a health care provider to refuse to
participate in a health care service regarding a patient because of the
patient's race, color, national origin, ethnicity, sex, religion, creed or
sexual orientation.
(2) Immunity from Liability. No health care provider
shall be civilly, criminally, or administratively liable for declining to
participate in a health care service that violates his or her conscience.
However, this subsection does not exempt a health care provider from
liability for refusing to participate in a health care service regarding a
patient because of the patient's race, color, national origin, ethnicity,
sex, religion, creed or sexual orientation.
(3) Discrimination. It shall be unlawful for any person,
health care provider, health care institution, public or private
institution, public official, or any board which certifies competency in
medical specialties to discriminate against any health care provider in any
manner based on his or her declining to participate in a health care service
that violates his or her conscience. For purposes of this chapter,
discrimination includes, but is not limited to: termination, transfer,
refusal of staff privileges, refusal of board certification, adverse
administrative action, demotion, loss of career specialty, reassignment to a
different shift, reduction of wages or benefits, refusal to award any grant,
contract, or other program, refusal to provide residency training
opportunities, or any other penalty, disciplinary or retaliatory action.
§ 41-107-7. Rights of Conscience of Health Care Institutions
(1) Rights of Conscience. A health care institution has the
right not to participate, and no health care institution shall be required
to participate in a health care service that violates its conscience.
However, this subsection does not allow a health care institution to refuse
to participate in a health care service regarding a patient because of the
patient's race, color, national origin, ethnicity, sex, religion, creed or
sexual orientation.
(2) Immunity from Liability. A health care institution that
declines to provide or participate in a health care service that violates
its conscience shall not be civilly, criminally or administratively liable
if the institution provides a consent form to be signed by a patient before
admission to the institution stating that it reserves the right to decline
to provide or participate in a health care service that violates its
conscience. However, this subsection does not exempt a health care
institution from liability for refusing to participate in a health care
service regarding a patient because of the patient's race, color, national
origin, ethnicity, sex, religion, creed or sexual orientation.
(3) Discrimination. It shall be unlawful for any person,
public or private institution, or public official to discriminate against
any health care institution, or any person, association, corporation, or
other entity attempting to establish a new health care institution or
operating an existing health care institution, in any manner, including, but
not limited to, any denial, deprivation or disqualification with respect to
licensure, any aid assistance, benefit or privilege, including staff
privileges, or any authorization, including authorization to create, expand,
improve, acquire, or affiliate or merge with any health care institution,
because such health care institution, or person, association, or corporation
planning, proposing, or operating a health care institution, declines to
participate in a health care service which violates the health care
institution's conscience.
(4) Denial of Aid or Benefit. It shall be unlawful for any
public official, agency, institution, or entity to deny any form of aid,
assistance, grants or benefits, or in any other manner to coerce, disqualify
or discriminate against any person, association, corporation or other entity
attempting to establish a new health care institution or operating an
existing health care institution because the existing or proposed health
care institution declines to participate in a health care service contrary
to the health care institution's conscience.
§ 41-107-9. Rights of conscience of health care payers.
(1) Rights of Conscience. A health care payer has the right
to decline to pay, and no health care payer shall be required to pay for or
arrange for the payment of a health care service that violates its
conscience. However, this subsection does not allow a health care payer to
decline to pay or arrange for the payment of a health care service regarding
a patient because of the patient's race, color, national origin, ethnicity,
sex, religion, creed or sexual orientation.
(2) Immunity from Liability. No health care payer and no
person, association, corporation or other entity that owns, operates,
supervises or manages a health care payer shall be civilly or criminally
liable by reason of the health care payer's declining to pay for or arrange
for the payment of a health care service that violates its conscience.
However, this subsection does not exempt from liability a health care payer,
or the owner, operator, supervisor or manager of a health care payer, for
declining to pay or arranging for the payment of a health care service
regarding a patient because of the patient's race, color, national origin,
ethnicity, sex, religion, creed or sexual orientation.
(3) Discrimination. It shall be unlawful for any person,
public or private institution, or public official to discriminate against
any health care payer, or any person, association, corporation, or other
entity (a) attempting to establish a new health care payer, or (b) operating
an existing health care payer, in any manner, including, but not limited to,
any denial, deprivation, or disqualification with respect to licensure, aid,
assistance, benefit, privilege or authorization, including, but not limited
to, any authorization to create, expand, improve, acquire, affiliate or
merge with any health care payer, because a health care payer, or a person,
association, corporation or other entity planning, proposing or operating a
health care payer declines to pay for or arrange for the payment of any
health care service that violates its conscience.
(4) Denial of Aid or Benefits. It shall be unlawful for any
public official, agency, institution or entity to deny any form of aid,
assistance, grants, or benefits or in any other manner coerce, disqualify or
discriminate against any health care payer, or any person, association,
corporation or other entity attempting to establish a new health care payer
or operating an existing health care payer because the existing or proposed
health care payer declines to pay for, or arrange for the payment of, any
health care service that is contrary to its conscience.
§ 41-107-11. Civil remedies
(1) A civil action for damages or injunctive relief, or both, may be
brought for the violation of any provision of this chapter. It shall not be
a defense to any claim arising out of the violation of this chapter that
such violation was necessary to prevent additional burden or expense on any
other health care provider, health care institution, individual or patient.
(2) Damage Remedies. Any individual, association,
corporation, entity or health care institution injured by any public or
private individual, association, agency, entity or corporation by reason of
any conduct prohibited by this chapter may commence a civil action. Upon
finding a violation of this chapter, the aggrieved party shall be entitled
to recover threefold the actual damages, including pain and suffering,
sustained by such individual, association, corporation, entity or health
care institution, the costs of the action, and reasonable attorney's fees;
but in no case shall recovery be less than Five Thousand Dollars ($5,000.00)
for each violation in addition to costs of the action and reasonable
attorney's fees. These damage remedies shall be cumulative, and not
exclusive of other remedies afforded under any other state or federal law.
(3) Injunctive Remedies. The court in such civil action may
award injunctive relief, including, but not limited to, ordering
reinstatement of a health care provider to his or her prior job position.
§ 41-107-13. Severability.
The provisions of this chapter are declared to be severable, and if any
provision, word, phrase or clause of this chapter or the application thereof
to any person shall be held invalid, such invalidity shall not affect the
validity of the remaining portions of this chapter.