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S 457 118th Congress Senate Health Child health Civil actions and liability Drug therapy Health facilities and institutions Health personnel Health programs administration and funding Higher education Prescription drugs Sex, gender, sexual orientation discrimination Surgery and anesthesia

Protecting Our Kids from Child Abuse Act

Introduced: February 15, 2023 Introduced by: Hawley, Josh Republican · Missouri See on congress.gov
 Everywhere this bill has been 2 steps
Introduced
In committee
Reported out
Passed House
Passed Senate
To President
Became law
Feb 15, 2023
Read twice and referred to the Committee on the Judiciary.
Feb 15, 2023
Introduced in Senate
 Plain-English summary Congressional Research Service

Protecting Our Kids from Child Abuse Act

This bill retroactively makes certain health care facilities and medical practitioners liable for any physical, psychological, emotional, or physiological harms caused by performing a gender-transition procedure on an individual who is younger than 18. The liability extends for 30 years after the individual who received the procedure turns 18, and it applies to procedures that occurred prior to the enactment of the bill.

Specifically, the liability applies to

  • pediatric gender clinics (medical facilities specializing in the diagnosis and treatment of gender discordance and dysphoria in minors) that provide gender-transition procedures;
  • institutions of higher education and hospitals affiliated with those clinics, and
  • medical practitioners who perform gender-transition procedures and those who administer health care related to the procedures at pediatric gender clinics.

Medical practitioners and health care facilities may defend against a liability claim if they neither knew nor had reason to know the individual was a minor.

Additionally, the bill prohibits federal funding for (1) gender-transition procedures performed on minors, (2) pediatric gender clinics, and (3) institutions of higher education or hospitals affiliated with those clinics.

Under the bill, gender-transition procedures generally include surgeries or hormone therapies that change the body of an individual to correspond to a sex that is different than the individual's biological sex. They exclude, however, specified types of interventions, including those that address (1) ambiguous external biological sex characteristics or abnormal sex chromosome structure or hormones; or (2) infections or other harms that result from a gender-transition procedure.

What's happening now February 15, 2023

Read twice and referred to the Committee on the Judiciary.

 Committees of jurisdiction 1