The Virginia House Health Subcommittee considered a heavy docket and reported multiple bills to the next stage while tabling two contentious measures.
HB 4 35 (palliative care) — Sponsor Delegate LaVar Bowling presented a substitute to create a Palliative Care and Quality of Life Advisory Council and a consumer/professional education program; the bill received broad stakeholder support (medical societies, advocacy groups, nonprofits) and was reported and referred to Appropriations by a vote of 9 to 0.
HB 13 53 (maternal health safety initiative) — Delegate Cohen asked the Commissioner of Health to convene a multidisciplinary work group to evaluate feasibility of statewide maternal‑health signaling (e.g., wristbands) and other interventions; the subcommittee reported the bill as amended 10 to 0.
HB 7 56 (death certificates) — A substitute allowing funeral service licensees to use the Electronic Death Registration System (EDRS) to satisfy a service requirement was described as an efficiency measure; the subcommittee reported the substitute as amended 10 to 0.
HB 6 85 (genetic privacy/organ transplant restrictions) — Sponsor framed the bill as protecting genetic privacy and preventing complicity in forced organ harvesting; after testimony — including survivor accounts and clinician statements — a substitute motion to pass the bill by indefinitely carried 7 to 3, tabling it for now.
HB 5 31 (born‑alive standard) — Delegate Hamilton proposed a measure requiring medical providers present at an attempted abortion who encounter a born‑alive infant to provide the same care that would be given to any infant of the same gestational age; the bill drew strong, polarized testimony and the committee passed it by indefinitely 5 to 3.
Other bills on the docket (HB 300, HB 13 47, HB 13 36, HB 4 35, HB 7 56) were reported to the next stage with recorded tallies; where applicable, the committee adopted substitutes or friendly amendments to address concerns.