Colorado House
Committee Passes Bill Requiring Coverage for Hepatitis C
Treatment for Emergency Services Workers
[Mar 22, 2002]
The Colorado House Business Affairs and Labor Committee on
Tuesday unanimously passed a bill that would allow
firefighters, police officers and emergency services workers
to receive workers' compensation coverage for hepatitis C
treatment,
the Denver
Post reports.
The measure would allow the workers to receive insurance
coverage for hepatitis C treatments if the disease was
contracted on the job. To receive coverage, workers would have
to report suspected exposure within two days of the incident,
and a medical test would need to be performed within five days
to determine baseline hepatitis C status (Martinez, Denver
Post, 3/20). The test would have to establish that the
employee did not have hepatitis C at the time of suspected
exposure, and the employee would have to test positive for the
virus within 24 months of suspected exposure for the coverage
to take effect (SB 6 text, 3/21). Employers who wanted to
challenge an employee's claim that he or she contracted
hepatitis C on the job would have to show a
"preponderance of evidence" that infection did not
occur during work. A provision that would have provided
retroactive hepatitis C coverage was dropped. Similar
hepatitis C coverage bills have been rejected by the
Legislature in the past because lawmakers have said that there
is "no scientific proof" that emergency services
workers are at higher risk for hepatitis C than the general
public. Lawmakers have also cited cost concerns, stating that
small local governments could be "fiscally drained"
if they had to pay for treatment (Denver Post, 3/20).
The bill now goes to the full House floor for a vote (Colorado
Legislature Web site, 3/21).
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