HR-9218-119
Referred to the House Committee on Education and Workforce.
Sponsored by Josh Gottheimer (D-NJ)
What it does
This bill would require local educational agencies (school districts) that receive certain federal funds to mandate that all 9th–12th grade students receive an electrocardiogram (ECG) and an echocardiogram (echo) before participating in their first competitive athletic event. School districts would be required to establish partnerships to offer these screenings at a cost of $20 or less per student. Students may be exempted on religious or medical grounds, and districts unable to secure a low-cost screening partner may apply to the Secretary of Education for a temporary waiver.
Who benefits
High school student athletes who have undetected cardiac conditions — such as hypertrophic cardiomyopathy — that could cause sudden cardiac death during athletic activity. Families of student athletes who would gain greater assurance of their child's cardiac health. Schools and athletic programs that could reduce liability exposure from sudden cardiac events. Cardiac screening providers and medical equipment companies that would gain a large new market. Emergency medical personnel who may face fewer sudden cardiac arrest events at school athletic events.
Who is hurt
School districts, particularly smaller or rural ones, that may struggle to find screening partners at the $20-per-student cap and face administrative burdens from the waiver process. Taxpayers and school budgets that may absorb costs above the $20 cap or administrative overhead. Students whose families object on religious grounds but feel social pressure to participate in athletics anyway. Providers of standard pre-participation physical exams (PPEs), which are the current norm, who may face displacement. Students in districts that cannot secure partnerships and receive waivers, who would lose access to the screening benefit.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that sudden cardiac arrest is the leading cause of death in young athletes, and that standard pre-participation physicals miss the majority of underlying cardiac conditions because they do not include ECG or echocardiogram screening. They contend that countries such as Italy, which have mandated cardiac screening for athletes since 1982, have documented an 89% reduction in sudden cardiac death among screened athletes, providing strong evidence that this intervention saves lives at a relatively low cost.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that major U.S. medical organizations — including the American Heart Association — have not recommended universal ECG screening for young athletes, citing concerns about high false-positive rates that could unnecessarily disqualify healthy students from sports and generate costly follow-up testing. They contend that the $20-per-student cost cap may be unrealistic in many markets, creating an unfunded mandate that burdens school districts, and that the bill's federal spending condition raises Tenth Amendment concerns by effectively directing state and local education policy.