S-2347-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions. (Sponsor introductory remarks on measure: CR S4458)
What it does
This bill would prohibit health care providers from delivering care in a way that is discriminatory in intent or effect based on race, religion, or other characteristics. It would require HHS to create an administrative complaint and mediation process, allow individuals to sue providers in civil court if mediated agreements are violated, and authorize HHS to exclude noncompliant providers from Medicare and Medicaid. The bill would also require providers to report patient data broken down by demographic factors, add health equity measures to Medicare's value-based purchasing program, create a new Federal Health Equity Commission, and establish grants for hospitals to promote equitable care.
Who benefits
Racial and ethnic minority patients who experience disparate health outcomes or treatment quality. Religious minorities who may face differential treatment. Patients in other protected categories. Hospitals that already meet equity standards and would gain a competitive or reputational advantage. Health equity researchers and consultants who would benefit from expanded data reporting requirements. Civil rights attorneys who could bring enforcement actions. Grant-eligible hospitals, particularly safety-net and community hospitals serving high-disparity populations.
Who is hurt
Health care providers — including hospitals, clinics, and individual practitioners — who would face new compliance costs, data reporting burdens, and litigation exposure. Small and rural providers with limited administrative capacity may bear disproportionate compliance costs. Providers who dispute the methodology used to determine "discriminatory effect" could face exclusion from Medicare and Medicaid, threatening their financial viability. Taxpayers who fund the new Federal Health Equity Commission and grant programs. Health care providers whose religious practices may conflict with equity mandates could face tension with existing RFRA protections.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that documented racial and ethnic health disparities — including Black Americans experiencing maternal mortality rates roughly three times higher than white Americans, per CDC data — represent a systemic failure that voluntary measures have not corrected. They contend the bill's combination of enforceable standards, data transparency, and financial incentives through Medicare's value-based purchasing program creates the accountability structure necessary to close gaps that have persisted for decades. They further argue that existing civil rights laws like Title VI already prohibit intentional discrimination but lack the "disparate effect" standard and enforcement infrastructure needed to address structural inequities.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill's "discriminatory in effect" standard is vague and could expose providers to liability for health outcome disparities driven by social determinants — poverty, diet, housing — that are outside a provider's control, creating a chilling effect on care in underserved communities. They contend that the threat of Medicare and Medicaid exclusion for disputed equity determinations gives HHS enormous coercive power over providers with limited due process protections, and that the 90-day regulatory timeline for complex demographic data reporting requirements is unrealistically short. They further argue that adding new equity metrics to Medicare's value-based purchasing program may divert hospital resources from other measurable quality improvements.
Constitutional context
Congress has broad authority to attach conditions to federal health care funding under the Taxing and Spending Clause (Art. I, §8, cl. 1), though NFIB v. Sebelius (2012) established that funding conditions cannot be so coercive as to leave states or providers no genuine choice. The bill's administrative rulemaking provisions — particularly the 90-day deadline for HHS to issue complex demographic reporting regulations — may face heightened judicial scrutiny under Loper Bright v. Raimondo (2024), which eliminated automatic deference to agency interpretations and requires courts to independently assess whether statutory language authorizes the specific rules agencies adopt.
Checks and balances
HHS gains significant new enforcement authority, including the power to exclude providers from federal programs; checks include the administrative complaint and mediation process, individual civil action rights, DOJ enforcement oversight, the new Federal Health Equity Commission, and judicial review of agency rules under the post-Loper Bright independent judgment standard.
Historical precedent
Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 prohibits discrimination based on race, color, and national origin in programs receiving federal funding, including health care, but does not include a "discriminatory effect" enforcement mechanism with the administrative infrastructure this bill would create.