Emergency medical services personnel; administration of medications. (HB1499)

Introduced By

Del. Chris Stolle (R-Virginia Beach) with support from co-patron Del. Keith Hodges (R-Urbanna)

Progress

Introduced
Passed Committee
Passed House
Passed Senate
Signed by Governor
Became Law

Description

Administration of medications. Clarifies the circumstances under which emergency medical services personnel may administer medications and provides that emergency medical services personnel may administer medications pursuant to an oral or written order or standing protocol. Read the Bill »

Outcome

Bill Has Passed

History

DateAction
01/02/2013Committee
01/02/2013Prefiled and ordered printed; offered 01/09/13 13100898D
01/02/2013Referred to Committee on Health, Welfare and Institutions
01/17/2013Reported from Health, Welfare and Institutions (22-Y 0-N) (see vote tally)
01/18/2013Read first time
01/21/2013Read second time and engrossed
01/22/2013Read third time and passed House BLOCK VOTE (98-Y 0-N)
01/22/2013Impact statement from DPB (HB1499)
01/22/2013VOTE: BLOCK VOTE PASSAGE (98-Y 0-N) (see vote tally)
01/23/2013Constitutional reading dispensed
01/23/2013Referred to Committee on Education and Health
02/07/2013Reported from Education and Health (11-Y 0-N) (see vote tally)
02/08/2013Constitutional reading dispensed (40-Y 0-N) (see vote tally)
02/11/2013Read third time
02/11/2013Passed Senate (40-Y 0-N) (see vote tally)
02/13/2013Enrolled
02/13/2013Bill text as passed House and Senate (HB1499ER)
02/13/2013Impact statement from DPB (HB1499ER)
02/13/2013Signed by Speaker
02/14/2013Signed by President
03/12/2013G Approved by Governor-Chapter 191 (effective 7/1/13)
03/12/2013G Acts of Assembly Chapter text (CHAP0191)

Video

This bill was discussed on the floor of the General Assembly. Below is all of the video that we have of that discussion, 1 clip in all, totaling 30 seconds.