BILL REQ. #: H-4348.1
State of Washington | 60th Legislature | 2008 Regular Session |
Read first time 01/16/08. Referred to Committee on Health Care & Wellness.
AN ACT Relating to umbilical cord blood; and creating new sections.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON:
NEW SECTION. Sec. 1 The legislature finds that:
(1) Placental and umbilical cord blood is recognized as a viable
and more accessible alternative to bone marrow in many medical
therapies. Science has discovered ways to treat many types of cancer,
blood, and immune disorders through the use of stem cells from
placental and umbilical cord blood. Placental and umbilical cord blood
is currently used to treat such diseases as leukemia and over sixty
other fatal immune system diseases;
(2) In the United States there are approximately fifty thousand
units of usable placental and umbilical cord blood. However, at least
one hundred fifty thousand units are needed in order to meet the
nation's demands. While over one thousand cord blood transplants have
occurred around the world, it is estimated that with an adequate supply
of placental and umbilical cord blood, over eleven thousand patients
could receive life-saving treatment in the United States every year;
(3) There is an urgent need to dramatically increase the racial and
ethnic diversity of the supply of placental and umbilical cord blood to
improve the possibility of finding compatible donors in all racial and
ethnic communities in Washington;
(4) Washington state is home to several large medical research
institutions and an expanding biomedical research industry. Over
thirty years ago the pioneering work of nobel laureate E. Donnall
Thomas, and his colleagues at the Fred Hutchinson cancer research
center, made bone marrow transplantation a reality. The use of
placental and umbilical cord blood promises to build upon this legacy
as well as lead to other new medical therapies; and
(5) Research on premature birth is currently being performed by
Children's Hospital that has led to gains in efficiency in the
retrieval and collection of placental and umbilical cord blood that can
be expanded beyond the research subjects to benefit the broader
population.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 2 (1) The department of health shall identify
and provide funding to a work group charged with the expansion of
umbilical cord blood collection practices consisting of representatives
from a major health research institution engaged in premature birth
research, a nationally recognized cancer treatment and research
institution, a nonprofit blood bank engaged in umbilical cord blood
collection, and an organization representing hospitals.
(2) The department of health shall support the work group in the
development of:
(a) Model educational materials for expectant parents and health
care providers regarding the process for donating umbilical cord blood
and its uses. The materials shall be culturally appropriate for
individuals of various races and ethnic backgrounds;
(b) Common protocols for use by hospitals and blood banks in the
retrieval and collection of umbilical cord blood to increase efficiency
to promote the expansion of umbilical cord blood retrieval and
collection statewide; and
(c) Methods to decrease the cost of umbilical cord blood banking
for both research and transplantation.
(3) The work group shall provide advice and consultation to the
pilot project established in section 3 of this act and review its
progress to inform the work group's efforts.
(4) By July 1, 2010, the department of health shall submit a report
of the work group to the legislature and governor. The report shall
contain the work group's recommendations for model educational
materials, retrieval and collection protocols, and any recommendations
for decreasing the cost of umbilical cord blood banking and expanding
umbilical cord blood collection across the state and to diverse
communities. In addition, the report must summarize the findings of
the pilot project established in section 3 of this act.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 3 The department of health, in consultation
with the work group created in section 2 of this act, shall identify an
institution actively conducting research in Washington that requires
the collection of blood and specimens from women during pregnancy and
at delivery, including the collection of umbilical cord blood, to
participate in a pilot project. The pilot project shall take place in
three hospitals in eastern Washington where research is occurring and
must support the expansion of the retrieval and collection of umbilical
cord blood beyond the research subjects to the general prenatal
population. The pilot project must support the additional staff and
resources necessary to expand retrieval and collection, which will be
overseen by the institution conducting the research, using protocols
and methods provided by the work group created in section 2 of this
act.