SF3989

Long-term care, life, and disability insurers usage of genetic information for certain purposes prohibition provision
Legislative Session 94 (2025-2026)

Related bill: HF3701

AI Generated Summary

Purpose

  • The bill aims to protect people from being discriminated against by certain insurers based on genetic information. It applies to long-term care, life, and disability insurers and includes changes to how genetic data can be used in underwriting, pricing, and coverage decisions.

Main Provisions

  • Prohibitions on using genetic information:

    • Insurers are not allowed to deny, cancel, limit, or set different premium rates for a person or their family member based solely on genetic information.
    • Insurers may not require, request, or coerce genetic testing (including full genomic sequencing) as a prerequisite for coverage renewal or pricing.
  • Exceptions and consent requirements:

    • Insurers may access or use existing health information, including genetic information already in a person’s medical records, if the person gives prior written consent. This consent must be presented separately from any other authorization to release medical records.
    • An insurer cannot deny or refuse to issue or renew a policy because the person did not provide consent or because a medical diagnosis (even if based on genetic testing) appears in the medical record.
  • Definitions (key terms defined in the bill):

    • Genetic information: information derived from a genetic test.
    • Genetic test: a presymptomatic test of genes, gene products, or chromosomes to determine presence or absence of gene(s) that cause or are associated with a disease, including carrier status; excludes tests like cholesterol tests not aimed at determining gene presence.
    • Health plan and health plan company: defined per existing Minnesota statutes.
    • Insurer: includes providers offering long-term care insurance, life insurance, or disability insurance.
    • Individual: a person applying for coverage or already covered.
    • The bill also notes life insurance can include policies offered by a fraternal benefit society.
  • Structural changes to existing law:

    • The bill amends Minnesota Statutes 2024 section 72A.139 subdivision 2 and creates new section 72A.1391 (Use of Genetic Information) with the prohibitions and requirements described.
    • It repeals Minnesota Statutes 2024 section 72A.139 subdivisions 4, 5, 6, and 7, replacing them with the new framework.

Significant Changes to Existing Law

  • Adds explicit protections against using genetic information for underwriting and pricing in certain types of insurance (long-term care, life, disability).
  • Eliminates prior subdivisions that may have governed other aspects of genetic information use, and replaces them with a unified set of protections and consent requirements in a new section.
  • Establishes a clear rule that consent for using health or genetic information must be separate and that existing medical information can be used only with prior written consent.

Practical Impact (plain-language summary)

  • Consumers cannot be charged higher premiums or be denied coverage just because of genetic information.
  • Insurers cannot force people to take genetic tests to get or keep coverage.
  • If an insurer wants to use genetic information from medical records, the person must sign consent that is separate from other forms; without this consent, the insurer cannot use that information to affect coverage.
  • If a person’s medical record shows a diagnosis that came from genetic testing, the insurer cannot use that diagnosis to deny or cancel coverage simply because the test existed or was performed.

Relevant terms - genetic information - genetic test - presymptomatic test - carrier status - health plan - health plan company - insurer - long-term care insurance - life insurance - disability insurance - underwriting - premium rates - precondition of coverage renewal or pricing - consent - prior written consent - separate consent - medical records - existing health information - denial/cancel/limit or differential premium based on genetic information - 72A.139 - 72A.1391 - fraternal benefit society

Bill text versions

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Actions

DateChamberWhereTypeNameCommittee Name
February 26, 2026SenateActionIntroduction and first reading
February 26, 2026SenateActionReferred toCommerce and Consumer Protection
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Progress through the legislative process

17%
In Committee

Sponsors

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