HOUSE BILL No. 4940

June 19, 2007, Introduced by Reps. Condino, Alma Smith, Bieda, Byrnes, Green, Tobocman, Miller, Leland, Angerer, Donigan and Dean and referred to the Committee on Health Policy.

 

      A bill to amend 1978 PA 368, entitled

 

"Public health code,"

 

by amending the heading of part 101 and sections 10101, 10102,

 

10103, 10104, 10105, 10106, 10107, 10108, 10109, 10204, and 20165

 

(MCL 333.10101, 333.10102, 333.10103, 333.10104, 333.10105,

 

333.10106, 333.10107, 333.10108, 333.10109, 333.10204, and

 

333.20165), section 10102 as amended by 2003 PA 62, section 10104

 

as amended by 2005 PA 140, section 10108 as amended by 2006 PA

 

301, section 10204 as amended by 1999 PA 60, and section 20165 as

 

amended by 1998 PA 108, and by adding sections 10110, 10111,

 

10112, 10113, 10114, 10115, 10116, 10117, 10118, 10119, 10120,

 

10121, 10122, and 10123; and to repeal acts and parts of acts.

 

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN ENACT:

 

 1                             PART 101

 


 1               REVISED UNIFORM ANATOMICAL GIFT LAW

 

 2        Sec. 10101. As used in this part:

 

 3        (a) "Bank or storage facility" means a facility licensed,

 

 4  accredited, or approved under the laws of any state for storage

 

 5  of human bodies or physical parts thereof.

 

 6        (b) "Decedent" means a deceased individual and includes a

 

 7  stillborn infant or fetus.

 

 8        (c) "Donor" means an individual who makes a gift of all or a

 

 9  physical part of his or her body.

 

10        (d) "Hospital" means a hospital licensed, accredited, or

 

11  approved under the laws of any state. It includes a hospital

 

12  operated by the United States government, a state or a

 

13  subdivision thereof, although not required to be licensed under

 

14  state laws.

 

15        (e) "Person" means an individual, corporation, government or

 

16  governmental subdivision or agency, business trust, estate,

 

17  trust, partnership or association, or any other legal entity.

 

18        (f) "Physical part" means organs, tissues, eyes, bones,

 

19  arteries, blood, other fluids, and any other portions of a human

 

20  body.

 

21        (g) "Physician" or "surgeon" means a physician or surgeon

 

22  licensed or authorized to practice under the laws of any state.

 

23        (h) "State medical school" means the university of Michigan

 

24  school of medicine, the Michigan state university college of

 

25  human medicine, the Michigan state university college of

 

26  osteopathic medicine, or the Wayne state university school of

 

27  medicine. This part shall be known and may be cited as the

 


 1  "revised uniform anatomical gift law".

 

 2        Sec. 10102. (1) An individual of sound mind and 18 years of

 

 3  age or more may make a gift of all or a physical part of his or

 

 4  her body for a purpose specified in section 10103, effective upon

 

 5  that individual's death.

 

 6        (2) Upon or immediately before the death of an individual

 

 7  who has not made a gift of all or a physical part of his or her

 

 8  body under this part, an individual having the following

 

 9  relationship to that individual may, in the following order of

 

10  priority and subject to subsection (3), make a gift of all or a

 

11  physical part of the deceased individual's body for a purpose

 

12  specified in section 10103:

 

13        (a) A patient advocate designated under section 5506 of the

 

14  estates and protected individuals code, 1998 PA 386, MCL

 

15  700.5506, who is authorized to make such a gift.

 

16        (b) The spouse.

 

17        (c) An adult son or daughter.

 

18        (d) Either parent.

 

19        (e) An adult brother or sister.

 

20        (f) A guardian of the person of the decedent at the time of

 

21  the death.

 

22        (g) An individual other than an individual described in

 

23  subdivisions (a) to (f), who is authorized or under obligation to

 

24  dispose of the body.

 

25        (3) An individual described in subsection (2) may make a

 

26  gift of all or a physical part of a decedent's body in accordance

 

27  with this part if each of the following circumstances exists:

 


 1        (a) An individual having a higher priority under subsection

 

 2  (2) to make the gift is not available or is not capable of making

 

 3  the decision at the time of the decedent's death.

 

 4        (b) The individual making the gift has not received actual

 

 5  notice that the decedent had expressed an unwillingness to make

 

 6  the gift.

 

 7        (c) The individual making the gift has not received actual

 

 8  notice that an individual having equal or greater priority under

 

 9  subsection (2) opposes the making of the gift.

 

10        (4) A gift made by an individual described in subsection (2)

 

11  is not revocable by an individual having a lower priority under

 

12  subsection (2).

 

13        (5) If the donee has actual notice that the decedent had

 

14  expressed an unwillingness to make the gift, or actual notice

 

15  that an individual having a higher priority under subsection (2)

 

16  than that of the individual making the gift under subsection (2)

 

17  opposes the making of the gift, the donee shall not accept the

 

18  gift.

 

19        (6) A gift of all or a physical part of a body under this

 

20  section authorizes any examination necessary to assure medical

 

21  acceptability of the gift for the purposes intended.

 

22        (7) The rights of the donee created by the gift are

 

23  paramount to the rights of others except as provided by section

 

24  10108(4). As used in this part:

 

25        (a) "Adult" means an individual who is at least 18 years of

 

26  age.

 

27        (b) "Agent" means an individual who meets 1 or more of the

 


 1  following requirements:

 

 2        (i) Is authorized to make health care decisions on the

 

 3  principal's behalf by a power of attorney for health care.

 

 4        (ii) Is expressly authorized to make an anatomical gift on

 

 5  the principal's behalf by any other record signed by the

 

 6  principal.

 

 7        (c) "Anatomical gift" means a donation of all or part of a

 

 8  human body to take effect after the donor's death for the purpose

 

 9  of transplantation, therapy, research, or education.

 

10        (d) "Body part" means an organ, eye, or tissue of a human

 

11  being. The term does not include the whole body.

 

12        (e) "Decedent" means a deceased individual whose body or

 

13  body part is or may be the source of an anatomical gift. The term

 

14  includes a stillborn infant and, subject to restrictions imposed

 

15  by law other than this part, a fetus.

 

16        (f) "Disinterested witness" means a witness who is not a

 

17  spouse, child, parent, sibling, grandchild, grandparent, or

 

18  guardian of or other adult who exhibited special care and concern

 

19  for the individual who makes, amends, revokes, or refuses to make

 

20  an anatomical gift. The term does not include a person to which

 

21  an anatomical gift could pass under section 10111.

 

22        (g) "Document of gift" means a donor card or other record

 

23  used to make an anatomical gift. The term includes a statement or

 

24  symbol on a driver license, identification card, or donor

 

25  registry.

 

26        (h) "Donor" means an individual whose body or body part is

 

27  the subject of an anatomical gift.

 


 1        (i) "Donor registry" means a database that contains records

 

 2  of anatomical gifts and amendments to or revocations of

 

 3  anatomical gifts as provided for in section 10120.

 

 4        (j) "Driver license" means an operator's or chauffeur's

 

 5  license or permit issued to an individual by the secretary of

 

 6  state under chapter III of the Michigan vehicle code, 1949 PA

 

 7  300, MCL 257.301 to 257.329, for that individual to operate a

 

 8  vehicle, whether or not conditions are attached to the license or

 

 9  permit.

 

10        (k) "Eye bank" means a person that is licensed, accredited,

 

11  or regulated under federal or state law to engage in the

 

12  recovery, screening, testing, processing, storage, or

 

13  distribution of human eyes or portions of human eyes.

 

14        (l) "Guardian" means a person appointed by a court to make

 

15  decisions regarding the support, care, education, health, or

 

16  welfare of an individual. The term does not include a guardian ad

 

17  litem.

 

18        (m) "Hospital" means a facility licensed as a hospital under

 

19  the law of any state or a facility operated as a hospital by the

 

20  United States, a state, or a subdivision of a state.

 

21        (n) "Identification card" means an official state personal

 

22  identification card issued by the secretary of state under 1972

 

23  PA 222, MCL 28.291 to 28.300.

 

24        (o) "Know" means to have actual knowledge.

 

25        (p) "Minor" means an individual who is under 18 years of

 

26  age.

 

27        (q) "Organ" means a human kidney, liver, heart, lung,

 


 1  pancreas, or intestine or multivisceral organs when transplanted

 

 2  at the same time as an intestine.

 

 3        (r) "Organ procurement organization" means a person

 

 4  certified or recertified by the secretary of the United States

 

 5  department of health and human services as a qualified organ

 

 6  procurement organization under 42 USC 273(b).

 

 7        (s) "Parent" means a parent whose parental rights have not

 

 8  been terminated.

 

 9        (t) "Person" means an individual, corporation, business

 

10  trust, estate, trust, partnership, limited liability company,

 

11  association, joint venture, public corporation, government or

 

12  governmental subdivision, agency, or instrumentality or any other

 

13  legal or commercial entity.

 

14        (u) "Physician" means an individual authorized to practice

 

15  medicine or osteopathic medicine and surgery under the law of any

 

16  state.

 

17        (v) "Procurement organization" means an eye bank, organ

 

18  procurement organization, or tissue bank.

 

19        (w) "Prospective donor" means an individual who is dead or

 

20  near death and has been determined by a procurement organization

 

21  to have a body part that could be medically suitable for

 

22  transplantation, therapy, research, or education. The term does

 

23  not include an individual who has made a refusal.

 

24        (x) "Reasonably available" means able to be contacted by a

 

25  procurement organization without undue effort and willing and

 

26  able to act in a timely manner consistent with existing medical

 

27  criteria necessary for the making of an anatomical gift.

 


 1        (y) "Recipient" means an individual into whose body a

 

 2  decedent's body part has been or is intended to be transplanted.

 

 3        (z) "Record" means information that is inscribed on a

 

 4  tangible medium or that is stored in an electronic or other

 

 5  medium and is retrievable in perceivable form.

 

 6        (aa) "Refusal" means a record created under section 10107

 

 7  that expressly refuses to make an anatomical gift of an

 

 8  individual's body or body part.

 

 9        (bb) "Sign" means that, with the present intent to

 

10  authenticate or adopt a record, an individual does either of the

 

11  following:

 

12        (i) Executes or adopts a tangible symbol.

 

13        (ii) Attaches to or logically associates with the record an

 

14  electronic symbol, sound, or process.

 

15        (cc) "State" means a state of the United States, the

 

16  District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, the United States Virgin

 

17  Islands, or any territory or insular possession subject to the

 

18  jurisdiction of the United States.

 

19        (dd) "Technician" means an individual determined to be

 

20  qualified to remove or process body parts by an appropriate

 

21  organization that is licensed, accredited, or regulated under

 

22  federal or state law. The term includes an enucleator.

 

23        (ee) "Tissue" means a portion of the human body other than

 

24  an organ or an eye. The term does not include blood unless the

 

25  blood is donated for the purpose of research or education.

 

26        (ff) "Tissue bank" means a person that is licensed,

 

27  accredited, or regulated under federal or state law to engage in

 


 1  the recovery, screening, testing, processing, storage, or

 

 2  distribution of tissue.

 

 3        (gg) "Transplant hospital" means a hospital that furnishes

 

 4  organ transplants and other medical and surgical specialty

 

 5  services required for the care of transplant patients.

 

 6        Sec. 10103. The following persons may become donees of gifts

 

 7  of bodies or physical parts thereof for the purposes stated:

 

 8        (a) Any hospital, surgeon, or physician for medical or

 

 9  dental education, research, advancement of medical or dental

 

10  science, therapy, or transplantation.

 

11        (b) Any accredited medical or dental school, college, or

 

12  university for education, research, advancement of medical or

 

13  dental science, or therapy.

 

14        (c) Any bank or storage facility for medical or dental

 

15  education, research, advancement of medical or dental science,

 

16  therapy, or transplantation.

 

17        (d) Any specified individual for therapy or transplantation

 

18  needed by that individual.

 

19        (e) Any approved or accredited school of optometry, nursing,

 

20  or veterinary medicine. This part applies to an anatomical gift

 

21  or amendment to, revocation of, or refusal to make an anatomical

 

22  gift, whenever made.

 

23        Sec. 10104. (1) A gift of all or a physical part of the

 

24  donor's body under section 10102(1) may be made by will. The gift

 

25  becomes effective upon the death of the testator without waiting

 

26  for probate. If the will is not probated, or if the will is

 

27  declared invalid for testamentary purposes, the gift, to the

 


 1  extent that the gift has been acted upon in good faith, is

 

 2  nevertheless valid and effective.

 

 3        (2) A gift of all or a physical part of the donor's body

 

 4  under section 10102(1) may also be made by document of gift other

 

 5  than a will. A gift made by a document of gift described in this

 

 6  subsection becomes effective upon the death of the donor. Subject

 

 7  to subsections (3) and (4), a document of gift other than a will

 

 8  may be 1 or more of the following:

 

 9        (a) A personal identification card issued to the donor by

 

10  the secretary of state under 1972 PA 222, MCL 28.291 to 28.300,

 

11  that contains a statement that the holder of the personal

 

12  identification card is an organ and tissue donor under this part,

 

13  along with the signature of the holder and the signature of at

 

14  least 1 witness to the holder's signature, as described in

 

15  section 2 of 1972 PA 222, MCL 28.292, or, beginning January 1,

 

16  2007, a heart insignia.

 

17        (b) A motor vehicle operator's or chauffeur's license issued

 

18  to the donor by the secretary of state under the Michigan vehicle

 

19  code, 1949 PA 300, MCL 257.1 to 257.923, that contains a

 

20  statement that the licensee is an organ and tissue donor under

 

21  this part, along with the signature of the licensee and the

 

22  signature of at least 1 witness to the licensee's signature, as

 

23  described in section 310 of the Michigan vehicle code, 1949 PA

 

24  300, MCL 257.310, or, beginning January 1, 2007, a heart

 

25  insignia.

 

26        (c) A document of gift that conforms substantially to the

 

27  following form:

 


 

Uniform Donor Card

of ..........................................................................................................................

Print or type name of donor

In the hope that I may help others, I hereby make this anatomical gift if medically acceptable, to take effect upon my death. The words and marks below indicate my desires.

I give:      (a) .... any needed organs or physical parts

                     (b) .... only the following organs or physical parts

________________________________________________________________

Specify the organ(s) or physical part(s)

For the purposes of transplantation, therapy, medical research or education;

10              (c) .... my body for anatomical study if needed.

11 Limitations or special wishes, if any: __________________________

12 Signed by the donor and at least 1 witness, in the presence of each other:

13 ______________________________     ______________________________

14 Signature of donor                 Date of birth of donor

15 ______________________________     _____________________________

16 Date signed                        City and state

17 ______________________________     _____________________________

18 Witness                            Witness

 

 

19        (3) If a donor does not specify a gift of his or her entire

 

20  body in the statement described in subsection (2)(a) or (b) on

 

21  the individual's personal identification card or motor vehicle

 

22  operator's or chauffeur's license, the gift is limited to

 

23  physical parts of the donor's body and does not include the

 

24  donor's entire body.

 

25        (4) A gift under section 10102 may be made to a specified or

 

26  unspecified donee. If the donee is not specified, the attending

 


 1  physician may accept the gift as donee upon or following the

 

 2  donor's death. If the gift is made to a specified donee who is

 

 3  not available at the time and place of death, the attending

 

 4  physician may, upon or following the donor's death, and in the

 

 5  absence of any expressed indication that the donor desired

 

 6  otherwise, accept the gift as donee. An attending physician who

 

 7  becomes a donee under this subsection shall not participate in

 

 8  the procedures for removing or transplanting a physical part.

 

 9        (5) Notwithstanding section 10108(4), the donor may

 

10  designate in his or her will or other document of gift described

 

11  in subsection (2) the physician who is to carry out the

 

12  procedures necessary to effectuate the gift. In the absence of a

 

13  designation under this subsection or if the designee is not

 

14  available, the donee or other person authorized to accept the

 

15  gift may employ or authorize another physician for the purpose of

 

16  effectuating the gift.

 

17        (6) A donor who is unable to sign a document of gift may

 

18  direct another individual to sign the document of gift on his or

 

19  her behalf if the signature of the other individual is made in

 

20  the donor's presence and in the presence of at least 1 witness.

 

21  The witness shall also sign the document of gift in the donor's

 

22  presence.

 

23        (7) A gift of all or a physical part of a donor's body made

 

24  by will as authorized by subsection (1) or by a document of gift

 

25  other than a will as authorized by subsection (2) is not

 

26  revocable after the death of the donor regardless of the

 

27  expressed desires of the deceased donor's next of kin who may

 


 1  oppose the donor's organ, tissue, or eye donation.

 

 2        (8) A gift by an individual designated in section 10102(2)

 

 3  shall be made by a document signed by the individual or made by

 

 4  the individual's telegraphic, electronic, recorded telephonic, or

 

 5  other recorded message.

 

 6        (9) A document of gift executed in another state or foreign

 

 7  country and in accord with the laws of that state or country is

 

 8  valid as a document of gift in this state, even if the document

 

 9  does not conform substantially to the form set forth in

 

10  subsection (2)(c). Subject to section 10108, an anatomical gift

 

11  of a donor's body or body part may be made during the life of the

 

12  donor for the purpose of transplantation, therapy, research, or

 

13  education in the manner provided in section 10105 by any of the

 

14  following:

 

15        (a) The donor, if the donor is an adult or if the donor is a

 

16  minor and meets 1 or more of the following requirements:

 

17        (i) Is emancipated.

 

18        (ii) Has been issued a driver license because the donor is at

 

19  least 16 years of age.

 

20        (b) An agent of the donor, unless the power of attorney for

 

21  health care or other record prohibits the agent from making an

 

22  anatomical gift.

 

23        (c) A parent of the donor, if the donor is an unemancipated

 

24  minor.

 

25        (d) The donor's guardian.

 

26        Sec. 10105. (1) In the absence of designation of a physician

 

27  or surgeon by either the donor or the donee of an eye or a

 


 1  physical part thereof of a decedent, or because the physician or

 

 2  surgeon is not readily available to excise the eye or physical

 

 3  part thereof as specified in a donor card or will, a licensed

 

 4  physician or a person who is certified by a state medical school

 

 5  may perform the operation and arrange for placement of the gift

 

 6  in the nearest eye bank. A state medical school may certify a

 

 7  person as qualified to perform the operation required for the

 

 8  removal of an eye or a physical part thereof only after

 

 9  successfully completing a comprehensive course in eye enucleation

 

10  organized and conducted by the state medical school or who has

 

11  successfully completed a similar course offered by a nationally

 

12  accredited medical school located outside this state. A donor may

 

13  make an anatomical gift by doing any of the following:

 

14        (a) By authorizing a statement or symbol indicating that the

 

15  donor has made an anatomical gift to be imprinted on the donor's

 

16  driver license or identification card.

 

17        (b) In a will.

 

18        (c) During a terminal illness or injury of the donor, by any

 

19  form of communication addressed to at least 2 adults, at least 1

 

20  of whom is a disinterested witness.

 

21        (d) As provided in subsection (2).

 

22        (2) A donor or other person authorized to make an anatomical

 

23  gift under section 10104 may make a gift by a donor card or other

 

24  record signed by the donor or other person making the gift or by

 

25  authorizing that a statement or symbol indicating that the donor

 

26  has made an anatomical gift be included on a donor registry. If

 

27  the donor or other person is physically unable to sign a record,

 


 1  the record may be signed by another individual at the direction

 

 2  of the donor or other person and shall meet all of the following

 

 3  requirements:

 

 4        (a) Be witnessed by at least 2 adults, at least 1 of whom is

 

 5  a disinterested witness, who have signed at the request of the

 

 6  donor or the other person.

 

 7        (b) State that it has been signed and witnessed as provided

 

 8  in subdivision (a).

 

 9        (3) Revocation, suspension, expiration, or cancellation of a

 

10  driver license or identification card upon which an anatomical

 

11  gift is indicated does not invalidate the gift.

 

12        (4) An anatomical gift made by will takes effect upon the

 

13  donor's death whether or not the will is probated. Invalidation

 

14  of the will after the donor's death does not invalidate the gift.

 

15        Sec. 10106. (1) If the gift is made by the donor to a

 

16  specified donee, the will, card, or other document, or an

 

17  executed copy thereof, may be delivered to the donee to expedite

 

18  the appropriate procedures immediately after death. Delivery is

 

19  not necessary to the validity of the gift. The will, card, or

 

20  other document, or an executed copy thereof, may be deposited in

 

21  any hospital, bank or storage facility, or registry office that

 

22  accepts it for safekeeping or for facilitation of procedures

 

23  after death. On request of any interested party upon or after the

 

24  donor's death, the person in possession shall produce the

 

25  document for examination. Subject to section 10108, a donor or

 

26  other person authorized to make an anatomical gift under section

 

27  10104 may amend or revoke an anatomical gift by any of the

 


 1  following means:

 

 2        (a) A record signed by any of the following:

 

 3        (i) The donor.

 

 4        (ii) The other person authorized to make an anatomical gift

 

 5  under section 10104.

 

 6        (iii) Subject to subsection (2), another individual acting at

 

 7  the direction of the donor or the other person authorized to make

 

 8  an anatomical gift under section 10104 if the donor or other

 

 9  person is physically unable to sign.

 

10        (b) A later-executed document of gift that amends or revokes

 

11  a previous anatomical gift or portion of an anatomical gift,

 

12  either expressly or by inconsistency.

 

13        (2) A record signed pursuant to subsection (1)(a)(iii) shall

 

14  meet all of the following requirements:

 

15        (a) Be witnessed by at least 2 adults, at least 1 of whom is

 

16  a disinterested witness, who have signed at the request of the

 

17  donor or the other person.

 

18        (b) State that it has been signed and witnessed as provided

 

19  in subdivision (a).

 

20        (3) Subject to section 10108, a donor or other person

 

21  authorized to make an anatomical gift under section 10104 may

 

22  revoke an anatomical gift by the destruction or cancellation of

 

23  the document of gift, or the portion of the document of gift used

 

24  to make the gift, with the intent to revoke the gift.

 

25        (4) A donor may amend or revoke an anatomical gift that was

 

26  not made in a will by any form of communication during a terminal

 

27  illness or injury addressed to at least 2 adults, at least 1 of

 


 1  whom is a disinterested witness.

 

 2        (5) A donor who makes an anatomical gift in a will may amend

 

 3  or revoke the gift in the manner provided for amendment or

 

 4  revocation of wills or as provided in subsection (1).

 

 5        Sec. 10107. (1) If the will, card, or other document or

 

 6  executed copy thereof, has been delivered to a specified donee,

 

 7  the donor may amend or revoke the gift by any of the following

 

 8  methods:

 

 9        (a) The execution and delivery to the donee of a signed

 

10  statement.

 

11        (b) An oral statement made in the presence of 2 persons and

 

12  communicated to the donee.

 

13        (c) A statement during a terminal illness or injury

 

14  addressed to an attending physician and communicated to the

 

15  donee.

 

16        (d) A signed card or document found on the donor's person or

 

17  in the donor's effects.

 

18        (2) Any document of gift which has not been delivered to the

 

19  donee may be revoked by the donor in the manner set out in

 

20  subsection (1), or by destruction, cancellation, or mutilation of

 

21  the document and all executed copies thereof.

 

22        (3) Any gift made by a will may also be amended or revoked

 

23  in the manner provided for amendment or revocation of wills, or

 

24  as provided in subsection (1). An individual may refuse to make

 

25  an anatomical gift of his or her body or body part by any of the

 

26  following means:

 

27        (a) A record signed by either of the following:

 


 1        (i) The individual.

 

 2        (ii) Subject to subsection (2), another individual acting at

 

 3  the direction of the individual if the individual is physically

 

 4  unable to sign.

 

 5        (b) The individual's will, whether or not the will is

 

 6  admitted to probate or invalidated after his or her death.

 

 7        (c) Any form of communication made by the individual during

 

 8  his or her terminal illness or injury addressed to at least 2

 

 9  adults, at least 1 of whom is a disinterested witness.

 

10        (2) A record signed pursuant to subsection (1)(a)(ii) shall

 

11  meet all of the following requirements:

 

12        (a) Be witnessed by at least 2 adults, at least 1 of whom is

 

13  a disinterested witness, who have signed at the request of the

 

14  individual.

 

15        (b) State that it has been signed and witnessed as provided

 

16  in subdivision (a).

 

17        (3) An individual who has made a refusal may amend or revoke

 

18  the refusal by any of the following means:

 

19        (a) In the manner provided in subsection (1) for making a

 

20  refusal.

 

21        (b) By subsequently making an anatomical gift pursuant to

 

22  section 10105 that is inconsistent with the refusal.

 

23        (c) By destroying or canceling the record evidencing the

 

24  refusal, or the portion of the record used to make the refusal,

 

25  with the intent to revoke the refusal.

 

26        (4) Except as otherwise provided in section 10108(8), in the

 

27  absence of an express, contrary indication by the individual set

 


 1  forth in the refusal, an individual's unrevoked refusal to make

 

 2  an anatomical gift of his or her body or body part bars all other

 

 3  persons from making an anatomical gift of the individual's body

 

 4  or body part.

 

 5        Sec. 10108. (1) The donee may accept or reject the gift. If

 

 6  the donee accepts a gift of the entire body, the person with

 

 7  authority to direct and arrange for the funeral and burial or

 

 8  other disposition of the body under section 3206 of the estates

 

 9  and protected individuals code, 1998 PA 386, MCL 700.3206,

 

10  subject to the terms of the gift, may authorize embalming and the

 

11  use of the body in funeral services. If the gift is a physical

 

12  part of the body, the donee, upon the death of the donor and

 

13  prior to embalming, shall cause the physical part to be removed

 

14  without unnecessary mutilation. After removal of the physical

 

15  part, custody of the remainder of the body vests in the person

 

16  with authority to direct and arrange for the funeral and burial

 

17  or other disposition of the remainder of the body under section

 

18  3206 of the estates and protected individuals code, 1998 PA 386,

 

19  MCL 700.3206. The holder of a license for the practice of

 

20  mortuary science under article 18 of the occupational code, 1980

 

21  PA 299, MCL 339.1801 to 339.1812, who acts pursuant to the

 

22  directions of persons alleging to have authority to direct and

 

23  arrange for the funeral and burial or other disposition of the

 

24  remainder of the body, is relieved of any liability for the

 

25  funeral and for the burial or other disposition of the remainder

 

26  of the body. A holder of a license for the practice of mortuary

 

27  science under that act may rely on the instructions and

 


 1  directions of any person alleging to be either a donee or a

 

 2  person authorized under this part to donate a body or any

 

 3  physical part thereof. A holder of a license for the practice of

 

 4  mortuary science under that act is not liable for removal of any

 

 5  physical part of a body donated under this part.

 

 6        (2) The time of death shall be determined by a physician who

 

 7  attends the donor at the death, or, if none, the physician who

 

 8  certifies the death. The attending or certifying physician shall

 

 9  not participate in the procedures for removing or transplanting a

 

10  physical part.

 

11        (3) A person, including a hospital, who acts in good faith

 

12  in accord with the terms of this part or with the anatomical gift

 

13  laws of another state or a foreign country is not liable for

 

14  damages in any civil action or subject to prosecution in any

 

15  criminal proceeding for the act.

 

16        (4) This part is subject to the laws of this state

 

17  prescribing powers and duties with respect to autopsies. Except

 

18  as otherwise provided in subsection (7) and subject to subsection

 

19  (6), in the absence of an express, contrary indication by the

 

20  donor, a person other than the donor is barred from making,

 

21  amending, or revoking an anatomical gift of a donor's body or

 

22  body part if the donor made an anatomical gift of the donor's

 

23  body or body part under section 10105 or an amendment to an

 

24  anatomical gift of the donor's body or body part under section

 

25  10106.

 

26        (2) A donor's revocation of an anatomical gift of the

 

27  donor's body or body part under section 10106 is not a refusal

 


 1  and does not bar another person specified in section 10104 or

 

 2  10109 from making an anatomical gift of the donor's body or body

 

 3  part under section 10105 or 10110.

 

 4        (3) If a person other than the donor makes an unrevoked

 

 5  anatomical gift of the donor's body or body part under section

 

 6  10105 or an amendment to an anatomical gift of the donor's body

 

 7  or body part under section 10106, another person may not make,

 

 8  amend, or revoke the gift of the donor's body or body part under

 

 9  section 10110.

 

10        (4) A revocation of an anatomical gift of a donor's body or

 

11  body part under section 10106 by a person other than the donor

 

12  does not bar another person from making an anatomical gift of the

 

13  body or body part under section 10105 or 10110.

 

14        (5) In the absence of an express, contrary indication by the

 

15  donor or other person authorized to make an anatomical gift under

 

16  section 10104, an anatomical gift of a body part is neither a

 

17  refusal to give another body part nor a limitation on the making

 

18  of an anatomical gift of another body part at a later time by the

 

19  donor or other person.

 

20        (6) In the absence of an express, contrary indication by the

 

21  donor or other person authorized to make an anatomical gift under

 

22  section 10104, an anatomical gift of a body part for 1 or more of

 

23  the purposes set forth in section 10104 is not a limitation on

 

24  the making of an anatomical gift of the body part for any of the

 

25  other purposes by the donor or any other person under section

 

26  10105 or 10110.

 

27        (7) If a donor who is an unemancipated minor dies, a parent

 


 1  of the donor who is reasonably available may revoke or amend an

 

 2  anatomical gift of the donor's body or body part.

 

 3        (8) If an unemancipated minor who signed a refusal dies, a

 

 4  parent of the minor who is reasonably available may revoke the

 

 5  minor's refusal.

 

 6        Sec. 10109. (1) This part shall be construed to effectuate

 

 7  its general purpose to make uniform the law of those states which

 

 8  enact it. Subject to subsections (2) and (3) and unless barred by

 

 9  section 10107 or 10108, an anatomical gift of a decedent's body

 

10  or body part for purpose of transplantation, therapy, research,

 

11  or education may be made by any member of the following classes

 

12  of persons who is reasonably available, in the order of priority

 

13  listed as follows:

 

14        (a) An agent of the decedent at the time of death who could

 

15  have made an anatomical gift under section 10104(b) immediately

 

16  before the decedent's death.

 

17        (b) The spouse of the decedent.

 

18        (c) Adult children of the decedent.

 

19        (d) Parents of the decedent.

 

20        (e) Adult siblings of the decedent.

 

21        (f) Adult grandchildren of the decedent.

 

22        (g) Grandparents of the decedent.

 

23        (h) An adult who exhibited special care and concern for the

 

24  decedent.

 

25        (i) The persons who were acting as the guardians of the

 

26  person of the decedent at the time of death.

 

27        (j) The persons assigned by the state of Michigan to

 


 1  authorize medical care for the decedent at the time of death,

 

 2  including public ward custodians, correctional or mental health

 

 3  facility personnel, or foster parents.

 

 4        (k) Any other person that has the authority to dispose of

 

 5  the decedent's body, including unidentified bodies, under section

 

 6  3206 of the estates and protected individuals code, 1998 PA 386,

 

 7  MCL 700.3206.

 

 8        (2) If there is more than 1 member of a class listed in

 

 9  subsection (1)(a), (c), (d), (e), (f), (g), or (i) entitled to

 

10  make an anatomical gift, an anatomical gift may be made by a

 

11  member of the class unless that member or a person to which the

 

12  gift may pass under section 10111 knows of an objection by

 

13  another member of the class. If an objection is known, the gift

 

14  may be made only by a majority of the members of the class who

 

15  are reasonably available.

 

16        (3) A person shall not make an anatomical gift if, at the

 

17  time of the decedent's death, a person in a prior class under

 

18  subsection (1) is reasonably available to make or to object to

 

19  the making of an anatomical gift.

 

20        Sec. 10110. (1) A person authorized to make an anatomical

 

21  gift under section 10109 may make an anatomical gift by a

 

22  document of gift signed by the person making the gift or by that

 

23  person's oral communication that is electronically recorded or is

 

24  contemporaneously reduced to a record and signed by the

 

25  individual receiving the oral communication.

 

26        (2) Subject to subsection (3), an anatomical gift by a

 

27  person authorized under section 10109 may be amended or revoked

 


 1  orally or in a record by any member of a prior class who is

 

 2  reasonably available. If more than 1 member of the prior class is

 

 3  reasonably available, the gift made by a person authorized under

 

 4  section 10109 may be amended or revoked as follows:

 

 5        (a) Amended only if a majority of the reasonably available

 

 6  members agree to the amending of the gift.

 

 7        (b) Revoked only if a majority of the reasonably available

 

 8  members agree to the revoking of the gift or if they are equally

 

 9  divided as to whether to revoke the gift.

 

10        (3) A revocation under subsection (2) is effective only if,

 

11  before an incision has been made to remove a part from the

 

12  donor's body or before invasive procedures have begun to prepare

 

13  the recipient, the procurement organization, transplant hospital,

 

14  or physician or technician knows of the revocation.

 

15        Sec. 10111. (1) An anatomical gift may be made to any of the

 

16  following persons named in the document of gift:

 

17        (a) A hospital; accredited medical school, dental school,

 

18  college, or university; organ procurement organization; or other

 

19  appropriate person, for research or education.

 

20        (b) Subject to subsection (2), an individual designated by

 

21  the person making the anatomical gift if the individual is the

 

22  recipient of the body part.

 

23        (c) An eye bank or tissue bank.

 

24        (2) If an anatomical gift to an individual under subsection

 

25  (1)(b) cannot be transplanted into the individual, the body part

 

26  passes pursuant to subsection (7) in the absence of an express,

 

27  contrary indication by the person making the anatomical gift.

 


 1        (3) If an anatomical gift of 1 or more specific body parts

 

 2  or of all body parts is made in a document of gift that does not

 

 3  name a person described in subsection (1) but identifies the

 

 4  purpose for which an anatomical gift may be used, the following

 

 5  rules apply:

 

 6        (a) If the body part is an eye and the gift is for the

 

 7  purpose of transplantation or therapy, the gift passes to the

 

 8  appropriate eye bank.

 

 9        (b) If the body part is tissue and the gift is for the

 

10  purpose of transplantation or therapy, the gift passes to the

 

11  appropriate tissue bank.

 

12        (c) If the body part is an organ and the gift is for the

 

13  purpose of transplantation or therapy, the gift passes to the

 

14  appropriate organ procurement organization as custodian of the

 

15  organ.

 

16        (d) If the body part is an organ, an eye, or tissue and the

 

17  gift is for the purpose of research or education, the gift passes

 

18  to the appropriate procurement organization.

 

19        (4) For the purpose of subsection (3) and as otherwise

 

20  specified in this section, if there is more than 1 purpose of an

 

21  anatomical gift set forth in the document of gift but the

 

22  purposes are not set forth in any priority, the gift shall be

 

23  used for transplantation or therapy, if suitable. If the gift

 

24  cannot be used for transplantation or therapy, the gift may be

 

25  used for research or education.

 

26        (5) If an anatomical gift of 1 or more specific body parts

 

27  is made in a document of gift that does not name a person

 


 1  described in subsection (1) and does not identify the purpose of

 

 2  the gift, the gift may be used for transplantation, therapy,

 

 3  research, or education pursuant to subsections (4) and (7).

 

 4        (6) If a document of gift specifies only a general intent to

 

 5  make an anatomical gift by words such as "donor", "organ donor",

 

 6  or "body donor" or by a symbol or statement of similar import,

 

 7  the gift may be used for transplantation, therapy, research, or

 

 8  education pursuant to subsections (4) and (7).

 

 9        (7) For purposes of subsections (2), (5), and (6), the

 

10  following rules apply:

 

11        (a) If the body part is an eye, the gift passes to the

 

12  appropriate eye bank.

 

13        (b) If the body part is tissue, the gift passes to the

 

14  appropriate tissue bank.

 

15        (c) If the body part is an organ, the gift passes to the

 

16  appropriate organ procurement organization as custodian of the

 

17  organ.

 

18        (8) An anatomical gift of an organ for transplantation or

 

19  therapy, other than an anatomical gift under subsection (1)(b),

 

20  passes to the organ procurement organization as custodian of the

 

21  organ.

 

22        (9) If an anatomical gift does not pass pursuant to

 

23  subsections (1) through (8) or the decedent's body or body part

 

24  is not used for transplantation, therapy, research, or education,

 

25  custody of the body or body part passes to the person under

 

26  obligation to dispose of the body or body part.

 

27        (10) A person shall not accept an anatomical gift if the

 


 1  person knows that the gift was not effectively made under section

 

 2  10105 or 10110 or if the person knows that the decedent made a

 

 3  refusal under section 10107 that was not revoked. For purposes of

 

 4  this subsection, if a person knows that an anatomical gift was

 

 5  made on a document of gift, the person is considered to know of

 

 6  any amendment or revocation of the gift or any refusal to make an

 

 7  anatomical gift on the same document of gift.

 

 8        (11) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (1)(b),

 

 9  nothing in this part affects the allocation of organs for

 

10  transplantation or therapy.

 

11        Sec. 10112. (1) As soon as practical, each of the following

 

12  persons shall make a reasonable search of an individual who the

 

13  person reasonably believes is dead or near death for a document

 

14  of gift or other information identifying the individual as a

 

15  donor or as an individual who made a refusal:

 

16        (a) A law enforcement officer, firefighter, paramedic, other

 

17  emergency rescuer finding the individual, or medical examiner or

 

18  his or her designee.

 

19        (b) If no other source of the information is immediately

 

20  available, a hospital, as soon as practical after the

 

21  individual's arrival at the hospital.

 

22        (2) If a document of gift or a refusal to make an anatomical

 

23  gift is located by the search required by subsection (1)(a) and

 

24  the individual or deceased individual to whom it relates is taken

 

25  to a hospital, the person responsible for conducting the search

 

26  shall immediately send the document of gift or refusal to the

 

27  hospital for documentation.

 


 1        (3) A person is not subject to criminal or civil liability

 

 2  for failing to discharge the duties imposed by this section but

 

 3  may be subject to administrative sanctions.

 

 4        Sec. 10113. (1) A document of gift need not be delivered

 

 5  during the donor's lifetime to be effective.

 

 6        (2) Upon or after an individual's death, a person in

 

 7  possession of a document of gift or a refusal to make an

 

 8  anatomical gift with respect to the decedent shall allow

 

 9  examination and copying of the document of gift or refusal by a

 

10  person authorized to make or object to the making of an

 

11  anatomical gift with respect to the decedent or by a person to

 

12  which the gift could pass under section 10111.

 

13        Sec. 10114. (1) When a hospital refers an individual at or

 

14  near death to a procurement organization, the procurement

 

15  organization shall make a reasonable search of the records of the

 

16  secretary of state and any donor registry that it knows exists

 

17  for the geographical area in which the individual resides to

 

18  ascertain whether the individual has made an anatomical gift.

 

19        (2) A procurement organization shall be allowed reasonable

 

20  access to information in the records of the secretary of state to

 

21  ascertain whether an individual at or near death is a donor.

 

22        (3) When a hospital refers an individual at or near death to

 

23  a procurement organization, the organization may conduct any

 

24  reasonable examination necessary to ensure the medical

 

25  suitability of a body part that is or could be the subject of an

 

26  anatomical gift for transplantation, therapy, research, or

 

27  education from a donor or a prospective donor, regardless of a

 


 1  prior decision to withhold or withdraw care as described in

 

 2  section 10121. During the examination period, measures necessary

 

 3  to ensure the medical suitability of the body part shall not be

 

 4  withdrawn unless the hospital or procurement organization knows

 

 5  that the individual expressed a contrary intent.

 

 6        (4) Unless prohibited by law other than this part, at any

 

 7  time after a donor's death, the person to which a body part

 

 8  passes under section 10111 may conduct any reasonable examination

 

 9  necessary to ensure the medical suitability of the body or body

 

10  part for its intended purpose.

 

11        (5) Unless prohibited by law other than this part, an

 

12  examination under subsection (3) or (4) may include an

 

13  examination of all medical and dental records or other sources of

 

14  medical information pertaining to the donor or prospective donor,

 

15  including those held by a medical examiner's office, correctional

 

16  facility, physician's office, or other medical entity.

 

17        (6) Upon the death of a minor who was a donor or had signed

 

18  a refusal, unless a procurement organization knows that the minor

 

19  is emancipated, the procurement organization shall conduct a

 

20  reasonable search for the parents of the minor and provide the

 

21  parents with an opportunity to revoke or amend the anatomical

 

22  gift or revoke the refusal.

 

23        (7) Upon referral by a hospital under subsection (1), a

 

24  procurement organization shall make a reasonable search for any

 

25  person listed in section 10109 that has priority to make an

 

26  anatomical gift on behalf of a prospective donor. If a

 

27  procurement organization receives information that an anatomical

 


 1  gift to any other person was made, amended, or revoked, it shall

 

 2  promptly advise the other person of all relevant information.

 

 3        (8) Subject to section 10111(9), the rights of the person to

 

 4  which a body part passes under section 10111 are superior to the

 

 5  rights of all others with respect to the body part. The person

 

 6  may accept or reject an anatomical gift in whole or in part.

 

 7  Subject to the terms of the document of gift and this part, a

 

 8  person that accepts an anatomical gift of an entire body may

 

 9  allow embalming, burial, or cremation, and use of remains in a

 

10  funeral service. If the gift is of a body part, the person to

 

11  which the body part passes under section 10111, upon the death of

 

12  the donor and before embalming, burial, or cremation, shall cause

 

13  the body part to be removed without unnecessary mutilation.

 

14        (9) Neither the physician who attends the decedent at death

 

15  nor the physician who determines the time of the decedent's death

 

16  may participate in the procedures for removing or transplanting a

 

17  body part from the decedent.

 

18        (10) A physician or technician may remove a donated part

 

19  from the body of a donor that the physician or technician is

 

20  qualified to remove.

 

21        Sec. 10115. Each hospital in this state shall enter into

 

22  agreements or affiliations with procurement organizations for

 

23  coordination of procurement and use of anatomical gifts.

 

24        Sec. 10116. (1) Except as otherwise provided in subsection

 

25  (2), a person that for valuable consideration knowingly purchases

 

26  or sells a body part for transplantation or therapy if removal of

 

27  the body part from an individual is intended to occur after the

 


 1  individual's death is guilty of a felony punishable by

 

 2  imprisonment for not more than 5 years or a fine of not more than

 

 3  $50,000.00, or both.

 

 4        (2) A person may charge a reasonable amount for the removal,

 

 5  processing, preservation, quality control, storage,

 

 6  transportation, implantation, or disposal of a body part.

 

 7        Sec. 10117. A person that, in order to obtain a financial

 

 8  gain, intentionally falsifies, forges, conceals, defaces, or

 

 9  obliterates a document of gift, an amendment or revocation of a

 

10  document of gift, or a refusal is guilty of a felony punishable

 

11  by imprisonment for not more than 5 years or a fine of not more

 

12  than $50,000.00, or both.

 

13        Sec. 10118. (1) A person that acts pursuant to this part or

 

14  with the applicable anatomical gift law of another state, or

 

15  attempts in good faith to do so, is not liable for the act in a

 

16  civil action, criminal prosecution, or administrative proceeding.

 

17        (2) Neither the person making an anatomical gift nor the

 

18  donor's estate is liable for any injury or damage that results

 

19  from the making or use of the gift.

 

20        (3) In determining whether an anatomical gift has been made,

 

21  amended, or revoked under this part, a person may rely upon

 

22  representations of an individual listed in section 10109(1)(b),

 

23  (c), (d), (e), (f), (g), or (h) relating to the individual's

 

24  relationship to the donor or prospective donor unless the person

 

25  knows that the representation is untrue.

 

26        Sec. 10119. (1) A document of gift is valid if executed

 

27  pursuant to any of the following:

 


 1        (a) This part.

 

 2        (b) The laws of the state or country where it was executed.

 

 3        (c) The laws of the state or country where the person making

 

 4  the anatomical gift was domiciled, had a place of residence, or

 

 5  was a national at the time the document of gift was executed.

 

 6        (2) If a document of gift is valid under this section, the

 

 7  law of this state governs the interpretation of the document of

 

 8  gift.

 

 9        (3) A person may presume that a document of gift or

 

10  amendment of an anatomical gift is valid unless that person knows

 

11  that it was not validly executed or was revoked.

 

12        Sec. 10120. (1) The organ procurement organization may

 

13  establish or contract for the establishment of a donor registry.

 

14        (2) As provided for in section 2 of 1972 PA 222, MCL 28.292,

 

15  and section 310 of the Michigan vehicle code, 1949 PA 300, MCL

 

16  257.310, the secretary of state shall inquire of each applicant,

 

17  licensee, or state identification card holder, in person or by

 

18  mail, whether the individual agrees to participate in a donor

 

19  registry as described in this part. The secretary of state shall

 

20  maintain a record of an individual who indicates a willingness to

 

21  have his or her name placed on the donor registry. The secretary

 

22  of state shall maintain the donor registry in a manner that

 

23  provides electronic access, including, but not limited to, the

 

24  transfer of data, to the organ procurement organization or its

 

25  successor organization, tissue banks, and eye banks. The

 

26  secretary of state shall administer the donor registry in a

 

27  manner that complies with subsections (3) and (4).

 


 1        (3) A donor registry under this section shall meet all of

 

 2  the following requirements:

 

 3        (a) Be accessible to a procurement organization to allow it

 

 4  to obtain the name, address, and date of birth of persons on the

 

 5  donor registry to determine, at or near death of the donor or a

 

 6  prospective donor, whether the donor or prospective donor has

 

 7  made an anatomical gift.

 

 8        (b) Provide electronic access, including, but not limited

 

 9  to, the transfer of data for purposes of subdivision (a) on a 7-

 

10  day-a-week, 24-hour-a-day basis at no cost to the procurement

 

11  organization.

 

12        (4) Personally identifiable information on a donor registry

 

13  about a donor or prospective donor shall not be used or disclosed

 

14  without the express consent of the donor, prospective donor, or

 

15  person that made the anatomical gift for any purpose other than

 

16  to determine, at or near death of the donor or prospective donor,

 

17  whether the donor or prospective donor has made, amended, or

 

18  revoked an anatomical gift.

 

19        (5) This section does not prohibit any person from creating

 

20  or maintaining a donor registry that is not established by or

 

21  under contract with this state. A donor registry that is not

 

22  established by or under contract with this state shall do all of

 

23  the following:

 

24        (a) Comply with subsections (3) and (4).

 

25        (b) Within 30 days of its establishment, notify the organ

 

26  procurement organization of its establishment.

 

27        (c) Within 30 days of its establishment, give the organ

 


 1  procurement organization full access to its records of anatomical

 

 2  gifts and amendments to or revocations of anatomical gifts.

 

 3        Sec. 10121. (1) As used in this section:

 

 4        (a) "Advance health care directive" means a power of

 

 5  attorney for health care or a record signed by a prospective

 

 6  donor containing the prospective donor's direction concerning a

 

 7  health care decision for the prospective donor.

 

 8        (b) "Declaration" means a record signed by a prospective

 

 9  donor specifying the circumstances under which a life support

 

10  system may be withheld or withdrawn from the prospective donor.

 

11        (c) "Health care decision" means any decision made regarding

 

12  the health care of the prospective donor.

 

13        (2) If a prospective donor has a declaration or advance

 

14  health care directive, measures necessary to ensure the medical

 

15  suitability of an organ for transplantation or therapy shall not

 

16  be withheld or withdrawn from the prospective donor, unless the

 

17  declaration expressly provides to the contrary or if the organ

 

18  procurement organization determines that the prospective donor's

 

19  organ is not medically suitable for transplantation or therapy.

 

20        Sec. 10122. In applying and construing this part,

 

21  consideration shall be given to the need to promote uniformity of

 

22  the law with respect to its subject matter among states that

 

23  enact it.

 

24        Sec. 10123. This part modifies, limits, and supersedes the

 

25  electronic signatures in global and national commerce act, 15 USC

 

26  7001 to 7031, but does not modify, limit, or supersede 15 USC

 

27  7001(a), or authorize electronic delivery of any of the notices

 


 1  described in 15 USC 7003(b).

 

 2        Sec. 10204. (1) Except as otherwise provided in subsection

 

 3  (2), a person shall not knowingly acquire, receive, or otherwise

 

 4  transfer a human organ or part of a human organ for valuable

 

 5  consideration for any purpose, including but not limited to

 

 6  transplantation, implantation, infusion, injection, or other

 

 7  medical or scientific purpose. A person who violates this

 

 8  subsection is guilty of a felony.

 

 9        (2) Subsection (1) does not prohibit 1 or more of the

 

10  following practices:

 

11        (a) The removal and use of a human cornea pursuant to

 

12  section 10202, or the removal and use of a human pituitary gland

 

13  pursuant to section 2855.

 

14        (b) An anatomical gift pursuant to part 101, or the

 

15  acquisition or distribution of bodies or parts by the director

 

16  department pursuant to sections 2651 2652 to 2663.

 

17        (c) Financial assistance payments provided under a plan of

 

18  insurance or other health care coverage.

 

19        (3) Only Except as otherwise provided in part 101, only an

 

20  individual who is 1 of the following may surgically remove a

 

21  human organ for transplantation, implantation, infusion,

 

22  injection, or any other medical or scientific purpose:

 

23        (a) A physician licensed under article 15.

 

24        (b) An individual acting under the delegatory authority and

 

25  supervision of a physician pursuant to section 16215(2), but not

 

26  including an individual whose license has been suspended under

 

27  article 15. This subdivision includes, but is not limited to, an

 


 1  individual described in section 16215(3).

 

 2        (c) For the purposes of surgically removing a human organ

 

 3  that is an eye or a physical part of an eye only, an individual

 

 4  certified by a state medical school as described in section

 

 5  10105.

 

 6        (c) (d) An individual residing in another state and

 

 7  authorized to practice allopathic medicine or osteopathic

 

 8  medicine and surgery in that state who is called into this state

 

 9  by a physician licensed under article 15 and is authorized by a

 

10  hospital licensed under article 17 to surgically remove 1 or more

 

11  of the following organs for transport back to the other state:

 

12        (i) A heart.

 

13        (ii) A liver.

 

14        (iii) A lung.

 

15        (iv) A pancreas.

 

16        (v) A kidney.

 

17        (vi) All or part of an intestine.

 

18        (vii) Any other human organ specified by rule promulgated by

 

19  the department under subsection (6).

 

20        (4) An individual who violates subsection (3) is guilty of a

 

21  felony.

 

22        (5) As used in this section:

 

23        (a) "Human organ" means the human kidney, liver, heart,

 

24  lung, pancreas, intestine, bone marrow, cornea, eye, bone, skin,

 

25  cartilage, dura mater, ligaments, tendons, fascia, pituitary

 

26  gland, and middle ear structures and any other human organ

 

27  specified by rule promulgated by the department under subsection

 


 1  (6). Human organ does not include whole blood, blood plasma,

 

 2  blood products, blood derivatives, other self-replicating body

 

 3  fluids, or human hair.

 

 4        (b) "Valuable consideration" does not include the reasonable

 

 5  payments associated with the removal, transportation,

 

 6  implantation, processing, preservation, quality control, and

 

 7  storage of a human organ or the medical expenses and expenses of

 

 8  travel, housing, and lost wages incurred by the donor of a human

 

 9  organ in connection with the donation of the human organ.

 

10        (6) The department may promulgate rules to specify human

 

11  organs in addition to the human organs listed in subsection

 

12  (3)(d)(i) to (vi) (3)(c) or (5)(a).

 

13        Sec. 20165. (1) Except as otherwise provided in this

 

14  section, after notice of intent to an applicant or licensee to

 

15  deny, limit, suspend, or revoke the applicant's or licensee's

 

16  license or certification and an opportunity for a hearing, the

 

17  department may deny, limit, suspend, or revoke the license or

 

18  certification or impose an administrative fine on a licensee if 1

 

19  or more of the following exist:

 

20        (a) Fraud or deceit in obtaining or attempting to obtain a

 

21  license or certification or in the operation of the licensed

 

22  health facility or agency.

 

23        (b) A violation of this article or a rule promulgated under

 

24  this article.

 

25        (c) False or misleading advertising.

 

26        (d) Negligence or failure to exercise due care, including

 

27  negligent supervision of employees and subordinates.

 


 1        (e) Permitting a license or certificate to be used by an

 

 2  unauthorized health facility or agency.

 

 3        (f) Evidence of abuse regarding a patient's health, welfare,

 

 4  or safety or the denial of a patient's rights.

 

 5        (g) Failure to comply with section 10102a(7) 10115.

 

 6        (h) Failure to comply with part 222 or a term, condition, or

 

 7  stipulation of a certificate of need issued under part 222, or

 

 8  both.

 

 9        (i) A violation of section 20197(1).

 

10        (2) The department may deny an application for a license or

 

11  certification based on a finding of a condition or practice that

 

12  would constitute a violation of this article if the applicant

 

13  were a licensee.

 

14        (3) Denial, suspension, or revocation of an individual

 

15  emergency medical services personnel license under part 209 is

 

16  governed by section 20958.

 

17        (4) If the department determines under subsection (1) that a

 

18  health facility or agency has violated section 20197(1), the

 

19  department shall impose an administrative fine of $5,000,000.00

 

20  on the health facility or agency.

 

21        Enacting section 1. This amendatory act takes effect January

 

22  1, 2008.

 

23        Enacting section 2. This amendatory act does not take effect

 

24  unless all of the following bills of the 94th Legislature are

 

25  enacted into law:

 

26        (a) Senate Bill No.____ or House Bill No. 4943(request no.

 

27  01547'07 a).

 


 1        (b) Senate Bill No.____ or House Bill No. 4942(request no.

 

 2  01547'07 b).

 

 3        (c) Senate Bill No.____ or House Bill No. 4941(request no.

 

 4  01547'07 c).

 

 5        (d) Senate Bill No.____ or House Bill No. 4944(request no.

 

 6  01547'07 d).

 

 7        (e) Senate Bill No.____ or House Bill No. 4945(request no.

 

 8  01547'07 e).

 

 9        Enacting section 3. Section 10102a of the public health

 

10  code, 1978 PA 368, MCL 333.10102a, is repealed.