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ASSEMBLYMEMBER PATTY BERG
1ST ASSEMBLY DISTRICT |
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For Immediate Release:
May 17, 2007 |
Contact: Maria Aliferis-Gjerde
916-319-2001 |
Allows volunteer doctors and nurses to help Californians during disaster relief efforts.
SACRAMENTO—The Assembly on Thursday unanimously passed a bill by Patty Berg that would protect Californians from the kind of red tape fiascos that kept doctors from Hurricane Katrina victims.
“Emergency response should be free from red tape during disasters,” said Assemblywoman Patty Berg, D-Eureka. “These are life and death situations.”
Assembly Bill 64 would require California officials to recognize the out-of-state medical licenses of emergency volunteers during a declared state emergency. At the same time, the bill would create a system for California’s health care workers to register their credentials so that other states could benefit from their expertise in a disaster.
During the Hurricane Katrina relief effort, volunteer doctors and nurses were prevented from giving aid because they lacked Louisiana medical licenses. Dr. Dan Diamond, a physician from Seattle, told the San Francisco Chronicle that it took five days for him and other doctors to get on the ground in New Orleans as opposed to 48 hours during the Indonesian tsunami aftermath in 2004.
“Each hour a doctor or nurse is delayed is an hour that a Californian goes without help,” said Berg. “Red tape should not cause Californians to die.”
Assembly Bill 64 is part of a multi-state effort to create a national registry. Kentucky enacted similar legislation, and six other states have introduced legislation.
AB 64 now goes to the Senate for further consideration.
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