Co-Sponsorship Memo Details

2023-2024 Regular Session
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Allowing Licensed Practical Nurses to Make Pronouncements in Hospice
June 6, 2024 09:39 AM to All House Members
Circulated By
Photo of Representative Representative Paul Takac
Representative Paul Takac
D House District 82
Along With
Photo of Representative Rep. Joanne Stehr
Rep. Joanne Stehr
R House District 107
Photo of Representative Rep. Tarik Khan
Rep. Tarik Khan
D House District 194
Photo of Representative Rep. Bridget Kosierowski
Rep. Bridget Kosierowski
D House District 114
Photo of Representative Rep. Joshua Siegel
Rep. Joshua Siegel
D House District 22
Memo
Licensed Practical Nurses (LPNs) provide high-quality, compassionate care in many healthcare settings, including hospitals, nursing homes, and hospice. Like nurses and other healthcare providers, LPNs are trained to perform vital signs and auscultate the heart and lungs. However, unlike registered nurses, physicians, physician assistants, and coroners in Pennsylvania, LPNs are not currently allowed to make death pronouncements in hospice settings.
 
Hospice care refers to settings where patients are at the end of life, and care focuses on relieving pain and distress symptoms. Unfortunately, when patients pass away in hospice care, due to the limited current scope of LPNs in these settings, families sometimes must wait for hours for a registered nurse, physician, or another provider to come to the home to pronounce death. These unnecessary delays can cause undue stress and trauma for families at their most vulnerable times. Allowing qualified LPNs to make death pronouncements in hospice care would enable the pronouncement of death in a timely manner.
 
Our bill is narrowly focused on LPNs in the hospice setting. Our legislation would also ensure that these LPNs have extra training in making these pronouncements, in addition to training in grief counseling, post-mortem care, and circumstances requiring a coroner’s investigation.
 
This is a companion bill to Senator Culver and colleagues bipartisan Senate Bill 1080. Please join us in cosponsoring this commonsense legislative fix to update the Vital Statistics Law of 1953 to allow LPNs to make death pronouncements in hospice settings.
 
 
Legislation
Document - Introduced as HB 2434
Allowing Licensed Practical Nurses to Make Pronouncements in Hospice
June 6, 2024 09:39 AM to All House Members

Circulated By
TAKAC and STEHR, KHAN, KOSIEROWSKI, SIEGEL

Memo
Licensed Practical Nurses (LPNs) provide high-quality, compassionate care in many healthcare settings, including hospitals, nursing homes, and hospice. Like nurses and other healthcare providers, LPNs are trained to perform vital signs and auscultate the heart and lungs. However, unlike registered nurses, physicians, physician assistants, and coroners in Pennsylvania, LPNs are not currently allowed to make death pronouncements in hospice settings.
 
Hospice care refers to settings where patients are at the end of life, and care focuses on relieving pain and distress symptoms. Unfortunately, when patients pass away in hospice care, due to the limited current scope of LPNs in these settings, families sometimes must wait for hours for a registered nurse, physician, or another provider to come to the home to pronounce death. These unnecessary delays can cause undue stress and trauma for families at their most vulnerable times. Allowing qualified LPNs to make death pronouncements in hospice care would enable the pronouncement of death in a timely manner.
 
Our bill is narrowly focused on LPNs in the hospice setting. Our legislation would also ensure that these LPNs have extra training in making these pronouncements, in addition to training in grief counseling, post-mortem care, and circumstances requiring a coroner’s investigation.
 
This is a companion bill to Senator Culver and colleagues bipartisan Senate Bill 1080. Please join us in cosponsoring this commonsense legislative fix to update the Vital Statistics Law of 1953 to allow LPNs to make death pronouncements in hospice settings.
 
 

Document
Introduced as HB 2434
Generated 05/18/2025 10:01 PM