S494119th CongressWALLET

National Plan for Epilepsy Act

Sponsored By: Senator Eric Schmitt

Introduced

Summary

Establishes a federally coordinated national plan to prevent, diagnose, treat, and cure epilepsy. This bill would require the Department of Health and Human Services to create and update an integrated National Plan, set up an expert advisory council, and publish regular assessments and recommendations through 2035.

Show full summary
  • People with epilepsy and families: Aims to improve early diagnosis, access to safer and more effective treatments, and efforts to reduce uncontrolled seizures. Epilepsy affects about 3 million adults and 456,000 children in the United States.
  • Caregivers and low-income households: Directs the plan to address the financial and social impact of epilepsy and to recommend steps to reduce burdens on households; 53 percent of people with uncontrolled seizures live in households earning less than $25,000.
  • Researchers and clinicians: Creates an Advisory Council of federal and nonfederal experts that must meet at least quarterly and report to HHS and Congress every two years with evaluations and priorities.
  • Federal coordination and data: Requires HHS to coordinate epilepsy research and services across federal agencies, collect relevant federal data, solicit public input, and submit annual assessments and recommended actions to Congress.

Your PRIA Score

Score Hidden

Personalized for You

How does this bill affect your finances?

Sign up for a PRIA Policy Scan to see your personalized alignment score for this bill and every other piece of legislation we track. We analyze your financial profile against policy provisions to show you exactly what matters to your wallet.

Free to start

Bill Overview

Analyzed Economic Effects

3 provisions identified: 2 benefits, 1 costs, 0 mixed.

Advisory council for epilepsy care

If enacted, HHS would create an Advisory Council on Epilepsy Research, Care, and Services to advise the National Plan. The council would include officials from NIH, CMS, CDC, FDA, HRSA, the Defense Department, and the VA plus non‑federal experts and people with epilepsy. The council must meet at least quarterly and hold public meetings. It must report to the Secretary and Congress within 18 months and every 2 years after, and convene a broader federal/non‑federal research meeting within 2 years and every 2 years thereafter.

National epilepsy plan and reports

If enacted, the HHS Secretary would create a National Plan for Epilepsy to prevent, diagnose, treat, and cure epilepsy. The plan would coordinate epilepsy research and services across all federal agencies and include an estimate of federal investment. The Secretary must do a national assessment not later than 2 years after enactment and then annually. The Secretary would send Congress yearly reports with priority actions, implementation steps, and progress. Federal agencies must share epilepsy data to help produce the assessments and reports.

Epilepsy program ends December 2035

If enacted, the section creating the National Plan for Epilepsy and its duties would stop being effective on December 31, 2035. On that date the reporting requirements, the advisory council duties, and the data‑sharing rules created by the plan would end. This could reduce federal coordination and supports for people with epilepsy and their caregivers after 2035.

Sponsors & CoSponsors

Sponsor

Eric Schmitt

MO • R

Cosponsors

  • Amy Klobuchar

    MN • D

    Sponsored 2/10/2025

  • John Boozman

    AR • R

    Sponsored 2/10/2025

  • Maggie Hassan

    NH • D

    Sponsored 2/10/2025

  • Jon Husted

    OH • R

    Sponsored 2/24/2025

  • Edward Markey

    MA • D

    Sponsored 9/2/2025

  • Cory Booker

    NJ • D

    Sponsored 9/3/2025

  • Joni Ernst

    IA • R

    Sponsored 10/1/2025

  • Alex Padilla

    CA • D

    Sponsored 10/8/2025

  • Shelley Capito

    WV • R

    Sponsored 10/20/2025

  • Jeanne Shaheen

    NH • D

    Sponsored 10/27/2025

  • Christopher Coons

    DE • D

    Sponsored 12/2/2025

  • Raphael Warnock

    GA • D

    Sponsored 12/11/2025

  • Timothy Kaine

    VA • D

    Sponsored 12/17/2025

  • Mark Warner

    VA • D

    Sponsored 1/12/2026

  • Angela Alsobrooks

    MD • D

    Sponsored 1/29/2026

  • Martin Heinrich

    NM • D

    Sponsored 2/5/2026

  • Adam Schiff

    CA • D

    Sponsored 3/2/2026

  • Kirsten Gillibrand

    NY • D

    Sponsored 3/9/2026

  • Susan Collins

    ME • R

    Sponsored 3/17/2026

Roll Call Votes

No roll call votes available for this bill.

View on Congress.gov
Back to Legislation

Take It Personal

Get Your Personalized Policy View

Start a Free Government Policy Watch to see how policy affects your household, then upgrade to PRIA Full Coverage for year-round monitoring.

Already have an account? Sign in