Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 6A— - PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER III— - NATIONAL RESEARCH INSTITUTES › Part Part H— - General Provisions › § 289g–1
Allows the Secretary to pay for or do research that transplants human fetal tissue to try to treat people. The law says the tissue can come from a spontaneous abortion, an induced abortion, or a stillbirth. A woman who donates tissue must give a written, signed statement saying she donates the tissue for that research, she places no limits on who can receive it, and she was not told who the recipients are. The doctor who helped obtain the tissue must sign a written statement saying, for induced abortions, that the woman agreed to the abortion before anyone asked about donation, that the timing or method of ending the pregnancy was not changed just to get tissue, and the abortion followed State law; the doctor must also confirm the woman donated as required and that the woman was told of any doctor interest in the research and any extra medical or privacy risks from donating. The lead researcher must sign a written statement saying they know the tissue is fetal, that it may come from abortion or stillbirth, that it was donated for research, that they told other research staff this, that they will get a written acknowledgment from any transplant recipient before consent, and that they did not help decide to end the pregnancy just for the research. The head of the agency doing the research must certify to the Secretary that the required signed statements will be available for a confidential audit. Any audit information may only be used to check rule-following, must not be disclosed except if federal law requires it (and then identities must be protected), and should not be kept after the audit unless needed. The Secretary may not fund or do the research unless it follows applicable State and local law. Each year the Secretary must send a report to the Committee on Energy and Commerce of the House of Representatives and to the Committee on Labor and Human Resources of the Senate describing the prior year’s activities and whether the research followed these rules. "Human fetal tissue" means tissue or cells taken from a dead human embryo or fetus after a spontaneous or induced abortion, or after a stillbirth.
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The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
42 U.S.C. § 289g–1
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73