House Bill 10‑27, which makes technical and substantive updates to statutes governing disease control, emergency response and certain screening and immunization provisions, passed the Colorado Senate on March 13 after committee and floor amendments.
Senator Doherty, carrying the bill on the floor, said the Department of Public Health and Environment and the Health and Human Services Committee identified areas needing cleanup, and the committee adopted an amendment (L20) clarifying that the State Board of Health establishes rules to prevent disease transmission and that the advisory bodies to be considered include ACIP (Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices), the American Academy of Pediatrics, the American Academy of Family Physicians, the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, and the American College of Physicians.
The bill also aligns hepatitis C screening requirements to current Centers for Disease Control recommendations and repeals duplicated student‑immunization statutes, according to the sponsor. Senators supported the technical corrections and the clearer rulemaking direction for the State Board of Health.
The committee report was adopted and the Senate voted to pass House Bill 10‑27; the clerk recorded “10 27 passes.” Sponsors said the statute revisions are intended to modernize public‑health emergency preparedness and stabilize the state immunization framework.