(Natural News)
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis on Feb. 24 signed a controversial bill that protects hospitals from claims related to the Wuhan coronavirus (COVID-19). The approval of Senate Bill (SB) 7014 effectively extended liability protections for hospitals and other facilities in the state until June 2023.
SB 7014 was a revised version of the earlier House Bill (HB) 7021 filed by Republican State Reps. Colleen Burton and Patt Maney in January 2022. The original bill protected hospitals from COVID-19 claims “that have accrued before the effective date of this act and within one year after.” However, SB 7014 amended this text to include claims filed before June 1, 2023.
According to LifeSiteNews, DeSantis and state legislators enacted laws to protect businesses and health care providers from various COVID-related lawsuits and their accompanying financial burden. These include circumstances wherein a health provider “made a good faith effort to substantially comply with authoritative or controlling government-issued health standards” at the federal, state or local level.
Critics of SB 7014 have expressed concerns that its effectivity prolongs the ability of doctors and hospitals agreeing with the medical establishment to use federal treatment standards as a shield from legal actions.
In what appears to be an attempt to soften the blow of SB 7014, DeSantis announced new guidance for doctors in the Sunshine State on Feb. 24.
Together with Florida Surgeon General Dr. Joseph Ladapo, the Florida governor encouraged physicians to “exercise their individual clinical judgment and expertise based on their patients’ needs and preferences.” These also encompassed “emerging treatments backed by quality evidence, with appropriate patient informed consent, including off-label use or as part of a clinical trial.”
“With today’s actions, state guidance is now clear that practitioners will have the flexibility to make the decision to treat patients with off-label prescriptions if they determine that it may help the patient, it is something the patient would like to try and [the patient] provides informed consent to try. Florida has always believed in providing all possible treatment options to health care providers and led efforts to make monoclonal antibody treatments statewide,” DeSantis’ office said in a statement. (Related: Brandon hands Americans a death sentence by restricting COVID-19 medications.)