(a) The California Initiative to Advance Precision Medicine is hereby established in the California Health and Human Services Agency. In establishing the initiative, the California Health and Human Services Agency shall incorporate agreements and partnerships regarding precision medicine entered into prior to January 1, 2016. (b) (1) The California Health and Human Services Agency shall develop, implement, and evaluate demonstration or nondemonstration projects on precision medicine in collaboration with public, nonprofit, and private entities. A demonstration project may focus on one or more disease areas or a subset of a population, and an award of funds under any appropriation of funds to the office for precision medicine may be based on criteria that include, but are not limited to, the following: (A) The potential for tangible benefit to patients within two to five years, including the likelihood that the study will have an immediate impact on patients. (B) The prospects of preventing or alleviating the impact of a pandemic through pathways including, but not limited to, tracking of emerging pathogens, early infectious disease outbreak detection, rapid outbreak response, and transmission reduction. (C) The depth and breadth of data available in the disease focus areas across institutions. (D) The prospects for efficient and effective data integration and analysis. (E) The expertise of potential team members. (F) The resources available for the project outside of the initiative, including the potential for leveraging nonstate funding. (G) The clinical and commercial potential of the project. (H) The potential to reduce health disparities. (I) The potential to scale and leverage multiple electronic health records systems. (J) The potential to develop the use of tools, measurements, and data, including publicly generated and available data. (2) A demonstration project that is selected by the California Health and Human Services Agency shall advance greater understanding in at least one of the following areas, or in another area that is determined by the California Health and Human Services Agency to be necessary to advance precision medicine: (A) The application of precision medicine to specific disease areas. (B) The feasibility of the technology in preventing, mitigating, or monitoring pandemics or other large-scale disease outbreaks. (C) The challenges of system interoperability. (D) Economic analysis. (E) Standards for sharing data or protocols across institutions. (F) The federal and state regulatory environment. (G) The clinical environment. (H) Challenges relating to data, tools, and infrastructure. (I) The protection of privacy and personal health information. (J) The potential for reducing health disparities. (K) Methods and protocols for patient engagement. (3) The California Health and Human Services Agency shall develop concrete metrics and goals for demonstration projects, monitor their progress, and comprehensively evaluate projects upon completion. (4) (A) The California Health and Human Services Agency shall annually submit a report to the Legislature that provides an update of the demonstration projects selected. Upon completion of a demonstration project, the California Health and Human Services Agency shall submit an evaluation of the demonstration project to the Legislature. A demonstration project is deemed complete when it has completed the agreed upon tasks and deliverables, and the project funding has been completed. (B) A written report made pursuant to subparagraph (A) shall be made in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code. (c) The California Health and Human Services Agency shall develop an inventory of precision medicine assets, including projects, data sets, and experts. In developing the inventory, the California Health and Human Services Agency shall assemble knowledge across broad disease areas. The California Health and Human Services Agency shall use the inventory to inform str
‹ Prev All California sections Next ›
Lexace provides legal information, not legal advice, and no attorney–client relationship is created. Statute text is provided for general information and may not reflect the most recent amendments; verify against the official state code.