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April 14, 2025 - Introduced by Senator James, cosponsored by Representatives Moses, Callahan, Snyder, O'Connor and Mursau. Referred to Committee on Health.
SB192,1,4
1An Act to amend 48.396 (1), 48.396 (2) (a), 48.78 (2) (a), 48.981 (7) (a) 15.,
2938.396 (1) (a), 938.396 (2) (a) and 938.78 (2) (a); to create 51.30 (4) (b) 29.,
3146.82 (2) (d), 250.22 and 961.385 (2) (cm) 5. of the statutes; relating to:
4fatality review teams and granting rule-making authority.
Analysis by the Legislative Reference Bureau
This bill establishes fatality review teams under state law. Current law does not address fatality review teams, though several types of such teams currently exist in Wisconsin based on voluntary efforts primarily organized by counties, with state-level technical assistance available for certain types of teams.
Under the bill, a fatality review team is defined as a multidisciplinary and multiagency team reviewing one or more types of death among children or adults and developing recommendations to prevent future deaths of similar circumstances. The bill generally governs a teams responsibilities, ability to access certain records, confidentiality requirements, and disclosure of information.
Duties and authority of the Department of Health Services
Under the bill, the Department of Health Services must establish a fatality review program comprised of local fatality review teams established at the option of a municipality, a county, a local health department, or a tribal health department, or a combination of these entities. The bill also authorizes, but does not require, DHS to create state fatality review teams.
The bill requires DHS to perform various duties, in consultation with other state agencies as appropriate, such as: 1) facilitate local team development; 2) identify training needs and make available training resources; 3) provide technical assistance and support; 4) in the absence of a local team or upon request, assign review of deaths to a state fatality review team, if established; 5) educate the public on causes and recommendations for prevention of reviewable deaths; and 6) provide information to the legislature, state agencies, and local communities on the need for modifications to law, policy, or practice. The bill allows DHS to contract with an entity to perform any of its duties under the bill.
Under the bill, DHS or its contracted entity must create and make available to fatality review teams a confidentiality agreement for use by team members to ensure confidentiality consistent with the bills provisions. The bill requires DHS to promulgate administrative rules to develop and implement a standardized form for review of suicide deaths, and allows DHS to promulgate rules to develop and implement standardized forms for other types of reviewable deaths. The bill further grants general rule-making authority to DHS to implement the bills provisions.
Fatality review teams
The bill contains general provisions governing any type of fatality review team. The bill identifies examples of the types of deaths that may constitute a reviewable death, including overdose, suicide, maternal death occurring during or within a year of a pregnancy, or any unexpected or unintentional death of a child, among others. The bill also provides a non-exhaustive list of potential team members.
Under the bill, a fatality review team has the purpose of gathering information about reviewable deaths to examine risk factors and understand how deaths may be prevented, through identifying recommendations for cross-sector, system-level policy and practice changes, and promoting cooperation and coordination among the agencies involved in understanding causes of reviewable deaths or in providing services to surviving family members.
If established, each fatality review team must: 1) establish and implement team protocols; 2) collect and maintain data; 3) create strategies and track implementation of prevention recommendations; and 4) evaluate the teams process, interagency collaboration, and implementation of recommendations. The bill requires teams to assign, as appropriate for a specific review, a team member to complete any standardized form developed by DHS, and to enter data regarding each reviewable death into any secure database designated by DHS or its contracted entity.
Record access and confidentiality
The bill authorizes a fatality review team to access records from a variety of sources, such as certain state agencies, law enforcement, medical examiners and coroners, health care providers, social or human service agencies, schools, and the prescription drug monitoring program, among others, subject to certain restrictions under the bill and current law.
Information and records provided to or created by a fatality review team are confidential, subject to limited exceptions provided under the bill, and are not subject to Wisconsins public records laws. The bill requires team members, and other individuals invited to attend a team meeting, to sign a confidentiality agreement before participating in or attending a fatality review team meeting. The bill prohibits team members, persons in attendance at team meetings, and others providing records to teams from testifying in any civil or criminal action as to the information specifically obtained through participation in the teams meeting.
The bill authorizes disclosure of information if such disclosure serves a teams purpose and certain other conditions are met, such as the information does not allow for identification of individuals and does not contain conclusory information attributing fault. The bill further specifies that a teams information and records are not subject to discovery or subpoena, or admissible as evidence, in a civil or criminal action, unless obtained independently from a teams review. The bill also provides that a person participating in a fatality review team is immune from civil or criminal liability for any good faith act or omission in connection with providing information or recommendations.
The bill exempts fatality review team meetings from Wisconsins open meetings law. The bill allows for public meetings to share summary findings and recommendations, but limits the types of information that may be disclosed in public meetings.
For further information see the state and local fiscal estimate, which will be printed as an appendix to this bill.
The people of the state of Wisconsin, represented in senate and assembly, do enact as follows:
SB192,1
1Section 1. 48.396 (1) of the statutes is amended to read:
SB192,3,21248.396 (1) Law enforcement officers records of children shall be kept separate
3from records of adults. Law enforcement officers records of the adult expectant
4mothers of unborn children shall be kept separate from records of other adults. Law
5enforcement officers records of children and the adult expectant mothers of unborn
6children shall not be open to inspection or their contents disclosed except under sub.

1(1b), (1d), (5), or (6) or s. 48.293 or, 250.22, or 938.396 (2m) (c) 1p. or by order of the
2court. This subsection does not apply to the representatives of newspapers or other
3reporters of news who wish to obtain information for the purpose of reporting news
4without revealing the identity of the child or adult expectant mother involved, to
5the confidential exchange of information between the police and officials of the
6public or private school attended by the child or other law enforcement or social
7welfare agencies, or to children 10 years of age or older who are subject to the
8jurisdiction of the court of criminal jurisdiction. A public school official who obtains
9information under this subsection shall keep the information confidential as
10required under s. 118.125, and a private school official who obtains information
11under this subsection shall keep the information confidential in the same manner
12as is required of a public school official under s. 118.125. This subsection does not
13apply to the confidential exchange of information between the police and officials of
14the tribal school attended by the child if the police determine that enforceable
15protections are provided by a tribal school policy or tribal law that requires tribal
16school officials to keep the information confidential in a manner at least as
17stringent as is required of a public school official under s. 118.125. A law
18enforcement agency that obtains information under this subsection shall keep the
19information confidential as required under this subsection and s. 938.396 (1) (a). A
20social welfare agency that obtains information under this subsection shall keep the
21information confidential as required under ss. 48.78 and 938.78.
SB192,222Section 2. 48.396 (2) (a) of the statutes is amended to read:
SB192,4,62348.396 (2) (a) Records of the court assigned to exercise jurisdiction under this

1chapter and ch. 938 and of courts exercising jurisdiction under s. 48.16 shall be
2entered in books or deposited in files kept for that purpose only. Those records shall
3not be open to inspection or their contents disclosed except by order of the court
4assigned to exercise jurisdiction under this chapter and ch. 938 or as required or
5permitted under this subsection, sub. (3) (b) or (c) 1g., 1m., or 1r. or (6), or s. 48.375
6(7) (e) or 250.22.
SB192,37Section 3. 48.78 (2) (a) of the statutes is amended to read:
SB192,4,13848.78 (2) (a) No agency may make available for inspection or disclose the
9contents of any record kept or information received about an individual who is or
10was in its care or legal custody, except as provided under sub. (2m) or s. 48.371,
1148.38 (5) (b) or (d) or (5m) (d), 48.396 (3) (bm) or (c) 1r., 48.432, 48.433, 48.48 (17)
12(bm), 48.57 (2m), 48.66 (6), 48.93, 48.981 (7), 250.22, 938.396 (2m) (c) 1r., 938.51, or
13938.78 or by order of the court.
SB192,414Section 4. 48.981 (7) (a) 15. of the statutes is amended to read:
SB192,4,181548.981 (7) (a) 15. A fatality review team established under s. 250.22, a child
16fatality review team recognized by the county department, or, in a county having a
17population of 750,000 or more, the department or a licensed child welfare agency
18under contract with the department.
SB192,519Section 5. 51.30 (4) (b) 29. of the statutes is created to read:
SB192,4,222051.30 (4) (b) 29. To an authorized member of a fatality review team
21established under s. 250.22. The recipient of any treatment records under this
22subdivision shall keep the records confidential in accordance with s. 250.22.
SB192,623Section 6. 146.82 (2) (d) of the statutes is created to read:
SB192,5,7
1146.82 (2) (d) Notwithstanding sub. (1), patient health care records may be
2released, upon request, to a fatality review team, as defined in s. 250.22 (1) (a),
3acting as a public health authority for the purpose of reviewing a death as described
4under s. 250.22. Records that may be released under this paragraph for the public
5health purposes under s. 250.22 may be disclosed to a fatality review team only in
6accordance with that section, and the recipient of any records released shall keep
7the records confidential.
SB192,78Section 7. 250.22 of the statutes is created to read:
SB192,5,99250.22 Fatality review teams. (1) Definitions. In this section:
SB192,5,1210(a) Fatality review team means a multidisciplinary and multiagency team
11examining one or more types of reviewable death among children or adults and
12developing recommendations to prevent future deaths of similar circumstances.
SB192,5,1613(b) Local fatality review team means a fatality review team that examines
14reviewable deaths from specific municipalities or counties. A local fatality review
15team may include a team formed by a collaboration of two or more municipalities,
16counties, local health departments, or tribal health departments.
SB192,5,1717(c) Municipality means a city, village, or town.
SB192,5,1918(d) State fatality review team means a fatality review team that examines
19reviewable deaths of residents across the state.
SB192,5,2020(e) 1. Reviewable death includes any of the following types of deaths:
SB192,5,2121a. Suicide.
SB192,5,2322b. Homicide or death involving domestic violence, intimate partner violence,
23or homicide related to community violence.
SB192,6,1
1c. Motor vehicle incident.
SB192,6,22d. Overdose death.
SB192,6,33e. Child abuse or neglect.
SB192,6,44f. Stillbirth.
SB192,6,55g. Fetal death or infant death.
SB192,6,66h. A maternal death occurring during or within a year of a pregnancy.
SB192,6,77i. Any unexpected or unintentional death of a child.
SB192,6,982. Reviewable death does not include a death subject to review under s.
9175.47.
SB192,6,1410(2) Department duties and authority. (a) The department shall establish
11a fatality review program comprised of local fatality review teams established at the
12option of a municipality, a county, a local health department, a tribal health
13department, or a combination of these entities. The department may also establish
14a state fatality review team.
SB192,6,1715(b) In coordination with the department of justice, the department of children
16and families, or other state agencies, as appropriate, the department shall do all of
17the following:
SB192,6,18181. Facilitate the development of local fatality review teams under this section.
SB192,6,21192. Identify training needs and make training resources available to local
20fatality review teams, statewide professional organizations, advocacy groups, and
21others.
SB192,6,23223. Respond to requests from local fatality review teams and provide any
23necessary technical assistance and support.
SB192,7,3
14. Upon request of a local fatality review team, or if a county does not have a
2fatality review team, assign review of deaths to a state fatality review team, if
3established.
SB192,7,545. Provide information to the legislature, state agencies, and local
5communities on the need for modifications to law, policy, or practice.
SB192,7,76(c) The department may enter into a contract with an entity to perform any of
7the departments duties under this section.
SB192,7,128(d) The department shall promulgate rules to develop and implement a
9standardized form for use by fatality review teams when reviewing suicide deaths.
10The department may promulgate rules to develop and implement standardized
11forms for use by fatality review teams when reviewing other types of reviewable
12deaths.
SB192,7,1513(e) The department may educate the public regarding the incidence and
14causes of reviewable deaths, including recommendations that identify needed policy
15changes or action to prevent future deaths.
SB192,7,1816(f) The department or its contracted entity shall create and make available to
17fatality review teams a confidentiality agreement to be used by fatality review team
18members to ensure confidentiality consistent with this section.
SB192,7,1919(g) The department may promulgate rules to implement this section.
SB192,8,220(3) Fatality review teams; purpose, duties, membership, and record
21access. (a) Fatality review teams shall have the purpose of gathering information
22concerning reviewable deaths to examine the risk factors and circumstances

1leading to reviewable deaths and understand how the deaths could have been
2prevented through all of the following:
SB192,8,531. Identification of recommendations for cross-sector, system-level policy and
4practice changes to address the identified risk factors and prevent future
5reviewable deaths.
SB192,8,862. Promotion of cooperation and coordination among agencies involved in
7understanding the causes of reviewable deaths or in providing services to surviving
8family members.
SB192,8,99(b) 1. If established, each fatality review team shall do all of the following:
SB192,8,1310a. Establish and implement a protocol for the fatality review team and, to the
11extent the department or its contracted entity is involved with the type of review
12undertaken, consult with the department or its contracted entity regarding the
13protocol.
SB192,8,1514b. Collect and maintain data to the extent requested by the department or its
15contracted entity for the type of review undertaken.
SB192,8,1816c. Create strategies and make and track the implementation of
17recommendations for the prevention and reduction of reviewable deaths in the area
18served by the fatality review team.
SB192,8,2119d. Evaluate the fatality review teams review process, interagency
20collaboration, and development and implementation of recommendations to ensure
21adherence to the purpose described in par. (a).
SB192,9,2222. A fatality review team may address a reviewable death that occurred in the
23area served by the fatality review team or that relates to a resident of the area

1served by the fatality review team if the incident or death occurred elsewhere in the
2state.
SB192,9,63(c) When conducting a fatality review under this section, a fatality review
4team may be provided with information from the records held by any of the
5following, if the records pertain to a person or incident within the scope of the
6review:
SB192,9,771. The department of health services or a local health department.
SB192,9,882. The department of children and families.
SB192,9,993. A law enforcement agency.
SB192,9,10104. A medical examiner or coroner.
SB192,9,11115. A treatment provider for substance use or mental health.
SB192,9,12126. A hospital or health care provider.
SB192,9,13137. Emergency medical services, including a fire department.
SB192,9,14148. A Women, Infants, and Children program under s. 253.06.
SB192,9,15159. The department of corrections.
SB192,9,161610. A district attorneys office.
SB192,9,171711. A circuit or municipal court.
SB192,9,181812. A social or human services agency.
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