1. Home
  2. >
  3. Georgia legislative update

Tag: Georgia legislative update

Legislative Update: Week 3

Image of the Georgia capitol

Expanding Pharmacy Access to HIV Prevention Medications

On Wednesday, January 28, the House Health Committee passed a substitute version of Senate Bill 195, which would allow Georgia pharmacists to dispense pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) and post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP) for HIV prevention without requiring a separate doctor’s prescription. If passed, pharmacists would operate under a statewide protocol developed by the Georgia Board of Pharmacy, with oversight from a Georgia-based physician.

Why this matters: PrEP is a daily medication that reduces HIV transmission risk by up to 99%, while PEP is a 28-day treatment that must start within 72 hours of potential exposure. Georgia has the highest HIV diagnosis rate in the nation at 23.1 per 100,000 residents, more than double the national average, and metro Atlanta ranks third nationally for new HIV cases, according to the CDC.

The substitute version passed on Wednesday includes new requirements compared to the bill that passed committee unanimously last year:

  • Both supervising physicians and pharmacists must reside in Georgia;
  • Pharmacists must complete approved training and maintain Basic Cardiac Life Support (BCLS) certification and liability insurance;
  • Patients must have an in-person visit and remain for 15-minute post-administration monitoring; and
  • Pharmacists must notify the patient’s primary care provider within 72 hours.

Potential concerns: While framed as patient safety measures, these amendments may limit pharmacist participation and patient access. The in-state residency requirement excludes telehealth-based protocols used in other states, training and insurance requirements add costs that may discourage participation, and the primary care notification requirement could deter individuals seeking confidential services.

GHF supports SB 195 as a meaningful step toward expanding access to HIV prevention in Georgia. Monitoring implementation will be important: if limited pharmacist participation results from the additional requirements, this data could support future amendments to strengthen access while maintaining appropriate safeguards.

(more…)

Tags:

Legislative Update: Week 2

Georgia State Capitol building with gold dome against blue sky

Week 2: Budget Hearings Reveal Funding Priorities as Affordability Challenge Goes Unaddressed

Governor Brian Kemp released his Amended Year 2026 (AY26) and Fiscal Year 2027 (FY27) budget proposals on January 14, 2026, officially beginning Georgia’s appropriations process for the 2026 legislative session.

Last week, state agency leaders presented their budget requests during joint appropriations hearings, setting the stage for House and Senate committees to craft their own versions of the budget over the coming weeks.

(more…)

Tags:

Legislative Update: Week 1

Georgia State Capitol building with gold dome against blue sky

The 2026 Georgia Legislative Session Is Here

On Monday, January 13th, the Georgia General Assembly convened for the second year of the state’s two-year legislative cycle. This session gives lawmakers another opportunity to advance bills introduced last year that didn’t cross the finish line, as well as introduce new legislation addressing issues affecting Georgians’ health and well-being.

As lawmakers returned to the Capitol, they faced a fundamentally altered health care landscape following the passage of H.R. 1 (the One Big Beautiful Bill Act) by Congress and President Trump in July 2025. Steeply higher health insurance premiums strain family budgets and push more Georgians toward becoming uninsured. Georgia Access has already lost more than 190,000 enrollees in the first phase of 2026 enrollment.

According to new projections from the Georgia Health Initiative, the combined effects of H.R. 1’s changes to both marketplace operations and Medicaid funding, and the subsequent loss of premium subsidies could leave nearly 500,000 Georgians uninsured by 2034, drive $10.5 billion in uncompensated care costs, and result in $51.5 billion in lost health care provider revenue over the next decade.

At the same time, new federal restrictions on state provider taxes and state-directed payments are constraining the financing tools Georgia has historically relied on to fund its share of Medicaid costs.

So far, lawmakers have made few public comments about how they plan to grapple with these challenges in the 2026 legislative session.

(more…)

Tags:

Stay Connected

Sign up to receive updates from GHF!
Join

GHF In The News

Jan 23, 2026
State lawmakers talk budget priorities: What’s on the table for Georgia’s health care
Sofi Gratas

Department heads across state agencies began outlining their spending priorities this week in joint budgetary hearings hosted by the Georgia Senate and General Assembly. During the hearings, department heads broke down…

Archive