In the 104th Congress several related bills were introduced.
The Genetic Privacy and Nondiscrimination Act of 1996, : Sen. Mark Hatfield and : Rep. Clifford Stearns
The Genetic Fairness Act of 1996, : Sen. Dianne Feinstein
The Genetic Information Nondiscrimination in Health Insurance Act of 1995, : Rep. Louise Slaughter and : Sen. Olympia Snowe
Genetic Confidentiality and Nondiscrimination Act of 1996, : Sen. Pete Domenici
In 1997, the was formed by several patient and civil rights groups to spearhead genetic nondiscrimination legislation on Capitol Hill. The CGF became the primary non-governmental driver of Federal genetic non-discrimination legislation. In 2003, GINA was introduced as, by Louise Slaughter, D-NY, and as by Senator Snowe, R-ME. In 2005, it was proposed as by Representative Biggert, R-IL, and as by Senator Snowe, R-ME. The Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act of 2007 was introduced into the United States House of Representatives as by Representatives Slaughter, Biggert, Eshoo, and Walden. It passed the House by a 420 - 9 - 3 vote on April 25, 2007.
Final legislation
The same bill was introduced into the United States Senate as by Senators Olympia Snowe, Ted Kennedy, Mike Enzi, and Christopher Dodd. On April 24, 2008, the Senate approved the bill 95-0, with five Senators not voting. It had been subject of a "Secret hold" placed by Tom Coburn, Republican U.S. senator from Oklahoma. The bill was then sent back to the House of Representatives and passed 414–16–1 on May 1, 2008. President George W. Bush signed the bill into law on May 21, 2008. The text of the .
Regulation
On May 17, 2016, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission amended various GINA regulations providing further clarification on acceptable workplace wellness programs. The new guidelines are effective on July 16, 2016. The new amendments require that employee wellness programs are voluntary; employers cannot deny health care coverage for non participation, or take adverse employment actions against or coerce employees who do not participate in wellness programs. Additionally, the new GINA regulations cover spousal participation in wellness programs and employers may not ask employees or covered dependents to agree to permit the sale of their genetic information in exchange for participation in wellness plans.
Debate during consideration
Arguments for
Along with an of the topic, the NIHNational Human Genome Research Institute that "NHGRI believes that legislation that gives comprehensive protection against all forms of genetic discrimination is necessary to ensure that biomedical research continues to advance. Similarly, it believes that such legislation is necessary so that patients are comfortable availing themselves to genetic diagnostic tests." This point of view thus regards GINA as important for the advancement of personalized medicine. The Coalition for Genetic Fairness presents some arguments for genetic nondiscrimination. As of 2007, their argument makes the claim that because all humans have genetic anomalies, this would prevent them from accessing medication and health insurance. The coalition also cites the potential for misuse of genetic information. The GINA legislation has historically received support from the majority of both Democrats and Republicans, as evidenced by the 420-3 vote in 2007 by the House of Representatives.
Arguments against
The National Association of Manufacturers, the National Retail Federation, the Society for Human Resource Management, the United States Chamber of Commerce, and other members of the Genetic Information Nondiscrimination in Employment Coalition say the proposed legislation is overly broad and are concerned the bills would do little to rectify inconsistent state laws and hence might increase frivolous litigation and/or punitive damages as a result of ambiguous record-keeping and other technical requirements. In addition, they are concerned that it would force employers to offer health plan coverage of all treatments for genetically-related conditions. Insurance industry representatives argued that they may need genetic information. Without it, more high-risk people would buy insurance, causing rate unfairness.
Limitations and calls for extension
While GINA has been cited as a strong step forward, some say that the legislation does not go far enough in enabling personal control over genetic testing results. The law does not cover life, disability, or long-term care insurance, which may cause some reluctance to get tested. Some legal scholars have called for the addition of a "disparate impact" theory of action to strengthen GINA as a law.
2017 proposal to reduce protection
In 2017, HR 1313 was introduced which would have let employers demand workers' genetic test results. The bill was not enacted.