[Congressional Bills 119th Congress]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]
[H. Res. 1147 Introduced in House (IH)]
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119th CONGRESS
2d Session
H. RES. 1147
Recognizing the United States legacy of dismissed pain and denied
autonomy in women's health care, and affirming the Federal Government's
duty to protect individual dignity and advance patient-centered care in
women's health.
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IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
March 30, 2026
Ms. Ansari (for herself, Mrs. Beatty, Mr. Bell, Ms. Brownley, Mr.
Carter of Louisiana, Ms. Clarke of New York, Mr. Conaway, Mr. Goldman
of New York, Mrs. Grijalva, Mr. Jackson of Illinois, Mr. Johnson of
Georgia, Mr. Kennedy of New York, Mr. Krishnamoorthi, Mr. McGarvey, Ms.
Norton, Ms. Pressley, Ms. Ross, Mr. Thanedar, Ms. Tlaib, Mr. Tonko,
Mrs. Trahan, Ms. Velazquez, Ms. Williams of Georgia, and Ms. Wilson of
Florida) submitted the following resolution; which was referred to the
Committee on Energy and Commerce
_______________________________________________________________________
RESOLUTION
Recognizing the United States legacy of dismissed pain and denied
autonomy in women's health care, and affirming the Federal Government's
duty to protect individual dignity and advance patient-centered care in
women's health.
Whereas for generations, women in the United States--especially Black,
indigenous, immigrant, LGBTQ+, disabled, and low-income women--have
endured a system that too often treats their comfort as secondary, their
pain as exaggerated, and their autonomy as negotiable;
Whereas the field of gynecology, while ranked high in patient trust and
satisfaction compared to other medical disciplines, was historically
built in part on the exploitation and sterilization of Black, enslaved,
Puerto Rican, indigenous, immigrant, and disabled women without their
consent, and remains a relatively under-researched area of medicine;
Whereas this history also includes the coercive testing of contraceptive pills
on women and girls in Puerto Rico;
Whereas countless women continue to experience their pain being dismissed or
minimized, contributing to delayed diagnoses, untreated conditions, and
unnecessary physical and psychological suffering that could have been
prevented;
Whereas American history is marked by laws and medical practices that have
required spousal or State approval for women to make choices about their
own bodies and private medical decisions, like whether to access
contraception, undergo sterilization, or terminate a pregnancy;
Whereas recent escalation of rollbacks on reproductive rights, including on the
constitutional right to abortion, have only worsened access to care for
women's health conditions, endangering reproductive health outcomes and
directly causing preventable medical emergencies not seen in over half a
century; and
Whereas the future of women's health care must center justice, bodily autonomy,
and empowering patients to make informed decisions about their
reproductive, sexual, and menstrual health: Now, therefore, be it
Resolved, That the House of Representatives--
(1) recognizes the historical and ongoing injustices that
deny women the dignity, seriousness, and respect they deserve;
(2) honors the women, especially marginalized women, who
have been denied agency over their bodies and suffered due to
systemic neglect and bias;
(3) affirms the need for shared decision-making and
patient-centered approaches to gynecological and reproductive
care, including patient education, procedural transparency, and
expanded research on women's health conditions;
(4) commits to expanding access to reproductive and
gynecological health care, strengthening protections for bodily
autonomy, increasing Federal investment in women's health
research, and holding institutions accountable for bias and
harm; and
(5) emphasizes the need to end the normalization of pain
and address the implicit and structural biases within
reproductive and gynecological care.
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