WeVote

Bill

Bill

HR 7352

PASTEUR Act of 2026

119th Congress Introduced by Jake Auchincloss and 23 co-sponsors

HR 7352 strengthens U.S. pandemic preparedness by expanding disease surveillance, testing infrastructure, and emergency response coordination across federal health agencies.

Introduced in House
0
WeVote Research Nonpartisan
Bill Summary · HR 7352

Legislative bill overview

The PASTEUR Act of 2026 establishes a framework to accelerate pandemic preparedness and response capabilities through enhanced surveillance, testing, and emergency response protocols. The bill, sponsored by a bipartisan group of legislators, aims to strengthen the nation's ability to detect, monitor, and respond to emerging infectious disease threats before they become widespread public health crises.

Why is this important

Pandemic preparedness has become a central policy concern following COVID-19, with significant implications for public health infrastructure, healthcare system resilience, and economic stability. The bill's provisions could reshape how federal agencies coordinate disease monitoring and emergency response, affecting everything from hospital readiness to vaccine development timelines and funding priorities.

Potential points of contention

  • Cost and fiscal burden: Congressional Budget Office analysis will determine whether the bill's surveillance and response infrastructure requires significant new federal spending or reallocation of existing public health budgets
  • Federal vs. state authority: Questions about how federal pandemic response mandates interact with state and local public health autonomy, particularly regarding testing requirements and emergency declarations
  • Surveillance scope and privacy: Balancing enhanced disease tracking systems with data privacy concerns, including how patient information is collected, stored, and shared across agencies

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

Sign in to ask a question.