SECTION 1.
(a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(1) There is an increasing female population in prisons and jails.
(2) While no system is perfect in responding to the medical conditions of pregnancy, correctional facilities and county jails are particularly ill-equipped to do so.
(3) During a criminal case involving a pregnant or postpartum defendant, the physical and mental health needs of the pregnant defendant or the postpartum defendant and newborn must be considered at all stages of the proceeding as a matter of community health and safety.
(4) Timely attention to medical conditions and mental health during the perinatal period can improve health and welfare for multiple generations of a family unit.
(5) Pregnancy is a time-sensitive process that has many potential outcomes and variations. A pregnant person may feel healthy and experience no complications. A pregnant person may also experience sudden, harmful medical conditions, such as preeclampsia or placental abruption, or develop complex medical conditions that result in the early termination of a pregnancy or threaten the life of the pregnant person, such as an ectopic pregnancy. At any stage of the perinatal period, a situation can occur that causes long-term physical and mental health trauma for the pregnant person.
(6) Criminal proceedings are not responsive to the timeline or complexity of the perinatal period.
(7) When a substance use disorder intersects with a pregnancy, it is best handled as a health condition. Increasing the time a pregnant person with a substance use disorder is in a correctional facility or county jail is counter to public health and may drive the pregnant person away from medical care and support services.
(8) The end of the pregnancy does not immediately terminate the effects of the pregnancy on the person who was pregnant.
(9) The postpartum period is an essential timeframe for both the person who gave birth and the newborn. It is an opportunity for the newborn to do both of the following:
(A) Develop healthy physiologic responses.
(B) Benefit from the attachment and bonding that occurs during this period.
(10) Bonding between a newborn and parent during the postpartum period can improve conditions for other children and care providers in the same family unit and prevent child abuse and neglect.
(11) Bonding between a newborn and a parent can improve the overall health of the newborn and the parent and may prevent or reduce long-term health risks that may be increased by separating the newborn from the parent. For example:
(A) A postpartum person who does not breastfeed or chestfeed a newborn may have an increased likelihood of premenopausal breast cancer, ovarian cancer, or type 2 diabetes.
(B) A newborn who is not breastfed or chestfed may have an increased likelihood of childhood obesity, asthma, type 1 or type 2 diabetes, leukemia, or sudden infant death syndrome.
(C) A child who is separated from a parent may experience stress hormones, which may lead to difficulty sleeping, developmental regression, heart disease, hypertension, obesity, diabetes, or decreased lifespan. A newborn who is separated from a parent may also experience permanent architectural changes in the brain, including a lower intelligence quotient or an increased likelihood of depression, suicidal ideation, or addiction to alcohol or gambling.
(b) The Legislature finds, therefore, that all alternatives to prosecution, commitment, and incarceration of a pregnant or postpartum person must be considered, including a stay of criminal proceedings or sentencing to reduce the likelihood of negative health and social outcomes for the parent, newborn child, and community.
(c) The Legislature declares that the definitions in Section 1565.1 of the Penal Code added by this act are from the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the National Institutes of Health.