SRES369-119

Designating August 21, 2025, as Fentanyl Prevention and Awareness Day.

119th Congress Introduced Aug 2, 2025

Analysis under review: This bill has generated analysis that may be too generic or incomplete. Clause-level evidence remains available below.

Summary

What This Bill Does

This bill, Designating August 21, 2025, as Fentanyl Prevention and Awareness Day., changes federal law or congressional policy affecting health care providers and patients. The main policy domain is Healthcare, Transportation, Criminal Justice.

Who Benefits and How

health care providers and patients may benefit from new authority, funding, eligibility, regulatory clarity, or reduced risk created by the bill.

Who Bears the Burden and How

federal implementing agencies, health care providers and patients may take on implementation duties, reporting obligations, compliance costs, or oversight responsibilities.

Key Provisions

  • Section S1: That the Senate— designates August 21, 2025, as Fentanyl Prevention and Awareness Day; encourages the people of the United States to promote prevention of the...

Evidence Chain:

This summary is generated from the full bill text using AI analysis. Expand "Detailed Analysis" below for identified beneficiaries/burden bearers.

At a Glance

What This Bill Does

This bill, Designating August 21, 2025, as Fentanyl Prevention and Awareness Day., changes federal law or congressional policy affecting health care providers and patients.

Key Policy Areas

Healthcare, Transportation, Criminal Justice

Primary Purpose

This bill, Designating August 21, 2025, as Fentanyl Prevention and Awareness Day., changes federal law or congressional policy affecting health care providers and patients.

Policy Domains

Healthcare Transportation Criminal Justice

Whole bill

Identified Gains
Contextual inference, no direct clause citation
  • health care providers and patients
Model: codex-gpt-5 | Version: bill_summary_v2 | Source: ats

Contextual inference, no direct clause citation

Identified Costs
Contextual inference, no direct clause citation
  • federal implementing agencies
  • health care providers and patients
Model: codex-gpt-5 | Version: bill_summary_v2 | Source: ats

Contextual inference, no direct clause citation

Legislative Progress

Aug 2, 2025

Mr. Grassley (for himself and Mrs. Shaheen) submitted the following …

Bill Structure & Actor Mappings

Who is "The Secretary" in each section?

Domains
Healthcare Transportation Criminal Justice
Actor Mappings
"federal_implementing_agencies"
→ Federal agencies assigned duties by the bill

We use a combination of our own taxonomy and classification in addition to large language models to assess meaning and potential beneficiaries. High confidence means strong textual evidence. Always verify with the original bill text.

Learn more about our methodology