Massachusetts Lawmakers Hear Urgent Case for Celiac Disease Diagnosis and School Meal Reform

At the Massachusetts State House, advocates made the case for two bills that could transform celiac diagnosis and school meal access across the Commonwealth.

Massachusetts State House building exterior with columns

On May 13, celiac disease advocates, clinicians, and families gathered at the Massachusetts State House to make a case that could reshape how the Commonwealth diagnoses celiac disease and feeds students who live with it. The Celiac Disease Foundation brought together lawmakers and community members to discuss two bills: the CAPE Act and the SNACCK Act.

These bills address two of the most persistent challenges celiac families face—getting diagnosed in the first place, and then navigating school cafeterias once you are.

What This Means for You

If you live in Massachusetts and have a child with celiac disease, these bills could directly impact your family. The SNACCK Act would require schools—from elementary through college—to provide gluten-free meal options that are safe from cross-contact. No more packing lunch every single day for twelve years of schooling. No more watching your child sit at the cafeteria table with a brown bag while everyone else eats hot lunch.

The CAPE Act focuses on the diagnostic gap. Right now, an estimated 83% of Americans with celiac disease remain undiagnosed. They’re walking around with active intestinal damage, increased risk of complications, and no idea what’s causing their symptoms. This bill would push for earlier screening and better diagnostic protocols across the Commonwealth.

For families like mine, these bills represent something we’ve needed for years: recognition that celiac disease isn’t a lifestyle preference or a minor inconvenience. It’s a serious autoimmune condition that requires institutional support, not just individual vigilance.

The Policy Leadership Awards

The Foundation honored two Massachusetts legislators who have championed these efforts. Representative Michelle Badger and Senator Joan Lovely received the annual Celiac Disease Policy Leadership Awards for their work co-sponsoring and advancing both bills.

Legislative champions matter. When lawmakers understand celiac disease—not as a diet trend but as a medical condition requiring systemic accommodation—they can move policy forward. These awards recognize legislators who’ve done exactly that.

Why School Meal Access Matters

The gluten-free diet is the only treatment for celiac disease. No medication, no cheat days, no small amounts being okay. Complete gluten avoidance, every meal, every day. When schools don’t provide safe options, the burden falls entirely on families.

I pack my son’s lunch every morning. I’ve done it for years. It’s not just inconvenient—it’s isolating for him. School meals are social. They’re about sitting with friends and feeling normal. When you’re the only kid who can’t eat what everyone else eats, you feel that difference every single day.

The SNACCK Act would change this. It would require schools to provide gluten-free options that meet the same safety standards we expect at home: separate preparation areas, dedicated equipment, staff training on cross-contact prevention. Students with celiac disease would finally have the same cafeteria access as their peers.

This isn’t about accommodation as a favor. It’s about equity. Students with peanut allergies have protocols. Students with diabetes have support. Students with celiac disease deserve the same institutional recognition and safety measures.

The Diagnostic Crisis

The CAPE Act tackles an even more fundamental problem: most people with celiac disease don’t know they have it. Current estimates suggest that for every person diagnosed, five or six others remain unidentified. They’re experiencing symptoms—chronic fatigue, anemia, digestive issues, brain fog—and getting treated for individual symptoms rather than the underlying autoimmune condition.

Earlier this year we covered the federal advocacy efforts at the 2026 Advocacy Summit, where celiac community members pushed for national policy reform. The Massachusetts effort represents state-level action on parallel issues: diagnosis and access.

Delayed diagnosis means years of active intestinal damage. It means increased risk of other autoimmune conditions, osteoporosis, and in rare cases, intestinal lymphoma. Every year someone goes undiagnosed, the risk compounds.

The CAPE Act would establish screening protocols and diagnostic pathways that catch celiac disease earlier. That means fewer people suffering for years with unexplained symptoms. It means fewer emergency diagnoses after serious complications develop. It means children getting diagnosed before they’ve spent years not absorbing nutrients properly during critical growth periods.

Building Momentum Beyond Massachusetts

Massachusetts isn’t the only state where celiac families are pushing for policy reform. The conversation is growing. We’ve seen increased federal attention to celiac disease research funding—federal research dollars are advancing diagnostic tools and potential therapies—and now state legislatures are recognizing the need for practical policy changes that affect daily life.

The May 13 briefing brought together the stakeholders who need to be in the room: legislators who write the laws, clinicians who diagnose and treat celiac disease, advocates who understand the policy landscape, and families who live with these challenges every day. That combination of expertise and lived experience is what moves policy forward.

When lawmakers hear from constituents about what it’s actually like to manage celiac disease—the constant vigilance, the social isolation, the diagnostic delays—it shifts the conversation from abstract policy to concrete need.

What Happens Next

Both bills are working through the Massachusetts legislative process. Passage isn’t guaranteed. Even well-crafted bills with strong support can stall in committee, get amended beyond recognition, or fail to reach a vote.

But the May 13 briefing signals something important: celiac disease is on the legislative agenda. Lawmakers are paying attention. The community is organized and making a clear, evidence-based case for change.

For Massachusetts families, this is the moment to engage. Contact your state representatives. Share your story. Explain what safe school meals would mean for your child. Describe the diagnostic journey—how long it took, what barriers you encountered, what earlier screening might have prevented.

Policy doesn’t change because advocates make a good argument in a vacuum. It changes because constituents make it clear that real people in their districts need this.

Key Takeaways

  • The SNACCK Act would require Massachusetts schools to provide safe gluten-free meal options from elementary through college.
  • The CAPE Act addresses the diagnostic gap, with 83% of Americans with celiac disease currently undiagnosed.
  • Representative Michelle Badger and Senator Joan Lovely received Policy Leadership Awards for championing both bills.
  • The May 13 State House briefing brought together advocates, clinicians, lawmakers, and families to build support for both measures.
  • Massachusetts families can support these bills by contacting state legislators and sharing their experiences.

References

  1. Celiac Disease Foundation. (2026, May 19). Massachusetts State House Briefing Highlights Urgent Need for Celiac Disease Policy Reform. https://celiac.org/2026/05/19/ma-briefing-highlights-urgent-need-for-celiac-disease-policy-reform/

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