Tyler’s Law would require hospitals, medical examiner offices, and coroner offices to report certain pediatric death- or serious injury-related incidents to the Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC). The reporting is triggered when the incident involves a child and is associated with a children's product or a durable infant or toddler product, and the hospital or office was involved in the care or handling of the case. For hospitals, the report must include detailed incident information, the product involved (with its code), child demographics, the hospital’s role in care, any involvement of alcohol, drugs, or fire, and related hospital reports, with a 7-day deadline after the hospital’s determination. Similar reporting requirements apply to medical examiner and coroner offices, with slightly different content (including the cause of death and treatment details). The bill also amends Medicare participation rules to require hospitals to comply with these reporting duties. Noncompliance by medical examiner or coroner offices could make them ineligible for a specific DOJ accreditation grant in the following fiscal year. The law would apply to incidents occurring 180 days after enactment. The purpose is to improve federal data collection on product-related pediatric harm so CPSC can monitor risks from children’s products and take appropriate safety actions.