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1     AN ACT concerning anatomical gifts.
 
2     Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
3 represented in the General Assembly:
4     Section 5. The Department of Public Health Powers and
5 Duties Law of the Civil Administrative Code of Illinois is
6 amended by changing Section 2310-330 as follows:
 
7     (20 ILCS 2310/2310-330)  (was 20 ILCS 2310/55.46)
8     Sec. 2310-330. Sperm and tissue bank registry; AIDS test
9 for donors; penalties.
10     (a) The Department shall establish a registry of all sperm
11 banks and tissue banks operating in this State. All sperm banks
12 and tissue banks operating in this State shall register with
13 the Department by May 1 of each year. Any person, hospital,
14 clinic, corporation, partnership, or other legal entity that
15 operates a sperm bank or tissue bank in this State and fails to
16 register with the Department pursuant to this Section commits a
17 business offense and shall be subject to a fine of $5000.
18     (b) All donors of semen for purposes of artificial
19 insemination, or donors of corneas, bones, organs, or other
20 human tissue for the purpose of injecting, transfusing, or
21 transplanting any of them in the human body, shall be tested
22 for evidence of exposure to human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)
23 and any other identified causative agent of acquired
24 immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) at the time of or after the
25 donation but prior to the semen, corneas, bones, organs, or
26 other human tissue being made available for that use. However,
27 when in the opinion of the attending physician the life of a
28 recipient of a bone, organ, or other human tissue donation
29 would be jeopardized by delays caused by testing for evidence
30 of exposure to HIV and any other causative agent of AIDS,
31 testing shall not be required.
32     (c) No person may intentionally, knowingly, recklessly, or

 

 

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1 negligently use the semen, corneas, bones, organs, or other
2 human tissue of a donor unless the requirements of subsection
3 (b) have been met. No person may intentionally, knowingly,
4 recklessly, or negligently use the semen, corneas, bones,
5 organs, or other human tissue of a donor who has tested
6 positive for exposure to HIV or any other identified causative
7 agent of AIDS. Violation of this subsection (c) shall be a
8 Class 4 felony.
9     (d) For the purposes of this Section, "human tissue" shall
10 not be construed to mean organs or whole blood or its component
11 parts.
12     For the purposes of this Section, "tissue bank" has the
13 same meaning as set forth in the Illinois Anatomical Gift Act.
14 means any facility or program that is involved in procuring,
15 furnishing, donating, processing, or distributing corneas,
16 bones, organs, or other human tissue for the purpose of
17 injecting, transfusing, or transplanting any of them in the
18 human body.
19 (Source: P.A. 91-239, eff. 1-1-00.)
20     Section 10. The School Code is amended by changing Section
21 27-23.5 as follows:
 
22     (105 ILCS 5/27-23.5)
23     Sec. 27-23.5. Organ/tissue donor and transplantation
24 programs. Each school district that maintains grades 9 and 10
25 may include in its curriculum and teach to the students of
26 either such grade one unit of instruction on organ/tissue donor
27 and transplantation programs. No student shall be required to
28 take or participate in instruction on organ/tissue donor and
29 transplantation programs if a parent or guardian files written
30 objection thereto on constitutional grounds, and refusal to
31 take or participate in such instruction on those grounds shall
32 not be reason for suspension or expulsion of a student or
33 result in any academic penalty.
34     The regional superintendent of schools in which a school

 

 

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1 district that maintains grades 9 and 10 is located shall obtain
2 and distribute make available to each the school in his or her
3 board of the district information and data that may be used by
4 the school district in developing a unit of instruction under
5 this Section. However, each school board shall determine the
6 minimum amount of instructional time that shall qualify as a
7 unit of instruction satisfying the requirements of this
8 Section.
9 (Source: P.A. 90-635, eff. 7-24-98.)
10     Section 15. The Hospital Licensing Act is amended by
11 changing Sections 6.16 and 10.4 as follows:
 
12     (210 ILCS 85/6.16)
13     Sec. 6.16. Agreement with designated organ procurement
14 agency. Each hospital licensed under this Act shall have an
15 agreement with its federally designated organ procurement
16 agency providing for notification of the organ procurement
17 agency when potential organ donors become available, as
18 required in Section 5-25 of the Illinois Anatomical Gift Act 2
19 of the Organ Donation Request Act.
20 (Source: P.A. 89-393, eff. 8-20-95.)
 
21     (210 ILCS 85/10.4)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 151.4)
22     Sec. 10.4. Medical staff privileges.
23     (a) Any hospital licensed under this Act or any hospital
24 organized under the University of Illinois Hospital Act shall,
25 prior to the granting of any medical staff privileges to an
26 applicant, or renewing a current medical staff member's
27 privileges, request of the Director of Professional Regulation
28 information concerning the licensure status and any
29 disciplinary action taken against the applicant's or medical
30 staff member's license, except for medical personnel who enter
31 a hospital to obtain organs and tissues for transplant from a
32 deceased donor in accordance with the Illinois Uniform
33 Anatomical Gift Act. The Director of Professional Regulation

 

 

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1 shall transmit, in writing and in a timely fashion, such
2 information regarding the license of the applicant or the
3 medical staff member, including the record of imposition of any
4 periods of supervision or monitoring as a result of alcohol or
5 substance abuse, as provided by Section 23 of the Medical
6 Practice Act of 1987, and such information as may have been
7 submitted to the Department indicating that the application or
8 medical staff member has been denied, or has surrendered,
9 medical staff privileges at a hospital licensed under this Act,
10 or any equivalent facility in another state or territory of the
11 United States. The Director of Professional Regulation shall
12 define by rule the period for timely response to such requests.
13     No transmittal of information by the Director of
14 Professional Regulation, under this Section shall be to other
15 than the president, chief operating officer, chief
16 administrative officer, or chief of the medical staff of a
17 hospital licensed under this Act, a hospital organized under
18 the University of Illinois Hospital Act, or a hospital operated
19 by the United States, or any of its instrumentalities. The
20 information so transmitted shall be afforded the same status as
21 is information concerning medical studies by Part 21 of Article
22 VIII of the Code of Civil Procedure, as now or hereafter
23 amended.
24     (b) All hospitals licensed under this Act, except county
25 hospitals as defined in subsection (c) of Section 15-1 of the
26 Illinois Public Aid Code, shall comply with, and the medical
27 staff bylaws of these hospitals shall include rules consistent
28 with, the provisions of this Section in granting, limiting,
29 renewing, or denying medical staff membership and clinical
30 staff privileges. Hospitals that require medical staff members
31 to possess faculty status with a specific institution of higher
32 education are not required to comply with subsection (1) below
33 when the physician does not possess faculty status.
34         (1) Minimum procedures for pre-applicants and
35     applicants for medical staff membership shall include the
36     following:

 

 

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1             (A) Written procedures relating to the acceptance
2         and processing of pre-applicants or applicants for
3         medical staff membership, which should be contained in
4         medical staff bylaws.
5             (B) Written procedures to be followed in
6         determining a pre-applicant's or an applicant's
7         qualifications for being granted medical staff
8         membership and privileges.
9             (C) Written criteria to be followed in evaluating a
10         pre-applicant's or an applicant's qualifications.
11             (D) An evaluation of a pre-applicant's or an
12         applicant's current health status and current license
13         status in Illinois.
14             (E) A written response to each pre-applicant or
15         applicant that explains the reason or reasons for any
16         adverse decision (including all reasons based in whole
17         or in part on the applicant's medical qualifications or
18         any other basis, including economic factors).
19         (2) Minimum procedures with respect to medical staff
20     and clinical privilege determinations concerning current
21     members of the medical staff shall include the following:
22             (A) A written notice of an adverse decision.
23             (B) An explanation of the reasons for an adverse
24         decision including all reasons based on the quality of
25         medical care or any other basis, including economic
26         factors.
27             (C) A statement of the medical staff member's right
28         to request a fair hearing on the adverse decision
29         before a hearing panel whose membership is mutually
30         agreed upon by the medical staff and the hospital
31         governing board. The hearing panel shall have
32         independent authority to recommend action to the
33         hospital governing board. Upon the request of the
34         medical staff member or the hospital governing board,
35         the hearing panel shall make findings concerning the
36         nature of each basis for any adverse decision

 

 

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1         recommended to and accepted by the hospital governing
2         board.
3                 (i) Nothing in this subparagraph (C) limits a
4             hospital's or medical staff's right to summarily
5             suspend, without a prior hearing, a person's
6             medical staff membership or clinical privileges if
7             the continuation of practice of a medical staff
8             member constitutes an immediate danger to the
9             public, including patients, visitors, and hospital
10             employees and staff. A fair hearing shall be
11             commenced within 15 days after the suspension and
12             completed without delay.
13                 (ii) Nothing in this subparagraph (C) limits a
14             medical staff's right to permit, in the medical
15             staff bylaws, summary suspension of membership or
16             clinical privileges in designated administrative
17             circumstances as specifically approved by the
18             medical staff. This bylaw provision must
19             specifically describe both the administrative
20             circumstance that can result in a summary
21             suspension and the length of the summary
22             suspension. The opportunity for a fair hearing is
23             required for any administrative summary
24             suspension. Any requested hearing must be
25             commenced within 15 days after the summary
26             suspension and completed without delay. Adverse
27             decisions other than suspension or other
28             restrictions on the treatment or admission of
29             patients may be imposed summarily and without a
30             hearing under designated administrative
31             circumstances as specifically provided for in the
32             medical staff bylaws as approved by the medical
33             staff.
34                 (iii) If a hospital exercises its option to
35             enter into an exclusive contract and that contract
36             results in the total or partial termination or

 

 

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1             reduction of medical staff membership or clinical
2             privileges of a current medical staff member, the
3             hospital shall provide the affected medical staff
4             member 60 days prior notice of the effect on his or
5             her medical staff membership or privileges. An
6             affected medical staff member desiring a hearing
7             under subparagraph (C) of this paragraph (2) must
8             request the hearing within 14 days after the date
9             he or she is so notified. The requested hearing
10             shall be commenced and completed (with a report and
11             recommendation to the affected medical staff
12             member, hospital governing board, and medical
13             staff) within 30 days after the date of the medical
14             staff member's request. If agreed upon by both the
15             medical staff and the hospital governing board,
16             the medical staff bylaws may provide for longer
17             time periods.
18             (D) A statement of the member's right to inspect
19         all pertinent information in the hospital's possession
20         with respect to the decision.
21             (E) A statement of the member's right to present
22         witnesses and other evidence at the hearing on the
23         decision.
24             (F) A written notice and written explanation of the
25         decision resulting from the hearing.
26             (F-5) A written notice of a final adverse decision
27         by a hospital governing board.
28             (G) Notice given 15 days before implementation of
29         an adverse medical staff membership or clinical
30         privileges decision based substantially on economic
31         factors. This notice shall be given after the medical
32         staff member exhausts all applicable procedures under
33         this Section, including item (iii) of subparagraph (C)
34         of this paragraph (2), and under the medical staff
35         bylaws in order to allow sufficient time for the
36         orderly provision of patient care.

 

 

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1             (H) Nothing in this paragraph (2) of this
2         subsection (b) limits a medical staff member's right to
3         waive, in writing, the rights provided in
4         subparagraphs (A) through (G) of this paragraph (2) of
5         this subsection (b) upon being granted the written
6         exclusive right to provide particular services at a
7         hospital, either individually or as a member of a
8         group. If an exclusive contract is signed by a
9         representative of a group of physicians, a waiver
10         contained in the contract shall apply to all members of
11         the group unless stated otherwise in the contract.
12         (3) Every adverse medical staff membership and
13     clinical privilege decision based substantially on
14     economic factors shall be reported to the Hospital
15     Licensing Board before the decision takes effect. These
16     reports shall not be disclosed in any form that reveals the
17     identity of any hospital or physician. These reports shall
18     be utilized to study the effects that hospital medical
19     staff membership and clinical privilege decisions based
20     upon economic factors have on access to care and the
21     availability of physician services. The Hospital Licensing
22     Board shall submit an initial study to the Governor and the
23     General Assembly by January 1, 1996, and subsequent reports
24     shall be submitted periodically thereafter.
25         (4) As used in this Section:
26         "Adverse decision" means a decision reducing,
27     restricting, suspending, revoking, denying, or not
28     renewing medical staff membership or clinical privileges.
29         "Economic factor" means any information or reasons for
30     decisions unrelated to quality of care or professional
31     competency.
32         "Pre-applicant" means a physician licensed to practice
33     medicine in all its branches who requests an application
34     for medical staff membership or privileges.
35         "Privilege" means permission to provide medical or
36     other patient care services and permission to use hospital

 

 

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1     resources, including equipment, facilities and personnel
2     that are necessary to effectively provide medical or other
3     patient care services. This definition shall not be
4     construed to require a hospital to acquire additional
5     equipment, facilities, or personnel to accommodate the
6     granting of privileges.
7         (5) Any amendment to medical staff bylaws required
8     because of this amendatory Act of the 91st General Assembly
9     shall be adopted on or before July 1, 2001.
10     (c) All hospitals shall consult with the medical staff
11 prior to closing membership in the entire or any portion of the
12 medical staff or a department. If the hospital closes
13 membership in the medical staff, any portion of the medical
14 staff, or the department over the objections of the medical
15 staff, then the hospital shall provide a detailed written
16 explanation for the decision to the medical staff 10 days prior
17 to the effective date of any closure. No applications need to
18 be provided when membership in the medical staff or any
19 relevant portion of the medical staff is closed.
20 (Source: P.A. 90-14, eff. 7-1-97; 90-149, eff. 1-1-98; 90-655,
21 eff. 7-30-98; 91-166, eff. 1-1-00.)
22     Section 20. The AIDS Confidentiality Act is amended by
23 changing Section 7 as follows:
 
24     (410 ILCS 305/7)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 7307)
25     Sec. 7. (a) Notwithstanding the provisions of Sections 4, 5
26 and 6 of this Act, written informed consent is not required for
27 a health care provider or health facility to perform a test
28 when the health care provider or health facility procures,
29 processes, distributes or uses a human body part donated for a
30 purpose specified under the Illinois Uniform Anatomical Gift
31 Act, or semen provided prior to the effective date of this Act
32 for the purpose of artificial insemination, and such a test is
33 necessary to assure medical acceptability of such gift or semen
34 for the purposes intended.

 

 

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1     (b) Written informed consent is not required for a health
2 care provider or health facility to perform a test when a
3 health care provider or employee of a health facility, or a
4 firefighter or an EMT-A, EMT-I or EMT-P, is involved in an
5 accidental direct skin or mucous membrane contact with the
6 blood or bodily fluids of an individual which is of a nature
7 that may transmit HIV, as determined by a physician in his
8 medical judgment. Should such test prove to be positive, the
9 patient and the health care provider, health facility employee,
10 firefighter, EMT-A, EMT-I, or EMT-P shall be provided
11 appropriate counseling consistent with this Act.
12     (c) Written informed consent is not required for a health
13 care provider or health facility to perform a test when a law
14 enforcement officer is involved in the line of duty in a direct
15 skin or mucous membrane contact with the blood or bodily fluids
16 of an individual which is of a nature that may transmit HIV, as
17 determined by a physician in his medical judgment. Should such
18 test prove to be positive, the patient shall be provided
19 appropriate counseling consistent with this Act. For purposes
20 of this subsection (c), "law enforcement officer" means any
21 person employed by the State, a county or a municipality as a
22 policeman, peace officer, auxiliary policeman, correctional
23 officer or in some like position involving the enforcement of
24 the law and protection of the public interest at the risk of
25 that person's life.
26 (Source: P.A. 86-887; 86-891; 86-1028; 87-459.)
27     Section 25. The Illinois Vehicle Code is amended by
28 changing Sections 6-110 and 12-215 as follows:
 
29     (625 ILCS 5/6-110)  (from Ch. 95 1/2, par. 6-110)
30     Sec. 6-110. Licenses issued to drivers.
31     (a) The Secretary of State shall issue to every qualifying
32 applicant a driver's license as applied for, which license
33 shall bear a distinguishing number assigned to the licensee,
34 the name, social security number, zip code, date of birth,

 

 

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1 address, and a brief description of the licensee, and a space
2 where the licensee may write his usual signature.
3     If the licensee is less than 17 years of age, the license
4 shall, as a matter of law, be invalid for the operation of any
5 motor vehicle during any time the licensee is prohibited from
6 being on any street or highway under the provisions of the
7 Child Curfew Act.
8     Licenses issued shall also indicate the classification and
9 the restrictions under Section 6-104 of this Code.
10     In lieu of the social security number, the Secretary may in
11 his discretion substitute a federal tax number or other
12 distinctive number.
13     A driver's license issued may, in the discretion of the
14 Secretary, include a suitable photograph of a type prescribed
15 by the Secretary.
16     (b) The Secretary of State shall provide a format on the
17 reverse of each driver's license issued which the licensee may
18 use to execute a document of gift conforming to the provisions
19 of the Illinois Uniform Anatomical Gift Act. The format shall
20 allow the licensee to indicate the gift intended, whether
21 specific organs, any organ, or the entire body, and shall
22 accommodate the signatures of the donor and 2 witnesses. The
23 Secretary shall also inform each applicant or licensee of this
24 format, describe the procedure for its execution, and may offer
25 the necessary witnesses; provided that in so doing, the
26 Secretary shall advise the applicant or licensee that he or she
27 is under no compulsion to execute a document of gift. A
28 brochure explaining this method of executing an anatomical gift
29 document shall be given to each applicant or licensee. The
30 brochure shall advise the applicant or licensee that he or she
31 is under no compulsion to execute a document of gift, and that
32 he or she may wish to consult with family, friends or clergy
33 before doing so. The Secretary of State may undertake
34 additional efforts, including education and awareness
35 activities, to promote organ and tissue donation.
36     (c) The Secretary of State shall designate on each driver's

 

 

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1 license issued a space where the licensee may place a sticker
2 or decal of the uniform size as the Secretary may specify,
3 which sticker or decal may indicate in appropriate language
4 that the owner of the license carries an Emergency Medical
5 Information Card.
6     The sticker may be provided by any person, hospital,
7 school, medical group, or association interested in assisting
8 in implementing the Emergency Medical Information Card, but
9 shall meet the specifications as the Secretary may by rule or
10 regulation require.
11     (d) The Secretary of State shall designate on each driver's
12 license issued a space where the licensee may indicate his
13 blood type and RH factor.
14     (e) The Secretary of State shall provide that each original
15 or renewal driver's license issued to a licensee under 21 years
16 of age shall be of a distinct nature from those driver's
17 licenses issued to individuals 21 years of age and older. The
18 color designated for driver's licenses for licensees under 21
19 years of age shall be at the discretion of the Secretary of
20 State.
21     (e-1) The Secretary shall provide that each driver's
22 license issued to a person under the age of 21 displays the
23 date upon which the person becomes 18 years of age and the date
24 upon which the person becomes 21 years of age.
25     (f) The Secretary of State shall inform all Illinois
26 licensed commercial motor vehicle operators of the
27 requirements of the Uniform Commercial Driver License Act,
28 Article V of this Chapter, and shall make provisions to insure
29 that all drivers, seeking to obtain a commercial driver's
30 license, be afforded an opportunity prior to April 1, 1992, to
31 obtain the license. The Secretary is authorized to extend
32 driver's license expiration dates, and assign specific times,
33 dates and locations where these commercial driver's tests shall
34 be conducted. Any applicant, regardless of the current
35 expiration date of the applicant's driver's license, may be
36 subject to any assignment by the Secretary. Failure to comply

 

 

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1 with the Secretary's assignment may result in the applicant's
2 forfeiture of an opportunity to receive a commercial driver's
3 license prior to April 1, 1992.
4     (g) The Secretary of State shall designate on a driver's
5 license issued, a space where the licensee may indicate that he
6 or she has drafted a living will in accordance with the
7 Illinois Living Will Act or a durable power of attorney for
8 health care in accordance with the Illinois Power of Attorney
9 Act.
10     (g-1) The Secretary of State, in his or her discretion, may
11 designate on each driver's license issued a space where the
12 licensee may place a sticker or decal, issued by the Secretary
13 of State, of uniform size as the Secretary may specify, that
14 shall indicate in appropriate language that the owner of the
15 license has renewed his or her driver's license.
16     (h) A person who acts in good faith in accordance with the
17 terms of this Section is not liable for damages in any civil
18 action or subject to prosecution in any criminal proceeding for
19 his or her act.
20 (Source: P.A. 91-357, eff. 7-29-99; 92-689, eff. 1-1-03.)
 
21     (625 ILCS 5/12-215)  (from Ch. 95 1/2, par. 12-215)
22     (Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 92-872)
23     Sec. 12-215. Oscillating, rotating or flashing lights on
24 motor vehicles. Except as otherwise provided in this Code:
25     (a) The use of red or white oscillating, rotating or
26 flashing lights, whether lighted or unlighted, is prohibited
27 except on:
28         1. Law enforcement vehicles of State, Federal or local
29     authorities;
30         2. A vehicle operated by a police officer or county
31     coroner and designated or authorized by local authorities,
32     in writing, as a law enforcement vehicle; however, such
33     designation or authorization must be carried in the
34     vehicle;
35         3. Vehicles of local fire departments and State or

 

 

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1     federal firefighting vehicles;
2         4. Vehicles which are designed and used exclusively as
3     ambulances or rescue vehicles; furthermore, such lights
4     shall not be lighted except when responding to an emergency
5     call for and while actually conveying the sick or injured;
6         5. Tow trucks licensed in a state that requires such
7     lights; furthermore, such lights shall not be lighted on
8     any such tow truck while the tow truck is operating in the
9     State of Illinois;
10         6. Vehicles of the Illinois Emergency Management
11     Agency, and vehicles of the Department of Nuclear Safety;
12     and
13         7. Vehicles operated by a local or county emergency
14     management services agency as defined in the Illinois
15     Emergency Management Agency Act; and .
16         8. Vehicles that are equipped and used exclusively as
17     organ transplant vehicles when used in combination with
18     blue oscillating, rotating, or flashing lights;
19     furthermore, these lights shall be lighted only when the
20     transportation is declared an emergency by a member of the
21     transplant team or a representative of the organ
22     procurement organization.
23     (b) The use of amber oscillating, rotating or flashing
24 lights, whether lighted or unlighted, is prohibited except on:
25         1. Second division vehicles designed and used for
26     towing or hoisting vehicles; furthermore, such lights
27     shall not be lighted except as required in this paragraph
28     1; such lights shall be lighted when such vehicles are
29     actually being used at the scene of an accident or
30     disablement; if the towing vehicle is equipped with a flat
31     bed that supports all wheels of the vehicle being
32     transported, the lights shall not be lighted while the
33     vehicle is engaged in towing on a highway; if the towing
34     vehicle is not equipped with a flat bed that supports all
35     wheels of a vehicle being transported, the lights shall be
36     lighted while the towing vehicle is engaged in towing on a

 

 

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1     highway during all times when the use of headlights is
2     required under Section 12-201 of this Code;
3         2. Motor vehicles or equipment of the State of
4     Illinois, local authorities and contractors; furthermore,
5     such lights shall not be lighted except while such vehicles
6     are engaged in maintenance or construction operations
7     within the limits of construction projects;
8         3. Vehicles or equipment used by engineering or survey
9     crews; furthermore, such lights shall not be lighted except
10     while such vehicles are actually engaged in work on a
11     highway;
12         4. Vehicles of public utilities, municipalities, or
13     other construction, maintenance or automotive service
14     vehicles except that such lights shall be lighted only as a
15     means for indicating the presence of a vehicular traffic
16     hazard requiring unusual care in approaching, overtaking
17     or passing while such vehicles are engaged in maintenance,
18     service or construction on a highway;
19         5. Oversized vehicle or load; however, such lights
20     shall only be lighted when moving under permit issued by
21     the Department under Section 15-301 of this Code;
22         6. The front and rear of motorized equipment owned and
23     operated by the State of Illinois or any political
24     subdivision thereof, which is designed and used for removal
25     of snow and ice from highways;
26         7. Fleet safety vehicles registered in another state,
27     furthermore, such lights shall not be lighted except as
28     provided for in Section 12-212 of this Code;
29         8. Such other vehicles as may be authorized by local
30     authorities;
31         9. Law enforcement vehicles of State or local
32     authorities when used in combination with red oscillating,
33     rotating or flashing lights;
34         9.5. Propane delivery trucks;
35         10. Vehicles used for collecting or delivering mail for
36     the United States Postal Service provided that such lights

 

 

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1     shall not be lighted except when such vehicles are actually
2     being used for such purposes;
3         11. Any vehicle displaying a slow-moving vehicle
4     emblem as provided in Section 12-205.1;
5         12. All trucks equipped with self-compactors or
6     roll-off hoists and roll-on containers for garbage or
7     refuse hauling. Such lights shall not be lighted except
8     when such vehicles are actually being used for such
9     purposes;
10         13. Vehicles used by a security company, alarm
11     responder, or control agency; and
12         14. Security vehicles of the Department of Human
13     Services; however, the lights shall not be lighted except
14     when being used for security related purposes under the
15     direction of the superintendent of the facility where the
16     vehicle is located.
17     (c) The use of blue oscillating, rotating or flashing
18 lights, whether lighted or unlighted, is prohibited except on:
19         1. Rescue squad vehicles not owned by a fire department
20     and vehicles owned or fully operated by a:
21             voluntary firefighter;
22             paid firefighter;
23             part-paid firefighter;
24             call firefighter;
25             member of the board of trustees of a fire
26         protection district;
27             paid or unpaid member of a rescue squad;
28             paid or unpaid member of a voluntary ambulance
29         unit; or
30             paid or unpaid members of a local or county
31         emergency management services agency as defined in the
32         Illinois Emergency Management Agency Act, designated
33         or authorized by local authorities, in writing, and
34         carrying that designation or authorization in the
35         vehicle.
36         However, such lights are not to be lighted except when

 

 

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1     responding to a bona fide emergency.
2         2. Police department vehicles in cities having a
3     population of 500,000 or more inhabitants.
4         3. Law enforcement vehicles of State or local
5     authorities when used in combination with red oscillating,
6     rotating or flashing lights.
7         4. Vehicles of local fire departments and State or
8     federal firefighting vehicles when used in combination
9     with red oscillating, rotating or flashing lights.
10         5. Vehicles which are designed and used exclusively as
11     ambulances or rescue vehicles when used in combination with
12     red oscillating, rotating or flashing lights; furthermore,
13     such lights shall not be lighted except when responding to
14     an emergency call.
15         6. Vehicles that are equipped and used exclusively as
16     organ transport vehicles when used in combination with red
17     oscillating, rotating, or flashing lights; furthermore,
18     these lights shall only be lighted when the transportation
19     is declared an emergency by a member of the transplant team
20     or a representative of the organ procurement organization.
21         7. Vehicles of the Illinois Emergency Management
22     Agency and vehicles of the Department of Nuclear Safety,
23     when used in combination with red oscillating, rotating, or
24     flashing lights.
25         8. Vehicles operated by a local or county emergency
26     management services agency as defined in the Illinois
27     Emergency Management Agency Act, when used in combination
28     with red oscillating, rotating, or flashing lights.
29     (c-1) In addition to the blue oscillating, rotating, or
30 flashing lights permitted under subsection (c), and
31 notwithstanding subsection (a), a vehicle operated by a
32 voluntary firefighter may be equipped with flashing white
33 headlights and blue grill lights, which may be used only in
34 responding to an emergency call.
35     (c-2) In addition to the blue oscillating, rotating, or
36 flashing lights permitted under subsection (c), and

 

 

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1 notwithstanding subsection (a), a vehicle operated by a paid or
2 unpaid member of a local or county emergency management
3 services agency as defined in the Illinois Emergency Management
4 Agency Act, may be equipped with white oscillating, rotating,
5 or flashing lights to be used in combination with blue
6 oscillating, rotating, or flashing lights, if authorization by
7 local authorities is in writing and carried in the vehicle.
8     (d) The use of a combination of amber and white
9 oscillating, rotating or flashing lights, whether lighted or
10 unlighted, is prohibited, except motor vehicles or equipment of
11 the State of Illinois, local authorities and contractors may be
12 so equipped; furthermore, such lights shall not be lighted
13 except while such vehicles are engaged in highway maintenance
14 or construction operations within the limits of highway
15 construction projects.
16     (e) All oscillating, rotating or flashing lights referred
17 to in this Section shall be of sufficient intensity, when
18 illuminated, to be visible at 500 feet in normal sunlight.
19     (f) Nothing in this Section shall prohibit a manufacturer
20 of oscillating, rotating or flashing lights or his
21 representative from temporarily mounting such lights on a
22 vehicle for demonstration purposes only.
23     (g) Any person violating the provisions of subsections (a),
24 (b), (c) or (d) of this Section who without lawful authority
25 stops or detains or attempts to stop or detain another person
26 shall be guilty of a Class 4 felony.
27     (h) Except as provided in subsection (g) above, any person
28 violating the provisions of subsections (a) or (c) of this
29 Section shall be guilty of a Class A misdemeanor.
30 (Source: P.A. 91-357, eff. 7-29-99; 92-138, eff. 7-24-01;
31 92-407, eff. 8-17-01; 92-651, eff. 7-11-02; 92-782, eff.
32 8-6-02; 92-820, eff. 8-21-02; revised 8-26-02.)
 
33     (Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 92-872)
34     Sec. 12-215. Oscillating, rotating or flashing lights on
35 motor vehicles. Except as otherwise provided in this Code:

 

 

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1     (a) The use of red or white oscillating, rotating or
2 flashing lights, whether lighted or unlighted, is prohibited
3 except on:
4         1. Law enforcement vehicles of State, Federal or local
5     authorities;
6         2. A vehicle operated by a police officer or county
7     coroner and designated or authorized by local authorities,
8     in writing, as a law enforcement vehicle; however, such
9     designation or authorization must be carried in the
10     vehicle;
11         3. Vehicles of local fire departments and State or
12     federal firefighting vehicles;
13         4. Vehicles which are designed and used exclusively as
14     ambulances or rescue vehicles; furthermore, such lights
15     shall not be lighted except when responding to an emergency
16     call for and while actually conveying the sick or injured;
17         5. Tow trucks licensed in a state that requires such
18     lights; furthermore, such lights shall not be lighted on
19     any such tow truck while the tow truck is operating in the
20     State of Illinois;
21         6. Vehicles of the Illinois Emergency Management
22     Agency, and vehicles of the Department of Nuclear Safety;
23     and
24         7. Vehicles operated by a local or county emergency
25     management services agency as defined in the Illinois
26     Emergency Management Agency Act; and .
27         8. Vehicles that are equipped and used exclusively as
28     organ transplant vehicles when used in combination with
29     blue oscillating, rotating, or flashing lights;
30     furthermore, these lights shall be lighted only when the
31     transportation is declared an emergency by a member of the
32     transplant team or a representative of the organ
33     procurement organization.
34     (b) The use of amber oscillating, rotating or flashing
35 lights, whether lighted or unlighted, is prohibited except on:
36         1. Second division vehicles designed and used for

 

 

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1     towing or hoisting vehicles; furthermore, such lights
2     shall not be lighted except as required in this paragraph
3     1; such lights shall be lighted when such vehicles are
4     actually being used at the scene of an accident or
5     disablement; if the towing vehicle is equipped with a flat
6     bed that supports all wheels of the vehicle being
7     transported, the lights shall not be lighted while the
8     vehicle is engaged in towing on a highway; if the towing
9     vehicle is not equipped with a flat bed that supports all
10     wheels of a vehicle being transported, the lights shall be
11     lighted while the towing vehicle is engaged in towing on a
12     highway during all times when the use of headlights is
13     required under Section 12-201 of this Code;
14         2. Motor vehicles or equipment of the State of
15     Illinois, local authorities and contractors; furthermore,
16     such lights shall not be lighted except while such vehicles
17     are engaged in maintenance or construction operations
18     within the limits of construction projects;
19         3. Vehicles or equipment used by engineering or survey
20     crews; furthermore, such lights shall not be lighted except
21     while such vehicles are actually engaged in work on a
22     highway;
23         4. Vehicles of public utilities, municipalities, or
24     other construction, maintenance or automotive service
25     vehicles except that such lights shall be lighted only as a
26     means for indicating the presence of a vehicular traffic
27     hazard requiring unusual care in approaching, overtaking
28     or passing while such vehicles are engaged in maintenance,
29     service or construction on a highway;
30         5. Oversized vehicle or load; however, such lights
31     shall only be lighted when moving under permit issued by
32     the Department under Section 15-301 of this Code;
33         6. The front and rear of motorized equipment owned and
34     operated by the State of Illinois or any political
35     subdivision thereof, which is designed and used for removal
36     of snow and ice from highways;

 

 

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1         7. Fleet safety vehicles registered in another state,
2     furthermore, such lights shall not be lighted except as
3     provided for in Section 12-212 of this Code;
4         8. Such other vehicles as may be authorized by local
5     authorities;
6         9. Law enforcement vehicles of State or local
7     authorities when used in combination with red oscillating,
8     rotating or flashing lights;
9         9.5. Propane delivery trucks;
10         10. Vehicles used for collecting or delivering mail for
11     the United States Postal Service provided that such lights
12     shall not be lighted except when such vehicles are actually
13     being used for such purposes;
14         11. Any vehicle displaying a slow-moving vehicle
15     emblem as provided in Section 12-205.1;
16         12. All trucks equipped with self-compactors or
17     roll-off hoists and roll-on containers for garbage or
18     refuse hauling. Such lights shall not be lighted except
19     when such vehicles are actually being used for such
20     purposes;
21         13. Vehicles used by a security company, alarm
22     responder, or control agency;
23         14. Security vehicles of the Department of Human
24     Services; however, the lights shall not be lighted except
25     when being used for security related purposes under the
26     direction of the superintendent of the facility where the
27     vehicle is located; and
28         15. Vehicles of union representatives, except that the
29     lights shall be lighted only while the vehicle is within
30     the limits of a construction project.
31     (c) The use of blue oscillating, rotating or flashing
32 lights, whether lighted or unlighted, is prohibited except on:
33         1. Rescue squad vehicles not owned by a fire department
34     and vehicles owned or fully operated by a:
35             voluntary firefighter;
36             paid firefighter;

 

 

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1             part-paid firefighter;
2             call firefighter;
3             member of the board of trustees of a fire
4         protection district;
5             paid or unpaid member of a rescue squad;
6             paid or unpaid member of a voluntary ambulance
7         unit; or
8             paid or unpaid members of a local or county
9         emergency management services agency as defined in the
10         Illinois Emergency Management Agency Act, designated
11         or authorized by local authorities, in writing, and
12         carrying that designation or authorization in the
13         vehicle.
14         However, such lights are not to be lighted except when
15     responding to a bona fide emergency.
16         2. Police department vehicles in cities having a
17     population of 500,000 or more inhabitants.
18         3. Law enforcement vehicles of State or local
19     authorities when used in combination with red oscillating,
20     rotating or flashing lights.
21         4. Vehicles of local fire departments and State or
22     federal firefighting vehicles when used in combination
23     with red oscillating, rotating or flashing lights.
24         5. Vehicles which are designed and used exclusively as
25     ambulances or rescue vehicles when used in combination with
26     red oscillating, rotating or flashing lights; furthermore,
27     such lights shall not be lighted except when responding to
28     an emergency call.
29         6. Vehicles that are equipped and used exclusively as
30     organ transport vehicles when used in combination with red
31     oscillating, rotating, or flashing lights; furthermore,
32     these lights shall only be lighted when the transportation
33     is declared an emergency by a member of the transplant team
34     or a representative of the organ procurement organization.
35         7. Vehicles of the Illinois Emergency Management
36     Agency and vehicles of the Department of Nuclear Safety,

 

 

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1     when used in combination with red oscillating, rotating, or
2     flashing lights.
3         8. Vehicles operated by a local or county emergency
4     management services agency as defined in the Illinois
5     Emergency Management Agency Act, when used in combination
6     with red oscillating, rotating, or flashing lights.
7     (c-1) In addition to the blue oscillating, rotating, or
8 flashing lights permitted under subsection (c), and
9 notwithstanding subsection (a), a vehicle operated by a
10 voluntary firefighter, a voluntary member of a rescue squad, or
11 a member of a voluntary ambulance unit may be equipped with
12 flashing white headlights and blue grill lights, which may be
13 used only in responding to an emergency call.
14     (c-2) In addition to the blue oscillating, rotating, or
15 flashing lights permitted under subsection (c), and
16 notwithstanding subsection (a), a vehicle operated by a paid or
17 unpaid member of a local or county emergency management
18 services agency as defined in the Illinois Emergency Management
19 Agency Act, may be equipped with white oscillating, rotating,
20 or flashing lights to be used in combination with blue
21 oscillating, rotating, or flashing lights, if authorization by
22 local authorities is in writing and carried in the vehicle.
23     (d) The use of a combination of amber and white
24 oscillating, rotating or flashing lights, whether lighted or
25 unlighted, is prohibited except motor vehicles or equipment of
26 the State of Illinois, local authorities, contractors, and
27 union representatives may be so equipped; furthermore, such
28 lights shall not be lighted on vehicles of the State of
29 Illinois, local authorities, and contractors except while such
30 vehicles are engaged in highway maintenance or construction
31 operations within the limits of highway construction projects,
32 and shall not be lighted on the vehicles of union
33 representatives except when those vehicles are within the
34 limits of a construction project.
35     (e) All oscillating, rotating or flashing lights referred
36 to in this Section shall be of sufficient intensity, when

 

 

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1 illuminated, to be visible at 500 feet in normal sunlight.
2     (f) Nothing in this Section shall prohibit a manufacturer
3 of oscillating, rotating or flashing lights or his
4 representative from temporarily mounting such lights on a
5 vehicle for demonstration purposes only.
6     (g) Any person violating the provisions of subsections (a),
7 (b), (c) or (d) of this Section who without lawful authority
8 stops or detains or attempts to stop or detain another person
9 shall be guilty of a Class 4 felony.
10     (h) Except as provided in subsection (g) above, any person
11 violating the provisions of subsections (a) or (c) of this
12 Section shall be guilty of a Class A misdemeanor.
13 (Source: P.A. 91-357, eff. 7-29-99; 92-138, eff. 7-24-01;
14 92-407, eff. 8-17-01; 92-651, eff. 7-11-02; 92-782, eff.
15 8-6-02; 92-820, eff. 8-21-02; 92-872, eff. 6-1-03; revised
16 1-10-03.)
17     Section 30. The Criminal Code of 1961 is amended by
18 changing Section 12-20 as follows:
 
19     (720 ILCS 5/12-20)  (from Ch. 38, par. 12-20)
20     Sec. 12-20. Sale of body parts. (a) Except as provided in
21 subsection (b), any person who knowingly buys or sells, or
22 offers to buy or sell, a human body or any part of a human body,
23 is guilty of a Class A misdemeanor for the first conviction and
24 a Class 4 felony for subsequent convictions.
25     (b) This Section does not prohibit:
26     (1) An anatomical gift made in accordance with the Illinois
27 Uniform Anatomical Gift Act.
28     (2) The removal and use of a human cornea in accordance
29 with the Illinois Anatomical Gift Corneal Transplant Act.
30     (3) Reimbursement of actual expenses incurred by a living
31 person in donating an organ, tissue or other body part or fluid
32 for transplantation, implantation, infusion, injection, or
33 other medical or scientific purpose, including medical costs,
34 loss of income, and travel expenses.

 

 

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1     (4) Payments provided under a plan of insurance or other
2 health care coverage.
3     (5) Reimbursement of reasonable costs associated with the
4 removal, storage or transportation of a human body or part
5 thereof donated for medical or scientific purposes.
6     (6) Purchase or sale of blood, plasma, blood products or
7 derivatives, other body fluids, or human hair.
8     (7) Purchase or sale of drugs, reagents or other substances
9 made from human bodies or body parts, for use in medical or
10 scientific research, treatment or diagnosis.
11 (Source: P.A. 85-191.)
12     Section 35. The Illinois Living Will Act is amended by
13 changing Section 6 as follows:
 
14     (755 ILCS 35/6)  (from Ch. 110 1/2, par. 706)
15     Sec. 6. Physician Responsibilities. An attending
16 physician who has been notified of the existence of a
17 declaration executed under this Act, without delay after the
18 diagnosis of a terminal condition of the patient, shall take
19 the necessary steps to provide for written recording of the
20 patient's terminal condition, so that the patient may be deemed
21 to be a qualified patient under this Act, or shall notify the
22 patient or, if the patient is unable to initiate a transfer,
23 the person or persons described in subsection (d) of Section 3
24 in the order of priority stated therein that the physician is
25 unwilling to comply with the provisions of the patient's
26 declaration. In the event of the patient's death as determined
27 by a physician, all medical care is to be terminated unless the
28 patient is an organ donor, in which case appropriate organ
29 donation treatment may be applied or continued temporarily.
30 (Source: P.A. 85-860.)
31     Section 40. The Health Care Surrogate Act is amended by
32 changing Sections 20 and 65 as follows:
 

 

 

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1     (755 ILCS 40/20)  (from Ch. 110 1/2, par. 851-20)
2     Sec. 20. Private decision making process.
3     (a) Decisions whether to forgo life-sustaining or any other
4 form of medical treatment involving an adult patient with
5 decisional capacity may be made by that adult patient.
6     (b) Decisions whether to forgo life-sustaining treatment
7 on behalf of a patient without decisional capacity are lawful,
8 without resort to the courts or legal process, if the patient
9 has a qualifying condition and if the decisions are made in
10 accordance with one of the following paragraphs in this
11 subsection and otherwise meet the requirements of this Act:
12         (1) Decisions whether to forgo life-sustaining
13     treatment on behalf of a minor or an adult patient who
14     lacks decisional capacity may be made by a surrogate
15     decision maker or makers in consultation with the attending
16     physician, in the order or priority provided in Section 25.
17     A surrogate decision maker shall make decisions for the
18     adult patient conforming as closely as possible to what the
19     patient would have done or intended under the
20     circumstances, taking into account evidence that includes,
21     but is not limited to, the patient's personal,
22     philosophical, religious and moral beliefs and ethical
23     values relative to the purpose of life, sickness, medical
24     procedures, suffering, and death. Where possible, the
25     surrogate shall determine how the patient would have
26     weighed the burdens and benefits of initiating or
27     continuing life-sustaining treatment against the burdens
28     and benefits of that treatment. In the event an unrevoked
29     advance directive, such as a living will, a declaration for
30     mental health treatment, or a power of attorney for health
31     care, is no longer valid due to a technical deficiency or
32     is not applicable to the patient's condition, that document
33     may be used as evidence of a patient's wishes. The absence
34     of a living will, declaration for mental health treatment,
35     or power of attorney for health care shall not give rise to
36     any presumption as to the patient's preferences regarding

 

 

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1     the initiation or continuation of life-sustaining
2     procedures. If the adult patient's wishes are unknown and
3     remain unknown after reasonable efforts to discern them or
4     if the patient is a minor, the decision shall be made on
5     the basis of the patient's best interests as determined by
6     the surrogate decision maker. In determining the patient's
7     best interests, the surrogate shall weigh the burdens on
8     and benefits to the patient of initiating or continuing
9     life-sustaining treatment against the burdens and benefits
10     of that treatment and shall take into account any other
11     information, including the views of family and friends,
12     that the surrogate decision maker believes the patient
13     would have considered if able to act for herself or
14     himself.
15         (2) Decisions whether to forgo life-sustaining
16     treatment on behalf of a minor or an adult patient who
17     lacks decisional capacity, but without any surrogate
18     decision maker or guardian being available determined
19     after reasonable inquiry by the health care provider, may
20     be made by a court appointed guardian. A court appointed
21     guardian shall be treated as a surrogate for the purposes
22     of this Act.
23     (b-5) Decisions concerning medical treatment on behalf of a
24 patient without decisional capacity are lawful, without resort
25 to the courts or legal process, if the patient does not have a
26 qualifying condition and if decisions are made in accordance
27 with one of the following paragraphs in this subsection and
28 otherwise meet the requirements of this Act:
29         (1) Decisions concerning medical treatment on behalf
30     of a minor or adult patient who lacks decisional capacity
31     may be made by a surrogate decision maker or makers in
32     consultation with the attending physician, in the order of
33     priority provided in Section 25 with the exception that
34     decisions to forgo life-sustaining treatment may be made
35     only when a patient has a qualifying condition. A surrogate
36     decision maker shall make decisions for the patient

 

 

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1     conforming as closely as possible to what the patient would
2     have done or intended under the circumstances, taking into
3     account evidence that includes, but is not limited to, the
4     patient's personal, philosophical, religious, and moral
5     beliefs and ethical values relative to the purpose of life,
6     sickness, medical procedures, suffering, and death. In the
7     event an unrevoked advance directive, such as a living
8     will, a declaration for mental health treatment, or a power
9     of attorney for health care, is no longer valid due to a
10     technical deficiency or is not applicable to the patient's
11     condition, that document may be used as evidence of a
12     patient's wishes. The absence of a living will, declaration
13     for mental health treatment, or power of attorney for
14     health care shall not give rise to any presumption as to
15     the patient's preferences regarding any process. If the
16     adult patient's wishes are unknown and remain unknown after
17     reasonable efforts to discern them or if the patient is a
18     minor, the decision shall be made on the basis of the
19     patient's best interests as determined by the surrogate
20     decision maker. In determining the patient's best
21     interests, the surrogate shall weigh the burdens on and
22     benefits to the patient of the treatment against the
23     burdens and benefits of that treatment and shall take into
24     account any other information, including the views of
25     family and friends, that the surrogate decision maker
26     believes the patient would have considered if able to act
27     for herself or himself.
28         (2) Decisions concerning medical treatment on behalf
29     of a minor or adult patient who lacks decisional capacity,
30     but without any surrogate decision maker or guardian being
31     available as determined after reasonable inquiry by the
32     health care provider, may be made by a court appointed
33     guardian. A court appointed guardian shall be treated as a
34     surrogate for the purposes of this Act.
35     (c) For the purposes of this Act, a patient or surrogate
36 decision maker is presumed to have decisional capacity in the

 

 

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1 absence of actual notice to the contrary without regard to
2 advanced age. With respect to a patient, a diagnosis of mental
3 illness or mental retardation, of itself, is not a bar to a
4 determination of decisional capacity. A determination that an
5 adult patient lacks decisional capacity shall be made by the
6 attending physician to a reasonable degree of medical
7 certainty. The determination shall be in writing in the
8 patient's medical record and shall set forth the attending
9 physician's opinion regarding the cause, nature, and duration
10 of the patient's lack of decisional capacity. Before
11 implementation of a decision by a surrogate decision maker to
12 forgo life-sustaining treatment, at least one other qualified
13 physician must concur in the determination that an adult
14 patient lacks decisional capacity. The concurring
15 determination shall be made in writing in the patient's medical
16 record after personal examination of the patient. The attending
17 physician shall inform the patient that it has been determined
18 that the patient lacks decisional capacity and that a surrogate
19 decision maker will be making life-sustaining treatment
20 decisions on behalf of the patient. Moreover, the patient shall
21 be informed of the identity of the surrogate decision maker and
22 any decisions made by that surrogate. If the person identified
23 as the surrogate decision maker is not a court appointed
24 guardian and the patient objects to the statutory surrogate
25 decision maker or any decision made by that surrogate decision
26 maker, then the provisions of this Act shall not apply.
27     (d) A surrogate decision maker acting on behalf of the
28 patient shall express decisions to forgo life-sustaining
29 treatment to the attending physician and one adult witness who
30 is at least 18 years of age. This decision and the substance of
31 any known discussion before making the decision shall be
32 documented by the attending physician in the patient's medical
33 record and signed by the witness.
34     (e) The existence of a qualifying condition shall be
35 documented in writing in the patient's medical record by the
36 attending physician and shall include its cause and nature, if

 

 

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1 known. The written concurrence of another qualified physician
2 is also required.
3     (f) Once the provisions of this Act are complied with, the
4 attending physician shall thereafter promptly implement the
5 decision to forgo life-sustaining treatment on behalf of the
6 patient unless he or she believes that the surrogate decision
7 maker is not acting in accordance with his or her
8 responsibilities under this Act, or is unable to do so for
9 reasons of conscience or other personal views or beliefs.
10     (g) In the event of a patient's death as determined by a
11 physician, all life-sustaining treatment and other medical
12 care is to be terminated, unless the patient is an organ donor,
13 in which case appropriate organ donation treatment may be
14 applied or continued temporarily.
15 (Source: P.A. 90-246, eff. 1-1-98.)
 
16     (755 ILCS 40/65)
17     Sec. 65. Do-not-resuscitate orders.
18     (a) An individual of sound mind and having reached the age
19 of majority or having obtained the status of an emancipated
20 person pursuant to the Emancipation of Mature Minors Act may
21 execute a document (consistent with the Department of Public
22 Health Uniform DNR Order Form) directing that resuscitating
23 efforts shall not be implemented. Such an order may also be
24 executed by an attending physician. Notwithstanding the
25 existence of a DNR order, appropriate organ donation treatment
26 may be applied or continued temporarily in the event of the
27 patient's death, in accordance with subsection (g) of Section
28 20 of this Act, if the patient is an organ donor.
29     (b) Consent to a DNR order may be obtained from the
30 individual, or from another person at the individual's
31 direction, or from the individual's legal guardian, agent under
32 a power of attorney for health care, or surrogate decision
33 maker, and witnessed by 2 individuals 18 years of age or older.
34     (c) The DNR order may, but need not, be in the form adopted
35 by the Department of Public Health pursuant to Section 2310-600

 

 

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1 of the Department of Public Health Powers and Duties Law (20
2 ILCS 2310/2310-600).
3     (d) A health care professional or health care provider may
4 presume, in the absence of knowledge to the contrary, that a
5 completed Department of Public Health Uniform DNR Order form or
6 a copy of that form is a valid DNR order. A health care
7 professional or health care provider, or an employee of a
8 health care professional or health care provider, who in good
9 faith complies with a do-not-resuscitate order made in
10 accordance with this Act is not, as a result of that
11 compliance, subject to any criminal or civil liability, except
12 for willful and wanton misconduct, and may not be found to have
13 committed an act of unprofessional conduct.
14 (Source: P.A. 92-356, eff. 10-1-01.)
15     Section 45. The Illinois Power of Attorney Act is amended
16 by changing Sections 4-7 and 4-10 as follows:
 
17     (755 ILCS 45/4-7)  (from Ch. 110 1/2, par. 804-7)
18     Sec. 4-7. Duties of health care providers and others in
19 relation to health care agencies. Each health care provider and
20 each other person with whom an agent deals under a health care
21 agency shall be subject to the following duties and
22 responsibilities:
23     (a) It is the responsibility of the agent or patient to
24 notify the health care provider of the existence of the health
25 care agency and any amendment or revocation thereof. A health
26 care provider furnished with a copy of a health care agency
27 shall make it a part of the patient's medical records and shall
28 enter in the records any change in or termination of the health
29 care agency by the principal that becomes known to the
30 provider. Whenever a provider believes a patient may lack
31 capacity to give informed consent to health care which the
32 provider deems necessary, the provider shall consult with any
33 available health care agent known to the provider who then has
34 power to act for the patient under a health care agency.

 

 

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1     (b) A health care decision made by an agent in accordance
2 with the terms of a health care agency shall be complied with
3 by every health care provider to whom the decision is
4 communicated, subject to the provider's right to administer
5 treatment for the patient's comfort care or alleviation of
6 pain; but if the provider is unwilling to comply with the
7 agent's decision, the provider shall promptly inform the agent
8 who shall then be responsible to make the necessary
9 arrangements for the transfer of the patient to another
10 provider. It is understood that a provider who is unwilling to
11 comply with the agent's decision will continue to afford
12 reasonably necessary consultation and care in connection with
13 the transfer.
14     (c) At the patient's expense and subject to reasonable
15 rules of the health care provider to prevent disruption of the
16 patient's health care, each health care provider shall give an
17 agent authorized to receive such information under a health
18 care agency the same right the principal has to examine and
19 copy any part or all of the patient's medical records that the
20 agent deems relevant to the exercise of the agent's powers,
21 whether the records relate to mental health or any other
22 medical condition and whether they are in the possession of or
23 maintained by any physician, psychiatrist, psychologist,
24 therapist, hospital, nursing home or other health care
25 provider.
26     (d) If and to the extent a health care agency empowers the
27 agent to (1) make an anatomical gift on behalf of the principal
28 under the Illinois Uniform Anatomical Gift Act, as now or
29 hereafter amended, or (2) authorize an autopsy of the
30 principal's body pursuant to Section 2 of "An Act in relation
31 to autopsy of dead bodies", approved August 13, 1965, as now or
32 hereafter amended, or (3) direct the disposition of the
33 principal's remains, the decision by an authorized agent as to
34 anatomical gift, autopsy approval or remains disposition shall
35 be deemed the act of the principal and shall control over the
36 decision of other persons who might otherwise have priority;

 

 

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1 and each person to whom a direction by the agent in accordance
2 with the terms of the agency is communicated shall comply with
3 such direction.
4 (Source: P.A. 86-736.)
 
5     (755 ILCS 45/4-10)  (from Ch. 110 1/2, par. 804-10)
6     Sec. 4-10. Statutory short form power of attorney for
7 health care.
8     (a) The following form (sometimes also referred to in this
9 Act as the "statutory health care power") may be used to grant
10 an agent powers with respect to the principal's own health
11 care; but the statutory health care power is not intended to be
12 exclusive nor to cover delegation of a parent's power to
13 control the health care of a minor child, and no provision of
14 this Article shall be construed to invalidate or bar use by the
15 principal of any other or different form of power of attorney
16 for health care. Nonstatutory health care powers must be
17 executed by the principal, designate the agent and the agent's
18 powers, and comply with Section 4-5 of this Article, but they
19 need not be witnessed or conform in any other respect to the
20 statutory health care power. When a power of attorney in
21 substantially the following form is used, including the
22 "notice" paragraph at the beginning in capital letters, it
23 shall have the meaning and effect prescribed in this Act. The
24 statutory health care power may be included in or combined with
25 any other form of power of attorney governing property or other
26 matters.
27     "ILLINOIS STATUTORY SHORT FORM POWER OF ATTORNEY FOR HEALTH
28 CARE
29     (NOTICE: THE PURPOSE OF THIS POWER OF ATTORNEY IS TO GIVE
30 THE PERSON YOU DESIGNATE (YOUR "AGENT") BROAD POWERS TO MAKE
31 HEALTH CARE DECISIONS FOR YOU, INCLUDING POWER TO REQUIRE,
32 CONSENT TO OR WITHDRAW ANY TYPE OF PERSONAL CARE OR MEDICAL
33 TREATMENT FOR ANY PHYSICAL OR MENTAL CONDITION AND TO ADMIT YOU
34 TO OR DISCHARGE YOU FROM ANY HOSPITAL, HOME OR OTHER
35 INSTITUTION. THIS FORM DOES NOT IMPOSE A DUTY ON YOUR AGENT TO

 

 

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1 EXERCISE GRANTED POWERS; BUT WHEN POWERS ARE EXERCISED, YOUR
2 AGENT WILL HAVE TO USE DUE CARE TO ACT FOR YOUR BENEFIT AND IN
3 ACCORDANCE WITH THIS FORM AND KEEP A RECORD OF RECEIPTS,
4 DISBURSEMENTS AND SIGNIFICANT ACTIONS TAKEN AS AGENT. A COURT
5 CAN TAKE AWAY THE POWERS OF YOUR AGENT IF IT FINDS THE AGENT IS
6 NOT ACTING PROPERLY. YOU MAY NAME SUCCESSOR AGENTS UNDER THIS
7 FORM BUT NOT CO-AGENTS, AND NO HEALTH CARE PROVIDER MAY BE
8 NAMED. UNLESS YOU EXPRESSLY LIMIT THE DURATION OF THIS POWER IN
9 THE MANNER PROVIDED BELOW, UNTIL YOU REVOKE THIS POWER OR A
10 COURT ACTING ON YOUR BEHALF TERMINATES IT, YOUR AGENT MAY
11 EXERCISE THE POWERS GIVEN HERE THROUGHOUT YOUR LIFETIME, EVEN
12 AFTER YOU BECOME DISABLED. THE POWERS YOU GIVE YOUR AGENT, YOUR
13 RIGHT TO REVOKE THOSE POWERS AND THE PENALTIES FOR VIOLATING
14 THE LAW ARE EXPLAINED MORE FULLY IN SECTIONS 4-5, 4-6, 4-9 AND
15 4-10(b) OF THE ILLINOIS "POWERS OF ATTORNEY FOR HEALTH CARE
16 LAW" OF WHICH THIS FORM IS A PART (SEE THE BACK OF THIS FORM).
17 THAT LAW EXPRESSLY PERMITS THE USE OF ANY DIFFERENT FORM OF
18 POWER OF ATTORNEY YOU MAY DESIRE. IF THERE IS ANYTHING ABOUT
19 THIS FORM THAT YOU DO NOT UNDERSTAND, YOU SHOULD ASK A LAWYER
20 TO EXPLAIN IT TO YOU.)
21     POWER OF ATTORNEY made this .......................day of
22 ................................
23     (month)  (year)
24     1. I, ..................................................,
25               (insert name and address of principal)
26 hereby appoint:
27 ............................................................
28           (insert name and address of agent)
29 as my attorney-in-fact (my "agent") to act for me and in my
30 name (in any way I could act in person) to make any and all
31 decisions for me concerning my personal care, medical
32 treatment, hospitalization and health care and to require,
33 withhold or withdraw any type of medical treatment or
34 procedure, even though my death may ensue. My agent shall have
35 the same access to my medical records that I have, including
36 the right to disclose the contents to others. My agent shall

 

 

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1 also have full power to authorize an autopsy and direct the
2 disposition of my remains. Effective upon my death, my agent
3 has the full power to make an anatomical gift of the following
4 (initial one):
5         ....Any organs, tissues, or eyes suitable for
6     transplantation or used for research or education organ.
7         ....Specific organs:....................................
8 (THE ABOVE GRANT OF POWER IS INTENDED TO BE AS BROAD AS
9 POSSIBLE SO THAT YOUR AGENT WILL HAVE AUTHORITY TO MAKE ANY
10 DECISION YOU COULD MAKE TO OBTAIN OR TERMINATE ANY TYPE OF
11 HEALTH CARE, INCLUDING WITHDRAWAL OF FOOD AND WATER AND OTHER
12 LIFE-SUSTAINING MEASURES, IF YOUR AGENT BELIEVES SUCH ACTION
13 WOULD BE CONSISTENT WITH YOUR INTENT AND DESIRES. IF YOU WISH
14 TO LIMIT THE SCOPE OF YOUR AGENT'S POWERS OR PRESCRIBE SPECIAL
15 RULES OR LIMIT THE POWER TO MAKE AN ANATOMICAL GIFT, AUTHORIZE
16 AUTOPSY OR DISPOSE OF REMAINS, YOU MAY DO SO IN THE FOLLOWING
17 PARAGRAPHS.)
18     2. The powers granted above shall not include the following
19 powers or shall be subject to the following rules or
20 limitations (here you may include any specific limitations you
21 deem appropriate, such as: your own definition of when
22 life-sustaining measures should be withheld; a direction to
23 continue food and fluids or life-sustaining treatment in all
24 events; or instructions to refuse any specific types of
25 treatment that are inconsistent with your religious beliefs or
26 unacceptable to you for any other reason, such as blood
27 transfusion, electro-convulsive therapy, amputation,
28 psychosurgery, voluntary admission to a mental institution,
29 etc.):
30 .............................................................
31 .............................................................
32 .............................................................
33 .............................................................
34 .............................................................
35 (THE SUBJECT OF LIFE-SUSTAINING TREATMENT IS OF PARTICULAR
36 IMPORTANCE. FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE IN DEALING WITH THAT SUBJECT,

 

 

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1 SOME GENERAL STATEMENTS CONCERNING THE WITHHOLDING OR REMOVAL
2 OF LIFE-SUSTAINING TREATMENT ARE SET FORTH BELOW. IF YOU AGREE
3 WITH ONE OF THESE STATEMENTS, YOU MAY INITIAL THAT STATEMENT;
4 BUT DO NOT INITIAL MORE THAN ONE):
5     I do not want my life to be prolonged nor do I want
6 life-sustaining treatment to be provided or continued if my
7 agent believes the burdens of the treatment outweigh the
8 expected benefits. I want my agent to consider the relief of
9 suffering, the expense involved and the quality as well as the
10 possible extension of my life in making decisions concerning
11 life-sustaining treatment.
12
Initialed...........................
13     I want my life to be prolonged and I want life-sustaining
14 treatment to be provided or continued unless I am in a coma
15 which my attending physician believes to be irreversible, in
16 accordance with reasonable medical standards at the time of
17 reference. If and when I have suffered irreversible coma, I
18 want life-sustaining treatment to be withheld or discontinued.
19
Initialed...........................
20     I want my life to be prolonged to the greatest extent
21 possible without regard to my condition, the chances I have for
22 recovery or the cost of the procedures.
23
Initialed...........................
24 (THIS POWER OF ATTORNEY MAY BE AMENDED OR REVOKED BY YOU IN THE
25 MANNER PROVIDED IN SECTION 4-6 OF THE ILLINOIS "POWERS OF
26 ATTORNEY FOR HEALTH CARE LAW" (SEE THE BACK OF THIS FORM).
27 ABSENT AMENDMENT OR REVOCATION, THE AUTHORITY GRANTED IN THIS
28 POWER OF ATTORNEY WILL BECOME EFFECTIVE AT THE TIME THIS POWER
29 IS SIGNED AND WILL CONTINUE UNTIL YOUR DEATH, AND BEYOND IF
30 ANATOMICAL GIFT, AUTOPSY OR DISPOSITION OF REMAINS IS
31 AUTHORIZED, UNLESS A LIMITATION ON THE BEGINNING DATE OR
32 DURATION IS MADE BY INITIALING AND COMPLETING EITHER OR BOTH OF
33 THE FOLLOWING:)
34     3. ( ) This power of attorney shall become effective on
35 .............................................................
36 .............................................................

 

 

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1 (insert a future date or event during your lifetime, such as
2 court determination of your disability, when you want this
3 power to first take effect)
4     4. ( ) This power of attorney shall terminate on.............
5 .............................................................
6 (insert a future date or event, such as court determination of
7 your disability, when you want this power to terminate prior to
8 your death)
9 (IF YOU WISH TO NAME SUCCESSOR AGENTS, INSERT THE NAMES AND
10 ADDRESSES OF SUCH SUCCESSORS IN THE FOLLOWING PARAGRAPH.)
11     5. If any agent named by me shall die, become incompetent,
12 resign, refuse to accept the office of agent or be unavailable,
13 I name the following (each to act alone and successively, in
14 the order named) as successors to such agent:
15 .............................................................
16 .............................................................
17 For purposes of this paragraph 5, a person shall be considered
18 to be incompetent if and while the person is a minor or an
19 adjudicated incompetent or disabled person or the person is
20 unable to give prompt and intelligent consideration to health
21 care matters, as certified by a licensed physician. (IF YOU
22 WISH TO NAME YOUR AGENT AS GUARDIAN OF YOUR PERSON, IN THE
23 EVENT A COURT DECIDES THAT ONE SHOULD BE APPOINTED, YOU MAY,
24 BUT ARE NOT REQUIRED TO, DO SO BY RETAINING THE FOLLOWING
25 PARAGRAPH. THE COURT WILL APPOINT YOUR AGENT IF THE COURT FINDS
26 THAT SUCH APPOINTMENT WILL SERVE YOUR BEST INTERESTS AND
27 WELFARE. STRIKE OUT PARAGRAPH 6 IF YOU DO NOT WANT YOUR AGENT
28 TO ACT AS GUARDIAN.)
29     6. If a guardian of my person is to be appointed, I
30 nominate the agent acting under this power of attorney as such
31 guardian, to serve without bond or security.
32     7. I am fully informed as to all the contents of this form
33 and understand the full import of this grant of powers to my
34 agent.
35
Signed..............................
36
(principal)
      

 

 

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1     The principal has had an opportunity to read the above form
2 and has signed the form or acknowledged his or her signature or
3 mark on the form in my presence.
4 ..........................  Residing at......................
5        (witness)
6 (YOU MAY, BUT ARE NOT REQUIRED TO, REQUEST YOUR AGENT AND
7 SUCCESSOR AGENTS TO PROVIDE SPECIMEN SIGNATURES BELOW. IF YOU
8 INCLUDE SPECIMEN SIGNATURES IN THIS POWER OF ATTORNEY, YOU MUST
9 COMPLETE THE CERTIFICATION OPPOSITE THE SIGNATURES OF THE
10 AGENTS.)
11 Specimen signatures of    I certify that the signatures of my
12 agent (and successors).   agent (and successors) are correct.
13 .........................   .................................
14        (agent)                      (principal)
15 .........................   .
16      (successor agent)              (principal)
17 .........................   .
18       (successor agent)             (principal)"
19     (b) The statutory short form power of attorney for health
20 care (the "statutory health care power") authorizes the agent
21 to make any and all health care decisions on behalf of the
22 principal which the principal could make if present and under
23 no disability, subject to any limitations on the granted powers
24 that appear on the face of the form, to be exercised in such
25 manner as the agent deems consistent with the intent and
26 desires of the principal. The agent will be under no duty to
27 exercise granted powers or to assume control of or
28 responsibility for the principal's health care; but when
29 granted powers are exercised, the agent will be required to use
30 due care to act for the benefit of the principal in accordance
31 with the terms of the statutory health care power and will be
32 liable for negligent exercise. The agent may act in person or
33 through others reasonably employed by the agent for that
34 purpose but may not delegate authority to make health care
35 decisions. The agent may sign and deliver all instruments,
36 negotiate and enter into all agreements and do all other acts

 

 

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1 reasonably necessary to implement the exercise of the powers
2 granted to the agent. Without limiting the generality of the
3 foregoing, the statutory health care power shall include the
4 following powers, subject to any limitations appearing on the
5 face of the form:
6     (1) The agent is authorized to give consent to and
7 authorize or refuse, or to withhold or withdraw consent to, any
8 and all types of medical care, treatment or procedures relating
9 to the physical or mental health of the principal, including
10 any medication program, surgical procedures, life-sustaining
11 treatment or provision of food and fluids for the principal.
12     (2) The agent is authorized to admit the principal to or
13 discharge the principal from any and all types of hospitals,
14 institutions, homes, residential or nursing facilities,
15 treatment centers and other health care institutions providing
16 personal care or treatment for any type of physical or mental
17 condition. The agent shall have the same right to visit the
18 principal in the hospital or other institution as is granted to
19 a spouse or adult child of the principal, any rule of the
20 institution to the contrary notwithstanding.
21     (3) The agent is authorized to contract for any and all
22 types of health care services and facilities in the name of and
23 on behalf of the principal and to bind the principal to pay for
24 all such services and facilities, and to have and exercise
25 those powers over the principal's property as are authorized
26 under the statutory property power, to the extent the agent
27 deems necessary to pay health care costs; and the agent shall
28 not be personally liable for any services or care contracted
29 for on behalf of the principal.
30     (4) At the principal's expense and subject to reasonable
31 rules of the health care provider to prevent disruption of the
32 principal's health care, the agent shall have the same right
33 the principal has to examine and copy and consent to disclosure
34 of all the principal's medical records that the agent deems
35 relevant to the exercise of the agent's powers, whether the
36 records relate to mental health or any other medical condition

 

 

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1 and whether they are in the possession of or maintained by any
2 physician, psychiatrist, psychologist, therapist, hospital,
3 nursing home or other health care provider.
4     (5) The agent is authorized: to direct that an autopsy be
5 made pursuant to Section 2 of "An Act in relation to autopsy of
6 dead bodies", approved August 13, 1965, including all
7 amendments; to make a disposition of any part or all of the
8 principal's body pursuant to the Illinois Uniform Anatomical
9 Gift Act, as now or hereafter amended; and to direct the
10 disposition of the principal's remains.
11 (Source: P.A. 91-240, eff. 1-1-00.)
12     Section 50. The Uniform Anatomical Gift Act is amended by
13 changing and renumbering Sections 1, 2, 3, 4, 4.5, 5, 6, 7, 8,
14 and 8.1 and by adding Article headings for Articles 1 and 5 and
15 adding Sections 1-5, 5-25, and 5-30 as follows:
 
16     (755 ILCS 50/Art. 1 heading new)
17
Article 1.
Title and General Provisions.

 
18     (755 ILCS 50/1-1 new)  (was 755 ILCS 50/1)
19     Sec. 1-1 1. Short Title.
20     This Act may be cited as the Illinois Uniform Anatomical
21 Gift Act.
22 (Source: P.A. 76-1209.)
 
23     (755 ILCS 50/1-5 new)
24     Sec. 1-5. Purpose. Illinois recognizes that there is a
25 critical shortage of human organs and tissues available to
26 citizens in need of organ and tissue transplants. This shortage
27 leads to the untimely death of many adults and children in
28 Illinois and across the nation each year. This Act is intended
29 to implement the public policy of encouraging timely donation
30 of human organs and tissue in Illinois and facilitating
31 transplants of those organs and tissue into patients in need of
32 them. Through this Act, laws relating to organ and tissue

 

 

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1 donation and transplantation are consolidated and modified for
2 the purpose of furthering this public policy.
 
3     (755 ILCS 50/1-10 new)  (was 755 ILCS 50/2)
4     Sec. 1-10 2. Definitions.)(a)
5     "Bank or storage facility" means a facility licensed,
6 accredited or approved under the laws of any state for storage
7 of human bodies or parts thereof.
8     "Close friend" means any person 18 years of age or older
9 who has exhibited special care and concern for the decedent and
10 who presents an affidavit to the decedent's attending
11 physician, or the hospital administrator or his or her
12 designated representative, stating that he or she (i) was a
13 close friend of the decedent, (ii) is willing and able to
14 consent to the donation, and (iii) maintained such regular
15 contact with the decedent as to be familiar with the decedent's
16 health and social history, and religious and moral beliefs. The
17 affidavit must also state facts and circumstances that
18 demonstrate that familiarity.
19     (b) "Death" means for the purposes of the Act, the
20 irreversible cessation of total brain function, according to
21 usual and customary standards of medical practice.
22     (c) "Decedent" means a deceased individual and includes a
23 stillborn infant or fetus.
24     (d) "Donor" means an individual who makes a gift of all or
25 parts of his body.
26     "Federally designated organ procurement agency" means the
27 organ procurement agency designated by the Secretary of the
28 U.S. Department of Health and Human Services for the service
29 area in which a hospital is located, or the organ procurement
30 agency for which the U.S. Secretary of Health and Human
31 Services has granted the hospital a waiver pursuant to 42
32 U.S.C. 1320b-8(a).
33     (e) "Hospital" means a hospital licensed, accredited or
34 approved under the laws of any state; and includes a hospital
35 operated by the United States government, a state, or a

 

 

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1 subdivision thereof, although not required to be licensed under
2 state laws.
3     "Not available" for the giving of consent or refusal means:
4     (1) the existence of the person is unknown to the hospital
5 administrator or designee, organ procurement agency, or tissue
6 bank and is not readily ascertainable through the examination
7 of the decedent's hospital records and the questioning of any
8 persons who are available for giving consent;
9     (2) the administrator or designee, organ procurement
10 agency, or tissue bank has unsuccessfully attempted to contact
11 the person by telephone or in any other reasonable manner; or
12     (3) the person is unable or unwilling to respond in a
13 manner that indicates the person's refusal or consent.
14     "Organ" means a human kidney, liver, heart, lung, pancreas,
15 small bowel, or other transplantable vascular body part as
16 determined by the Organ Procurement and Transplantation
17 Network, as periodically selected by the U.S. Department of
18 Health and Human Services.
19     "Tissue" means eyes, bones, heart valves, veins, skin, and
20 any other portions of a human body excluding blood, blood
21 products or organs.
22     (f) "Part" means organs, tissues, eyes, bones, arteries,
23 blood, other fluids and any other portions of a human body.
24     (g) "Person" means an individual, corporation, government
25 or governmental subdivision or agency, business trust, estate,
26 trust, partnership or association or any other legal entity.
27     (h) "Physician" or "surgeon" means a physician or surgeon
28 licensed or authorized to practice medicine in all of its
29 branches under the laws of any state.
30     (i) "State" includes any state, district, commonwealth,
31 territory, insular possession, and any other area subject to
32 the legislative authority of the United States of America.
33     (j) "Technician" means an individual trained and certified
34 to remove tissue, by a recognized medical training institution
35 in the State of Illinois.
36     "Tissue bank" means any facility or program operating in

 

 

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1 Illinois that is certified by the American Association of
2 Tissue Banks, the Eye Bank Association of America, or the
3 Association of Organ Procurement Organizations and is involved
4 in procuring, furnishing, donating, or distributing corneas,
5 bones, or other human tissue for the purpose of injecting,
6 transfusing, or transplanting any of them into the human body.
7 "Tissue bank" does not include a licensed blood bank. For the
8 purposes of this Act, "tissue" does not include organs or blood
9 or blood products.
10 (Source: P.A. 79-952.)
 
11     (755 ILCS 50/Art. 5/heading new)
12
Article 5.
Organ Donation.

 
13     (755 ILCS 50/5-5 new)  (was 755 ILCS 50/3)
14     Sec. 5-5 3. Persons who may execute an anatomical gift.
15     (a) Any individual of sound mind who has attained the age
16 of 18 may give all or any part of his or her body for any
17 purpose specified in Section 5-10 4. Such a gift may be
18 executed in any of the ways set out in Section 5-20 5, and
19 shall take effect upon the individual's death without the need
20 to obtain the consent of any survivor. An anatomical gift made
21 by an agent of an individual, as authorized by the individual
22 under the Powers of Attorney for Health Care Law, as now or
23 hereafter amended, is deemed to be a gift by that individual
24 and takes effect without the need to obtain the consent of any
25 other person.
26     (b) If no gift has been executed under subsection (a), any
27 of the following persons, in the order of priority stated in
28 items (1) through (11) (9) below, when persons in prior classes
29 are not available for the giving of consent or refusal and in
30 the absence of (i) actual notice of contrary intentions by the
31 decedent and (ii) actual notice of opposition by any member
32 within the same priority class, may consent to give all or any
33 part of the decedent's body after or immediately before death
34 to a person who may become a donee for any purpose specified in

 

 

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1 Section 5-10 4:
2         (1) an individual acting as the decedent's agent under
3     a power of attorney for health care which provides specific
4     direction regarding organ donation,
5         (2) the decedent's surrogate decision maker identified
6     by the attending physician in accordance with the Health
7     Care Surrogate Act,
8         (3) the guardian of the decedent's person at the time
9     of death,
10         (4) (2) the decedent's spouse,
11         (5) (3) any of the decedent's adult sons or daughters,
12         (6) (4) either of the decedent's parents,
13         (7) (5) any of the decedent's adult brothers or
14     sisters,
15         (8) (6) any adult grandchild of the decedent,
16         (9) a close friend of the decedent,
17         (10) (7) the guardian of the decedent's estate,
18         (8) the decedent's surrogate decision maker under the
19     Health Care Surrogate Act,
20         (11) (9) any other person authorized or under legal
21     obligation to dispose of the body.
22     If the donee has actual notice of opposition to the gift by
23 the decedent or any person in the highest priority class in
24 which an available person can be found, then no gift of all or
25 any part of the decedent's body shall be accepted.
26     (c) For the purposes of this Act, a person will not be
27 considered "available" for the giving of consent or refusal if:
28         (1) the existence of the person is unknown to the donee
29     and is not readily ascertainable through the examination of
30     the decedent's hospital records and the questioning of any
31     persons who are available for giving consent;
32         (2) the donee has unsuccessfully attempted to contact
33     the person by telephone or in any other reasonable manner;
34         (3) the person is unable or unwilling to respond in a
35     manner which indicates the person's refusal or consent.
36     (c) (d) A gift of all or part of a body authorizes any

 

 

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1 examination necessary to assure medical acceptability of the
2 gift for the purposes intended.
3     (d) (e) The rights of the donee created by the gift are
4 paramount to the rights of others except as provided by Section
5 5-45 8(d).
6     (e) (f) If no gift has been executed under this Act
7 Section, then no part of the decedent's body may be used for
8 any purpose specified in Section 4 of this Act, except in
9 accordance with the Organ Donation Request Act or the Corneal
10 Transplant Act.
11 (Source: P.A. 92-349, eff. 1-1-02.)
 
12     (755 ILCS 50/5-10 new)  (was 755 ILCS 50/4)
13     Sec. 5-10 4. Persons Who May Become Donees; Purposes for
14 Which Anatomical Gifts May be Made.
15     The following persons may become donees of gifts of bodies
16 or parts thereof for the purposes stated:
17     (1) any hospital, surgeon, or physician, for medical or
18 dental education, research, advancement of medical or dental
19 science, therapy, or transplantation; or
20     (2) any accredited medical, chiropractic, mortuary or
21 dental school, college or university for education, research,
22 advancement of medical or dental science, or therapy; or
23     (3) any bank or storage facility, for medical or dental
24 education, research, advancement of medical or dental science,
25 therapy, or transplantation; or
26     (4) any federally designated organ procurement agency or
27 tissue bank, for medical or dental education, research,
28 advancement of medical or dental science, therapy, or
29 transplantation; or
30     (5) (4) any specified individual for therapy or
31 transplantation needed by him or her, or for any other purpose.
32 (Source: P.A. 76-1209.)
 
33     (755 ILCS 50/5-15 new)  (was 755 ILCS 50/4.5)
34     Sec. 5-15 4.5. Disability of recipient.

 

 

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1     (a) No hospital, physician and surgeon, bank or storage
2 facility, or other person shall determine the ultimate
3 recipient of an anatomical gift based upon a potential
4 recipient's physical or mental disability, except to the extent
5 that the physical or mental disability has been found by a
6 physician and surgeon, following a case-by-case evaluation of
7 the potential recipient, to be medically significant to the
8 provision of the anatomical gift.
9     (b) Subsection (a) shall apply to each part of the organ
10 transplant process.
11     (c) The court shall accord priority on its calendar and
12 handle expeditiously any action brought to seek any remedy
13 authorized by law for purposes of enforcing compliance with
14 this Section.
15     (d) This Section shall not be deemed to require referrals
16 or recommendations for or the performance of medically
17 inappropriate organ transplants.
18     (e) As used in this Section "disability" has the same
19 meaning as in the federal Americans with Disabilities Act of
20 1990 (42 U.S.C. 12101 et seq., Public Law 101-336) as may be
21 amended from time to time.
22 (Source: P.A. 91-345, eff. 1-1-00.)
 
23     (755 ILCS 50/5-20 new)  (was 755 ILCS 50/5)
24     Sec. 5-20 5. Manner of Executing Anatomical Gifts. (a) A
25 gift of all or part of the body under Section 5-5 3 (a) may be
26 made by will. The gift becomes effective upon the death of the
27 testator without waiting for probate. If the will is not
28 probated, or if it is declared invalid for testamentary
29 purposes, the gift, to the extent that it has been acted upon
30 in good faith, is nevertheless valid and effective.
31     (b) A gift of all or part of the body under Section 5-5 3
32 (a) may also be made by a written, signed document other than a
33 will. The gift becomes effective upon the death of the donor.
34 The document, which may be a card or a valid driver's license
35 designed to be carried on the person, must be signed by the

 

 

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1 donor in the presence of 2 witnesses who must sign the document
2 in his presence and who thereby certify that he was of sound
3 mind and memory and free from any undue influence and knows the
4 objects of his bounty and affection. Such a gift may also be
5 made by properly executing the form provided by the Secretary
6 of State on the reverse side of the donor's driver's license
7 pursuant to subsection (b) of Section 6-110 of The Illinois
8 Vehicle Code. Delivery of the document of gift during the
9 donor's lifetime is not necessary to make the gift valid.
10     (c) The gift may be made to a specified donee or without
11 specifying a donee. If the latter, the gift may be accepted by
12 the attending physician as donee upon or following death. If
13 the gift is made to a specified donee who is not available at
14 the time and place of death, then if made for the purpose of
15 transplantation, it shall be effectuated in accordance with
16 Section 5-25, and if made for any other purpose the attending
17 physician upon or following death, in the absence of any
18 expressed indication that the donor desired otherwise, may
19 accept the gift as donee. The physician who becomes a donee
20 under this subsection shall not participate either physically
21 or financially in the procedures for removing or transplanting
22 a part.
23     (d) Notwithstanding Section 5-45 8 (b), the donor may
24 designate in his will, card, or other document of gift the
25 surgeon or physician to carry out the appropriate procedures.
26 In the absence of a designation or if the designee is not
27 available, the donee or other person authorized to accept the
28 gift may employ or authorize any surgeon or physician for the
29 purpose.
30     (e) Any gift by a person designated in Section 5-5 3 (b)
31 shall be made by a document signed by him or made by his
32 telegraphic, recorded telephonic, or other recorded message.
33 (Source: P.A. 85-192.)
 
34     (755 ILCS 50/5-25 new)
35     Sec. 5-25. Notification; consent.

 

 

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1     (a) When, based upon generally accepted medical standards,
2 an inpatient in a general acute care hospital with more than
3 100 beds is a suitable candidate for organ or tissue donation
4 and the patient has not made an anatomical gift of all or any
5 part of his or her body pursuant to Section 5-20 of this Act,
6 the hospital shall proceed in accordance with the requirements
7 of 42 CFR 482.45 or any successor provisions of federal statute
8 or regulation, as may be amended from time to time, and the
9 written agreement between the hospital and the applicable organ
10 procurement agency executed thereunder.
11     (b) In making a request for organ or tissue donation, the
12 hospital or the hospital's federally designated organ
13 procurement agency or tissue bank shall request any of the
14 following persons, in the order of priority stated in items (1)
15 through (11) below, when persons in prior classes are not
16 available and in the absence of (i) actual notice of contrary
17 intentions by the decedent, (ii) actual notice of opposition by
18 any member within the same priority class, and (iii) reason to
19 believe that an anatomical gift is contrary to the decedent's
20 religious beliefs, to consent to the gift of all or any part of
21 the decedent's body for any purpose specified in Section 5-10
22 of this Act:
23         (1) an individual acting as the decedent's agent under
24     a power of attorney for health care;
25         (2) the decedent's surrogate decision maker identified
26     by the attending physician in accordance with the Health
27     Care Surrogate Act;
28         (3) the guardian of the decedent's person at the time
29     of death;
30         (4) the decedent's spouse;
31         (5) any of the decedent's adult sons or daughters;
32         (6) either of the decedent's parents;
33         (7) any of the decedent's adult brothers or sisters;
34         (8) any adult grandchild of the decedent;
35         (9) a close friend of the decedent;
36         (10) the guardian of the decedent's estate; or

 

 

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1         (11) any other person authorized or under legal
2     obligation to dispose of the body.
3     (c) If (1) the hospital, the applicable organ procurement
4 agency, or the tissue bank has actual notice of opposition to
5 the gift by the decedent or any person in the highest priority
6 class in which an available person can be found, or (2) there
7 is reason to believe that an anatomical gift is contrary to the
8 decedent's religious beliefs, or (3) the Director of Public
9 Health has adopted a rule signifying his or her determination
10 that the need for organs and tissues for donation has been
11 adequately met, then the gift of all or any part of the
12 decedent's body shall not be requested. If a donation is
13 requested, consent or refusal may be obtained only from the
14 person or persons in the highest priority class available. If
15 the hospital administrator, or his or her designated
16 representative, the designated organ procurement agency, or
17 the tissue bank is unable to obtain consent from any of the
18 persons named in items (1) through (11) of subsection (b) of
19 this Section, the decedent's body shall not be used for an
20 anatomical gift unless a valid anatomical gift document was
21 executed under this Act.
22     (d) When there is a suitable candidate for organ donation,
23 as described in subsection (a), or if consent to remove organs
24 and tissues is granted, the hospital shall notify the
25 applicable federally designated organ procurement agency. The
26 federally designated organ procurement agency shall notify any
27 tissue bank specified by the hospital of the suitable candidate
28 for tissue donation. The organ procurement agency shall
29 collaborate with all tissue banks in Illinois to maximize
30 tissue procurement in a timely manner.
 
31     (755 ILCS 50/5-30 new)
32     Sec. 5-30. Corneal Transplants.
33     (a) Upon request by a physician licensed to practice
34 medicine in all its branches, or by an eye bank certified by
35 the Eye Bank Association of America, and approved by the

 

 

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1 coroner or county medical examiner, in any case in which a
2 patient is in need of corneal tissue for a transplant, a
3 coroner or county medical examiner who orders the performance
4 of an autopsy may provide corneal tissue of a decedent whenever
5 all of the following conditions are met:
6         (1) The decedent from whom the tissue is taken is under
7     the jurisdiction of the coroner or county medical examiner.
8         (2) There has been a reasonable and good faith effort
9     by the coroner or county medical examiner or any authorized
10     individual acting for the coroner or county medical
11     examiner to contact an appropriate person as set forth in
12     subsection (b) of this Section.
13         (3) No objection by the decedent or, after the
14     decedent's death, by an appropriate person as set forth in
15     subsection (b) of this Section is known to the coroner or
16     county medical examiner or authorized individual acting
17     for the coroner or county medical examiner prior to removal
18     of the corneal tissue.
19         (4) The person designated to remove the tissue is
20     qualified to do so under this Act.
21         (5) Removal of the tissue will not interfere with the
22     subsequent course of an investigation or autopsy.
23         (6) The individual when living did not make known in
24     writing his or her objection on religious grounds to the
25     removal of his or her corneal tissue.
26     (b) Objection to the removal of corneal tissue may be made
27 known to the coroner or county medical examiner or authorized
28 individual acting for the coroner or county medical examiner by
29 the individual during his or her lifetime or by the following
30 persons, in the order of priority stated, after the decedent's
31 death:
32         (1) an individual acting as the decedent's agent under
33     a power of attorney for health care;
34         (2) the decedent's surrogate decision maker identified
35     by the attending physician in accordance with the Health
36     Care Surrogate Act;

 

 

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1         (3) the guardian of the decedent's person at the time
2     of death;
3         (4) the decedent's spouse;
4         (5) any of the decedent's adult sons or daughters;
5         (6) either of the decedent's parents;
6         (7) any of the decedent's adult brothers or sisters;
7         (8) any adult grandchild of the decedent;
8         (9) a close friend of the decedent;
9         (10) the guardian of the decedent's estate; or
10         (11) any other person authorized or under legal
11     obligation to dispose of the body.
12     (c) If the coroner or county medical examiner or any
13 authorized individual acting for the coroner or county medical
14 examiner has actual notice of any contrary indications by the
15 decedent or actual notice that any member within the same class
16 specified in subsection (b), paragraphs (1) through (11), of
17 this Section, in the same order of priority, objects to the
18 removal, the coroner or county medical examiner shall not
19 approve the removal of corneal tissue.
20     (d) The coroner or county medical examiner or any
21 authorized individual acting for the coroner or county medical
22 examiner authorizing the removal of corneal tissue, or the
23 persons or organizations listed in subsection (a) of this
24 Section, shall not be liable in any civil or criminal action
25 for removing corneal tissue from a decedent and using the same
26 for transplant purposes if there has been compliance with the
27 provisions of this Section.
 
28     (755 ILCS 50/5-35 new)  (was 755 ILCS 50/6)
29     Sec. 5-35 6. Delivery of Document of Gift.
30     If the gift is made by the donor to a specified donee, the
31 will, card, or other document, or an executed copy thereof, may
32 be delivered to the donee to expedite the appropriate
33 procedures immediately after death. Delivery is not necessary
34 to the validity of the gift. The will, card, or other document,
35 or an executed copy thereof, may be deposited in any hospital,

 

 

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1 bank or storage facility, or registry office that accepts it
2 for safekeeping or for facilitation of procedures after death.
3 On request of any interested party upon or after the donor's
4 death, the person in possession shall produce the document for
5 examination.
6 (Source: P.A. 76-1209.)
 
7     (755 ILCS 50/5-40 new)  (was 755 ILCS 50/7)
8     Sec. 5-40 7. Amendment or Revocation of the Gift.
9     (a) If the will, card, or other document or executed copy
10 thereof, has been delivered to a specified donee, the donor may
11 amend or revoke the gift by:
12         (1) the execution and delivery to the donee of a signed
13     statement witnessed and certified as provided in Section
14     5-20 5 (b); or
15         (2) a signed card or document found on his person, or
16     in his effects, executed at a date subsequent to the date
17     the original gift was made and witnessed and certified as
18     provided in Section 5-20 5 (b).
19     (b) Any document of gift which has not been delivered to
20 the donee may be revoked by the donor in the manner set out in
21 subsection (a).
22     (c) Any gift made by a will may also be amended or revoked
23 in the manner provided for amendment or revocation of wills or
24 as provided in subsection (a).
25 (Source: P.A. 87-895.)
 
26     (755 ILCS 50/5-45 new)  (was 755 ILCS 50/8)
27     Sec. 5-45 8. Rights and Duties at Death. (a) The donee may
28 accept or reject the gift. If the donee accepts a gift of the
29 entire body, he may, subject to the terms of the gift,
30 authorize embalming and the use of the body in funeral
31 services, unless a person named in subsection (b) of Section
32 5-5 3 has requested, prior to the final disposition by the
33 donee, that the remains of said body be returned to his or her
34 custody for the purpose of final disposition. Such request

 

 

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1 shall be honored by the donee if the terms of the gift are
2 silent on how final disposition is to take place. If the gift
3 is of a part of the body, the donee or technician designated by
4 him upon the death of the donor and prior to embalming, shall
5 cause the part to be removed without unnecessary mutilation and
6 without undue delay in the release of the body for the purposes
7 of final disposition. After removal of the part, custody of the
8 remainder of the body vests in the surviving spouse, next of
9 kin, or other persons under obligation to dispose of the body,
10 in the order or priority listed in subsection (b) of Section
11 5-5 3 of this Act.
12     (b) The time of death shall be determined by a physician
13 who attends the donor at his death, or, if none, the physician
14 who certifies the death. The physician shall not participate in
15 the procedures for removing or transplanting a part.
16     (c) A person who acts in good faith in accord with the
17 terms of this Act and the AIDS Confidentiality Act, or the
18 anatomical gift laws of another state or a foreign country, is
19 not liable for damages in any civil action or subject to
20 prosecution in any criminal proceeding for his act. Any person
21 that participates in good faith and according to the usual and
22 customary standards of medical practice in the removal or
23 transplantation of any part of a decedent's body pursuant to an
24 anatomical gift made by the decedent under Section 5-20 5 of
25 this Act or pursuant to an anatomical gift made by an
26 individual as authorized by subsection (b) of Section 5-5 3 of
27 this Act shall have immunity from liability, civil, criminal,
28 or otherwise, that might result by reason of such actions. For
29 the purpose of any proceedings, civil or criminal, the validity
30 of an anatomical gift executed pursuant to Section 5-20 5 of
31 this Act shall be presumed and the good faith of any person
32 participating in the removal or transplantation of any part of
33 a decedent's body pursuant to an anatomical gift made by the
34 decedent or by another individual authorized by the Act shall
35 be presumed.
36     (d) This Act is subject to the provisions of "An Act to

 

 

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1 revise the law in relation to coroners", approved February 6,
2 1874, as now or hereafter amended, to the laws of this State
3 prescribing powers and duties with respect to autopsies, and to
4 the statutes, rules, and regulations of this State with respect
5 to the transportation and disposition of deceased human bodies.
6     (e) If the donee is provided information, or determines
7 through independent examination, that there is evidence that
8 the gift was exposed to the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)
9 or any other identified causative agent of acquired
10 immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS), the donee may reject the gift
11 and shall treat the information and examination results as a
12 confidential medical record; the donee may disclose only the
13 results confirming HIV exposure, and only to the physician of
14 the deceased donor. The donor's physician shall determine
15 whether the person who executed the gift should be notified of
16 the confirmed positive test result.
17 (Source: P.A. 85-1209.)
 
18     (755 ILCS 50/5-50 new)  (was 755 ILCS 50/8.1)
19     Sec. 5-50 8.1. Payment for gift. (a) Except as provided in
20 subsection (b), any person who knowingly pays or offers to pay
21 any financial consideration to a donor or to any of the persons
22 listed in subsection (b) of Section 5-5 3 for making or
23 consenting to an anatomical gift shall be guilty of a Class A
24 misdemeanor for the first conviction and a Class 4 felony for
25 subsequent convictions.
26     (b) This Section does not prohibit reimbursement for
27 reasonable costs associated with the removal, storage or
28 transportation of a human body or part thereof pursuant to an
29 anatomical gift executed pursuant to this Act.
30 (Source: P.A. 85-191.)
31     (755 ILCS 50/9 rep.)
32     (755 ILCS 50/11 rep.)
33     Section 55. The Uniform Anatomical Gift Act is amended by
34 repealing Sections 9 and 11.
1     (755 ILCS 55/Act rep.)
2     Section 60. The Illinois Corneal Transplant Act is
3 repealed.
4     (755 ILCS 60/Act rep.)
5     Section 65. The Organ Donation Request Act is repealed.
6     Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon
7 becoming law.

 

 

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1 INDEX
2 Statutes amended in order of appearance
3     20 ILCS 2310/2310-330 was 20 ILCS 2310/55.46
4     105 ILCS 5/27-23.5
5     210 ILCS 85/6.16
6     210 ILCS 85/10.4 from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 151.4
7     410 ILCS 305/7 from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 7307
8     625 ILCS 5/6-110 from Ch. 95 1/2, par. 6-110
9     625 ILCS 5/12-215 from Ch. 95 1/2, par. 12-215
10     720 ILCS 5/12-20 from Ch. 38, par. 12-20
11     755 ILCS 35/6 from Ch. 110 1/2, par. 706
12     755 ILCS 40/20 from Ch. 110 1/2, par. 851-20
13     755 ILCS 40/65
14     755 ILCS 45/4-7 from Ch. 110 1/2, par. 804-7
15     755 ILCS 45/4-10 from Ch. 110 1/2, par. 804-10
16     755 ILCS 50/Art. 1 heading
17     new
18     755 ILCS 50/1-1 new was 755 ILCS 50/1
19     755 ILCS 50/1-5 new
20     755 ILCS 50/1-10 new was 755 ILCS 50/2
21     755 ILCS 50/Art. 5/heading
22     new
23     755 ILCS 50/5-5 new was 755 ILCS 50/3
24     755 ILCS 50/5-10 new was 755 ILCS 50/4
25     755 ILCS 50/5-15 new was 755 ILCS 50/4.5
26     755 ILCS 50/5-20 new was 755 ILCS 50/5
27     755 ILCS 50/5-25 new
28     755 ILCS 50/5-30 new
29     755 ILCS 50/5-35 new was 755 ILCS 50/6
30     755 ILCS 50/5-40 new was 755 ILCS 50/7
31     755 ILCS 50/5-45 new was 755 ILCS 50/8
32     755 ILCS 50/5-50 new was 755 ILCS 50/8.1
33     755 ILCS 50/9 rep.
34     755 ILCS 50/11 rep.
35     755 ILCS 55/Act rep.

 

 

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1     755 ILCS 60/Act rep.