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| | 102ND GENERAL ASSEMBLY
State of Illinois
2021 and 2022 HB5456 Introduced 1/31/2022, by Rep. Deanne M. Mazzochi SYNOPSIS AS INTRODUCED: |
| New Act | | 30 ILCS 805/8.46 new | |
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Creates the Patient-Assisted Hemophilia Medication Administration Act. Provides that emergency personnel may assist a patient with a rare blood disease in emergency situations to administer patient-carried medication if the administration meets specified requirements, irrespective of the age of the patient and without the need to secure separate consent from the patient or the patient's caregiver or a legal guardian if the emergency personnel take steps to deliver the patient to a receiving hospital and the receiving hospital is informed of the pending arrival of the rare blood disease patient, along with the treatment instituted by the emergency personnel. Allows the Department of Public Health to conduct or approve a training program for emergency personnel to recognize and learn additional treatment protocols for rare blood disorders. Amends the State Mandates Act to require implementation without reimbursement.
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| | A BILL FOR |
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| | HB5456 | | LRB102 26099 CPF 35582 b |
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1 | | AN ACT concerning health.
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2 | | Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
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3 | | represented in the General Assembly:
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4 | | Section 1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the |
5 | | Patient-Assisted Hemophilia Medication Administration Act. |
6 | | Section 5. Findings. The General Assembly finds that: |
7 | | (1) Patients that have rare bleeding disorders such as |
8 | | hemophilia and Von Willebrand Disease can create large |
9 | | demands on health care resources, and such patients |
10 | | necessitate the provision of unique care. Patients with |
11 | | these diseases may suffer profuse, life-threatening |
12 | | bleeding even through minor trauma. Patients commonly may |
13 | | receive human or recombinant blood factors |
14 | | prophylactically throughout each week to keep blood factor |
15 | | levels within safe levels. |
16 | | (2) During an emergency situation, which may include |
17 | | either a minor or major trauma event, it is the standard of |
18 | | care and opinion of experts that, "if in doubt, treat", |
19 | | preferably within 2 hours. |
20 | | (3) For severe or life-threatening bleeding, patients |
21 | | need appropriate clotting factors by intravenous push over |
22 | | one to 2 minutes followed by additional follow up |
23 | | prophylactic care. |
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1 | | (4) Because of the need for immediate treatment, it is |
2 | | common for patients with rare bleeding disorders to carry |
3 | | with them at all times their own clotting factor, |
4 | | including, but not limited to, factor VIII, factor IX, and |
5 | | Von Willebrand factor, desmopressin, anti-inhibitor |
6 | | coagulant complex, or related substances. |
7 | | (5) The risk of overdose of rare disease blood |
8 | | treatment factors is rare and low relative to the risk of |
9 | | harm to such patients from failure to adequately dose rare |
10 | | blood disease treatment factors if treatment is not |
11 | | administered quickly when an emergency bleed occurs. |
12 | | Failure to treat quickly at the time of trauma may also |
13 | | necessitate increased administration of rare blood disease |
14 | | treatment factors for a period of days or weeks compared |
15 | | to normal prophylactic care doses. Treating patients with |
16 | | medication that patients have on hand also lessens the |
17 | | likelihood that a patient will suffer adverse and |
18 | | potentially life-threatening side effects from the |
19 | | generation of alloantibodies, inhibitory antibodies, |
20 | | triggering antibodies, or undesirable binding of HLA class |
21 | | II antigens. |
22 | | (6) Patients and their associated caregivers who may |
23 | | be nonmedical personnel, such as parents, are frequently |
24 | | trained on how to administer rare blood disease treatment |
25 | | factors to address acute trauma events. However, there may |
26 | | be times when the caregiver is either not present or |
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1 | | incapacitated, or otherwise solely in the presence of |
2 | | those who have not been trained in how to provide |
3 | | intravenous infusions. |
4 | | (7) Patients and their associated caregivers have |
5 | | experienced failure to immediately treat in response to |
6 | | acute trauma, even when the patient has his or her own |
7 | | rescue medication on hand, because of confusion in the |
8 | | scope of permissible practice. |
9 | | (8) It is the goal of the General Assembly to |
10 | | encourage emergency management technicians, assistant |
11 | | emergency medical technicians, and paramedics certified |
12 | | under Illinois statutes to assist a patient with a rare |
13 | | blood disease in emergency situations. |
14 | | Section 10. Definitions. In this Act: |
15 | | "Administer" means to directly apply, via injector, or |
16 | | deliver, via infusion, a medication associated with a rare |
17 | | blood disease to the body of an individual. |
18 | | "Emergency personnel" includes any emergency medical |
19 | | technician, assistant emergency medical technician, and |
20 | | paramedic licensed under the Emergency Medical Services (EMS) |
21 | | Systems Act.
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22 | | "Emergency situations" includes at least the following: |
23 | | situations where a call is initiated to or received by 9-1-1 or |
24 | | other emergency response service; events where an emergency |
25 | | medical technician, assistant emergency medical technician, or |
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1 | | paramedic has been specially retained to be present; an |
2 | | accident scene; ambulance transport; airlift transport; |
3 | | situations where federal emergency response agencies have been |
4 | | called to a scene; or situations which otherwise arise in a |
5 | | location in the State that is not an urgent care center or |
6 | | hospital. |
7 | | "Health care practitioner" means a physician licensed to |
8 | | practice medicine in all its branches under the Medical |
9 | | Practice Act of 1987, a physician assistant under the |
10 | | Physician Assistant Practice Act of 1987 with prescriptive |
11 | | authority, or an advanced practice registered nurse with |
12 | | prescribing authority under Article 65 of the Nurse Practice |
13 | | Act. |
14 | | "Patient-carried medication" means: |
15 | | (1) for a patient who is a resident in the State, |
16 | | medication that has been prescribed by a health care |
17 | | practitioner in connection with the treatment, therapy, or |
18 | | prophylactic care of a rare blood disease and is in the |
19 | | possession, custody, or control of the patient or the |
20 | | patient's caregiver or legal guardian. |
21 | | (2) for a patient who is not a resident in the State, |
22 | | medication that has been prescribed by a physician, |
23 | | physician assistant with prescribing authority, or |
24 | | advanced practice nurse with prescriptive authority who is |
25 | | licensed in the state of the patient's residency, is in |
26 | | connection to the treatment, therapy, or prophylactic care |
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1 | | of a rare blood disease, and is in the possession, |
2 | | custody, or control of a patient, patient caregiver, or |
3 | | patient's legal guardian, provided that the prescription |
4 | | medication is accompanied by either an original or copy of |
5 | | the prescription signed by an authorizing physician or the |
6 | | packaging indicates the name of a dispensing pharmacy and |
7 | | the prescription was written in the name of the patient. |
8 | | "Rare blood diseases" means a group of disorders that |
9 | | share the inability to form a proper blood clot, characterized |
10 | | by extended bleeding after injury, surgery, trauma, or |
11 | | menstruation, or sometimes spontaneously, without a known or |
12 | | identifiable cause. "Rare blood diseases" includes hemophilia |
13 | | A and B, Von Willebrand Disease, and such additional |
14 | | conditions as may be determined by the Department of Public |
15 | | Health pursuant to notice and rulemaking. |
16 | | "Rare blood disease treatment factors" includes Factor |
17 | | VII; Factor VIII, Factor IX, Von Willebrand factor, |
18 | | desmopressin, anti-inhibitor coagulant complex, complexes, |
19 | | conjugates, or derivatives thereof (including those complexed |
20 | | to polyethylene glycol, genetically modified or synthesized |
21 | | variants, or partial fragments of such factors that provide |
22 | | clinical activity), and such additional medications as may be |
23 | | determined by the Department of Public Health pursuant to |
24 | | notice and rulemaking used in the treatment of rare blood |
25 | | disease.
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1 | | Section 15. Administering patient-carried medication. Any |
2 | | emergency personnel may assist a patient with a rare blood |
3 | | disease in emergency situations to administer patient-carried |
4 | | medication if the administration is: |
5 | | (1) consistent with written instructions from an |
6 | | authorizing physician, such as a written care plan; |
7 | | (2) consistent with the package labeling; |
8 | | (3) via routes of delivery that are within the scope |
9 | | of training of the emergency personnel; or |
10 | | (4) consistent with a care plan that previously was |
11 | | filed by or on behalf of the patient with the chief |
12 | | emergency personnel officer, or his or her designee, |
13 | | provided that the care plan has been independently |
14 | | approved by a health care practitioner. |
15 | | The activity authorized under this Section may be taken |
16 | | irrespective of the age of the patient and without the need to |
17 | | secure separate consent from the patient or the patient's |
18 | | caregiver or a legal guardian if the emergency personnel take |
19 | | steps to deliver the patient to a receiving hospital and the |
20 | | receiving hospital is informed of the pending arrival of the |
21 | | rare blood disease patient, along with the treatment |
22 | | instituted by the emergency personnel. |
23 | | Section 20. Training program. The Department of Public |
24 | | Health may conduct or approve a training program for emergency |
25 | | personnel to recognize and learn additional treatment |