Rep. Kelly M. Cassidy

Filed: 5/23/2020

 

 


 

 


 
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1
AMENDMENT TO SENATE BILL 557

2    AMENDMENT NO. ______. Amend Senate Bill 557, AS AMENDED, by
3replacing everything after the enacting clause with the
4following:
 
5    "Section 5. The Sexual Assault Survivors Emergency
6Treatment Act is amended by changing Sections 1a, 2, 2.05,
72.06, 2.1, 2.2, 3, 5, 5.1, 5.2, 5.3, 5.5, 6.1, 6.2, 6.4, 6.5,
86.6, 7, 7.5, 8, and 10 and by adding Sections 1a-1, 2-1,
92.05-1, 2.06-1, 2.1-1, 2.2-1, 3-1, 5-1, 5.1-1, 5.2-1, 5.3-1,
105.5-1, 6.1-1, 6.2-1, 6.4-1, 6.5-1, 6.6-1, 7-1, 7.5-1, 8-1, and
1110-1 as follows:
 
12    (410 ILCS 70/1a)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 87-1a)
13    Sec. 1a. Definitions.
14    (a) In this Act:
15    "Advanced practice registered nurse" has the meaning
16provided in Section 50-10 of the Nurse Practice Act.

 

 

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1    "Ambulance provider" means an individual or entity that
2owns and operates a business or service using ambulances or
3emergency medical services vehicles to transport emergency
4patients.
5    "Approved pediatric health care facility" means a health
6care facility, other than a hospital, with a sexual assault
7treatment plan approved by the Department to provide medical
8forensic services to pediatric sexual assault survivors who
9present with a complaint of sexual assault within a minimum of
10the last 7 days or who have disclosed past sexual assault by a
11specific individual and were in the care of that individual
12within a minimum of the last 7 days.
13    "Areawide sexual assault treatment plan" means a plan,
14developed by hospitals or by hospitals and approved pediatric
15health care facilities in a community or area to be served,
16which provides for medical forensic services to sexual assault
17survivors that shall be made available by each of the
18participating hospitals and approved pediatric health care
19facilities.
20    "Board-certified child abuse pediatrician" means a
21physician certified by the American Board of Pediatrics in
22child abuse pediatrics.
23    "Board-eligible child abuse pediatrician" means a
24physician who has completed the requirements set forth by the
25American Board of Pediatrics to take the examination for
26certification in child abuse pediatrics.

 

 

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1    "Department" means the Department of Public Health.
2    "Emergency contraception" means medication as approved by
3the federal Food and Drug Administration (FDA) that can
4significantly reduce the risk of pregnancy if taken within 72
5hours after sexual assault.
6    "Follow-up healthcare" means healthcare services related
7to a sexual assault, including laboratory services and pharmacy
8services, rendered within 90 days of the initial visit for
9medical forensic services.
10    "Health care professional" means a physician, a physician
11assistant, a sexual assault forensic examiner, an advanced
12practice registered nurse, a registered professional nurse, a
13licensed practical nurse, or a sexual assault nurse examiner.
14    "Hospital" means a hospital licensed under the Hospital
15Licensing Act or operated under the University of Illinois
16Hospital Act, any outpatient center included in the hospital's
17sexual assault treatment plan where hospital employees provide
18medical forensic services, and an out-of-state hospital that
19has consented to the jurisdiction of the Department under
20Section 2.06.
21    "Illinois State Police Sexual Assault Evidence Collection
22Kit" means a prepackaged set of materials and forms to be used
23for the collection of evidence relating to sexual assault. The
24standardized evidence collection kit for the State of Illinois
25shall be the Illinois State Police Sexual Assault Evidence
26Collection Kit.

 

 

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1    "Law enforcement agency having jurisdiction" means the law
2enforcement agency in the jurisdiction where an alleged sexual
3assault or sexual abuse occurred.
4    "Licensed practical nurse" has the meaning provided in
5Section 50-10 of the Nurse Practice Act.
6    "Medical forensic services" means health care delivered to
7patients within or under the care and supervision of personnel
8working in a designated emergency department of a hospital or
9an approved pediatric health care facility. "Medical forensic
10services" includes, but is not limited to, taking a medical
11history, performing photo documentation, performing a physical
12and anogenital examination, assessing the patient for evidence
13collection, collecting evidence in accordance with a statewide
14sexual assault evidence collection program administered by the
15Department of State Police using the Illinois State Police
16Sexual Assault Evidence Collection Kit, if appropriate,
17assessing the patient for drug-facilitated or
18alcohol-facilitated sexual assault, providing an evaluation of
19and care for sexually transmitted infection and human
20immunodeficiency virus (HIV), pregnancy risk evaluation and
21care, and discharge and follow-up healthcare planning.
22    "Pediatric health care facility" means a clinic or
23physician's office that provides medical services to pediatric
24patients.
25    "Pediatric sexual assault survivor" means a person under
26the age of 13 who presents for medical forensic services in

 

 

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1relation to injuries or trauma resulting from a sexual assault.
2    "Photo documentation" means digital photographs or
3colposcope videos stored and backed up securely in the original
4file format.
5    "Physician" means a person licensed to practice medicine in
6all its branches.
7    "Physician assistant" has the meaning provided in Section 4
8of the Physician Assistant Practice Act of 1987.
9    "Prepubescent sexual assault survivor" means a female who
10is under the age of 18 years and has not had a first menstrual
11cycle or a male who is under the age of 18 years and has not
12started to develop secondary sex characteristics who presents
13for medical forensic services in relation to injuries or trauma
14resulting from a sexual assault.
15    "Qualified medical provider" means a board-certified child
16abuse pediatrician, board-eligible child abuse pediatrician, a
17sexual assault forensic examiner, or a sexual assault nurse
18examiner who has access to photo documentation tools, and who
19participates in peer review.
20    "Registered Professional Nurse" has the meaning provided
21in Section 50-10 of the Nurse Practice Act.
22    "Sexual assault" means:
23        (1) an act of sexual conduct; as used in this
24    paragraph, "sexual conduct" has the meaning provided under
25    Section 11-0.1 of the Criminal Code of 2012; or
26        (2) any act of sexual penetration; as used in this

 

 

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1    paragraph, "sexual penetration" has the meaning provided
2    under Section 11-0.1 of the Criminal Code of 2012 and
3    includes, without limitation, acts prohibited under
4    Sections 11-1.20 through 11-1.60 of the Criminal Code of
5    2012.
6    "Sexual assault forensic examiner" means a physician or
7physician assistant who has completed training that meets or is
8substantially similar to the Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner
9Education Guidelines established by the International
10Association of Forensic Nurses.
11    "Sexual assault nurse examiner" means an advanced practice
12registered nurse or registered professional nurse who has
13completed a sexual assault nurse examiner training program that
14meets the Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner Education Guidelines
15established by the International Association of Forensic
16Nurses.
17    "Sexual assault services voucher" means a document
18generated by a hospital or approved pediatric health care
19facility at the time the sexual assault survivor receives
20outpatient medical forensic services that may be used to seek
21payment for any ambulance services, medical forensic services,
22laboratory services, pharmacy services, and follow-up
23healthcare provided as a result of the sexual assault.
24    "Sexual assault survivor" means a person who presents for
25medical forensic services in relation to injuries or trauma
26resulting from a sexual assault.

 

 

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1    "Sexual assault transfer plan" means a written plan
2developed by a hospital and approved by the Department, which
3describes the hospital's procedures for transferring sexual
4assault survivors to another hospital, and an approved
5pediatric health care facility, if applicable, in order to
6receive medical forensic services.
7    "Sexual assault treatment plan" means a written plan that
8describes the procedures and protocols for providing medical
9forensic services to sexual assault survivors who present
10themselves for such services, either directly or through
11transfer from a hospital or an approved pediatric health care
12facility.
13    "Transfer hospital" means a hospital with a sexual assault
14transfer plan approved by the Department.
15    "Transfer services" means the appropriate medical
16screening examination and necessary stabilizing treatment
17prior to the transfer of a sexual assault survivor to a
18hospital or an approved pediatric health care facility that
19provides medical forensic services to sexual assault survivors
20pursuant to a sexual assault treatment plan or areawide sexual
21assault treatment plan.
22    "Treatment hospital" means a hospital with a sexual assault
23treatment plan approved by the Department to provide medical
24forensic services to all sexual assault survivors who present
25with a complaint of sexual assault within a minimum of the last
267 days or who have disclosed past sexual assault by a specific

 

 

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1individual and were in the care of that individual within a
2minimum of the last 7 days.
3    "Treatment hospital with approved pediatric transfer"
4means a hospital with a treatment plan approved by the
5Department to provide medical forensic services to sexual
6assault survivors 13 years old or older who present with a
7complaint of sexual assault within a minimum of the last 7 days
8or who have disclosed past sexual assault by a specific
9individual and were in the care of that individual within a
10minimum of the last 7 days.
11    (b) This Section is effective on and after July 1, 2021.
12(Source: P.A. 100-513, eff. 1-1-18; 100-775, eff. 1-1-19;
13101-81, eff. 7-12-19.)
 
14    (410 ILCS 70/1a-1 new)
15    Sec. 1a-1. Definitions.
16    (a) In this Act:
17    "Advanced practice registered nurse" has the meaning
18provided in Section 50-10 of the Nurse Practice Act.
19    "Ambulance provider" means an individual or entity that
20owns and operates a business or service using ambulances or
21emergency medical services vehicles to transport emergency
22patients.
23    "Approved pediatric health care facility" means a health
24care facility, other than a hospital, with a sexual assault
25treatment plan approved by the Department to provide medical

 

 

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1forensic services to pediatric sexual assault survivors who
2present with a complaint of sexual assault within a minimum of
3the last 7 days or who have disclosed past sexual assault by a
4specific individual and were in the care of that individual
5within a minimum of the last 7 days.
6    "Approved federally qualified health center" means a
7facility as defined in Section 1905(l)(2)(B) of the federal
8Social Security Act with a sexual assault treatment plan
9approved by the Department to provide medical forensic services
10to sexual assault survivors 13 years old or older who present
11with a complaint of sexual assault within a minimum of the last
127 days or who have disclosed past sexual assault by a specific
13individual and were in the care of that individual within a
14minimum of the last 7 days.
15    "Areawide sexual assault treatment plan" means a plan,
16developed by hospitals or by hospitals, approved pediatric
17health care facilities, and approved federally qualified
18health centers in a community or area to be served, which
19provides for medical forensic services to sexual assault
20survivors that shall be made available by each of the
21participating hospitals and approved pediatric health care
22facilities.
23    "Board-certified child abuse pediatrician" means a
24physician certified by the American Board of Pediatrics in
25child abuse pediatrics.
26    "Board-eligible child abuse pediatrician" means a

 

 

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1physician who has completed the requirements set forth by the
2American Board of Pediatrics to take the examination for
3certification in child abuse pediatrics.
4    "Department" means the Department of Public Health.
5    "Emergency contraception" means medication as approved by
6the federal Food and Drug Administration (FDA) that can
7significantly reduce the risk of pregnancy if taken within 72
8hours after sexual assault.
9    "Federally qualified health center" means a facility as
10defined in Section 1905(l)(2)(B) of the federal Social Security
11Act that provides primary care or sexual health services.
12    "Follow-up healthcare" means healthcare services related
13to a sexual assault, including laboratory services and pharmacy
14services, rendered within 90 days of the initial visit for
15medical forensic services.
16    "Health care professional" means a physician, a physician
17assistant, a sexual assault forensic examiner, an advanced
18practice registered nurse, a registered professional nurse, a
19licensed practical nurse, or a sexual assault nurse examiner.
20    "Hospital" means a hospital licensed under the Hospital
21Licensing Act or operated under the University of Illinois
22Hospital Act, any outpatient center included in the hospital's
23sexual assault treatment plan where hospital employees provide
24medical forensic services, and an out-of-state hospital that
25has consented to the jurisdiction of the Department under
26Section 2.06-1.

 

 

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1    "Illinois State Police Sexual Assault Evidence Collection
2Kit" means a prepackaged set of materials and forms to be used
3for the collection of evidence relating to sexual assault. The
4standardized evidence collection kit for the State of Illinois
5shall be the Illinois State Police Sexual Assault Evidence
6Collection Kit.
7    "Law enforcement agency having jurisdiction" means the law
8enforcement agency in the jurisdiction where an alleged sexual
9assault or sexual abuse occurred.
10    "Licensed practical nurse" has the meaning provided in
11Section 50-10 of the Nurse Practice Act.
12    "Medical forensic services" means health care delivered to
13patients within or under the care and supervision of personnel
14working in a designated emergency department of a hospital,
15approved pediatric health care facility, or an approved
16federally qualified health centers.
17    "Medical forensic services" includes, but is not limited
18to, taking a medical history, performing photo documentation,
19performing a physical and anogenital examination, assessing
20the patient for evidence collection, collecting evidence in
21accordance with a statewide sexual assault evidence collection
22program administered by the Department of State Police using
23the Illinois State Police Sexual Assault Evidence Collection
24Kit, if appropriate, assessing the patient for
25drug-facilitated or alcohol-facilitated sexual assault,
26providing an evaluation of and care for sexually transmitted

 

 

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1infection and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), pregnancy
2risk evaluation and care, and discharge and follow-up
3healthcare planning.
4    "Pediatric health care facility" means a clinic or
5physician's office that provides medical services to pediatric
6patients.
7    "Pediatric sexual assault survivor" means a person under
8the age of 13 who presents for medical forensic services in
9relation to injuries or trauma resulting from a sexual assault.
10    "Photo documentation" means digital photographs or
11colposcope videos stored and backed up securely in the original
12file format.
13    "Physician" means a person licensed to practice medicine in
14all its branches.
15    "Physician assistant" has the meaning provided in Section 4
16of the Physician Assistant Practice Act of 1987.
17    "Prepubescent sexual assault survivor" means a female who
18is under the age of 18 years and has not had a first menstrual
19cycle or a male who is under the age of 18 years and has not
20started to develop secondary sex characteristics who presents
21for medical forensic services in relation to injuries or trauma
22resulting from a sexual assault.
23    "Qualified medical provider" means a board-certified child
24abuse pediatrician, board-eligible child abuse pediatrician, a
25sexual assault forensic examiner, or a sexual assault nurse
26examiner who has access to photo documentation tools, and who

 

 

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1participates in peer review.
2    "Registered Professional Nurse" has the meaning provided
3in Section 50-10 of the Nurse Practice Act.
4    "Sexual assault" means:
5        (1) an act of sexual conduct; as used in this
6    paragraph, "sexual conduct" has the meaning provided under
7    Section 11-0.1 of the Criminal Code of 2012; or
8        (2) any act of sexual penetration; as used in this
9    paragraph, "sexual penetration" has the meaning provided
10    under Section 11-0.1 of the Criminal Code of 2012 and
11    includes, without limitation, acts prohibited under
12    Sections 11-1.20 through 11-1.60 of the Criminal Code of
13    2012.
14    "Sexual assault forensic examiner" means a physician or
15physician assistant who has completed training that meets or is
16substantially similar to the Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner
17Education Guidelines established by the International
18Association of Forensic Nurses.
19    "Sexual assault nurse examiner" means an advanced practice
20registered nurse or registered professional nurse who has
21completed a sexual assault nurse examiner training program that
22meets the Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner Education Guidelines
23established by the International Association of Forensic
24Nurses.
25    "Sexual assault services voucher" means a document
26generated by a hospital or approved pediatric health care

 

 

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1facility at the time the sexual assault survivor receives
2outpatient medical forensic services that may be used to seek
3payment for any ambulance services, medical forensic services,
4laboratory services, pharmacy services, and follow-up
5healthcare provided as a result of the sexual assault.
6    "Sexual assault survivor" means a person who presents for
7medical forensic services in relation to injuries or trauma
8resulting from a sexual assault.
9    "Sexual assault transfer plan" means a written plan
10developed by a hospital and approved by the Department, which
11describes the hospital's procedures for transferring sexual
12assault survivors to another hospital, and an approved
13pediatric health care facility, if applicable, in order to
14receive medical forensic services.
15    "Sexual assault treatment plan" means a written plan that
16describes the procedures and protocols for providing medical
17forensic services to sexual assault survivors who present
18themselves for such services, either directly or through
19transfer from a hospital or an approved pediatric health care
20facility.
21    "Transfer hospital" means a hospital with a sexual assault
22transfer plan approved by the Department.
23    "Transfer services" means the appropriate medical
24screening examination and necessary stabilizing treatment
25prior to the transfer of a sexual assault survivor to a
26hospital or an approved pediatric health care facility that

 

 

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1provides medical forensic services to sexual assault survivors
2pursuant to a sexual assault treatment plan or areawide sexual
3assault treatment plan.
4    "Treatment hospital" means a hospital with a sexual assault
5treatment plan approved by the Department to provide medical
6forensic services to all sexual assault survivors who present
7with a complaint of sexual assault within a minimum of the last
87 days or who have disclosed past sexual assault by a specific
9individual and were in the care of that individual within a
10minimum of the last 7 days.
11    "Treatment hospital with approved pediatric transfer"
12means a hospital with a treatment plan approved by the
13Department to provide medical forensic services to sexual
14assault survivors 13 years old or older who present with a
15complaint of sexual assault within a minimum of the last 7 days
16or who have disclosed past sexual assault by a specific
17individual and were in the care of that individual within a
18minimum of the last 7 days.
19    (b) This Section is repealed on June 30, 2021.
 
20    (410 ILCS 70/2)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 87-2)
21    Sec. 2. Hospital and approved pediatric health care
22facility requirements for sexual assault plans.
23    (a) Every hospital required to be licensed by the
24Department pursuant to the Hospital Licensing Act, or operated
25under the University of Illinois Hospital Act that provides

 

 

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1general medical and surgical hospital services shall provide
2either (i) transfer services to all sexual assault survivors,
3(ii) medical forensic services to all sexual assault survivors,
4or (iii) transfer services to pediatric sexual assault
5survivors and medical forensic services to sexual assault
6survivors 13 years old or older, in accordance with rules
7adopted by the Department.
8    In addition, every such hospital, regardless of whether or
9not a request is made for reimbursement, shall submit to the
10Department a plan to provide either (i) transfer services to
11all sexual assault survivors, (ii) medical forensic services to
12all sexual assault survivors, or (iii) transfer services to
13pediatric sexual assault survivors and medical forensic
14services to sexual assault survivors 13 years old or older. The
15Department shall approve such plan for either (i) transfer
16services to all sexual assault survivors, (ii) medical forensic
17services to all sexual assault survivors, or (iii) transfer
18services to pediatric sexual assault survivors and medical
19forensic services to sexual assault survivors 13 years old or
20older, if it finds that the implementation of the proposed plan
21would provide (i) transfer services or (ii) medical forensic
22services for sexual assault survivors in accordance with the
23requirements of this Act and provide sufficient protections
24from the risk of pregnancy to sexual assault survivors.
25Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in this paragraph, the
26Department may approve a sexual assault transfer plan for the

 

 

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1provision of medical forensic services until January 1, 2022
2if:
3        (1) a treatment hospital with approved pediatric
4    transfer has agreed, as part of an areawide treatment plan,
5    to accept sexual assault survivors 13 years of age or older
6    from the proposed transfer hospital, if the treatment
7    hospital with approved pediatric transfer is
8    geographically closer to the transfer hospital than a
9    treatment hospital or another treatment hospital with
10    approved pediatric transfer and such transfer is not unduly
11    burdensome on the sexual assault survivor; and
12        (2) a treatment hospital has agreed, as a part of an
13    areawide treatment plan, to accept sexual assault
14    survivors under 13 years of age from the proposed transfer
15    hospital and transfer to the treatment hospital would not
16    unduly burden the sexual assault survivor.
17    The Department may not approve a sexual assault transfer
18plan unless a treatment hospital has agreed, as a part of an
19areawide treatment plan, to accept sexual assault survivors
20from the proposed transfer hospital and a transfer to the
21treatment hospital would not unduly burden the sexual assault
22survivor.
23    In counties with a population of less than 1,000,000, the
24Department may not approve a sexual assault transfer plan for a
25hospital located within a 20-mile radius of a 4-year public
26university, not including community colleges, unless there is a

 

 

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1treatment hospital with a sexual assault treatment plan
2approved by the Department within a 20-mile radius of the
34-year public university.
4    A transfer must be in accordance with federal and State
5laws and local ordinances.
6    A treatment hospital with approved pediatric transfer must
7submit an areawide treatment plan under Section 3 of this Act
8that includes a written agreement with a treatment hospital
9stating that the treatment hospital will provide medical
10forensic services to pediatric sexual assault survivors
11transferred from the treatment hospital with approved
12pediatric transfer. The areawide treatment plan may also
13include an approved pediatric health care facility.
14    A transfer hospital must submit an areawide treatment plan
15under Section 3 of this Act that includes a written agreement
16with a treatment hospital stating that the treatment hospital
17will provide medical forensic services to all sexual assault
18survivors transferred from the transfer hospital. The areawide
19treatment plan may also include an approved pediatric health
20care facility. Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in this
21paragraph, until January 1, 2022, the areawide treatment plan
22may include a written agreement with a treatment hospital with
23approved pediatric transfer that is geographically closer than
24other hospitals providing medical forensic services to sexual
25assault survivors 13 years of age or older stating that the
26treatment hospital with approved pediatric transfer will

 

 

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1provide medical services to sexual assault survivors 13 years
2of age or older who are transferred from the transfer hospital.
3If the areawide treatment plan includes a written agreement
4with a treatment hospital with approved pediatric transfer, it
5must also include a written agreement with a treatment hospital
6stating that the treatment hospital will provide medical
7forensic services to sexual assault survivors under 13 years of
8age who are transferred from the transfer hospital.
9    Beginning January 1, 2019, each treatment hospital and
10treatment hospital with approved pediatric transfer shall
11ensure that emergency department attending physicians,
12physician assistants, advanced practice registered nurses, and
13registered professional nurses providing clinical services,
14who do not meet the definition of a qualified medical provider
15in Section 1a of this Act, receive a minimum of 2 hours of
16sexual assault training by July 1, 2020 or until the treatment
17hospital or treatment hospital with approved pediatric
18transfer certifies to the Department, in a form and manner
19prescribed by the Department, that it employs or contracts with
20a qualified medical provider in accordance with subsection
21(a-7) of Section 5, whichever occurs first.
22    After July 1, 2020 or once a treatment hospital or a
23treatment hospital with approved pediatric transfer certifies
24compliance with subsection (a-7) of Section 5, whichever occurs
25first, each treatment hospital and treatment hospital with
26approved pediatric transfer shall ensure that emergency

 

 

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1department attending physicians, physician assistants,
2advanced practice registered nurses, and registered
3professional nurses providing clinical services, who do not
4meet the definition of a qualified medical provider in Section
51a of this Act, receive a minimum of 2 hours of continuing
6education on responding to sexual assault survivors every 2
7years. Protocols for training shall be included in the
8hospital's sexual assault treatment plan.
9    Sexual assault training provided under this subsection may
10be provided in person or online and shall include, but not be
11limited to:
12        (1) information provided on the provision of medical
13    forensic services;
14        (2) information on the use of the Illinois Sexual
15    Assault Evidence Collection Kit;
16        (3) information on sexual assault epidemiology,
17    neurobiology of trauma, drug-facilitated sexual assault,
18    child sexual abuse, and Illinois sexual assault-related
19    laws; and
20        (4) information on the hospital's sexual
21    assault-related policies and procedures.
22    The online training made available by the Office of the
23Attorney General under subsection (b) of Section 10 may be used
24to comply with this subsection.
25    (b) An approved pediatric health care facility may provide
26medical forensic services, in accordance with rules adopted by

 

 

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1the Department, to all pediatric sexual assault survivors who
2present for medical forensic services in relation to injuries
3or trauma resulting from a sexual assault. These services shall
4be provided by a qualified medical provider.
5    A pediatric health care facility must participate in or
6submit an areawide treatment plan under Section 3 of this Act
7that includes a treatment hospital. If a pediatric health care
8facility does not provide certain medical or surgical services
9that are provided by hospitals, the areawide sexual assault
10treatment plan must include a procedure for ensuring a sexual
11assault survivor in need of such medical or surgical services
12receives the services at the treatment hospital. The areawide
13treatment plan may also include a treatment hospital with
14approved pediatric transfer.
15    The Department shall review a proposed sexual assault
16treatment plan submitted by a pediatric health care facility
17within 60 days after receipt of the plan. If the Department
18finds that the proposed plan meets the minimum requirements set
19forth in Section 5 of this Act and that implementation of the
20proposed plan would provide medical forensic services for
21pediatric sexual assault survivors, then the Department shall
22approve the plan. If the Department does not approve a plan,
23then the Department shall notify the pediatric health care
24facility that the proposed plan has not been approved. The
25pediatric health care facility shall have 30 days to submit a
26revised plan. The Department shall review the revised plan

 

 

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1within 30 days after receipt of the plan and notify the
2pediatric health care facility whether the revised plan is
3approved or rejected. A pediatric health care facility may not
4provide medical forensic services to pediatric sexual assault
5survivors who present with a complaint of sexual assault within
6a minimum of the last 7 days or who have disclosed past sexual
7assault by a specific individual and were in the care of that
8individual within a minimum of the last 7 days until the
9Department has approved a treatment plan.
10    If an approved pediatric health care facility is not open
1124 hours a day, 7 days a week, it shall post signage at each
12public entrance to its facility that:
13        (1) is at least 14 inches by 14 inches in size;
14        (2) directs those seeking services as follows: "If
15    closed, call 911 for services or go to the closest hospital
16    emergency department, (insert name) located at (insert
17    address).";
18        (3) lists the approved pediatric health care
19    facility's hours of operation;
20        (4) lists the street address of the building;
21        (5) has a black background with white bold capital
22    lettering in a clear and easy to read font that is at least
23    72-point type, and with "call 911" in at least 125-point
24    type;
25        (6) is posted clearly and conspicuously on or adjacent
26    to the door at each entrance and, if building materials

 

 

10100SB0557ham002- 23 -LRB101 04318 CPF 72428 a

1    allow, is posted internally for viewing through glass; if
2    posted externally, the sign shall be made of
3    weather-resistant and theft-resistant materials,
4    non-removable, and adhered permanently to the building;
5    and
6        (7) has lighting that is part of the sign itself or is
7    lit with a dedicated light that fully illuminates the sign.
8    A copy of the proposed sign must be submitted to the
9Department and approved as part of the approved pediatric
10health care facility's sexual assault treatment plan.
11    (c) Each treatment hospital, treatment hospital with
12approved pediatric transfer, and approved pediatric health
13care facility must enter into a memorandum of understanding
14with a rape crisis center for medical advocacy services, if
15these services are available to the treatment hospital,
16treatment hospital with approved pediatric transfer, or
17approved pediatric health care facility. With the consent of
18the sexual assault survivor, a rape crisis counselor shall
19remain in the exam room during the collection for forensic
20evidence.
21    (d) Every treatment hospital, treatment hospital with
22approved pediatric transfer, and approved pediatric health
23care facility's sexual assault treatment plan shall include
24procedures for complying with mandatory reporting requirements
25pursuant to (1) the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act;
26(2) the Abused and Neglected Long Term Care Facility Residents

 

 

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1Reporting Act; (3) the Adult Protective Services Act; and (iv)
2the Criminal Identification Act.
3    (e) Each treatment hospital, treatment hospital with
4approved pediatric transfer, and approved pediatric health
5care facility shall submit to the Department every 6 months, in
6a manner prescribed by the Department, the following
7information:
8        (1) The total number of patients who presented with a
9    complaint of sexual assault.
10        (2) The total number of Illinois Sexual Assault
11    Evidence Collection Kits:
12            (A) offered to (i) all sexual assault survivors and
13        (ii) pediatric sexual assault survivors pursuant to
14        paragraph (1.5) of subsection (a-5) of Section 5;
15            (B) completed for (i) all sexual assault survivors
16        and (ii) pediatric sexual assault survivors; and
17            (C) declined by (i) all sexual assault survivors
18        and (ii) pediatric sexual assault survivors.
19    This information shall be made available on the
20Department's website.
21    (f) This Section is effective on and after July 1, 2021.
22(Source: P.A. 100-775, eff. 1-1-19; 101-73, eff. 7-12-19.)
 
23    (410 ILCS 70/2-1 new)
24    Sec. 2-1. Hospital, approved pediatric health care
25facility, and approved federally qualified health center

 

 

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1requirements for sexual assault plans.
2    (a) Every hospital required to be licensed by the
3Department pursuant to the Hospital Licensing Act, or operated
4under the University of Illinois Hospital Act that provides
5general medical and surgical hospital services shall provide
6either (i) transfer services to all sexual assault survivors,
7(ii) medical forensic services to all sexual assault survivors,
8or (iii) transfer services to pediatric sexual assault
9survivors and medical forensic services to sexual assault
10survivors 13 years old or older, in accordance with rules
11adopted by the Department.
12    In addition, every such hospital, regardless of whether or
13not a request is made for reimbursement, shall submit to the
14Department a plan to provide either (i) transfer services to
15all sexual assault survivors, (ii) medical forensic services to
16all sexual assault survivors, or (iii) transfer services to
17pediatric sexual assault survivors and medical forensic
18services to sexual assault survivors 13 years old or older. The
19Department shall approve such plan for either (i) transfer
20services to all sexual assault survivors, (ii) medical forensic
21services to all sexual assault survivors, or (iii) transfer
22services to pediatric sexual assault survivors and medical
23forensic services to sexual assault survivors 13 years old or
24older, if it finds that the implementation of the proposed plan
25would provide (i) transfer services or (ii) medical forensic
26services for sexual assault survivors in accordance with the

 

 

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1requirements of this Act and provide sufficient protections
2from the risk of pregnancy to sexual assault survivors.
3Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in this paragraph, the
4Department may approve a sexual assault transfer plan for the
5provision of medical forensic services until January 1, 2022
6if:
7        (1) a treatment hospital with approved pediatric
8    transfer has agreed, as part of an areawide treatment plan,
9    to accept sexual assault survivors 13 years of age or older
10    from the proposed transfer hospital, if the treatment
11    hospital with approved pediatric transfer is
12    geographically closer to the transfer hospital than a
13    treatment hospital or another treatment hospital with
14    approved pediatric transfer and such transfer is not unduly
15    burdensome on the sexual assault survivor; and
16        (2) a treatment hospital has agreed, as a part of an
17    areawide treatment plan, to accept sexual assault
18    survivors under 13 years of age from the proposed transfer
19    hospital and transfer to the treatment hospital would not
20    unduly burden the sexual assault survivor.
21    The Department may not approve a sexual assault transfer
22plan unless a treatment hospital has agreed, as a part of an
23areawide treatment plan, to accept sexual assault survivors
24from the proposed transfer hospital and a transfer to the
25treatment hospital would not unduly burden the sexual assault
26survivor.

 

 

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1    In counties with a population of less than 1,000,000, the
2Department may not approve a sexual assault transfer plan for a
3hospital located within a 20-mile radius of a 4-year public
4university, not including community colleges, unless there is a
5treatment hospital with a sexual assault treatment plan
6approved by the Department within a 20-mile radius of the
74-year public university.
8    A transfer must be in accordance with federal and State
9laws and local ordinances.
10    A treatment hospital with approved pediatric transfer must
11submit an areawide treatment plan under Section 3-1 of this Act
12that includes a written agreement with a treatment hospital
13stating that the treatment hospital will provide medical
14forensic services to pediatric sexual assault survivors
15transferred from the treatment hospital with approved
16pediatric transfer. The areawide treatment plan may also
17include an approved pediatric health care facility.
18    A transfer hospital must submit an areawide treatment plan
19under Section 3-1 of this Act that includes a written agreement
20with a treatment hospital stating that the treatment hospital
21will provide medical forensic services to all sexual assault
22survivors transferred from the transfer hospital. The areawide
23treatment plan may also include an approved pediatric health
24care facility. Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in this
25paragraph, until January 1, 2022, the areawide treatment plan
26may include a written agreement with a treatment hospital with

 

 

10100SB0557ham002- 28 -LRB101 04318 CPF 72428 a

1approved pediatric transfer that is geographically closer than
2other hospitals providing medical forensic services to sexual
3assault survivors 13 years of age or older stating that the
4treatment hospital with approved pediatric transfer will
5provide medical services to sexual assault survivors 13 years
6of age or older who are transferred from the transfer hospital.
7If the areawide treatment plan includes a written agreement
8with a treatment hospital with approved pediatric transfer, it
9must also include a written agreement with a treatment hospital
10stating that the treatment hospital will provide medical
11forensic services to sexual assault survivors under 13 years of
12age who are transferred from the transfer hospital.
13    Beginning January 1, 2019, each treatment hospital and
14treatment hospital with approved pediatric transfer shall
15ensure that emergency department attending physicians,
16physician assistants, advanced practice registered nurses, and
17registered professional nurses providing clinical services,
18who do not meet the definition of a qualified medical provider
19in Section 1a-1 of this Act, receive a minimum of 2 hours of
20sexual assault training by July 1, 2020 or until the treatment
21hospital or treatment hospital with approved pediatric
22transfer certifies to the Department, in a form and manner
23prescribed by the Department, that it employs or contracts with
24a qualified medical provider in accordance with subsection
25(a-7) of Section 5-1, whichever occurs first.
26    After July 1, 2020 or once a treatment hospital or a

 

 

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1treatment hospital with approved pediatric transfer certifies
2compliance with subsection (a-7) of Section 5-1, whichever
3occurs first, each treatment hospital and treatment hospital
4with approved pediatric transfer shall ensure that emergency
5department attending physicians, physician assistants,
6advanced practice registered nurses, and registered
7professional nurses providing clinical services, who do not
8meet the definition of a qualified medical provider in Section
91a-1 of this Act, receive a minimum of 2 hours of continuing
10education on responding to sexual assault survivors every 2
11years. Protocols for training shall be included in the
12hospital's sexual assault treatment plan.
13    Sexual assault training provided under this subsection may
14be provided in person or online and shall include, but not be
15limited to:
16        (1) information provided on the provision of medical
17    forensic services;
18        (2) information on the use of the Illinois Sexual
19    Assault Evidence Collection Kit;
20        (3) information on sexual assault epidemiology,
21    neurobiology of trauma, drug-facilitated sexual assault,
22    child sexual abuse, and Illinois sexual assault-related
23    laws; and
24        (4) information on the hospital's sexual
25    assault-related policies and procedures.
26    The online training made available by the Office of the

 

 

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1Attorney General under subsection (b) of Section 10-1 may be
2used to comply with this subsection.
3    (b) An approved pediatric health care facility may provide
4medical forensic services, in accordance with rules adopted by
5the Department, to all pediatric sexual assault survivors who
6present for medical forensic services in relation to injuries
7or trauma resulting from a sexual assault. These services shall
8be provided by a qualified medical provider.
9    A pediatric health care facility must participate in or
10submit an areawide treatment plan under Section 3-1 of this Act
11that includes a treatment hospital. If a pediatric health care
12facility does not provide certain medical or surgical services
13that are provided by hospitals, the areawide sexual assault
14treatment plan must include a procedure for ensuring a sexual
15assault survivor in need of such medical or surgical services
16receives the services at the treatment hospital. The areawide
17treatment plan may also include a treatment hospital with
18approved pediatric transfer.
19    The Department shall review a proposed sexual assault
20treatment plan submitted by a pediatric health care facility
21within 60 days after receipt of the plan. If the Department
22finds that the proposed plan meets the minimum requirements set
23forth in Section 5-1 of this Act and that implementation of the
24proposed plan would provide medical forensic services for
25pediatric sexual assault survivors, then the Department shall
26approve the plan. If the Department does not approve a plan,

 

 

10100SB0557ham002- 31 -LRB101 04318 CPF 72428 a

1then the Department shall notify the pediatric health care
2facility that the proposed plan has not been approved. The
3pediatric health care facility shall have 30 days to submit a
4revised plan. The Department shall review the revised plan
5within 30 days after receipt of the plan and notify the
6pediatric health care facility whether the revised plan is
7approved or rejected. A pediatric health care facility may not
8provide medical forensic services to pediatric sexual assault
9survivors who present with a complaint of sexual assault within
10a minimum of the last 7 days or who have disclosed past sexual
11assault by a specific individual and were in the care of that
12individual within a minimum of the last 7 days until the
13Department has approved a treatment plan.
14    If an approved pediatric health care facility is not open
1524 hours a day, 7 days a week, it shall post signage at each
16public entrance to its facility that:
17        (1) is at least 14 inches by 14 inches in size;
18        (2) directs those seeking services as follows: "If
19    closed, call 911 for services or go to the closest hospital
20    emergency department, (insert name) located at (insert
21    address).";
22        (3) lists the approved pediatric health care
23    facility's hours of operation;
24        (4) lists the street address of the building;
25        (5) has a black background with white bold capital
26    lettering in a clear and easy to read font that is at least

 

 

10100SB0557ham002- 32 -LRB101 04318 CPF 72428 a

1    72-point type, and with "call 911" in at least 125-point
2    type;
3        (6) is posted clearly and conspicuously on or adjacent
4    to the door at each entrance and, if building materials
5    allow, is posted internally for viewing through glass; if
6    posted externally, the sign shall be made of
7    weather-resistant and theft-resistant materials,
8    non-removable, and adhered permanently to the building;
9    and
10        (7) has lighting that is part of the sign itself or is
11    lit with a dedicated light that fully illuminates the sign.
12    (b-5) An approved federally qualified health center may
13provide medical forensic services, in accordance with rules
14adopted by the Department, to all sexual assault survivors 13
15years old or older who present for medical forensic services in
16relation to injuries or trauma resulting from a sexual assault
17during the duration, and 90 days thereafter, of a proclamation
18issued by the Governor declaring a disaster, or a successive
19proclamation regarding the same disaster, in all 102 counties
20due to a public health emergency. These services shall be
21provided by (i) a qualified medical provider, physician,
22physician assistant, or advanced practice registered nurse who
23has received a minimum of 10 hours of sexual assault training
24provided by a qualified medical provider on current Illinois
25legislation, how to properly perform a medical forensic
26examination, evidence collection, drug and alcohol facilitated

 

 

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1sexual assault, and forensic photography and has all
2documentation and photos peer reviewed by a qualified medical
3provider or (ii) until the federally qualified health care
4center certifies to the Department, in a form and manner
5prescribed by the Department, that it employs or contracts with
6a qualified medical provider in accordance with subsection
7(a-7) of Section 5-1, whichever occurs first.
8    A federally qualified health center must participate in or
9submit an areawide treatment plan under Section 3-1 of this Act
10that includes a treatment hospital. If a federally qualified
11health center does not provide certain medical or surgical
12services that are provided by hospitals, the areawide sexual
13assault treatment plan must include a procedure for ensuring a
14sexual assault survivor in need of such medical or surgical
15services receives the services at the treatment hospital. The
16areawide treatment plan may also include a treatment hospital
17with approved pediatric transfer or an approved pediatric
18health care facility.
19    The Department shall review a proposed sexual assault
20treatment plan submitted by a federally qualified health center
21within 14 days after receipt of the plan. If the Department
22finds that the proposed plan meets the minimum requirements set
23forth in Section 5-1 and that implementation of the proposed
24plan would provide medical forensic services for sexual assault
25survivors 13 years old or older, then the Department shall
26approve the plan. If the Department does not approve a plan,

 

 

10100SB0557ham002- 34 -LRB101 04318 CPF 72428 a

1then the Department shall notify the federally qualified health
2center that the proposed plan has not been approved. The
3federally qualified health center shall have 14 days to submit
4a revised plan. The Department shall review the revised plan
5within 14 days after receipt of the plan and notify the
6federally qualified health center whether the revised plan is
7approved or rejected. A federally qualified health center may
8not (i) provide medical forensic services to sexual assault
9survivors 13 years old or older who present with a complaint of
10sexual assault within a minimum of the previous 7 days or (ii)
11who have disclosed past sexual assault by a specific individual
12and were in the care of that individual within a minimum of the
13previous 7 days until the Department has approved a treatment
14plan.
15    If an approved federally qualified health center is not
16open 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, it shall post signage at
17each public entrance to its facility that:
18        (1) is at least 14 inches by 14 inches in size;
19        (2) directs those seeking services as follows: "If
20    closed, call 911 for services or go to the closest hospital
21    emergency department, (insert name) located at (insert
22    address).";
23        (3) lists the approved federally qualified health
24    center's hours of operation;
25        (4) lists the street address of the building;
26        (5) has a black background with white bold capital

 

 

10100SB0557ham002- 35 -LRB101 04318 CPF 72428 a

1    lettering in a clear and easy to read font that is at least
2    72-point type, and with "call 911" in at least 125-point
3    type;
4        (6) is posted clearly and conspicuously on or adjacent
5    to the door at each entrance and, if building materials
6    allow, is posted internally for viewing through glass; if
7    posted externally, the sign shall be made of
8    weather-resistant and theft-resistant materials,
9    non-removable, and adhered permanently to the building;
10    and
11        (7) has lighting that is part of the sign itself or is
12    lit with a dedicated light that fully illuminates the sign.
13    A copy of the proposed sign must be submitted to the
14Department and approved as part of the approved federally
15qualified health center's sexual assault treatment plan.
16    (c) Each treatment hospital, treatment hospital with
17approved pediatric transfer, approved pediatric health care
18facility, and approved federally qualified health center must
19enter into a memorandum of understanding with a rape crisis
20center for medical advocacy services, if these services are
21available to the treatment hospital, treatment hospital with
22approved pediatric transfer, approved pediatric health care
23facility, or approved federally qualified health center. With
24the consent of the sexual assault survivor, a rape crisis
25counselor shall remain in the exam room during the collection
26for forensic evidence.

 

 

10100SB0557ham002- 36 -LRB101 04318 CPF 72428 a

1    (d) Every treatment hospital, treatment hospital with
2approved pediatric transfer, approved pediatric health care
3facility, and approved federally qualified health center's
4sexual assault treatment plan shall include procedures for
5complying with mandatory reporting requirements pursuant to
6(1) the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act; (2) the
7Abused and Neglected Long Term Care Facility Residents
8Reporting Act; (3) the Adult Protective Services Act; and (iv)
9the Criminal Identification Act.
10    (e) Each treatment hospital, treatment hospital with
11approved pediatric transfer, approved pediatric health care
12facility, and approved federally qualified health center shall
13submit to the Department every 6 months, in a manner prescribed
14by the Department, the following information:
15        (1) The total number of patients who presented with a
16    complaint of sexual assault.
17        (2) The total number of Illinois Sexual Assault
18    Evidence Collection Kits:
19            (A) offered to (i) all sexual assault survivors and
20        (ii) pediatric sexual assault survivors pursuant to
21        paragraph (1.5) of subsection (a-5) of Section 5-1;
22            (B) completed for (i) all sexual assault survivors
23        and (ii) pediatric sexual assault survivors; and
24            (C) declined by (i) all sexual assault survivors
25        and (ii) pediatric sexual assault survivors.
26    This information shall be made available on the

 

 

10100SB0557ham002- 37 -LRB101 04318 CPF 72428 a

1Department's website.
2    (f) This Section is repealed on June 30, 2021.
 
3    (410 ILCS 70/2.05)
4    Sec. 2.05. Department requirements.
5    (a) The Department shall periodically conduct on-site
6reviews of approved sexual assault treatment plans with
7hospital and approved pediatric health care facility personnel
8to ensure that the established procedures are being followed.
9Department personnel conducting the on-site reviews shall
10attend 4 hours of sexual assault training conducted by a
11qualified medical provider that includes, but is not limited
12to, forensic evidence collection provided to sexual assault
13survivors of any age and Illinois sexual assault-related laws
14and administrative rules.
15    (b) On July 1, 2019 and each July 1 thereafter, the
16Department shall submit a report to the General Assembly
17containing information on the hospitals and pediatric health
18care facilities in this State that have submitted a plan to
19provide: (i) transfer services to all sexual assault survivors,
20(ii) medical forensic services to all sexual assault survivors,
21(iii) transfer services to pediatric sexual assault survivors
22and medical forensic services to sexual assault survivors 13
23years old or older, or (iv) medical forensic services to
24pediatric sexual assault survivors. The Department shall post
25the report on its Internet website on or before October 1, 2019

 

 

10100SB0557ham002- 38 -LRB101 04318 CPF 72428 a

1and, except as otherwise provided in this Section, update the
2report every quarter thereafter. The report shall include all
3of the following:
4        (1) Each hospital and pediatric care facility that has
5    submitted a plan, including the submission date of the
6    plan, type of plan submitted, and the date the plan was
7    approved or denied. If a pediatric health care facility
8    withdraws its plan, the Department shall immediately
9    update the report on its Internet website to remove the
10    pediatric health care facility's name and information.
11        (2) Each hospital that has failed to submit a plan as
12    required in subsection (a) of Section 2.
13        (3) Each hospital and approved pediatric care facility
14    that has to submit an acceptable Plan of Correction within
15    the time required by Section 2.1, including the date the
16    Plan of Correction was required to be submitted. Once a
17    hospital or approved pediatric health care facility
18    submits and implements the required Plan of Correction, the
19    Department shall immediately update the report on its
20    Internet website to reflect that hospital or approved
21    pediatric health care facility's compliance.
22        (4) Each hospital and approved pediatric care facility
23    at which the periodic on-site review required by Section
24    2.05 of this Act has been conducted, including the date of
25    the on-site review and whether the hospital or approved
26    pediatric care facility was found to be in compliance with

 

 

10100SB0557ham002- 39 -LRB101 04318 CPF 72428 a

1    its approved plan.
2        (5) Each areawide treatment plan submitted to the
3    Department pursuant to Section 3 of this Act, including
4    which treatment hospitals, treatment hospitals with
5    approved pediatric transfer, transfer hospitals and
6    approved pediatric health care facilities are identified
7    in each areawide treatment plan.
8    (c) The Department, in consultation with the Office of the
9Attorney General, shall adopt administrative rules by January
101, 2020 establishing a process for physicians and physician
11assistants to provide documentation of training and clinical
12experience that meets or is substantially similar to the Sexual
13Assault Nurse Examiner Education Guidelines established by the
14International Association of Forensic Nurses in order to
15qualify as a sexual assault forensic examiner.
16    (d) This Section is effective on and after July 1, 2021.
17(Source: P.A. 100-775, eff. 1-1-19.)
 
18    (410 ILCS 70/2.05-1 new)
19    Sec. 2.05-1. Department requirements.
20    (a) The Department shall periodically conduct on-site
21reviews of approved sexual assault treatment plans with
22hospital, approved pediatric health care facility, and
23approved federally qualified health care personnel to ensure
24that the established procedures are being followed. Department
25personnel conducting the on-site reviews shall attend 4 hours

 

 

10100SB0557ham002- 40 -LRB101 04318 CPF 72428 a

1of sexual assault training conducted by a qualified medical
2provider that includes, but is not limited to, forensic
3evidence collection provided to sexual assault survivors of any
4age and Illinois sexual assault-related laws and
5administrative rules.
6    (b) On July 1, 2019 and each July 1 thereafter, the
7Department shall submit a report to the General Assembly
8containing information on the hospitals, pediatric health care
9facilities, and federally qualified health centers in this
10State that have submitted a plan to provide: (i) transfer
11services to all sexual assault survivors, (ii) medical forensic
12services to all sexual assault survivors, (iii) transfer
13services to pediatric sexual assault survivors and medical
14forensic services to sexual assault survivors 13 years old or
15older, or (iv) medical forensic services to pediatric sexual
16assault survivors. The Department shall post the report on its
17Internet website on or before October 1, 2019 and, except as
18otherwise provided in this Section, update the report every
19quarter thereafter. The report shall include all of the
20following:
21        (1) Each hospital, pediatric care facility, and
22    federally qualified health center that has submitted a
23    plan, including the submission date of the plan, type of
24    plan submitted, and the date the plan was approved or
25    denied. If a pediatric health care facility withdraws its
26    plan, the Department shall immediately update the report on

 

 

10100SB0557ham002- 41 -LRB101 04318 CPF 72428 a

1    its Internet website to remove the pediatric health care
2    facility's name and information.
3        (2) Each hospital that has failed to submit a plan as
4    required in subsection (a) of Section 2-1.
5        (3) Each hospital, approved pediatric care facility,
6    and federally qualified health center that has to submit an
7    acceptable Plan of Correction within the time required by
8    Section 2.1-1, including the date the Plan of Correction
9    was required to be submitted. Once a hospital, approved
10    pediatric health care facility, or approved federally
11    qualified health center submits and implements the
12    required Plan of Correction, the Department shall
13    immediately update the report on its Internet website to
14    reflect that hospital, approved pediatric health care
15    facility, or federally qualified health center's
16    compliance.
17        (4) Each hospital, approved pediatric care facility,
18    and federally qualified health center at which the periodic
19    on-site review required by Section 2.05-1 of this Act has
20    been conducted, including the date of the on-site review
21    and whether the hospital, approved pediatric care
22    facility, and federally qualified health center was found
23    to be in compliance with its approved plan.
24        (5) Each areawide treatment plan submitted to the
25    Department pursuant to Section 3-1 of this Act, including
26    which treatment hospitals, treatment hospitals with

 

 

10100SB0557ham002- 42 -LRB101 04318 CPF 72428 a

1    approved pediatric transfer, transfer hospitals, approved
2    pediatric health care facilities, and approved federally
3    qualified health centers are identified in each areawide
4    treatment plan.
5        (6) During the duration, and 90 days thereafter, of a
6    proclamation issued by the Governor declaring a disaster,
7    or a successive proclamation regarding the same disaster,
8    in all 102 counties due to a public health emergency, the
9    Department shall immediately update the report on its
10    website to reflect each federally qualified health center
11    that has submitted a plan, including the submission date of
12    the plan, type of plan submitted, and the date the plan was
13    approved.
14    (c) The Department, in consultation with the Office of the
15Attorney General, shall adopt administrative rules by January
161, 2020 establishing a process for physicians and physician
17assistants to provide documentation of training and clinical
18experience that meets or is substantially similar to the Sexual
19Assault Nurse Examiner Education Guidelines established by the
20International Association of Forensic Nurses in order to
21qualify as a sexual assault forensic examiner.
22    (d) This Section is repealed on June 30, 2021.
 
23    (410 ILCS 70/2.06)
24    Sec. 2.06. Consent to jurisdiction.
25    (a) A pediatric health care facility that submits a plan to

 

 

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1the Department for approval under Section 2 or an out-of-state
2hospital that submits an areawide treatment plan in accordance
3with subsection (b) of Section 5.4 consents to the jurisdiction
4and oversight of the Department, including, but not limited to,
5inspections, investigations, and evaluations arising out of
6complaints relevant to this Act made to the Department. A
7pediatric health care facility that submits a plan to the
8Department for approval under Section 2 or an out-of-state
9hospital that submits an areawide treatment plan in accordance
10with subsection (b) of Section 5.4 shall be deemed to have
11given consent to annual inspections, surveys, or evaluations
12relevant to this Act by properly identified personnel of the
13Department or by such other properly identified persons,
14including local health department staff, as the Department may
15designate. In addition, representatives of the Department
16shall have access to and may reproduce or photocopy any books,
17records, and other documents maintained by the pediatric health
18care facility or the facility's representatives or the
19out-of-state hospital or the out-of-state hospital's
20representative to the extent necessary to carry out this Act.
21No representative, agent, or person acting on behalf of the
22pediatric health care facility or out-of-state hospital in any
23manner shall intentionally prevent, interfere with, or attempt
24to impede in any way any duly authorized investigation and
25enforcement of this Act. The Department shall have the power to
26adopt rules to carry out the purpose of regulating a pediatric

 

 

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1health care facility or out-of-state hospital. In carrying out
2oversight of a pediatric health care facility or an
3out-of-state hospital, the Department shall respect the
4confidentiality of all patient records, including by complying
5with the patient record confidentiality requirements set out in
6Section 6.14b of the Hospital Licensing Act.
7    (b) This Section is effective on and after July 1, 2021.
8(Source: P.A. 100-775, eff. 1-1-19.)
 
9    (410 ILCS 70/2.06-1 new)
10    Sec. 2.06-1. Consent to jurisdiction.
11    (a) A pediatric health care facility or federally qualified
12health center that submits a plan to the Department for
13approval under Section 2-1 or an out-of-state hospital that
14submits an areawide treatment plan in accordance with
15subsection (b) of Section 5.4 consents to the jurisdiction and
16oversight of the Department, including, but not limited to,
17inspections, investigations, and evaluations arising out of
18complaints relevant to this Act made to the Department. A
19pediatric health care facility or federally qualified health
20center that submits a plan to the Department for approval under
21Section 2-1 or an out-of-state hospital that submits an
22areawide treatment plan in accordance with subsection (b) of
23Section 5.4 shall be deemed to have given consent to annual
24inspections, surveys, or evaluations relevant to this Act by
25properly identified personnel of the Department or by such

 

 

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1other properly identified persons, including local health
2department staff, as the Department may designate. In addition,
3representatives of the Department shall have access to and may
4reproduce or photocopy any books, records, and other documents
5maintained by the pediatric health care facility or the
6facility's representatives or the out-of-state hospital or the
7out-of-state hospital's representative to the extent necessary
8to carry out this Act. No representative, agent, or person
9acting on behalf of the pediatric health care facility,
10federally qualified health center, or out-of-state hospital in
11any manner shall intentionally prevent, interfere with, or
12attempt to impede in any way any duly authorized investigation
13and enforcement of this Act. The Department shall have the
14power to adopt rules to carry out the purpose of regulating a
15pediatric health care facility or out-of-state hospital. In
16carrying out oversight of a pediatric health care facility,
17federally qualified health center, or an out-of-state
18hospital, the Department shall respect the confidentiality of
19all patient records, including by complying with the patient
20record confidentiality requirements set out in Section 6.14b of
21the Hospital Licensing Act.
22    (b) This Section is repealed on June 30, 2021.
23    
 
24    (410 ILCS 70/2.1)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 87-2.1)
25    Sec. 2.1. Plan of correction; penalties.

 

 

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1    (a) If the Department surveyor determines that the hospital
2or approved pediatric health care facility is not in compliance
3with its approved plan, the surveyor shall provide the hospital
4or approved pediatric health care facility with a written list
5of the specific items of noncompliance within 10 working days
6after the conclusion of the on-site review. The hospital shall
7have 10 working days to submit to the Department a plan of
8correction which contains the hospital's or approved pediatric
9health care facility's specific proposals for correcting the
10items of noncompliance. The Department shall review the plan of
11correction and notify the hospital in writing within 10 working
12days as to whether the plan is acceptable or unacceptable.
13    If the Department finds the Plan of Correction
14unacceptable, the hospital or approved pediatric health care
15facility shall have 10 working days to resubmit an acceptable
16Plan of Correction. Upon notification that its Plan of
17Correction is acceptable, a hospital or approved pediatric
18health care facility shall implement the Plan of Correction
19within 60 days.
20    (b) The failure of a hospital to submit an acceptable Plan
21of Correction or to implement the Plan of Correction, within
22the time frames required in this Section, will subject a
23hospital to the imposition of a fine by the Department. The
24Department may impose a fine of up to $500 per day until a
25hospital complies with the requirements of this Section.
26    If an approved pediatric health care facility fails to

 

 

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1submit an acceptable Plan of Correction or to implement the
2Plan of Correction within the time frames required in this
3Section, then the Department shall notify the approved
4pediatric health care facility that the approved pediatric
5health care facility may not provide medical forensic services
6under this Act. The Department may impose a fine of up to $500
7per patient provided services in violation of this Act.
8    (c) Before imposing a fine pursuant to this Section, the
9Department shall provide the hospital or approved pediatric
10health care facility via certified mail with written notice and
11an opportunity for an administrative hearing. Such hearing must
12be requested within 10 working days after receipt of the
13Department's Notice. All hearings shall be conducted in
14accordance with the Department's rules in administrative
15hearings.
16    (d) This Section is effective on and after July 1, 2031.
17(Source: P.A. 100-775, eff. 1-1-19; 101-81, eff. 7-12-19.)
 
18    (410 ILCS 70/2.1-1 new)
19    Sec. 2.1-1. Plan of correction; penalties.
20    (a) If the Department surveyor determines that the
21hospital, approved pediatric health care facility, or approved
22federally qualified health center is not in compliance with its
23approved plan, the surveyor shall provide the hospital,
24approved pediatric health care facility, or approved federally
25qualified health center with a written list of the specific

 

 

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1items of noncompliance within 10 working days after the
2conclusion of the on-site review. The hospital, approved
3pediatric health care facility, or approved federally
4qualified health center shall have 10 working days to submit to
5the Department a plan of correction which contains the
6hospital's, approved pediatric health care facility's, or
7approved federally qualified health center's specific
8proposals for correcting the items of noncompliance. The
9Department shall review the plan of correction and notify the
10hospital, approved pediatric health care facility, or approved
11federally qualified health center in writing within 10 working
12days as to whether the plan is acceptable or unacceptable.
13    If the Department finds the Plan of Correction
14unacceptable, the hospital, approved pediatric health care
15facility, or approved federally qualified health center shall
16have 10 working days to resubmit an acceptable Plan of
17Correction. Upon notification that its Plan of Correction is
18acceptable, a hospital, approved pediatric health care
19facility, or approved federally qualified health center shall
20implement the Plan of Correction within 60 days.
21    (b) The failure of a hospital to submit an acceptable Plan
22of Correction or to implement the Plan of Correction, within
23the time frames required in this Section, will subject a
24hospital to the imposition of a fine by the Department. The
25Department may impose a fine of up to $500 per day until a
26hospital complies with the requirements of this Section.

 

 

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1    If an approved pediatric health care facility or approved
2federally qualified health center fails to submit an acceptable
3Plan of Correction or to implement the Plan of Correction
4within the time frames required in this Section, then the
5Department shall notify the approved pediatric health care
6facility or approved federally qualified health center that the
7approved pediatric health care facility or approved federally
8qualified health center may not provide medical forensic
9services under this Act. The Department may impose a fine of up
10to $500 per patient provided services in violation of this Act.
11    (c) Before imposing a fine pursuant to this Section, the
12Department shall provide the hospital, or approved pediatric
13health care facility, or approved federally qualified health
14center via certified mail with written notice and an
15opportunity for an administrative hearing. Such hearing must be
16requested within 10 working days after receipt of the
17Department's Notice. All hearings shall be conducted in
18accordance with the Department's rules in administrative
19hearings.
20    (d) This Section is repealed on June 30, 2021.
 
21    (410 ILCS 70/2.2)
22    Sec. 2.2. Emergency contraception.
23    (a) The General Assembly finds:
24        (1) Crimes of sexual assault and sexual abuse cause
25    significant physical, emotional, and psychological trauma

 

 

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1    to the victims. This trauma is compounded by a victim's
2    fear of becoming pregnant and bearing a child as a result
3    of the sexual assault.
4        (2) Each year over 32,000 women become pregnant in the
5    United States as the result of rape and approximately 50%
6    of these pregnancies end in abortion.
7        (3) As approved for use by the Federal Food and Drug
8    Administration (FDA), emergency contraception can
9    significantly reduce the risk of pregnancy if taken within
10    72 hours after the sexual assault.
11        (4) By providing emergency contraception to rape
12    victims in a timely manner, the trauma of rape can be
13    significantly reduced.
14    (b) Every hospital or approved pediatric health care
15facility providing services to sexual assault survivors in
16accordance with a plan approved under Section 2 must develop a
17protocol that ensures that each survivor of sexual assault will
18receive medically and factually accurate and written and oral
19information about emergency contraception; the indications and
20contraindications and risks associated with the use of
21emergency contraception; and a description of how and when
22victims may be provided emergency contraception at no cost upon
23the written order of a physician licensed to practice medicine
24in all its branches, a licensed advanced practice registered
25nurse, or a licensed physician assistant. The Department shall
26approve the protocol if it finds that the implementation of the

 

 

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1protocol would provide sufficient protection for survivors of
2sexual assault.
3    The hospital or approved pediatric health care facility
4shall implement the protocol upon approval by the Department.
5The Department shall adopt rules and regulations establishing
6one or more safe harbor protocols and setting minimum
7acceptable protocol standards that hospitals may develop and
8implement. The Department shall approve any protocol that meets
9those standards. The Department may provide a sample acceptable
10protocol upon request.
11    (c) This Section is effective on and after July 1, 2021.
12(Source: P.A. 99-173, eff. 7-29-15; 100-513, eff. 1-1-18;
13100-775, eff. 1-1-19.)
 
14    (410 ILCS 70/2.2-1 new)
15    Sec. 2.2-1. Emergency contraception.
16    (a) The General Assembly finds:
17        (1) Crimes of sexual assault and sexual abuse cause
18    significant physical, emotional, and psychological trauma
19    to the victims. This trauma is compounded by a victim's
20    fear of becoming pregnant and bearing a child as a result
21    of the sexual assault.
22        (2) Each year over 32,000 women become pregnant in the
23    United States as the result of rape and approximately 50%
24    of these pregnancies end in abortion.
25        (3) As approved for use by the Federal Food and Drug

 

 

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1    Administration (FDA), emergency contraception can
2    significantly reduce the risk of pregnancy if taken within
3    72 hours after the sexual assault.
4        (4) By providing emergency contraception to rape
5    victims in a timely manner, the trauma of rape can be
6    significantly reduced.
7    (b) Every hospital, approved pediatric health care
8facility, or approved federally qualified health center
9providing services to sexual assault survivors in accordance
10with a plan approved under Section 2-1 must develop a protocol
11that ensures that each survivor of sexual assault will receive
12medically and factually accurate and written and oral
13information about emergency contraception; the indications and
14contraindications and risks associated with the use of
15emergency contraception; and a description of how and when
16victims may be provided emergency contraception at no cost upon
17the written order of a physician licensed to practice medicine
18in all its branches, a licensed advanced practice registered
19nurse, or a licensed physician assistant. The Department shall
20approve the protocol if it finds that the implementation of the
21protocol would provide sufficient protection for survivors of
22sexual assault.
23    The hospital, approved pediatric health care facility, or
24approved federally qualified health center shall implement the
25protocol upon approval by the Department. The Department shall
26adopt rules and regulations establishing one or more safe

 

 

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1harbor protocols and setting minimum acceptable protocol
2standards that hospitals may develop and implement. The
3Department shall approve any protocol that meets those
4standards. The Department may provide a sample acceptable
5protocol upon request.
6    (c) This Section is repealed on June 30, 2021.
 
7    (410 ILCS 70/3)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 87-3)
8    Sec. 3. Areawide sexual assault treatment plans;
9submission.
10    (a) Hospitals and approved pediatric health care
11facilities in the area to be served may develop and participate
12in areawide plans that shall describe the medical forensic
13services to sexual assault survivors that each participating
14hospital and approved pediatric health care facility has agreed
15to make available. Each hospital and approved pediatric health
16care facility participating in such a plan shall provide such
17services as it is designated to provide in the plan agreed upon
18by the participants. An areawide plan may include treatment
19hospitals, treatment hospitals with approved pediatric
20transfer, transfer hospitals, approved pediatric health care
21facilities, or out-of-state hospitals as provided in Section
225.4. All areawide plans shall be submitted to the Department
23for approval, prior to becoming effective. The Department shall
24approve a proposed plan if it finds that the minimum
25requirements set forth in Section 5 and implementation of the

 

 

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1plan would provide for appropriate medical forensic services
2for the people of the area to be served.
3    (b) This Section is effective on and after July 1, 2021.
4(Source: P.A. 100-775, eff. 1-1-19.)
 
5    (410 ILCS 70/3-1 new)
6    Sec. 3-1. Areawide sexual assault treatment plans;
7submission.
8    (a) Hospitals, approved pediatric health care facilities,
9and approved federally qualified health centers in the area to
10be served may develop and participate in areawide plans that
11shall describe the medical forensic services to sexual assault
12survivors that each participating hospital, approved pediatric
13health care facility, and approved federally qualified health
14centers has agreed to make available. Each hospital, approved
15pediatric health care facility, and approved federally
16qualified health center participating in such a plan shall
17provide such services as it is designated to provide in the
18plan agreed upon by the participants. An areawide plan may
19include treatment hospitals, treatment hospitals with approved
20pediatric transfer, transfer hospitals, approved pediatric
21health care facilities, approved federally qualified health
22centers, or out-of-state hospitals as provided in Section 5.4.
23All areawide plans shall be submitted to the Department for
24approval, prior to becoming effective. The Department shall
25approve a proposed plan if it finds that the minimum

 

 

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1requirements set forth in Section 5-1 and implementation of the
2plan would provide for appropriate medical forensic services
3for the people of the area to be served.
4    (b) This Section is repealed on June 30, 2021.
 
5    (410 ILCS 70/5)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 87-5)
6    Sec. 5. Minimum requirements for medical forensic services
7provided to sexual assault survivors by hospitals and approved
8pediatric health care facilities.
9    (a) Every hospital and approved pediatric health care
10facility providing medical forensic services to sexual assault
11survivors under this Act shall, as minimum requirements for
12such services, provide, with the consent of the sexual assault
13survivor, and as ordered by the attending physician, an
14advanced practice registered nurse, or a physician assistant,
15the services set forth in subsection (a-5).
16    Beginning January 1, 2022, a qualified medical provider
17must provide the services set forth in subsection (a-5).
18    (a-5) A treatment hospital, a treatment hospital with
19approved pediatric transfer, or an approved pediatric health
20care facility shall provide the following services in
21accordance with subsection (a):
22        (1) Appropriate medical forensic services without
23    delay, in a private, age-appropriate or
24    developmentally-appropriate space, required to ensure the
25    health, safety, and welfare of a sexual assault survivor

 

 

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1    and which may be used as evidence in a criminal proceeding
2    against a person accused of the sexual assault, in a
3    proceeding under the Juvenile Court Act of 1987, or in an
4    investigation under the Abused and Neglected Child
5    Reporting Act.
6        Records of medical forensic services, including
7    results of examinations and tests, the Illinois State
8    Police Medical Forensic Documentation Forms, the Illinois
9    State Police Patient Discharge Materials, and the Illinois
10    State Police Patient Consent: Collect and Test Evidence or
11    Collect and Hold Evidence Form, shall be maintained by the
12    hospital or approved pediatric health care facility as part
13    of the patient's electronic medical record.
14        Records of medical forensic services of sexual assault
15    survivors under the age of 18 shall be retained by the
16    hospital for a period of 60 years after the sexual assault
17    survivor reaches the age of 18. Records of medical forensic
18    services of sexual assault survivors 18 years of age or
19    older shall be retained by the hospital for a period of 20
20    years after the date the record was created.
21        Records of medical forensic services may only be
22    disseminated in accordance with Section 6.5 of this Act and
23    other State and federal law.
24        (1.5) An offer to complete the Illinois Sexual Assault
25    Evidence Collection Kit for any sexual assault survivor who
26    presents within a minimum of the last 7 days of the assault

 

 

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1    or who has disclosed past sexual assault by a specific
2    individual and was in the care of that individual within a
3    minimum of the last 7 days.
4            (A) Appropriate oral and written information
5        concerning evidence-based guidelines for the
6        appropriateness of evidence collection depending on
7        the sexual development of the sexual assault survivor,
8        the type of sexual assault, and the timing of the
9        sexual assault shall be provided to the sexual assault
10        survivor. Evidence collection is encouraged for
11        prepubescent sexual assault survivors who present to a
12        hospital or approved pediatric health care facility
13        with a complaint of sexual assault within a minimum of
14        96 hours after the sexual assault.
15            Before January 1, 2022, the information required
16        under this subparagraph shall be provided in person by
17        the health care professional providing medical
18        forensic services directly to the sexual assault
19        survivor.
20            On and after January 1, 2022, the information
21        required under this subparagraph shall be provided in
22        person by the qualified medical provider providing
23        medical forensic services directly to the sexual
24        assault survivor.
25            The written information provided shall be the
26        information created in accordance with Section 10 of

 

 

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1        this Act.
2            (B) Following the discussion regarding the
3        evidence-based guidelines for evidence collection in
4        accordance with subparagraph (A), evidence collection
5        must be completed at the sexual assault survivor's
6        request. A sexual assault nurse examiner conducting an
7        examination using the Illinois State Police Sexual
8        Assault Evidence Collection Kit may do so without the
9        presence or participation of a physician.
10        (2) Appropriate oral and written information
11    concerning the possibility of infection, sexually
12    transmitted infection, including an evaluation of the
13    sexual assault survivor's risk of contracting human
14    immunodeficiency virus (HIV) from sexual assault, and
15    pregnancy resulting from sexual assault.
16        (3) Appropriate oral and written information
17    concerning accepted medical procedures, laboratory tests,
18    medication, and possible contraindications of such
19    medication available for the prevention or treatment of
20    infection or disease resulting from sexual assault.
21        (3.5) After a medical evidentiary or physical
22    examination, access to a shower at no cost, unless
23    showering facilities are unavailable.
24        (4) An amount of medication, including HIV
25    prophylaxis, for treatment at the hospital or approved
26    pediatric health care facility and after discharge as is

 

 

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1    deemed appropriate by the attending physician, an advanced
2    practice registered nurse, or a physician assistant in
3    accordance with the Centers for Disease Control and
4    Prevention guidelines and consistent with the hospital's
5    or approved pediatric health care facility's current
6    approved protocol for sexual assault survivors.
7        (5) Photo documentation of the sexual assault
8    survivor's injuries, anatomy involved in the assault, or
9    other visible evidence on the sexual assault survivor's
10    body to supplement the medical forensic history and written
11    documentation of physical findings and evidence beginning
12    July 1, 2019. Photo documentation does not replace written
13    documentation of the injury.
14        (6) Written and oral instructions indicating the need
15    for follow-up examinations and laboratory tests after the
16    sexual assault to determine the presence or absence of
17    sexually transmitted infection.
18        (7) Referral by hospital or approved pediatric health
19    care facility personnel for appropriate counseling.
20        (8) Medical advocacy services provided by a rape crisis
21    counselor whose communications are protected under Section
22    8-802.1 of the Code of Civil Procedure, if there is a
23    memorandum of understanding between the hospital or
24    approved pediatric health care facility and a rape crisis
25    center. With the consent of the sexual assault survivor, a
26    rape crisis counselor shall remain in the exam room during

 

 

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1    the medical forensic examination.
2        (9) Written information regarding services provided by
3    a Children's Advocacy Center and rape crisis center, if
4    applicable.
5        (10) A treatment hospital, a treatment hospital with
6    approved pediatric transfer, an out-of-state hospital as
7    defined in Section 5.4, or an approved pediatric health
8    care facility shall comply with the rules relating to the
9    collection and tracking of sexual assault evidence adopted
10    by the Department of State Police under Section 50 of the
11    Sexual Assault Evidence Submission Act.
12    (a-7) By January 1, 2022, every hospital with a treatment
13plan approved by the Department shall employ or contract with a
14qualified medical provider to initiate medical forensic
15services to a sexual assault survivor within 90 minutes of the
16patient presenting to the treatment hospital or treatment
17hospital with approved pediatric transfer. The provision of
18medical forensic services by a qualified medical provider shall
19not delay the provision of life-saving medical care.
20    (b) Any person who is a sexual assault survivor who seeks
21medical forensic services or follow-up healthcare under this
22Act shall be provided such services without the consent of any
23parent, guardian, custodian, surrogate, or agent. If a sexual
24assault survivor is unable to consent to medical forensic
25services, the services may be provided under the Consent by
26Minors to Medical Procedures Act, the Health Care Surrogate

 

 

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1Act, or other applicable State and federal laws.
2    (b-5) Every hospital or approved pediatric health care
3facility providing medical forensic services to sexual assault
4survivors shall issue a voucher to any sexual assault survivor
5who is eligible to receive one in accordance with Section 5.2
6of this Act. The hospital shall make a copy of the voucher and
7place it in the medical record of the sexual assault survivor.
8The hospital shall provide a copy of the voucher to the sexual
9assault survivor after discharge upon request.
10    (c) Nothing in this Section creates a physician-patient
11relationship that extends beyond discharge from the hospital or
12approved pediatric health care facility.
13    (d) This Section is effective on and after July 1, 2021.
14(Source: P.A. 100-513, eff. 1-1-18; 100-775, eff. 1-1-19;
15100-1087, eff. 1-1-19; 101-81, eff. 7-12-19; 101-377, eff.
168-16-19.)
 
17    (410 ILCS 70/5-1 new)
18    Sec. 5-1. Minimum requirements for medical forensic
19services provided to sexual assault survivors by hospitals,
20approved pediatric health care facilities, and approved
21federally qualified health centers.
22    (a) Every hospital, approved pediatric health care
23facility, and approved federally qualified health center
24providing medical forensic services to sexual assault
25survivors under this Act shall, as minimum requirements for

 

 

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1such services, provide, with the consent of the sexual assault
2survivor, and as ordered by the attending physician, an
3advanced practice registered nurse, or a physician assistant,
4the services set forth in subsection (a-5).
5    Beginning January 1, 2022, a qualified medical provider
6must provide the services set forth in subsection (a-5).
7    (a-5) A treatment hospital, a treatment hospital with
8approved pediatric transfer, or an approved pediatric health
9care facility, or an approved federally qualified health center
10shall provide the following services in accordance with
11subsection (a):
12        (1) Appropriate medical forensic services without
13    delay, in a private, age-appropriate or
14    developmentally-appropriate space, required to ensure the
15    health, safety, and welfare of a sexual assault survivor
16    and which may be used as evidence in a criminal proceeding
17    against a person accused of the sexual assault, in a
18    proceeding under the Juvenile Court Act of 1987, or in an
19    investigation under the Abused and Neglected Child
20    Reporting Act.
21        Records of medical forensic services, including
22    results of examinations and tests, the Illinois State
23    Police Medical Forensic Documentation Forms, the Illinois
24    State Police Patient Discharge Materials, and the Illinois
25    State Police Patient Consent: Collect and Test Evidence or
26    Collect and Hold Evidence Form, shall be maintained by the

 

 

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1    hospital or approved pediatric health care facility as part
2    of the patient's electronic medical record.
3        Records of medical forensic services of sexual assault
4    survivors under the age of 18 shall be retained by the
5    hospital for a period of 60 years after the sexual assault
6    survivor reaches the age of 18. Records of medical forensic
7    services of sexual assault survivors 18 years of age or
8    older shall be retained by the hospital for a period of 20
9    years after the date the record was created.
10        Records of medical forensic services may only be
11    disseminated in accordance with Section 6.5-1 of this Act
12    and other State and federal law.
13        (1.5) An offer to complete the Illinois Sexual Assault
14    Evidence Collection Kit for any sexual assault survivor who
15    presents within a minimum of the last 7 days of the assault
16    or who has disclosed past sexual assault by a specific
17    individual and was in the care of that individual within a
18    minimum of the last 7 days.
19            (A) Appropriate oral and written information
20        concerning evidence-based guidelines for the
21        appropriateness of evidence collection depending on
22        the sexual development of the sexual assault survivor,
23        the type of sexual assault, and the timing of the
24        sexual assault shall be provided to the sexual assault
25        survivor. Evidence collection is encouraged for
26        prepubescent sexual assault survivors who present to a

 

 

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1        hospital or approved pediatric health care facility
2        with a complaint of sexual assault within a minimum of
3        96 hours after the sexual assault.
4            Before January 1, 2022, the information required
5        under this subparagraph shall be provided in person by
6        the health care professional providing medical
7        forensic services directly to the sexual assault
8        survivor.
9            On and after January 1, 2022, the information
10        required under this subparagraph shall be provided in
11        person by the qualified medical provider providing
12        medical forensic services directly to the sexual
13        assault survivor.
14            The written information provided shall be the
15        information created in accordance with Section 10-1 of
16        this Act.
17            (B) Following the discussion regarding the
18        evidence-based guidelines for evidence collection in
19        accordance with subparagraph (A), evidence collection
20        must be completed at the sexual assault survivor's
21        request. A sexual assault nurse examiner conducting an
22        examination using the Illinois State Police Sexual
23        Assault Evidence Collection Kit may do so without the
24        presence or participation of a physician.
25        (2) Appropriate oral and written information
26    concerning the possibility of infection, sexually

 

 

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1    transmitted infection, including an evaluation of the
2    sexual assault survivor's risk of contracting human
3    immunodeficiency virus (HIV) from sexual assault, and
4    pregnancy resulting from sexual assault.
5        (3) Appropriate oral and written information
6    concerning accepted medical procedures, laboratory tests,
7    medication, and possible contraindications of such
8    medication available for the prevention or treatment of
9    infection or disease resulting from sexual assault.
10        (3.5) After a medical evidentiary or physical
11    examination, access to a shower at no cost, unless
12    showering facilities are unavailable.
13        (4) An amount of medication, including HIV
14    prophylaxis, for treatment at the hospital or approved
15    pediatric health care facility and after discharge as is
16    deemed appropriate by the attending physician, an advanced
17    practice registered nurse, or a physician assistant in
18    accordance with the Centers for Disease Control and
19    Prevention guidelines and consistent with the hospital's
20    or approved pediatric health care facility's current
21    approved protocol for sexual assault survivors.
22        (5) Photo documentation of the sexual assault
23    survivor's injuries, anatomy involved in the assault, or
24    other visible evidence on the sexual assault survivor's
25    body to supplement the medical forensic history and written
26    documentation of physical findings and evidence beginning

 

 

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1    July 1, 2019. Photo documentation does not replace written
2    documentation of the injury.
3        (6) Written and oral instructions indicating the need
4    for follow-up examinations and laboratory tests after the
5    sexual assault to determine the presence or absence of
6    sexually transmitted infection.
7        (7) Referral by hospital or approved pediatric health
8    care facility personnel for appropriate counseling.
9        (8) Medical advocacy services provided by a rape crisis
10    counselor whose communications are protected under Section
11    8-802.1 of the Code of Civil Procedure, if there is a
12    memorandum of understanding between the hospital or
13    approved pediatric health care facility and a rape crisis
14    center. With the consent of the sexual assault survivor, a
15    rape crisis counselor shall remain in the exam room during
16    the medical forensic examination.
17        (9) Written information regarding services provided by
18    a Children's Advocacy Center and rape crisis center, if
19    applicable.
20        (10) A treatment hospital, a treatment hospital with
21    approved pediatric transfer, an out-of-state hospital as
22    defined in Section 5.4, or an approved pediatric health
23    care facility shall comply with the rules relating to the
24    collection and tracking of sexual assault evidence adopted
25    by the Department of State Police under Section 50 of the
26    Sexual Assault Evidence Submission Act.

 

 

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1    (a-7) By January 1, 2022, every hospital with a treatment
2plan approved by the Department shall employ or contract with a
3qualified medical provider to initiate medical forensic
4services to a sexual assault survivor within 90 minutes of the
5patient presenting to the treatment hospital or treatment
6hospital with approved pediatric transfer. The provision of
7medical forensic services by a qualified medical provider shall
8not delay the provision of life-saving medical care.
9    (b) Any person who is a sexual assault survivor who seeks
10medical forensic services or follow-up healthcare under this
11Act shall be provided such services without the consent of any
12parent, guardian, custodian, surrogate, or agent. If a sexual
13assault survivor is unable to consent to medical forensic
14services, the services may be provided under the Consent by
15Minors to Medical Procedures Act, the Health Care Surrogate
16Act, or other applicable State and federal laws.
17    (b-5) Every hospital, approved pediatric health care
18facility, or approved federally qualified health center
19providing medical forensic services to sexual assault
20survivors shall issue a voucher to any sexual assault survivor
21who is eligible to receive one in accordance with Section 5.2-1
22of this Act. The hospital, approved pediatric health care
23facility, or approved federally qualified health center shall
24make a copy of the voucher and place it in the medical record
25of the sexual assault survivor. The hospital, approved
26pediatric health care facility, or approved federally

 

 

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1qualified health center shall provide a copy of the voucher to
2the sexual assault survivor after discharge upon request.
3    (c) Nothing in this Section creates a physician-patient
4relationship that extends beyond discharge from the hospital,
5or approved pediatric health care facility, or approved
6federally qualified health center.
7    (d) This Section is repealed on June 30, 2021.
 
8    (410 ILCS 70/5.1)
9    Sec. 5.1. Storage, retention, and dissemination of photo
10documentation relating to medical forensic services.
11    (a) Photo documentation taken during a medical forensic
12examination shall be maintained by the hospital or approved
13pediatric health care facility as part of the patient's medical
14record.
15    Photo documentation shall be stored and backed up securely
16in its original file format in accordance with facility
17protocol. The facility protocol shall require limited access to
18the images and be included in the sexual assault treatment plan
19submitted to the Department.
20    Photo documentation of a sexual assault survivor under the
21age of 18 shall be retained for a period of 60 years after the
22sexual assault survivor reaches the age of 18. Photo
23documentation of a sexual assault survivor 18 years of age or
24older shall be retained for a period of 20 years after the
25record was created.

 

 

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1    Photo documentation of the sexual assault survivor's
2injuries, anatomy involved in the assault, or other visible
3evidence on the sexual assault survivor's body may be used for
4peer review, expert second opinion, or in a criminal proceeding
5against a person accused of sexual assault, a proceeding under
6the Juvenile Court Act of 1987, or in an investigation under
7the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act. Any dissemination
8of photo documentation, including for peer review, an expert
9second opinion, or in any court or administrative proceeding or
10investigation, must be in accordance with State and federal
11law.
12    (b) This Section is effective on and after July 1, 2021.
13(Source: P.A. 100-775, eff. 1-1-19.)
 
14    (410 ILCS 70/5.1-1 new)
15    Sec. 5.1-1. Storage, retention, and dissemination of photo
16documentation relating to medical forensic services.
17    (a) Photo documentation taken during a medical forensic
18examination shall be maintained by the hospital, approved
19pediatric health care facility, or approved federally
20qualified health center as part of the patient's medical
21record.
22    Photo documentation shall be stored and backed up securely
23in its original file format in accordance with facility
24protocol. The facility protocol shall require limited access to
25the images and be included in the sexual assault treatment plan

 

 

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1submitted to the Department.
2    Photo documentation of a sexual assault survivor under the
3age of 18 shall be retained for a period of 60 years after the
4sexual assault survivor reaches the age of 18. Photo
5documentation of a sexual assault survivor 18 years of age or
6older shall be retained for a period of 20 years after the
7record was created.
8    Photo documentation of the sexual assault survivor's
9injuries, anatomy involved in the assault, or other visible
10evidence on the sexual assault survivor's body may be used for
11peer review, expert second opinion, or in a criminal proceeding
12against a person accused of sexual assault, a proceeding under
13the Juvenile Court Act of 1987, or in an investigation under
14the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act. Any dissemination
15of photo documentation, including for peer review, an expert
16second opinion, or in any court or administrative proceeding or
17investigation, must be in accordance with State and federal
18law.
19    (b) This Section is repealed on June 30, 2021.
 
20    (410 ILCS 70/5.2)
21    Sec. 5.2. Sexual assault services voucher.
22    (a) A sexual assault services voucher shall be issued by a
23treatment hospital, treatment hospital with approved pediatric
24transfer, or approved pediatric health care facility at the
25time a sexual assault survivor receives medical forensic

 

 

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1services.
2    (b) Each treatment hospital, treatment hospital with
3approved pediatric transfer, and approved pediatric health
4care facility must include in its sexual assault treatment plan
5submitted to the Department in accordance with Section 2 of
6this Act a protocol for issuing sexual assault services
7vouchers. The protocol shall, at a minimum, include the
8following:
9        (1) Identification of employee positions responsible
10    for issuing sexual assault services vouchers.
11        (2) Identification of employee positions with access
12    to the Medical Electronic Data Interchange or successor
13    system.
14        (3) A statement to be signed by each employee of an
15    approved pediatric health care facility with access to the
16    Medical Electronic Data Interchange or successor system
17    affirming that the Medical Electronic Data Interchange or
18    successor system will only be used for the purpose of
19    issuing sexual assault services vouchers.
20    (c) A sexual assault services voucher may be used to seek
21payment for any ambulance services, medical forensic services,
22laboratory services, pharmacy services, and follow-up
23healthcare provided as a result of the sexual assault.
24    (d) Any treatment hospital, treatment hospital with
25approved pediatric transfer, approved pediatric health care
26facility, health care professional, ambulance provider,

 

 

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1laboratory, or pharmacy may submit a bill for services provided
2to a sexual assault survivor as a result of a sexual assault to
3the Department of Healthcare and Family Services Sexual Assault
4Emergency Treatment Program. The bill shall include:
5        (1) the name and date of birth of the sexual assault
6    survivor;
7        (2) the service provided;
8        (3) the charge of service;
9        (4) the date the service was provided; and
10        (5) the recipient identification number, if known.
11    A health care professional, ambulance provider,
12laboratory, or pharmacy is not required to submit a copy of the
13sexual assault services voucher.
14    The Department of Healthcare and Family Services Sexual
15Assault Emergency Treatment Program shall electronically
16verify, using the Medical Electronic Data Interchange or a
17successor system, that a sexual assault services voucher was
18issued to a sexual assault survivor prior to issuing payment
19for the services.
20    If a sexual assault services voucher was not issued to a
21sexual assault survivor by the treatment hospital, treatment
22hospital with approved pediatric transfer, or approved
23pediatric health care facility, then a health care
24professional, ambulance provider, laboratory, or pharmacy may
25submit a request to the Department of Healthcare and Family
26Services Sexual Assault Emergency Treatment Program to issue a

 

 

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1sexual assault services voucher.
2    (e) This Section is effective on and after July 1, 2021.
3(Source: P.A. 100-775, eff. 1-1-19.)
 
4    (410 ILCS 70/5.2-1 new)
5    Sec. 5.2-1. Sexual assault services voucher.
6    (a) A sexual assault services voucher shall be issued by a
7treatment hospital, treatment hospital with approved pediatric
8transfer, approved pediatric health care facility, or approved
9federally qualified health center at the time a sexual assault
10survivor receives medical forensic services.
11    (b) Each treatment hospital, treatment hospital with
12approved pediatric transfer, approved pediatric health care
13facility, and approved federally qualified health center must
14include in its sexual assault treatment plan submitted to the
15Department in accordance with Section 2-1 of this Act a
16protocol for issuing sexual assault services vouchers. The
17protocol shall, at a minimum, include the following:
18        (1) Identification of employee positions responsible
19    for issuing sexual assault services vouchers.
20        (2) Identification of employee positions with access
21    to the Medical Electronic Data Interchange or successor
22    system.
23        (3) A statement to be signed by each employee of an
24    approved pediatric health care facility or approved
25    federally qualified health center with access to the

 

 

10100SB0557ham002- 74 -LRB101 04318 CPF 72428 a

1    Medical Electronic Data Interchange or successor system
2    affirming that the Medical Electronic Data Interchange or
3    successor system will only be used for the purpose of
4    issuing sexual assault services vouchers.
5    (c) A sexual assault services voucher may be used to seek
6payment for any ambulance services, medical forensic services,
7laboratory services, pharmacy services, and follow-up
8healthcare provided as a result of the sexual assault.
9    (d) Any treatment hospital, treatment hospital with
10approved pediatric transfer, approved pediatric health care
11facility, approved federally qualified health center, health
12care professional, ambulance provider, laboratory, or pharmacy
13may submit a bill for services provided to a sexual assault
14survivor as a result of a sexual assault to the Department of
15Healthcare and Family Services Sexual Assault Emergency
16Treatment Program. The bill shall include:
17        (1) the name and date of birth of the sexual assault
18    survivor;
19        (2) the service provided;
20        (3) the charge of service;
21        (4) the date the service was provided; and
22        (5) the recipient identification number, if known.
23    A health care professional, ambulance provider,
24laboratory, or pharmacy is not required to submit a copy of the
25sexual assault services voucher.
26    The Department of Healthcare and Family Services Sexual

 

 

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1Assault Emergency Treatment Program shall electronically
2verify, using the Medical Electronic Data Interchange or a
3successor system, that a sexual assault services voucher was
4issued to a sexual assault survivor prior to issuing payment
5for the services.
6    If a sexual assault services voucher was not issued to a
7sexual assault survivor by the treatment hospital, treatment
8hospital with approved pediatric transfer, approved pediatric
9health care facility, or approved federally qualified health
10center, then a health care professional, ambulance provider,
11laboratory, or pharmacy may submit a request to the Department
12of Healthcare and Family Services Sexual Assault Emergency
13Treatment Program to issue a sexual assault services voucher.
14    (e) This Section is repealed on June 30, 2021.
 
15    (410 ILCS 70/5.3)
16    Sec. 5.3. Pediatric sexual assault care.
17    (a) The General Assembly finds:
18        (1) Pediatric sexual assault survivors can suffer from
19    a wide range of health problems across their life span. In
20    addition to immediate health issues, such as sexually
21    transmitted infections, physical injuries, and
22    psychological trauma, child sexual abuse victims are at
23    greater risk for a plethora of adverse psychological and
24    somatic problems into adulthood in contrast to those who
25    were not sexually abused.

 

 

10100SB0557ham002- 76 -LRB101 04318 CPF 72428 a

1        (2) Sexual abuse against the pediatric population is
2    distinct, particularly due to their dependence on their
3    caregivers and the ability of perpetrators to manipulate
4    and silence them (especially when the perpetrators are
5    family members or other adults trusted by, or with power
6    over, children). Sexual abuse is often hidden by
7    perpetrators, unwitnessed by others, and may leave no
8    obvious physical signs on child victims.
9        (3) Pediatric sexual assault survivors throughout the
10    State should have access to qualified medical providers who
11    have received specialized training regarding the care of
12    pediatric sexual assault survivors within a reasonable
13    distance from their home.
14        (4) There is a need in Illinois to increase the number
15    of qualified medical providers available to provide
16    medical forensic services to pediatric sexual assault
17    survivors.
18    (b) If a medically stable pediatric sexual assault survivor
19presents at a transfer hospital or treatment hospital with
20approved pediatric transfer that has a plan approved by the
21Department requesting medical forensic services, then the
22hospital emergency department staff shall contact an approved
23pediatric health care facility, if one is designated in the
24hospital's plan.
25    If the transferring hospital confirms that medical
26forensic services can be initiated within 90 minutes of the

 

 

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1patient's arrival at the approved pediatric health care
2facility following an immediate transfer, then the hospital
3emergency department staff shall notify the patient and
4non-offending parent or legal guardian that the patient will be
5transferred for medical forensic services and shall provide the
6patient and non-offending parent or legal guardian the option
7of being transferred to the approved pediatric health care
8facility or the treatment hospital designated in the hospital's
9plan. The pediatric sexual assault survivor may be transported
10by ambulance, law enforcement, or personal vehicle.
11    If medical forensic services cannot be initiated within 90
12minutes of the patient's arrival at the approved pediatric
13health care facility, there is no approved pediatric health
14care facility designated in the hospital's plan, or the patient
15or non-offending parent or legal guardian chooses to be
16transferred to a treatment hospital, the hospital emergency
17department staff shall contact a treatment hospital designated
18in the hospital's plan to arrange for the transfer of the
19patient to the treatment hospital for medical forensic
20services, which are to be initiated within 90 minutes of the
21patient's arrival at the treatment hospital. The treatment
22hospital shall provide medical forensic services and may not
23transfer the patient to another facility. The pediatric sexual
24assault survivor may be transported by ambulance, law
25enforcement, or personal vehicle.
26    (c) If a medically stable pediatric sexual assault survivor

 

 

10100SB0557ham002- 78 -LRB101 04318 CPF 72428 a

1presents at a treatment hospital that has a plan approved by
2the Department requesting medical forensic services, then the
3hospital emergency department staff shall contact an approved
4pediatric health care facility, if one is designated in the
5treatment hospital's areawide treatment plan.
6    If medical forensic services can be initiated within 90
7minutes after the patient's arrival at the approved pediatric
8health care facility following an immediate transfer, the
9hospital emergency department staff shall provide the patient
10and non-offending parent or legal guardian the option of having
11medical forensic services performed at the treatment hospital
12or at the approved pediatric health care facility. If the
13patient or non-offending parent or legal guardian chooses to be
14transferred, the pediatric sexual assault survivor may be
15transported by ambulance, law enforcement, or personal
16vehicle.
17    If medical forensic services cannot be initiated within 90
18minutes after the patient's arrival to the approved pediatric
19health care facility, there is no approved pediatric health
20care facility designated in the hospital's plan, or the patient
21or non-offending parent or legal guardian chooses not to be
22transferred, the hospital shall provide medical forensic
23services to the patient.
24    (d) If a pediatric sexual assault survivor presents at an
25approved pediatric health care facility requesting medical
26forensic services or the facility is contacted by law

 

 

10100SB0557ham002- 79 -LRB101 04318 CPF 72428 a

1enforcement or the Department of Children and Family Services
2requesting medical forensic services for a pediatric sexual
3assault survivor, the services shall be provided at the
4facility if the medical forensic services can be initiated
5within 90 minutes after the patient's arrival at the facility.
6If medical forensic services cannot be initiated within 90
7minutes after the patient's arrival at the facility, then the
8patient shall be transferred to a treatment hospital designated
9in the approved pediatric health care facility's plan for
10medical forensic services. The pediatric sexual assault
11survivor may be transported by ambulance, law enforcement, or
12personal vehicle.
13    (e) This Section is effective on and after July 1, 2021.
14(Source: P.A. 100-775, eff. 1-1-19.)
 
15    (410 ILCS 70/5.3-1 new)
16    Sec. 5.3-1. Pediatric sexual assault care.
17    (a) The General Assembly finds:
18        (1) Pediatric sexual assault survivors can suffer from
19    a wide range of health problems across their life span. In
20    addition to immediate health issues, such as sexually
21    transmitted infections, physical injuries, and
22    psychological trauma, child sexual abuse victims are at
23    greater risk for a plethora of adverse psychological and
24    somatic problems into adulthood in contrast to those who
25    were not sexually abused.

 

 

10100SB0557ham002- 80 -LRB101 04318 CPF 72428 a

1        (2) Sexual abuse against the pediatric population is
2    distinct, particularly due to their dependence on their
3    caregivers and the ability of perpetrators to manipulate
4    and silence them (especially when the perpetrators are
5    family members or other adults trusted by, or with power
6    over, children). Sexual abuse is often hidden by
7    perpetrators, unwitnessed by others, and may leave no
8    obvious physical signs on child victims.
9        (3) Pediatric sexual assault survivors throughout the
10    State should have access to qualified medical providers who
11    have received specialized training regarding the care of
12    pediatric sexual assault survivors within a reasonable
13    distance from their home.
14        (4) There is a need in Illinois to increase the number
15    of qualified medical providers available to provide
16    medical forensic services to pediatric sexual assault
17    survivors.
18    (b) If a medically stable pediatric sexual assault survivor
19presents at a transfer hospital, treatment hospital with
20approved pediatric transfer, or an approved federally
21qualified health center that has a plan approved by the
22Department requesting medical forensic services, then the
23hospital emergency department staff or approved federally
24qualified health center staff shall contact an approved
25pediatric health care facility, if one is designated in the
26hospital's or an approved federally qualified health center's

 

 

10100SB0557ham002- 81 -LRB101 04318 CPF 72428 a

1plan.
2    If the transferring hospital or approved federally
3qualified health center confirms that medical forensic
4services can be initiated within 90 minutes of the patient's
5arrival at the approved pediatric health care facility
6following an immediate transfer, then the hospital emergency
7department or approved federally qualified health center staff
8shall notify the patient and non-offending parent or legal
9guardian that the patient will be transferred for medical
10forensic services and shall provide the patient and
11non-offending parent or legal guardian the option of being
12transferred to the approved pediatric health care facility or
13the treatment hospital designated in the hospital's or approved
14federally qualified health center's plan. The pediatric sexual
15assault survivor may be transported by ambulance,law
16enforcement, or personal vehicle.
17    If medical forensic services cannot be initiated within 90
18minutes of the patient's arrival at the approved pediatric
19health care facility, there is no approved pediatric health
20care facility designated in the hospital's or approved
21federally qualified health center's plan, or the patient or
22non-offending parent or legal guardian chooses to be
23transferred to a treatment hospital, the hospital emergency
24department or approved federally qualified health center staff
25shall contact a treatment hospital designated in the hospital's
26or approved federally qualified health center's plan to arrange

 

 

10100SB0557ham002- 82 -LRB101 04318 CPF 72428 a

1for the transfer of the patient to the treatment hospital for
2medical forensic services, which are to be initiated within 90
3minutes of the patient's arrival at the treatment hospital. The
4treatment hospital shall provide medical forensic services and
5may not transfer the patient to another facility. The pediatric
6sexual assault survivor may be transported by ambulance, law
7enforcement, or personal vehicle.
8    (c) If a medically stable pediatric sexual assault survivor
9presents at a treatment hospital that has a plan approved by
10the Department requesting medical forensic services, then the
11hospital emergency department staff shall contact an approved
12pediatric health care facility, if one is designated in the
13treatment hospital's areawide treatment plan.
14    If medical forensic services can be initiated within 90
15minutes after the patient's arrival at the approved pediatric
16health care facility following an immediate transfer, the
17hospital emergency department staff shall provide the patient
18and non-offending parent or legal guardian the option of having
19medical forensic services performed at the treatment hospital
20or at the approved pediatric health care facility. If the
21patient or non-offending parent or legal guardian chooses to be
22transferred, the pediatric sexual assault survivor may be
23transported by ambulance, law enforcement, or personal
24vehicle.
25    If medical forensic services cannot be initiated within 90
26minutes after the patient's arrival to the approved pediatric

 

 

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1health care facility, there is no approved pediatric health
2care facility designated in the hospital's plan, or the patient
3or non-offending parent or legal guardian chooses not to be
4transferred, the hospital shall provide medical forensic
5services to the patient.
6    (d) If a pediatric sexual assault survivor presents at an
7approved pediatric health care facility requesting medical
8forensic services or the facility is contacted by law
9enforcement or the Department of Children and Family Services
10requesting medical forensic services for a pediatric sexual
11assault survivor, the services shall be provided at the
12facility if the medical forensic services can be initiated
13within 90 minutes after the patient's arrival at the facility.
14If medical forensic services cannot be initiated within 90
15minutes after the patient's arrival at the facility, then the
16patient shall be transferred to a treatment hospital designated
17in the approved pediatric health care facility's plan for
18medical forensic services. The pediatric sexual assault
19survivor may be transported by ambulance, law enforcement, or
20personal vehicle.
21    (e) This Section is repealed on June 30, 2021.
 
22    (410 ILCS 70/5.5)
23    Sec. 5.5. Minimum reimbursement requirements for follow-up
24healthcare.
25    (a) Every hospital, pediatric health care facility, health

 

 

10100SB0557ham002- 84 -LRB101 04318 CPF 72428 a

1care professional, laboratory, or pharmacy that provides
2follow-up healthcare to a sexual assault survivor, with the
3consent of the sexual assault survivor and as ordered by the
4attending physician, an advanced practice registered nurse, or
5physician assistant shall be reimbursed for the follow-up
6healthcare services provided. Follow-up healthcare services
7include, but are not limited to, the following:
8        (1) a physical examination;
9        (2) laboratory tests to determine the presence or
10    absence of sexually transmitted infection; and
11        (3) appropriate medications, including HIV
12    prophylaxis, in accordance with the Centers for Disease
13    Control and Prevention's guidelines.
14    (b) Reimbursable follow-up healthcare is limited to office
15visits with a physician, advanced practice registered nurse, or
16physician assistant within 90 days after an initial visit for
17hospital medical forensic services.
18    (c) Nothing in this Section requires a hospital, pediatric
19health care facility, health care professional, laboratory, or
20pharmacy to provide follow-up healthcare to a sexual assault
21survivor.
22    (d) This Section is effective on and after July 1, 2021.
23(Source: P.A. 99-173, eff. 7-29-15; 100-513, eff. 1-1-18;
24100-775, eff. 1-1-19.)
 
25    (410 ILCS 70/5.5-1 new)

 

 

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1    Sec. 5.5-1. Minimum reimbursement requirements for
2follow-up healthcare.
3    (a) Every hospital, pediatric health care facility,
4federally qualified health center, health care professional,
5laboratory, or pharmacy that provides follow-up healthcare to a
6sexual assault survivor, with the consent of the sexual assault
7survivor and as ordered by the attending physician, an advanced
8practice registered nurse, or physician assistant shall be
9reimbursed for the follow-up healthcare services provided.
10Follow-up healthcare services include, but are not limited to,
11the following:
12        (1) a physical examination;
13        (2) laboratory tests to determine the presence or
14    absence of sexually transmitted infection; and
15        (3) appropriate medications, including HIV
16    prophylaxis, in accordance with the Centers for Disease
17    Control and Prevention's guidelines.
18    (b) Reimbursable follow-up healthcare is limited to office
19visits with a physician, advanced practice registered nurse, or
20physician assistant within 90 days after an initial visit for
21hospital medical forensic services.
22    (c) Nothing in this Section requires a hospital, pediatric
23health care facility, federally qualified health center,
24health care professional, laboratory, or pharmacy to provide
25follow-up healthcare to a sexual assault survivor.
26    (d) This Section is repealed on June 30, 2021.
 

 

 

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1    (410 ILCS 70/6.1)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 87-6.1)
2    Sec. 6.1. Minimum standards.
3    (a) The Department shall prescribe minimum standards,
4rules, and regulations necessary to implement this Act and the
5changes made by this amendatory Act of the 100th General
6Assembly, which shall apply to every hospital required to be
7licensed by the Department that provides general medical and
8surgical hospital services and to every approved pediatric
9health care facility. Such standards shall include, but not be
10limited to, a uniform system for recording results of medical
11examinations and all diagnostic tests performed in connection
12therewith to determine the condition and necessary treatment of
13sexual assault survivors, which results shall be preserved in a
14confidential manner as part of the hospital's or approved
15pediatric health care facility's record of the sexual assault
16survivor.
17    (b) This Section is effective on and after July 1, 2021.
18(Source: P.A. 100-775, eff. 1-1-19.)
 
19    (410 ILCS 70/6.1-1 new)
20    Sec. 6.1-1. Minimum standards.
21    (a) The Department shall prescribe minimum standards,
22rules, and regulations necessary to implement this Act and the
23changes made by this amendatory Act of the 101st General
24Assembly, which shall apply to every hospital required to be

 

 

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1licensed by the Department that provides general medical and
2surgical hospital services and to every approved pediatric
3health care facility and approved federally qualified health
4center. Such standards shall include, but not be limited to, a
5uniform system for recording results of medical examinations
6and all diagnostic tests performed in connection therewith to
7determine the condition and necessary treatment of sexual
8assault survivors, which results shall be preserved in a
9confidential manner as part of the hospital's, approved
10pediatric health care facility's, or approved federally
11qualified health center's record of the sexual assault
12survivor.
13    (b) This Section is repealed on June 30, 2021.
 
14    (410 ILCS 70/6.2)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 87-6.2)
15    Sec. 6.2. Assistance and grants.
16    (a) The Department shall assist in the development and
17operation of programs which provide medical forensic services
18to sexual assault survivors, and, where necessary, to provide
19grants to hospitals and approved pediatric health care
20facilities for this purpose.
21    (b) This Section is effective on and after July 1, 2021.
22(Source: P.A. 100-775, eff. 1-1-19.)
 
23    (410 ILCS 70/6.2-1 new)
24    Sec. 6.2-1. Assistance and grants.

 

 

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1    (a) The Department shall assist in the development and
2operation of programs which provide medical forensic services
3to sexual assault survivors, and, where necessary, to provide
4grants to hospitals, approved pediatric health care
5facilities, and approved federally qualified health centers
6for this purpose.
7    (b) This Section is repealed on June 30, 2021.
 
8    (410 ILCS 70/6.4)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 87-6.4)
9    Sec. 6.4. Sexual assault evidence collection program.
10    (a) There is created a statewide sexual assault evidence
11collection program to facilitate the prosecution of persons
12accused of sexual assault. This program shall be administered
13by the Illinois State Police. The program shall consist of the
14following: (1) distribution of sexual assault evidence
15collection kits which have been approved by the Illinois State
16Police to hospitals and approved pediatric health care
17facilities that request them, or arranging for such
18distribution by the manufacturer of the kits, (2) collection of
19the kits from hospitals and approved pediatric health care
20facilities after the kits have been used to collect evidence,
21(3) analysis of the collected evidence and conducting of
22laboratory tests, (4) maintaining the chain of custody and
23safekeeping of the evidence for use in a legal proceeding, and
24(5) the comparison of the collected evidence with the genetic
25marker grouping analysis information maintained by the

 

 

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1Department of State Police under Section 5-4-3 of the Unified
2Code of Corrections and with the information contained in the
3Federal Bureau of Investigation's National DNA database;
4provided the amount and quality of genetic marker grouping
5results obtained from the evidence in the sexual assault case
6meets the requirements of both the Department of State Police
7and the Federal Bureau of Investigation's Combined DNA Index
8System (CODIS) policies. The standardized evidence collection
9kit for the State of Illinois shall be the Illinois State
10Police Sexual Assault Evidence Kit and shall include a written
11consent form authorizing law enforcement to test the sexual
12assault evidence and to provide law enforcement with details of
13the sexual assault.
14    (a-5) (Blank).
15    (b) The Illinois State Police shall administer a program to
16train hospital and approved pediatric health care facility
17personnel participating in the sexual assault evidence
18collection program, in the correct use and application of the
19sexual assault evidence collection kits. The Department shall
20cooperate with the Illinois State Police in this program as it
21pertains to medical aspects of the evidence collection.
22    (c) (Blank).
23    (d) This Section is effective on and after July 1, 2021.
24(Source: P.A. 99-801, eff. 1-1-17; 100-775, eff. 1-1-19.)
 
25    (410 ILCS 70/6.4-1 new)

 

 

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1    Sec. 6.4-1. Sexual assault evidence collection program.
2    (a) There is created a statewide sexual assault evidence
3collection program to facilitate the prosecution of persons
4accused of sexual assault. This program shall be administered
5by the Illinois State Police. The program shall consist of the
6following: (1) distribution of sexual assault evidence
7collection kits which have been approved by the Illinois State
8Police to hospitals, approved pediatric health care
9facilities, and approved federally qualified health centers
10that request them, or arranging for such distribution by the
11manufacturer of the kits, (2) collection of the kits from
12hospitals and approved pediatric health care facilities after
13the kits have been used to collect evidence, (3) analysis of
14the collected evidence and conducting of laboratory tests, (4)
15maintaining the chain of custody and safekeeping of the
16evidence for use in a legal proceeding, and (5) the comparison
17of the collected evidence with the genetic marker grouping
18analysis information maintained by the Department of State
19Police under Section 5-4-3 of the Unified Code of Corrections
20and with the information contained in the Federal Bureau of
21Investigation's National DNA database; provided the amount and
22quality of genetic marker grouping results obtained from the
23evidence in the sexual assault case meets the requirements of
24both the Department of State Police and the Federal Bureau of
25Investigation's Combined DNA Index System (CODIS) policies.
26The standardized evidence collection kit for the State of

 

 

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1Illinois shall be the Illinois State Police Sexual Assault
2Evidence Kit and shall include a written consent form
3authorizing law enforcement to test the sexual assault evidence
4and to provide law enforcement with details of the sexual
5assault.
6    (a-5) (Blank).
7    (b) The Illinois State Police shall administer a program to
8train hospital, and approved pediatric health care facility,
9and approved federally qualified health center personnel
10participating in the sexual assault evidence collection
11program, in the correct use and application of the sexual
12assault evidence collection kits. The Department shall
13cooperate with the Illinois State Police in this program as it
14pertains to medical aspects of the evidence collection.
15    (c) (Blank).
16    (d) This Section is repealed on June 30, 2021.
 
17    (410 ILCS 70/6.5)
18    Sec. 6.5. Written consent to the release of sexual assault
19evidence for testing.
20    (a) Upon the completion of medical forensic services, the
21health care professional providing the medical forensic
22services shall provide the patient the opportunity to sign a
23written consent to allow law enforcement to submit the sexual
24assault evidence for testing, if collected. The written consent
25shall be on a form included in the sexual assault evidence

 

 

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1collection kit and posted on the Illinois State Police website.
2The consent form shall include whether the survivor consents to
3the release of information about the sexual assault to law
4enforcement.
5        (1) A survivor 13 years of age or older may sign the
6    written consent to release the evidence for testing.
7        (2) If the survivor is a minor who is under 13 years of
8    age, the written consent to release the sexual assault
9    evidence for testing may be signed by the parent, guardian,
10    investigating law enforcement officer, or Department of
11    Children and Family Services.
12        (3) If the survivor is an adult who has a guardian of
13    the person, a health care surrogate, or an agent acting
14    under a health care power of attorney, the consent of the
15    guardian, surrogate, or agent is not required to release
16    evidence and information concerning the sexual assault or
17    sexual abuse. If the adult is unable to provide consent for
18    the release of evidence and information and a guardian,
19    surrogate, or agent under a health care power of attorney
20    is unavailable or unwilling to release the information,
21    then an investigating law enforcement officer may
22    authorize the release.
23        (4) Any health care professional or health care
24    institution, including any hospital or approved pediatric
25    health care facility, who provides evidence or information
26    to a law enforcement officer under a written consent as

 

 

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1    specified in this Section is immune from any civil or
2    professional liability that might arise from those
3    actions, with the exception of willful or wanton
4    misconduct. The immunity provision applies only if all of
5    the requirements of this Section are met.
6    (b) The hospital or approved pediatric health care facility
7shall keep a copy of a signed or unsigned written consent form
8in the patient's medical record.
9    (c) If a written consent to allow law enforcement to hold
10the sexual assault evidence is signed at the completion of
11medical forensic services, the hospital or approved pediatric
12health care facility shall include the following information in
13its discharge instructions:
14        (1) the sexual assault evidence will be stored for 10
15    years from the completion of an Illinois State Police
16    Sexual Assault Evidence Collection Kit, or 10 years from
17    the age of 18 years, whichever is longer;
18        (2) a person authorized to consent to the testing of
19    the sexual assault evidence may sign a written consent to
20    allow law enforcement to test the sexual assault evidence
21    at any time during that 10-year period for an adult victim,
22    or until a minor victim turns 28 years of age by (A)
23    contacting the law enforcement agency having jurisdiction,
24    or if unknown, the law enforcement agency contacted by the
25    hospital or approved pediatric health care facility under
26    Section 3.2 of the Criminal Identification Act; or (B) by

 

 

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1    working with an advocate at a rape crisis center;
2        (3) the name, address, and phone number of the law
3    enforcement agency having jurisdiction, or if unknown the
4    name, address, and phone number of the law enforcement
5    agency contacted by the hospital or approved pediatric
6    health care facility under Section 3.2 of the Criminal
7    Identification Act; and
8        (4) the name and phone number of a local rape crisis
9    center.
10    (d) This Section is effective on and after July 1, 2021.
11(Source: P.A. 100-513, eff. 1-1-18; 100-775, eff. 1-1-19;
12100-1087, eff. 1-1-19; 101-81, eff. 7-12-19.)
 
13    (410 ILCS 70/6.5-1 new)
14    Sec. 6.5-1. Written consent to the release of sexual
15assault evidence for testing.
16    (a) Upon the completion of medical forensic services, the
17health care professional providing the medical forensic
18services shall provide the patient the opportunity to sign a
19written consent to allow law enforcement to submit the sexual
20assault evidence for testing, if collected. The written consent
21shall be on a form included in the sexual assault evidence
22collection kit and posted on the Illinois State Police website.
23The consent form shall include whether the survivor consents to
24the release of information about the sexual assault to law
25enforcement.

 

 

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1        (1) A survivor 13 years of age or older may sign the
2    written consent to release the evidence for testing.
3        (2) If the survivor is a minor who is under 13 years of
4    age, the written consent to release the sexual assault
5    evidence for testing may be signed by the parent, guardian,
6    investigating law enforcement officer, or Department of
7    Children and Family Services.
8        (3) If the survivor is an adult who has a guardian of
9    the person, a health care surrogate, or an agent acting
10    under a health care power of attorney, the consent of the
11    guardian, surrogate, or agent is not required to release
12    evidence and information concerning the sexual assault or
13    sexual abuse. If the adult is unable to provide consent for
14    the release of evidence and information and a guardian,
15    surrogate, or agent under a health care power of attorney
16    is unavailable or unwilling to release the information,
17    then an investigating law enforcement officer may
18    authorize the release.
19        (4) Any health care professional or health care
20    institution, including any hospital, approved pediatric
21    health care facility, or approved federally qualified
22    health center, who provides evidence or information to a
23    law enforcement officer under a written consent as
24    specified in this Section is immune from any civil or
25    professional liability that might arise from those
26    actions, with the exception of willful or wanton

 

 

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1    misconduct. The immunity provision applies only if all of
2    the requirements of this Section are met.
3    (b) The hospital, approved pediatric health care facility,
4or approved federally qualified health center shall keep a copy
5of a signed or unsigned written consent form in the patient's
6medical record.
7    (c) If a written consent to allow law enforcement to hold
8the sexual assault evidence is signed at the completion of
9medical forensic services, the hospital, approved pediatric
10health care facility, or approved federally qualified health
11center shall include the following information in its discharge
12instructions:
13        (1) the sexual assault evidence will be stored for 10
14    years from the completion of an Illinois State Police
15    Sexual Assault Evidence Collection Kit, or 10 years from
16    the age of 18 years, whichever is longer;
17        (2) A person authorized to consent to the testing of
18    the sexual assault evidence may sign a written consent to
19    allow law enforcement to test the sexual assault evidence
20    at any time during that 10-year period for an adult victim,
21    or until a minor victim turns 28 years of age by (A)
22    contacting the law enforcement agency having jurisdiction,
23    or if unknown, the law enforcement agency contacted by the
24    hospital, approved pediatric health care facility, or
25    approved federally qualified health center under Section
26    3.2 of the Criminal Identification Act; or (B) by working

 

 

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1    with an advocate at a rape crisis center;
2        (3) the name, address, and phone number of the law
3    enforcement agency having jurisdiction, or if unknown the
4    name, address, and phone number of the law enforcement
5    agency contacted by the hospital or approved pediatric
6    health care facility under Section 3.2 of the Criminal
7    Identification Act; and
8        (4) the name and phone number of a local rape crisis
9    center.
10    (d) This Section is repealed on June 30, 2021.
 
11    (410 ILCS 70/6.6)
12    Sec. 6.6. Submission of sexual assault evidence.
13    (a) As soon as practicable, but in no event more than 4
14hours after the completion of medical forensic services, the
15hospital or approved pediatric health care facility shall make
16reasonable efforts to determine the law enforcement agency
17having jurisdiction where the sexual assault occurred, if
18sexual assault evidence was collected. The hospital or approved
19pediatric health care facility may obtain the name of the law
20enforcement agency with jurisdiction from the local law
21enforcement agency.
22    (b) Within 4 hours after the completion of medical forensic
23services, the hospital or approved pediatric health care
24facility shall notify the law enforcement agency having
25jurisdiction that the hospital or approved pediatric health

 

 

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1care facility is in possession of sexual assault evidence and
2the date and time the collection of evidence was completed. The
3hospital or approved pediatric health care facility shall
4document the notification in the patient's medical records and
5shall include the agency notified, the date and time of the
6notification and the name of the person who received the
7notification. This notification to the law enforcement agency
8having jurisdiction satisfies the hospital's or approved
9pediatric health care facility's requirement to contact its
10local law enforcement agency under Section 3.2 of the Criminal
11Identification Act.
12    (c) If the law enforcement agency having jurisdiction has
13not taken physical custody of sexual assault evidence within 5
14days of the first contact by the hospital or approved pediatric
15health care facility, the hospital or approved pediatric health
16care facility shall renotify the law enforcement agency having
17jurisdiction that the hospital or approved pediatric health
18care facility is in possession of sexual assault evidence and
19the date the sexual assault evidence was collected. The
20hospital or approved pediatric health care facility shall
21document the renotification in the patient's medical records
22and shall include the agency notified, the date and time of the
23notification and the name of the person who received the
24notification.
25    (d) If the law enforcement agency having jurisdiction has
26not taken physical custody of the sexual assault evidence

 

 

10100SB0557ham002- 99 -LRB101 04318 CPF 72428 a

1within 10 days of the first contact by the hospital or approved
2pediatric health care facility and the hospital or approved
3pediatric health care facility has provided renotification
4under subsection (c) of this Section, the hospital or approved
5pediatric health care facility shall contact the State's
6Attorney of the county where the law enforcement agency having
7jurisdiction is located. The hospital or approved pediatric
8health care facility shall inform the State's Attorney that the
9hospital or approved pediatric health care facility is in
10possession of sexual assault evidence, the date the sexual
11assault evidence was collected, the law enforcement agency
12having jurisdiction, the dates, times and names of persons
13notified under subsections (b) and (c) of this Section. The
14notification shall be made within 14 days of the collection of
15the sexual assault evidence.
16    (e) This Section is effective on and after July 1, 2021.
17(Source: P.A. 99-801, eff. 1-1-17; 100-201, eff. 8-18-17;
18100-775, eff. 1-1-19.)
 
19    (410 ILCS 70/6.6-1 new)
20    Sec. 6.6-1. Submission of sexual assault evidence.
21    (a) As soon as practicable, but in no event more than 4
22hours after the completion of medical forensic services, the
23hospital, approved pediatric health care facility, or approved
24federally qualified health center shall make reasonable
25efforts to determine the law enforcement agency having

 

 

10100SB0557ham002- 100 -LRB101 04318 CPF 72428 a

1jurisdiction where the sexual assault occurred, if sexual
2assault evidence was collected. The hospital, approved
3pediatric health care facility, or approved federally
4qualified health center may obtain the name of the law
5enforcement agency with jurisdiction from the local law
6enforcement agency.
7    (b) Within 4 hours after the completion of medical forensic
8services, the hospital, approved pediatric health care
9facility, or approved federally qualified health center shall
10notify the law enforcement agency having jurisdiction that the
11hospital, approved pediatric health care facility, or approved
12federally qualified health center is in possession of sexual
13assault evidence and the date and time the collection of
14evidence was completed. The hospital, approved pediatric
15health care facility, or approved federally qualified health
16center shall document the notification in the patient's medical
17records and shall include the agency notified, the date and
18time of the notification and the name of the person who
19received the notification. This notification to the law
20enforcement agency having jurisdiction satisfies the
21hospital's, approved pediatric health care facility's, or
22approved federally qualified health center's requirement to
23contact its local law enforcement agency under Section 3.2 of
24the Criminal Identification Act.
25    (c) If the law enforcement agency having jurisdiction has
26not taken physical custody of sexual assault evidence within 5

 

 

10100SB0557ham002- 101 -LRB101 04318 CPF 72428 a

1days of the first contact by the hospital, approved pediatric
2health care facility, or approved federally qualified health
3center, the hospital, approved pediatric health care facility,
4or approved federally qualified health center shall renotify
5the law enforcement agency having jurisdiction that the
6hospital, approved pediatric health care facility, or approved
7federally qualified health center is in possession of sexual
8assault evidence and the date the sexual assault evidence was
9collected. The hospital, approved pediatric health care
10facility, or approved federally qualified health center shall
11document the renotification in the patient's medical records
12and shall include the agency notified, the date and time of the
13notification and the name of the person who received the
14notification.
15    (d) If the law enforcement agency having jurisdiction has
16not taken physical custody of the sexual assault evidence
17within 10 days of the first contact by the hospital, approved
18pediatric health care facility, or approved federally
19qualified health center and the hospital, approved pediatric
20health care facility, or approved federally qualified health
21center has provided renotification under subsection (c) of this
22Section, the hospital, approved pediatric health care
23facility, or approved federally qualified health center shall
24contact the State's Attorney of the county where the law
25enforcement agency having jurisdiction is located. The
26hospital, approved pediatric health care facility shall inform

 

 

10100SB0557ham002- 102 -LRB101 04318 CPF 72428 a

1the State's Attorney that the hospital, approved pediatric
2health care facility, or approved federally qualified health
3center is in possession of sexual assault evidence, the date
4the sexual assault evidence was collected, the law enforcement
5agency having jurisdiction, the dates, times and names of
6persons notified under subsections (b) and (c)of this Section.
7The notification shall be made within 14 days of the collection
8of the sexual assault evidence.
9    (e) This Section is repealed on June 30, 2021.
 
10    (410 ILCS 70/7)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 87-7)
11    Sec. 7. Reimbursement.
12    (a) A hospital, approved pediatric health care facility, or
13health care professional furnishing medical forensic services,
14an ambulance provider furnishing transportation to a sexual
15assault survivor, a hospital, health care professional, or
16laboratory providing follow-up healthcare, or a pharmacy
17dispensing prescribed medications to any sexual assault
18survivor shall furnish such services or medications to that
19person without charge and shall seek payment as follows:
20        (1) If a sexual assault survivor is eligible to receive
21    benefits under the medical assistance program under
22    Article V of the Illinois Public Aid Code, the ambulance
23    provider, hospital, approved pediatric health care
24    facility, health care professional, laboratory, or
25    pharmacy must submit the bill to the Department of

 

 

10100SB0557ham002- 103 -LRB101 04318 CPF 72428 a

1    Healthcare and Family Services or the appropriate Medicaid
2    managed care organization and accept the amount paid as
3    full payment.
4        (2) If a sexual assault survivor is covered by one or
5    more policies of health insurance or is a beneficiary under
6    a public or private health coverage program, the ambulance
7    provider, hospital, approved pediatric health care
8    facility, health care professional, laboratory, or
9    pharmacy shall bill the insurance company or program. With
10    respect to such insured patients, applicable deductible,
11    co-pay, co-insurance, denial of claim, or any other
12    out-of-pocket insurance-related expense may be submitted
13    to the Illinois Sexual Assault Emergency Treatment Program
14    of the Department of Healthcare and Family Services in
15    accordance with 89 Ill. Adm. Code 148.510 for payment at
16    the Department of Healthcare and Family Services'
17    allowable rates under the Illinois Public Aid Code. The
18    ambulance provider, hospital, approved pediatric health
19    care facility, health care professional, laboratory, or
20    pharmacy shall accept the amounts paid by the insurance
21    company or health coverage program and the Illinois Sexual
22    Assault Treatment Program as full payment.
23        (3) If a sexual assault survivor is neither eligible to
24    receive benefits under the medical assistance program
25    under Article V of the Illinois Public Aid Code nor covered
26    by a policy of insurance or a public or private health

 

 

10100SB0557ham002- 104 -LRB101 04318 CPF 72428 a

1    coverage program, the ambulance provider, hospital,
2    approved pediatric health care facility, health care
3    professional, laboratory, or pharmacy shall submit the
4    request for reimbursement to the Illinois Sexual Assault
5    Emergency Treatment Program under the Department of
6    Healthcare and Family Services in accordance with 89 Ill.
7    Adm. Code 148.510 at the Department of Healthcare and
8    Family Services' allowable rates under the Illinois Public
9    Aid Code.
10        (4) If a sexual assault survivor presents a sexual
11    assault services voucher for follow-up healthcare, the
12    healthcare professional, pediatric health care facility,
13    or laboratory that provides follow-up healthcare or the
14    pharmacy that dispenses prescribed medications to a sexual
15    assault survivor shall submit the request for
16    reimbursement for follow-up healthcare, pediatric health
17    care facility, laboratory, or pharmacy services to the
18    Illinois Sexual Assault Emergency Treatment Program under
19    the Department of Healthcare and Family Services in
20    accordance with 89 Ill. Adm. Code 148.510 at the Department
21    of Healthcare and Family Services' allowable rates under
22    the Illinois Public Aid Code. Nothing in this subsection
23    (a) precludes hospitals or approved pediatric health care
24    facilities from providing follow-up healthcare and
25    receiving reimbursement under this Section.
26    (b) Nothing in this Section precludes a hospital, health

 

 

10100SB0557ham002- 105 -LRB101 04318 CPF 72428 a

1care provider, ambulance provider, laboratory, or pharmacy
2from billing the sexual assault survivor or any applicable
3health insurance or coverage for inpatient services.
4    (c) (Blank).
5    (d) On and after July 1, 2012, the Department shall reduce
6any rate of reimbursement for services or other payments or
7alter any methodologies authorized by this Act or the Illinois
8Public Aid Code to reduce any rate of reimbursement for
9services or other payments in accordance with Section 5-5e of
10the Illinois Public Aid Code.
11    (e) The Department of Healthcare and Family Services shall
12establish standards, rules, and regulations to implement this
13Section.
14    (f) This Section is effective on and after July 1, 2021.
15(Source: P.A. 99-454, eff. 1-1-16; 100-775, eff. 1-1-19;
16revised 7-23-19.)
 
17    (410 ILCS 70/7-1 new)
18    Sec. 7-1. Reimbursement
19    (a) A hospital, approved pediatric health care facility,
20approved federally qualified health center, or health care
21professional furnishing medical forensic services, an
22ambulance provider furnishing transportation to a sexual
23assault survivor, a hospital, health care professional, or
24laboratory providing follow-up healthcare, or a pharmacy
25dispensing prescribed medications to any sexual assault

 

 

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1survivor shall furnish such services or medications to that
2person without charge and shall seek payment as follows:
3        (1) If a sexual assault survivor is eligible to receive
4    benefits under the medical assistance program under
5    Article V of the Illinois Public Aid Code, the ambulance
6    provider, hospital, approved pediatric health care
7    facility, approved federally qualified health center,
8    health care professional, laboratory, or pharmacy must
9    submit the bill to the Department of Healthcare and Family
10    Services or the appropriate Medicaid managed care
11    organization and accept the amount paid as full payment.
12        (2) If a sexual assault survivor is covered by one or
13    more policies of health insurance or is a beneficiary under
14    a public or private health coverage program, the ambulance
15    provider, hospital, approved pediatric health care
16    facility, approved federally qualified health center,
17    health care professional, laboratory, or pharmacy shall
18    bill the insurance company or program. With respect to such
19    insured patients, applicable deductible, co-pay,
20    co-insurance, denial of claim, or any other out-of-pocket
21    insurance-related expense may be submitted to the Illinois
22    Sexual Assault Emergency Treatment Program of the
23    Department of Healthcare and Family Services in accordance
24    with 89 Ill. Adm. Code 148.510 for payment at the
25    Department of Healthcare and Family Services' allowable
26    rates under the Illinois Public Aid Code. The ambulance

 

 

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1    provider, hospital, approved pediatric health care
2    facility, approved federally qualified health center,
3    health care professional, laboratory, or pharmacy shall
4    accept the amounts paid by the insurance company or health
5    coverage program and the Illinois Sexual Assault Treatment
6    Program as full payment.
7        (3) If a sexual assault survivor is neither eligible to
8    receive benefits under the medical assistance program
9    under Article V of the Illinois Public Aid Code nor covered
10    by a policy of insurance or a public or private health
11    coverage program, the ambulance provider, hospital,
12    approved pediatric health care facility, approved
13    federally qualified health center, health care
14    professional, laboratory, or pharmacy shall submit the
15    request for reimbursement to the Illinois Sexual Assault
16    Emergency Treatment Program under the Department of
17    Healthcare and Family Services in accordance with 89 Ill.
18    Adm. Code 148.510 at the Department of Healthcare and
19    Family Services' allowable rates under the Illinois Public
20    Aid Code.
21        (4) If a sexual assault survivor presents a sexual
22    assault services voucher for follow-up healthcare, the
23    healthcare professional, pediatric health care facility,
24    federally qualified health center, or laboratory that
25    provides follow-up healthcare or the pharmacy that
26    dispenses prescribed medications to a sexual assault

 

 

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1    survivor shall submit the request for reimbursement for
2    follow-up healthcare, pediatric health care facility,
3    laboratory, or pharmacy services to the Illinois Sexual
4    Assault Emergency Treatment Program under the Department
5    of Healthcare and Family Services in accordance with 89
6    Ill. Adm. Code 148.510 at the Department of Healthcare and
7    Family Services' allowable rates under the Illinois Public
8    Aid Code. Nothing in this subsection (a) precludes
9    hospitals, or approved pediatric health care facilities or
10    approved federally qualified health centers from providing
11    follow-up healthcare and receiving reimbursement under
12    this Section.
13    (b) Nothing in this Section precludes a hospital, health
14care provider, ambulance provider, laboratory, or pharmacy
15from billing the sexual assault survivor or any applicable
16health insurance or coverage for inpatient services.
17    (c) (Blank).
18    (d) On and after July 1, 2012, the Department shall reduce
19any rate of reimbursement for services or other payments or
20alter any methodologies authorized by this Act or the Illinois
21Public Aid Code to reduce any rate of reimbursement for
22services or other payments in accordance with Section 5-5e of
23the Illinois Public Aid Code.
24    (e) The Department of Healthcare and Family Services shall
25establish standards, rules, and regulations to implement this
26Section.

 

 

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1    (f) This Section is repealed on June 30, 2021.
 
2    (410 ILCS 70/7.5)
3    Sec. 7.5. Prohibition on billing sexual assault survivors
4directly for certain services; written notice; billing
5protocols.
6    (a) A hospital, approved pediatric health care facility,
7health care professional, ambulance provider, laboratory, or
8pharmacy furnishing medical forensic services, transportation,
9follow-up healthcare, or medication to a sexual assault
10survivor shall not:
11        (1) charge or submit a bill for any portion of the
12    costs of the services, transportation, or medications to
13    the sexual assault survivor, including any insurance
14    deductible, co-pay, co-insurance, denial of claim by an
15    insurer, spenddown, or any other out-of-pocket expense;
16        (2) communicate with, harass, or intimidate the sexual
17    assault survivor for payment of services, including, but
18    not limited to, repeatedly calling or writing to the sexual
19    assault survivor and threatening to refer the matter to a
20    debt collection agency or to an attorney for collection,
21    enforcement, or filing of other process;
22        (3) refer a bill to a collection agency or attorney for
23    collection action against the sexual assault survivor;
24        (4) contact or distribute information to affect the
25    sexual assault survivor's credit rating; or

 

 

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1        (5) take any other action adverse to the sexual assault
2    survivor or his or her family on account of providing
3    services to the sexual assault survivor.
4    (b) Nothing in this Section precludes a hospital, health
5care provider, ambulance provider, laboratory, or pharmacy
6from billing the sexual assault survivor or any applicable
7health insurance or coverage for inpatient services.
8    (c) Every hospital and approved pediatric health care
9facility providing treatment services to sexual assault
10survivors in accordance with a plan approved under Section 2 of
11this Act shall provide a written notice to a sexual assault
12survivor. The written notice must include, but is not limited
13to, the following:
14        (1) a statement that the sexual assault survivor should
15    not be directly billed by any ambulance provider providing
16    transportation services, or by any hospital, approved
17    pediatric health care facility, health care professional,
18    laboratory, or pharmacy for the services the sexual assault
19    survivor received as an outpatient at the hospital or
20    approved pediatric health care facility;
21        (2) a statement that a sexual assault survivor who is
22    admitted to a hospital may be billed for inpatient services
23    provided by a hospital, health care professional,
24    laboratory, or pharmacy;
25        (3) a statement that prior to leaving the hospital or
26    approved pediatric health care facility, the hospital or

 

 

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1    approved pediatric health care facility will give the
2    sexual assault survivor a sexual assault services voucher
3    for follow-up healthcare if the sexual assault survivor is
4    eligible to receive a sexual assault services voucher;
5        (4) the definition of "follow-up healthcare" as set
6    forth in Section 1a of this Act;
7        (5) a phone number the sexual assault survivor may call
8    should the sexual assault survivor receive a bill from the
9    hospital or approved pediatric health care facility for
10    medical forensic services;
11        (6) the toll-free phone number of the Office of the
12    Illinois Attorney General, Crime Victim Services Division,
13    which the sexual assault survivor may call should the
14    sexual assault survivor receive a bill from an ambulance
15    provider, approved pediatric health care facility, a
16    health care professional, a laboratory, or a pharmacy.
17    This subsection (c) shall not apply to hospitals that
18provide transfer services as defined under Section 1a of this
19Act.
20    (d) Within 60 days after the effective date of this
21amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly, every health care
22professional, except for those employed by a hospital or
23hospital affiliate, as defined in the Hospital Licensing Act,
24or those employed by a hospital operated under the University
25of Illinois Hospital Act, who bills separately for medical or
26forensic services must develop a billing protocol that ensures

 

 

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1that no survivor of sexual assault will be sent a bill for any
2medical forensic services and submit the billing protocol to
3the Crime Victim Services Division of the Office of the
4Attorney General for approval. Within 60 days after the
5commencement of the provision of medical forensic services,
6every health care professional, except for those employed by a
7hospital or hospital affiliate, as defined in the Hospital
8Licensing Act, or those employed by a hospital operated under
9the University of Illinois Hospital Act, who bills separately
10for medical or forensic services must develop a billing
11protocol that ensures that no survivor of sexual assault is
12sent a bill for any medical forensic services and submit the
13billing protocol to the Crime Victim Services Division of the
14Office of the Attorney General for approval. Health care
15professionals who bill as a legal entity may submit a single
16billing protocol for the billing entity.
17    Within 60 days after the Department's approval of a
18treatment plan, an approved pediatric health care facility and
19any health care professional employed by an approved pediatric
20health care facility must develop a billing protocol that
21ensures that no survivor of sexual assault is sent a bill for
22any medical forensic services and submit the billing protocol
23to the Crime Victim Services Division of the Office of the
24Attorney General for approval.
25     The billing protocol must include at a minimum:
26        (1) a description of training for persons who prepare

 

 

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1    bills for medical and forensic services;
2        (2) a written acknowledgement signed by a person who
3    has completed the training that the person will not bill
4    survivors of sexual assault;
5        (3) prohibitions on submitting any bill for any portion
6    of medical forensic services provided to a survivor of
7    sexual assault to a collection agency;
8        (4) prohibitions on taking any action that would
9    adversely affect the credit of the survivor of sexual
10    assault;
11        (5) the termination of all collection activities if the
12    protocol is violated; and
13        (6) the actions to be taken if a bill is sent to a
14    collection agency or the failure to pay is reported to any
15    credit reporting agency.
16    The Crime Victim Services Division of the Office of the
17Attorney General may provide a sample acceptable billing
18protocol upon request.
19    The Office of the Attorney General shall approve a proposed
20protocol if it finds that the implementation of the protocol
21would result in no survivor of sexual assault being billed or
22sent a bill for medical forensic services.
23    If the Office of the Attorney General determines that
24implementation of the protocol could result in the billing of a
25survivor of sexual assault for medical forensic services, the
26Office of the Attorney General shall provide the health care

 

 

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1professional or approved pediatric health care facility with a
2written statement of the deficiencies in the protocol. The
3health care professional or approved pediatric health care
4facility shall have 30 days to submit a revised billing
5protocol addressing the deficiencies to the Office of the
6Attorney General. The health care professional or approved
7pediatric health care facility shall implement the protocol
8upon approval by the Crime Victim Services Division of the
9Office of the Attorney General.
10    The health care professional or approved pediatric health
11care facility shall submit any proposed revision to or
12modification of an approved billing protocol to the Crime
13Victim Services Division of the Office of the Attorney General
14for approval. The health care professional or approved
15pediatric health care facility shall implement the revised or
16modified billing protocol upon approval by the Crime Victim
17Services Division of the Office of the Illinois Attorney
18General.
19    (e) This Section is effective on and after July 1, 2021.
20(Source: P.A. 99-454, eff. 1-1-16; 100-775, eff. 1-1-19.)
 
21    (410 ILCS 70/7.5-1 new)
22    Sec. 7.5-1. Prohibition on billing sexual assault
23survivors directly for certain services; written notice;
24billing protocols.
25    (a) A hospital, approved pediatric health care facility,

 

 

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1approved federally qualified health center, health care
2professional, ambulance provider, laboratory, or pharmacy
3furnishing medical forensic services, transportation,
4follow-up healthcare, or medication to a sexual assault
5survivor shall not:
6        (1) charge or submit a bill for any portion of the
7    costs of the services, transportation, or medications to
8    the sexual assault survivor, including any insurance
9    deductible, co-pay, co-insurance, denial of claim by an
10    insurer, spenddown, or any other out-of-pocket expense;
11        (2) communicate with, harass, or intimidate the sexual
12    assault survivor for payment of services, including, but
13    not limited to, repeatedly calling or writing to the sexual
14    assault survivor and threatening to refer the matter to a
15    debt collection agency or to an attorney for collection,
16    enforcement, or filing of other process;
17        (3) refer a bill to a collection agency or attorney for
18    collection action against the sexual assault survivor;
19        (4) contact or distribute information to affect the
20    sexual assault survivor's credit rating; or
21        (5) take any other action adverse to the sexual assault
22    survivor or his or her family on account of providing
23    services to the sexual assault survivor.
24    (b) Nothing in this Section precludes a hospital, health
25care provider, ambulance provider, laboratory, or pharmacy
26from billing the sexual assault survivor or any applicable

 

 

10100SB0557ham002- 116 -LRB101 04318 CPF 72428 a

1health insurance or coverage for inpatient services.
2    (c) Every hospital, approved pediatric health care
3facility, and approved federally qualified health center
4providing treatment services to sexual assault survivors in
5accordance with a plan approved under Section 2-1 of this Act
6shall provide a written notice to a sexual assault survivor.
7The written notice must include, but is not limited to, the
8following:
9        (1) a statement that the sexual assault survivor should
10    not be directly billed by any ambulance provider providing
11    transportation services, or by any hospital, approved
12    pediatric health care facility, approved federally
13    qualified health center, health care professional,
14    laboratory, or pharmacy for the services the sexual assault
15    survivor received as an outpatient at the hospital,
16    approved pediatric health care facility, or approved
17    federally qualified health center;
18        (2) a statement that a sexual assault survivor who is
19    admitted to a hospital may be billed for inpatient services
20    provided by a hospital, health care professional,
21    laboratory, or pharmacy;
22        (3) a statement that prior to leaving the hospital,
23    approved pediatric health care facility, or approved
24    federally qualified health center, the hospital, approved
25    pediatric health care facility, or approved federally
26    qualified health center will give the sexual assault

 

 

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1    survivor a sexual assault services voucher for follow-up
2    healthcare if the sexual assault survivor is eligible to
3    receive a sexual assault services voucher;
4        (4) the definition of "follow-up healthcare" as set
5    forth in Section 1a-1 of this Act;
6        (5) a phone number the sexual assault survivor may call
7    should the sexual assault survivor receive a bill from the
8    hospital, approved pediatric health care facility, or
9    approved federally qualified health center for medical
10    forensic services;
11        (6) the toll-free phone number of the Office of the
12    Illinois Attorney General, Crime Victim Services Division,
13    which the sexual assault survivor may call should the
14    sexual assault survivor receive a bill from an ambulance
15    provider, approved pediatric health care facility,
16    approved federally qualified health center, a health care
17    professional, a laboratory, or a pharmacy.
18    This subsection (c) shall not apply to hospitals that
19provide transfer services as defined under Section 1a-1 of this
20Act.
21    (d) Within 60 days after the effective date of this
22amendatory Act of the 101st General Assembly, every health care
23professional, except for those employed by a hospital or
24hospital affiliate, as defined in the Hospital Licensing Act,
25or those employed by a hospital operated under the University
26of Illinois Hospital Act, who bills separately for medical or

 

 

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1forensic services must develop a billing protocol that ensures
2that no survivor of sexual assault will be sent a bill for any
3medical forensic services and submit the billing protocol to
4the Crime Victim Services Division of the Office of the
5Attorney General for approval. Within 60 days after the
6commencement of the provision of medical forensic services,
7every health care professional, except for those employed by a
8hospital or hospital affiliate, as defined in the Hospital
9Licensing Act, or those employed by a hospital operated under
10the University of Illinois Hospital Act, who bills separately
11for medical or forensic services must develop a billing
12protocol that ensures that no survivor of sexual assault is
13sent a bill for any medical forensic services and submit the
14billing protocol to the Crime Victim Services Division of the
15Office of the Attorney General for approval. Health care
16professionals who bill as a legal entity may submit a single
17billing protocol for the billing entity.
18    Within 60 days after the Department's approval of a
19treatment plan, an approved pediatric health care facility and
20any health care professional employed by an approved pediatric
21health care facility must develop a billing protocol that
22ensures that no survivor of sexual assault is sent a bill for
23any medical forensic services and submit the billing protocol
24to the Crime Victim Services Division of the Office of the
25Attorney General for approval.
26    Within 14 days after the Department's approval of a

 

 

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1treatment plan, an approved federally qualified health center
2and any health care professional employed by an approved
3federally qualified health center must develop a billing
4protocol that ensures that no survivor of sexual assault is
5sent a bill for any medical forensic services and submit the
6billing protocol to the Crime Victim Services Division of the
7Office of the Attorney General for approval.
8    The billing protocol must include at a minimum:
9        (1) a description of training for persons who prepare
10    bills for medical and forensic services;
11        (2) a written acknowledgement signed by a person who
12    has completed the training that the person will not bill
13    survivors of sexual assault;
14        (3) prohibitions on submitting any bill for any portion
15    of medical forensic services provided to a survivor of
16    sexual assault to a collection agency;
17        (4) prohibitions on taking any action that would
18    adversely affect the credit of the survivor of sexual
19    assault;
20        (5) the termination of all collection activities if the
21    protocol is violated; and
22        (6) the actions to be taken if a bill is sent to a
23    collection agency or the failure to pay is reported to any
24    credit reporting agency.
25    The Crime Victim Services Division of the Office of the
26Attorney General may provide a sample acceptable billing

 

 

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1protocol upon request.
2    The Office of the Attorney General shall approve a proposed
3protocol if it finds that the implementation of the protocol
4would result in no survivor of sexual assault being billed or
5sent a bill for medical forensic services.
6    If the Office of the Attorney General determines that
7implementation of the protocol could result in the billing of a
8survivor of sexual assault for medical forensic services, the
9Office of the Attorney General shall provide the health care
10professional or approved pediatric health care facility with a
11written statement of the deficiencies in the protocol. The
12health care professional or approved pediatric health care
13facility shall have 30 days to submit a revised billing
14protocol addressing the deficiencies to the Office of the
15Attorney General. The health care professional or approved
16pediatric health care facility shall implement the protocol
17upon approval by the Crime Victim Services Division of the
18Office of the Attorney General.
19    The health care professional, approved pediatric health
20care facility, or approved federally qualified health center
21shall submit any proposed revision to or modification of an
22approved billing protocol to the Crime Victim Services Division
23of the Office of the Attorney General for approval. The health
24care professional, approved pediatric health care facility, or
25approved federally qualified health center shall implement the
26revised or modified billing protocol upon approval by the Crime

 

 

10100SB0557ham002- 121 -LRB101 04318 CPF 72428 a

1Victim Services Division of the Office of the Illinois Attorney
2General.
3    (e) This Section is repealed on June 30, 2021.
 
4    (410 ILCS 70/8)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 87-8)
5    Sec. 8. Penalties.
6    (a) Any hospital or approved pediatric health care facility
7violating any provisions of this Act other than Section 7.5
8shall be guilty of a petty offense for each violation, and any
9fine imposed shall be paid into the general corporate funds of
10the city, incorporated town or village in which the hospital or
11approved pediatric health care facility is located, or of the
12county, in case such hospital is outside the limits of any
13incorporated municipality.
14    (b) The Attorney General may seek the assessment of one or
15more of the following civil monetary penalties in any action
16filed under this Act where the hospital, approved pediatric
17health care facility, health care professional, ambulance
18provider, laboratory, or pharmacy knowingly violates Section
197.5 of the Act:
20        (1) For willful violations of paragraphs (1), (2), (4),
21    or (5) of subsection (a) of Section 7.5 or subsection (c)
22    of Section 7.5, the civil monetary penalty shall not exceed
23    $500 per violation.
24        (2) For violations of paragraphs (1), (2), (4), or (5)
25    of subsection (a) of Section 7.5 or subsection (c) of

 

 

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1    Section 7.5 involving a pattern or practice, the civil
2    monetary penalty shall not exceed $500 per violation.
3        (3) For violations of paragraph (3) of subsection (a)
4    of Section 7.5, the civil monetary penalty shall not exceed
5    $500 for each day the bill is with a collection agency.
6        (4) For violations involving the failure to submit
7    billing protocols within the time period required under
8    subsection (d) of Section 7.5, the civil monetary penalty
9    shall not exceed $100 per day until the health care
10    professional or approved pediatric health care facility
11    complies with subsection (d) of Section 7.5.
12    All civil monetary penalties shall be deposited into the
13Violent Crime Victims Assistance Fund.
14    (c) This Section is effective on and after July 1, 2021.
15(Source: P.A. 99-454, eff. 1-1-16; 100-775, eff. 1-1-19.)
 
16    (410 ILCS 70/8-1 new)
17    Sec. 8-1. Penalties.
18    (a) Any hospital, approved pediatric health care facility,
19or approved federally qualified health center violating any
20provisions of this Act other than Section 7.5-1 shall be guilty
21of a petty offense for each violation, and any fine imposed
22shall be paid into the general corporate funds of the city,
23incorporated town or village in which the hospital, approved
24pediatric health care facility, or approved federally
25qualified health center is located, or of the county, in case

 

 

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1such hospital is outside the limits of any incorporated
2municipality.
3    (b) The Attorney General may seek the assessment of one or
4more of the following civil monetary penalties in any action
5filed under this Act where the hospital, approved pediatric
6health care facility, approved federally qualified health
7center, health care professional, ambulance provider,
8laboratory, or pharmacy knowingly violates Section 7.5-1 of the
9Act:
10        (1) For willful violations of paragraphs (1), (2), (4),
11    or (5) of subsection (a) of Section 7.5-1 or subsection (c)
12    of Section 7.5-1, the civil monetary penalty shall not
13    exceed $500 per violation.
14        (2) For violations of paragraphs (1), (2), (4), or (5)
15    of subsection (a) of Section 7.5-1 or subsection (c) of
16    Section 7.5-1 involving a pattern or practice, the civil
17    monetary penalty shall not exceed $500 per violation.
18        (3) For violations of paragraph (3) of subsection (a)
19    of Section 7.5-1, the civil monetary penalty shall not
20    exceed $500 for each day the bill is with a collection
21    agency.
22        (4) For violations involving the failure to submit
23    billing protocols within the time period required under
24    subsection (d) of Section 7.5-1, the civil monetary penalty
25    shall not exceed $100 per day until the health care
26    professional or approved pediatric health care facility

 

 

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1    complies with subsection (d) of Section 7.5-1.
2    All civil monetary penalties shall be deposited into the
3Violent Crime Victims Assistance Fund.
4    (c) This Section is repealed on June 30, 2021.
 
5    (410 ILCS 70/10)
6    Sec. 10. Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner Program.
7    (a) The Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner Program is
8established within the Office of the Attorney General. The
9Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner Program shall maintain a list of
10sexual assault nurse examiners who have completed didactic and
11clinical training requirements consistent with the Sexual
12Assault Nurse Examiner Education Guidelines established by the
13International Association of Forensic Nurses.
14    (b) By March 1, 2019, the Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner
15Program shall develop and make available to hospitals 2 hours
16of online sexual assault training for emergency department
17clinical staff to meet the training requirement established in
18subsection (a) of Section 2. Notwithstanding any other law
19regarding ongoing licensure requirements, such training shall
20count toward the continuing medical education and continuing
21nursing education credits for physicians, physician
22assistants, advanced practice registered nurses, and
23registered professional nurses.
24    The Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner Program shall provide
25didactic and clinical training opportunities consistent with

 

 

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1the Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner Education Guidelines
2established by the International Association of Forensic
3Nurses, in sufficient numbers and geographical locations
4across the State, to assist hospitals with training the
5necessary number of sexual assault nurse examiners to comply
6with the requirement of this Act to employ or contract with a
7qualified medical provider to initiate medical forensic
8services to a sexual assault survivor within 90 minutes of the
9patient presenting to the hospital as required in subsection
10(a-7) of Section 5.
11    The Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner Program shall assist
12hospitals in establishing trainings to achieve the
13requirements of this Act.
14    For the purpose of providing continuing medical education
15credit in accordance with the Medical Practice Act of 1987 and
16administrative rules adopted under the Medical Practice Act of
171987 and continuing education credit in accordance with the
18Nurse Practice Act and administrative rules adopted under the
19Nurse Practice Act to health care professionals for the
20completion of sexual assault training provided by the Sexual
21Assault Nurse Examiner Program under this Act, the Office of
22the Attorney General shall be considered a State agency.
23    (c) The Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner Program, in
24consultation with qualified medical providers, shall create
25uniform materials that all treatment hospitals, treatment
26hospitals with approved pediatric transfer, and approved

 

 

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1pediatric health care facilities are required to give patients
2and non-offending parents or legal guardians, if applicable,
3regarding the medical forensic exam procedure, laws regarding
4consenting to medical forensic services, and the benefits and
5risks of evidence collection, including recommended time
6frames for evidence collection pursuant to evidence-based
7research. These materials shall be made available to all
8hospitals and approved pediatric health care facilities on the
9Office of the Attorney General's website.
10    (d) This Section is effective on and after July 1, 2021.
11(Source: P.A. 100-775, eff. 1-1-19.)
 
12    (410 ILCS 70/10-1 new)
13    Sec. 10-1. Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner Program.
14    (a) The Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner Program is
15established within the Office of the Attorney General. The
16Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner Program shall maintain a list of
17sexual assault nurse examiners who have completed didactic and
18clinical training requirements consistent with the Sexual
19Assault Nurse Examiner Education Guidelines established by the
20International Association of Forensic Nurses.
21    (b) By March 1, 2019, the Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner
22Program shall develop and make available to hospitals 2 hours
23of online sexual assault training for emergency department
24clinical staff to meet the training requirement established in
25subsection (a) of Section 2-1. Notwithstanding any other law

 

 

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1regarding ongoing licensure requirements, such training shall
2count toward the continuing medical education and continuing
3nursing education credits for physicians, physician
4assistants, advanced practice registered nurses, and
5registered professional nurses.
6    The Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner Program shall provide
7didactic and clinical training opportunities consistent with
8the Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner Education Guidelines
9established by the International Association of Forensic
10Nurses, in sufficient numbers and geographical locations
11across the State, to assist hospitals with training the
12necessary number of sexual assault nurse examiners to comply
13with the requirement of this Act to employ or contract with a
14qualified medical provider to initiate medical forensic
15services to a sexual assault survivor within 90 minutes of the
16patient presenting to the hospital as required in subsection
17(a-7) of Section 5-1.
18    The Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner Program shall assist
19hospitals in establishing trainings to achieve the
20requirements of this Act.
21    For the purpose of providing continuing medical education
22credit in accordance with the Medical Practice Act of 1987 and
23administrative rules adopted under the Medical Practice Act of
241987 and continuing education credit in accordance with the
25Nurse Practice Act and administrative rules adopted under the
26Nurse Practice Act to health care professionals for the

 

 

10100SB0557ham002- 128 -LRB101 04318 CPF 72428 a

1completion of sexual assault training provided by the Sexual
2Assault Nurse Examiner Program under this Act, the Office of
3the Attorney General shall be considered a State agency.
4    (c) The Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner Program, in
5consultation with qualified medical providers, shall create
6uniform materials that all treatment hospitals, treatment
7hospitals with approved pediatric transfer, approved pediatric
8health care facilities, and approved federally qualified
9health centers are required to give patients and non-offending
10parents or legal guardians, if applicable, regarding the
11medical forensic exam procedure, laws regarding consenting to
12medical forensic services, and the benefits and risks of
13evidence collection, including recommended time frames for
14evidence collection pursuant to evidence-based research. These
15materials shall be made available to all hospitals, approved
16pediatric health care facilities, and approved federally
17qualified health centers on the Office of the Attorney
18General's website.
19    (d) This Section is repealed on June 30, 2021.
 
20    Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon
21becoming law.".