(20 ILCS 2310/2310-67) Sec. 2310-67. Health care facility closure. (a) In this Section: "Closing" means ceasing all operations under an existing facility license that results in patients no longer being treated at the closed location. The term "closing" does not include a situation where a facility ceases operations at one location while contemporaneously establishing a replacement facility in another location. "Health care facility" or "facility" means a public or private hospital, ambulatory surgical treatment center, nursing home, or kidney disease treatment center. (b) A hospital must provide a written pre-closing statement to the Department no less than 90 days before permanently closing its facility. A health care facility other than a hospital must provide a written pre-closing statement to the Department no less than 90 days before permanently closing its facility. The statement must address all of the following: (1) Whether arrangements have been made for the |
| timely transfer of patient records, regardless of format, to another health care facility, or another secure facility. The name of the new location shall be published on the Department's website.
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(2) Whether an agreement with the facility receiving
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| the patient records has been made that provides for the following:
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(A) Safe storage of patient records.
(B) Privacy of patient record information.
(C) Availability of patient records for release
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| to individuals lawfully authorized to receive them.
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(D) Periodic destruction of patient records for
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| which the statutory retention period has expired.
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(3) Whether the health care facility has arranged to
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| provide notice to the public, at least 30 days before closing, of the planned closing of the facility. The notice must include an explanation of how to obtain copies of the patient records for those authorized to access those records. Notice may be given by publication in a newspaper of general circulation in the area in which the health care facility is located.
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(4) In the case of a hospital, whether arrangements
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| have been made for (i) the timely transfer of medical staff credentialing files and (ii) notification to physicians on the hospital's staff of the location of those files.
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(5) Whether arrangements have been made for the
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| transfer or disposal of hazardous and other waste, if any, in accordance with the Radiation Protection Act, the Environmental Protection Act, and other applicable laws and regulations.
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(6) Whether arrangements have been made for the
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| disposition of legend drugs, if any, in accordance with the Pharmacy Practice Act and other applicable laws and regulations.
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(7) Whether arrangements have been made for securing
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| the health care facility building or buildings and remaining medical equipment, if any.
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(8) The intended date upon which business will cease.
(b) The Department shall require a closed health care facility, or its designee, to provide to the Department a written post-closing statement that (i) describes the completion of, and any changes to, the plan of closure set forth in the facility's pre-closing statement and (ii) states the actual date on which business ceased. The Department may verify that the arrangements or other provisions of the plan of closure have been implemented and shall notify appropriate State and federal authorities of the closure to ensure compliance with other applicable laws and regulations.
(Source: P.A. 96-596, eff. 8-18-09.)
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(20 ILCS 2310/2310-76) Sec. 2310-76. Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion Task Force. (a) In Illinois, as well as in other parts of the United States, chronic diseases are a significant health and economic problem for our citizens and State government. Chronic diseases such as cancer, diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and arthritis are largely preventable non-communicable conditions associated with risk factors such as poor nutrition, physical inactivity, tobacco or alcohol abuse, as well as other social determinants of chronic illness. It is fully documented by national and State data that significant disparity exists between racial, ethnic, and socioeconomic groups and that the incidence and impact of many of these conditions disproportionately affect these populations. Chronic diseases can take away a person's quality of life or his or her ability to work. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports that 7 out of 10 Americans who die each year, or more than 1.7 million people, die of a chronic disease. In Illinois, studies have indicated that during the study period the State has spent more than $12.5 billion in health care dollars to treat chronic diseases in our State. The financial burden for Illinois from the impact of lost work days and lower employee productivity during the same time period related to chronic diseases resulted in an annual economic loss of $43.6 billion. These same studies have concluded that improvements in preventing and managing chronic diseases could drastically reduce future costs associated with chronic disease in Illinois and that the most effective way to trim healthcare spending in Illinois and across the U.S. is to take measures aimed at preventing diseases before we have to treat them. Furthermore, by addressing health disparities and by targeting chronic disease prevention and health promotion services toward the highest risk groups, especially in communities where racial, ethnic, and socioeconomic factors indicate high rates of these diseases, the goals of improving the overall health status for all Illinois residents can be achieved. Health promotion and prevention programs and activities are scattered throughout a number of State agencies with various streams of funding and little coordination. While the State has been looking at making significant changes to healthcare coverage for a portion of the population, in order to have the most effective impact, any changes to the healthcare delivery system in Illinois should take into consideration and integrate the role of prevention and health promotion in that system. (b) Subject to appropriation, a Task Force on Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion shall be convened to study and make recommendations regarding the structure of the chronic disease prevention and health promotion system in Illinois, as well as changes that should be made to the system in order to integrate and coordinate efforts in the State and ensure continuity and consistency of purpose and the elimination of disparity in the delivery of this care in Illinois. (c) The Department of Public Health shall have primary responsibility for, and shall provide staffing and technical and administrative support for, the Task Force in its efforts. The other State agencies represented on the Task Force shall work cooperatively with the Department of Public Health to provide administrative and technical support to the Task Force in its efforts. Membership of the Task Force shall consist of 19 members as follows: the Public Health Advocate, appointed by the Governor; the Director of Public Health, who shall serve as Chair; the Secretary of Human Services or his or her designee; the Director of Aging or his or her designee; the Director of Healthcare and Family Services or his or her designee; 4 members of the General Assembly, one from the State Senate appointed by the President of the Senate, one from the State Senate appointed by the Minority Leader of the Senate, one from the House of Representatives appointed by the Speaker of the House, and one from the House of Representatives appointed by the Minority Leader of the House; and 10 members appointed by the Director of Public Health and who shall be representative of State associations and advocacy organizations with a primary focus that includes chronic disease prevention, public health delivery, medicine, health care and disease management, or community health. (d) The Task Force shall seek input from interested parties and shall hold a minimum of 3 public hearings across the State, including one in northern Illinois, one in central Illinois, and one in southern Illinois. (e) On or before December 31, 2010, the Task Force shall, at a minimum, make recommendations to the General Assembly and the Director of Public Health on the following: reforming the delivery system for chronic disease prevention and health promotion in Illinois; ensuring adequate funding for infrastructure and delivery of programs; addressing health disparity; and the role of health promotion and chronic disease prevention in support of State spending on health care.
(Source: P.A. 95-900, eff. 8-25-08; 96-328, eff. 8-11-09; 96-1073, eff. 7-16-10.) |
(20 ILCS 2310/2310-77) Sec. 2310-77. Chronic Disease Nutrition and Outcomes Advisory Commission. (a) Subject to appropriation, the Chronic Disease Nutrition and Outcomes Advisory Commission is created to advise the Department on how best to incorporate nutrition as a chronic disease management strategy into State health policy to avoid Medicaid hospitalizations, and how to measure health care outcomes that will likely be required by new federal legislation. (b) The Commission shall consist of all of the following members: (1) One member of the Senate appointed by the |
| President of the Senate and one member of the Senate appointed by the Minority Leader of the Senate.
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(2) One member of the House of Representatives
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| appointed by the Speaker of the House of Representatives and one member of the House of Representatives appointed by the Minority Leader of the House of Representatives.
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(3) Five members appointed by the Governor as follows:
(A) One representative of a not-for-profit social
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| service agency that provides clinical nutrition services to individuals with HIV/AIDS and other chronic diseases.
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(B) One representative of a teaching medical
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| hospital that collaborates with community social service providers.
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(C) One representative of a social service agency
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| that provides outreach, counseling, and housing for chronically ill individuals.
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(D) One person who is a licensed physician with
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| expertise in treating individuals with chronic illnesses, including heart disease, hypertension, and HIV/AIDS, among others.
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(E) One representative of a not-for-profit
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| community based agency that provides direct care, supportive services, and education related to chronic illnesses, including heart disease, hypertension, and HIV/AIDS, among others.
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Each Commission member shall serve for a term of 3 years and until his or her successor is appointed. Vacancies shall be filled in the same manner as original appointments.
(c) The Commission shall meet to organize and select a chairperson upon appointment of a majority of the members. The chairperson shall be elected by a majority vote of the members appointed to the Commission. The Commission shall meet at least 4 times a year at the call of the chairperson. Members of the Commission shall serve without compensation, but may be reimbursed for reasonable expenses incurred as a result of their duties as members of the Commission from funds appropriated to the Department for that purpose.
(d) The Commission shall submit an annual report to the Department on or before July 1, 2011 and on or before July 1 of each year thereafter with its recommendations.
(e) The Department shall provide administrative and staff support to the Commission.
(Source: P.A. 96-1502, eff. 1-27-11.)
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(20 ILCS 2310/2310-213) Sec. 2310-213. Diversity in Health Care Professions Task Force. (a) The Diversity in Health Care Professions Task Force is created. The Director shall serve as the chairperson and shall appoint the following members to the Task Force, licensed to practice in their respective fields in Illinois: (1) 2 dentists. (2) 2 medical doctors. (3) 2 nurses. (4) 2 optometrists. (5) 2 pharmacists. (6) 2 physician assistants. (7) 2 podiatrists. (8) 2 public health practitioners. (b) The Task Force has the following objectives: (1) Minority students pursuing medicine or healthcare |
| as a career option. The goal is to diversify the health care workforce by engaging students, parents, and the community to build an infrastructure that assists students in developing the skills necessary for careers in healthcare.
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(2) Establishing a mentee/mentor relationship with
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| current healthcare professionals and students, utilizing social media to communicate important messages and success stories, and holding a conference related to diversity and inclusion in healthcare professions.
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(3) Early employment and support, including (i)
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| researching and leveraging best practices, including recruitment, retention, orientation, workplace diversity, and inclusion training, (ii) identifying barriers to inclusion and retention, and (iii) proposing solutions.
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(4) Healthcare leadership and succession planning,
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(A) providing education, resources and tool kits
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| to fully support, implement, and cultivate diversity and inclusion in Illinois health-related professions through coordination of resources from professional health care leadership organizations;
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(B) developing healthy work environments,
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| leadership training on culture, diversity, and inclusion; and
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(C) obtaining workforce development concentrated
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| on graduate and post-graduate education and succession planning.
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(c) The Task Force may collaborate with policy makers, medical and specialty societies, national minority organizations, and other groups to achieve greater diversity in medicine and the health professions.
The Task Force's priorities are:
(1) Affirmative action programs should be designed to
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| promote the entry of racial and ethnic minority students into medical school, as well as other specialized training programs for other health professions.
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(2) Recruitment activities should support and
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| advocate for the full spectrum of racial, ethnic, and cultural diversity, including language, national origin, and religion within the healthcare profession. These activities should maintain the high quality of the health care workforce and encourage individuals from all backgrounds to enter careers in healthcare.
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(3) Recruitment and academic preparations of
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| underrepresented minority students should begin in elementary school and continue through the entire scope of their education and professional formation. Efforts to recruit minority students into the various health care professions should be targeted appropriately at each educational level.
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(4) Financial incentives should be increased to
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| minority students, including federal funding for diversity programs, such as Title VII funding, loan forgiveness or repayment programs, and tuition reimbursement.
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(5) Enhancing diversity within the healthcare
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| workforce will require a commitment at the highest levels. To put this commitment into practice, educational and healthcare institutions, medical organizations, and other relevant bodies should hire staff who are responsible solely for the implementation, management, and evaluation of diversity programs and who are accountable to the organizational leadership. These programs should be integrated into the organization's operations and provided with an infrastructure adequate to implement and measure the effectiveness of their activities.
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(6) Institutional commitments to improve workforce
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| diversity must include a formal program or mechanism to ensure that racial, ethnic, and cultural minority individuals rise to leadership positions at all levels.
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(7) Organizations with a stake in enhancing workforce
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| diversity should implement systems to track data and information on race, ethnicity, and other cultural attributes.
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(d) Task Force members shall serve without compensation but may be reimbursed for their expenses incurred in performing their duties. The Task Force shall meet at least quarterly and at other times as called by the chairperson.
(e) The Department of Public Health shall provide administrative and other support to the Task Force.
(f) The Task Force shall prepare a report that summarizes its work and makes recommendations resulting from its study. The Task Force shall submit the report of its findings and recommendations to the Governor and the General Assembly by December 1, 2020 and annually thereafter.
(Source: P.A. 101-273, eff. 1-1-20 .)
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(20 ILCS 2310/2310-215) (was 20 ILCS 2310/55.62)
Sec. 2310-215. Center for Minority Health Services.
(a) The Department shall establish a Center for Minority Health
Services to advise the Department on matters pertaining to the health needs
of minority populations within the State.
(b) The Center shall have the following duties:
(1) To assist in the assessment of the health needs |
| of minority populations in the State.
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(2) To recommend treatment methods and programs that
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| are sensitive and relevant to the unique linguistic, cultural, and ethnic characteristics of minority populations.
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(3) To provide consultation, technical assistance,
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| training programs, and reference materials to service providers, organizations, and other agencies.
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(4) To promote awareness of minority health concerns,
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| and encourage, promote, and aid in the establishment of minority services.
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(5) To disseminate information on available minority
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(6) To provide adequate and effective opportunities
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| for minority populations to express their views on Departmental policy development and program implementation.
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(7) To coordinate with the Department on Aging and
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| the Department of Healthcare and Family Services to coordinate services designed to meet the needs of minority senior citizens.
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(8) To promote awareness of the incidence of
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| Alzheimer's disease and related dementias among minority populations and to encourage, promote, and aid in the establishment of prevention and treatment programs and services relating to this health problem.
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(c) For the purpose of this Section, "minority" shall mean and include
any person or group of persons who are any of the following:
(1) American Indian or Alaska Native (a person having
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| origins in any of the original peoples of North and South America, including Central America, and who maintains tribal affiliation or community attachment).
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(2) Asian (a person having origins in any of the
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| original peoples of the Far East, Southeast Asia, or the Indian subcontinent, including, but not limited to, Cambodia, China, India, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, Pakistan, the Philippine Islands, Thailand, and Vietnam).
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(3) Black or African American (a person having
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| origins in any of the black racial groups of Africa).
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(4) Hispanic or Latino (a person of Cuban, Mexican,
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| Puerto Rican, South or Central American, or other Spanish culture or origin, regardless of race).
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(5) Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander (a
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| person having origins in any of the original peoples of Hawaii, Guam, Samoa, or other Pacific Islands).
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(Source: P.A. 102-465, eff. 1-1-22 .)
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(20 ILCS 2310/2310-223) Sec. 2310-223. Maternal care. (a) The Department shall establish a classification system for the following levels of maternal care: (1) basic care: care of uncomplicated pregnancies |
| with the ability to detect, stabilize, and initiate management of unanticipated maternal-fetal or neonatal problems that occur during the antepartum, intrapartum, or postpartum period until the patient can be transferred to a facility at which specialty maternal care is available;
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(2) specialty care: basic care plus care of
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| appropriate high-risk antepartum, intrapartum, or postpartum conditions, both directly admitted and transferred to another facility;
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(3) subspecialty care: specialty care plus care of
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| more complex maternal medical conditions, obstetric complications, and fetal conditions; and
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(4) regional perinatal health care: subspecialty care
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| plus on-site medical and surgical care of the most complex maternal conditions, critically ill pregnant women, and fetuses throughout antepartum, intrapartum, and postpartum care.
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(b) The Department shall:
(1) introduce uniform designations for levels of
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| maternal care that are complementary but distinct from levels of neonatal care;
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(2) establish clear, uniform criteria for designation
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| of maternal centers that are integrated with emergency response systems to help ensure that the appropriate personnel, physical space, equipment, and technology are available to achieve optimal outcomes, as well as to facilitate subsequent data collection regarding risk-appropriate care;
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(3) require each health care facility to have a clear
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| understanding of its capability to handle increasingly complex levels of maternal care, and to have a well-defined threshold for transferring women to health care facilities that offer a higher level of care; to ensure optimal care of all pregnant women, the Department shall require all birth centers, hospitals, and higher-level facilities to collaborate in order to develop and maintain maternal and neonatal transport plans and cooperative agreements capable of managing the health care needs of women who develop complications; the Department shall require that receiving hospitals openly accept transfers;
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(4) require higher-level facilities to provide
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| training for quality improvement initiatives, educational support, and severe morbidity and mortality case review for lower-level hospitals; the Department shall ensure that, in those regions that do not have a facility that qualifies as a regional perinatal health care facility, any specialty care facility in the region will provide the educational and consultation function;
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(5) require facilities and regional systems to
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| develop methods to track severe maternal morbidity and mortality to assess the efficacy of utilizing maternal levels of care;
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(6) analyze data collected from all facilities and
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| regional systems in order to inform future updates to the levels of maternal care;
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(7) require follow-up interdisciplinary work groups
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| to further explore the implementation needs that are necessary to adopt the proposed classification system for levels of maternal care in all facilities that provide maternal care;
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(8) disseminate data and materials to raise public
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| awareness about the importance of prenatal care and maternal health;
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(9) engage the Illinois Chapter of the American
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| Academy of Pediatrics in creating a quality improvement initiative to expand efforts of pediatricians conducting postpartum depression screening at well baby visits during the first year of life; and
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(10) adopt rules in accordance with the Illinois
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| Administrative Procedure Act to implement this subsection.
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(Source: P.A. 101-447, eff. 8-23-19; 102-558, eff. 8-20-21; 102-813, eff. 5-13-22.)
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(20 ILCS 2310/2310-228)
Sec. 2310-228. Nursing workforce database.
(a) The Department shall, subject to appropriation and in consultation with the Illinois Coalition for Nursing Resources, the Illinois Nurses Association, and other nursing associations, establish and administer a nursing
workforce database. The database shall be assembled from data currently collected by State agencies or departments that may be released under the Freedom of Information Act and shall be maintained with the
assistance of the Department of Professional Regulation, the Department of
Labor, the Department of Employment Security,
and any other State agency or department with access to nursing
workforce-related information.
(b) The objective of establishing the database shall be to compile the following data related to the nursing
workforce that is currently collected by State agencies or departments that may be released under the Freedom of Information Act: (1) Data on current and projected population |
| demographics and available health indicator data to determine how the population needs relate to the demand for nursing services.
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(2) Data to create a dynamic system for projecting
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| nurse workforce supply and demand.
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(3) Data related to the development of a nursing
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| workforce that considers the diversity, educational mix, geographic distribution, and number of nurses needed within the State.
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(4) Data on the current and projected numbers of
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| nurse faculty who are needed to educate the nurses who will be needed to meet the needs of the residents of the State.
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(5) Data on nursing education programs within the
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| State including number of nursing programs, applications, enrollments, and graduation rates.
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(6) Data needed to develop collaborative models
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| between nursing education and practice to identify necessary competencies, educational strategies, and models of professional practice.
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(7) Data on nurse practice setting, practice
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| locations, and specialties.
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(c) To accomplish the objectives set forth in subsection (b),
data compiled by the Department into a database may be
used
by the Department, medical institutions and societies, health care facilities and associations of health care facilities, and nursing programs to assess current and projected nursing workforce shortfalls and
develop strategies for overcoming them. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the Department may not disclose any data that it compiles under this Section in a manner that would allow the identification of any particular health care professional or health care facility.
(d) Nothing in this Section shall be construed as requiring any health care facility to file or submit any data, information, or reports to the Department or any State agency or department.
(e) No later than January 15, 2006, the Department shall submit a
report to the Governor and to the members of the General Assembly regarding the
development of the
database and the effectiveness of its use.
(Source: P.A. 93-795, eff. 1-1-05.)
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(20 ILCS 2310/2310-236) Sec. 2310-236. Form of coroner's report; sudden unexpected infant death and sudden infant death syndrome. (a) The Department shall develop and require the use of a form by coroners in the case of a death of an infant in which the cause of death is sudden unexpected infant death or sudden infant death syndrome. The form shall contain, at minimum, the following information to be recorded after a preliminary investigation: (1) The date and time of death. (2) The county of occurrence and the county of the |
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(3) Relevant demographic details regarding the
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| infant, such as date of birth and gender.
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(4) Relevant demographic details regarding the
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| parents or caretaker of the infant.
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(5) Relevant details regarding the circumstances of
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| the death, including, but not limited to, who found the infant, where, and what they did.
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(6) Relevant details concerning where the infant was
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| placed, by whom, and in what position.
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(7) Any additional relevant details concerning the
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| sleep environment that the infant was placed in and what environmental factors were present, to the extent that those factors are ascertainable.
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(8) Relevant details concerning health hazards
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| present in the sleep environment, to the extent that those health hazards are ascertainable.
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(9) Relevant details concerning the infant's medical
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| history and previous medical issues.
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(10) Other information the Department may determine
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| to be relevant and conducive to understanding and recording the circumstances of the infant's death.
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(b) The Department shall publish current information concerning sudden unexpected infant death and sudden infant death syndrome.
(c) At least once every 5 years, the Department shall review the form and determine whether updates need to be made for effectiveness and relevancy.
(Source: P.A. 101-338, eff. 1-1-20 .)
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(20 ILCS 2310/2310-255) (was 20 ILCS 2310/55.75)
Sec. 2310-255.
Immunization outreach programs.
(a) The Illinois General Assembly finds and declares the following:
(1) There is a growing number of 2-year-old children |
| who have not received the necessary childhood immunizations to prevent communicable diseases.
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(2) The reasons these children do not receive
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| immunizations are many and varied. These reasons include, but are not limited to, the following:
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(A) Their parents live in poverty and do not have
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| access to insurance coverage for health care and immunizations.
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(B) Their parents come from non-English speaking
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| cultures where the importance of early childhood immunizations has not been emphasized.
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(C) Their parents do not receive adequate
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| referral to immunization programs or do not have access to public immunization programs through other public assistance services.
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(3) The percentage of fully immunized
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| African-American and Hispanic 2-year-old children is significantly less than that for Whites.
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(4) The ages of concern that remain are infancy and
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| preschool, especially for those children at high risk because of a medical condition or because of social and environmental factors.
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(5) Ensuring protective levels of immunization
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| against communicable disease for these children is the most historically proven cost-effective preventive measure available to public health agencies.
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(6) It is the intent of the General Assembly to
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| establish an immunization outreach program to respond to this problem.
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(b) The Department, in cooperation with county,
multiple
county, and municipal health departments, may establish permanent,
temporary,
or
mobile sites for immunizing children or referring parents to other programs
that provide immunizations and comprehensive health services. These sites may
include, but are not limited to, the following:
(1) Public places where parents of children at high
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| risk of remaining unimmunized reside, shop, worship, or recreate.
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(2) School grounds, either during regular hours,
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| evening hours, or on weekends.
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(3) Places on or adjacent to sites of public or
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| community-based agencies or programs that either provide or refer persons to public assistance programs or services.
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(c) Outreach programs shall, to the extent feasible, include referral
components intended to link immunized children with available public or private
primary care providers to increase access to continuing pediatric
care including subsequent immunization services.
(d) The population to be targeted by the programs shall
include children who
do not receive immunizations through private third-party sources or other
public sources with priority given to infants and children from birth up to age
3. Outreach programs shall provide information to the families of children
being immunized about possible reactions to the vaccine and about follow-up
referral sources.
(Source: P.A. 91-239, eff. 1-1-00.)
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(20 ILCS 2310/2310-257) Sec. 2310-257. Crisis standards of care plan. (a) The Department shall develop and implement a crisis standards of care plan as an annex to the Department of Public Health's Essential Support Function (ESF-8) Plan for Public Health and Medical Services, to assist health care facilities and provide support in situations in which local medical resources are overwhelmed, including, but not limited to, public health emergencies, as that term is defined in Section 4 of the Illinois Emergency Management Agency Act. (b) In developing a crisis standards of care plan, the Department shall: (1) collaborate with the entities listed in Sections |
| 2310-50.5 and 2310-620 of the Department of Public Health Powers and Duties Law of the Civil Administrative Code of Illinois;
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(2) ensure the crisis standards of care plan
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| addresses situations in which a conventional response moves to a crisis response and key resources may be affected;
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(3) establish a multi-disciplinary planning committee
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| with representation from the following, as applicable:
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(A) the Department and local public health
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(B) emergency medical services;
(C) healthcare providers and facilities,
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| including representation of rural, urban, and critical access and municipal healthcare providers and facilities;
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(D) medical ethicists;
(E) healthcare coalitions, including, but not
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| limited to, a statewide association representing hospitals; and
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(F) other members from across the State with
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| expertise within their disciplines, as necessary, to inform and develop an emergency medical disaster plan;
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(4) conduct literature reviews to develop an
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| inclusive, culturally sensitive, and ethical framework for the Emergency Medical Disaster Plan Crisis Standards of Care Annex, which considers, among other factors, ethical healthcare decision making, health equity, and social determinants of health, and the equitable distribution of patients and critical healthcare resources in a manner that, to the maximum extent possible and given resources available at the time, reduces shortages of healthcare resources to preserve lives during a public health emergency; and
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(5) disseminate the crisis standards of care plan
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| among healthcare providers and facilities, emergency management officials, public safety communities, and other stakeholders, including, but not limited to, disseminating information about, and gathering feedback on, the emergency medical disaster plan, including gathering general information and data, assessing regional needs, perspectives, specific capabilities and potential challenges, to ensure a structured, ethical, culturally sensitive, and integrated framework and approach to equitable distribution of resources during public health emergencies.
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(c) The Department may adopt rules necessary to implement this Section.
(Source: P.A. 103-658, eff. 7-19-24.)
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(20 ILCS 2310/2310-312) Sec. 2310-312. Multidrug-Resistant Organisms. The Department shall perform the following functions in relation to the prevention and control of Multidrug-Resistant Organisms (MDROs), including methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), vancomycin-resistant (VRE) and certain gram-negative bacilli (GNB), as these terms are referenced by the United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention: (1) Except with regard to hospitals, for which |
| administrative rules shall be adopted in accordance with Section 6.23 of the Hospital Licensing Act and Section 7 of the University of Illinois Hospital Act, the Department shall adopt administrative rules for health care facilities subject to licensure, certification, registration, or other regulation by the Department that may require one or more types of those facilities to (i) perform an annual infection control risk assessment, (ii) develop infection control policies for MDROs that are based on this assessment and incorporate, as appropriate, updated recommendations of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for the prevention and control of MDROs, and (iii) enforce hand hygiene requirements.
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(2) The Department shall:
(A) publicize guidelines for reducing the
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| incidence of MDROs to health care providers, health care facilities, public health departments, prisons, jails, and the general public; and
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(B) provide periodic reports and updates to
|
| public officials, health professionals, and the general public statewide regarding new developments or procedures concerning prevention and management of infections due to MDROs.
|
|
(3) The Department shall publish a yearly report
|
| regarding MRSA and Clostridium difficile infections based on the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's National Healthcare Safety Network surveillance system or its successor. The Department is authorized to require hospitals, based on guidelines developed by the National Center for Health Statistics, after October 1, 2007, to submit data to the Department that is coded as "present on admission" and "occurred during the stay".
|
|
(4) Reporting to the Department under the Hospital
|
| Report Card Act shall include organisms, including but not limited to MRSA, that are responsible for central venous catheter-associated bloodstream infections and ventilator-associated pneumonia in designated hospital units.
|
|
(5) The Department shall implement surveillance for
|
| designated cases of community associated MRSA infections for a period of at least 3 years, beginning on or before January 1, 2008.
|
|
(Source: P.A. 97-49, eff. 1-1-12.)
|
(20 ILCS 2310/2310-313) Sec. 2310-313. Sepsis Review Task Force. (a) The Sepsis Review Task Force is created. The Task Force shall study sepsis early intervention and the prevention of loss of life from sepsis. The Task Force's study shall include, but not be limited to: (1) studying the Medical Patient Rights Act, |
| reviewing how other states handle patients' rights, and determining how Illinois can improve patients' rights and prevent sepsis based on the approaches of the other states;
|
|
(2) investigating specific advances in medical
|
| technology that could identify sepsis in blood tests;
|
|
(3) studying medical record sharing that would enable
|
| physicians and patients to see results from blood work that was drawn at hospitals;
|
|
(4) best practices and protocols for hospitals,
|
| long-term care facilities licensed under the Nursing Home Care Act, ID/DD facilities under the ID/DD Community Care Act, and group homes; and
|
|
(5) developing best practices and protocols for
|
| emergency first responders in the field dealing with patients who potentially are in septic shock or others who are suffering from sepsis.
|
|
(b) The Task Force shall consist of the following members, appointed by the Director of Public Health:
(1) one representative of a statewide association
|
|
(2) two representatives of a statewide organization
|
| representing physicians licensed to practice medicine in all its branches, one of whom shall represent hospitalists;
|
|
(3) one representative of a statewide organization
|
| representing emergency physicians;
|
|
(4) one representative of a statewide labor union
|
|
(5) two representatives of statewide organizations
|
| representing long-term care facilities;
|
|
(6) one representative of a statewide organization
|
| representing facilities licensed under the MC/DD Act or ID/DD Community Care Act;
|
|
(7) the Chief of the Department's Division of
|
| Emergency Medical Services and Highway Safety or his or her designee;
|
|
(8) one representative of an ambulance or emergency
|
| medical services association;
|
|
(9) three representatives of a nationwide sepsis
|
|
(10) one representative of a medical research
|
| department at a public university; and
|
|
(11) one representative of a statewide association
|
| representing medical information management professionals.
|
|
Task Force members shall serve without compensation. If a vacancy occurs in the Task Force membership, the vacancy shall be filled in the same manner as the original appointment. The Department of Public Health shall provide the Task Force with administrative and other support.
(Source: P.A. 100-1100, eff. 8-26-18; 101-81, eff. 7-12-19.)
|
(20 ILCS 2310/2310-315) (was 20 ILCS 2310/55.41)
Sec. 2310-315. Prevention and treatment of AIDS. To perform the
following in relation to the prevention and
treatment of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS):
(1) Establish a State AIDS Control Unit within the Department as
a
separate administrative subdivision, to coordinate all State
programs and services relating to the prevention, treatment, and
amelioration of AIDS.
(2) Conduct a public information campaign for physicians,
hospitals, health facilities, public health departments, law enforcement
personnel, public employees, laboratories, and the general public on
acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) and promote necessary measures
to reduce the incidence of AIDS and the mortality from AIDS. This program
shall include, but not be limited to, the establishment of a statewide
hotline and a State AIDS information clearinghouse that will provide
periodic reports and releases to public officials, health professionals,
community service organizations, and the general public regarding new
developments or procedures concerning prevention and treatment of AIDS.
(3) (Blank).
(4) Establish alternative blood test services that are not
operated by a blood bank, plasma center or hospital. The
Department shall prescribe by rule minimum criteria, standards and
procedures for the establishment and operation of such services, which shall
include, but not be limited to requirements for the provision of
information, counseling and referral services that ensure appropriate
counseling and referral for persons whose blood is tested and shows evidence of
exposure to the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) or other
identified causative agent of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS).
(5) Establish regional and community service networks of public
and
private service providers or health care professionals who may be involved
in AIDS research, prevention and treatment.
(6) Provide grants to individuals, organizations or facilities
to support
the following:
(A) Information, referral, and treatment
services.
(B) Interdisciplinary workshops for professionals |
| involved in research and treatment.
|
|
(C) Establishment and operation of a statewide
|
|
(D) Establishment and operation of alternative
|
|
(E) Research into detection, prevention, and
|
|
(F) Supplementation of other public and private
|
|
(G) Implementation by long-term care facilities of
|
| Department standards and procedures for the care and treatment of persons with AIDS and the development of adequate numbers and types of placements for those persons.
|
|
(7) (Blank).
(8) Accept any gift, donation, bequest, or grant of funds
from private or
public agencies, including federal funds that may be provided for AIDS control
efforts.
(9) Develop and implement, in consultation with the Long-Term
Care
Facility Advisory Board, standards and procedures for long-term care
facilities that provide care and treatment of persons with AIDS, including
appropriate infection control procedures. The Department shall work
cooperatively with organizations representing those facilities to
develop
adequate numbers and types of placements for persons with AIDS and shall
advise those facilities on proper implementation of its standards
and procedures.
(10) The Department shall create and administer a training
program
for State employees who have a need for understanding matters relating to
AIDS in order to deal with or advise the public. The training
shall
include information on the cause and effects of AIDS, the means of
detecting it and preventing its transmission, the availability of related
counseling and referral, and other matters that may be
appropriate.
The training may also be made available to employees of local
governments,
public service agencies, and private agencies that contract
with the State;
in those cases the Department may charge a reasonable fee to
recover the
cost of the training.
(11) Approve tests or testing procedures used in determining
exposure to HIV or any other identified causative agent of AIDS.
(12) Provide prescription drug benefits counseling for persons with HIV or AIDS.
(13) Continue to administer the AIDS Drug Assistance Program that provides drugs to prolong the lives of low income Persons with Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS) or Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) infection who are not eligible under Article V of the Illinois Public Aid Code for Medical Assistance, as provided under Title 77, Chapter 1, Subchapter (k), Part 692, Section 692.10 of the Illinois Administrative Code, effective August 1, 2000, except that the financial qualification for that program shall be that the anticipated gross monthly income shall be at or below 500% of the most recent Federal Poverty Guidelines published annually by the United States Department of Health and Human Services for the size of the household. Notwithstanding the preceding sentence, the Department of Public Health may determine the income eligibility standard for the AIDS Drug Assistance Program each year and may set the standard at more than 500% of the Federal Poverty Guidelines for the size of the household, provided that moneys appropriated to the Department for the program are sufficient to cover the increased cost of implementing the higher income eligibility standard. Rulemaking authority to implement this amendatory Act of the 95th General Assembly, if any, is conditioned on the rules being adopted in accordance with all provisions of the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act and all rules and procedures of the Joint Committee on Administrative Rules; any purported rule not so adopted, for whatever reason, is unauthorized. If the Department reduces the financial qualification for new applicants while allowing currently enrolled individuals to remain on the program, the Department shall maintain a waiting list of applicants who would otherwise be eligible except that they do not meet the financial qualifications. Upon determination that program finances are adequate, the Department shall permit qualified individuals who are on the waiting list to enroll in the program.
(14) In order to implement the provisions of Public Act 95-7, the Department must expand HIV testing in health care settings where undiagnosed individuals are likely to be identified. The Department must purchase rapid HIV kits and make grants for technical assistance, staff to conduct HIV testing and counseling, and related purposes. The Department must make grants to (i) facilities serving patients that are uninsured at high rates, (ii) facilities located in areas with a high prevalence of HIV or AIDS, (iii) facilities that have a high likelihood of identifying individuals who are undiagnosed with HIV or AIDS, or (iv) any combination of items (i), (ii), and (iii).
(Source: P.A. 97-74, eff. 6-30-11.)
|
(20 ILCS 2310/2310-323) Sec. 2310-323. Advisory Council on Youth HIV/AIDS Prevention Messages. (a) Subject to appropriation, there is created the Advisory Council on Youth HIV/AIDS Prevention Messages to advise the Department on effective prevention messages designed to educate and deter youth from engaging in risky behaviors that could result in the transmission of HIV/AIDS. (b) The Advisory Council shall consist of all of the following members: (1) One member of the Senate appointed by the |
| President of the Senate and one member of the Senate appointed by the Minority Leader of the Senate.
|
|
(2) One member of the House of Representatives
|
| appointed by the Speaker of the House of Representatives and one member of the House of Representatives appointed by the Minority Leader of the House of Representatives.
|
|
(3) Five members appointed by the Governor as
|
|
(A) One representative of a social service agency
|
| that provides services to youth and families infected or impacted by HIV/AIDS.
|
|
(B) One person from academia with a background or
|
| expertise in HIV/AIDS prevention messages.
|
|
(C) One representative of the Department of Human
|
|
(D) One person with a background in public health.
(E) One youth member 18 years old or older and
|
|
(4) The public information officer of the Department
|
| of Public Health, who shall be a non-voting member of the Advisory Council.
|
|
Each voting member shall serve for a term of 3 years and until his or her successor is appointed and has qualified. Vacancies shall be filled in the same manner as original appointments.
(c) The Advisory Council shall meet to organize and select a chairperson upon appointment of a majority of the members. The chairperson shall be elected by a majority vote of the members appointed to the Advisory Council. The Advisory Council shall meet at least 4 times a year at the call of the chairperson. Members of the Advisory Council shall serve without compensation, but may be reimbursed for reasonable expenses incurred as a result of their duties as members of the Advisory Council from funds appropriated by the General Assembly for that purpose.
(d) The Advisory Council shall submit an annual report to the Department on or before July 1, 2010 and on or before July 1 of each year thereafter with recommendations for effective prevention messages aimed at youth, including recommendations regarding the use of technology to deliver such messages.
(Source: P.A. 96-700, eff. 8-25-09.)
|
(20 ILCS 2310/2310-330) (was 20 ILCS 2310/55.46)
Sec. 2310-330. Sperm and tissue bank registry; AIDS test for donors;
penalties.
(a) The Department shall establish a registry of all sperm
banks and tissue banks operating in this State. All sperm banks and tissue
banks operating in this State
shall register with the Department by May 1 of each year. Any person,
hospital, clinic, corporation, partnership, or other legal entity that
operates a sperm bank or tissue bank in this State and fails to register with
the
Department pursuant to this Section commits a business offense and shall be
subject to a fine of $5000.
(b) All donors
of semen for purposes of artificial insemination, or donors of corneas,
bones, organs, or other human tissue for the purpose of injecting,
transfusing, or transplanting any of them in the human body, shall be
tested for
evidence of exposure to human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)
and any other identified causative agent of acquired immunodeficiency
syndrome (AIDS) at the time of or after the donation but prior to the
semen, corneas, bones, organs, or other human tissue being made available for
that use.
However, when in the opinion of the attending physician the life of a
recipient of a bone, organ, or other human tissue donation would be
jeopardized by delays caused by testing for evidence of exposure to HIV and
any other causative agent of AIDS, testing shall not be required.
(c) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (c-5), no person may
intentionally, knowingly, recklessly, or negligently
use the semen, corneas, bones, organs, or
other human tissue of a donor unless the requirements of subsection (b)
have been met. Except as otherwise provided in subsection (c-5), no person
may intentionally, knowingly, recklessly, or
negligently use the semen, corneas, bones, organs, or other human tissue of a
donor who
has tested positive for exposure to
HIV or any other identified causative agent of AIDS. Violation of
this subsection (c) shall be a Class 4 felony.
(c-5) It is not a violation of this Section for a person to perform a solid
organ transplant
of an organ from an HIV infected donor to a person who has tested positive for
exposure
to HIV or any other identified causative agent of AIDS and who is in immediate
threat of
death unless the transplant is performed. A tissue bank that provides an organ
from an
HIV infected donor under this subsection (c-5) may not be criminally or civilly
liable for
the furnishing of that organ under this subsection (c-5).
(d) For the purposes of this Section:
"Human tissue" shall not be
construed to mean organs or whole blood or its component parts.
"Tissue bank" has the same meaning as set forth in the Illinois Anatomical Gift Act.
"Solid organ transplant" means the surgical transplantation of internal
organs including, but not limited to, the liver, kidney, pancreas, lungs, or
heart.
"Solid
organ transplant" does not mean a bone marrow based transplant or a blood
transfusion.
"HIV infected donor" means a deceased donor who was infected with HIV or a living donor known to be infected with HIV and who is willing to donate a part or all of one or more of his or her organs. A determination of the donor's HIV infection is made by the donor's medical history or by specific tests that document HIV infection, such as HIV RNA or DNA, or by antibodies to HIV.
(Source: P.A. 95-331, eff. 8-21-07.)
|
(20 ILCS 2310/2310-339) Sec. 2310-339. Chronic Kidney Disease Program. (a) The Department, subject to appropriation or other available funding, shall establish a Chronic Kidney Disease Awareness, Testing, Diagnosis and Treatment Program. The program may include, but is not limited to:
(1) Dissemination of information regarding the |
| incidence of chronic kidney disease, the risk factors associated with chronic kidney disease, and the benefits of early testing, diagnosis and treatment of chronic kidney disease.
|
|
(2) Promotion information and counseling about
|
|
(3) Establishment and promotion of referral services
|
|
(4) Development and dissemination, through print and
|
| broadcast media, of public service announcements that publicize the importance of awareness, testing, diagnosis and treatment of chronic kidney disease.
|
|
(b) Any entity funded by the Program shall coordinate with other local providers of chronic kidney disease testing, diagnostic, follow-up, education, and advocacy services to avoid duplication of effort. Any entity funded by the Program shall comply with any applicable State and federal standards regarding chronic kidney disease testing.
(c) Administrative costs of the Department shall not exceed 10% of the funds allocated to the Program. Indirect costs of the entities funded by this Program shall not exceed 12%. The Department shall define "indirect costs" in accordance with applicable State and federal law.
(d) Any entity funded by the Program shall collect data and maintain records that are determined by the Department to be necessary to facilitate the Department's ability to monitor and evaluate the effectiveness of the entities and the Program. Commencing with the Program's second year of operation, the Department shall submit an annual report to the General Assembly and the Governor. The report shall describe the activities and effectiveness of the Program and shall include, but is not limited to, the following types of information regarding those persons served by the Program: (i) the number, (ii) the ethnic, geographic, and age breakdown, (iii) the stages of progression, and (iv) the diagnostic and treatment status.
(e) The Department or any entity funded by the Program shall collect personal and medical information necessary to administer the Program from any individual applying for services under the Program. The information shall be confidential and shall not be disclosed other than for purposes directly connected with the administration of the Program or as otherwise provided by law or pursuant to prior written consent of the subject of the information.
(f) The Department or any entity funded by the Program may disclose the confidential information to medical personnel and fiscal intermediaries of the State to the extent necessary to administer the Program, and to other State public health agencies or medical researchers if the confidential information is necessary to carry out the duties of those agencies or researchers in the investigation, control, or surveillance of chronic kidney disease.
(g) The Department shall adopt rules to implement the Program in accordance with the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act.
(Source: P.A. 94-81, eff. 1-1-06.)
|
(20 ILCS 2310/2310-342) Sec. 2310-342. Umbilical cord blood donations.
(a) Subject to appropriations for that purpose, the Department of Public Health shall, by January 1, 2008, prepare and distribute to health and maternal care providers written publications containing standardized, objective information about umbilical cord blood banking that is sufficient to allow a pregnant woman to make an informed decision about whether to participate in a public or private umbilical cord blood banking program, including the following information: (1) An explanation of the difference between public |
| and private umbilical cord blood banking.
|
|
(2) The options available to a mother, after the
|
| delivery of her newborn, relating to stem cells contained in the umbilical cord blood, including:
|
|
(A) donating to a public bank;
(B) storing in a family umbilical cord blood bank
|
| for use by immediate and extended family members;
|
|
(C) storing, for family use, through a family or
|
| sibling donor banking program that provides free collection, processing, and storage when there is a medical need; and
|
|
(D) discarding the umbilical cord blood.
(3) The medical processes involved in the collection
|
|
(4) The medical risks to a mother and her newborn
|
| child of umbilical cord blood collection.
|
|
(5) The current and potential future medical uses and
|
| benefits of umbilical cord blood collection to a mother, her newborn child, and her biological family.
|
|
(6) The current and potential future medical uses and
|
| benefits of umbilical cord blood collection to persons who are not biologically related to a mother or her newborn child.
|
|
(7) Medical or family history criteria that can
|
| impact a family's consideration of umbilical cord blood banking.
|
|
(8) Costs associated with public and private
|
| umbilical cord blood banking, including the family banking and sibling donor programs when there is a medical need.
|
|
(9) Options for ownership and future use of the
|
|
(10) The availability in Illinois of umbilical cord
|
|
(b) The Department shall encourage health and maternal care providers providing healthcare services to a pregnant woman, when those healthcare services are directly related to her pregnancy, to provide the pregnant woman with the publication described under subsection (a) of this Section before her third trimester.
(c) In developing the publications required under subsection (a), the Department of Public Health shall consult with an organization of physicians licensed to practice medicine in all its branches and consumer groups. The Department shall update the publications every 2 years.
(Source: P.A. 94-832, eff. 6-5-06; 95-73, eff. 8-13-07.)
|
(20 ILCS 2310/2310-347)
Sec. 2310-347. The Carolyn Adams Ticket For The Cure Board. (a) The Carolyn Adams Ticket For The Cure Board is created as an advisory board within the Department. Until 30 days after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 97th General Assembly, the Board may consist of 10 members as follows: 2 members appointed by the President of the Senate; 2 members appointed by the Minority Leader of the Senate; 2 members appointed by the Speaker of the House of Representatives; 2 members appointed by the Minority Leader of the House of Representatives; and 2 members appointed by the Governor with the advice and consent of the Senate, one of whom shall be designated as chair of the Board at the time of appointment. (a-5) Notwithstanding any provision of this Article to the contrary, the term of office of each current Board member ends 30 days after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 97th General Assembly or when his or her successor is appointed and qualified, whichever occurs sooner. No later than 30 days after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 97th General Assembly, the Board shall consist of 10 newly appointed members. Four of the Board members shall be members of the General Assembly and appointed as follows: one member appointed by the President of the Senate; one member appointed by the Minority Leader of the Senate; one member appointed by the Speaker of the House of Representatives; and one member appointed by the Minority Leader of the House of Representatives. Six of the Board members shall be appointed by the Director of the Department of Public Health, who shall designate one of these appointed members as chair of the Board at the time of his or her appointment. These 6 members appointed by the Director shall reflect the population with regard to ethnic, racial, and geographical composition and shall include the following individuals: one breast cancer survivor; one physician specializing in breast cancer or related medical issues; one breast cancer researcher; one representative from a breast cancer organization; one individual who operates a patient navigation program at a major hospital or health system; and one breast cancer professional that may include, but not be limited to, a genetics counselor, a social worker, a detain, an occupational therapist, or a nurse. A Board member whose term has expired may continue to serve until a successor is appointed. (b) Board members shall serve without compensation but may be reimbursed for their reasonable travel expenses incurred in performing their duties from funds available for that purpose. The Department shall provide staff and administrative support services to the Board. (c) The Board may advise: (i) the Department of Revenue in designing and |
| promoting the Carolyn Adams Ticket For The Cure special instant scratch-off lottery game;
|
|
(ii) the Department in reviewing grant applications;
|
|
(iii) the Director on the final award of grants from
|
| amounts appropriated from the Carolyn Adams Ticket For The Cure Grant Fund, to public or private entities in Illinois that reflect the population with regard to ethnic, racial, and geographic composition for the purpose of funding breast cancer research and supportive services for breast cancer survivors and those impacted by breast cancer and breast cancer education. In awarding grants, the Department shall consider criteria that includes, but is not limited to, projects and initiatives that address disparities in incidence and mortality rates of breast cancer, based on data from the Illinois Cancer Registry, and populations facing barriers to care in accordance with Section 21.5 of the Illinois Lottery Law.
|
|
(c-5) The Department shall submit a report to the Governor and the General Assembly by December 31 of each year. The report shall provide a summary of the Carolyn Adams Ticket for the Cure lottery ticket sales, grants awarded, and the accomplishments of the grantees.
(d) The Board is discontinued on June 30, 2027.
(Source: P.A. 102-1129, eff. 2-10-23.)
|
(20 ILCS 2310/2310-349) Sec. 2310-349. The Childhood Cancer Research Board. (a) The Childhood Cancer Research Board is created as an advisory board within the Department. The Board shall consist of 11 members as follows: 2 members appointed by the President of the Senate; one member appointed by the Minority Leader of the Senate; 2 members appointed by the Speaker of the House of Representatives; one member appointed by the Minority Leader of the House of Representatives; 2 members appointed by the Governor, one of whom shall be designated as chair of the Board at the time of appointment; and 2 members appointed by the Director. The Director, or his or her designee, shall serve as an ex officio member of the Board. Members appointed under this Section shall be experts in pediatric cancer or members of the General Assembly; however, no appointing authority may appoint more than one member of the General Assembly to serve during the same term. For the purposes of this Section, an "expert in pediatric cancer" is defined as a physician or scientist who (i) holds a position of leadership in an internationally recognized program of pediatric cancer research at the time of his or her appointment, or (ii) is a fully tenured professor at an institution of higher education. In addition, an expert in pediatric cancer must possess at least one of the following qualifications: (1) a strong track record of publication; (2) participation in a federally-funded pediatric |
|
(3) a leadership role in a national cancer research
|
| society, including the American Society of Hematology, the American Association of Cancer Research, or the American Society of Clinical Oncology; and
|
|
(4) participation in a National Cancer Institute or
|
| American Cancer Society study section.
|
|
The Board members shall serve one 2-year term. If a vacancy occurs in the Board membership, the vacancy shall be filled in the same manner as the initial appointment.
(b) Board members shall serve without compensation and shall not be reimbursed for necessary expenses incurred in
the performance of their duties unless funds become available to the Board. The Department shall provide staff and administrative support services to the Board.
(c) The Board must review grant applications, make recommendations and comments, and consult with the Department of Public Health in making grants from amounts appropriated from the Childhood Cancer Research Fund to public or private not-for-profit entities for the purpose of conducting childhood cancer research in accordance with Section 6z-93 of the State Finance Act.
(d) Grants shall be awarded to research projects that fall within the following categories:
(1) understanding the basic biology of specific
|
| pediatric cancers using cellular and animal models;
|
|
(2) pre-clinical studies that translate basic
|
| observations into novel diagnostics or therapeutic agents specific to pediatric cancer; or
|
|
(3) support of Phase I clinical trials of new agents
|
| developed at Illinois institutions.
|
|
(e) The Board shall make its recommendations to the Department no later than March 1 of the year after the application is received.
(Source: P.A. 98-464, eff. 1-1-14.)
|
(20 ILCS 2310/2310-376)
Sec. 2310-376. Hepatitis education and outreach.
(a) The Illinois General Assembly finds and declares the following:
(1) The World Health Organization characterizes |
| hepatitis as a disease of primary concern to humanity.
|
|
(2) Hepatitis is considered a silent killer; no
|
| recognizable signs or symptoms occur until severe liver damage has occurred.
|
|
(3) Studies indicate that nearly 4 million Americans
|
| (1.8 percent of the population) carry the virus HCV that causes the disease.
|
|
(4) 30,000 acute new infections occur each year in
|
| the United States, and only 25 to 30 percent are diagnosed.
|
|
(5) 8,000 to 10,000 Americans die from the disease
|
|
(6) 200,000 Illinois residents may be carriers and
|
| could develop the debilitating and potentially deadly liver disease.
|
|
(7) Inmates of correctional facilities have a higher
|
| incidence of hepatitis and, upon their release, present a significant health risk to the general population.
|
|
(8) Illinois members of the armed services are
|
| subject to an increased risk of contracting hepatitis due to their possible receipt of contaminated blood during a transfusion occurring for the treatment of wounds and due to their service in areas of the World where the disease is more prevalent and healthcare is less capable of detecting and treating the disease. Many of these service members are unaware of the danger of hepatitis and their increased risk of contracting the disease.
|
|
(b) Subject to appropriation, the Department shall conduct an education and
outreach campaign, in
addition to its overall effort to prevent infectious disease in Illinois, in
order to
raise awareness about and promote prevention of hepatitis.
(c) Subject to appropriation, in addition to the education and outreach campaign provided in subsection (b), the Department shall develop and make available to physicians, other health care providers, members of the armed services, and other persons subject to an increased risk of contracting hepatitis, educational materials, in written and electronic forms, on the diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of the disease. These materials shall include the recommendations of the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and any other persons or entities determined by the Department to have particular expertise on hepatitis, including the American Liver Foundation. These materials shall be written in terms that are understandable by members of the general public.
(d) The Department shall establish an Advisory Council on Hepatitis to develop a hepatitis prevention plan. The Department shall specify the membership, members' terms, provisions for removal of members, chairmen, and purpose of the Advisory Council. The Advisory Council shall consist of one representative from each of the following State agencies or offices, appointed by the head of each agency or office:
(1) The Department of Public Health.
(2) The Department of Public Aid.
(3) The Department of Corrections.
(4) The Department of Veterans' Affairs.
(5) The Department on Aging.
(6) The Department of Human Services.
(7) The Illinois State Police.
(8) The office of the State Fire Marshal.
The Director shall appoint representatives of organizations and advocates in the State of Illinois, including, but not limited to, the American Liver Foundation. The Director shall also appoint interested members of the public, including consumers and providers of health services and representatives of local public health agencies, to provide recommendations and information to the members of the Advisory Council. Members of the Advisory Council shall serve on a voluntary, unpaid basis and are not entitled to reimbursement for mileage or other costs they incur in connection with performing their duties.
(Source: P.A. 102-538, eff. 8-20-21.)
|
(20 ILCS 2310/2310-377)
Sec. 2310-377.
Lupus education and outreach.
(a) The Illinois General Assembly finds and declares the following:
(1) Lupus is a chronic, incurable auto-immune disease |
| of unknown origin that mainly affects women of childbearing age, is difficult to diagnose, and causes severe, potentially life-threatening organ damage.
|
|
(2) The Lupus Foundation of America estimates that
|
| 1.4 million people in the U.S. have a form of lupus.
|
|
(3) Lupus causes the immune system to attack the
|
| body's healthy cells and tissues producing skin damage, rheumatoid arthritis, life-threatening inflammation of multiple major organs, and a potentially fatal failure of the renal, circulatory, or central nervous system.
|
|
(4) Symptoms include joint pain, rash, unusual loss
|
| of hair, unexplained fever, low blood counts, sensitivity to the sun, and fingers that turn pale or purple when exposed to cold.
|
|
(5) According to the Lupus Foundation of America, a
|
| survey of its members revealed that more than half of all people with lupus suffered 4 or more years and were examined by 3 or more doctors before obtaining a correct diagnosis.
|
|
(6) According to the Center for Disease Control and
|
| Prevention, the number of lupus-related deaths between 1979 and 1988 increased dramatically; African American women, ages 45-64, experienced a 70% increase, the largest increase among all groups in the 20 years studied.
|
|
(b) Subject to appropriation, the Department shall conduct an education and
outreach campaign
in
order to
raise awareness about the symptoms and treatment of lupus, a potentially
life-threatening disease.
(Source: P.A. 93-129, eff. 1-1-04.)
|
(20 ILCS 2310/2310-394)
Sec. 2310-394. Multiple sclerosis; home services. (a) Subject to appropriation, the Department shall create a program of services for persons with multiple sclerosis to help those persons stay in their homes and out of institutions. The Department shall collaborate with consumers to develop a program of services that is consumer directed. (1) There shall be meaningful consumer participation |
| in all aspects of program design, review, and improvement.
|
|
(2) A review committee shall be established,
|
| comprised of consumers and other stakeholders. The committee shall meet at least once a year to evaluate the program, including quality assurance data, and shall submit program recommendations to the Department.
|
|
(3) Consumers shall have control in the selection,
|
| management, and termination of providers.
|
|
(4) Providers shall be educated about
|
| consumer-directed services and multiple sclerosis.
|
|
(b) To be eligible for the program, a person must meet the following requirements:
(1) He or she must have a current diagnosis of
|
|
(2) He or she must have applied for benefits under
|
| the Home Services Program operated by the Department of Human Services and must have been determined not eligible for benefits under that program because his or her retirement assets or life insurance assets, or both, exceeded the limits applicable to that program.
|
|
(3) He or she must have assets not exceeding $17,500.
|
| In determining whether a person's assets meet this requirement, the Department must disregard retirement assets up to a total of $500,000 and disregard all life insurance assets.
|
|
(c) This Section does not create any new entitlement to a service, program, or benefit, but does not affect any entitlement to a service, program, or benefit created by any other law.
(Source: P.A. 95-744, eff. 7-18-08.)
|
(20 ILCS 2310/2310-397) (was 20 ILCS 2310/55.90)
Sec. 2310-397. Prostate and testicular cancer program.
(a) The Department, subject to appropriation or other
available funding, shall conduct a program to promote awareness and early
detection of prostate and testicular cancer. The program may include, but
need not be limited to:
(1) Dissemination of information regarding the |
| incidence of prostate and testicular cancer, the risk factors associated with prostate and testicular cancer, and the benefits of early detection and treatment.
|
|
(2) Promotion of information and counseling about
|
|
(3) Establishment and promotion of referral services
|
|
Beginning July 1, 2004, the program must include the development and
dissemination, through print and broadcast media, of public service
announcements that publicize the importance of prostate cancer screening for
men over age 40.
(b) Subject to appropriation or other available funding,
a Prostate Cancer Screening Program shall be
established in the Department of Public Health.
(1) The Program shall apply to the following persons
|
|
(A) uninsured and underinsured men 50 years of
|
|
(B) uninsured and underinsured men between 40 and
|
| 50 years of age who are at high risk for prostate cancer, upon the advice of a physician, advanced practice registered nurse, or physician assistant or upon the request of the patient; and
|
|
(C) non-profit organizations providing assistance
|
| to persons described in subparagraphs (A) and (B).
|
|
(2) Any entity funded by the Program shall coordinate
|
| with other local providers of prostate cancer screening, diagnostic, follow-up, education, and advocacy services to avoid duplication of effort. Any entity funded by the Program shall comply with any applicable State and federal standards regarding prostate cancer screening.
|
|
(3) Administrative costs of the Department shall not
|
| exceed 10% of the funds allocated to the Program. Indirect costs of the entities funded by this Program shall not exceed 12%. The Department shall define "indirect costs" in accordance with applicable State and federal law.
|
|
(4) Any entity funded by the Program shall collect
|
| data and maintain records that are determined by the Department to be necessary to facilitate the Department's ability to monitor and evaluate the effectiveness of the entities and the Program. Commencing with the Program's second year of operation, the Department shall submit an Annual Report to the General Assembly and the Governor. The report shall describe the activities and effectiveness of the Program and shall include, but not be limited to, the following types of information regarding those served by the Program:
|
|
(A) the number; and
(B) the ethnic, geographic, and age breakdown.
(5) The Department or any entity funded by the
|
| Program shall collect personal and medical information necessary to administer the Program from any individual applying for services under the Program. The information shall be confidential and shall not be disclosed other than for purposes directly connected with the administration of the Program or except as otherwise provided by law or pursuant to prior written consent of the subject of the information.
|
|
(6) The Department or any entity funded by the
|
| program may disclose the confidential information to medical personnel and fiscal intermediaries of the State to the extent necessary to administer the Program, and to other State public health agencies or medical researchers if the confidential information is necessary to carry out the duties of those agencies or researchers in the investigation, control, or surveillance of prostate cancer.
|
|
(c) The Department shall adopt rules to implement the Prostate Cancer
Screening Program in accordance with the Illinois Administrative
Procedure Act.
(Source: P.A. 99-581, eff. 1-1-17; 100-513, eff. 1-1-18 .)
|
(20 ILCS 2310/2310-399.5) Sec. 2310-399.5. Veterans' cancer program. (a) The Department, subject to appropriation or other
available funding, shall conduct a program to promote awareness of cancer in veterans. The program may include, but
need not be limited to:
(1) Dissemination of information regarding the |
| incidence of cancer in veterans, the risk factors associated with cancer, and the benefits of early detection and treatment.
|
|
(2) Promotion of information and counseling about
|
|
(3) Establishment and promotion of referral services
|
|
Beginning January 1, 2018, the program must include the development and
dissemination, through print and broadcast media, of public service
announcements that publicize the importance of cancer screening for
veterans.
(b) Subject to appropriation or other available funding,
the Veterans' Cancer Screening Program shall be
established in the Department of Public Health. The Program shall apply to the following persons and entities:
(1) uninsured and underinsured veterans; and
(2) non-profit organizations providing assistance to
|
| persons described in paragraph (1).
|
|
An entity funded by the Program shall coordinate with other
local providers of cancer screening, diagnostic, follow-up,
education, and advocacy services for veterans to avoid duplication of effort. Any
entity funded by the Program shall comply with any applicable State
and federal standards regarding cancer screening.
Administrative costs of the Department shall not exceed 10%
of the funds allocated to the Program. Indirect costs of the
entities funded by this Program shall not exceed 12%. The
Department shall define "indirect costs" in accordance with
applicable State and federal law.
An entity funded by the Program shall collect data and
maintain records that are determined by the Department to be
necessary to facilitate the Department's ability to monitor and
evaluate the effectiveness of the entities and the Program.
Commencing with the Program's second year of operation, by January 1, 2019 and every January 1 thereafter, the
Department shall submit an annual report to the General Assembly and
the Governor. The report shall describe the activities
and effectiveness of the Program and shall include, but not be
limited to, the following types of information regarding those served
by the Program: (i) the number; and (ii) the ethnic, geographic, and age breakdown.
The Department or an entity funded by the Program shall
collect personal and medical information necessary to administer the
Program from an individual applying for services under the Program.
The information shall be confidential and shall not be disclosed
other than for purposes directly connected with the administration of
the Program or except as otherwise provided by law or pursuant to
prior written consent of the subject of the information.
The Department or any entity funded by the program may
disclose the confidential information to medical personnel and fiscal
intermediaries of the State to the extent necessary to administer
the Program, and to other State public health agencies or medical
researchers if the confidential information is necessary to carry out
the duties of those agencies or researchers in the investigation,
control, or surveillance of cancer.
The Department shall adopt rules to implement the Veterans' Cancer
Screening Program in accordance with the Illinois Administrative
Procedure Act.
(Source: P.A. 100-224, eff. 1-1-18 .)
|
(20 ILCS 2310/2310-420) (was 20 ILCS 2310/55.74)
Sec. 2310-420.
Violence and homicide; injury prevention.
(a) Utilizing existing
resources, the Department may examine the impact of
violence
and homicide on the public health and safety of Illinois residents, especially
children. Based on their findings, the Department shall, if warranted, declare
violence and homicide a public health epidemic and recommend anti-violence and
homicide prevention programs to the Illinois General Assembly.
(b) The Section on Injury Prevention is created within the Department. The Section on Injury Prevention is charged with coordination
and expansion of prevention and control activities related to
intentional and unintentional injuries. The
duties of the Section on Injury Prevention may include, but may not be limited
to, the following:
(1) To serve as a data coordinator and analysis |
| source of mortality and injury statistics for other State agencies.
|
|
(2) To integrate an injury and violence prevention
|
| focus within the Department.
|
|
(3) To develop collaborative relationships with other
|
| State agencies and private and community organizations to establish programs promoting injury prevention, awareness, and education to reduce automobile, motorcycle, and bicycle injuries and interpersonal violence, including homicide, child abuse, youth violence, domestic violence, sexual assault, and elderly abuse.
|
|
(4) To support the development of comprehensive
|
| community-based injury and violence prevention initiatives within municipalities of this State.
|
|
(5) To identify possible sources of funding to
|
| establish and continue programs to promote prevention of intentional and unintentional injuries.
|
|
(Source: P.A. 91-239, eff. 1-1-00.)
|
(20 ILCS 2310/2310-425) (was 20 ILCS 2310/55.66)
Sec. 2310-425. Health care summary for women.
(a) From funds made available from the General Assembly for this
purpose,
the Department shall publish in plain language, in both an
English and a Spanish version, a pamphlet providing information regarding
health care for women which shall include the following:
(1) A summary of the various medical conditions, |
| including cancer, sexually transmitted diseases, endometriosis, or other similar diseases or conditions widely affecting women's reproductive health, that may require a hysterectomy or other treatment.
|
|
(2) A summary of the recommended schedule and
|
| indications for physical examinations, including "pap smears" or other tests designed to detect medical conditions of the uterus and other reproductive organs.
|
|
(3) A summary of the widely accepted medical
|
| treatments, including viable alternatives, that may be prescribed for the medical conditions specified in paragraph (1).
|
|
(b) In developing the summary the Department shall consult with the
Illinois State Medical Society, Illinois Society of Advanced Practice Nurses, the Illinois Academy of Physician Assistants, and consumer groups. The summary shall be
updated by the Department every 2 years.
(c) The Department shall distribute the summary to hospitals, public
health centers, and health care professionals who are likely to treat medical conditions
described in paragraph (1) of subsection (a). Those hospitals, public
health centers, and physicians shall make the summaries available to the
public. The Department shall also distribute the summaries to any person,
organization, or other interested parties upon request. The summary may be
duplicated by any person provided the copies are identical to the
current
summary prepared by the Department.
(d) The summary shall display on the inside of its cover, printed in
capital letters and bold face type, the following paragraph:
"The information contained in this brochure is only for the purpose of
assisting you, the patient, in understanding the medical information and
advice offered by your health care professional. This brochure cannot serve as a
substitute for the sound professional advice of your health care professional. The
availability of this brochure or the information contained within is not
intended to alter, in any way, the existing health care professional-patient relationship,
nor the existing professional obligations of your health care professional in the delivery
of medical services to you, the patient."
(Source: P.A. 99-581, eff. 1-1-17 .)
|
(20 ILCS 2310/2310-430) (was 20 ILCS 2310/55.69)
Sec. 2310-430.
Women's health issues.
(a) The Department shall designate a member of its staff to handle women's
health issues not currently or adequately addressed by the Department.
(b) The staff person's duties shall include, without limitation:
(1) Assisting in the assessment of the health needs |
|
(2) Recommending treatment methods and programs that
|
| are sensitive and relevant to the unique characteristics of women.
|
|
(3) Promoting awareness of women's health concerns
|
| and encouraging, promoting, and aiding in the establishment of women's services.
|
|
(4) Providing adequate and effective opportunities
|
| for women to express their views on Departmental policy development and program implementation.
|
|
(5) Providing information to the members of the
|
| public, patients, and health care providers regarding women's gynecological cancers, including but not limited to the signs and symptoms, risk factors, the benefits of early detection through appropriate diagnostic testing, and treatment options.
|
|
(6) Publishing the health care summary required under
|
| Section 2310-425 of this Act.
|
|
(c) The information provided under item (5) of subsection (b) of this
Section may include, but is not limited to, the following:
(1) Educational and informational materials in print,
|
| audio, video, electronic, or other media.
|
|
(2) Public service announcements and advertisements.
(3) The health care summary required under Section
|
|
The Department may develop or contract with others to develop, as the
Director deems appropriate, the materials described in this subsection (c)
or may survey available publications from, among other sources, the National
Cancer Institute and the American Cancer Society. The staff person designated
under this Section shall collect the materials, formulate a distribution plan,
and disseminate the materials according to the plan. These materials shall be
made available to the public free of charge.
In exercising its powers under this subsection (c), the Department shall
consult with appropriate health care professionals and providers, patients,
and organizations representing health care professionals and providers and
patients.
(Source: P.A. 91-106, eff. 1-1-00; 91-239, eff. 1-1-00; 92-16, eff.
6-28-01.)
|
(20 ILCS 2310/2310-431) Sec. 2310-431. Healthy Illinois Survey. (a) The General Assembly finds the following: (1) The Coronavirus pandemic that struck in 2020 |
| caused more illness and death in Black, Latinx, and other communities with people of color in Illinois.
|
|
(2) Many rural and other underserved communities in
|
| Illinois experienced higher rates of COVID-19 illness and death than higher-resourced communities.
|
|
(3) The structural racism and underlying health and
|
| social disparities in communities of color and other underserved communities that produced these COVID-19 disparities also produce disparities in chronic disease, access to care, and social determinants of health, such as overcrowded housing and prevalence of working in low-wage essential jobs.
|
|
(4) Traditional public health data collected by
|
| existing methods is insufficient to help State and local governments, health care partners, and communities understand local health concerns and social factors associated with health. Nor does the data provide adequate information to help identify policies and interventions that address health inequities.
|
|
(5) Comprehensive, relevant, and current public
|
| health data could be used to: identify health concerns for communities across Illinois; understand environmental, neighborhood, and social factors associated with health; and support the development, implementation, and progress of programs for public health interventions and addressing health inequities.
|
|
(b) Subject to appropriation, the Department shall administer an annual survey, which shall be named the Healthy Illinois Survey. The Healthy Illinois Survey shall:
(1) include interviews of a sample of State residents
|
| such that statistically reliable data for every county, zip code groupings within more highly populated counties and cities, suburban Cook County municipalities, and Chicago community areas can be developed, as well as statistically reliable data on racial, ethnic, gender, age, and other demographic groups of State residents important to inform health equity goals;
|
|
(2) be collected at the zip code level; and
(3) include questions on a range of topics designed
|
| to establish an initial baseline public health data set and annual updates, including:
|
|
(A) access to health services;
(B) civic engagement;
(C) childhood experiences;
(D) chronic health conditions;
(E) COVID-19;
(F) diet;
(G) financial security;
(H) food security;
(I) mental health;
(J) community conditions;
(K) physical activity;
(L) physical safety;
(M) substance abuse; and
(N) violence.
(c) In developing the Healthy Illinois Survey, the Department shall consult with local public health departments and stakeholders with expertise in health, mental health, nutrition, physical activity, violence prevention, safety, tobacco and drug use, and emergency preparedness with the goal of developing a comprehensive survey that will assist the State and other partners in developing the data to measure public health and health equity.
(d) The Department shall provide the results of the Healthy Illinois Survey in forms useful to cities, communities, local health departments, hospitals, and other potential users, including annually publishing on its website data at the most granular geographic and demographic levels possible while protecting identifying information. The Department shall produce periodic special reports and analyses relevant to ongoing and emerging health and social issues in communities and the State. The Department shall use this data to inform the development and monitoring of its State Health Assessment. The Department shall provide the full relevant jurisdictional data set to local health departments for their local use and analysis each year.
(e) The identity, or any group of facts that tends to lead to the identity, of any person whose condition or
treatment is submitted to the Healthy Illinois Survey is confidential and shall not be open to public inspection
or dissemination and is exempt from disclosure under Section 7 of the Freedom of Information Act.
Information for specific research purposes may be released in accordance with procedures established by
the Department.
(Source: P.A. 102-483, eff. 1-1-22; 102-813, eff. 5-13-22.)
|
(20 ILCS 2310/2310-434) Sec. 2310-434. Certified Nursing Assistant Intern Program. (a) As used in this Section, "facility" means a facility licensed by the Department under the Nursing Home Care Act, the MC/DD Act, or the ID/DD Community Care Act or an establishment licensed under the Assisted Living and Shared Housing Act. (b) The Department shall establish or approve a Certified Nursing Assistant Intern Program to address the increasing need for trained health care workers and provide additional pathways for individuals to become certified nursing assistants. Upon successful completion of the classroom education and on-the-job training requirements of the Program required under this Section, an individual may provide, at a facility, the patient and resident care services determined under the Program and may perform the procedures listed under subsection (e). (c) In order to qualify as a certified nursing assistant intern, an individual shall successfully complete at least 8 hours of classroom education on the services and procedures determined under the Program and listed under subsection (e). The classroom education shall be: (1) taken within the facility where the certified |
| nursing assistant intern will be employed;
|
|
(2) proctored by either an advanced practice
|
| registered nurse or a registered nurse who holds a bachelor's degree in nursing, has a minimum of 3 years of continuous experience in geriatric care, or is certified as a nursing assistant instructor; and
|
|
(3) satisfied by the successful completion of an
|
| approved 8-hour online training course or in-person group training.
|
|
(d) In order to qualify as a certified nursing assistant intern, an individual shall successfully complete at least 24 hours of on-the-job training in the services and procedures determined under the Program and listed under subsection (e), as follows:
(1) The training program instructor shall be either
|
| an advanced practice registered nurse or a registered nurse who holds a bachelor's degree in nursing, has a minimum of 3 years of continuous experience in geriatric care, or is certified as a nursing assistant instructor.
|
|
(2) The training program instructor shall ensure that
|
| the student meets the competencies determined under the Program and those listed under subsection (e). The instructor shall document the successful completion or failure of the competencies and any remediation that may allow for the successful completion of the competencies.
|
|
(3) All on-the-job training shall be under the direct
|
| observation of either an advanced practice registered nurse or a registered nurse who holds a bachelor's degree in nursing, has a minimum of 3 years of continuous experience in geriatric care, or is certified as a nursing assistant instructor.
|
|
(4) All on-the-job training shall be conducted at a
|
| facility that is licensed by the State of Illinois and that is the facility where the certified nursing assistant intern will be working.
|
|
(e) A certified nursing assistant intern shall receive classroom and on-the-job training on how to provide the patient or resident care services and procedures, as determined under the Program, that are required of a certified nursing assistant's performance skills, including, but not limited to, all of the following:
(1) Successful completion and maintenance of active
|
| certification in both first aid and the American Red Cross' courses on cardiopulmonary resuscitation.
|
|
(2) Infection control and in-service training
|
| required at the facility.
|
|
(3) Washing a resident's hands.
(4) Performing oral hygiene on a resident.
(5) Shaving a resident with an electric razor.
(6) Giving a resident a partial bath.
(7) Making a bed that is occupied.
(8) Dressing a resident.
(9) Transferring a resident to a wheelchair using a
|
| gait belt or transfer belt.
|
|
(10) Ambulating a resident with a gait belt or
|
|
(11) Feeding a resident.
(12) Calculating a resident's intake and output.
(13) Placing a resident in a side-lying position.
(14) The Heimlich maneuver.
(f) A certified nursing assistant intern may not perform any of the following on a resident:
(1) Shaving with a nonelectric razor.
(2) Nail care.
(3) Perineal care.
(4) Transfer using a mechanical lift.
(5) Passive range of motion.
(g) A certified nursing assistant intern may only provide the patient or resident care services and perform the procedures that he or she is deemed qualified to perform that are listed under subsection (e). A certified nursing assistant intern may not provide the procedures excluded under subsection (f).
(h) The Program is subject to the Health Care Worker Background Check Act and the Health Care Worker Background Check Code under 77 Ill. Adm. Code 955. Program participants and personnel shall be included on the Health Care Worker Registry.
(i) A Program participant who has completed the training required under paragraph (5) of subsection (a) of Section 3-206 of the Nursing Home Care Act, has completed the Program from April 21, 2020 through September 18, 2020, and has shown competency in all of the performance skills listed under subsection (e) may be considered a certified nursing assistant intern once the observing advanced practice registered nurse or registered nurse educator has confirmed the Program participant's competency in all of those performance skills.
(j) The requirement under subsection (b) of Section 395.400 of Title 77 of the Illinois Administrative Code that a student must pass a BNATP written competency examination within 12 months after the completion of the BNATP does not apply to a certified nursing assistant intern under this Section. However, upon a Program participant's enrollment in a certified nursing assistant course, the requirement under subsection (b) of Section 395.400 of Title 77 of the Illinois Administrative Code that a student pass a BNATP written competency examination within 12 months after completion of the BNATP program applies.
(k) A certified nursing assistant intern shall enroll in a certified nursing assistant program within 6 months after completing his or her certified nursing assistant intern training under the Program. The individual may continue to work as a certified nursing assistant intern during his or her certified nursing assistant training. If the scope of work for a nurse assistant in training pursuant to 77 Ill. Adm. Code 300.660 is broader in scope than the work permitted to be performed by a certified nursing assistant intern, then the certified nursing assistant intern enrolled in certified nursing assistant training may perform the work allowed under 77 Ill. Adm. Code 300.660 with written documentation that the certified nursing assistant intern has successfully passed the competencies necessary to perform such skills. The facility shall maintain documentation as to the additional jobs and duties the certified nursing assistant intern is authorized to perform, which shall be made available to the Department upon request. The individual shall receive one hour of credit for every hour employed as a certified nursing assistant intern or as a temporary nurse assistant, not to exceed 30 hours of credit, subject to the approval of an accredited certified nursing assistant training program.
(l) A facility that seeks to train and employ a certified nursing assistant intern at the facility must:
(1) not have received or applied for a registered
|
| nurse waiver under Section 3-303.1 of the Nursing Home Care Act, if applicable;
|
|
(2) not have been cited for a violation, except a
|
| citation for noncompliance with COVID-19 reporting requirements, that has caused severe harm to or the death of a resident within the 2 years prior to employing a certified nursing assistant; for purposes of this paragraph, the revocation of the facility's ability to hire and train a certified nursing assistant intern shall only occur if the underlying federal citation for the revocation remains substantiated following an informal dispute resolution or independent informal dispute resolution;
|
|
(3) not have been cited for a violation that resulted
|
| in a pattern of certified nursing assistants being removed from the Health Care Worker Registry as a result of resident abuse, neglect, or exploitation within the 2 years prior to employing a certified nursing assistant intern;
|
|
(4) if the facility is a skilled nursing facility,
|
| meet a minimum staffing ratio of 3.8 hours of nursing and personal care time, as those terms are used in subsection (e) of Section 3-202.05 of the Nursing Home Care Act, each day for a resident needing skilled care and 2.5 hours of nursing and personal care time each day for a resident needing intermediate care;
|
|
(5) not have lost the ability to offer a Nursing
|
| Assistant Training and Competency Evaluation Program as a result of an enforcement action;
|
|
(6) establish a certified nursing assistant intern
|
| mentoring program within the facility for the purposes of increasing education and retention, which must include an experienced certified nurse assistant who has at least 3 years of active employment and is employed by the facility;
|
|
(7) not have a monitor or temporary management placed
|
| upon the facility by the Department;
|
|
(8) not have provided the Department with a notice of
|
|
(9) not have had a termination action initiated by
|
| the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services or the Department for failing to comply with minimum regulatory or licensure requirements.
|
|
(m) A facility that does not meet the requirements of subsection (l) shall cease its new employment training, education, or onboarding of any employee under the Program. The facility may resume its new employment training, education, or onboarding of an employee under the Program once the Department determines that the facility is in compliance with subsection (l).
(n) To study the effectiveness of the Program, the Department shall collect data from participating facilities and publish a report on the extent to which the Program brought individuals into continuing employment as certified nursing assistants in long-term care. Data collected from facilities shall include, but shall not be limited to, the number of certified nursing assistants employed, the number of persons who began participation in the Program, the number of persons who successfully completed the Program, and the number of persons who continue employment in a long-term care service or facility. The report shall be published no later than 6 months after the Program end date determined under subsection (p). A facility participating in the Program shall, twice annually, submit data under this subsection in a manner and time determined by the Department. Failure to submit data under this subsection shall result in suspension of the facility's Program.
(o) The Department may adopt emergency rules in accordance with Section 5-45.30 of the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act.
(p) The Program shall end upon the termination of the Secretary of Health and Human Services' public health emergency declaration for COVID-19 or 3 years after the date that the Program becomes operational, whichever occurs later.
(q) This Section is inoperative 18 months after the Program end date determined under subsection (p).
(Source: P.A. 102-1037, eff. 6-2-22; 103-154, eff. 6-30-23.)
|
(20 ILCS 2310/2310-460) Sec. 2310-460. Suicide prevention. Subject to appropriation, the Department shall implement activities associated with the Suicide Prevention, Education, and Treatment Act, including, but not limited to, the following: (1) Coordinating suicide prevention, intervention, |
| and postvention programs, services, and efforts statewide.
|
|
(2) Developing and submitting proposals for funding
|
| from federal agencies or other sources of funding to promote suicide prevention and coordinate activities.
|
|
(3) With input from the Illinois Suicide Prevention
|
| Alliance, preparing the Illinois Suicide Prevention Strategic Plan required under Section 15 of the Suicide Prevention, Education, and Treatment Act and coordinating the activities necessary to implement the recommendations in that Plan.
|
|
(4) With input from the Illinois Suicide Prevention
|
| Alliance, providing to the Governor and General Assembly the annual report required under Section 13 of the Suicide Prevention, Education, and Treatment Act.
|
|
(5) Providing technical support for the activities of
|
| the Illinois Suicide Prevention Alliance.
|
|
(Source: P.A. 101-331, eff. 8-9-19; 102-558, eff. 8-20-21.)
|
(20 ILCS 2310/2310-542) (Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2026) Sec. 2310-542. Safe gun storage public awareness campaign. (a) Subject to appropriation, the Department shall develop and implement a comprehensive 2-year statewide safe gun storage public awareness campaign. The campaign shall include the following: (1) Sustained and focused messaging over the course |
| of the 2-year campaign period.
|
|
(2) Messages paired with information about
|
| enforcement or incentives for safe gun storage.
|
|
(3) Geographic and cultural considerations.
(b) The campaign shall be divided into the following 3 phases:
(1) A statewide messaging strategy that shall develop
|
| research-based, culturally appropriate messaging for awareness of gun safety, reducing access to lethal means, and encouraging safe storage. The campaign shall include formats such as paid advertising on Chicago Transit Authority trains, bus stops, billboards, digital or social media campaigns, radio, and other public education and outreach.
|
|
(2) A gun lock and gun safe distribution campaign and
|
| gun buy-back programs. This phase shall require the following:
|
|
(A) Developing a focused strategy to distribute,
|
| through community-based organizations, gun locks and gun safes in areas most affected by gun violence.
|
|
(B) Pairing gun lock distribution with brief
|
| counseling or education sessions, which has been shown to significantly increase safe storage practices.
|
|
(C) Developing an education and training program
|
| on safe storage counseling and screening for health care professionals, including pediatric primary care and emergency room departments.
|
|
(D) Developing education and training on the
|
| Firearms Restraining Order Act for practitioners, law enforcement, and the general public.
|
|
(E) Focusing on suicide prevention, youth or
|
| young adult survivors of gun violence, and families at risk due to domestic violence.
|
|
(F) Incorporating gun buy-back opportunities in
|
| partnership with law enforcement, community-based organizations, and other local stakeholders.
|
|
(3) A comprehensive evaluation to measure changes in
|
| gun safety behaviors and the overall impact and effectiveness of the campaign to promote safety. Metrics to be measured include, but are not limited to, the following:
|
|
(A) Changes in parent behavior and perception.
(B) Media campaign metrics and digital analytics.
(C) The number of people reached through each
|
|
(D) The number of gun locks and gun safes
|
|
(E) Changes in intentional and unintentional
|
|
(c) This Section is repealed on January 1, 2026.
(Source: P.A. 102-1067, eff. 1-1-23 .)
|
(20 ILCS 2310/2310-560) (was 20 ILCS 2310/55.87)
Sec. 2310-560. Advisory committees concerning
construction of
facilities. (a) The Director shall appoint an advisory committee. The committee
shall be established by the Department by rule. The Director and the
Department shall consult with the advisory committee concerning the
application of building codes and Department rules related to those
building codes to facilities under the Ambulatory Surgical Treatment
Center Act, the Nursing Home Care Act, the Specialized Mental Health Rehabilitation Act of 2013, the ID/DD Community Care Act, and the MC/DD Act.
(b) The Director shall appoint an advisory committee to advise the
Department and to conduct informal dispute resolution concerning the
application of building codes for new and existing construction and related
Department rules and standards under the Hospital Licensing Act, including
without limitation rules and standards for (i) design and construction, (ii)
engineering and maintenance of the physical plant, site, equipment, and
systems (heating, cooling, electrical, ventilation, plumbing, water, sewer,
and solid waste disposal), and (iii) fire and safety. The advisory committee
shall be composed of all of the following members:
(1) The chairperson or an elected representative from |
| the Hospital Licensing Board under the Hospital Licensing Act.
|
|
(2) Two health care architects with a minimum of 10
|
| years of experience in institutional design and building code analysis.
|
|
(3) Two engineering professionals (one mechanical and
|
| one electrical) with a minimum of 10 years of experience in institutional design and building code analysis.
|
|
(4) One commercial interior design professional with
|
| a minimum of 10 years of experience.
|
|
(5) Two representatives from provider associations.
(6) The Director or his or her designee, who shall
|
| serve as the committee moderator.
|
|
Appointments shall be made with the concurrence of the
Hospital Licensing Board. The committee shall submit
recommendations concerning the
application of building codes and related Department rules and
standards to the
Hospital Licensing Board
for review and comment prior to
submission to the Department. The committee shall submit
recommendations concerning informal dispute resolution to the Director.
The Department shall provide per diem and travel expenses to the
committee members.
(Source: P.A. 98-104, eff. 7-22-13; 99-180, eff. 7-29-15.)
|
(20 ILCS 2310/2310-577) Sec. 2310-577. Cord blood stem cell banks. (a) Subject to appropriation, the Department shall establish a network of human cord blood stem cell banks. The Director shall enter into contracts with qualified cord blood stem cell banks to assist in the establishment, provision, and maintenance of the network. (b) A cord blood stem cell bank is eligible to enter the network and be a donor bank if it satisfies each of the following: (1) Has obtained all applicable federal and State |
| licenses, accreditations, certifications, registrations, and other authorizations required to operate and maintain a cord blood stem cell bank.
|
|
(2) Has implemented donor screening and cord blood
|
| collection practices adequate to protect both donors and transplant recipients and to prevent transmission of potentially harmful infections and other diseases.
|
|
(3) Has established a system of strict
|
| confidentiality to protect the identity and privacy of patients and donors in accordance with existing federal and State law and consistent with regulations promulgated under the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996, Public Law 104-191, for the release of the identity of donors, the identity of recipients, or identifiable records.
|
|
(4) Has established a system for encouraging donation
|
| by an ethnically and racially diverse group of donors.
|
|
(5) Has developed adequate systems for communication
|
| with other cord blood stem cell banks, transplant centers, and physicians with respect to the request, release, and distribution of cord blood units nationally and has developed those systems, consistent with the regulations promulgated under the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996, Public Law 104-191, to track recipients' clinical outcomes for distributed units.
|
|
(6) Has developed an objective system for educating
|
| the public, including patient advocacy organizations, about the benefits of donating and utilizing cord blood stem cells in appropriate circumstances.
|
|
(7) Has policies and procedures in place for the
|
| procurement of materials for the conduct of stem cell research, including policies and procedures ensuring that persons are empowered to make voluntary and informed decisions to participate or to refuse to participate in the research, and ensuring confidentiality of the decision.
|
|
(8) Has policies and procedures in place to ensure
|
| the bank is following current best practices with respect to medical ethics, including informed consent of patients and the protection of human subjects.
|
|
(c) A donor bank that enters into the network shall do all of the following:
(1) Acquire, tissue-type, test, cryopreserve, and
|
| store donated units of human cord blood acquired with the informed consent of the donor, in a manner that complies with applicable federal regulations.
|
|
(2) Make cord blood units collected under this
|
| Section, or otherwise, available to transplant centers for stem cell transplantation.
|
|
(3) Allocate up to 10% of the cord blood inventory
|
| each year for peer-reviewed research. This quota may be met by using cord blood units that did not meet the cell count standards necessary for transplantation.
|
|
(4) Make agreements with obstetrical health care
|
| facilities, consistent with federal regulations, for the collection of donated units of human cord blood.
|
|
(d) An advisory committee shall advise the Department concerning the administration of the cord blood stem cell bank network. The committee shall be appointed by the Director and consist of members who represent each of the following:
(1) Cord blood stem cell transplant centers.
(2) Physicians from participating birthing hospitals.
(3) The cord blood stem cell research community.
(4) Recipients of cord blood stem cell transplants.
(5) Family members who have made a donation to a
|
| statewide cord blood stem cell bank.
|
|
(6) Individuals with expertise in the social sciences.
(7) Members of the general public.
(8) Each network donor bank.
(9) Hospital administration from birthing hospitals.
Except as otherwise provided under this subsection, each member of the committee shall serve for a 3-year term and may be reappointed for one or more additional terms. Appointments for the initial members shall be for terms of 1, 2, and 3 years, respectively, so as to provide for the subsequent appointment of an equal number of members each year. The committee shall elect a chairperson.
(e) A person has a conflict of interest if any action, advice, or recommendation with respect to a matter may directly or indirectly financially benefit any of the following:
(1) That person.
(2) That person's spouse, immediate family living
|
| with that person, or that person's extended family.
|
|
(3) Any individual or entity required to be disclosed
|
|
(4) Any other individual or entity with which that
|
| person has a business or professional relationship.
|
|
An advisory committee member who has a conflict of interest with respect to a matter may not discuss that matter with other committee members and shall not vote upon or otherwise participate in any committee action, advice, or recommendation with respect to that matter. Each recusal occurring during a committee meeting shall be made a part of the minutes or recording of the meeting in accordance with the Open Meetings Act.
The Department shall not allow any Department employee to participate in the processing of, or to provide any advice or recommendation concerning, any matter with which the Department employee has a conflict of interest.
(f) Each advisory committee member shall file with the Secretary of State a written disclosure of the following with respect to the member, the member's spouse, and any immediate family living with the member:
(1) Each source of income.
(2) Each entity in which the member, spouse, or
|
| immediate family living with the member has an ownership or distributive income share that is not an income source required to be disclosed under item (1) of this subsection (f).
|
|
(3) Each entity in or for which the member, spouse,
|
| or immediate family living with the member serves as an executive, officer, director, trustee, or fiduciary.
|
|
(4) Each entity with which the member, member's
|
| spouse, or immediate family living with the member has a contract for future income.
|
|
Each advisory committee member shall file the disclosure required by this subsection (f) at the time the member is appointed and at the time of any reappointment of that member.
Each advisory committee member shall file an updated disclosure with the Secretary of State promptly after any change in the items required to be disclosed under this subsection with respect to the member, the member's spouse, or any immediate family living with the member.
The requirements of Section 3A-30 of the Illinois Governmental Ethics Act and any other disclosures required by law apply to this Act.
Filed disclosures shall be public records.
(g) The Department shall do each of the following:
(1) Ensure that the donor banks within the network
|
| meet the requirements of subsection (b) on a continuing basis.
|
|
(2) Encourage network donor banks to work
|
| collaboratively with other network donor banks and encourage network donor banks to focus their resources in their respective local or regional area.
|
|
(3) Designate one or more established national or
|
| international cord blood registries to serve as a statewide cord blood stem cell registry.
|
|
(4) Coordinate the donor banks in the network.
In performing these duties, the Department may seek the advice of the advisory committee.
(h) Definitions. As used in this Section:
(1) "Cord blood unit" means the blood collected from
|
| a single placenta and umbilical cord.
|
|
(2) "Donor" means a mother who has delivered a baby
|
| and consents to donate the newborn's blood remaining in the placenta and umbilical cord.
|
|
(3) "Donor bank" means a qualified cord blood stem
|
| cell bank that enters into a contract with the Director under this Section.
|
|
(4) "Human cord blood stem cells" means hematopoietic
|
| stem cells and any other stem cells contained in the neonatal blood collected immediately after the birth from the separated placenta and umbilical cord.
|
|
(5) "Network" means the network of qualified cord
|
| blood stem cell banks established under this Section.
|
|
(Source: P.A. 95-406, eff. 8-24-07.)
|
(20 ILCS 2310/2310-600)
Sec. 2310-600. Advance directive information.
(a) The Department of Public Health shall prepare and publish the summary of
advance directives law, as required by the federal Patient
Self-Determination Act, and related forms. Publication may be limited to the World Wide Web. The summary required under this subsection (a) must include the Department of Public Health Uniform POLST form.
(b) The Department of Public Health shall publish
Spanish language
versions of the following:
(1) The statutory Living Will Declaration form.
(2) The Illinois Statutory Short Form Power of |
| Attorney for Health Care.
|
|
(3) The statutory Declaration of Mental Health
|
|
(4) The summary of advance directives law in Illinois.
(5) The Department of Public Health Uniform POLST
|
|
Publication may be limited to the World Wide Web.
(b-5) In consultation with a statewide professional organization
representing
physicians licensed to practice medicine in all its branches, statewide
organizations representing physician assistants, advanced practice registered nurses, nursing homes, registered professional nurses, and emergency medical systems, and a statewide
organization
representing hospitals, the Department of Public Health shall develop and
publish a uniform
form for practitioner cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) or life-sustaining treatment orders that may be utilized in all
settings. The form shall meet the published minimum requirements to nationally be considered a practitioner orders for life-sustaining treatment form, or POLST, and
may be referred to as the Department of Public Health Uniform POLST form. An electronic version of the Uniform POLST form under this Act may be created, signed, or revoked electronically using a generic, technology-neutral system in which each user is assigned a unique identifier that is securely maintained and in a manner that meets the regulatory requirements for a digital or electronic signature. Compliance with the standards defined in the Uniform Electronic Transactions Act or the implementing rules of the Hospital Licensing Act for medical record entry authentication for author validation of the documentation, content accuracy, and completeness meets this standard. This form does not replace a physician's or other practitioner's authority to make a do-not-resuscitate (DNR) order.
(b-10) In consultation with a statewide professional organization representing physicians licensed to practice medicine in all its branches, statewide organizations representing physician assistants, advanced practice registered nurses, nursing homes, registered professional nurses, and emergency medical systems, a statewide bar association, a national bar association with an Illinois chapter that concentrates in elder and disability law, a not-for-profit organ procurement organization that coordinates organ and tissue donation, a statewide committee or group responsible for stakeholder education about POLST issues, and a statewide organization representing hospitals, the Department of Public Health shall study the feasibility of creating a statewide registry of advance directives and POLST forms. The registry would allow residents of this State to submit the forms and for the forms to be made available to health care providers and professionals in a timely manner for the provision of care or services. This study must be filed with the General Assembly on or before January 1, 2021.
(c) (Blank).
(d) The Department of Public Health shall publish the Department of Public Health Uniform POLST form reflecting the changes made by this amendatory Act of the 98th General Assembly no later than January 1, 2015.
(Source: P.A. 101-163, eff. 1-1-20; 102-38, eff. 6-25-21.)
|
(20 ILCS 2310/2310-640) Sec. 2310-640. Hospital Capital Investment Program.
(a) Subject to appropriation, the Department shall establish and administer a program to award capital grants to Illinois hospitals licensed under the Hospital Licensing Act. Grants awarded under this program shall only be used to fund capital projects to improve or renovate the hospital's facility or to improve, replace or acquire the hospital's equipment or technology. Such projects may include, but are not limited to, projects to satisfy any building code, safety standard or life safety code; projects to maintain, improve, renovate, expand or construct buildings or structures; projects to maintain, establish or improve health information technology; or projects to maintain or improve patient safety, quality of care or access to care. The Department shall establish rules necessary to implement the Hospital Capital Investment Program, including application standards, requirements for the distribution and obligation of grant funds, accounting for the use of the funds, reporting the status of funded projects, and standards for monitoring compliance with standards. In awarding grants under this Section, the Department shall consider criteria that include but are not limited to: the financial requirements of the project and the extent to which the grant makes it possible to implement the project; the proposed project's likely benefit in terms of patient safety or quality of care; and the proposed project's likely benefit in terms of maintaining or improving access to care. The Department shall approve a hospital's eligibility for a hospital capital investment grant pursuant to the standards established by this Section. The Department shall determine eligible project costs, including but not limited to the use of funds for the acquisition, development, construction, reconstruction, rehabilitation, improvement, architectural planning, engineering, and installation of capital facilities consisting of buildings, structures, technology and durable equipment for hospital purposes. No portion of a hospital capital investment grant awarded by the Department may be used by a hospital to pay for any on-going operational costs, pay outstanding debt, or be allocated to an endowment or other invested fund. Nothing in this Section shall exempt nor relieve any hospital receiving a grant under this Section from any requirement of the Illinois Health Facilities Planning Act. (b) Safety Net Hospital Grants. The Department shall make capital grants to hospitals eligible for safety net hospital grants under this subsection. The total amount of grants to any individual hospital shall be no less than $2,500,000 and no more than $7,000,000. The total amount of grants to hospitals under this subsection shall not exceed $100,000,000. Hospitals that satisfy one of the following criteria shall be eligible to apply for safety net hospital grants: (1) Any general acute care hospital located in a |
| county of over 3,000,000 inhabitants that has a Medicaid inpatient utilization rate for the rate year beginning on October 1, 2008 greater than 43%, that is not affiliated with a hospital system that owns or operates more than 3 hospitals, and that has more than 13,500 Medicaid inpatient days.
|
|
(2) Any general acute care hospital that is located
|
| in a county of more than 3,000,000 inhabitants and has a Medicaid inpatient utilization rate for the rate year beginning on October 1, 2008 greater than 55% and has authorized beds for the obstetric-gynecology category of service as reported in the 2008 Annual Hospital Bed Report, issued by the Illinois Department of Public Health.
|
|
(3) Any hospital that is defined in 89 Illinois
|
| Administrative Code Section 149.50(c)(3)(A) and that has less than 20,000 Medicaid inpatient days.
|
|
(4) Any general acute care hospital that is located
|
| in a county of less than 3,000,000 inhabitants and has a Medicaid inpatient utilization rate for the rate year beginning on October 1, 2008 greater than 64%.
|
|
(5) Any general acute care hospital that is located
|
| in a county of over 3,000,000 inhabitants and a city of less than 1,000,000 inhabitants, that has a Medicaid inpatient utilization rate for the rate year beginning on October 1, 2008 greater than 22%, that has more than 12,000 Medicaid inpatient days, and that has a case mix index greater than 0.71.
|
|
(c) Community Hospital Grants. The Department shall make a one-time capital grant to any public or not-for-profit hospitals located in counties of less than 3,000,000 inhabitants that are not otherwise eligible for a grant under subsection (b) of this Section and that have a Medicaid inpatient utilization rate for the rate year beginning on October 1, 2008 of at least 10%. The total amount of grants under this subsection shall not exceed $50,000,000. This grant shall be the sum of the following payments:
(1) For each acute care hospital, a base payment of:
(i) $170,000 if it is located in an urban area;
|
|
(ii) $340,000 if it is located in a rural area.
(2) A payment equal to the product of $45 multiplied
|
| by total Medicaid inpatient days for each hospital.
|
|
(d) Annual report. The Department of Public Health shall prepare and submit to the Governor and the General Assembly an annual report by January 1 of each year regarding its administration of the Hospital Capital Investment Program, including an overview of the program and information about the specific purpose and amount of each grant and the status of funded projects. The report shall include information as to whether each project is subject to and authorized under the Illinois Health Facilities Planning Act, if applicable.
(e) Definitions. As used in this Section, the following terms shall be defined as follows:
"General acute care hospital" shall have the same meaning as general acute care hospital in Section 5A-12.2 of the Illinois Public Aid Code.
"Hospital" shall have the same meaning as defined in Section 3 of the Hospital Licensing Act, but in no event shall it include a hospital owned or operated by a State agency, a State university, or a county with a population of 3,000,000 or more.
"Medicaid inpatient day" shall have the same meaning as defined in Section 5A-12.2(n) of the Illinois Public Aid Code.
"Medicaid inpatient utilization rate" shall have the same meaning as provided in Title 89, Chapter I, subchapter d, Part 148, Section 148.120 of the Illinois Administrative Code.
"Rural" shall have the same meaning as provided in Title 89, Chapter I, subchapter d, Part 148, Section 148.25(g)(3) of the Illinois Administrative Code.
"Urban" shall have the same meaning as provided in Title 89, Chapter I, subchapter d, Part 148, Section 148.25(g)(4) of the Illinois Administrative Code.
(Source: P.A. 96-37, eff. 7-13-09; 96-1000, eff. 7-2-10.)
|
(20 ILCS 2310/2310-642) Sec. 2310-642. Diabetes; transfer of functions from Department of Human Services. (a) Diabetes Research Checkoff Fund; grants. The Diabetes Research Checkoff Fund is a special fund in the State treasury. On and after July 1, 2010, from appropriations to the Department from that Fund, the Department shall make grants to recognized public or private entities in Illinois for the purpose of funding research concerning the disease of diabetes. At least 50% of the grants made from the Fund by the Department shall be made to entities that conduct research for juvenile diabetes. For purposes of this subsection, the term "research" includes, without limitation, expenditures to develop and advance the understanding, techniques, and modalities effective in the detection, prevention, screening, management, and treatment of diabetes and may include clinical trials in Illinois.
Moneys received for the purposes of this subsection, including, without limitation, income tax checkoff receipts and gifts, grants, and awards from any public or private person or entity, shall be deposited into the Fund. Any interest earned on moneys in the Fund must be deposited into the Fund. (b) Diabetes information. On and after July 1, 2010, the Department shall include within its public health promotion programs and materials information to be directed toward population groups in Illinois that are considered at high risk of developing diabetes, asthma, and pulmonary disorders, such as Hispanics, people of African descent, the elderly, obese individuals, persons with high blood sugar content, and persons with a family history of diabetes. The information shall inform members of such high risk groups about the causes and prevention of diabetes, asthma, and pulmonary disorders, the types of treatment for these diseases, and how treatment may be obtained. By February 15, 2011, and each February 15 thereafter, the Department shall file a report with the General Assembly concerning its activities and accomplishments under this subsection during the previous calendar year. (c) Transfer of functions from Department of Human Services. (1) Transfer. On the effective date of this |
| amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly, all functions performed by the Department of Human Services in connection with Sections 10-9 and 10-10 of the Department of Human Services Act (now repealed, and replaced by subsections (a) and (b), respectively, of this Section), together with all of the powers, duties, rights, and responsibilities of the Department of Human Services relating to those functions, are transferred from the Department of Human Services to the Department of Public Health.
|
|
The Department of Human Services and the Department
|
| of Public Health shall cooperate to ensure that the transfer of functions is completed as soon as practical.
|
|
(2) Effect of transfer. Neither the functions
|
| transferred under this subsection, nor any powers, duties, rights, and responsibilities relating to those functions, are affected by this amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly, except that all such functions, powers, duties, rights, and responsibilities shall be performed or exercised by the Department of Public Health on and after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly.
|
|
(3) The staff of the Department of Human Services
|
| engaged in the performance of the functions transferred under this subsection may be transferred to the Department of Public Health. The status and rights of those employees under the Personnel Code shall not be affected by the transfers. The rights of the employees, the State of Illinois, and its agencies under the Personnel Code and applicable collective bargaining agreements, or under any pension, retirement, or annuity plan, shall not be affected by this amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly.
|
|
(4) Books and records transferred. All books,
|
| records, papers, documents, contracts, and pending business pertaining to the functions transferred under this subsection, including but not limited to material in electronic or magnetic format, shall be transferred to the Department of Public Health. The transfer of that information shall not, however, violate any applicable confidentiality constraints.
|
|
(5) Unexpended moneys transferred. All unexpended
|
| appropriation balances and other funds otherwise available to the Department of Human Services for use in connection with the functions transferred under this subsection shall be transferred and made available to the Department of Public Health for use in connection with the functions transferred under this subsection. Unexpended balances so transferred shall be expended only for the purpose for which the appropriations were originally made.
|
|
(6) Exercise of transferred powers; savings
|
| provisions. The powers, duties, rights, and responsibilities relating to the functions transferred under this subsection are vested in and shall be exercised by the Department of Public Health. Each act done in exercise of those powers, duties, rights, and responsibilities shall have the same legal effect as if done by the Department of Human Services or its divisions, officers, or employees.
|
|
(7) Persons subject to penalties. Every officer,
|
| employee, or agent of the Department of Public Health shall, for any offense, be subject to the same penalty or penalties, civil or criminal, as are prescribed by existing laws for the same offense by any officer, employee, or agent whose powers or duties were transferred under this subsection.
|
|
(8) Reports or notices. Whenever reports or notices
|
| are now required to be made or given or papers or documents furnished or served by any person to or upon the Department of Human Services in connection with any of the functions transferred under this subsection, the same shall be made, given, furnished, or served in the same manner to or upon the Department of Public Health.
|
|
(9) This subsection shall not affect any act done,
|
| ratified, or canceled, or any right occurring or established, or any action or proceeding had or commenced in an administrative, civil, or criminal case, regarding the functions of the Department of Human Services before this amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly takes effect; such actions may be prosecuted, defended, or continued by the Department of Public Health.
|
|
(10) Rules. Any rules of the Department of Human
|
| Services that relate to the functions transferred under this subsection that are in full force on the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly, and that have been duly adopted by the Department of Human Services, shall become the rules of the Department of Public Health. This subsection shall not affect the legality of any such rules in the Illinois Administrative Code. Any proposed rules filed with the Secretary of State by the Department of Human Services that are pending in the rulemaking process on the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly, and that pertain to the functions transferred, shall be deemed to have been filed by the Department of Public Health. As soon as practicable after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly, the Department of Public Health shall revise and clarify the rules transferred to it under this subsection to reflect the reorganization of powers, duties, rights, and responsibilities affected by this subsection, using the procedures for recodification of rules available under the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act, except that existing title, part, and section numbering for the affected rules may be retained.
|
|
The Department of Public Health, consistent with the
|
| Department of Human Services' authority to do so, may propose and adopt, under the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act, such other rules of the Department of Human Services that will now be administered by the Department of Public Health.
|
|
To the extent that, prior to the effective date of
|
| the transfer of functions under this subsection, the Secretary of Human Services had been empowered to prescribe regulations or had other authority with respect to the transferred functions, such duties shall be exercised from and after the effective date of the transfer by the Director of Public Health.
|
|
(11) Successor Agency Act. For the purposes of the
|
| Successor Agency Act, the Department of Public Health is declared to be the successor agency of the Department of Human Services, but only with respect to the functions that are transferred to the Department of Public Health under this subsection.
|
|
(12) Statutory references. Whenever a provision of
|
| law refers to the Department of Human Services in connection with its performance of a function that is transferred to the Department of Public Health under this subsection, that provision shall be deemed to refer to the Department of Public Health on and after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly.
|
|
(Source: P.A. 96-1406, eff. 7-29-10.)
|
(20 ILCS 2310/2310-643) Sec. 2310-643. Illinois State Diabetes Commission. (a) Commission established. The Illinois State Diabetes Commission is established within the Department of Public Health. The Commission shall consist of members that are residents of this State and shall include an Executive Committee appointed by the Director. The members of the Commission shall be appointed by the Director as follows: (1) The Director or the Director's designee, who |
| shall serve as chairperson of the Commission.
|
|
(2) Physicians who are board certified in
|
| endocrinology, with at least one physician with expertise and experience in the treatment of childhood diabetes and at least one physician with expertise and experience in the treatment of adult onset diabetes.
|
|
(3) Health care professionals with expertise and
|
| experience in the prevention, treatment, and control of diabetes.
|
|
(4) Representatives of organizations or groups that
|
| advocate on behalf of persons suffering from diabetes.
|
|
(5) Representatives of voluntary health organizations
|
| or advocacy groups with an interest in the prevention, treatment, and control of diabetes.
|
|
(6) Members of the public who have been diagnosed
|
|
The Director may appoint additional members deemed necessary and appropriate by the Director.
Members of the Commission shall be appointed by June 1, 2010. A member shall continue to serve
until his or her successor is duly appointed and qualified.
(b) Meetings. Meetings shall be held 3 times per year or at the call of the Commission chairperson.
(c) Reimbursement. Members shall serve without compensation but shall, subject to appropriation,
be reimbursed for reasonable and necessary expenses actually incurred in the performance
of the member's official duties.
(d) Department support. The Department shall
provide administrative support and current staff as necessary for the effective operation
of the Commission.
(e) Duties. The Commission shall perform all of the following duties:
(1) Hold public hearings to gather information from
|
| the general public on issues pertaining to the prevention, treatment, and control of diabetes.
|
|
(2) Develop a strategy for the prevention, treatment,
|
| and control of diabetes in this State.
|
|
(3) Examine the needs of adults, children, racial and
|
| ethnic minorities, and medically underserved populations who have diabetes.
|
|
(4) Prepare and make available an annual report on
|
| the activities of the Commission to the Director, the Speaker of the House of Representatives, the Minority Leader of the House of Representatives, the President of the Senate, the Minority Leader of the Senate, and the Governor by June 30 of each year, beginning on June 30, 2011.
|
|
(f) Funding. The Department may accept on behalf of the
Commission any federal funds or gifts and donations from individuals, private organizations,
and foundations and any other funds that may become available.
(g) Rules. The Director may adopt rules to implement and administer this Section.
(h) Report. By January 10, 2015 and January 10 of each odd-numbered year thereafter, the Commission shall submit a report to the General Assembly containing the following:
(1) the financial impact and reach that diabetes of
|
| all types is having on the State and the Department; this assessment shall include the number of people with diabetes impacted in this State or covered by the State Medicaid program, the number of people with diabetes and family members impacted by prevention and diabetes control programs implemented by the Department, the financial toll or impact diabetes and its complications places on the Department's diabetes program, and the financial toll or impact diabetes and its complications places on the diabetes program in comparison to other chronic diseases and conditions;
|
|
(2) an assessment of the benefits of implemented
|
| programs and activities aimed at controlling diabetes and preventing the disease; this assessment shall also document the amount and source for any funding directed to the Department from the General Assembly for programs and activities aimed at reaching those with diabetes;
|
|
(3) a description of the level of coordination that
|
| exists between the Department and other entities on activities, programs, and messaging on managing, treating, or preventing all forms of diabetes and its complications;
|
|
(4) the development or revision of a detailed action
|
| plan for battling diabetes with a range of actionable items for consideration by the General Assembly; the plan shall identify proposed action steps to reduce the impact of diabetes, pre-diabetes, and related diabetes complications; the plan shall also identify expected outcomes of the action steps proposed for the 2 years following the submission of the report while also establishing benchmarks for controlling and preventing relevant forms of diabetes; and
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|
(5) the development of a detailed budget blueprint
|
| identifying needs, costs, and resources required to implement the plan identified in item (4) of this subsection (h); this blueprint shall include a budget range for all options presented in the plan identified in item (4) of this subsection (h) for consideration by the General Assembly.
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|
The Department of Healthcare and Family Services shall provide cooperation to the Department of Public Health to facilitate the implementation of this subsection (h).
(Source: P.A. 98-97, eff. 1-1-14.)
|
(20 ILCS 2310/2310-670) Sec. 2310-670. Breast cancer patient education. (a) The General Assembly makes the following findings: (1) Annually, about 207,090 new cases of breast |
| cancer are diagnosed, according to the American Cancer Society.
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|
(2) Breast cancer has a disproportionate and
|
| detrimental impact on African-American women and is the most common cancer among Hispanic and Latina women.
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|
(3) African-American women under the age of 40 have a
|
| greater incidence of breast cancer than Caucasian women of the same age.
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|
(4) Individuals undergoing surgery for breast cancer
|
| should give due consideration to the option of breast reconstructive surgery, either at the same time as the breast cancer surgery or at a later date.
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|
(5) According to the American Cancer Society,
|
| immediate breast reconstruction offers the advantage of combining the breast cancer surgery with the reconstructive surgery and is cost effective.
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|
(6) According to the American Cancer Society, delayed
|
| breast reconstruction may be advantageous in women who require post-surgical radiation or other treatments.
|
|
(7) A woman suffering from the loss of her breast may
|
| not be a candidate for surgical breast reconstruction or may choose not to undergo additional surgery and instead choose breast prostheses.
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|
(8) The federal Women's Health and Cancer Rights Act
|
| of 1998 requires health plans that offer breast cancer coverage to also provide for breast reconstruction.
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|
(9) Required coverage for breast reconstruction
|
| includes all the necessary stages of reconstruction. Surgery of the opposite breast for symmetry may be required. Breast prostheses may be necessary. Other sequelae of breast cancer treatment, such as lymphedema, must be covered.
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|
(10) Several states have enacted laws to require that
|
| women receive information on their breast cancer treatment and reconstruction options.
|
|
(b) In this Section:
"Hispanic" has the same meaning as in Section 1707 of
|
| the federal Public Health Service Act.
|
|
"Racial and ethnic minority group" has the same
|
| meaning as in Section 1707 of the federal Public Health Services Act.
|
|
(c) The Director shall provide for the planning and implementation of an education campaign to inform breast cancer patients, especially those in racial and ethnic minority groups, anticipating surgery regarding the availability and coverage of breast reconstruction, prostheses, and other options. The
campaign shall include the dissemination, at a minimum, on relevant State health Internet websites, including the Department of Public Health's Internet website, of the following information:
(1) Breast reconstruction is possible at the time of
|
| breast cancer surgery or in a delayed fashion.
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|
(2) Prostheses or breast forms may be available.
(3) Federal law mandates both public and private
|
| health plans to include coverage of breast reconstruction and prostheses.
|
|
(4) The patient has a right to choose the provider of
|
| reconstructive care, including the potential transfer of care to a surgeon that provides breast reconstructive care.
|
|
(5) The patient may opt to undergo breast
|
| reconstruction in a delayed fashion for personal reasons or after completion of all other breast cancer treatments.
|
|
The campaign may include dissemination of such other information, whether developed by the Director or by other entities, as the Director determines relevant.
The campaign shall not specify, or be designed to serve as a tool to limit, the health care providers available to patients.
(d) In developing the information to be disseminated under this Section, the Director shall consult with appropriate medical societies and patient advocates related to breast cancer, patient advocates representing racial and ethnic minority groups, with a special emphasis on African-American and Hispanic populations' breast reconstructive surgery, and breast prostheses and breast forms.
(e) Beginning no later than January 1, 2016 (2 years after the effective date of Public Act 98-479) and continuing each second year thereafter, the Director shall submit to the General Assembly a report describing the activities carried out under this Section during the preceding 2 fiscal years, including evaluating the extent to which the activities have been effective in improving the health of racial and ethnic minority groups.
(Source: P.A. 102-558, eff. 8-20-21.)
|
(20 ILCS 2310/2310-676) Sec. 2310-676. Advisory council on pediatric autoimmune neuropsychiatric disorder associated with streptococcal infections and pediatric acute neuropsychiatric syndrome. (a) There is established an advisory council on pediatric autoimmune neuropsychiatric disorder associated with streptococcal infections and pediatric acute neuropsychiatric syndrome to advise the Director of Public Health on research, diagnosis, treatment, and education relating to the disorder and syndrome. (b) The advisory council shall consist of the following members, who shall be appointed by the Director of Public Health within 60 days after August 7, 2015 (the effective date of Public Act 99-320): (1) An immunologist licensed and practicing in this |
| State who has experience treating persons with pediatric autoimmune neuropsychiatric disorder associated with streptococcal infections and pediatric acute neuropsychiatric syndrome and the use of intravenous immunoglobulin.
|
|
(2) A health care provider licensed and practicing in
|
| this State who has expertise in treating persons with pediatric autoimmune neuropsychiatric disorder associated with streptococcal infections and pediatric acute neuropsychiatric syndrome and autism.
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|
(3) A representative of PANDAS/PANS Advocacy &
|
|
(4) An osteopathic physician licensed and practicing
|
| in this State who has experience treating persons with pediatric autoimmune neuropsychiatric disorder associated with streptococcal infections and pediatric acute neuropsychiatric syndrome.
|
|
(5) A medical researcher with experience conducting
|
| research concerning pediatric autoimmune neuropsychiatric disorder associated with streptococcal infections, pediatric acute neuropsychiatric syndrome, obsessive-compulsive disorder, tic disorder, and other neurological disorders.
|
|
(6) A certified dietitian-nutritionist practicing in
|
| this State who provides services to children with autism spectrum disorder, attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder, and other neuro-developmental conditions.
|
|
(7) A representative of a professional organization
|
| in this State for school psychologists.
|
|
(8) A child psychiatrist who has experience treating
|
| persons with pediatric autoimmune neuropsychiatric disorder associated with streptococcal infections and pediatric acute neuropsychiatric syndrome.
|
|
(9) A representative of a professional organization
|
| in this State for school nurses.
|
|
(10) A pediatrician who has experience treating
|
| persons with pediatric autoimmune neuropsychiatric disorder associated with streptococcal infections and pediatric acute neuropsychiatric syndrome.
|
|
(11) A representative of an organization focused on
|
|
(12) A parent with a child who has been diagnosed
|
| with pediatric autoimmune neuropsychiatric disorder associated with streptococcal infections or pediatric acute neuropsychiatric syndrome and autism.
|
|
(13) A social worker licensed and practicing in this
|
|
(14) A representative of the Special Education
|
| Services division of the State Board of Education.
|
|
(15) One member of the General Assembly appointed by
|
| the Speaker of the House of Representatives.
|
|
(16) One member of the General Assembly appointed by
|
| the President of the Senate.
|
|
(17) One member of the General Assembly appointed by
|
| the Minority Leader of the House of Representatives.
|
|
(18) One member of the General Assembly appointed by
|
| the Minority Leader of the Senate.
|
|
(c) The Director of Public Health, or his or her designee, shall be an ex officio, nonvoting member and shall attend all meetings of the advisory council. Any member of the advisory council appointed under this Section may be a member of the General Assembly. Members shall receive no compensation for their services.
(d) The Director of Public Health shall schedule the first meeting of the advisory council, which shall be held not later than 90 days after August 7, 2015 (the effective date of Public Act 99-320). A majority of the council members shall constitute a quorum. A majority vote of a quorum shall be required for any official action of the advisory council. The advisory council shall meet upon the call of the chairperson or upon the request of a majority of council members.
(e) Not later than January 1, 2017, and annually thereafter, the advisory council shall issue a report to the General Assembly with recommendations concerning:
(1) practice guidelines for the diagnosis and
|
| treatment of the disorder and syndrome;
|
|
(2) mechanisms to increase clinical awareness and
|
| education regarding the disorder and syndrome among physicians, including pediatricians, school-based health centers, and providers of mental health services;
|
|
(3) outreach to educators and parents to increase
|
| awareness of the disorder and syndrome; and
|
|
(4) development of a network of volunteer experts on
|
| the diagnosis and treatment of the disorder and syndrome to assist in education and outreach.
|
|
(Source: P.A. 99-320, eff. 8-7-15; 100-863, eff. 8-14-18.)
|
(20 ILCS 2310/2310-690) Sec. 2310-690. Cytomegalovirus public education. (a) In this Section: "CMV" means cytomegalovirus. "Health care professional and provider" means any |
| physician, advanced practice registered nurse, physician assistant, hospital facility, or other person that is licensed or otherwise authorized to deliver health care services.
|
|
(b) The Department shall develop or approve and publish informational materials for women who may become pregnant, expectant parents, and parents of infants regarding:
(1) the incidence of CMV;
(2) the transmission of CMV to pregnant women and
|
| women who may become pregnant;
|
|
(3) birth defects caused by congenital CMV;
(4) methods of diagnosing congenital CMV; and
(5) available preventive measures to avoid the
|
| infection of women who are pregnant or may become pregnant.
|
|
(c) The Department shall publish the information required under subsection (b) on its Internet website.
(d) The Department shall publish information to:
(1) educate women who may become pregnant, expectant
|
| parents, and parents of infants about CMV; and
|
|
(2) raise awareness of CMV among health care
|
| professionals and providers who provide care to expectant mothers or infants.
|
|
(e) The Department may solicit and accept the assistance of any relevant health care professional associations or community resources, including faith-based resources, to promote education about CMV under this Section.
(f) If a newborn infant fails the 2 initial hearing screenings in the hospital, then the hospital performing that screening shall provide to the parents of the newborn infant information regarding: (i) birth defects caused by congenital CMV; (ii) testing opportunities and options for CMV, including the opportunity to test for CMV before leaving the hospital; and (iii) early intervention services. Health care professionals and providers may, but are not required to, use the materials developed by the Department for distribution to parents of newborn infants.
(Source: P.A. 99-424, eff. 1-1-16; 99-581, eff. 1-1-17; 99-642, eff. 7-28-16; 100-513, eff. 1-1-18 .)
|
(20 ILCS 2310/2310-715) Sec. 2310-715. Safety-Net Hospital Health Equity and Access Leadership (HEAL) Grant Program. (a) Findings. The General Assembly finds that there are communities in Illinois that experience significant health care disparities, as recently emphasized by the COVID-19 pandemic, aggravated by social determinants of health and a lack of sufficient access to high quality health care resources, particularly community-based services, preventive care, obstetric care, chronic disease management, and specialty care. Safety-net hospitals, as defined under the Illinois Public Aid Code, serve as the anchors of the health care system for many of these communities. Safety-net hospitals not only care for their patients, they also are rooted in their communities by providing jobs and partnering with local organizations to help address the social determinants of health, such as food, housing, and transportation needs. However, safety-net hospitals serve a significant number of Medicare, Medicaid, and uninsured patients, and therefore, are heavily dependent on underfunded government payers, and are heavily burdened by uncompensated care. At the same time, the overall cost of providing care has increased substantially in recent years, driven by increasing costs for staffing, prescription drugs, technology, and infrastructure. For all of these reasons, the General Assembly finds that the long-term sustainability of safety-net hospitals is threatened. While the General Assembly is providing funding to the Department to be paid to support the expenses of specific safety-net hospitals in State Fiscal Year 2023, such annual, ad hoc funding is not a reliable and stable source of funding that will enable safety-net hospitals to develop strategies to achieve long term sustainability. Such annual, ad hoc funding also does not provide the State with transparency and accountability to ensure that such funding is being used effectively and efficiently to maximize the benefit to members of the community. Therefore, it is the intent of the General Assembly that the Department of Public Health and the Department of Healthcare and Family Services jointly provide options and recommendations to the General Assembly by February 1, 2023, for the establishment of a permanent Safety-Net Hospital Health Equity and Access Leadership (HEAL) Grant Program, in accordance with this Section. It is the intention of the General Assembly that during State fiscal years 2024 through 2029, the Safety-Net Hospital Health Equity and Access Leadership (HEAL) Grant Program shall be supported by an annual funding pool of up to $100,000,000, subject to appropriation. (b) By February 1, 2023, the Department of Public Health and the Department of Healthcare and Family Services shall provide a joint report to the General Assembly on options and recommendations for the establishment of a permanent Safety-Net Hospital Health Equity and Access Leadership (HEAL) Grant Program to be administered by the State. For this report, "safety-net hospital" means a hospital identified by the Department of Healthcare and Family Services under Section 5-5e.1 of the Illinois Public Aid Code. The Departments of Public Health and Healthcare and Family Services may consult with the statewide association representing a majority of hospitals and safety-net hospitals on the report. The report may include, but need not be limited to: (1) Criteria for a safety-net hospital to be |
| eligible for the program, such as:
|
|
(A) The hospital is a participating provider in
|
| at least one Medicaid managed care plan.
|
|
(B) The hospital is located in a medically
|
|
(C) The hospital's Medicaid utilization rate
|
| (for both inpatient and outpatient services).
|
|
(D) The hospital's Medicare utilization rate
|
| (for both inpatient and outpatient services).
|
|
(E) The hospital's uncompensated care
|
|
(F) The hospital's role in providing access to
|
| services, reducing health disparities, and improving health equity in its service area.
|
|
(G) The hospital's performance on quality
|
|
(2) Potential projects eligible for grant funds
|
| which may include projects to reduce health disparities, advance health equity, or improve access to or the quality of health care services.
|
|
(3) Potential policies, standards, and procedures to
|
| ensure accountability for the use of grant funds.
|
|
(4) Potential strategies to generate federal
|
| Medicaid matching funds for expenditures under the program.
|
|
(5) Potential policies, processes, and procedures for
|
| the administration of the program.
|
|
(Source: P.A. 102-886, eff. 5-17-22; 103-154, eff. 6-30-23.)
|
(20 ILCS 2310/2310-730) (Text of Section from P.A. 103-588) Sec. 2310-730. Health care telementoring. (a) Subject to appropriation, the Department shall designate one or more health care telementoring entities based on an application to be developed by the Department. Applicants shall demonstrate a record of expertise and demonstrated success in providing health care telementoring services. The Department may adopt rules necessary for the implementation of this Section. Funding may be provided based on the number of health care providers or professionals who are assisted by each approved health care telementoring entity and the hours of assistance provided to each health care provider or professional in addition to other factors as determined by the Director. (b) In this Section: "Health care providers or professionals" means individuals trained to provide health care or related services. "Health care providers or professionals" includes, but is not limited to, physicians, nurses, physician assistants, speech language pathologists, social workers, and school personnel involved in screening for targeted conditions and providing support to students impacted by those conditions. "Health care telementoring" means a program: (1) that is based on interactive video or phone |
| technology that connects groups of local health care providers or professionals in urban and rural underserved areas with specialists in regular real-time collaborative sessions;
|
|
(2) that is designed around case-based learning and
|
|
(3) that helps local health care providers or
|
| professionals gain the expertise required to more effectively provide needed services.
|
|
"Health care telementoring" includes, but is not limited to, a program provided to improve services in one or more of a variety of areas, including, but not limited to, chronic disease, communicable disease, atypical vision or hearing, adolescent health, Hepatitis C, complex diabetes, geriatrics, mental illness, opioid use disorders, substance use disorders, maternity care, childhood adversity and trauma, pediatric ADHD, congregate settings, including justice involved systems, and other priorities identified by the Department.
(Source: P.A. 103-588, eff. 6-5-24.)
(Text of Section from P.A. 103-860)
(This Section may contain text from a Public Act with a delayed effective date )
Sec. 2310-730. Diversity in clinical trials.
(a) As used in this Section, "underrepresented community" or "underrepresented demographic group" means a community or demographic group that is more likely to be historically marginalized and less likely to be included in research and clinical trials represented by race, ethnicity, sex, sexual orientation, socioeconomic status, age, and geographic location.
(b) Any State entity or hospital that receives funding from the National Institutes of Health for the purpose of conducting clinical trials of drugs or medical devices is required to:
(1) adopt a policy that will result in the
|
| identification and recruitment of persons who are members of underrepresented demographic groups to participate in the clinical trials and that:
|
|
(A) includes specific strategies for trial
|
| enrollment and retention of diverse participants, including, but not limited to, site location and access, sustained community engagement, and reducing burdens due to trial design or conduct, as appropriate; and
|
|
(B) uses strategies recommended by the United
|
| States Food and Drug Administration to identify and recruit those persons to participate in the clinical trials;
|
|
(2) provide information to trial participants in
|
| languages other than English in accordance with current federal requirements;
|
|
(3) provide translation services or bilingual staff
|
| for trial recruitment and consent processes;
|
|
(4) provide culturally specific recruitment materials
|
| alongside general enrollment materials; and
|
|
(5) provide remote consent options when not
|
| prohibited by the granting entity or federal regulations.
|
|
(c) The Department, through voluntary reporting from research institutions and in consultation with community-based organizations and other stakeholders as appropriate and available, shall analyze and provide recommendations on the following:
(1) the demographic groups and populations that are
|
| currently represented and underrepresented in clinical trials in Illinois, including representation of groups based on their geographic location;
|
|
(2) the barriers that prevent persons who are members
|
| of underrepresented demographic groups from participating in clinical trials in Illinois, including barriers related to transportation; and
|
|
(3) approaches for how clinical trials can
|
| successfully partner with community-based organizations and others to provide outreach to underrepresented communities.
|
|
By July 1, 2026, the Department shall issue a report and post on its website the results of the analysis required under this subsection and any recommendations to increase diversity and reduce barriers for participants in clinical trials.
(d) The Department shall review the most recent guidance on race and ethnicity data collection in clinical trials published by the United States Food and Drug Administration and establish, using existing infrastructure and tools an Internet website that:
(1) provides information concerning methods
|
| recognized by the United States Food and Drug Administration for identifying and recruiting persons who are members of underrepresented demographic groups to participate in clinical trials; and
|
|
(2) contains links to Internet websites maintained by
|
| medical facilities, health authorities and other local governmental entities, nonprofit organizations, and scientific investigators and institutions that are performing research relating to drugs or medical devices in this State.
|
|
The Department may apply for grants from any source, including, without limitation, the Federal Government, to fund the requirements of this Section.
(Source: P.A. 103-860, eff. 1-1-25.)
(Text of Section from P.A. 103-964)
(This Section may contain text from a Public Act with a delayed effective date )
Sec. 2310-730. Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy Awareness Program.
(a) Subject to appropriation, the Department of Public Health, in conjunction with experts in the field of Duchenne muscular dystrophy, shall develop mandatory protocols and best practices for providing the necessary medical guidance for Duchenne muscular dystrophy in Illinois.
(b) To raise awareness about Duchenne muscular dystrophy, the protocols and best practices developed by the Department under subsection (a):
(1) shall be published on a designated and publicly
|
|
(2) shall include up-to-date information about
|
| Duchenne muscular dystrophy;
|
|
(3) shall reference peer-reviewed scientific research
|
|
(4) shall incorporate guidance and recommendations
|
| from the National Institutes of Health, and any other persons or entities determined by the Department to have particular expertise in Duchenne muscular dystrophy; and
|
|
(5) shall be distributed to physicians, other health
|
| care professionals and providers, and persons subject to Duchenne muscular dystrophy.
|
|
(c) The Department shall prepare a report of all efforts undertaken by the Department under this Section. The report shall be posted on the Department's website and distributed to local health departments and to any other facilities as determined by the Department.
(Source: P.A. 103-964, eff. 1-1-25.)
|