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Public Act 103-1064
Public Act 1064 103RD GENERAL ASSEMBLY | Public Act 103-1064 | HB5373 Enrolled | LRB103 36911 RLC 67024 b |
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| AN ACT concerning criminal law. | Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois, | represented in the General Assembly: | Section 5. The Illinois Controlled Substances Act is | amended by changing Section 318 and by adding Section 315.7 as | follows: | (720 ILCS 570/315.7 new) | Sec. 315.7. Chronic pain treatment. | (a) In this Section: | "Chronic pain" means a state in which pain persists beyond | the usual course of an acute disease or healing of an injury, | or which may or may not be associated with an acute or chronic | pathologic process that causes continuous or intermittent pain | over months or years. "Chronic pain" is considered to be pain | that persists for more than 12 weeks and is adversely | affecting the function or well-being of the individual. | "Opioid" means a narcotic drug or substance that is a | Schedule II controlled substance under paragraph (1), (2), | (3), or (5) of subsection (b) or under subsection (c) of | Section 206. | (b) Decisions regarding the treatment of patients | experiencing chronic pain shall be made by the prescriber with | dispensing by the pharmacist in accordance with the |
| corresponding responsibility as described in 21 CFR 1306.04(a) | and 77 Ill. Adm. Code 3100.380(a). | (c) Ordering, prescribing, dispensing, administering, or | paying for controlled substances, including opioids, shall not | in any way be predetermined by specific morphine milligram | equivalent guidelines except as provided under federal law. | (d) Nothing in this Section shall interfere with the | review of prescriptions by the Prescription Monitoring | Program's Peer Review Committee. In reviewing prescriptions | for chronic pain, the peer review committee members shall | review the most updated clinical guidelines on treating | chronic pain for the period the prescriptions were written. | (720 ILCS 570/318) | (Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 103-881 ) | Sec. 318. Confidentiality of information. | (a) Information received by the central repository under | Section 316 and former Section 321 is confidential. | (a-1) To ensure the federal Health Insurance Portability | and Accountability Act and confidentiality of substance use | disorder patient records rules that mandate the privacy of an | individual's prescription data reported to the Prescription | Monitoring Program received from a retail dispenser under this | Act, and in order to execute the duties and responsibilities | under Section 316 of this Act and rules for disclosure under | this Section, the Clinical Director of the Prescription |
| Monitoring Program or his or her designee shall maintain | direct access to all Prescription Monitoring Program data. Any | request for Prescription Monitoring Program data from any | other department or agency must be approved in writing by the | Clinical Director of the Prescription Monitoring Program or | his or her designee unless otherwise permitted by law. | Prescription Monitoring Program data shall only be disclosed | as permitted by law. Confidential information received from | opioid treatment programs or confidential information | otherwise protected under federal confidentiality of substance | use disorder patient records regulations under 42 CFR Part 2 | shall not be included in the information shared. | (a-2) As an active step to address the current opioid | crisis in this State and to prevent and reduce addiction | resulting from a sports injury or an accident, the | Prescription Monitoring Program and the Department of Public | Health shall coordinate a continuous review of the | Prescription Monitoring Program and the Department of Public | Health data to determine if a patient may be at risk of opioid | addiction. Each patient discharged from any medical facility | with an International Classification of Disease, 10th edition | code related to a sport or accident injury shall be subject to | the data review. If the discharged patient is dispensed a | controlled substance, the Prescription Monitoring Program | shall alert the patient's prescriber as to the addiction risk | and urge each to follow the Centers for Disease Control and |
| Prevention guidelines or his or her respective profession's | treatment guidelines related to the patient's injury. This | subsection (a-2), other than this sentence, is inoperative on | or after January 1, 2024. | (b) The Department must carry out a program to protect the | confidentiality of the information described in subsection | (a). The Department may disclose the information to another | person only under subsection (c), (d), or (f) and may charge a | fee not to exceed the actual cost of furnishing the | information. | (c) The Department may disclose confidential information | described in subsection (a) to any person who is engaged in | receiving, processing, or storing the information. | (d) The Department may release confidential information | described in subsection (a) to the following persons: | (1) A governing body that licenses practitioners and | is engaged in an investigation, an adjudication, or a | prosecution of a violation under any State or federal law | that involves a controlled substance. | (2) An investigator for the Consumer Protection | Division of the office of the Attorney General, a | prosecuting attorney, the Attorney General, a deputy | Attorney General, or an investigator from the office of | the Attorney General, who is engaged in any of the | following activities involving controlled substances: | (A) an investigation; |
| (B) an adjudication; or | (C) a prosecution of a violation under any State | or federal law that involves a controlled substance. | (3) A law enforcement officer who is: | (A) authorized by the Illinois State Police or the | office of a county sheriff or State's Attorney or | municipal police department of Illinois to receive | information of the type requested for the purpose of | investigations involving controlled substances; or | (B) approved by the Department to receive | information of the type requested for the purpose of | investigations involving controlled substances; and | (C) engaged in the investigation or prosecution of | a violation under any State or federal law that | involves a controlled substance. | (4) Select representatives of the Department of | Children and Family Services through the indirect online | request process. Access shall be established by an | intergovernmental agreement between the Department of | Children and Family Services and the Department of Human | Services. | (e) Before the Department releases confidential | information under subsection (d), all of the following must be | demonstrated the applicant must demonstrate in writing to the | Department by the applicant that : | (1) the applicant has reason to believe that a |
| violation under any State or federal law that involves a | controlled substance has occurred; and | (2) the requested information is reasonably related to | the investigation, adjudication, or prosecution of the | violation described in subdivision (1) ; and . | (3) the applicant has a valid court order or subpoena, | or an administrative subpoena issued by the Department of | Financial and Professional Regulation, for the | confidential information requested. | (f) The Department may receive and release confidential | prescription record information collected under Sections 316 | and 321 (now repealed) that identifies vendors or | practitioners, or both, who are prescribing or dispensing | large quantities of Schedule II, III, IV, or V controlled | substances outside the scope of their practice, pharmacy, or | business, as determined by the Advisory Committee created by | Section 320, prescription record information under Section 316 | and former Section 321 to: | (1) a governing body that licenses practitioners; | (2) an investigator for the Consumer Protection | Division of the office of the Attorney General, a | prosecuting attorney, the Attorney General, a deputy | Attorney General, or an investigator from the office of | the Attorney General; | (3) any Illinois law enforcement officer who is: | (A) authorized to receive the type of information |
| released; and | (B) approved by the Department to receive the type | of information released; or | (4) prescription monitoring entities in other states | per the provisions outlined in subsection (g) and (h) | below . ; | confidential prescription record information collected under | Sections 316 and 321 (now repealed) that identifies vendors or | practitioners, or both, who are prescribing or dispensing | large quantities of Schedule II, III, IV, or V controlled | substances outside the scope of their practice, pharmacy, or | business, as determined by the Advisory Committee created by | Section 320. | (f-5) In accordance with a confidentiality agreement | entered into with the Department, a medical director, or a | public health administrator and their delegated analysts, of a | county or municipal health department or the Department of | Public Health shall have access to data from the system for any | of the following purposes: | (1) developing education programs or public health | interventions relating to prescribing trends and | controlled substance use; or | (2) conducting analyses and publish reports on | prescribing trends in their respective jurisdictions. | At a minimum, the confidentiality agreement entered into | with the Department shall: |
| (i) prohibit analysis and reports produced under | subparagraph (2) from including information that | identifies, by name, license, or address, any | practitioner, dispenser, ultimate user, or other person | administering a controlled substance; and | (ii) specify the appropriate technical and physical | safeguards that the county or municipal health department | must implement to ensure the privacy and security of data | obtained from the system. The data from the system shall | not be admissible as evidence, nor discoverable in any | action of any kind in any court or before any tribunal, | board, agency, or person. The disclosure of any such | information or data, whether proper or improper, shall not | waive or have any effect upon its confidentiality, | non-discoverability, or non-admissibility. | (g) The information described in subsection (f) may not be | released until it has been reviewed by an employee of the | Department who is licensed as a prescriber or a dispenser and | until that employee has certified that further investigation | is warranted. Upon review and approval by a licensed | prescriber or dispenser, or trained designee, the Prescription | Monitoring Program may release information described in | subsection (f). However, failure to comply with this | subsection (g) does not invalidate the use of any evidence | that is otherwise admissible in a proceeding described in | subsection (h). |
| (h) An investigator or a law enforcement officer receiving | confidential information under subsection (c), (d), or (f) may | disclose the information to a law enforcement officer or an | attorney for the office of the Attorney General for use as | evidence in the following: | (1) A proceeding under any State or federal law that | involves a controlled substance. | (2) A criminal proceeding or a proceeding in juvenile | court that involves a controlled substance. | (i) The Department may compile statistical reports from | the information described in subsection (a). The reports must | not include information that identifies, by name, license or | address, any practitioner, dispenser, ultimate user, or other | person administering a controlled substance. | (j) Based upon federal, initial and maintenance funding, a | prescriber and dispenser inquiry system shall be developed to | assist the health care community in its goal of effective | clinical practice and to prevent patients from diverting or | abusing medications. | (1) An inquirer shall have read-only access to a | stand-alone database which shall contain records for the | previous 12 months. | (2) Dispensers may, upon positive and secure | identification, make an inquiry on a patient or customer | solely for a medical purpose as delineated within the | federal HIPAA law. |
| (3) The Department shall provide a one-to-one secure | link and encrypted software necessary to establish the | link between an inquirer and the Department. Technical | assistance shall also be provided. | (4) Written inquiries are acceptable but must include | the fee and the requester's Drug Enforcement | Administration license number and submitted upon the | requester's business stationery. | (5) As directed by the Prescription Monitoring Program | Advisory Committee and the Clinical Director for the | Prescription Monitoring Program, aggregate data that does | not indicate any prescriber, practitioner, dispenser, or | patient may be used for clinical studies. | (6) Tracking analysis shall be established and used | per administrative rule. | (7) Nothing in this Act or Illinois law shall be | construed to require a prescriber or dispenser to make use | of this inquiry system. | (8) If there is an adverse outcome because of a | prescriber or dispenser making an inquiry, which is | initiated in good faith, the prescriber or dispenser shall | be held harmless from any civil liability. | (k) The Department shall establish, by rule, the process | by which to evaluate possible erroneous association of | prescriptions to any licensed prescriber or end user of the | Illinois Prescription Information Library (PIL). |
| (l) The Prescription Monitoring Program Advisory Committee | is authorized to evaluate the need for and method of | establishing a patient specific identifier. | (m) Patients who identify prescriptions attributed to them | that were not obtained by them shall be given access to their | personal prescription history pursuant to the validation | process as set forth by administrative rule. | (n) The Prescription Monitoring Program is authorized to | develop operational push reports to entities with compatible | electronic medical records. The process shall be covered | within administrative rule established by the Department. | (o) Hospital emergency departments and freestanding | healthcare facilities providing healthcare to walk-in patients | may obtain, for the purpose of improving patient care, a | unique identifier for each shift to utilize the PIL system. | (p) The Prescription Monitoring Program shall | automatically create a log-in to the inquiry system when a | prescriber or dispenser obtains or renews his or her | controlled substance license. The Department of Financial and | Professional Regulation must provide the Prescription | Monitoring Program with electronic access to the license | information of a prescriber or dispenser to facilitate the | creation of this profile. The Prescription Monitoring Program | shall send the prescriber or dispenser information regarding | the inquiry system, including instructions on how to log into | the system, instructions on how to use the system to promote |
| effective clinical practice, and opportunities for continuing | education for the prescribing of controlled substances. The | Prescription Monitoring Program shall also send to all | enrolled prescribers, dispensers, and designees information | regarding the unsolicited reports produced pursuant to Section | 314.5 of this Act. | (q) A prescriber or dispenser may authorize a designee to | consult the inquiry system established by the Department under | this subsection on his or her behalf, provided that all the | following conditions are met: | (1) the designee so authorized is employed by the same | hospital or health care system; is employed by the same | professional practice; or is under contract with such | practice, hospital, or health care system; | (2) the prescriber or dispenser takes reasonable steps | to ensure that such designee is sufficiently competent in | the use of the inquiry system; | (3) the prescriber or dispenser remains responsible | for ensuring that access to the inquiry system by the | designee is limited to authorized purposes and occurs in a | manner that protects the confidentiality of the | information obtained from the inquiry system, and remains | responsible for any breach of confidentiality; and | (4) the ultimate decision as to whether or not to | prescribe or dispense a controlled substance remains with | the prescriber or dispenser. |
| The Prescription Monitoring Program shall send to | registered designees information regarding the inquiry system, | including instructions on how to log onto the system. | (r) The Prescription Monitoring Program shall maintain an | Internet website in conjunction with its prescriber and | dispenser inquiry system. This website shall include, at a | minimum, the following information: | (1) current clinical guidelines developed by health | care professional organizations on the prescribing of | opioids or other controlled substances as determined by | the Advisory Committee; | (2) accredited continuing education programs related | to prescribing of controlled substances; | (3) programs or information developed by health care | professionals that may be used to assess patients or help | ensure compliance with prescriptions; | (4) updates from the Food and Drug Administration, the | Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and other | public and private organizations which are relevant to | prescribing; | (5) relevant medical studies related to prescribing; | (6) other information regarding the prescription of | controlled substances; and | (7) information regarding prescription drug disposal | events, including take-back programs or other disposal | options or events. |
| The content of the Internet website shall be periodically | reviewed by the Prescription Monitoring Program Advisory | Committee as set forth in Section 320 and updated in | accordance with the recommendation of the advisory committee. | (s) The Prescription Monitoring Program shall regularly | send electronic updates to the registered users of the | Program. The Prescription Monitoring Program Advisory | Committee shall review any communications sent to registered | users and also make recommendations for communications as set | forth in Section 320. These updates shall include the | following information: | (1) opportunities for accredited continuing education | programs related to prescribing of controlled substances; | (2) current clinical guidelines developed by health | care professional organizations on the prescribing of | opioids or other drugs as determined by the Advisory | Committee; | (3) programs or information developed by health care | professionals that may be used to assess patients or help | ensure compliance with prescriptions; | (4) updates from the Food and Drug Administration, the | Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and other | public and private organizations which are relevant to | prescribing; | (5) relevant medical studies related to prescribing; | (6) other information regarding prescribing of |
| controlled substances; | (7) information regarding prescription drug disposal | events, including take-back programs or other disposal | options or events; and | (8) reminders that the Prescription Monitoring Program | is a useful clinical tool. | (t) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Act, | neither the Prescription Monitoring Program nor any other | person shall disclose any information in violation of the | restrictions and requirements of paragraph (3.5) of subsection | (a) of Section 316 as implemented under Public Act 102-527. | (Source: P.A. 102-751, eff. 1-1-23 .) | (Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 103-881 ) | Sec. 318. Confidentiality of information. | (a) Information received by the central repository under | Section 316 and former Section 321 is confidential. | (a-1) To ensure the federal Health Insurance Portability | and Accountability Act and confidentiality of substance use | disorder patient records rules that mandate the privacy of an | individual's prescription data reported to the Prescription | Monitoring Program received from a retail dispenser under this | Act, and in order to execute the duties and responsibilities | under Section 316 of this Act and rules for disclosure under | this Section, the Clinical Director of the Prescription | Monitoring Program or his or her designee shall maintain |
| direct access to all Prescription Monitoring Program data. Any | request for Prescription Monitoring Program data from any | other department or agency must be approved in writing by the | Clinical Director of the Prescription Monitoring Program or | his or her designee unless otherwise permitted by law. | Prescription Monitoring Program data shall only be disclosed | as permitted by law. Confidential information received from | opioid treatment programs or confidential information | otherwise protected under federal confidentiality of substance | use disorder patient records regulations under 42 CFR Part 2 | shall not be included in the information shared. | (a-2) As an active step to address the current opioid | crisis in this State and to prevent and reduce substance use | disorders resulting from a sports injury or an accident, the | Prescription Monitoring Program and the Department of Public | Health shall coordinate a continuous review of the | Prescription Monitoring Program and the Department of Public | Health data to determine if a patient may be at risk of opioid | use disorder. Each patient discharged from any medical | facility with an International Classification of Disease, 10th | edition code related to a sport or accident injury shall be | subject to the data review. If the discharged patient is | dispensed a controlled substance, the Prescription Monitoring | Program shall alert the patient's prescriber as to the risk of | developing a substance use disorder and urge each to follow | the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines or |
| his or her respective profession's treatment guidelines | related to the patient's injury. This subsection (a-2), other | than this sentence, is inoperative on or after January 1, | 2024. | (b) The Department must carry out a program to protect the | confidentiality of the information described in subsection | (a). The Department may disclose the information to another | person only under subsection (c), (d), or (f) and may charge a | fee not to exceed the actual cost of furnishing the | information. | (c) The Department may disclose confidential information | described in subsection (a) to any person who is engaged in | receiving, processing, or storing the information. | (d) The Department may release confidential information | described in subsection (a) to the following persons: | (1) A governing body that licenses practitioners and | is engaged in an investigation, an adjudication, or a | prosecution of a violation under any State or federal law | that involves a controlled substance. | (2) An investigator for the Consumer Protection | Division of the office of the Attorney General, a | prosecuting attorney, the Attorney General, a deputy | Attorney General, or an investigator from the office of | the Attorney General, who is engaged in any of the | following activities involving controlled substances: | (A) an investigation; |
| (B) an adjudication; or | (C) a prosecution of a violation under any State | or federal law that involves a controlled substance. | (3) A law enforcement officer who is: | (A) authorized by the Illinois State Police or the | office of a county sheriff or State's Attorney or | municipal police department of Illinois to receive | information of the type requested for the purpose of | investigations involving controlled substances; or | (B) approved by the Department to receive | information of the type requested for the purpose of | investigations involving controlled substances; and | (C) engaged in the investigation or prosecution of | a violation under any State or federal law that | involves a controlled substance. | (4) Select representatives of the Department of | Children and Family Services through the indirect online | request process. Access shall be established by an | intergovernmental agreement between the Department of | Children and Family Services and the Department of Human | Services. | (e) Before the Department releases confidential | information under subsection (d), all of the following must be | demonstrated the applicant must demonstrate in writing to the | Department by the applicant that : | (1) the applicant has reason to believe that a |
| violation under any State or federal law that involves a | controlled substance has occurred; and | (2) the requested information is reasonably related to | the investigation, adjudication, or prosecution of the | violation described in subdivision (1) ; and . | (3) the applicant has a valid court order or subpoena, | or an administrative subpoena issued by the Department of | Financial and Professional Regulation, for the | confidential information requested. | (f) The Department may receive and release confidential | prescription record information collected under Sections 316 | and 321 (now repealed) that identifies vendors or | practitioners, or both, who are prescribing or dispensing | large quantities of Schedule II, III, IV, or V controlled | substances outside the scope of their practice, pharmacy, or | business, as determined by the Advisory Committee created by | Section 320, prescription record information under Section 316 | and former Section 321 to: | (1) a governing body that licenses practitioners; | (2) an investigator for the Consumer Protection | Division of the office of the Attorney General, a | prosecuting attorney, the Attorney General, a deputy | Attorney General, or an investigator from the office of | the Attorney General; | (3) any Illinois law enforcement officer who is: | (A) authorized to receive the type of information |
| released; and | (B) approved by the Department to receive the type | of information released; or | (4) prescription monitoring entities in other states | per the provisions outlined in subsection (g) and (h) | below . ; | confidential prescription record information collected under | Sections 316 and 321 (now repealed) that identifies vendors or | practitioners, or both, who are prescribing or dispensing | large quantities of Schedule II, III, IV, or V controlled | substances outside the scope of their practice, pharmacy, or | business, as determined by the Advisory Committee created by | Section 320. | (f-5) In accordance with a confidentiality agreement | entered into with the Department, a medical director, or a | public health administrator and their delegated analysts, of a | county or municipal health department or the Department of | Public Health shall have access to data from the system for any | of the following purposes: | (1) developing education programs or public health | interventions relating to prescribing trends and | controlled substance use; or | (2) conducting analyses and publish reports on | prescribing trends in their respective jurisdictions. | At a minimum, the confidentiality agreement entered into | with the Department shall: |
| (i) prohibit analysis and reports produced under | subparagraph (2) from including information that | identifies, by name, license, or address, any | practitioner, dispenser, ultimate user, or other person | administering a controlled substance; and | (ii) specify the appropriate technical and physical | safeguards that the county or municipal health department | must implement to ensure the privacy and security of data | obtained from the system. The data from the system shall | not be admissible as evidence, nor discoverable in any | action of any kind in any court or before any tribunal, | board, agency, or person. The disclosure of any such | information or data, whether proper or improper, shall not | waive or have any effect upon its confidentiality, | non-discoverability, or non-admissibility. | (g) The information described in subsection (f) may not be | released until it has been reviewed by an employee of the | Department who is licensed as a prescriber or a dispenser and | until that employee has certified that further investigation | is warranted. Upon review and approval by a licensed | prescriber or dispenser, or trained designee, the Prescription | Monitoring Program may release information described in | subsection (f). However, failure to comply with this | subsection (g) does not invalidate the use of any evidence | that is otherwise admissible in a proceeding described in | subsection (h). |
| (h) An investigator or a law enforcement officer receiving | confidential information under subsection (c), (d), or (f) may | disclose the information to a law enforcement officer or an | attorney for the office of the Attorney General for use as | evidence in the following: | (1) A proceeding under any State or federal law that | involves a controlled substance. | (2) A criminal proceeding or a proceeding in juvenile | court that involves a controlled substance. | (i) The Department may compile statistical reports from | the information described in subsection (a). The reports must | not include information that identifies, by name, license or | address, any practitioner, dispenser, ultimate user, or other | person administering a controlled substance. | (j) Based upon federal, initial and maintenance funding, a | prescriber and dispenser inquiry system shall be developed to | assist the health care community in its goal of effective | clinical practice and to prevent patients from diverting or | abusing medications. | (1) An inquirer shall have read-only access to a | stand-alone database which shall contain records for the | previous 12 months. | (2) Dispensers may, upon positive and secure | identification, make an inquiry on a patient or customer | solely for a medical purpose as delineated within the | federal HIPAA law. |
| (3) The Department shall provide a one-to-one secure | link and encrypted software necessary to establish the | link between an inquirer and the Department. Technical | assistance shall also be provided. | (4) Written inquiries are acceptable but must include | the fee and the requester's Drug Enforcement | Administration license number and submitted upon the | requester's business stationery. | (5) As directed by the Prescription Monitoring Program | Advisory Committee and the Clinical Director for the | Prescription Monitoring Program, aggregate data that does | not indicate any prescriber, practitioner, dispenser, or | patient may be used for clinical studies. | (6) Tracking analysis shall be established and used | per administrative rule. | (7) Nothing in this Act or Illinois law shall be | construed to require a prescriber or dispenser to make use | of this inquiry system. | (8) If there is an adverse outcome because of a | prescriber or dispenser making an inquiry, which is | initiated in good faith, the prescriber or dispenser shall | be held harmless from any civil liability. | (k) The Department shall establish, by rule, the process | by which to evaluate possible erroneous association of | prescriptions to any licensed prescriber or end user of the | Illinois Prescription Information Library (PIL). |
| (l) The Prescription Monitoring Program Advisory Committee | is authorized to evaluate the need for and method of | establishing a patient specific identifier. | (m) Patients who identify prescriptions attributed to them | that were not obtained by them shall be given access to their | personal prescription history pursuant to the validation | process as set forth by administrative rule. | (n) The Prescription Monitoring Program is authorized to | develop operational push reports to entities with compatible | electronic medical records. The process shall be covered | within administrative rule established by the Department. | (o) Hospital emergency departments and freestanding | healthcare facilities providing healthcare to walk-in patients | may obtain, for the purpose of improving patient care, a | unique identifier for each shift to utilize the PIL system. | (p) The Prescription Monitoring Program shall | automatically create a log-in to the inquiry system when a | prescriber or dispenser obtains or renews his or her | controlled substance license. The Department of Financial and | Professional Regulation must provide the Prescription | Monitoring Program with electronic access to the license | information of a prescriber or dispenser to facilitate the | creation of this profile. The Prescription Monitoring Program | shall send the prescriber or dispenser information regarding | the inquiry system, including instructions on how to log into | the system, instructions on how to use the system to promote |
| effective clinical practice, and opportunities for continuing | education for the prescribing of controlled substances. The | Prescription Monitoring Program shall also send to all | enrolled prescribers, dispensers, and designees information | regarding the unsolicited reports produced pursuant to Section | 314.5 of this Act. | (q) A prescriber or dispenser may authorize a designee to | consult the inquiry system established by the Department under | this subsection on his or her behalf, provided that all the | following conditions are met: | (1) the designee so authorized is employed by the same | hospital or health care system; is employed by the same | professional practice; or is under contract with such | practice, hospital, or health care system; | (2) the prescriber or dispenser takes reasonable steps | to ensure that such designee is sufficiently competent in | the use of the inquiry system; | (3) the prescriber or dispenser remains responsible | for ensuring that access to the inquiry system by the | designee is limited to authorized purposes and occurs in a | manner that protects the confidentiality of the | information obtained from the inquiry system, and remains | responsible for any breach of confidentiality; and | (4) the ultimate decision as to whether or not to | prescribe or dispense a controlled substance remains with | the prescriber or dispenser. |
| The Prescription Monitoring Program shall send to | registered designees information regarding the inquiry system, | including instructions on how to log onto the system. | (r) The Prescription Monitoring Program shall maintain an | Internet website in conjunction with its prescriber and | dispenser inquiry system. This website shall include, at a | minimum, the following information: | (1) current clinical guidelines developed by health | care professional organizations on the prescribing of | opioids or other controlled substances as determined by | the Advisory Committee; | (2) accredited continuing education programs related | to prescribing of controlled substances; | (3) programs or information developed by health care | professionals that may be used to assess patients or help | ensure compliance with prescriptions; | (4) updates from the Food and Drug Administration, the | Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and other | public and private organizations which are relevant to | prescribing; | (5) relevant medical studies related to prescribing; | (6) other information regarding the prescription of | controlled substances; and | (7) information regarding prescription drug disposal | events, including take-back programs or other disposal | options or events. |
| The content of the Internet website shall be periodically | reviewed by the Prescription Monitoring Program Advisory | Committee as set forth in Section 320 and updated in | accordance with the recommendation of the advisory committee. | (s) The Prescription Monitoring Program shall regularly | send electronic updates to the registered users of the | Program. The Prescription Monitoring Program Advisory | Committee shall review any communications sent to registered | users and also make recommendations for communications as set | forth in Section 320. These updates shall include the | following information: | (1) opportunities for accredited continuing education | programs related to prescribing of controlled substances; | (2) current clinical guidelines developed by health | care professional organizations on the prescribing of | opioids or other drugs as determined by the Advisory | Committee; | (3) programs or information developed by health care | professionals that may be used to assess patients or help | ensure compliance with prescriptions; | (4) updates from the Food and Drug Administration, the | Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and other | public and private organizations which are relevant to | prescribing; | (5) relevant medical studies related to prescribing; | (6) other information regarding prescribing of |
| controlled substances; | (7) information regarding prescription drug disposal | events, including take-back programs or other disposal | options or events; and | (8) reminders that the Prescription Monitoring Program | is a useful clinical tool. | (t) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Act, | neither the Prescription Monitoring Program nor any other | person shall disclose any information in violation of the | restrictions and requirements of paragraph (3.5) of subsection | (a) of Section 316 as implemented under Public Act 102-527. | (Source: P.A. 102-751, eff. 1-1-23; 103-881, eff. 1-1-25.) | Section 95. No acceleration or delay. Where this Act makes | changes in a statute that is represented in this Act by text | that is not yet or no longer in effect (for example, a Section | represented by multiple versions), the use of that text does | not accelerate or delay the taking effect of (i) the changes | made by this Act or (ii) provisions derived from any other | Public Act. | Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon | becoming law. |
Effective Date: 2/7/2025
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