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Public Act 095-0445
Public Act 0445 95TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY
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Public Act 095-0445 |
SB0264 Enrolled |
LRB095 03976 DRJ 30779 b |
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| AN ACT concerning regulation.
| Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois, | represented in the General Assembly:
| Section 5. The Alternative Health Care Delivery Act is | amended by changing
Sections 30 and 35 as follows:
| (210 ILCS 3/30)
| Sec. 30. Demonstration program requirements. The | requirements set forth in
this Section shall apply to | demonstration programs.
| (a) There shall be no more than:
| (i) 3 subacute care hospital alternative health care | models in the City of
Chicago (one of which shall be | located on a designated site and shall have been
licensed | as a hospital under the Illinois Hospital Licensing Act | within the 10
years immediately before the application for | a license);
| (ii) 2 subacute care hospital alternative health care | models in the
demonstration program for each of the | following areas:
| (1) Cook County outside the City of Chicago.
| (2) DuPage, Kane, Lake, McHenry, and Will | Counties.
| (3) Municipalities with a population greater than |
| 50,000 not
located in the areas described in item (i) | of subsection (a) and paragraphs
(1) and (2) of item | (ii) of subsection (a); and
| (iii) 4 subacute care hospital alternative health care
| models in the demonstration program for rural areas.
| In selecting among applicants for these
licenses in rural | areas, the Health Facilities Planning Board and the
Department | shall give preference to hospitals that may be unable for | economic
reasons to provide continued service to the community | in which they are located
unless the hospital were to receive | an alternative health care model license.
| (a-5) There shall be no more than a total of 12 | postsurgical
recovery care
center alternative health care | models in the demonstration program, located as
follows:
| (1) Two in the City of Chicago.
| (2) Two in Cook County outside the City of Chicago. At | least
one of these shall be owned or operated by a hospital | devoted exclusively to
caring for children.
| (3) Two in Kane, Lake, and McHenry Counties.
| (4) Four in municipalities with a population of 50,000 | or more
not located
in the areas described in paragraphs | (1), (2), and (3), 3 of which
shall be
owned or operated by | hospitals, at least 2 of which shall be located in
counties | with a population of less than 175,000, according to the | most recent
decennial census for which data are available, | and one of
which shall be owned or operated by
an |
| ambulatory surgical treatment center.
| (5) Two in rural areas,
both of which shall be owned or | operated by
hospitals.
| There shall be no postsurgical recovery care center | alternative health care
models located in counties with | populations greater than 600,000 but less
than 1,000,000. A | proposed postsurgical recovery care center must be owned or
| operated by a hospital if it is to be located within, or will | primarily serve
the residents of, a health service area in | which more than 60% of the gross
patient revenue of the | hospitals within that health service area are derived
from | Medicaid and Medicare, according to the most recently available | calendar
year data from the Illinois Health Care Cost | Containment Council. Nothing in
this paragraph shall preclude a | hospital and an ambulatory surgical treatment
center from | forming a joint venture or developing a collaborative agreement | to
own or operate a postsurgical recovery care center.
| (a-10) There shall be no more than a total of 8 children's | respite care
center alternative health care models in the | demonstration program, which shall
be located as follows:
| (1) One in the City of Chicago.
| (2) One in Cook County outside the City of Chicago.
| (3) A total of 2 in the area comprised of DuPage, Kane, | Lake, McHenry, and
Will counties.
| (4) A total of 2 in municipalities with a population of | 50,000 or more and
not
located in the areas described in |
| paragraphs (1), (2), or (3).
| (5) A total of 2 in rural areas, as defined by the | Health Facilities
Planning Board.
| No more than one children's respite care model owned and | operated by a
licensed skilled pediatric facility shall be | located in each of the areas
designated in this subsection | (a-10).
| (a-15) There shall be an authorized community-based | residential
rehabilitation center alternative health care | model in the demonstration
program. The community-based | residential rehabilitation center shall be
located in the area | of Illinois south of Interstate Highway 70.
| (a-20) There shall be an authorized
Alzheimer's disease | management center alternative health care model in the
| demonstration program. The Alzheimer's disease management | center shall be
located in Will
County, owned by a
| not-for-profit entity, and endorsed by a resolution approved by | the county
board before the effective date of this amendatory | Act of the 91st General
Assembly.
| (a-25) There shall be no more than 10 birth center | alternative health care
models in the demonstration program, | located as follows:
| (1) Four in the area comprising Cook, DuPage, Kane, | Lake, McHenry, and
Will counties, one of
which shall be | owned or operated by a hospital and one of which shall be | owned
or operated by a federally qualified health center.
|
| (2) Three in municipalities with a population of 50,000 | or more not
located in the area described in paragraph (1) | of this subsection, one of
which shall be owned or operated | by a hospital and one of which shall be owned
or operated | by a federally qualified health center.
| (3) Three in rural areas, one of which shall be owned | or operated by a
hospital and one of which shall be owned | or operated by a federally qualified
health center.
| The first 3 birth centers authorized to operate by the | Department shall be
located in or predominantly serve the | residents of a health professional
shortage area as determined | by the United States Department of Health and Human
Services. | There shall be no more than 2 birth centers authorized to | operate in
any single health planning area for obstetric | services as determined under the
Illinois Health Facilities | Planning Act. If a birth center is located outside
of a
health | professional shortage area, (i) the birth center shall be | located in a
health planning
area with a demonstrated need for | obstetrical service beds, as determined by
the Illinois Health | Facilities Planning Board or (ii) there must be a
reduction in
| the existing number of obstetrical service beds in the planning | area so that
the establishment of the birth center does not | result in an increase in the
total number of obstetrical | service beds in the health planning area.
| (b) Alternative health care models, other than a model | authorized under
subsection (a-20), shall obtain a certificate |
| of
need from the Illinois Health Facilities Planning Board | under the Illinois
Health Facilities Planning Act before | receiving a license by the
Department.
If, after obtaining its | initial certificate of need, an alternative health
care | delivery model that is a community based residential | rehabilitation center
seeks to
increase the bed capacity of | that center, it must obtain a certificate of need
from the | Illinois Health Facilities Planning Board before increasing | the bed
capacity. Alternative
health care models in medically | underserved areas
shall receive priority in obtaining a | certificate of need.
| (c) An alternative health care model license shall be | issued for a
period of one year and shall be annually renewed | if the facility or
program is in substantial compliance with | the Department's rules
adopted under this Act. A licensed | alternative health care model that continues
to be in | substantial compliance after the conclusion of the | demonstration
program shall be eligible for annual renewals | unless and until a different
licensure program for that type of | health care model is established by
legislation. The Department | may issue a provisional license to any
alternative health care | model that does not substantially comply with the
provisions of | this Act and the rules adopted under this Act if (i)
the | Department finds that the alternative health care model has | undertaken
changes and corrections which upon completion will | render the alternative
health care model in substantial |
| compliance with this Act and rules and
(ii) the health and | safety of the patients of the alternative
health care model | will be protected during the period for which the provisional
| license is issued. The Department shall advise the licensee of
| the conditions under which the provisional license is issued, | including
the manner in which the alternative health care model | fails to comply with
the provisions of this Act and rules, and | the time within which the changes
and corrections necessary for | the alternative health care model to
substantially comply with | this Act and rules shall be completed.
| (d) Alternative health care models shall seek | certification under Titles
XVIII and XIX of the federal Social | Security Act. In addition, alternative
health care models shall | provide charitable care consistent with that provided
by | comparable health care providers in the geographic area.
| (d-5) The Department of Healthcare and Family Services | (formerly Illinois Department of Public Aid ) , in cooperation | with the
Illinois Department of
Public Health, shall develop | and implement a reimbursement methodology for all
facilities | participating in the demonstration program. The Department of | Healthcare and Family Services
Illinois Department
of Public | Aid shall keep a record of services provided under the | demonstration
program to recipients of medical assistance | under the Illinois Public Aid Code
and shall submit an annual | report of that information to the Illinois
Department of Public | Health.
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| (e) Alternative health care models shall, to the extent | possible,
link and integrate their services with nearby health | care facilities.
| (f) Each alternative health care model shall implement a | quality
assurance program with measurable benefits and at | reasonable cost.
| (Source: P.A. 91-65, eff. 7-9-99; 91-838, eff. 6-16-00; revised | 12-15-05.)
| (210 ILCS 3/35)
| Sec. 35. Alternative health care models authorized. | Notwithstanding
any other law to the contrary, alternative | health care models
described in this Section may be established | on a demonstration basis.
| (1) Alternative health care model; subacute care | hospital. A subacute
care hospital is a designated site | which provides medical specialty care for
patients who need | a greater intensity or complexity of care than generally
| provided in a skilled nursing facility but who no longer | require acute hospital
care. The average length of stay for | patients treated in subacute care
hospitals shall not be | less than 20 days, and for individual patients, the
| expected length of stay at the time of admission shall not | be less than 10
days. Variations from minimum lengths of | stay shall be reported to the
Department. There shall be no | more than 13 subacute care hospitals
authorized to operate |
| by the Department. Subacute care includes physician
| supervision, registered nursing, and physiological | monitoring on a continual
basis. A subacute care hospital | is either a freestanding building or a distinct
physical | and operational entity within a hospital or nursing home | building. A
subacute care hospital shall only consist of | beds currently existing in
licensed hospitals or skilled | nursing facilities, except, in the City of
Chicago, on a | designated site that was licensed as a hospital under the
| Illinois Hospital Licensing Act within the 10 years | immediately before the
application for an alternative | health care model license. During the period of
operation | of the demonstration project, the existing licensed beds | shall remain
licensed as hospital or skilled nursing | facility beds as well as being licensed
under this Act. In | order to handle cases of
complications, emergencies, or | exigent circumstances, a subacute care hospital
shall | maintain a contractual relationship, including a transfer | agreement, with
a general acute care hospital. If a | subacute care model is located in a
general acute care | hospital, it shall utilize all or a portion of the bed
| capacity of that existing hospital. In no event shall a | subacute care hospital
use the word "hospital" in its | advertising or marketing activities or represent
or hold | itself out to the public as a general acute care hospital.
| (2) Alternative health care delivery model; |
| postsurgical recovery care
center. A postsurgical recovery | care center is a designated site which
provides | postsurgical recovery care for generally healthy patients
| undergoing surgical procedures that require overnight | nursing care, pain
control, or observation that would | otherwise be provided in an inpatient
setting. A | postsurgical recovery care center is either freestanding | or a
defined unit of an ambulatory surgical treatment | center or hospital.
No facility, or portion of a facility, | may participate in a demonstration
program as a | postsurgical recovery care center unless the facility has | been
licensed as an ambulatory surgical treatment center or | hospital for at least 2
years before August 20, 1993 (the | effective date of Public Act 88-441). The
maximum length of | stay for patients in a
postsurgical recovery care center is | not to exceed 48 hours unless the treating
physician | requests an extension of time from the recovery center's | medical
director on the basis of medical or clinical | documentation that an additional
care period is required | for the recovery of a patient and the medical director
| approves the extension of time. In no case, however, shall | a patient's length
of stay in a postsurgical recovery care | center be longer than 72 hours. If a
patient requires an | additional care period after the expiration of the 72-hour
| limit, the patient shall be transferred to an appropriate | facility. Reports on
variances from the 48-hour limit shall |
| be sent to the Department for its
evaluation. The reports | shall, before submission to the Department, have
removed | from them all patient and physician identifiers. In order | to handle
cases of complications, emergencies, or exigent | circumstances, every
postsurgical recovery care center as | defined in this paragraph shall maintain a
contractual | relationship, including a transfer agreement, with a | general acute
care hospital. A postsurgical recovery care | center shall be no larger than 20
beds. A postsurgical | recovery care center shall be located within 15 minutes
| travel time from the general acute care hospital with which | the center
maintains a contractual relationship, including | a transfer agreement, as
required under this paragraph.
| No postsurgical recovery care center shall | discriminate against any patient
requiring treatment | because of the source of payment for services, including
| Medicare and Medicaid recipients.
| The Department shall adopt rules to implement the | provisions of Public
Act 88-441 concerning postsurgical | recovery care centers within 9 months after
August 20, | 1993.
| (3) Alternative health care delivery model; children's | community-based
health care center. A children's | community-based health care center model is a
designated | site that provides nursing care, clinical support | services, and
therapies for a period of one to 14 days for |
| short-term stays and 120 days to
facilitate transitions to | home or other appropriate settings for medically
fragile | children, technology
dependent children, and children with | special health care needs who are deemed
clinically stable | by a physician and are younger than 22 years of age. This
| care is to be provided in a home-like environment that | serves no more than 12
children at a time. Children's | community-based health care center
services must be | available through the model to all families, including | those
whose care is paid for through the Department of | Healthcare and Family Services
Public Aid , the Department | of
Children and Family Services, the Department of Human | Services, and insurance
companies who cover home health | care services or private duty nursing care in
the home.
| Each children's community-based health care center | model location shall be
physically separate and
apart from | any other facility licensed by the Department of Public | Health under
this or any other Act and shall provide the | following services: respite care,
registered nursing or | licensed practical nursing care, transitional care to
| facilitate home placement or other appropriate settings | and reunite families,
medical day care, weekend
camps, and | diagnostic studies typically done in the home setting.
| Coverage for the services provided by the Illinois
| Department of Healthcare and Family Services
Public
Aid
| under this paragraph (3) is contingent upon federal waiver |
| approval and is
provided only to Medicaid eligible clients | participating in the home and
community based services | waiver designated in Section 1915(c) of the Social
Security | Act for medically frail and technologically dependent | children or
children in Department of Children and Family | Services foster care who receive
home health benefits.
| (4) Alternative health care delivery model; community | based residential
rehabilitation center.
A community-based | residential rehabilitation center model is a designated
| site that provides rehabilitation or support, or both, for | persons who have
experienced severe brain injury, who are | medically stable, and who no longer
require acute | rehabilitative care or intense medical or nursing | services. The
average length of stay in a community-based | residential rehabilitation center
shall not exceed 4 | months. As an integral part of the services provided,
| individuals are housed in a supervised living setting while | having immediate
access to the community. The residential | rehabilitation center authorized by
the Department may | have more than one residence included under the license.
A | residence may be no larger than 12 beds and shall be | located as an integral
part of the community. Day treatment | or
individualized outpatient services shall be provided | for persons who reside in
their own home. Functional | outcome goals shall be established for each
individual. | Services shall include, but are not limited to, case |
| management,
training and assistance with activities of | daily living, nursing
consultation, traditional therapies | (physical, occupational, speech),
functional interventions | in the residence and community (job placement,
shopping, | banking, recreation), counseling, self-management | strategies,
productive activities, and multiple | opportunities for skill acquisition and
practice | throughout the day. The design of individualized program | plans shall
be consistent with the outcome goals that are | established for each resident.
The programs provided in | this setting shall be accredited by the
Commission
on | Accreditation of Rehabilitation Facilities (CARF). The | program shall have
been accredited by CARF as a Brain | Injury Community-Integrative Program for at
least 3 years.
| (5) Alternative health care delivery model; | Alzheimer's disease
management center. An Alzheimer's | disease management center model is a
designated site that | provides a safe and secure setting for care of persons
| diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease. An Alzheimer's disease | management center
model shall be a facility separate from | any other facility licensed by the
Department of Public | Health under this or any other Act. An Alzheimer's
disease | management center shall conduct and document an assessment | of each
resident every 6 months. The assessment shall | include an evaluation of daily
functioning, cognitive | status, other medical conditions, and behavioral
problems. |
| An Alzheimer's disease management center shall develop and | implement
an ongoing treatment plan for each resident. The | treatment
plan shall have defined goals.
The
Alzheimer's | disease management center shall treat behavioral problems | and mood
disorders using nonpharmacologic approaches such | as environmental modification,
task simplification, and | other appropriate activities.
All staff must have | necessary
training to care for all stages of Alzheimer's | Disease. An
Alzheimer's disease
management center shall | provide education and support for residents and
| caregivers. The
education and support shall include | referrals to support organizations for
educational | materials on community resources, support groups, legal | and
financial issues, respite care, and future care needs | and options. The
education and support shall also include a | discussion of the resident's need to
make advance | directives and to identify surrogates for medical and legal
| decision-making. The provisions of this paragraph | establish the minimum level
of services that must be | provided by an Alzheimer's disease management
center. An | Alzheimer's disease management center model shall have no | more
than 100 residents. Nothing in this paragraph (5) | shall be construed as
prohibiting a person or facility from | providing services and care to persons
with Alzheimer's | disease as otherwise authorized under State law.
| (6) Alternative health care delivery model; birth |
| center. A birth
center shall be exclusively dedicated to | serving the childbirth-related needs of women and their | newborns and shall have no more than 10 beds. A birth | center is a designated site
that is away from the mother's | usual place of residence and in which births are
planned to | occur following a normal, uncomplicated, and low-risk | pregnancy. A
birth center shall offer prenatal care and | community education services and
shall coordinate these | services with other health care services available in
the | community.
| (A) A birth center shall not be separately licensed | if it
is one of the following: | (1) A part of a hospital; or | (2) A freestanding facility that is physically
| distinct from a hospital but is operated under a
| license issued to a hospital under the Hospital
| Licensing Act. | (B) A separate birth center license shall be | required if the birth center is operated as: | (1) A part of the operation of a federally
| qualified health center as designated by the | United
States Department of Health and Human | Services; or | (2) A facility other than one described in | subparagraph (A)(1), (A)(2), or (B)(1) of this | paragraph (6) whose costs are
reimbursable under |
| Title XIX of the federal Social
Security Act. | In adopting rules for birth centers, the Department | shall consider:
the American Association
of Birth Centers' | Standards for Freestanding Birth Centers; the American | Academy of Pediatrics/American College of Obstetricians | and Gynecologists Guidelines for Perinatal Care; and the | Regionalized Perinatal Health Care Code. The Department's | rules shall stipulate the eligibility criteria for birth | center admission. The Department's rules shall
stipulate | the necessary equipment for emergency care
according to the | American Association of Birth Centers'
standards and any | additional equipment deemed necessary by the Department. | The Department's rules shall provide for a time
period | within which each birth center not part of a
hospital must | become accredited by either the Commission for the
| Accreditation of Freestanding Birth Centers or The Joint | Commission. | A birth center shall be certified to participate in the | Medicare and Medicaid
programs under Titles XVIII and XIX, | respectively, of the federal Social
Security Act.
To the | extent necessary, the Illinois Department of Healthcare | and Family Services shall apply for
a waiver from the | United States Health Care Financing Administration to | allow
birth centers to be reimbursed under Title XIX of the | federal Social Security
Act. | A birth center that is not operated under a hospital |
| license shall be located within a ground travel time | distance from the general acute care hospital with which
| the birth center maintains a contractual relationship,
| including a transfer agreement, as required under this
| paragraph, that allows for an emergency caesarian delivery | to be started within 30 minutes of the decision a caesarian | delivery is necessary. A birth center operating under a | hospital license shall be located within a ground travel | time distance from the licensed hospital that allows for an | emergency caesarian delivery to be started within 30 | minutes of the decision a caesarian delivery is necessary. | The services of a
medical director physician, licensed | to practice medicine in all its branches, who is certified | or eligible for certification by the
American College of | Obstetricians and Gynecologists or the
American Board of | Osteopathic Obstetricians and Gynecologists or has | hospital
obstetrical privileges are required in birth | centers. The medical director in consultation with the | Director of Nursing and Midwifery Services shall | coordinate the clinical staff and overall provision of | patient care.
The medical director or his or her physician | designee shall be available on the premises or within a | close proximity as defined by rule. The medical director | and the Director of Nursing and Midwifery Services shall | jointly develop and approve policies defining the criteria | to determine which pregnancies are accepted as normal, |
| uncomplicated, and low-risk, and the anesthesia services | available at the center. No general anesthesia may be | administered at the center. | If a birth center employs
certified nurse midwives, a | certified nurse midwife shall be the Director of
Nursing | and Midwifery
Services who is responsible for the | development of policies and procedures for
services as | provided by Department rules. | An obstetrician, family
practitioner, or certified | nurse midwife shall attend each woman in labor from
the | time of admission through birth and throughout the | immediate postpartum
period. Attendance may be delegated | only to another physician or certified
nurse
midwife. | Additionally, a second staff person shall also be present | at each
birth who is licensed or certified in Illinois in a | health-related field and under the supervision of the | physician or certified nurse midwife
in attendance, has | specialized training in labor and delivery techniques and
| care of newborns, and receives planned and ongoing training | as needed to
perform assigned duties effectively. | The maximum length of stay in a birth center shall be
| consistent with existing State laws allowing a 48-hour stay | or appropriate
post-delivery care, if discharged earlier | than 48 hours. | A birth center shall
participate in the Illinois | Perinatal
System under the Developmental Disability |
| Prevention Act. At a minimum, this
participation shall | require a birth center to establish a letter of agreement
| with a hospital designated under the Perinatal System. A | hospital that
operates or has a letter of agreement with a | birth center shall include the
birth center under its | maternity service plan under the Hospital Licensing Act
and | shall include the birth center in the hospital's letter of | agreement with
its regional perinatal center. | A birth center may not discriminate against any patient | requiring treatment
because of the source of payment for | services, including Medicare and Medicaid
recipients. | No general anesthesia and no surgery may be performed | at a birth center.
The Department may by rule add birth | center patient eligibility criteria or standards as it | deems necessary.
The Department shall by rule require each | birth center to report the information which the Department | shall make publicly available, which shall include, but is | not limited to, the following: | (i) Birth center ownership. | (ii) Sources of payment for services. | (iii) Utilization data involving patient length of | stay. | (iv) Admissions and discharges. | (v) Complications. | (vi) Transfers. | (vii) Unusual incidents. |
| (viii) Deaths. | (ix) Any other publicly reported data required | under the Illinois Consumer Guide. | (x) Post-discharge patient status data where | patients are followed for 14 days after discharge from | the birth center to determine whether the mother or | baby developed a complication or infection. | Within 9 months after the effective date of this | amendatory Act of the 95th
General Assembly, the Department | shall adopt rules that are developed with consideration of: | the American Association of Birth Centers' Standards for | Freestanding Birth Centers; the American Academy of | Pediatrics/American College of Obstetricians and | Gynecologists Guidelines for Perinatal Care; and the | Regionalized Perinatal Health Care Code. | The Department shall adopt other rules as necessary to | implement the provisions of this
amendatory Act of the 95th | General Assembly within 9 months after the
effective date | of this amendatory Act of the 95th General Assembly. | (Source: P.A. 93-402, eff. 1-1-04; revised 12-15-05.)
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Effective Date: 1/1/2008
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