Public Act 096-1117 Public Act 1117 96TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY |
Public Act 096-1117 | SB3273 Enrolled | LRB096 19757 RPM 35188 b |
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| AN ACT concerning health.
| Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
| represented in the General Assembly:
| Section 5. The Prenatal and Newborn Care Act is amended by | adding Sections 8 and 9 as follows: | (410 ILCS 225/8 new) | Sec. 8. Educational information on risks and healthcare | needs of premature infants. | (a) It is the purpose of this Section to: | (1) improve healthcare quality and outcomes for | infants born preterm through enhanced hospital discharge, | follow-up care, and management processes and reduced | rehospitalization from infectious disease and other | complications; and | (2) reduce infant morbidity and mortality associated | with prematurity. | (b) The General Assembly finds the following: | (1) Infants born premature at less than 37 weeks | gestational age have greater morbidity and mortality than | full-term infants. | (2) In 2006, 12.8% of all births in the United States | were premature, accounting for more than 542,000 infants. | (3) In Illinois, 1 in 8 babies were born premature in |
| 2006, or 13.3% of live births, accounting for 23,955 | premature births. | (4) Between 1996 and 2006, the rate of infants born | premature in Illinois increased nearly 15%. | (5) The rate of premature birth in Illinois is highest | in African American infants, 19.3%, followed by Native | Americans, 15.6%, Hispanics, 12.1%, and Caucasians, 11.9%. | (6) Approximately 70% of premature births occur in the | late preterm period between 34 and 36 weeks of gestation, | and late-preterm babies have significant differences in | clinical outcomes than full-term infants, including | greater risk for temperature instability, hypoglycemia, | respiratory distress, and jaundice. | (7) In 2005, preterm birth cost the United States at | least $26.2 billion, or $51,600 for every infant born | prematurely. | (8) Medical costs for premature babies are greater than | they are for healthy newborns. In 2007, the average medical | costs for a preterm baby were more than 10 times as high as | they were for a healthy full-term baby. The costs for a | healthy baby from birth to his first birthday were $4,551. | For a pre-term baby, the costs were $49,033. | (9) The costs of premature birth in Illinois may be | significant because the State Medicaid Program paid for 40% | of all births in 2003. | (10) Premature infant standard of care practices of |
| clinicians and hospitals may vary across the State, | particularly for late preterm births. | (c) The Department of Public Health shall publish on its | website information about the possible health complications | associated with newborn infants who are born premature at less | than 37 weeks gestational age and the proper care and support | for these newborn infants. The written information shall, at a | minimum, include the following: | (1) The unique health issues affecting infants born | premature, such as increased risk of developmental | problems; nutritional challenges; infection; chronic lung | disease (bronchopulmonary dysplasia); vision and hearing | impairment; breathing problems; feeding; maintaining body | temperature; jaundice; hyperactivity; infant mortality as | well as long-term complications associated with growth and | nutrition; respiratory problems; fine motor skills; | reading; and speaking. | (2) The proper care needs of premature infants, | developmental screenings, and monitoring and healthcare | services available to premature infants through the | Medicaid program or other public or private health | programs. | (3) Methods, vaccines, and other preventative measures | to protect premature infants from infectious diseases, | including viral respiratory infections. | (4) The emotional and financial burdens and other |
| challenges that parents and family members of premature | infants experience and information about community | resources available to support them. | (d) The information shall be easily accessible and written | in clear language to educate parents of premature infants | across a variety of socioeconomic statuses. | (e) In determining what information is most beneficial to | the public, the Department may consult with pediatric | healthcare providers, community organizations, or other | experts as the Department deems necessary. | (f) The Department shall ensure that the information is | accessible to children's health providers, maternal care | providers, hospitals, public health departments, and medical | organizations. The Department shall encourage those | organizations to provide the publications to parents or | guardians of premature infants. | (410 ILCS 225/9 new) | Sec. 9. The Illinois Department of Healthcare and Family | Services; consultation; data reporting. | (a) The Illinois Department of Healthcare and Family | Services, which administers the Illinois Medicaid Program and | the Covering ALL KIDS Health Insurance Program, shall consult | with statewide organizations focused on premature infant | healthcare in order to: | (1) examine and improve hospital discharge and |
| follow-up care procedures for premature infants born | earlier than 37 weeks gestational age to ensure | standardized and coordinated processes are followed as | premature infants leave the hospital from either a Level 1 | (well baby nursery), Level 2 (step down or transitional | nursery), or Level 3 (neonatal intensive care unit) unit | and transition to follow-up care by a health care provider | in the community; and | (2) use guidance from the Centers for Medicare and | Medicaid Services' Neonatal Outcome Improvement Project to | implement programs to improve newborn outcome, reduce | newborn health costs, and establish ongoing quality | improvement for newborns. | (b) In consultation with statewide organizations | representing hospitals, the Department of Public Health shall | consider mechanisms to collect discharge data for purposes of | analyzing readmission rates of certain premature infants.
| Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon | becoming law.
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Effective Date: 07/20/2010
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