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Public Act 099-0712 Public Act 0712 99TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY |
Public Act 099-0712 | HB5009 Enrolled | LRB099 18341 MJP 42716 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 Illinois Act on the Aging is amended by | changing Section 4.04 as follows:
| (20 ILCS 105/4.04) (from Ch. 23, par. 6104.04)
| Sec. 4.04. Long Term Care Ombudsman Program. The purpose of | the Long Term Care Ombudsman Program is to ensure that older | persons and persons with disabilities receive quality | services. This is accomplished by providing advocacy services | for residents of long term care facilities and participants | receiving home care and community-based care. Managed care is | increasingly becoming the vehicle for delivering health and | long-term services and supports to seniors and persons with | disabilities, including dual eligible participants. The | additional ombudsman authority will allow advocacy services to | be provided to Illinois participants for the first time and | will produce a cost savings for the State of Illinois by | supporting the rebalancing efforts of the Patient Protection | and Affordable Care Act.
| (a) Long Term Care Ombudsman Program. The Department shall
| establish a Long Term Care Ombudsman Program, through the | Office of State
Long Term Care Ombudsman ("the Office"), in |
| accordance with the provisions of
the Older Americans Act of | 1965, as now or hereafter amended. The Long Term Care Ombudsman | Program is authorized, subject to sufficient appropriations, | to advocate on behalf of older persons and persons with | disabilities residing in their own homes or community-based | settings, relating to matters which may adversely affect the | health, safety, welfare, or rights of such individuals.
| (b) Definitions. As used in this Section, unless the | context requires
otherwise:
| (1) "Access" means the right to:
| (i) Enter any long term care facility or assisted | living or shared
housing establishment or supportive | living facility;
| (ii) Communicate privately and without restriction | with any resident, regardless of age,
who consents to | the communication;
| (iii) Seek consent to communicate privately and | without restriction
with any participant or resident, | regardless of age;
| (iv) Inspect the clinical and other records of a | participant or resident, regardless of age, with the
| express written consent of the participant or | resident;
| (v) Observe all areas of the long term care | facility or supportive
living facilities, assisted | living or shared housing establishment except the
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| living area of any resident who protests the | observation; and
| (vi) Subject to permission of the participant or | resident requesting services or his or her | representative, enter a home or community-based | setting. | (2) "Long Term Care Facility" means (i) any facility as | defined by Section
1-113 of the Nursing Home Care Act, as | now or hereafter amended; (ii) any
skilled nursing facility | or a nursing facility which meets the
requirements of | Section 1819(a), (b), (c), and (d) or Section 1919(a), (b),
| (c), and (d) of the Social Security Act, as now or | hereafter amended (42
U.S.C. 1395i-3(a), (b), (c), and (d) | and 42 U.S.C. 1396r(a), (b), (c), and
(d)); (iii) any | facility as defined by Section 1-113 of the ID/DD Community | Care Act, as now or hereafter amended; and (iv) any | facility as defined by Section 1-113 of MC/DD Act, as now | or hereafter amended ; and (v) any facility licensed under | Section 4-105 or 4-201 of the Specialized Mental Health | Rehabilitation Act of 2013, as now or hereafter amended .
| (2.5) "Assisted living establishment" and "shared | housing establishment"
have the meanings given those terms | in Section 10 of the Assisted Living and
Shared Housing | Act.
| (2.7) "Supportive living facility" means a facility | established under
Section 5-5.01a of the Illinois Public |
| Aid Code.
| (2.8) "Community-based setting" means any place of | abode other than an individual's private home. | (3) "State Long Term Care Ombudsman" means any person | employed by the
Department to fulfill
the requirements of | the Office of State Long Term Care Ombudsman as
required | under the Older Americans Act of 1965, as now or hereafter | amended,
and Departmental policy.
| (3.1) "Ombudsman" means any designated representative | of the State Long Term Care Ombudsman Program; provided | that the representative, whether he is
paid for or | volunteers his ombudsman services, shall be qualified and
| designated by the Office to perform the duties of an | ombudsman as specified by
the Department in rules and in | accordance with the provisions of
the Older Americans Act | of 1965, as now or hereafter amended.
| (4) "Participant" means an older person aged 60 or over | or an adult with a disability aged 18 through 59 who is | eligible for services under any of the following: | (i) A medical assistance waiver administered by | the State. | (ii) A managed care organization providing care | coordination and other services to seniors and persons | with disabilities. | (5) "Resident" means an older person aged 60 or over or | an adult with a disability aged 18 through 59 who resides |
| in a long-term care facility. | (c) Ombudsman; rules. The Office of State Long Term Care | Ombudsman shall
be composed of at least one full-time ombudsman | and shall include a system of
designated regional long term | care ombudsman programs. Each regional program
shall be | designated by the State Long Term Care Ombudsman as a | subdivision of
the Office and any representative of a regional | program shall be treated as a
representative of the Office.
| The Department, in consultation with the Office, shall | promulgate
administrative rules in accordance with the | provisions of the Older Americans
Act of 1965, as now or | hereafter amended, to establish the responsibilities of
the | Department and the Office of State Long Term Care Ombudsman and | the
designated regional Ombudsman programs. The administrative | rules shall include
the responsibility of the Office and | designated regional programs to
investigate and resolve | complaints made by or on behalf of residents of long
term care | facilities, supportive living facilities, and assisted living | and
shared housing establishments, and participants residing | in their own homes or community-based settings, including the | option to serve residents and participants under the age of 60, | relating to actions, inaction, or
decisions of providers, or | their representatives, of such
facilities and establishments, | of public agencies, or of social services agencies,
which may | adversely affect the health, safety, welfare, or rights of such
| residents and participants. The Office and designated regional |
| programs may represent all residents and participants, but are | not required by this Act to represent persons under 60 years of | age, except to the extent required by federal law.
When | necessary and appropriate, representatives of the Office shall | refer
complaints to the appropriate regulatory State agency.
| The Department, in consultation with the Office, shall | cooperate with the
Department of Human Services and other State | agencies in providing information and training to
designated | regional long term care ombudsman programs about the | appropriate
assessment and treatment (including information | about appropriate supportive
services, treatment options, and | assessment of rehabilitation potential) of the participants | they serve. | The State Long Term Care Ombudsman and all other ombudsmen, | as defined in paragraph (3.1) of subsection (b) must submit to | background checks under the Health Care Worker Background Check | Act and receive training, as prescribed by the Illinois | Department on Aging, before visiting facilities, private | homes, or community-based settings. The training must include | information specific to assisted living establishments, | supportive living facilities, shared housing establishments, | private homes, and community-based settings and to the rights | of residents and participants guaranteed under the | corresponding Acts and administrative rules.
| (c-5) Consumer Choice Information Reports. The Office | shall: |
| (1) In collaboration with the Attorney General, create | a Consumer Choice Information Report form to be completed | by all licensed long term care facilities to aid | Illinoisans and their families in making informed choices | about long term care. The Office shall create a Consumer | Choice Information Report for each type of licensed long | term care facility. The Office shall collaborate with the | Attorney General and the Department of Human Services to | create a Consumer Choice Information Report form for | facilities licensed under the ID/DD Community Care Act or | the MC/DD Act. | (2) Develop a database of Consumer Choice Information | Reports completed by licensed long term care facilities | that includes information in the following consumer | categories: | (A) Medical Care, Services, and Treatment. | (B) Special Services and Amenities. | (C) Staffing. | (D) Facility Statistics and Resident Demographics. | (E) Ownership and Administration. | (F) Safety and Security. | (G) Meals and Nutrition. | (H) Rooms, Furnishings, and Equipment. | (I) Family, Volunteer, and Visitation Provisions. | (3) Make this information accessible to the public, | including on the Internet by means of a hyperlink labeled |
| "Resident's Right to Know" on the Office's World Wide Web | home page. Information about facilities licensed under the | ID/DD Community Care Act or the MC/DD Act shall be made | accessible to the public by the Department of Human | Services, including on the Internet by means of a hyperlink | labeled "Resident's and Families' Right to Know" on the | Department of Human Services' "For Customers" website. | (4) Have the authority, with the Attorney General, to | verify that information provided by a facility is accurate. | (5) Request a new report from any licensed facility | whenever it deems necessary.
| (6) Include in the Office's Consumer Choice
| Information Report for each type of licensed long term care
| facility additional information on each licensed long term
| care facility in the State of Illinois, including
| information regarding each facility's compliance with the
| relevant State and federal statutes, rules, and standards;
| customer satisfaction surveys; and information generated
| from quality measures developed by the Centers for Medicare
| and Medicaid Services. | (d) Access and visitation rights.
| (1) In accordance with subparagraphs (A) and (E) of | paragraph (3) of
subsection (c) of Section 1819
and | subparagraphs (A) and (E) of paragraph (3) of subsection | (c) of Section
1919 of the Social Security Act, as now or | hereafter amended (42 U.S.C.
1395i-3 (c)(3)(A) and (E) and |
| 42 U.S.C. 1396r (c)(3)(A) and (E)), and
Section
712 of the | Older Americans Act of 1965, as now or hereafter
amended | (42 U.S.C. 3058f), a long term care facility, supportive | living
facility, assisted living
establishment, and shared | housing establishment must:
| (i) permit immediate access to any resident, | regardless of age, by a designated
ombudsman;
| (ii) permit representatives of the Office, with | the permission of the
resident's legal representative | or legal guardian, to examine a resident's
clinical and | other records, regardless of the age of the resident, | and if a resident is unable to consent to such
review, | and has no legal guardian, permit representatives of | the Office
appropriate access, as defined by the | Department, in consultation with the
Office, in | administrative rules, to the resident's records; and
| (iii) permit a representative of the Program to | communicate privately and without restriction with any | participant who consents to the communication | regardless of the consent of, or withholding of consent | by, a legal guardian or an agent named in a power of | attorney executed by the participant. | (2) Each long term care facility, supportive living | facility, assisted
living establishment, and
shared | housing establishment shall display, in multiple, | conspicuous
public places within the facility accessible |
| to both visitors and residents and
in an easily readable | format, the address and phone number of the Office of the
| Long Term Care Ombudsman, in a manner prescribed by the | Office.
| (e) Immunity. An ombudsman or any representative of the | Office participating
in the good faith performance of his or | her official duties
shall have immunity from any liability | (civil, criminal or otherwise) in
any proceedings (civil, | criminal or otherwise) brought as a consequence of
the | performance of his official duties.
| (f) Business offenses.
| (1) No person shall:
| (i) Intentionally prevent, interfere with, or | attempt to impede in any
way any representative of the | Office in the performance of his
official
duties under | this Act and the Older Americans Act of 1965; or
| (ii) Intentionally retaliate, discriminate | against, or effect reprisals
against any long term care | facility resident or employee for contacting or
| providing information to any representative of the | Office.
| (2) A violation of this Section is a business offense, | punishable by a
fine not to exceed $501.
| (3) The State Long Term Care Ombudsman shall
notify the | State's Attorney of the
county in which the long term care | facility, supportive living facility, or
assisted living |
| or shared housing establishment is located,
or the Attorney | General, of any violations of this Section.
| (g) Confidentiality of records and identities. The | Department shall
establish procedures for the disclosure by the | State Ombudsman or the regional
ombudsmen
entities of files | maintained by the program. The procedures shall provide that
| the files and records may be disclosed only at the discretion | of the State Long
Term Care
Ombudsman or the person designated | by the State Ombudsman to disclose the files
and records, and | the procedures shall prohibit the disclosure of the identity
of | any complainant, resident, participant, witness, or employee | of a long term care provider
unless:
| (1) the complainant, resident, participant, witness, | or employee of a long term care
provider or his or her | legal representative consents to the disclosure and the
| consent is in writing;
| (2) the complainant, resident, participant, witness, | or employee of a long term care
provider gives consent | orally; and the consent is documented contemporaneously
in | writing in
accordance with such requirements as the | Department shall establish; or
| (3) the disclosure is required by court order.
| (h) Legal representation. The Attorney General shall
| provide legal representation to any representative of the | Office
against
whom suit or other legal action is brought in | connection with the
performance of the representative's |
| official duties, in accordance with the
State Employee | Indemnification Act.
| (i) Treatment by prayer and spiritual means. Nothing in | this Act shall
be construed to authorize or require the medical | supervision, regulation
or control of remedial care or | treatment of any resident in a long term
care facility operated | exclusively by and for members or adherents of any
church or | religious denomination the tenets and practices of which | include
reliance solely upon spiritual means through prayer for | healing.
| (j) The Long Term Care Ombudsman Fund is created as a | special fund in the State treasury to receive moneys for the | express purposes of this Section. All interest earned on moneys | in the fund shall be credited to the fund. Moneys contained in | the fund shall be used to support the purposes of this Section. | (k) Each Regional Ombudsman may, in accordance with rules | promulgated by the Office, establish a multi-disciplinary team | to act in an advisory role for the purpose of providing | professional knowledge and expertise in handling complex | abuse, neglect, and advocacy issues involving participants. | Each multi-disciplinary team may consist of one or more | volunteer representatives from any combination of at least 7 | members from the following professions: banking or finance; | disability care; health care; pharmacology; law; law | enforcement; emergency responder; mental health care; clergy; | coroner or medical examiner; substance abuse; domestic |
| violence; sexual assault; or other related fields. To support | multi-disciplinary teams in this role, law enforcement | agencies and coroners or medical examiners shall supply records | as may be requested in particular cases. The Regional | Ombudsman, or his or her designee, of the area in which the | multi-disciplinary team is created shall be the facilitator of | the multi-disciplinary team. | (Source: P.A. 98-380, eff. 8-16-13; 98-989, eff. 1-1-15; | 99-180, eff. 7-29-15.)
| Section 10. The Specialized Mental Health Rehabilitation | Act of 2013 is amended by changing Sections 4-103, 4-105, and | 4-201 as follows: | (210 ILCS 49/4-103)
| Sec. 4-103. Provisional licensure emergency rules. The | Department, in consultation with the Division of Mental Health | of the Department of Human Services and the Department of | Healthcare and Family Services, is granted the authority under | this Act to establish provisional licensure and licensing | procedures by emergency rule. The Department shall file | emergency rules concerning provisional licensure under this | Act within 120 days after the effective date of this Act. The | rules to be filed for provisional licensure shall be for a | period of 3 years, beginning with the adoption date of the | emergency rules establishing the provisional license, and |
| shall not be extended beyond the date of 3 years after the | effective date of the emergency rules creating the provisional | license and licensing process. Rules governing the provisional | license and licensing process shall contain rules for the | different levels of care offered by the facilities authorized | under this Act and shall address each type of care hereafter | enumerated: | (1) triage centers; | (2) crisis stabilization; | (3) recovery and rehabilitation supports; | (4) transitional living units; or | (5) other intensive treatment and stabilization | programs designed and developed in collaboration with the | Department.
| (Source: P.A. 98-104, eff. 7-22-13.) | (210 ILCS 49/4-105)
| Sec. 4-105. Provisional licensure duration. A provisional | license shall be valid upon fulfilling the requirements | established by the Department by emergency rule. The license | shall remain valid as long as a facility remains in compliance | with the licensure provisions established in rule. Provisional | licenses issued upon initial licensure as a specialized mental | health rehabilitation facility shall expire at the end of a | 3-year period, which commences on the date the provisional | license is issued. Issuance of a provisional license for any |
| reason other than initial licensure (including, but not limited | to, change of ownership, location, number of beds, or services) | shall not extend the maximum 3-year period, at the end of which | a facility must be licensed pursuant to Section 4-201. The | provisional license shall expire when the administrative rule | established by the Department for provisional licensure | expires at the end of a 3-year period.
| (Source: P.A. 98-104, eff. 7-22-13.) | (210 ILCS 49/4-201)
| Sec. 4-201. Accreditation and licensure. At the end of the | provisional licensure period established in Article 3, Part 1 | of this Article 4 Act , the Department shall license a facility | as a specialized mental health rehabilitation facility under | this Act that successfully completes and obtains valid national | accreditation in behavioral health from a recognized national | accreditation entity and complies with licensure standards as | established by the Department of Public Health in | administrative rule. Rules governing licensure standards shall | include, but not be limited to, appropriate fines and sanctions | associated with violations of laws or regulations. The | following shall be considered to be valid national | accreditation in behavioral health from an national | accreditation entity: | (1) the Joint Commission; | (2) the Commission on Accreditation of Rehabilitation |
| Facilities; | (3) the Healthcare Facilities Accreditation Program; | or | (4) any other national standards of care as approved by | the Department.
| (Source: P.A. 98-104, eff. 7-22-13.)
| Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon | becoming law.
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Effective Date: 8/5/2016
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