Public Act 90-0742 of the 90th General Assembly

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Public Act 90-0742

SB1585 Enrolled                                LRB9011272NTsb

    AN ACT concerning medicine.

    Be it enacted by the People of  the  State  of  Illinois,
represented in the General Assembly:

    Section   1.  The   Mental   Health   and   Developmental
Disabilities   Administrative  Act  is  amended  by  changing
Section 56 as follows:

    (20 ILCS 1705/56) (from Ch. 91 1/2, par. 100-56)
    Sec. 56.  The  Secretary,  upon  making  a  determination
based  upon  information in the possession of the Department,
that continuation in  practice  of  a  licensed  health  care
professional  would  constitute  an  immediate  danger to the
public, shall submit a written communication to the  Director
of  Professional Regulation indicating such determination and
additionally providing a complete summary of the  information
upon which such determination is based, and recommending that
the  Director  of Professional Regulation immediately suspend
such person's license.   All  relevant  evidence,  or  copies
thereof, in the Department's possession may also be submitted
in  conjunction  with  the  written communication.  A copy of
such written communication, which is exempt from the  copying
and  inspection provisions of The Freedom of Information Act,
shall  at  the  time  of  submittal  to   the   Director   of
Professional  Regulation be simultaneously mailed to the last
known  business  address  of  such   licensed   health   care
professional  by  certified  or  registered  postage,  United
States  Mail,  return  receipt  requested.   Any evidence, or
copies thereof, which is submitted in  conjunction  with  the
written  communication  is  also  exempt from the copying and
inspection provisions of The Freedom of Information Act.
    For the purposes of this Section, "licensed  health  care
professional"  means  any  person licensed under the Illinois
Dental  Practice  Act,  the  Illinois  Nursing  and  Advanced
Practice Nursing Act of 1987, the  Medical  Practice  Act  of
1987,  the  Pharmacy  Practice  Act  of  1987,  the Podiatric
Medical Practice Act of 1987,  and  the  Illinois  Optometric
Practice Act of 1987.
(Source: P.A. 89-507, eff. 7-1-97.)

    Section  2.  The Civil Administrative Code of Illinois is
amended by changing Sections 55.37a and 55.62a as follows:

    (20 ILCS 2310/55.37a) (from Ch. 127, par. 55.37a)
    Sec. 55.37a.  The Director of Public Health, upon  making
a  determination  based upon information in the possession of
the Department, that continuation in practice of  a  licensed
health care professional would constitute an immediate danger
to  the  public,  shall submit a written communication to the
Director  of  the  Department  of   Professional   Regulation
indicating  such  determination  and additionally providing a
complete  summary  of  the  information   upon   which   such
determination is based, and recommending that the Director of
Professional  Regulation  immediately  suspend  such person's
license.  All relevant evidence, or copies  thereof,  in  the
Department's  possession may also be submitted in conjunction
with the written  communication.   A  copy  of  such  written
communication,   which   is   exempt  from  the  copying  and
inspection provisions of  The  Freedom  of  Information  Act,
shall  at  the  time  of  submittal  to  the  Director of the
Department  of  Professional  Regulation  be   simultaneously
mailed  to  the  last known business address of such licensed
health care professional by certified or registered  postage,
United  States Mail, return receipt requested.  Any evidence,
or copies thereof, which is submitted in conjunction with the
written communication is also  exempt  for  the  copying  and
inspection provisions of The Freedom of Information Act.
    For  the  purposes  of this Section "licensed health care
professional" means any person licensed  under  the  Illinois
Dental  Practice  Act,  the  Illinois  Nursing  and  Advanced
Practice  Nursing  Act  of  1987, the Medical Practice Act of
1987, the  Pharmacy  Practice  Act  of  1987,  the  Podiatric
Medical  Practice  Act  of  1987, and the Illinois Optometric
Practice Act of 1987.
(Source: P.A. 85-1209.)

    (20 ILCS 2310/55.62a)
    Sec. 55.62a.  Advisory Panel on Minority Health.
    (a)  In this Section:
    "Health profession" means any health profession regulated
under the laws of this State, including, without  limitation,
professions  regulated  under  the Illinois Athletic Trainers
Practice Act, the Clinical Psychologist  Licensing  Act,  the
Clinical  Social  Work  and  Social  Work  Practice  Act, the
Illinois Dental Practice  Act,  the  Dietetic  and  Nutrition
Services  Practice  Act,  the  Marriage  and  Family  Therapy
Licensing   Act,  the  Medical  Practice  Act  of  1987,  the
Naprapathic Practice Act, the Illinois Nursing  and  Advanced
Practice  Nursing  Act  of  1987,  the  Illinois Occupational
Therapy Practice Act, the Illinois Optometric Practice Act of
1987,  the  Illinois  Physical  Therapy  Act,  the  Physician
Assistant  Practice  Act  of  1987,  the  Podiatric   Medical
Practice Act of 1987, the Professional Counselor and Clinical
Professional   Counselor  Licensing  Act,  and  the  Illinois
Speech-Language Pathology and Audiology Practice Act.
    "Minority" has the same meaning as in Section 55.62.
    (b)  The General Assembly finds as follows:
         (1)  The health status of  individuals  from  ethnic
    and  racial  minorities  in  this  State is significantly
    lower than the health status of the general population of
    the State.
         (2)  Minorities suffer disproportionately high rates
    of cancer, stroke, heart disease,  diabetes,  sickle-cell
    anemia,   lupus,   substance   abuse,   acquired   immune
    deficiency   syndrome,   other  diseases  and  disorders,
    unintentional injuries, and suicide.
         (3)  The  incidence  of   infant   mortality   among
    minorities   is   almost  double  that  for  the  general
    population.
         (4)  Minorities suffer disproportionately from  lack
    of access to health care and poor living conditions.
         (5)  Minorities  are under-represented in the health
    care professions.
         (6)  Minority  participation  in   the   procurement
    policies of the health care industry is lacking.
         (7)  Minority health professionals historically have
    tended  to  practice  in  low-income  areas  and to serve
    minorities.
         (8)  National experts on minority health report that
    access  to  health   care   among   minorities   can   be
    substantially   improved  by  increasing  the  number  of
    minority health professionals.
         (9)  Increasing the number of minorities serving  on
    the  facilities  of  health  professional  schools  is an
    important factor in attracting  minorities  to  pursue  a
    career in health professions.
         (10)  Retaining    minority   health   professionals
    currently practicing in this State  and  those  receiving
    training  and  education  in  this  State is an important
    factor  in  maintaining  and  increasing  the  number  of
    minority health professionals in Illinois.
         (11)  An  Advisory  Panel  on  Minority  Health   is
    necessary   to   address   the  health  issues  affecting
    minorities in this State.
    (c)  The General Assembly's intent is as follows:
         (1)  That all  Illinoisans  have  access  to  health
    care.
         (2)  That  the  gap  between  the  health  status of
    minorities and other Illinoisans be closed.
         (3)  That the health issues that  disproportionately
    affect  minorities  be  addressed  to  improve the health
    status of minorities.
         (4)  That the number of  minorities  in  the  health
    professions be increased.
    (d)  The  Advisory  Panel  on Minority Health is created.
The Advisory Panel shall consist of 25 members  appointed  by
the  Director  of Public Health.  The members shall represent
health professions and the General Assembly.
    (e)  The Advisory Panel shall assist  the  Department  in
the following manner:
         (1)  Examination  of  the  following  areas  as they
    relate to minority health:
              (A)  Access to health care.
              (B)  Demographic factors.
              (C)  Environmental factors.
              (D)  Financing of health care.
              (E)  Health behavior.
              (F)  Health knowledge.
              (G)  Utilization of quality care.
              (H)  Minorities in health care professions.
         (2)  Development  of   monitoring,   tracking,   and
    reporting  mechanisms  for  programs  and  services  with
    minority health goals and objectives.
         (3)  Communication  with  local  health departments,
    community-based    organizations,    voluntary     health
    organizations, and other public and private organizations
    statewide, on an ongoing basis, to learn more about their
    services  to minority communities, the health problems of
    minority  communities,  and  their  ideas  for  improving
    minority health.
         (4)  Promotion  of  communication  among  all  State
    agencies that provide services to minority populations.
         (5)  Building  coalitions  between  the  State   and
    leadership in minority communities.
         (6)  Encouragement  of  recruitment and retention of
    minority health professionals.
         (7)  Improvement  in  methods  for  collecting   and
    reporting data on minority health.
         (8)  Improvement  in  accessibility  to  health  and
    medical  care  for  minority  populations in under-served
    rural and urban areas.
         (9)  Reduction   of   communication   barriers   for
    non-English speaking residents.
         (10)  Coordination   of    the    development    and
    dissemination  of  culturally  appropriate  and sensitive
    education material, public awareness messages, and health
    promotion  programs for minorities.
    (f)  On or before January  1,  1997  the  Advisory  Panel
shall  submit  an  interim  report  to  the  Governor and the
General Assembly.  The interim report shall include an update
on the Advisory Panel's progress in performing its  functions
under   this   Section  and  shall  include  recommendations,
including  recommendations  for  any  necessary   legislative
changes.
    On  or  before  January  1, 1998 the Advisory Panel shall
submit a  final  report  to  the  Governor  and  the  General
Assembly.  The final report shall include the following:
         (1)  An   evaluation   of   the   health  status  of
    minorities in this State.
         (2)  An evaluation of minority access to health care
    in this State.
         (3)  Recommendations for improving the health status
    of minorities in this State.
         (4)  Recommendations for increasing minority  access
    to health care in this State.
         (5)  Recommendations    for    increasing   minority
    participation in the procurement policies of  the  health
    care industry.
         (6)  Recommendations  for  increasing  the number of
    minority health professionals in this State.
         (7)  Recommendations  that  will  ensure  that   the
    health status of minorities in this State continues to be
    addressed beyond the expiration of the Advisory Panel.
(Source: P.A. 89-298, eff. 1-1-96.)

    Section  3.  The  Geriatric  Medicine  Assistance  Act is
amended by changing Section 2 as follows:

    (20 ILCS 3945/2) (from Ch. 144, par. 2002)
    Sec.  2.   There  is  created  the   Geriatric   Medicine
Assistance  Commission.  The  Commission  shall  receive  and
approve  applications  for grants from schools, recognized by
the Department of Professional Regulation as being authorized
to confer doctor of medicine, doctor of osteopathy, doctor of
chiropractic or registered professional  nursing  degrees  in
the  State,  to  help  finance the establishment of geriatric
medicine  programs  within  such  schools.   In   determining
eligibility  for grants, the Commission shall give preference
to those programs which exhibit the  greatest  potential  for
directly benefiting the largest number of elderly citizens in
the  State. The Commission may not approve the application of
any institution which is unable to  demonstrate  its  current
financial  stability  and  reasonable  prospects  for  future
stability. No institution which fails to possess and maintain
an  open policy with respect to race, creed, color and sex as
to  admission  of  students,  appointment  of   faculty   and
employment  of  staff shall be eligible for grants under this
Act. The Commission shall establish such rules and  standards
as it deems necessary for the implementation of this Act.
    The Commission shall be composed of 8 members selected as
follows:  2 physicians licensed to practice under the Medical
Practice Act of 1987 and specializing in geriatric  medicine;
a  registered  professional nurse licensed under the Illinois
Nursing  and  Advanced  Practice  Nursing  Act  of  1987  and
specializing   in   geriatric   health   care   medicine;   2
representatives  of  organizations  interested  in  geriatric
medicine or the care of the elderly; and 3 individuals 60  or
older who are interested in geriatric health care medicine or
the  care of the elderly. The members of the Commission shall
be selected by the Governor from a  list  of  recommendations
submitted  to  him  by organizations concerned with geriatric
medicine or the care of the elderly.
    The terms of the members of the  Commission  shall  be  4
years,  except  that  of  the  members initially appointed, 2
shall be designated to serve until January 1, 1986,  3  until
January  1, 1988, and 2 until January 1, 1990. Members of the
Commission  shall  receive  no  compensation,  but  shall  be
reimbursed for actual expenses incurred in carrying out their
duties.
(Source: P.A. 85-1209.)

    Section  4.  The   Baccalaureate   Assistance   Law   for
Registered  Nurses  is  amended  by  changing  Section  3  as
follows:

    (110 ILCS 915/3) (from Ch. 144, par. 1403)
    Sec.  3.  Definitions. The following terms, whenever used
or referred to, have the following meanings except where  the
context clearly indicates otherwise:
    (a)  "Board" means: the Board of Higher Education created
by "An Act creating a Board of Higher Education, defining its
powers  and  duties,  making  an  appropriation therefor, and
repealing an Act therein named", approved August 22, 1961, as
now or hereafter amended.
    (b)  "Department"  means:  the  Illinois  Department   of
Public Health.
    (c)  "Approved   institution"   means:   a   college   or
university  located  in  this State which has National League
for  Nursing  accreditation  for  the  baccalaureate   degree
program in nursing.
    (d)  "Enrollment"    means:    the    establishment   and
maintenance of an individual's status  as  a  student  in  an
approved  institution,  regardless  of  the terms used at the
institution to describe such status.
    (e)  "Academic year"  means:  the  period  of  time  from
September 1 of one year through August 31 of the next year.
    (f)  "Registered  Nurse" or "professional nurse" means: a
nurse holding a valid existing license in good standing as  a
registered  professional  nurse  issued  by the Department of
Professional  Regulation  under  the  Illinois  Nursing   and
Advanced Practice Nursing Act of 1987.
    (g)  "Regions"  means:  the  official  and  uniform state
planning  and  administrative  regions  established  by   the
Governor  by  Executive  Order No. 7, dated June 22, 1971, as
amended.
    (h)  "Director"  means:  the  Director  of  the  Illinois
Department of Public Health.
(Source: P.A. 85-1209.)

    Section 5.  The  Nursing  Education  Scholarship  Law  is
amended by changing Section 6 as follows:

    (110 ILCS 975/6) (from Ch. 144, par. 2756)
    Sec. 6.  Nursing requirements for scholarship recipients.
    Upon  graduation  from  an  associate  degree or hospital
based program in professional nursing,  baccalaureate  degree
in  nursing  program, or other program or course of study any
person who accepted a  scholarship  under  Section  5  shall,
during  the  7  year  period immediately following his or her
graduation,  be  employed  in  this  State  as  a  registered
professional nurse or licensed practical nurse, as each  term
defined in the Illinois Nursing and Advanced Practice Nursing
Act of 1987, for at least one year for each year of full-time
scholarship  support received.  If the recipient spends up to
4 years in  military  service  before  or  after  he  or  she
graduates,  the  period of military service shall be excluded
from the computation of that 7 year period.  A recipient  who
is  enrolled  in  an  academic  program leading to a graduate
degree in nursing shall have the  period  of  graduate  study
excluded from the computation of that 7 year period.
    Calendar   years   of   required   employment   will   be
proportionally  reduced  for  less  than  full  academic year
scholarship support; provided  that  employment  must  be  at
least 17.5 hours per week.
    Any  person  who  fails to fulfill the nursing employment
requirement shall pay to the Department an  amount  equal  to
the  amount  of  scholarship funds received per year for each
unfulfilled  year  of  the  nursing  employment  requirement,
together with interest at 7% per year on the unpaid  balance.
All repayments must be completed within 6 years from the date
of  the  occurrence  initiating the repayment.  However, this
obligation to repay  does  not  apply  when  the  failure  to
fulfill  the  nursing  requirement results from involuntarily
leaving the profession due to a decrease  in  the  number  of
nurses   employed   in   the  State  or  from  the  death  or
adjudication  as  incompetent  of  the  person  holding   the
scholarship.  No claim for repayment may be filed against the
estate of such a decedent or incompetent.
    Each  person  applying  for  such  a scholarship shall be
provided with a copy of this Section at the time  he  or  she
applies for the benefits of such scholarship.
(Source: P.A. 86-1467; 87-577.)

    Section   6.  The  Academic  Degree  Act  is  amended  by
changing Section 11 as follows:

    (110 ILCS 1010/11) (from Ch. 144, par. 241)
    Sec. 11. Exemptions. This Act  shall  not  apply  to  any
school or educational institution regulated or approved under
the  Illinois  Nursing  and  Advanced Practice Nursing Act of
1987, as heretofore and hereafter amended.
    This Act shall not apply to any of the following:
    (a)  in-training  programs  by  corporations   or   other
business organizations for the training of their personnel;
    (b)  education or other improvement programs by business,
trade  and  similar  organizations  and  associations for the
benefit of their members only; or
    (c)  apprentice  or  other  training  programs  by  labor
unions.
(Source: P.A. 85-1209.)

    Section 7. The Ambulatory Surgical Treatment  Center  Act
is amended by adding Section 6.5 as follows:

    (210 ILCS 5/6.5 new)
    Sec. 6.5.  Clinical privileges; advanced practice nurses.
No  policy,  rule,  regulation,  or practice of an ambulatory
surgical treatment center licensed under this  Act  shall  be
inconsistent  with  the  provision of adequate collaboration,
including medical direction  of  licensed  advanced  practice
nurses,  in  accordance  with  Section  54.5  of  the Medical
Practice Act of 1987.
    Section 8.  The Illinois Clinical  Laboratory  and  Blood
Bank Act is amended by changing Section 7-101 as follows:

    (210 ILCS 25/7-101) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 627-101)
    Sec.   7-101.   Examination   of  specimens.  A  clinical
laboratory shall examine specimens only at the request of (i)
a licensed  physician,  (ii)  a  licensed  dentist,  (iii)  a
licensed  podiatrist,  (iv)  a  therapeutic  optometrist  for
diagnostic  or  therapeutic  purposes  related  to the use of
diagnostic  topical  or  therapeutic  ocular   pharmaceutical
agents, as defined in subsections (c) and (d) of Section 15.1
of  the  Illinois  Optometric  Practice  Act  of 1987,  (v) a
licensed physician assistant in accordance with  the  written
guidelines  required  under  subdivision (3) of Section 4 and
under Section 7.5 of the Physician Assistant Practice Act  of
1987,    (v-A)  an advanced practice nurse in accordance with
the written collaborative agreement  required  under  Section
15-15  of  the  Nursing and Advanced Practice Nursing Act, or
(vi) an authorized law enforcement agency or, in the case  of
blood  alcohol, at the request of the individual for whom the
test is to be performed in compliance  with  Sections  11-501
and  11-501.1  of the Illinois Vehicle Code.   If the request
to a laboratory is oral, the physician  or  other  authorized
person  shall  submit  a  written  request  to the laboratory
within 48 hours.  If the  laboratory  does  not  receive  the
written  request  within that period, it shall note that fact
in its records.
(Source: P.A. 90-116,  eff.  7-14-97;  90-322,  eff.  1-1-98;
revised 10-23-97.)

    Section  9.  The  Life  Care Facilities Act is amended by
changing Section 2 as follows:

    (210 ILCS 40/2) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 4160-2)

    Sec.  2.   As  used  in  this  Act,  unless  the  context
otherwise requires:
    (a)  "Department" means the Department of Public Health.
    (b)  "Director" means the Director of the Department.
    (c)  "Life care contract" means a contract to provide  to
a person for the duration of such person's life or for a term
in  excess of one year, nursing services, medical services or
personal care services, in addition to  maintenance  services
for  such person in a facility, conditioned upon the transfer
of an entrance fee  to  the  provider  of  such  services  in
addition  to  or  in  lieu of the payment of regular periodic
charges for the care and services involved.
    (d)  "Provider" means  a  person  who  provides  services
pursuant to a life care contract.
    (e)  "Resident"  means  a  person  who enters into a life
care contract with a provider, or who is designated in a life
care contract to be a person provided  with  maintenance  and
nursing, medical or personal care services.
    (f)  "Facility"  means  a  place  or  places  in  which a
provider  undertakes  to  provide  a  resident  with  nursing
services, medical services  or  personal  care  services,  in
addition  to maintenance services for a term in excess of one
year or for life pursuant to a life care contract.  The  term
also  means  a place or places in which a provider undertakes
to provide such services to a non-resident.
    (g)  "Living unit" means an apartment, room or other area
within a facility set aside for the exclusive use of  one  or
more identified residents.
    (h)  "Entrance fee" means an initial or deferred transfer
to a provider of a sum of money or property, made or promised
to  be  made  by a person entering into a life care contract,
which assures a resident of services pursuant to a life  care
contract.
    (i)  "Permit" means a written authorization to enter into
life care contracts issued by the Department to a provider.
    (j)  "Medical  services"  means those services pertaining
to medical or dental care that are  performed  in  behalf  of
patients  at  the direction of a physician licensed under the
Medical Practice Act of 1987 or a dentist licensed under "the
Illinois Dental Practice Act" by such physicians or dentists,
or by a registered or licensed practical nurse as defined  in
the  Illinois  Nursing  and  Advanced Practice Nursing Act of
1987 or by other professional and technical personnel.
    (k)  "Nursing services" means those  services  pertaining
to  the  curative,  restorative  and  preventive  aspects  of
nursing  care  that  are  performed  at  the  direction  of a
physician licensed under the Medical Practice Act of 1987  by
or   under  the  supervision  of  a  registered  or  licensed
practical nurse  as  defined  in  the  Illinois  Nursing  and
Advanced Practice Nursing Act of 1987.
    (l)  "Personal   care  services"  means  assistance  with
meals, dressing, movement, bathing or other personal needs or
maintenance, or general  supervision  and  oversight  of  the
physical  and  mental  well-being  of  an  individual, who is
incapable of maintaining a private, independent residence  or
who  is  incapable  of  managing  his person whether or not a
guardian has been appointed for such individual.
    (m)  "Maintenance  services"  means  food,  shelter   and
laundry services.
    (n)  "Certificates  of  Need"  means those permits issued
pursuant to the Illinois Health Facilities  Planning  Act  as
now or hereafter amended.
    (o)  "Non-resident" means a person admitted to a facility
who has not entered into a life care contract.
(Source: P.A. 85-1440.)

    Section  10.  The  Nursing  Home  Care  Act is amended by
changing Section 1-118 as follows:
    (210 ILCS 45/1-118) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 4151-118)
    Sec. 1-118.   "Nurse"  means  a  registered  nurse  or  a
licensed  practical  nurse as defined in the Illinois Nursing
and  Advanced  Practice  Nursing  Act  of  1987,  as  now  or
hereafter amended.
(Source: P.A. 85-1209)

    Section 11.  The Emergency Medical Services (EMS) Systems
Act is amended by changing Section 3.80 as follows:

    (210 ILCS 50/3.80)
    Sec. 3.80.  Pre-Hospital RN and Emergency  Communications
Registered Nurse.
    (a)  Emergency  Communications Registered Nurse or "ECRN"
means a registered professional  nurse,  licensed  under  the
Illinois  Nursing  and  Advanced Practice Nursing Act of 1987
who has  successfully  completed  supplemental  education  in
accordance  with  rules adopted by the Department, and who is
approved   by   an   EMS   Medical   Director   to    monitor
telecommunications  from  and give voice orders to EMS System
personnel, under the authority of the  EMS  Medical  Director
and in accordance with System protocols.
    Upon  the  effective date of this amendatory Act of 1995,
all existing Registered  Professional  Nurse/MICNs  shall  be
considered ECRNs.
    (b)  "Pre-Hospital Registered Nurse" or "Pre-Hospital RN"
means  a  registered  professional  nurse, licensed under the
Illinois Nursing and Advanced Practice Nursing  Act  of  1987
who  has  successfully  completed  supplemental  education in
accordance with rules adopted by the Department  pursuant  to
this  Act,  and who is approved by an EMS Medical Director to
practice within an EMS System as emergency  medical  services
personnel  for pre-hospital and inter-hospital emergency care
and non-emergency medical transports.
    Upon the effective date of this amendatory Act  of  1995,
all existing Registered Professional Nurse/Field RNs shall be
considered Pre-Hospital RNs.
    (c)  The   Department   shall   have  the  authority  and
responsibility to:
         (1)  Prescribe education  and  continuing  education
    requirements  for  Pre-Hospital  RN  and  ECRN candidates
    through rules adopted pursuant to this Act:
              (A)  Education  for   Pre-Hospital   RN   shall
         include    extrication,    telecommunications,   and
         pre-hospital cardiac and trauma care;
              (B)  Education   for   ECRN    shall    include
         telecommunications,  System  standing medical orders
         and the procedures and protocols established by  the
         EMS Medical Director;
              (C)  A   Pre-Hospital   RN   candidate  who  is
         fulfilling clinical training and in-field supervised
         experience  requirements  may   perform   prescribed
         procedures   under   the  direct  supervision  of  a
         physician licensed to practice medicine  in  all  of
         its  branches,  a  qualified registered professional
         nurse or a qualified EMT, only  when  authorized  by
         the EMS Medical Director;
              (D)  An   EMS   Medical   Director  may  impose
         in-field supervised field experience requirements on
         System ECRNs as part of their training or continuing
         education,  in   which   they   perform   prescribed
         procedures   under   the  direct  supervision  of  a
         physician licensed to practice medicine  in  all  of
         its  branches,  a  qualified registered professional
         nurse or qualified EMT, only when authorized by  the
         EMS Medical Director;
         (2)  Require  EMS  Medical  Directors  to  reapprove
    Pre-Hospital  RNs  and  ECRNs  every  4  years,  based on
    compliance   with   continuing   education   requirements
    prescribed  by  the  Department  through  rules   adopted
    pursuant to this Act;
         (3)  Allow  EMS  Medical Directors to grant inactive
    status to any Pre-Hospital  RN  or  ECRN  who  qualifies,
    based  on  standards  and  procedures  established by the
    Department in rules adopted pursuant to this Act;
         (4)  Require a  Pre-Hospital  RN  to  honor  Do  Not
    Resuscitate  (DNR)  orders  and  powers  of  attorney for
    health care only in accordance with rules adopted by  the
    Department  pursuant to this Act and protocols of the EMS
    System in which he or she practices.
(Source: P.A. 89-177, eff. 7-19-95.)

    Section 12.  The Hospice Program Licensing Act is amended
by changing Section 3 as follows:

    (210 ILCS 60/3) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 6103)
    Sec. 3.  Definitions.  As used in this  Act,  unless  the
context otherwise requires:
    (a)  "Bereavement"  means the period of time during which
the hospice patient's family experiences and adjusts  to  the
death of the hospice patient.
    (b)  "Department" means the Illinois Department of Public
Health.
    (c)  "Director"   means  the  Director  of  the  Illinois
Department of Public Health.
    (d)  "Full hospice" means a coordinated program  of  home
and inpatient care  providing directly, or through agreement,
palliative  and supportive medical, health and other services
to terminally ill  patients  and  their  families.    A  full
hospice   utilizes  a  medically  directed  interdisciplinary
hospice care  team  of  professionals  and  volunteers.   The
program  provides  care  to meet the physical, psychological,
social,  spiritual  and  other  special   needs   which   are
experienced  during  the  final  stages of illness and during
dying and bereavement.  Home care is  to  be  provided  on  a
part-time, intermittent, regularly scheduled basis, and on an
on-call  around-the-clock  basis  according  to  patient  and
family  need.  To  the maximum extent possible, care shall be
furnished in the patient's home.  Should in-patient  care  be
required,  services  are  to  be  provided with the intent of
minimizing the length of such care and shall only be provided
in a hospital licensed under the Hospital Licensing Act, or a
skilled nursing facility licensed under the Nursing Home Care
Act.
    (e)  "Hospice  care  team"  means  an   interdisciplinary
working  unit  composed  of  but  not  limited to a physician
licensed to practice medicine in all of its branches, a nurse
licensed  pursuant  to  the  Illinois  Nursing  and  Advanced
Practice Nursing Act of 1987, a social worker, a pastoral  or
other counselor, and trained volunteers.  The patient and the
patient's  family  are considered members of the hospice care
team when development or revision of the  patient's  plan  of
care takes place.
    (f)  "Hospice  patient"  means  a  terminally  ill person
receiving hospice services.
    (g)  "Hospice patient's family" means a hospice patient's
immediate family consisting  of  a  spouse,  sibling,  child,
parent  and  those  individuals  designated  as  such  by the
patient for the purposes of this Act.
    (g-1)  "Hospice  residence"  means  a   home,   apartment
building, or similar building providing living quarters:
         (1)  that  is owned or operated by a person licensed
    to operate as a full hospice; and
         (2)  at  which  hospice  services  are  provided  to
    facility residents.
    A building that is licensed under the Hospital  Licensing
Act or the Nursing Home Care Act is not a hospice residence.
    (h)  "Hospice  services"  means palliative and supportive
care provided to a hospice patient and his family to meet the
special  need  arising  out  of  the   physical,   emotional,
spiritual  and  social  stresses which are experienced during
the final stages of illness and during dying and bereavement.
Services provided to the  terminally  ill  patient  shall  be
furnished,  to  the maximum extent possible, in the patient's
home.  Should inpatient care be required, services are to  be
provided  with  the  intent  of minimizing the length of such
care.
    (i)  "Palliative care" means treatment to provide for the
reduction or abatement of pain and other troubling  symptoms,
rather than treatment aimed at investigation and intervention
for  the  purpose  of  cure  or inappropriate prolongation of
life.
    (j)  "Hospice service plan" means a  plan  detailing  the
specific  hospice  services  offered  by  a full or volunteer
hospice, and the administrative  and  direct  care  personnel
responsible  for  those services.  The plan shall include but
not be limited to:
         (1)  Identification  of  the   person   or   persons
    administratively  responsible  for  the  program, and the
    affiliation of such person or  persons  with  a  licensed
    home health agency, hospital or nursing home.
         (2)  The estimated average monthly patient census.
         (3)  The  proposed  geographic area the hospice will
    serve.
         (4)  A listing of those  hospice  services  provided
    directly  by  the  hospice,  and  those  hospice services
    provided indirectly through a contractual agreement.
         (5)  The name and qualifications of those persons or
    entities  under  contract  to  provide  indirect  hospice
    services.
         (6)  The name and qualifications  of  those  persons
    providing  direct hospice services, with the exception of
    volunteers.
         (7)  A description  of  how  the  hospice  plans  to
    utilize volunteers in the provision of hospice services.
         (8)  A  description  of the program's record keeping
    system.
    (k)  "Terminally ill" means  a  medical  prognosis  by  a
physician  licensed  to  practice  medicine  in  all  of  its
branches that a patient has an anticipated life expectancy of
6 months or less.
    (l)  "Volunteer"  means  a  person  who offers his or her
services to a hospice  without  compensation.   Reimbursement
for a volunteer's expenses in providing hospice service shall
not be considered compensation.
    (m)  "Volunteer  hospice"  means a program which provides
hospice services to patients regardless of their  ability  to
pay,  with  emphasis  on  the  utilization  of  volunteers to
provide   services,   under   the   administration    of    a
not-for-profit agency.  This definition does not prohibit the
employment of staff.
(Source: P.A. 89-278, eff. 8-10-95.)

    Section  13.  The  Hospital  Licensing  Act is amended by
changing Section 10 as follows:

    (210 ILCS 85/10) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 151)
    Sec. 10.  Board creation; Department rules.
    (a) The Governor shall appoint a Hospital Licensing Board
composed of 14 persons, which shall advise and  consult  with
the   Director  in  the  administration  of  this  Act.   The
Secretary of Human Services (or his or  her  designee)  shall
serve  on the Board, along with one additional representative
of the Department of Human Services to be designated  by  the
Secretary.   Four  appointive  members  shall  represent  the
general  public  and  2 of these shall be members of hospital
governing boards; one appointive member shall be a registered
professional nurse or advanced practice nurse as  defined  in
the  Illinois  Nursing  and  Advanced Practice Nursing Act of
1987, as now or hereafter  amended,  who  is  employed  in  a
hospital;    3   appointive   members   shall   be   hospital
administrators  actively  engaged  in  the   supervision   or
administration  of  hospitals;  2 appointive members shall be
practicing  physicians,  licensed  in  Illinois  to  practice
medicine in all of its branches; and  one  appointive  member
shall  be a physician licensed to practice podiatric medicine
under the Podiatric Medical Practice Act  of  1987;  and  one
appointive  member  shall  be  a dentist licensed to practice
dentistry under the "Illinois Dental Practice Act",  approved
September 14, 1985, as amended. In making Board appointments,
the Governor shall give consideration to recommendations made
through  the Director by professional organizations concerned
with hospital administration for the hospital  administrative
and  governing  board  appointments,  registered professional
nurse organizations for  the  registered  professional  nurse
appointment,   professional  medical  organizations  for  the
physician appointments, and professional dental organizations
for the dentist appointment.
    (b)  Each appointive member shall hold office for a  term
of  3  years,  except  that  any  member  appointed to fill a
vacancy occurring prior to the expiration  of  the  term  for
which  his  predecessor  was appointed shall be appointed for
the remainder of such term and the terms  of  office  of  the
members  first  taking  office shall expire, as designated at
the time of appointment, 2 at the end of the first year, 2 at
the end of the second year, and 3 at the  end  of  the  third
year,  after  the  date  of appointment. The initial terms of
office of the 2 additional members representing  the  general
public  provided  for in this Section shall expire at the end
of the third year after the date of appointment. The term  of
office  of  each  original  appointee  shall commence July 1,
1953;  the  term  of  office  of  the   original   registered
professional nurse appointee shall commence July 1, 1969; the
term  of office of the original licensed podiatrist appointee
shall commence July 1,  1981;  the  term  of  office  of  the
original  dentist  appointee shall commence July 1, 1987; and
the term of office of each successor shall commence on July 1
of the year in which his predecessor's  term  expires.  Board
members,  while  serving  on  business  of  the  Board, shall
receive actual and necessary travel and subsistence  expenses
while  so  serving  away  from their places of residence. The
Board  shall  meet  as  frequently  as  the  Director   deems
necessary,  but  not less than once a year. Upon request of 5
or more members, the Director shall call  a  meeting  of  the
Board.
    (c)  The  Director  shall  prescribe  rules, regulations,
standards, and statements  of  policy  needed  to  implement,
interpret,  or  make  specific the provisions and purposes of
this Act. The Department shall adopt rules  which  set  forth
standards for determining when the public interest, safety or
welfare  requires emergency action in relation to termination
of a research program or experimental procedure conducted  by
a  hospital licensed under this Act.  No rule, regulation, or
standard shall be adopted by the  Department  concerning  the
operation  of hospitals licensed under this Act which has not
had prior approval of the Hospital Licensing Board, nor shall
the  Department  adopt  any  rule,  regulation  or   standard
relating   to   the   establishment  of  a  hospital  without
consultation with the Hospital Licensing Board.
    (d)  Within one year after the  effective  date  of  this
amendatory Act of 1984, all hospitals licensed under this Act
and  providing  perinatal care shall comply with standards of
perinatal care promulgated by the  Department.  The  Director
shall  promulgate  rules  or regulations under this Act which
are consistent with "An Act relating  to  the  prevention  of
developmental  disabilities",  approved September 6, 1973, as
amended.
(Source: P.A. 89-507, eff. 7-1-97.)

    Section 14.  The Hospital Licensing  Act  is  amended  by
adding Section 10.7 as follows:

    (210 ILCS 85/10.7 new)
    Sec.   10.7.  Clinical   privileges;   advanced  practice
registered nurses. No policy, rule, regulation,  or  practice
of  a  hospital licensed under this Act shall be inconsistent
with  the  provision  of  adequate  collaboration,  including
medical direction of licensed advanced  practice  nurses,  in
accordance  with  Section 54.5 of the Medical Practice Act of
1987.

    Section 15.  The Health Care Worker Self-Referral Act  is
amended by changing Section 15 as follows:

    (225 ILCS 47/15)
    Sec. 15.  Definitions.  In this Act:
    (a)  "Board" means the Health Facilities Planning Board.
    (b)  "Entity"  means  any  individual, partnership, firm,
corporation, or other business that provides health  services
but  does  not  include  an  individual  who is a health care
worker who provides professional services to an individual.
    (c)  "Group practice" means a group of 2 or  more  health
care workers legally organized as a partnership, professional
corporation,  not-for-profit  corporation,  faculty  practice
plan or a similar association in which:
         (1)  each  health  care  worker  who  is a member or
    employee  or  an  independent  contractor  of  the  group
    provides substantially the full range  of  services  that
    the  health  care  worker  routinely  provides, including
    consultation, diagnosis, or treatment, through the use of
    office space, facilities, equipment, or personnel of  the
    group;
         (2)  the  services  of  the  health care workers are
    provided through the group,  and  payments  received  for
    health services are treated as receipts of the group; and
         (3)  the  overhead  expenses and the income from the
    practice are distributed by methods previously determined
    by the group.
    (d)  "Health care worker" means any  individual  licensed
under  the  laws  of  this  State to provide health services,
including but not limited to:  dentists  licensed  under  the
Illinois  Dental  Practice  Act;  dental  hygienists licensed
under the Illinois Dental Practice Act; nurses  and  advanced
practice  nurses  licensed  under  the  Illinois  Nursing and
Advanced  Practice  Nursing   Act   of   1987;   occupational
therapists  licensed  under the Illinois Occupational Therapy
Practice  Act;  optometrists  licensed  under  the   Illinois
Optometric  Practice  Act of 1987; pharmacists licensed under
the  Pharmacy  Practice  Act  of  1987;  physical  therapists
licensed under the Illinois Physical Therapy Act;  physicians
licensed  under  the  Medical Practice Act of 1987; physician
assistants licensed under the  Physician  Assistant  Practice
Act of 1987; podiatrists licensed under the Podiatric Medical
Practice  Act  of 1987; clinical psychologists licensed under
the Clinical  Psychologist  Licensing  Act;  clinical  social
workers  licensed  under  the Clinical Social Work and Social
Work   Practice   Act;   speech-language   pathologists   and
audiologists  licensed  under  the  Illinois  Speech-Language
Pathology and Audiology Practice Act; or  hearing  instrument
dispensers  licensed  under  the  Hearing Instrument Consumer
Protection Act, or any of their successor Acts.
    (e)  "Health services" means health care  procedures  and
services provided by or through a health care worker.
    (f)  "Immediate   family  member"  means  a  health  care
worker's spouse, child, child's spouse, or a parent.
    (g)  "Investment  interest"  means  an  equity  or   debt
security  issued by an entity, including, without limitation,
shares of stock in a corporation, units or other interests in
a partnership, bonds,  debentures,  notes,  or  other  equity
interests or debt instruments except that investment interest
for  purposes  of  Section  20 does not include interest in a
hospital licensed under the laws of the State of Illinois.
    (h)  "Investor" means an individual or entity directly or
indirectly  owning  a  legal  or  beneficial   ownership   or
investment  interest,  (such  as  through an immediate family
member, trust, or another entity related to the investor).
    (i)  "Office   practice"   includes   the   facility   or
facilities at which a  health  care  worker,  on  an  ongoing
basis,  provides  or supervises the provision of professional
health services to individuals.
    (j)  "Referral" means  any  referral  of  a  patient  for
health services, including, without limitation:
         (1)  The  forwarding of a patient by one health care
    worker to another health care  worker  or  to  an  entity
    outside the health care worker's office practice or group
    practice that provides health services.
         (2)  The  request  or establishment by a health care
    worker of a plan of care outside the health care worker's
    office practice  or  group  practice  that  includes  the
    provision of any health services.
(Source: P.A. 89-72, eff. 12-31-95.)

    Section  16.  The Medical Practice Act of 1987 is amended
by changing Sections 20 and 22 and  adding  Section  54.5  as
follows:

    (225 ILCS 60/20) (from Ch. 111, par. 4400-20)
    Sec.  20.   Continuing  education.   The Department shall
promulgate rules of continuing education for persons licensed
under this Act  that  require  150  50  hours  of  continuing
education  per  license renewal cycle each year.  These rules
shall   be   consistent   with   requirements   of   relevant
professional associations, speciality societies,  or  boards.
The  rules  shall  also  address  variances  for  illness  or
hardship.  In  establishing these rules, the Department shall
consider  educational  requirements   for   medical   staffs,
requirements for specialty society board certification or for
continuing   education   requirements   as   a  condition  of
membership in societies  representing  the  2  categories  of
licensee  under  this  Act.   These  rules  shall assure that
licensees are given the opportunity to participate  in  those
programs   sponsored   by   or   through  their  professional
associations  or  hospitals  which  are  relevant  to   their
practice.   Each  licensee  is  responsible  for  maintaining
records  of  completion  of continuing education and shall be
prepared  to  produce  the  records  when  requested  by  the
Department.
(Source: P.A. 89-702, eff. 7-1-97.)

    (225 ILCS 60/22) (from Ch. 111, par. 4400-22)
    Sec. 22.  Disciplinary action.
    (A)  The  Department  may  revoke,  suspend,   place   on
probationary status, or take any other disciplinary action as
the  Department may deem proper with regard to the license or
visiting professor permit of any person issued under this Act
to practice medicine, or to treat human ailments without  the
use  of  drugs  and without operative surgery upon any of the
following grounds:
         (1)  Performance of  an  elective  abortion  in  any
    place, locale, facility, or institution other than:
              (a)  a   facility   licensed  pursuant  to  the
         Ambulatory Surgical Treatment Center Act;
              (b)  an institution licensed under the Hospital
         Licensing Act; or
              (c)  an ambulatory surgical treatment center or
         hospitalization or care facility maintained  by  the
         State  or  any agency thereof, where such department
         or agency has authority under law to  establish  and
         enforce   standards   for  the  ambulatory  surgical
         treatment   centers,   hospitalization,   or    care
         facilities under its management and control; or
              (d)  ambulatory   surgical  treatment  centers,
         hospitalization or care facilities maintained by the
         Federal Government; or
              (e)  ambulatory  surgical  treatment   centers,
         hospitalization or care facilities maintained by any
         university  or college established under the laws of
         this State and supported principally by public funds
         raised by taxation.
         (2)  Performance  of  an  abortion  procedure  in  a
    wilful and wanton manner on a woman who was not  pregnant
    at the time the abortion procedure was performed.
         (3)  The conviction of a felony in this or any other
    jurisdiction,  except as otherwise provided in subsection
    B of this Section, whether or  not  related  to  practice
    under  this  Act,  or  the  entry  of  a  guilty  or nolo
    contendere plea to a felony charge.
         (4)  Gross negligence in practice under this Act.
         (5)  Engaging   in   dishonorable,   unethical    or
    unprofessional  conduct of a character likely to deceive,
    defraud or harm the public.
         (6)  Obtaining  any  fee  by   fraud,   deceit,   or
    misrepresentation.
         (7)  Habitual  or  excessive  use  or abuse of drugs
    defined in law as controlled substances, of  alcohol,  or
    of any other substances which results in the inability to
    practice with reasonable judgment, skill or safety.
         (8)  Practicing under a false or, except as provided
    by law, an assumed name.
         (9)  Fraud  or misrepresentation in applying for, or
    procuring, a license under this Act or in connection with
    applying for renewal of a license under this Act.
         (10)  Making  a  false   or   misleading   statement
    regarding  their  skill  or  the efficacy or value of the
    medicine, treatment, or  remedy  prescribed  by  them  at
    their  direction in the treatment of any disease or other
    condition of the body or mind.
         (11)  Allowing another person or organization to use
    their license, procured under this Act, to practice.
         (12)  Disciplinary  action  of  another   state   or
    jurisdiction  against a license or other authorization to
    practice as  a  medical  doctor,  doctor  of  osteopathy,
    doctor of osteopathic medicine or doctor of chiropractic,
    a certified copy of the record of the action taken by the
    other  state  or  jurisdiction being prima facie evidence
    thereof.
         (13)  Violation of any provision of this Act  or  of
    the Medical Practice Act prior to the repeal of that Act,
    or  violation  of  the  rules,  or a final administrative
    action  of  the  Director,  after  consideration  of  the
    recommendation of the Disciplinary Board.
         (14)  Dividing with  anyone  other  than  physicians
    with  whom  the  licensee  practices  in  a  partnership,
    Professional  Association,  limited liability company, or
    Medical or Professional Corporation any fee,  commission,
    rebate or other form of compensation for any professional
    services  not  actually  and personally rendered. Nothing
    contained in this subsection  prohibits  persons  holding
    valid and current licenses under this Act from practicing
    medicine  in  partnership  under a partnership agreement,
    including a limited liability partnership, in  a  limited
    liability  company  under  the  Limited Liability Company
    Act,  in  a  corporation  authorized   by   the   Medical
    Corporation  Act,  as  an  association  authorized by the
    Professional Association Act, or in a  corporation  under
    the   Professional   Corporation  Act  or  from  pooling,
    sharing, dividing or apportioning  the  fees  and  monies
    received  by  them  or by the partnership, corporation or
    association in accordance with the partnership  agreement
    or  the  policies  of  the  Board  of  Directors  of  the
    corporation  or  association.   Nothing contained in this
    subsection prohibits 2 or more corporations authorized by
    the Medical Corporation Act, from forming  a  partnership
    or  joint  venture  of  such  corporations, and providing
    medical, surgical and scientific research  and  knowledge
    by  employees of these corporations if such employees are
    licensed  under  this  Act,  or  from  pooling,  sharing,
    dividing, or apportioning the fees and monies received by
    the partnership or joint venture in accordance  with  the
    partnership   or   joint   venture   agreement.   Nothing
    contained in this subsection shall abrogate the right  of
    2  or  more  persons,  holding valid and current licenses
    under this Act, to each receive adequate compensation for
    concurrently rendering professional services to a patient
    and  divide  a  fee;  provided,  the  patient  has   full
    knowledge  of  the  division,  and,  provided,  that  the
    division  is made in proportion to the services performed
    and responsibility assumed by each.
         (15)  A finding by the  Medical  Disciplinary  Board
    that  the  registrant  after  having  his  or her license
    placed on probationary status or subjected to  conditions
    or  restrictions  violated  the terms of the probation or
    failed to comply with such terms or conditions.
         (16)  Abandonment of a patient.
         (17)  Prescribing,      selling,      administering,
    distributing,  giving  or  self-administering  any   drug
    classified as a controlled substance (designated product)
    or narcotic for other than medically accepted therapeutic
    purposes.
         (18)  Promotion  of  the  sale  of  drugs,  devices,
    appliances or goods provided for a patient in such manner
    as  to  exploit  the  patient  for  financial gain of the
    physician.
         (19)  Offering, undertaking or agreeing to  cure  or
    treat disease by a secret method, procedure, treatment or
    medicine,  or  the treating, operating or prescribing for
    any human condition by a method, means or procedure which
    the licensee  refuses  to  divulge  upon  demand  of  the
    Department.
         (20)  Immoral  conduct  in the commission of any act
    including, but not limited to, commission of  an  act  of
    sexual misconduct related to the licensee's practice.
         (21)  Wilfully  making  or  filing  false records or
    reports in his or her practice as a physician, including,
    but not limited  to,  false  records  to  support  claims
    against  the medical assistance program of the Department
    of Public Aid under the Illinois Public Aid Code.
         (22)  Wilful omission to file or record, or wilfully
    impeding the filing or  recording,  or  inducing  another
    person  to  omit  to  file  or record, medical reports as
    required  by  law,  or  wilfully  failing  to  report  an
    instance of suspected abuse or  neglect  as  required  by
    law.
         (23)  Being  named  as a perpetrator in an indicated
    report by the Department of Children and Family  Services
    under  the  Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act, and
    upon proof by clear  and  convincing  evidence  that  the
    licensee  has  caused  a  child  to be an abused child or
    neglected child as defined in the  Abused  and  Neglected
    Child Reporting Act.
         (24)  Solicitation  of professional patronage by any
    corporation, agents or persons, or profiting  from  those
    representing themselves to be agents of the licensee.
         (25)  Gross  and  wilful  and continued overcharging
    for  professional  services,   including   filing   false
    statements  for collection of fees for which services are
    not rendered, including, but not limited to, filing  such
    false  statements  for  collection of monies for services
    not rendered from the medical assistance program  of  the
    Department  of  Public  Aid under the Illinois Public Aid
    Code.
         (26)  A pattern of practice or other behavior  which
    demonstrates incapacity or incompetence to practice under
    this Act.
         (27)  Mental  illness or disability which results in
    the inability to practice under this Act with  reasonable
    judgment, skill or safety.
         (28)  Physical  illness,  including, but not limited
    to, deterioration through the aging process, or  loss  of
    motor  skill  which results in a physician's inability to
    practice under this Act with reasonable  judgment,  skill
    or safety.
         (29)  Cheating   on   or   attempt  to  subvert  the
    licensing examinations administered under this Act.
         (30)  Wilfully   or   negligently   violating    the
    confidentiality  between  physician and patient except as
    required by law.
         (31)  The use of any false, fraudulent, or deceptive
    statement in any document connected with  practice  under
    this Act.
         (32)  Aiding and abetting an individual not licensed
    under  this  Act in the practice of a profession licensed
    under this Act.
         (33)  Violating state or federal laws or regulations
    relating to controlled substances.
         (34)  Failure  to  report  to  the  Department   any
    adverse  final  action  taken  against  them  by  another
    licensing  jurisdiction (any other state or any territory
    of the United States or any foreign state or country), by
    any peer review body, by any health care institution,  by
    any   professional  society  or  association  related  to
    practice under this Act, by any governmental  agency,  by
    any  law  enforcement agency, or by any court for acts or
    conduct similar to acts or conduct which would constitute
    grounds for action as defined in this Section.
         (35)  Failure to report to the Department  surrender
    of  a  license  or authorization to practice as a medical
    doctor, a doctor of osteopathy, a doctor  of  osteopathic
    medicine,  or  doctor of chiropractic in another state or
    jurisdiction, or surrender of membership on  any  medical
    staff  or  in  any medical or professional association or
    society, while under disciplinary investigation by any of
    those authorities or bodies, for acts or conduct  similar
    to  acts  or  conduct  which would constitute grounds for
    action as defined in this Section.
         (36)  Failure  to  report  to  the  Department   any
    adverse  judgment,  settlement,  or  award arising from a
    liability claim related to acts  or  conduct  similar  to
    acts or conduct which would constitute grounds for action
    as defined in this Section.
         (37)  Failure  to transfer copies of medical records
    as required by law.
         (38)  Failure  to  furnish   the   Department,   its
    investigators  or  representatives, relevant information,
    legally requested by the  Department  after  consultation
    with  the Chief Medical Coordinator or the Deputy Medical
    Coordinator.
         (39)  Violating the Health Care Worker Self-Referral
    Act.
         (40)  Willful failure to provide notice when  notice
    is  required under the Parental Notice of Abortion Act of
    1995.
         (41)  Failure to establish and maintain  records  of
    patient care and treatment as required by this law.
         (42)  Entering  into  an excessive number of written
    collaborative agreements with licensed advanced  practice
    nurses   resulting   in   an   inability   to  adequately
    collaborate and provide medical direction.
         (43)  Repeated  failure  to  adequately  collaborate
    with or provide medical direction to a licensed  advanced
    practice nurse.
    All proceedings to suspend, revoke, place on probationary
status,   or  take  any  other  disciplinary  action  as  the
Department may deem proper, with regard to a license  on  any
of  the  foregoing  grounds, must be commenced within 3 years
next after receipt by the Department of a complaint  alleging
the  commission  of or notice of the conviction order for any
of  the  acts  described  herein.   Except  for  the  grounds
numbered (8), (9) and (29), no action shall be commenced more
than 5 years after the date of the incident or act alleged to
have violated this Section.  In the event of  the  settlement
of  any  claim or cause of action in favor of the claimant or
the reduction to final judgment of any civil action in  favor
of the plaintiff, such claim, cause of action or civil action
being grounded on the allegation that a person licensed under
this  Act  was  negligent  in  providing care, the Department
shall have an additional period of one year from the date  of
notification  to  the Department under Section 23 of this Act
of such settlement or final judgment in which to  investigate
and commence formal disciplinary proceedings under Section 36
of  this  Act, except as otherwise provided by law.  The time
during which the holder of the license was outside the  State
of  Illinois  shall not be included within any period of time
limiting the  commencement  of  disciplinary  action  by  the
Department.
    The  entry  of  an order or judgment by any circuit court
establishing that any person holding a license under this Act
is a person  in  need  of  mental  treatment  operates  as  a
suspension  of  that  license.   That person may resume their
practice only upon the entry of a  Departmental  order  based
upon  a  finding  by the Medical Disciplinary Board that they
have been determined to be recovered from mental  illness  by
the  court  and  upon the Disciplinary Board's recommendation
that they be permitted to resume their practice.
    The Department may refuse to issue or  take  disciplinary
action concerning the license of any person who fails to file
a  return,  or to pay the tax, penalty or interest shown in a
filed return, or to pay any final assessment of tax,  penalty
or  interest,  as required by any tax Act administered by the
Illinois Department  of  Revenue,  until  such  time  as  the
requirements  of any such tax Act are satisfied as determined
by the Illinois Department of Revenue.
    The  Department,   upon   the   recommendation   of   the
Disciplinary   Board,  shall  adopt  rules  which  set  forth
standards to be used in determining:
         (a)  when  a  person  will  be  deemed  sufficiently
    rehabilitated to warrant the public trust;
         (b)  what  constitutes  dishonorable,  unethical  or
    unprofessional conduct of a character likely to  deceive,
    defraud, or harm the public;
         (c)  what   constitutes   immoral   conduct  in  the
    commission of any act, including,  but  not  limited  to,
    commission  of an act of sexual misconduct related to the
    licensee's practice; and
         (d)  what  constitutes  gross  negligence   in   the
    practice of medicine.
    However,  no  such rule shall be admissible into evidence
in any civil action except for review of a licensing or other
disciplinary action under this Act.
    In  enforcing  this  Section,  the  Medical  Disciplinary
Board, upon a showing of a possible violation, may compel any
individual licensed to practice under this Act,  or  who  has
applied  for  licensure  or a permit pursuant to this Act, to
submit to a mental  or  physical  examination,  or  both,  as
required  by  and  at  the  expense  of  the Department.  The
examining physician or physicians shall be those specifically
designated   by   the   Disciplinary   Board.   The   Medical
Disciplinary Board or the Department may order the  examining
physician  to  present  testimony  concerning  this mental or
physical  examination  of  the  licensee  or  applicant.   No
information shall be excluded by reason of any common law  or
statutory  privilege  relating  to  communication between the
licensee  or  applicant  and  the  examining  physician.  The
individual to be  examined  may  have,  at  his  or  her  own
expense,  another  physician  of  his  or  her choice present
during all aspects  of  the  examination.    Failure  of  any
individual  to submit to mental or physical examination, when
directed, shall be grounds  for  suspension  of  his  or  her
license  until  such  time  as  the individual submits to the
examination if the Disciplinary Board finds, after notice and
hearing, that the refusal to submit to  the  examination  was
without  reasonable cause.  If the Disciplinary Board finds a
physician unable to practice because of the reasons set forth
in this Section, the Disciplinary Board  shall  require  such
physician  to  submit  to  care,  counseling, or treatment by
physicians approved or designated by the Disciplinary  Board,
as   a   condition  for  continued,  reinstated,  or  renewed
licensure to practice.   Any  physician,  whose  license  was
granted  pursuant  to  Sections 9, 17, or 19 of this Act, or,
continued, reinstated, renewed,  disciplined  or  supervised,
subject  to  such terms, conditions or restrictions who shall
fail to comply with such terms, conditions  or  restrictions,
or  to  complete  a  required program of care, counseling, or
treatment, as determined by the Chief Medical Coordinator  or
Deputy   Medical  Coordinators,  shall  be  referred  to  the
Director for a determination as to whether the licensee shall
have their license suspended immediately, pending  a  hearing
by  the  Disciplinary  Board.   In  instances  in  which  the
Director immediately suspends a license under this Section, a
hearing  upon  such  person's license must be convened by the
Disciplinary Board within 15 days after such  suspension  and
completed  without appreciable delay.  The Disciplinary Board
shall have the authority to review  the  subject  physician's
record  of treatment and counseling regarding the impairment,
to the extent permitted by applicable  federal  statutes  and
regulations   safeguarding  the  confidentiality  of  medical
records.
    An individual licensed under  this  Act,  affected  under
this Section, shall be afforded an opportunity to demonstrate
to  the  Disciplinary  Board that they can resume practice in
compliance with acceptable and prevailing standards under the
provisions of their license.
    The Department may promulgate rules for the imposition of
fines in disciplinary cases, not to exceed  $5,000  for  each
violation  of  this Act.  Fines may be imposed in conjunction
with other forms of disciplinary action, but shall not be the
exclusive disposition of any disciplinary action arising  out
of  conduct  resulting  in death or injury to a patient.  Any
funds collected from such fines shall  be  deposited  in  the
Medical Disciplinary Fund.
    (B)  The  Department shall revoke the license or visiting
permit of any  person  issued  under  this  Act  to  practice
medicine  or to treat human ailments without the use of drugs
and without operative  surgery,  who  has  been  convicted  a
second  time  of  committing  any  felony  under the Illinois
Controlled Substances Act, or who has been convicted a second
time of committing a Class 1 felony under Sections  8A-3  and
8A-6 of the Illinois Public Aid Code.  A person whose license
or  visiting  permit  is  revoked  under this subsection B of
Section 22 of this Act shall be  prohibited  from  practicing
medicine  or treating human ailments without the use of drugs
and without operative surgery.
    (C)  The Medical Disciplinary Board  shall  recommend  to
the  Department  civil  penalties  and  any other appropriate
discipline in disciplinary cases when the Board finds that  a
physician   willfully   performed  an  abortion  with  actual
knowledge that the person upon whom  the  abortion  has  been
performed  is a minor or an incompetent person without notice
as required under the Parental  Notice  of  Abortion  Act  of
1995.   Upon the Board's recommendation, the Department shall
impose, for the first violation, a civil  penalty  of  $1,000
and  for a second or subsequent violation, a civil penalty of
$5,000.
(Source: P.A.  89-18,  eff.  6-1-95;  89-201,  eff.   1-1-96;
89-626, eff. 8-9-96; 89-702, eff. 7-1-97.)

    (225 ILCS 60/54.5 new)
    Sec. 54.5.  Physician delegation of authority.
    (a)  Physicians  licensed to practice medicine in all its
branches may delegate care and treatment responsibilities  to
a physician assistant under guidelines in accordance with the
requirements  of   the  Physician  Assistant  Practice Act of
1987.  A physician licensed to practice medicine in  all  its
branches may enter into supervising physician agreements with
no more than 2 physician assistants.
    (b)  A physician licensed to practice medicine in all its
branches  in active clinical practice may collaborate with an
advanced practice nurse in accordance with  the  requirements
of Title 15 of the Nursing and Advanced Practice Nursing Act.
Collaboration   is  for  the  purpose  of  providing  medical
direction, and no employment  relationship  is  required.   A
written   collaborative   agreement   shall  conform  to  the
requirements of Sections 15-15 and 15-20 of the  Nursing  and
Advanced  Practice  Nursing  Act.  The agreement shall be for
services the collaborating physician  generally  provides  to
his  or her patients in the normal course of clinical medical
practice.  Physician medical direction shall be adequate with
respect to collaboration with certified nurse  practitioners,
certified nurse midwives, and clinical nurse specialists if a
collaborating physician:
         (1)  participates in the joint formulation and joint
    approval  of  orders  or  guidelines  with  the  advanced
    practice  nurse  and periodically reviews such orders and
    the services  provided  patients  under  such  orders  in
    accordance  with  accepted  standards of medical practice
    and advanced practice nursing practice;
         (2)  is on site at least once  a  month  to  provide
    medical direction and consultation; and
         (3)  is  available  through  telecommunications  for
    consultation   on  medical  problems,  complications,  or
    emergencies or patient referral.
    (c)  The supervising physician shall have access  to  the
medical  records  of  all  patients  attended  by a physician
assistant.  The collaborating physician shall have access  to
the  medical  records  of  all  patients  attended  to  by an
advanced practice nurse.
    (d)  Nothing in this Act shall be construed to limit  the
delegation  of  tasks  or  duties  by a physician licensed to
practice medicine in all its branches to a licensed practical
nurse, a registered professional nurse, or other personnel.
    (e)  A physician shall not be  liable  for  the  acts  or
omissions of a physician assistant or advanced practice nurse
solely  on the basis of having signed a supervision agreement
or guidelines or  a  collaborative  agreement,  an  order,  a
standing medical order, a standing delegation order, or other
order  or  guideline  authorizing  a  physician  assistant or
advanced practice nurse to perform acts, unless the physician
has reason to believe the  physician  assistant  or  advanced
practice  nurse  lacked  the competency to perform the act or
acts or commits willful and wanton misconduct.

    Section 17.  The Illinois Nursing Act of 1987 is  amended
by  renumbering  and  changing Sections 1, 2, 3, 4, 4.1, 4.2,
4.5, 5, 5.1, 6, 7, 12, 14, 16, 17, 18, 21, 22,  23,  24,  26,
27,  29,  30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36, 37, 38, 39, 40, 41, 42,
43, 44, 45, 46, 47, 48, and 49  and  adding  Sections  10-10,
10-15, 10-40, 10-45, 10-50, 15-5, 15-10, 15-15, 15-20, 15-30,
15-35,  15-40,  15-45, 15-50, 15-55, 15-100, and 20-2 and new
Title headings as follows:

    (225 ILCS 65/Title 5 heading new)
                 TITLE 5. GENERAL PROVISIONS

    (225 ILCS 65/5-1, formerly 65/1)
    Sec. 5-1. 1.  This Article may be cited as  the  Illinois
Nursing  and  Advanced  Practice  Nursing Act, and throughout
this Article, references to this Act shall mean this  Article
of 1987.
(Source: P.A. 85-981; 86-1475.)
    (225 ILCS 65/5-5, formerly 65/2)
    Sec.  5-5.  2.  Legislative  purpose.   The  practice  of
professional  and  practical nursing in the State of Illinois
is hereby declared to affect the public health,  safety,  and
welfare  and  to  be subject to regulation and control in the
public interest.  It is further declared to be  a  matter  of
public  interest and concern that the practice of nursing, as
defined in this Act, merit and receive the confidence of  the
public  and  that  only qualified persons be authorized to so
practice in  the  State  of  Illinois.   This  Act  shall  be
liberally  construed  to  best  carry  out these subjects and
purposes.
(Source: P.A. 85-981.)

    (225 ILCS 65/5-10, formerly 65/3)
    Sec. 5-10. 3.  Definitions.  Each of the following terms,
when used in this Act, shall have  the meaning ascribed to it
in this Section, except where the context  clearly  indicates
otherwise:
    (a)  "Department"  means  the  Department of Professional
Regulation.
    (b)  "Director"  means  the  Director   of   Professional
Regulation.
    (c)  "Board"  means the Board of Nursing appointed by the
Director.
    (d)  "Academic year" means the customary annual  schedule
of  courses  at  a  college,  university, or approved school,
customarily regarded as the school year as distinguished from
the calendar year.
    (e)  "Approved program of professional nursing education"
and "approved program of  practical  nursing  education"  are
programs  of professional or practical nursing, respectively,
approved by the Department under the provisions of this Act.
    (f)  "Nursing  Act  Coordinator"   means   a   registered
professional nurse appointed by the Director to carry out the
administrative policies of the Department.
    (g)  "Assistant   Nursing   Act   Coordinator"   means  a
registered professional nurse appointed by  the  Director  to
assist  in  carrying  out  the administrative policies of the
Department.
    (h)  "Registered" is the equivalent of "licensed".
    (i)  "Practical  nurse"  or  "licensed  practical  nurse"
means a person who is licensed as  a  practical  nurse  under
this  Act  and  practices  practical  nursing  as  defined in
paragraph (j)  of  this  Section.   Only  a  practical  nurse
licensed  under  this  Act  is  entitled  to  use  the  title
"licensed practical nurse" and the abbreviation "L.P.N.".
    (j)  "Practical nursing" means the performance of nursing
acts  requiring  the  basic nursing knowledge, judgement, and
skill  acquired  by  means  of  completion  of  an   approved
practical   nursing  education  program.   Practical  nursing
includes assisting in the nursing process as delegated by and
under the direction of a registered professional nurse.   The
practical  nurse  may  work under the direction of a licensed
physician,  dentist,  podiatrist,  or   other   health   care
professional determined by the Department.
    (k)  "Registered   Nurse"   or  "Registered  Professional
Nurse" means a person who is licensed as a professional nurse
under this Act and practices nursing as defined in  paragraph
(l)  of this Section.  Only a registered nurse licensed under
this Act is entitled to use the titles "registered nurse" and
"registered professional nurse" and the abbreviation, "R.N.".
    (l)  "Registered professional nursing practice"  includes
all  nursing  specialities  and  means the performance of any
nursing act based upon professional knowledge, judgment,  and
skills  acquired  by  means  of  completion  of  an  approved
registered   professional   nursing   education  program.   A
registered   professional   nurse   provides   nursing   care
emphasizing   the   importance   of   the   whole   and   the
interdependence of its parts through the nursing  process  to
individuals,  groups, families, or communities, that includes
but is not limited  to:  (1)  the  assessment  of  healthcare
needs,   nursing  diagnosis,  planning,  implementation,  and
nursing  evaluation;  (2)  the  promotion,  maintenance,  and
restoration of health;  (3)  counseling,  patient  education,
health    education,    and   patient   advocacy;   (4)   the
administration of medications and treatments as prescribed by
a physician licensed to  practice  medicine  in  all  of  its
branches,  a  licensed  dentist,  a licensed podiatrist, or a
licensed  optometrist  or  as  prescribed  by   a   physician
assistant  in  accordance  with  written  guidelines required
under the Physician Assistant Practice Act of 1987 or  by  an
advanced   practice   nurse  in  accordance  with  a  written
collaborative  agreement  required  under  the  Nursing   and
Advanced  Practice  Nursing  Act;  (5)  the  coordination and
management of the nursing plan of care; (6) the delegation to
and supervision of  individuals  who  assist  the  registered
professional  nurse  implementing  the  plan of care; and (7)
teaching  and  supervision  of  nursing  students.  in    The
foregoing  shall  not  be  deemed  to  include  those acts of
medical  diagnosis  or   prescription   of   therapeutic   or
corrective  measures  that  are  properly  performed  only by
physicians licensed in the State of Illinois.
    (m)  "Current nursing practice  update  course"  means  a
planned   nursing   education   curriculum  approved  by  the
Department consisting of  activities  that  have  educational
objectives, instructional methods, content or subject matter,
clinical  practice,  and evaluation methods, related to basic
review and updating  content  and  specifically  planned  for
those  nurses previously licensed in the United States or its
territories and preparing for reentry into nursing practice.
    (n)  "Professional assistance program for nurses" means a
professional   assistance   program   that   meets   criteria
established by the Board of Committee on Nursing and approved
by the Director, which provides a non-disciplinary  treatment
approach  for nurses licensed under this Act whose ability to
practice is compromised  by  alcohol  or  chemical  substance
addiction.
(Source:  P.A.  90-61,  eff.  12-30-97;  90-248, eff. 1-1-98;
revised 8-12-97.)

    (225 ILCS 65/5-15, formerly 65/4)
    Sec.  5-15.  4.  Policy;  application  of  Act.  For  the
protection of life and  the  promotion  of  health,  and  the
prevention  of  illness and communicable diseases, any person
practicing or offering to practice professional and practical
nursing in Illinois shall submit evidence that he or  she  is
qualified  to  practice,  and  shall  be licensed as provided
under this  Act.   No  person  shall  practice  or  offer  to
practice professional or practical nursing in Illinois or use
any  title,  sign,  card  or  device  to indicate that such a
person is practicing professional or practical nursing unless
such person has been licensed under the  provisions  of  this
Act.
    This Act does not prohibit the following:
    (a)  The practice of nursing in Federal employment in the
discharge  of  the  employee's  duties  by  a  person  who is
employed by the  United  States  government  or  any  bureau,
division  or  agency  thereof  and is a legally qualified and
licensed nurse of another  state  or  territory  and  not  in
conflict  with  Sections 10-5, 10-30, and 10-45 6, 12, and 25
of this Act.;
    (b)  Nursing that is included in their program  of  study
by  students  enrolled  in  programs of nursing or in current
nurse practice update courses approved by the Department.;
    (c)  The  furnishing  of   nursing   assistance   in   an
emergency.;
    (d)  The  practice  of  nursing  by  a nurse who holds an
active license in another state when  providing  services  to
patients  in  Illinois  during  a  bonafide  emergency  or in
immediate preparation for or during interstate transit.;
    (e)  The incidental care of the sick by  members  of  the
family,  domestic  servants  or  housekeepers, or care of the
sick where treatment is by prayer or spiritual means.;
    (f)  Persons  from  being  employed  as  nursing   aides,
attendants, orderlies, and other auxiliary workers in private
homes,  long  term  care  facilities, nurseries, hospitals or
other institutions.;
    (g)  The practice of practical nursing  by  one  who  has
applied  in  writing  to the Department in form and substance
satisfactory to the Department, for a license as  a  licensed
practical  nurse and who has complied with all the provisions
under Section 10-30 12, except the passing of an  examination
to  be eligible to receive such license, until:  the decision
of the Department that the applicant has failed to  pass  the
next  available  examination authorized by the Department, or
has failed, without an approved  excuse,  to  take  the  next
available  examination authorized by the Department, or until
the withdrawal of  the  application,  but  not  to  exceed  3
months.   No  applicant  for  licensure  practicing under the
provisions of this paragraph shall practice practical nursing
except  under  the  direct  supervision   of   a   registered
professional  nurse  licensed  under  this  Act or a licensed
physician, dentist or podiatrist.  In no instance  shall  any
such  applicant  practice  or  be employed in any supervisory
capacity.;
    (h)  The practice of practical nursing by one  who  is  a
licensed  practical  nurse  under  the  laws  of another U.S.
jurisdiction and has applied in writing to the Department, in
form and substance satisfactory  to  the  Department,  for  a
license as a licensed practical nurse and who is qualified to
receive  such  license under Section 10-30 12, until: (1) the
expiration of 6 months  after  the  filing  of  such  written
application,  or  (2)  the withdrawal of such application, or
(3) the denial of such application by the Department.;
    (i)  The practice of professional nursing by one who  has
applied  in  writing  to the Department in form and substance
satisfactory to the Department for a license as a  registered
professional  nurse  and has complied with all the provisions
under Section 10-30 12 except the passing of  an  examination
to  be eligible to receive such license, until:  the decision
of the Department that the applicant has failed to  pass  the
next  available  examination authorized by the Department, or
has failed, without an approved  excuse,  to  take  the  next
available  examination  authorized by the Department or until
the withdrawal of  the  application,  but  not  to  exceed  3
months.  No  applicant  for  licensure  practicing  under the
provisions of  this  paragraph  shall  practice  professional
nursing  except  under the direct supervision of a registered
professional nurse licensed under this Act.  In  no  instance
shall  any  such  applicant  practice  or  be employed in any
supervisory capacity.;
    (j)  The practice of professional nursing by one who is a
registered professional  nurse  under  the  laws  of  another
state,  territory  of  the  United  States or country and has
applied in writing to the Department, in form  and  substance
satisfactory to the Department, for a license as a registered
professional  nurse  and  who  is  qualified  to receive such
license under Section 10-30 12, until:  (1)   the  expiration
of  6 months after the filing of such written application, or
(2) the withdrawal of such application, or (3) the denial  of
such application by the Department.;
    (k)  The   practice   of  professional  nursing  that  is
included in a program of study by one  who  is  a  registered
professional  nurse  under  the  laws  of  another  state  or
territory  of the United States or foreign country, territory
or province  and  who  is  enrolled  in  a  graduate  nursing
education  program  or  a  program  for  the  completion of a
baccalaureate nursing degree in  this  State,  which  program
includes clinical supervision by faculty as determined by the
educational  institution  offering the program and the health
care organization where the practice of nursing occurs.   The
educational  institution  will  file with the Department each
academic term a list of the names and origin  of  license  of
all  professional  nurses practicing nursing as part of their
programs under this provision.; or
    (l)  Any person licensed in this State  under  any  other
Act  from  engaging  in  the  practice for which she or he is
licensed.
    An applicant for license practicing under the  exceptions
set  forth  in  subparagraphs  (g), (h), (i), and (j) of this
Section shall use the title R.N. Lic. Pend.  or  L.P.N.  Lic.
Pend. respectively and no other.
(Source:  P.A.  90-61,  eff.  12-30-97;  90-248, eff. 1-1-98;
revised 8-12-97.)

    (225 ILCS 65/5-17, formerly 65/4.1)
    Sec. 5-17. 4.1.  Task Force.  The Governor shall  appoint
a  task  force  to  be convened by the Illinois Department of
Professional Regulation to study the roles, responsibilities,
training, competency, and  supervision  of  persons  who  are
employed   to   assist  a  nurse,  including  nursing  aides,
attendants, orderlies, and other auxiliary workers in private
homes, long term care facilities, nurseries,  hospitals,  and
other  institutions.   The purpose of the task force shall be
to determine if there  is  a  need  for  regulation  of  such
persons by the Department.
    The  task  force  shall  be comprised of 11 members.  The
task  force  shall  include  one  representative   from   the
Department  of  Professional  Regulation,  one representative
from  the  Department  of  Public  Health,  and   9   persons
representing   various   nursing  and  health  care  provider
organizations in Illinois, including, but not limited  to,  a
representative from the Illinois Nurses Association, Illinois
Organization  of  Nurse Leaders, Illinois Hospital and Health
Systems  Association,  Illinois  Health   Care   Association,
Illinois  Coalition  of  Nursing Organizations, Life Services
Network, Licensed Practical Nursing Association of  Illinois,
Certified   Nurse   Aide  Educators,  and  Illinois  Homecare
Council.
    The  task   force   shall   report   its   findings   and
recommendations to the Governor by January 1, 1999.
(Source: P.A. 90-248, eff. 1-1-98.)

    (225 ILCS 65/5-22, formerly 65/4.2)
    Sec.   5-22.  4.2.  Social  Security  Number  on  license
application.  In addition  to any other information  required
to be contained in the application, every  application for an
original,  renewal,  or restored license under this Act shall
include the applicant's Social Security Number.
(Source: P.A. 90-144, eff. 7-23-97.)

    (225 ILCS 65/5-20, formerly 65/4.5)
    Sec. 5-20. 4.5.  Unlicensed  practice;  violation;  civil
penalty.
    (a)  Any   person  who  practices,  offers  to  practice,
attempts to  practice,  or  holds  oneself  out  to  practice
nursing  without  being  licensed  under  this  Act shall, in
addition to any other penalty provided by law,  pay  a  civil
penalty  to  the Department in an amount not to exceed $5,000
for each offense as determined by the Department.  The  civil
penalty  shall  be assessed by the Department after a hearing
is held in accordance with the provisions set forth  in  this
Act  regarding  the provision of a hearing for the discipline
of a licensee.
    (b)  The  Department  has  the  authority  and  power  to
investigate any and all unlicensed activity.
    (c)  The civil penalty shall be paid within 60 days after
the effective date of the order imposing the  civil  penalty.
The  order  shall  constitute a judgment and may be filed and
execution had thereon in the same manner as any judgment from
any court of record.
(Source: P.A. 89-474, eff. 6-18-96.)

    (225 ILCS 65/5-25, formerly 65/5)
    Sec.  5-25.  5.    Emergency   care;   civil   liability.
Exemption  from  civil  liability  for  emergency  care is as
provided in the Good Samaritan Act.
(Source: P.A. 89-607, eff. 1-1-97.)

    (225 ILCS 65/5-30, formerly 65/5.1)
    Sec. 5-30. 5.1.  Services rendered without  compensation;
civil liability.  Exemption from civil liability for services
rendered  without  compensation  is  as  provided in the Good
Samaritan Act.
(Source: P.A. 89-607, eff. 1-1-97.)

    (225 ILCS 65/Title 10 heading new)
                TITLE 10.  REGISTERED NURSES
                AND LICENSED PRACTICAL NURSES

    (225 ILCS 65/10-5, formerly 65/6)
    Sec. 10-5. Prohibited acts. 6.  No person shall:
    (a)  Practice  professional  nursing  without   a   valid
license as a registered professional nurse except as provided
in paragraphs (i) and (j) of Section 5-15 4 of this Act;
    (b)  Practice  practical  nursing without a valid license
as a licensed practical nurse; or practice practical  nursing
other  than  under  the  direction  of  a licensed physician,
licensed dentist, or registered professional nurse; except as
provided in paragraphs (g), (h), and (j) of Section 5-15 4 of
this Act;
    (c)  Practice  nursing  under  cover  of   any   diploma,
license,  or  record  illegally  or  fraudulently obtained or
signed   or   issued   unlawfully   or    under    fraudulent
representation;
    (d)  Practice  nursing during the time her or his license
is suspended, revoked, expired or on inactive status;
    (e)  Use  any  words,  abbreviations,  figures,  letters,
title, sign, card, or device tending to imply that she or  he
is  a  registered professional nurse, including the titles or
initials,   "Registered   Nurse,"    "Professional    Nurse,"
"Registered  Professional Nurse," "Certified Nurse," "Trained
Nurse," "Graduate Nurse," "P.N.," or "R.N.," or  "R.P.N."  or
similar  titles  or  initials  with  intention  of indicating
practice without a valid license as a registered professional
nurse;
    (f)  Use  any  words,  abbreviations  figures,   letters,
title,  sign, card, or device tending to imply that she or he
is  a  licensed  practical  nurse  including  the  titles  or
initials  "Practical  Nurse,"  "Licensed  Practical   Nurse,"
"P.N.,"  or  "L.P.N.,"  or  similar  titles  or initials with
intention of indicated practice as a licensed practical nurse
without a valid license as a licensed practical  nurse  under
this Act;
    (g)  Obtain  or  furnish a license by or for money or any
other thing of value other than the fees required by  Section
20-35 23, or by any fraudulent representation or act;
    (h)  Make any wilfully false oath or affirmation required
by this Act;
    (i)  Conduct   a   nursing  education  program  preparing
persons for licensure that  has  not  been  approved  by  the
Department;
    (j)  Represent  that  any school or course is approved or
accredited as  a  school  or  course  for  the  education  of
registered  professional  nurses or licensed practical nurses
unless such school or course is approved  by  the  Department
under the provisions of this Act;
    (k)  Attempt or offer to do any of the acts enumerated in
this Section, or  knowingly aid, abet, assist in the doing of
any  such  acts  or in the attempt or offer to do any of such
acts;
    (l)  Seek employment as a registered  professional  nurse
under  the  terms of paragraphs (i) and (j) of Section 5-15 4
of this Act without possessing a written authorization  which
has  been  issued  by  the  Department  or designated testing
service  and  which  evidences  the  filing  of  the  written
application referred to in paragraphs paragraph (i)  and  (j)
of Section 5-15 4 of this Act;
    (m)  Seek  employment as a licensed practical nurse under
the terms of paragraphs (g) and (h) of Section 5-15 4 of this
Act without possessing a written authorization which has been
issued by the Department or designated  testing  service  and
which   evidences  the  filing  of  the  written  application
referred to in paragraphs paragraph (g) and  (h)  of  Section
5-15 4 of this Act;
    (n)  Employ  or  utilize  persons not licensed under this
Act to practice professional nursing  or  practical  nursing;
and
    (o)  Otherwise  intentionally  violate  any  provision of
this Act.
    Any person, including a firm, association or  corporation
who violates any provision of this Section shall be guilty of
a Class A misdemeanor.
(Source: P.A. 85-981.)

    (225 ILCS 65/10-10 new)
    Sec. 10-10. Department powers and duties.
    (a)  The  Department shall exercise the powers and duties
prescribed by the Civil Administrative Code of  Illinois  for
administration  of  licensing  acts  and shall exercise other
powers and duties necessary for effectuating the  purpose  of
this  Act.   None  of the functions, powers, or duties of the
Department with respect to licensure and examination shall be
exercised by the Department except upon review by the  Board.
The  Department shall adopt rules to implement, interpret, or
make specific  the  provisions  and  purposes  of  this  Act;
however  no  such  rules  shall  be adopted by the Department
except upon review by the Board.
    (b)  The Department shall:
         (1)  prepare  and  maintain  a  list   of   approved
    programs  of  professional nursing education and programs
    of practical  nursing  education  in  this  State,  whose
    graduates,    if    they   have   the   other   necessary
    qualifications provided in this Act, shall be eligible to
    apply for a license to practice nursing in this State;
         (2)  promulgate rules defining what  constitutes  an
    approved  program  of  professional nursing education and
    what constitutes an approved program of practical nursing
    education; and
         (3)  adopt rules for examination of  candidates  for
    licenses   and   for  issuance  of  licenses  authorizing
    candidates upon passing an examination to practice  under
    this Act.

    (225 ILCS 65/10-15 new)
    Sec.  10-15.   Nursing  Act  Coordinator.  The Department
shall obtain, pursuant to the Personnel Code, a  Nursing  Act
Coordinator  and  assistants.    The  Nursing Coordinator and
assistants shall be  professional  nurses  licensed  in  this
State and graduated from approved schools of nursing and each
shall  have  been  actively  engaged in nursing education not
less than one year prior to  appointment.   The  Nursing  Act
Coordinator  shall hold at least a master's degree in nursing
from an approved college or  university  and  shall  have  at
least  5  years  experience since graduation in progressively
responsible positions in nursing education.   Each  assistant
shall  hold  at  least  a  master's degree in nursing from an
approved college or university and  shall  have  at  least  3
years    experience   since   graduation   in   progressively
responsible positions in nursing education.  The Nursing  Act
Coordinator  and assistants shall perform such administrative
functions as may be delegated to them by the Director.

    (225 ILCS 65/10-25, formerly 65/7)
    Sec. 10-25. 7. Board.
    (a)  The Director shall  appoint  the  Board  of  Nursing
which  shall be composed of 9 registered professional nurses,
2 licensed practical nurses and one public member  who  shall
also be a voting member and who is not a licensed health care
provider.  Two  registered  nurses  shall  hold  at  least  a
master's  degree  in nursing and be educators in professional
nursing  programs,  one  representing  baccalaureate  nursing
education,  one   representing   associate   degree   nursing
education;  one  registered  nurse  shall  hold  at  least  a
bachelor's  degree with a major in nursing and be an educator
in a licensed practical nursing program; one registered nurse
shall hold a master's degree in nursing  and shall  represent
nursing  service  administration;  2  registered nurses shall
represent clinical nursing practice, one of whom  shall  have
at  least  a  master's  degree  in  nursing; and 2 registered
nurses shall represent advanced specialty practice.  Each  of
the  11 nurses shall have had a minimum of 5 years experience
in nursing, 3 of which shall be in the area they represent on
the Board and be actively engaged in the area of nursing they
represent at the time of appointment and during their  tenure
on  the  Board.   Members  shall be appointed for a term of 3
years.  No member shall be eligible for appointment  to  more
than  2  consecutive  terms  and  any  appointment  to fill a
vacancy shall be for the unexpired portion of the  term.   In
making   Board   appointments,   the   Director   shall  give
consideration  to  recommendations   submitted   by   nursing
organizations.     Consideration  shall  be  given  to  equal
geographic representation.  The Board  shall  receive  actual
and  necessary  expenses incurred in the performance of their
duties.
    In making the initial appointments,  the  Director  shall
appoint  all  new  members for terms of 2, 3, and 4 years and
such terms  shall  be  staggered  as  follows:   3  shall  be
appointed  for  terms  of  2  years; 3 shall be appointed for
terms of 3 years; and 3 shall be appointed  for  terms  of  4
years.
    The  Director  may  remove  any  member  of the Board for
misconduct, incapacity, or neglect  of  duty.   The  Director
shall reduce to writing any causes for removal.
    The  Board shall meet annually to elect a chairperson and
vice chairperson.  The Board may  hold  such  other  meetings
during  the year as may be necessary to conduct its business.
Six voting members of the Board shall constitute a quorum  at
any  meeting.   Any  action taken by the Board must be on the
affirmative vote of 6 members.  Voting by proxy shall not  be
permitted.
    The Board shall submit an annual report to the Director.
    The members of the Board shall be immune from suit in any
action  based upon any disciplinary proceedings or other acts
performed in good faith as members of the Board.
    (b)  The Board is authorized to:
         (1)  recommend the adoption and, from time to  time,
    the revision of such rules that may be necessary to carry
    out the provisions of this Act;
         (2)  conduct  hearings  and disciplinary conferences
    upon charges calling for  discipline  of  a  licensee  as
    provided in Section 10-45 25;
         (3)  report  to the Department, upon completion of a
    hearing, the disciplinary actions recommended to be taken
    against persons violating this Act;
         (4)  recommend the  approval,  denial  of  approval,
    withdrawal   of   approval,   or  discipline  of  nursing
    education programs;
         (5)  participate in a national organization of state
    boards of nursing; and
         (6)  recommend a list of the  registered  nurses  to
    serve  as  Nursing  Act Coordinator and Assistant Nursing
    Act Coordinator, respectively.
(Source: P.A. 90-61, eff. 12-30-97.)

    (225 ILCS 65/10-30, formerly 65/12)
    Sec. 10-30. 12. Qualifications for licensure.
    (a)  Each   applicant   who   successfully   meets    the
requirements  of  this Section shall be entitled to licensure
as a Registered Nurse or Licensed Practical Nurse,  whichever
is applicable.
    (b)  An   applicant   for  licensure  by  examination  to
practice as a registered nurse or  licensed  practical  nurse
shall:
         (1)  submit  a  completed  written  application,  on
    forms  provided by the Department and fees as established
    by the Department;
         (2)  for registered nurse licensure, have  completed
    an approved professional nursing education program of not
    less  than  2  academic years and have graduated from the
    program; for licensed  practical  nurse  licensure,  have
    completed an approved practical nursing education program
    of  not  less  than  one academic year and have graduated
    from the program;
         (3)  have not violated  the  provisions  of  Section
    10-45  25  of  this  Act.   The  Department may take into
    consideration any felony conviction of the applicant, but
    such a conviction shall not operate as an absolute bar to
    licensure;
         (4)  meet all other requirements as  established  by
    rule;
         (5)  pay, either to the Department or its designated
    testing service, a fee covering the cost of providing the
    examination. Failure to appear for the examination on the
    scheduled  date at the time and place specified after the
    applicant's application for examination has been received
    and acknowledged by  the  Department  or  the  designated
    testing  service  shall  result  in the forfeiture of the
    examination fee.
    If an applicant neglects, fails, or refuses  to  take  an
examination  or  fails  to  pass an examination for a license
under this Act within 3 years after filing  the  application,
the  application shall be denied.  However, the applicant may
make a new application accompanied by the  required  fee  and
provide  evidence of meeting the requirements in force at the
time of the new application.
    An applicant  shall  have  one  year  from  the  date  of
notification  of  successful completion of the examination to
apply to the Department for a license.  If an applicant fails
to apply within one year, the applicant shall be required  to
again  take  and  pass  the  examination  unless  licensed in
another jurisdiction of the United States within one  year  2
years of passing the examination.
    (c)  An  applicant  for  licensure  who  is  a registered
professional nurse or a licensed practical nurse licensed  by
examination  under  the laws of another state or territory of
the United States shall:
         (1)  submit  a  completed  written  application,  on
    forms supplied by the Department, and fees as established
    by the Department;
         (2)  for registered nurse licensure, have  completed
    an approved professional nursing education program of not
    less  than  2  academic years and have graduated from the
    program; for licensed  practical  nurse  licensure,  have
    completed an approved practical nursing education program
    of  not  less  than  one academic year and have graduated
    from the program;
         (3)  submit   verification   of   licensure   status
    directly  from  the   United   States   jurisdiction   of
    licensure;
         (4)  have  passed  the examination authorized by the
    Department;
         (5)  meet all other requirements as  established  by
    rule.
    (d)  All   applicants  for  licensure  pursuant  to  this
Section who are graduates of nursing educational programs  in
a  country  other  than  the United States or its territories
must submit to the  Department  certification  of  successful
completion  of the Commission of Graduates of Foreign Nursing
Schools (CGFNS) examination. An applicant, who is  unable  to
provide  appropriate documentation to satisfy CGFNS of her or
his educational qualifications  for  the  CGFNS  examination,
shall  be  required to pass an examination to test competency
in the English language which  shall  be  prescribed  by  the
Department, if the applicant is determined by the Board to be
educationally  prepared  in  nursing.   The  Board shall make
appropriate  inquiry  into  the  reasons  for   any   adverse
determination by CGFNS before making its own decision.
    An  applicant  licensed in another state or territory who
is applying  for  licensure  and  has  received  her  or  his
education  in  a  country other than the United States or its
territories shall  be  exempt  from  the  completion  of  the
Commission  of  Graduates  of Foreign Nursing Schools (CGFNS)
examination if the  applicant  meets  all  of  the  following
requirements:
         (1)  successful passage of the licensure examination
    authorized by the Department;
         (2)  holds   an   active,  unencumbered  license  in
    another state; and
         (3)  has been actively practicing for a minimum of 2
    years in another state.
    (e)  No  applicant  shall  be  issued  a  license  as   a
registered nurse or practical nurse under this Section unless
he  or  she  has  passed  the  examination  authorized by the
Department within 3 years of completion and  graduation  from
an  approved nursing education program, unless such applicant
submits    proof    of    successful    completion    of    a
Department-authorized remedial nursing education  program  or
recompletion  of  an  approved  registered nursing program or
licensed practical nursing program, as appropriate.
    (f)  Pending the issuance of a license  under  subsection
(b)  of this Section, the Department may grant an applicant a
temporary license to practice nursing as a  registered  nurse
or  as  a  licensed  practical  nurse  if  the  Department is
satisfied that the applicant holds  an  active,  unencumbered
license  in  good  standing  in another jurisdiction.  If the
applicant holds more than one current active license, or  one
or  more  active temporary licenses from other jurisdictions,
the Department shall not issue a temporary license  until  it
is  satisfied  that  each  current active license held by the
applicant is  unencumbered.   The  temporary  license,  which
shall  be  issued  no  later  than  14 working days following
receipt by the Department of an application for the temporary
license,  shall  be  granted  upon  the  submission  of   the
following to the Department:
         (1)  a   signed   and   completed   application  for
    licensure under subsection  (a)  of  this  Section  as  a
    registered nurse or a licensed practical nurse;
         (2)  proof  of a current, active license in at least
    one other jurisdiction and proof that each current active
    license or temporary license held  by  the  applicant  is
    unencumbered;
         (3)  a   signed  and  completed  application  for  a
    temporary license; and
         (4)  the required permit fee.
    (g)  The Department may refuse to issue  an  applicant  a
temporary  license  authorized  pursuant  to this Section if,
within  14  working  days  following  its   receipt   of   an
application   for   a   temporary   license,  the  Department
determines that:
         (1)  the applicant has been  convicted  of  a  crime
    under  the  laws  of a jurisdiction of the United States:
    (i) which is a felony; or (ii)  which  is  a  misdemeanor
    directly  related  to  the  practice  of  the profession,
    within the last 5 years;
         (2)  within the last 5 years the applicant has had a
    license or permit related  to  the  practice  of  nursing
    revoked,  suspended,  or  placed  on probation by another
    jurisdiction,  if  at  least  one  of  the  grounds   for
    revoking, suspending, or placing on probation is the same
    or substantially equivalent to grounds in Illinois; or
         (3)  it intends to deny licensure by endorsement.
    For  purposes  of this Section, an "unencumbered license"
means a license against which no disciplinary action has been
taken or is pending and for which all fees  and  charges  are
paid and current.
    (h)  The Department may revoke a temporary license issued
pursuant to this Section if:
         (1)  it  determines  that  the  applicant  has  been
    convicted of a crime under the law of any jurisdiction of
    the  United  States  that  is  (i)  a  felony  or  (ii) a
    misdemeanor directly  related  to  the  practice  of  the
    profession, within the last 5 years;
         (2)  it  determines that within the last 5 years the
    applicant has had a license  or  permit  related  to  the
    practice  of  nursing  revoked,  suspended,  or placed on
    probation by another jurisdiction, if at least one of the
    grounds for revoking, suspending, or placing on probation
    is the same or substantially  equivalent  to  grounds  in
    Illinois; or
         (3)  it determines that it intends to deny licensure
    by endorsement.
    A  temporary  license  or renewed temporary license shall
expire (i) upon issuance of an Illinois license or (ii)  upon
notification that the Department intends to deny licensure by
endorsement.   A temporary license shall expire 6 months from
the date of issuance.  Further renewal may be granted by  the
Department in hardship cases, as defined by rule.  However, a
temporary license shall automatically expire upon issuance of
the Illinois license or upon notification that the Department
intends  to  deny  licensure,  whichever  occurs  first.   No
extensions  shall be granted beyond the 6-month period unless
approved by the Director.   Notification  by  the  Department
under this Section shall be by certified or registered mail.
(Source: P.A. 90-61, eff. 12-30-97.)

    (225 ILCS 65/10-35, formerly 65/14)
    Sec.  10-35. 14.  Concurrent theory and clinical practice
education requirements.  Except for those applicants who have
received  advanced  graduate  degrees  in  nursing  from   an
approved   program   with   concurrent  theory  and  clinical
practice, the educational requirements of  Section  10-30  12
relating  to  registered  professional  nursing  and licensed
practical nursing shall not be deemed to have been  satisfied
by the completion of any correspondence course or any program
of  nursing  that  does not require coordinated or concurrent
theory and clinical practice.
(Source: P.A. 90-61, eff. 12-30-97.)

    (225 ILCS 65/10-40 new)
    Sec. 10-40.  Endorsement. Upon payment  of  the  required
fee, an applicant who is a registered professional nurse or a
licensed practical nurse educated and licensed under the laws
of  a  foreign country, territory or province shall write and
pass an examination conducted by the Department to  determine
her or his fitness for licensure as a registered professional
nurse or a licensed practical nurse:
    (a)  whenever the requirements of such country, territory
or  province  were at the date of license substantially equal
to the requirements then in force in  this  State;  and  with
respect  to  practical  nursing, if prior to the enactment of
this Act, substantially equal to the requirements of this Act
at the time of its enactment; or
    (b)  whenever  such  requirements  of  another   country,
territory   or   province   together   with  educational  and
professional qualifications, as distinguished from  practical
experience,  of  the applicant since obtaining a license as a
registered professional nurse or a licensed  practical  nurse
in  such  country,  territory  or  province are substantially
equal to the requirements in force in Illinois at the time of
application for licensure as a registered nurse or a licensed
practical nurse in Illinois.
    The examination shall be the same  as  that  required  of
other applicants for licensure by examination.
    Applicants  have  3 years from the date of application to
complete the application process.  If  the  process  has  not
been  completed  in 3 years, the application shall be denied,
the fee forfeited and the applicant must reapply and meet the
requirements in effect at the time of reapplication.

    (225 ILCS 65/10-45 new)
    Sec. 10-45.  Grounds for disciplinary action.
    (a)  The  Department  may,  upon  recommendation  of  the
Board, refuse to issue or to renew, or may  revoke,  suspend,
place  on  probation,  reprimand,  or take other disciplinary
action as the Department may deem appropriate with regard  to
a  license for any one or combination of the causes set forth
in subsection (b) below.  Fines up to $2,500 may  be  imposed
in  conjunction  with  other forms of disciplinary action for
those  violations  that  result  in  monetary  gain  for  the
licensee. Fines shall not be the exclusive disposition of any
disciplinary action arising out of conduct resulting in death
or injury to a patient.   Fines  shall  not  be  assessed  in
disciplinary  actions involving mental or physical illness or
impairment.  All fines collected under this Section shall  be
deposited in the Nursing Dedicated and Professional Fund.
    (b)  Grounds   for   disciplinary   action   include  the
following:
         (1)  Material deception in furnishing information to
    the Department.
         (2)  Material violations of any  provision  of  this
    Act  or violation of the rules of or final administrative
    action  of  the  Director,  after  consideration  of  the
    recommendation of the Board.
         (3)  Conviction of any crime under the laws  of  any
    jurisdiction of the United States: (i) which is a felony;
    or  (ii)  which is a misdemeanor, an essential element of
    which is dishonesty, or  (iii)  of  any  crime  which  is
    directly related to the practice of the profession.
         (4)  A  pattern  of practice or other behavior which
    demonstrates incapacity or incompetency to practice under
    this Act.
         (5)  Knowingly aiding or assisting another person in
    violating any provision of this Act or rules.
         (6)  Failing, within 90 days, to provide a  response
    to  a  request  for  information in response to a written
    request made by the Department by certified mail.
         (7)  Engaging   in   dishonorable,   unethical    or
    unprofessional  conduct of a character likely to deceive,
    defraud or harm the public, as defined by rule.
         (8)  Unlawful sale  or  distribution  of  any  drug,
    narcotic,  or prescription device, or unlawful conversion
    of any drug, narcotic or prescription device.
         (9)  Habitual  or  excessive  use  or  addiction  to
    alcohol, narcotics, stimulants,  or  any  other  chemical
    agent  or drug which results in a licensee's inability to
    practice with reasonable judgment, skill or safety.
         (10)  Discipline by  another  U.S.  jurisdiction  or
    foreign  nation,  if  at least one of the grounds for the
    discipline is the same  or  substantially  equivalent  to
    those set forth in this Section.
         (11)  A  finding that the licensee, after having her
    or  his  license  placed  on  probationary  status,   has
    violated the terms of probation.
         (12)  Being  named  as a perpetrator in an indicated
    report by the Department of Children and Family  Services
    and  under  the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act,
    and upon proof by clear and convincing evidence that  the
    licensee  has  caused  a  child  to be an abused child or
    neglected child as defined in the  Abused  and  Neglected
    Child Reporting Act.
         (13)  Willful   omission   to  file  or  record,  or
    willfully impeding the filing or  recording  or  inducing
    another  person to omit to file or record medical reports
    as required by law or  willfully  failing  to  report  an
    instance  of suspected child abuse or neglect as required
    by the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act.
         (14)  Gross negligence in the practice of nursing.
         (15)  Holding oneself out to be  practicing  nursing
    under any name other than one's own.
         (16)  Fraud, deceit or misrepresentation in applying
    for   or  procuring  a  license  under  this  Act  or  in
    connection with applying for renewal of a  license  under
    this Act.
         (17)  Allowing another person or organization to use
    the licensees' license to deceive the public.
         (18)  Willfully  making  or  filing false records or
    reports in the licensee's  practice,  including  but  not
    limited  to  false  records to support claims against the
    medical assistance program of the  Department  of  Public
    Aid under the Illinois Public Aid Code.
         (19)  Attempting  to  subvert  or  cheat  on a nurse
    licensing examination administered under this Act.
         (20)  Immoral conduct in the commission of  an  act,
    such  as  sexual  abuse,  sexual  misconduct,  or  sexual
    exploitation, related to the licensee's practice.
         (21)  Willfully   or   negligently   violating   the
    confidentiality  between  nurse  and  patient  except  as
    required by law.
         (22)  Practicing  under  a  false  or  assumed name,
    except as provided by law.
         (23)  The use of any false, fraudulent, or deceptive
    statement in any document connected with  the  licensee's
    practice.
         (24)  Directly  or indirectly giving to or receiving
    from  a  person,  firm,  corporation,   partnership,   or
    association  a  fee, commission, rebate, or other form of
    compensation for professional services  not  actually  or
    personally rendered.
         (25)  Failure   of  a  licensee  to  report  to  the
    Department any adverse final action  taken  against  such
    licensee  by  another  licensing  jurisdiction (any other
    jurisdiction of the United States or any foreign state or
    country), by any peer review body,  by  any  health  care
    institution,  by  any  professional or nursing society or
    association, by  any  governmental  agency,  by  any  law
    enforcement   agency,  or  by  any  court  or  a  nursing
    liability claim related to acts  or  conduct  similar  to
    acts  or conduct that would constitute grounds for action
    as defined in this Section.
         (26)  Failure  of  a  licensee  to  report  to   the
    Department  surrender  by  the  licensee  of a license or
    authorization to practice nursing  in  another  state  or
    jurisdiction,  or  current  surrender  by the licensee of
    membership on any nursing staff  or  in  any  nursing  or
    professional   association   or   society   while   under
    disciplinary investigation by any of those authorities or
    bodies  for  acts  or  conduct similar to acts or conduct
    that would constitute grounds for action  as  defined  by
    this Section.
         (27)  A   violation   of   the  Health  Care  Worker
    Self-Referral Act.
         (28)  Physical illness, including but not limited to
    deterioration through the aging process or loss of  motor
    skill,  mental illness, or disability that results in the
    inability to  practice  the  profession  with  reasonable
    judgment, skill, or safety.
    (c)  The determination by a circuit court that a licensee
is  subject to involuntary admission or judicial admission as
provided in the Mental Health and Developmental  Disabilities
Code,  as  amended,  operates as an automatic suspension. The
suspension will end only upon a finding by a court  that  the
patient  is  no  longer  subject  to involuntary admission or
judicial  admission  and  issues  an  order  so  finding  and
discharging the patient; and upon the recommendation  of  the
Board  to the Director that the licensee be allowed to resume
his or her practice.
    (d)  The Department may refuse to issue  or  may  suspend
the  license  of any person who fails to file a return, or to
pay the tax, penalty or interest shown in a filed return,  or
to  pay any final assessment of the tax, penalty, or interest
as required by any  tax  Act  administered  by  the  Illinois
Department of Revenue, until such time as the requirements of
any such tax Act are satisfied.
    (e)  In  enforcing  this Section, the Department or Board
upon  a  showing  of  a  possible  violation  may  compel  an
individual licensed to practice under this Act,  or  who  has
applied  for  licensure under this Act, to submit to a mental
or physical examination, or both, as required by and  at  the
expense  of the Department. The Department or Board may order
the examining physician to present testimony  concerning  the
mental  or physical examination of the licensee or applicant.
No information shall be excluded by reason of any common  law
or statutory privilege relating to communications between the
licensee  or  applicant  and  the  examining  physician.  The
examining  physicians shall be specifically designated by the
Board or Department. The individual to be examined may  have,
at  his  or  her own expense, another physician of his or her
choice  present  during  all  aspects  of  this  examination.
Failure of an individual to submit to a  mental  or  physical
examination,  when  directed, shall be grounds for suspension
of his or her license until the  individual  submits  to  the
examination   if  the  Department  finds,  after  notice  and
hearing, that the refusal to submit to  the  examination  was
without reasonable cause.
    If  the Department or Board finds an individual unable to
practice because of the reasons set forth  in  this  Section,
the Department or Board may require that individual to submit
to  care,  counseling, or treatment by physicians approved or
designated by the Department or Board, as a condition,  term,
or   restriction   for   continued,  reinstated,  or  renewed
licensure to practice; or, in lieu of  care,  counseling,  or
treatment,   the  Department  may  file,  or  the  Board  may
recommend  to  the  Department  to  file,  a   complaint   to
immediately  suspend,  revoke,  or  otherwise  discipline the
license of the individual. An individual  whose  license  was
granted,   continued,  reinstated,  renewed,  disciplined  or
supervised   subject   to   such   terms,   conditions,    or
restrictions,  and  who  fails  to  comply  with  such terms,
conditions,  or  restrictions,  shall  be  referred  to   the
Director  for  a  determination  as to whether the individual
shall have his or her license suspended immediately,  pending
a hearing by the Department.
    In instances in which the Director immediately suspends a
person's  license  under  this  Section,  a  hearing  on that
person's license must be convened by the Department within 15
days after the suspension and completed  without  appreciable
delay.  The  Department and Board shall have the authority to
review the  subject  individual's  record  of  treatment  and
counseling  regarding  the impairment to the extent permitted
by applicable federal statutes and  regulations  safeguarding
the confidentiality of medical records.
    An  individual licensed under this Act and affected under
this Section shall be afforded an opportunity to  demonstrate
to the Department or Board that he or she can resume practice
in  compliance with acceptable and prevailing standards under
the provisions of his or her license.
    (225 ILCS 65/10-50 new)
    Sec. 10-50.  Intoxication and drug abuse.
    (a)  A professional assistance program for  nurses  shall
be established by January 1, 1999.
    (b)  The Director shall appoint a task force to advise in
the creation of the assistance program.  The task force shall
include  members  of  the Department and professional nurses,
and shall report its  findings  and  recommendations  to  the
Committee on Nursing.
    (c)  Any   registered   professional   nurse  who  is  an
administrator or officer in any hospital, nursing home, other
health care agency or  facility,  or  nurse  agency  and  has
knowledge   of  any  action  or  condition  which  reasonably
indicates to her or him that a registered professional  nurse
or licensed practical nurse employed by or practicing nursing
in  such  hospital, nursing home, other health care agency or
facility,  or  nurse  agency  is  habitually  intoxicated  or
addicted to the use of habit-forming drugs to the extent that
such intoxication or addiction adversely affects such nurse's
professional  performance,  or  unlawfully  possesses,  uses,
distributes or converts habit-forming drugs belonging to  the
hospital,  nursing  home  or  other  health  care  agency  or
facility  for  such  nurse's  own  use, shall promptly file a
written report thereof to the Department;  provided  however,
an  administrator  or officer need not file the report if the
nurse participates  in  a  course  of  remedial  professional
counseling  or medical treatment for substance abuse, as long
as  such  nurse  actively  pursues   such   treatment   under
monitoring   by  the  administrator  or  officer  or  by  the
hospital, nursing home, health care agency  or  facility,  or
nurse  agency  and the nurse continues to be employed by such
hospital, nursing home, health care agency  or  facility,  or
nurse  agency.    The  Department  shall  review  all reports
received by it in a timely manner.  Its initial review  shall
be  completed  no  later  than  60  days after receipt of the
report.  Within this 60 day period, the Department shall,  in
writing,  make  a  determination  as  to  whether  there  are
sufficient facts to warrant further investigation or action.
    Should  the Department find insufficient facts to warrant
further  investigation,  or  action,  the  report  shall   be
accepted for filing and the matter shall be deemed closed and
so reported.
    Should  the  Department  find sufficient facts to warrant
further investigation, such investigation shall be  completed
within 60 days of the date of the determination of sufficient
facts  to  warrant  further  investigation  or action.  Final
action shall be determined no later than 30  days  after  the
completion of the investigation.  If there is a finding which
verifies   habitual  intoxication  or  drug  addiction  which
adversely affects professional performance  or  the  unlawful
possession,  use, distribution or conversion of habit-forming
drugs by the reported nurse, the  Department  may  refuse  to
issue  or renew or may suspend or revoke that nurse's license
as a registered professional nurse or  a  licensed  practical
nurse.
    Any of the aforementioned actions or a determination that
there are insufficient facts to warrant further investigation
or  action  shall  be  considered  a final action.  The nurse
administrator or officer who filed  the  original  report  or
complaint,  and  the  nurse who is the subject of the report,
shall be notified in writing by the Department within 15 days
of any final action taken by the Department.
    Each year on March 1, commencing with the effective  date
of  this  Act,  the  Department  shall submit a report to the
General Assembly.  The report shall  include  the  number  of
reports  made under this Section to the Department during the
previous year, the  number  of  reports  reviewed  and  found
insufficient  to warrant further investigation, the number of
reports not completed and the reasons for incompletion.  This
report shall be made available also to nurses requesting  the
report.
    Any  person making a report under this Section or in good
faith assisting another person in making such a report  shall
have  immunity  from any liability, either criminal or civil,
that might result by reason of such action.  For the  purpose
of  any legal proceeding, criminal or civil, there shall be a
rebuttable presumption that any person making a report  under
this  Section  or  assisting  another  person  in making such
report was acting in good faith.  All such  reports  and  any
information  disclosed  to  or  collected  by  the Department
pursuant to this Section shall remain confidential records of
the Department and shall not be disclosed nor be  subject  to
any  law  or  regulation of this State relating to freedom of
information or public disclosure of records.

    (225 ILCS 65/Title 15 heading new)
             TITLE 15. ADVANCED PRACTICE NURSES

    (225 ILCS 65/15-5 new)
    Sec. 15-5.  Definitions. As used in this Title:
    "APN Board" means the Advanced Practice Nursing Board.
    "Advanced practice nurse" or "APN" means  a  person  who:
(1)   is  licensed  as  a registered professional nurse under
this Act;   (2)  meets the requirements for licensure  as  an
advanced  practice  nurse  under  Section  15-10;  (3)  has a
written  collaborative   agreement   with   a   collaborating
physician  in  the  diagnosis  of  illness  and management of
wellness and other conditions as appropriate to the level and
area of his or her practice in accordance with Section 15-15;
and  (4) cares for patients (A) by using advanced  diagnostic
skills,  the  results  of  diagnostic  tests  and  procedures
ordered   by   the   advanced  practice  nurse,  a  physician
assistant, a dentist,  a  podiatrist,  or  a  physician,  and
professional  judgment to initiate and coordinate the care of
patients;  (B)  by  ordering  diagnostic  tests,  prescribing
medications and drugs in accordance with Section  15-20,  and
administering  medications  and  drugs;   and  (C)  by  using
medical,   therapeutic,  and  corrective  measures  to  treat
illness  and  improve  health  status.    Categories  include
certified nurse midwife (CNM), certified  nurse  practitioner
(CNP), or certified clinical nurse specialist (CNS).
    "Collaborating  physician"  means  a  physician who works
with  an  advanced  practice  nurse  and   provides   medical
direction  as documented in a written collaborative agreement
required under Section 15-15.
    "Licensed hospital" means a hospital licensed  under  the
Hospital  Licensing  Act or organized under the University of
Illinois Hospital Act.
    "Physician" means a person licensed to practice  medicine
in all its branches under the Medical Practice Act of 1987.

    (225 ILCS 65/15-10 new)
    Sec.  15-10.   Advanced  practice  nurse; qualifications;
roster.
    (a)  A person shall be  qualified  for  licensure  as  an
advanced practice nurse if that person:
         (1)  has  applied  in  writing in form and substance
    satisfactory to the Department and  has  not  violated  a
    provision  of  this  Act  or the rules adopted under this
    Act. The  Department  may  take  into  consideration  any
    felony conviction of the applicant but a conviction shall
    not operate as an absolute bar to licensure;
         (2)  holds  a  current  license  to  practice  as  a
    registered nurse in Illinois;
         (3)  has   successfully  completed  requirements  to
    practice as, and holds a current, national  certification
    as,  a nurse midwife, clinical nurse specialist, or nurse
    practitioner from  the  appropriate  national  certifying
    body as determined by rule of the Department;
         (4)  has paid the required fees as set by rule; and
         (5)  has   successfully   completed   a   post-basic
    advanced practice formal education program in the area of
    his or her nursing specialty.
    (b)  In   addition   to   meeting   the  requirements  of
subsection (a), except item (5) of that subsection, beginning
July 1, 2001 or 12 months after the adoption of  final  rules
to  implement  this  Section, whichever is sooner, applicants
for  initial  licensure  shall   have   a   graduate   degree
appropriate for national certification in a clinical advanced
practice nursing specialty.
    (c)  The   Department  shall  provide  by  rule  for  APN
licensure of registered professional nurses who (1) apply for
licensure before July 1, 2001  and  (2)  submit  evidence  of
completion  of  a program described in item (5) of subsection
(a) or in subsection (b) and  evidence  of  practice  for  at
least 10 years as a nurse practitioner.
    (d)  The  Department  shall maintain a separate roster of
advanced practice nurses licensed under this Title and  their
licenses  shall  indicate "Registered Nurse/Advanced Practice
Nurse".

    (225 ILCS 65/15-15 new)
    Sec. 15-15.  Written collaborative agreements.
    (a)  No person shall engage in the practice  of  advanced
practice  nursing  except  when licensed under this Title and
pursuant  to  a  written  collaborative  agreement   with   a
collaborating physician.
    (b)  A written collaborative agreement shall describe the
working  relationship of the advanced practice nurse with the
collaborating physician and shall authorize the categories of
care,  treatment,  or  procedures  to  be  performed  by  the
advanced practice nurse.  Collaboration does not  require  an
employment  relationship  between the collaborating physician
and  advanced  practice  nurse.   Collaboration   means   the
relationship  under  which  an  advanced practice nurse works
with a collaborating physician in an active clinical practice
to deliver health care services in accordance  with  (i)  the
advanced practice nurse's training, education, and experience
and  (ii)  medical  direction  as  documented  in  a  jointly
developed written collaborative agreement.
    The agreement shall be defined to promote the exercise of
professional   judgment   by   the  advanced  practice  nurse
commensurate with his or her education  and  experience.  The
services  to be provided by the advanced practice nurse shall
be  services  that  the  collaborating  physician   generally
provides  to  his or her patients in the normal course of his
or her clinical medical practice.   The  agreement  need  not
describe the exact steps that an advanced practice nurse must
take  with  respect  to  each specific condition, disease, or
symptom but must specify which authorized procedures  require
a physician's presence as the procedures are being performed.
The  collaborative  relationship under an agreement shall not
be construed to require the personal presence of a  physician
at all times  at  the  place  where  services  are  rendered.
Methods  of communication shall be available for consultation
with  the   collaborating   physician   in   person   or   by
telecommunications  in  accordance  with  established written
guidelines as set forth in the written agreement.
    (c)  Physician medical direction under an agreement shall
be adequate if a collaborating physician:
         (1)  participates in the joint formulation and joint
    approval of orders or guidelines with the APN and  he  or
    she  periodically  reviews  such  orders and the services
    provided patients under such orders  in  accordance  with
    accepted  standards  of  medical  practice  and  advanced
    practice nursing practice;
         (2)  is  on  site  at  least once a month to provide
    medical direction and consultation; and
         (3)  is  available  through  telecommunications  for
    consultation  on  medical  problems,  complications,   or
    emergencies or patient referral.
    (d)  A   copy   of   the  signed,  written  collaborative
agreement must be available to the  Department  upon  request
from  both  the advanced practice nurse and the collaborating
physician  and  shall  be  annually  updated.   An   advanced
practice  nurse  shall inform each collaborating physician of
all collaborative agreements he or she has signed and provide
a copy of these to any collaborating physician, upon request.

    (225 ILCS 65/15-20 new)
    Sec. 15-20.   Prescriptive authority.
    (a)  A collaborating physician may, but is  not  required
to,   delegate  limited prescriptive authority to an advanced
practice nurse as part of a written collaborative  agreement.
This   authority   may,  but  is  not  required  to,  include
prescription of legend drugs and legend controlled substances
categorized as Schedule III, IV, or V controlled  substances,
as   defined   in  Article  II  of  the  Illinois  Controlled
Substances Act.
    (b)  To prescribe  Schedule  III,  IV,  or  V  controlled
substances  under  this  Section,  an advanced practice nurse
shall affix the collaborating physician's DEA number to,  and
individually   sign,   the   appropriate   prescription  form
containing the printed names of the advanced  practice  nurse
and  collaborating  physician  in accordance with the written
collaborative agreement.  Medication orders shall be reviewed
periodically by the collaborating physician.
    (c)  The collaborating  physician  shall  file  with  the
Department notice of delegation of prescriptive authority and
termination  of such delegation, in accordance with  rules of
the Department.
    (d)  Nothing in this Act shall be construed to limit  the
delegation  of  tasks  or duties by a physician to a licensed
practical nurse, a registered professional  nurse,  or  other
personnel.

    (225 ILCS 65/15-30 new)
    Sec. 15-30.  Title.
    (a)  No   person  shall  use  any  words,  abbreviations,
figures, letters, title, sign, card,  or  device  tending  to
imply that he or she is an advanced practice nurse, including
but  not  limited  to using the titles or initials  "Advanced
Practice Nurse", "Certified Nurse Midwife", "Certified  Nurse
Practitioner",   "Clinical   Nurse   Specialist",   "A.P.N.",
"C.N.M.",  "C.N.P.", "C.N.S.", or similar titles or initials,
with the intention of  indicating  practice  as  an  advanced
practice  nurse without meeting the requirements of this Act.
No advanced practice nurse shall use the title of  doctor  or
associate  with his or her name or any other term to indicate
to other persons that he or she is qualified to engage in the
general practice of medicine.
    (b)  An advanced practice nurse shall  verbally  identify
himself  or  herself  as an advanced practice nurse including
specialty certification to each patient.
    (c)  Nothing in this Act shall be construed to relieve  a
physician  of  professional  or  legal responsibility for the
care and treatment of persons attended by him or  her  or  to
relieve  an  advanced  practice  nurse of the professional or
legal responsibility for the care and  treatment  of  persons
attended by him or her.

    (225 ILCS 65/15-35 new)
    Sec. 15-35.  Advanced Practice Nursing Board.
    (a)  There  is  hereby  established  an Advanced Practice
Nursing Board, hereinafter referred to as  the  "APN  Board".
The  APN  Board  shall review and make recommendations to the
Department  regarding  matters  relating  to  licensure   and
discipline  of advanced practice nurses.  The APN Board shall
be composed of 9 members to be appointed by the  Governor,  4
of whom shall be advanced practice nurses and 3 of whom shall
be  collaborating  physicians.  In making appointments to the
APN Board, the  Governor  shall  give  due  consideration  to
recommendations  by  statewide  professional  associations or
societies representing nurses  and  physicians  in  Illinois.
Two  members, not employed or having any material interest in
any health care  field,  shall  represent  the  public.   The
chairperson  of  the APN Board shall be a member elected by a
majority vote of the APN Board.  The APN Board shall meet and
report to the Department quarterly and as  advanced  practice
nurse issues arise.
    Initial  appointments  to  the  APN  Board  shall be made
within 90 days after the effective date  of  this  amendatory
Act  of  1998.   The  terms of office of each of the original
members shall be at staggered intervals.  One  physician  and
one  advanced practice nurse shall serve one-year terms.  One
physician and one advanced practice nurse shall serve  2-year
terms.   One  physician and one advanced practice nurse shall
serve 3-year terms.  One  advanced  practice  nurse  and  the
public members shall serve 4-year terms.  Upon the expiration
of  the term of an initial member, his or her successor shall
be appointed for a term of 4 years.  No  member  shall  serve
more  than 2 consecutive terms, excluding initial appointment
terms.  An appointment to fill a vacancy  shall  be  for  the
unexpired  portion  of  the  term.   Members of the APN Board
shall  be  reimbursed  for  all  authorized  legitimate   and
necessary  expenses incurred in attending the meetings of the
APN Board.  A majority of the  APN  Board  members  appointed
shall  constitute  a  quorum.  A vacancy in the membership of
the APN Board shall not impair  the  right  of  a  quorum  to
perform  all of the duties of the APN Board.  A member of the
APN Board shall have no liability in an action based  upon  a
disciplinary  proceeding  or other activity performed in good
faith as a member of the APN Board.
    (b)  Complaints  received  concerning  advanced  practice
nurses shall  be  reviewed  by  the  APN  Board.   Complaints
received   concerning   collaborating   physicians  shall  be
reviewed by the Medical Disciplinary Board.

    (225 ILCS 65/15-40 new)
    Sec. 15-40.  Advertising.
    (a)  A person licensed under this Title may advertise the
availability of professional services in the public media  or
on the premises where the professional services are rendered.
The   advertising   shall   be   limited   to  the  following
information:
         (1)  publication of the person's name, title, office
    hours, address, and telephone number;
         (2)  information pertaining to the person's areas of
    specialization, including but not limited to  appropriate
    board   certification   or   limitation  of  professional
    practice;
         (3)  publication  of  the   person's   collaborating
    physician's name, title, and areas of specialization;
         (4)  information  on  usual  and  customary fees for
    routine  professional  services  offered,   which   shall
    include  notification  that  fees  may be adjusted due to
    complications or unforeseen circumstances;
         (5)  announcements of the  opening  of,  change  of,
    absence from, or return to business;
         (6)  announcement  of additions to or deletions from
    professional licensed staff; and
         (7)  the issuance of business or appointment cards.
    (b)  It is unlawful for  a  person  licensed  under  this
Title  to  use  testimonials or claims of superior quality of
care to entice the public.  It shall be unlawful to advertise
fee comparisons of available services  with  those  of  other
licensed persons.
    (c)  This  Title  does  not  authorize the advertising of
professional services that the offeror of the services is not
licensed or authorized to render.  Nor shall  the  advertiser
use  statements that contain false, fraudulent, deceptive, or
misleading material or guarantees of success, statements that
play upon the vanity or fears of the  public,  or  statements
that promote or produce unfair competition.
    (d)  It  is  unlawful  and  punishable  under the penalty
provisions of this Act for a person licensed under this Title
to knowingly advertise  that  the  licensee  will  accept  as
payment  for  services  rendered by assignment from any third
party payor the  amount  the  third  party  payor  covers  as
payment  in  full, if the effect is to give the impression of
eliminating the  need  of  payment  by  the  patient  of  any
required  deductible or copayment applicable in the patient's
health benefit plan.
    (e)  As  used  in   this   Section,   "advertise"   means
solicitation  by  the  licensee  or through another person or
entity by means  of  handbills,  posters,  circulars,  motion
pictures,  radio,  newspapers,  or  television  or  any other
manner.

    (225 ILCS 65/15-45 new)
    Sec. 15-45.  Continuing education.  The Department  shall
adopt  rules  of  continuing  education  for persons licensed
under  this  Title  that  require  50  hours  of   continuing
education  per 2-year license renewal cycle.  The rules shall
not be inconsistent with requirements  of  relevant  national
certifying   bodies   or   State   or  national  professional
associations. The rules  shall  also  address  variances  for
illness  or  hardship.   The continuing education rules shall
assure  that  licensees  are   given   the   opportunity   to
participate  in  programs sponsored by or through their State
or national professional associations,  hospitals,  or  other
providers   of   continuing   education.   Each  licensee  is
responsible  for  maintaining  records   of   completion   of
continuing  education  and  shall  be prepared to produce the
records when requested by the Department.

    (225 ILCS 65/15-50 new)
    Sec. 15-50.  Grounds for disciplinary action.
    (a)  The Department may, upon the recommendation  of  the
APN  Board,  refuse  to  issue  or  to  renew, or may revoke,
suspend, place on probation, censure or  reprimand,  or  take
other   disciplinary   action  as  the  Department  may  deem
appropriate with regard to a license issued under this Title,
including the issuance of fines not to exceed $5,000 for each
violation, for any one or  combination  of  the  grounds  for
discipline  set forth in Section 10-45 of this Act or for any
one or combination of the following causes:
         (1)  Gross negligence in the  practice  of  advanced
    practice nursing.
         (2)  Exceeding   the   terms   of   a  collaborative
    agreement or the prescriptive authority delegated to  him
    or her by his or her collaborating physician or alternate
    collaborating physician in guidelines established under a
    written collaborative agreement.
         (3)  Making   a   false   or   misleading  statement
    regarding his or her skill or the efficacy  or  value  of
    the  medicine,  treatment, or remedy prescribed by him or
    her in the course of treatment.
         (4)  Prescribing,      selling,       administering,
    distributing,   giving,   or  self-administering  a  drug
    classified as a controlled substance (designated product)
    or narcotic for other than medically accepted therapeutic
    purposes.
         (5)  Promotion  of  the  sale  of  drugs,   devices,
    appliances,  or  goods provided for a patient in a manner
    to exploit the patient for financial gain.
         (6)  Violating State or federal laws or  regulations
    relating to controlled substances.
         (7)  Willfully    or   negligently   violating   the
    confidentiality   between   advanced   practice    nurse,
    collaborating  physician, and patient, except as required
    by law.
         (8)  Failure  of  a  licensee  to  report   to   the
    Department  any  adverse  final action taken against such
    licensee by another  licensing  jurisdiction  (any  other
    jurisdiction of the United States or any foreign state or
    country),   any   peer   review  body,  any  health  care
    institution,  a  professional  or  nursing  or   advanced
    practice  nursing  society or association, a governmental
    agency, a  law  enforcement  agency,  or  a  court  or  a
    liability  claim  relating  to acts or conduct similar to
    acts or conduct that would constitute grounds for  action
    as defined in this Section.
         (9)  Failure   of   a  licensee  to  report  to  the
    Department surrender by the  licensee  of  a  license  or
    authorization  to  practice  nursing or advanced practice
    nursing in another  state  or  jurisdiction,  or  current
    surrender  by  the  licensee of membership on any nursing
    staff or organized health care professional staff  or  in
    any  nursing,  advanced  practice  nurse, or professional
    association   or   society   while   under   disciplinary
    investigation by any of those authorities or  bodies  for
    acts  or  conduct  similar  to acts or conduct that would
    constitute grounds for action as defined in this Section.
         (10)  Failing,   within   60   days,   to    provide
    information  in response to a written request made by the
    Department.
         (11)  Failure to establish and maintain  records  of
    patient care and treatment as required by law.
         (12)  Any  violation of any Section of this Title or
    Act.
    When  the  Department  has   received   written   reports
concerning incidents required to be reported in items (8) and
(9),   the  licensee's  failure to report the incident to the
Department under those items shall not be  the  sole  grounds
for disciplinary action.
    (b)  The  Department  may  refuse to issue or may suspend
the license of any person who fails to file a return, to  pay
the  tax, penalty, or interest shown in a filed return, or to
pay any final assessment of the tax, penalty, or interest  as
required  by  a  tax  Act  administered  by the Department of
Revenue, until the requirements of the tax Act are satisfied.
    (c)  In enforcing this Section,  the  Department  or  APN
Board,  upon a showing of a possible violation, may compel an
individual licensed to practice under this Title, or who  has
applied for licensure under this Title, to submit to a mental
or  physical  examination  or both, as required by and at the
expense of the Department.  The Department or APN  Board  may
order the examining physician to present testimony concerning
the  mental  or  physical  examination  of  the  licensee  or
applicant.  No information shall be excluded by reason of any
common  law or statutory privilege relating to communications
between  the  licensee  or  applicant   and   the   examining
physician.   The  examining  physician  shall be specifically
designated by the APN Board or Department.  The individual to
be examined may have, at his  or  her  own  expense,  another
physician  of his or her choice present during all aspects of
this examination. Failure of an individual  to  submit  to  a
mental or physical examination when directed shall be grounds
for  suspension  of  his  or her license until the individual
submits to the examination if  the  Department  finds,  after
notice  and  hearing,  that  the  refusal  to  submit  to the
examination was without reasonable cause.
    If the Department or APN Board finds an individual unable
to practice because of the reasons set forth in this Section,
the Department or APN Board may require  that  individual  to
submit  to  care,  counseling,  or  treatment  by  physicians
approved  or  designated  by the Department or APN Board as a
condition, term, or restriction for continued, reinstated, or
renewed  licensure  to  practice;  or,  in  lieu   of   care,
counseling, or treatment, the Department may file, or the APN
Board may recommend to the Department to file, a complaint to
immediately  suspend,  revoke,  or  otherwise  discipline the
license of the individual.  An individual whose  license  was
granted,   continued,  reinstated,  renewed,  disciplined  or
supervised subject to terms, conditions, or restrictions, and
who  fails  to  comply  with  the   terms,   conditions,   or
restrictions,  shall  be  referred  to  the  Director  for  a
determination  as to whether the individual shall have his or
her license suspended immediately, pending a hearing  by  the
Department.
    In instances in which the Director immediately suspends a
person's  license  under  this  Section,  a  hearing  on that
person's license shall be convened by the  Department  within
15  days  after the suspension and shall be completed without
appreciable delay.  The Department and APN Board  shall  have
the  authority  to  review the subject individual's record of
treatment and counseling  regarding  the  impairment  to  the
extent   permitted   by   applicable   federal  statutes  and
regulations  safeguarding  the  confidentiality  of   medical
records.
    An  individual  licensed  under  this  Title and affected
under this  Section  shall  be  afforded  an  opportunity  to
demonstrate to the Department or APN Board that he or she can
resume  practice in compliance with acceptable and prevailing
standards under the provisions of his or her license.

    (225 ILCS 65/15-55 new)
    Sec. 15-55. Reports relating to professional conduct  and
capacity.
    (a)  Entities Required to Report.
         (1)  Health    Care    Institutions.     The   chief
    administrator or  executive  officer  of  a  health  care
    institution  licensed by the Department of Public Health,
    which provides the  minimum  due  process  set  forth  in
    Section  10.4 of the Hospital Licensing Act, shall report
    to the APN Board when a licensee's organized professional
    staff  clinical  privileges   are   terminated   or   are
    restricted  based on a final determination, in accordance
    with that institution's bylaws or rules and  regulations,
    that  (i)  a  person  has either committed an act or acts
    that may directly threaten patient care and that are  not
    of  an administrative nature or (ii) that a person may be
    mentally or physically disabled  in  a  manner  that  may
    endanger  patients  under  that person's care.  The chief
    administrator or officer shall also report if a  licensee
    accepts  voluntary termination or restriction of clinical
    privileges in lieu of formal action  based  upon  conduct
    related   directly   to   patient  care  and  not  of  an
    administrative  nature,  or  in  lieu  of  formal  action
    seeking to determine whether a person may be mentally  or
    physically   disabled  in  a  manner  that  may  endanger
    patients under that person's care.  The APN  Board  shall
    provide  by rule for the reporting to it of all instances
    in which a person  licensed  under  this  Title,  who  is
    impaired  by  reason  of  age,  drug, or alcohol abuse or
    physical or mental impairment, is under supervision  and,
    where  appropriate,  is  in  a program of rehabilitation.
    Reports submitted under this subsection shall be strictly
    confidential and may be reviewed and considered  only  by
    the  members  of  the  APN  Board  or authorized staff as
    provided by rule of the APN Board.  Provisions  shall  be
    made  for  the  periodic report of the status of any such
    reported person not less than  twice  annually  in  order
    that  the  APN  Board shall have current information upon
    which to determine the status of  that  person.   Initial
    and periodic reports of impaired advanced practice nurses
    shall not be considered records within the meaning of the
    State  Records Act and shall be disposed  of, following a
    determination by the APN Board that such reports  are  no
    longer  required,  in a manner and at an appropriate time
    as the APN Board shall determine by rule. The  filing  of
    reports   submitted   under   this  subsection  shall  be
    construed as the filing  of  a  report  for  purposes  of
    subsection (c) of this Section.
         (2)  Professional  Associations.   The  President or
    chief executive officer of an association or  society  of
    persons  licensed under this Title, operating within this
    State, shall report to the APN Board when the association
    or society renders a final determination  that  a  person
    licensed  under  this  Title has committed unprofessional
    conduct related directly to patient care or that a person
    may be mentally or physically disabled in a  manner  that
    may endanger patients under the person's care.
         (3)  Professional    Liability    Insurers.    Every
    insurance company that offers  policies  of  professional
    liability insurance to persons licensed under this Title,
    or   any   other  entity  that  seeks  to  indemnify  the
    professional liability of a person  licensed  under  this
    Title,  shall  report  to the APN Board the settlement of
    any claim or cause of action, or final judgment  rendered
    in  any  cause  of action, that alleged negligence in the
    furnishing of patient  care  by  the  licensee  when  the
    settlement   or   final  judgment  is  in  favor  of  the
    plaintiff.
         (4)  State's Attorneys.   The  State's  Attorney  of
    each  county  shall report to the APN Board all instances
    in which a person licensed under this Title is  convicted
    or otherwise found guilty of the commission of a felony.
         (5)  State    Agencies.    All   agencies,   boards,
    commissions, departments, or other  instrumentalities  of
    the  government  of  this  State  shall report to the APN
    Board  any  instance  arising  in  connection  with   the
    operations of the agency, including the administration of
    any  law  by the agency, in which a person licensed under
    this Title has either committed an act or acts  that  may
    constitute a violation of this Title, that may constitute
    unprofessional  conduct related directly to patient care,
    or that indicates that a person licensed under this Title
    may be mentally or physically disabled in a  manner  that
    may endanger patients under that person's care.
    (b)  Mandatory  Reporting.   All  reports  required under
items (8) and (9) of subsection  (a)  of  Section  15-50  and
under  this  Section shall be submitted to the APN Board in a
timely fashion.  The reports shall be filed in writing within
60 days after a determination that a report is required under
this  Title.   All  reports  shall  contain   the   following
information:
           (1)  The  name,  address,  and telephone number of
    the person making the report.
           (2)  The name, address, and  telephone  number  of
    the person who is the subject of the report.
           (3)  The  name or other means of identification of
    any patient or patients whose treatment is a  subject  of
    the  report,  except  that  no  medical  records  may  be
    revealed  without  the  written consent of the patient or
    patients.
         (4)  A brief description of the facts that gave rise
    to the issuance of the report, including but not  limited
    to the dates of any occurrences deemed to necessitate the
    filing of the report.
         (5)  If  court  action  is involved, the identity of
    the court in  which  the  action  is  filed,  the  docket
    number, and date of filing of the action.
         (6)  Any  further  pertinent  information  that  the
    reporting  party  deems to be an aid in the evaluation of
    the report.
    Nothing contained in this Section shall be  construed  to
in  any  way  waive  or modify the confidentiality of medical
reports and committee reports to the extent provided by  law.
Any  information  reported or disclosed shall be kept for the
confidential use of the APN Board, the APN Board's attorneys,
the  investigative staff, and authorized clerical  staff  and
shall  be afforded the same status as is provided information
concerning medical studies in Part 21 of Article VIII of  the
Code of Civil Procedure.
    (c)  Immunity   from   Prosecution.    An  individual  or
organization acting in good faith, and not in  a  wilful  and
wanton  manner,  in  complying with this Title by providing a
report or other information to the APN Board, by assisting in
the investigation or preparation of a report or  information,
by  participating  in  proceedings  of  the  APN Board, or by
serving as a member of the Board shall not, as  a  result  of
such  actions,  be  subject  to criminal prosecution or civil
damages.
    (d)  Indemnification.  Members of the APN Board,  the APN
Board's attorneys, the investigative staff, advanced practice
nurses or physicians retained under contract  to  assist  and
advise  in  the  investigation, and authorized clerical staff
shall be  indemnified  by  the  State  for  any  actions  (i)
occurring within the scope of services on the APN Board, (ii)
performed  in  good faith, and (iii) not wilful and wanton in
nature.  The Attorney General shall defend all actions  taken
against those persons unless he or she determines either that
there  would  be a conflict of interest in the representation
or that the actions complained of were not performed in  good
faith  or  were wilful and wanton in nature.  If the Attorney
General declines representation, the member  shall  have  the
right  to  employ  counsel  of  his or her choice, whose fees
shall be  provided  by  the  State,  after  approval  by  the
Attorney  General, unless there is a determination by a court
that the member's actions were not performed in good faith or
were wilful and wanton in nature. The member shall notify the
Attorney General within 7 days of receipt of  notice  of  the
initiation  of an action involving services of the APN Board.
Failure to so notify the Attorney General shall constitute an
absolute   waiver   of   the   right   to   a   defense   and
indemnification.  The Attorney General shall determine within
7 days after receiving the notice  whether  he  or  she  will
undertake to represent the member.
    (e)  Deliberations  of  APN Board.  Upon the receipt of a
report called for by this Title, other than those reports  of
impaired  persons licensed under this Title required pursuant
to the rules of the APN Board, the APN Board shall notify  in
writing  by  certified  mail the person who is the subject of
the report.  The notification shall be made within 30 days of
receipt by the APN Board  of  the  report.  The  notification
shall  include  a  written  notice setting forth the person's
right to examine the report.  Included  in  the  notification
shall  be  the  address  at which the file is maintained, the
name of the custodian  of  the  reports,  and  the  telephone
number at which the custodian may be reached.  The person who
is the subject of the report shall submit a written statement
responding  to,  clarifying, adding to, or proposing to amend
the report previously filed.  The statement  shall  become  a
permanent  part  of the file and shall be received by the APN
Board no more than 30 days after the date on which the person
was notified of the existence of the  original  report.   The
APN  Board  shall  review  all reports received by it and any
supporting information and responding statements submitted by
persons who are the subject of reports.  The  review  by  the
APN  Board  shall be in a timely manner but in no event shall
the APN Board's initial review of the material  contained  in
each disciplinary file be less than 61 days nor more than 180
days  after  the  receipt  of  the  initial report by the APN
Board. When the APN Board makes its  initial  review  of  the
materials  contained  within  its disciplinary files, the APN
Board shall, in writing, make a determination as  to  whether
there  are  sufficient facts to warrant further investigation
or action.  Failure to make  that  determination  within  the
time  provided  shall  be  deemed  to be a determination that
there  are  not   sufficient   facts   to   warrant   further
investigation  or  action.   Should  the  APN Board find that
there  are  not   sufficient   facts   to   warrant   further
investigation  or  action,  the  report shall be accepted for
filing and the matter shall be deemed closed and so reported.
The individual  or  entity  filing  the  original  report  or
complaint  and the person who is the subject of the report or
complaint shall be notified in writing by the  APN  Board  of
any final action on their report or complaint.
    (f)  Summary  Reports.  The APN Board shall prepare, on a
timely basis, but in no  event  less  than  one  every  other
month,   a   summary  report  of  final  actions  taken  upon
disciplinary files maintained by the APN Board.  The  summary
reports  shall  be sent by the APN Board to every health care
facility licensed by the Department of Public  Health,  every
professional  association  and  society  of  persons licensed
under this Title functioning on a  statewide  basis  in  this
State,   all   insurers   providing   professional  liability
insurance to persons licensed under this Title in this State,
and the Illinois Pharmacists Association.
    (g)  Any violation of this  Section  shall  constitute  a
Class A misdemeanor.
    (h)  If a person violates the provisions of this Section,
an  action  may  be  brought in the name of the People of the
State of Illinois, through the Attorney General of the  State
of  Illinois,  for an order enjoining the violation or for an
order enforcing compliance with this Section.  Upon filing of
a verified petition in court, the court may issue a temporary
restraining  order   without   notice   or   bond   and   may
preliminarily  or permanently enjoin the violation, and if it
is established that the person has violated or  is  violating
the  injunction,  the  court  may  punish  the  offender  for
contempt  of  court.  Proceedings under this subsection shall
be in addition to, and not in lieu of, all other remedies and
penalties provided for by this Section.

    (225 ILCS 65/15-100 new)
    Sec. 15-100.  Joint  Committee  on  Licensure  of  CRNAs.
There  is  created the Joint Committee on Licensure of CRNAs,
consisting of the chairperson and  minority  spokesperson  of
the   Licensed   Activities  Committee  of  the  Senate,  the
chairperson and minority spokesperson of the Registration and
Regulation Committee of the House of Representatives,  and  4
other  members  who  shall  be  appointed,  one  each, by the
President and the Minority  Leader  of  the  Senate  and  the
Speaker  and Minority Leader of the House of Representatives.
The Joint Committee shall meet initially at the call  of  the
Speaker  and  the  President  and  shall select one member as
chairperson at its initial  meeting.   Thereafter,  it  shall
meet  at  the  call of the chairperson, hold public hearings,
and issue a report of legislative recommendations  concerning
the  proper  standards  for licensure of certified registered
nurse anesthetists (CRNAs) to the House  and  the  Senate  by
filing  copies  of its report with the Clerk of the House and
the Secretary of the Senate on or before April 1, 1999.    In
making  its  determinations,  the  Joint Committee also shall
consider the extent to which  existing  laws  and  rules  are
adequate to protect the public health, safety, and welfare in
all settings where anesthesia services are administered.  The
Joint  Committee  on Licensure of CRNAs shall be dissolved on
April 15, 1999.

    (225 ILCS 65/Title 20 heading new)
          TITLE 20. ADMINISTRATION AND ENFORCEMENT

    (225 ILCS 65/20-2 new)
    Sec. 20-2.  References  to  Board.   References  in  this
Title  to  the "Board" shall mean the Board of Nursing in the
case of an administrative or  enforcement  matter  concerning
the  practice  of  practical nursing or professional nursing,
and shall mean the Advanced Practice  Nursing  Board  in  the
case  of  an  administrative or enforcement matter concerning
the practice of advanced practice nursing.

    (225 ILCS 65/20-5, formerly, 65/16)
    Sec.  20-5.  16.  Expiration  of  license;  renewal.  The
expiration date and renewal period for  each  license  issued
under this Act shall be set by rule.  The holder of a license
may   renew  the  license  during  the  month  preceding  the
expiration date of the license by paying the required fee. It
is  the  responsibility  of  the  licensee  to   notify   the
Department in writing of a change of address.
(Source: P.A. 90-61, eff. 12-30-97.)

    (225 ILCS 65/20-10, formerly 65/17)
    Sec.   20-10.   17.  Restoration  of  license;  temporary
permit.
    (a)  Any license issued under this Act that  has  expired
or  that  is  on  inactive  status  may be restored by making
application to the Department and  filing  proof  of  fitness
acceptable  to  the  Department as specified by rule, to have
the license restored, and by paying the required  restoration
fee.   Such  proof of fitness may include evidence certifying
to active lawful practice in another jurisdiction.
    However, any license issued under this Act  that  expired
while  the licensee was (1) in federal service on active duty
with the Armed Forces of the  United  States,  or  the  State
Militia  called  into service or training, or (2) in training
or education under  the  supervision  of  the  United  States
preliminary  to induction into the military service, may have
the license restored without paying any lapsed  renewal  fees
if  within  2  years  after  honorable  termination  of  such
service,  training, or education, the applicant furnishes the
Department with satisfactory evidence to the effect that  the
applicant  has  been  so  engaged  and  that the individual's
service, training, or education has been so terminated.
    Any licensee who shall engage in the practice of  nursing
or  advanced  practice nursing with a lapsed license or while
on inactive status  shall  be  considered  to  be  practicing
without a license which shall be grounds for discipline under
Section 10-30 or Article 15, respectively 25 of this Act.
    (b)  Pending  restoration  of  a license under subsection
(a) of this Section, the Department may grant an applicant  a
temporary  license  to practice nursing as a registered nurse
or as  a  licensed  practical  nurse  if  the  Department  is
satisfied  that  the  applicant holds an active, unencumbered
license in good standing  in  another  jurisdiction.  If  the
applicant  holds more than one current active license, or one
or more active temporary licenses from  other  jurisdictions,
the  Department  shall not issue a temporary license until it
is satisfied that each current active  license  held  by  the
applicant is unencumbered. The temporary license, which shall
be  issued no later than 14 working days following receipt by
the Department of an application for the  license,  shall  be
granted   upon   the  submission  of  the  following  to  the
Department:
         (1)  a  signed   and   completed   application   for
    restoration   of   licensure  under  this  Section  as  a
    registered nurse or a licensed practical nurse;
         (2)  proof of (i) a current, active  license  in  at
    least one other jurisdiction and proof that each current,
    active  license or temporary permit held by the applicant
    is unencumbered or (ii) fitness to  practice  nursing  in
    Illinois as specified by rule;
         (3)  a   signed  and  completed  application  for  a
    temporary permit; and
         (4)  the required permit fee.
    (c)  The Department may refuse to issue to an applicant a
temporary permit authorized under this Section if, within  14
working  days  following  its receipt of an application for a
temporary permit, the Department determines that:
         (1)  the applicant has  been  convicted  within  the
    last  5  years  of  any  crime  under  the  laws  of  any
    jurisdiction  of  the United States that is  (i) a felony
    or (ii) a misdemeanor directly related to the practice of
    the profession;
         (2)  within the last 5 years  the  applicant  had  a
    license  or  permit  related  to  the practice of nursing
    revoked, suspended, or placed  on  probation  by  another
    jurisdiction if at least one of the grounds for revoking,
    suspending,  or  placing  on  probation  is  the  same or
    substantially equivalent to grounds in Illinois; or
         (3)  it is determined  by  the  Department  that  it
    intends to deny restoration of the license.
    For  purposes  of this Section, an "unencumbered license"
means any license against which no  disciplinary  action  has
been  taken  or is pending and for which all fees and charges
are paid and current.
    (d)  The Department may revoke a temporary permit  issued
under this Section if:
         (1)  it  determines  that  the  applicant  has  been
    convicted  within the last 5 years of any crime under the
    law of any jurisdiction of the United States that is  (i)
    a  felony  or  (ii) a misdemeanor directly related to the
    practice of the profession;
         (2)  within the last 5 years  the  applicant  had  a
    license  or  permit  related  to  the practice of nursing
    revoked, suspended, or placed  on  probation  by  another
    jurisdiction,   if  at  least  one  of  the  grounds  for
    revoking, suspending, or placing on probation is the same
    or substantially equivalent to grounds in Illinois; or
         (3)  it is determined  by  the  Department  that  it
    intends to deny restoration of the license.
    A  temporary  permit  or  renewed  temporary permit shall
expire (i) upon issuance of an Illinois license or (ii)  upon
notification  that the Department intends to deny restoration
of licensure. A temporary permit shall expire 6  months  from
the  date  of issuance. Further renewal may be granted by the
Department,  in  hardship  cases,  that  shall  automatically
expire  upon  issuance  of  the  Illinois  license  or   upon
notification  that  the Department intends to deny licensure,
whichever occurs first. No extensions shall be granted beyond
the  6  months  period  unless  approved  by  the   Director.
Notification by the Department under this Section shall be by
certified or registered mail.
(Source: P.A. 90-61, eff. 12-30-97.)

    (225 ILCS 65/20-15, formerly 65/18)
    Sec. 20-15. 18.  Inactive status.  Any nurse who notifies
the   Department  in  writing  on  forms  prescribed  by  the
Department, may elect to place her or his license on inactive
status and shall, subject to  rules  of  the  Department,  be
excused from payment of renewal fees until notice is given to
the Department in writing of her or his intent to restore the
license.
    Any  nurse  requesting  restoration  from inactive status
shall be required to pay the current renewal fee and shall be
required to restore her or his license, as provided  by  rule
of the Department.
    Any  nurse  whose  license is in an inactive status shall
not practice nursing in the State of Illinois.
(Source: P.A. 85-981.)

    (225 ILCS 65/20-25, formerly 65/21)
    Sec. 20-25. 21.  Returned checks; fines. Any  person  who
delivers  a  check or other payment to the Department that is
returned  to  the  Department   unpaid   by   the   financial
institution   upon  which  it  is  drawn  shall  pay  to  the
Department, in addition to the amount  already  owed  to  the
Department,  a fine of $50. If the check or other payment was
for a renewal or  issuance  fee  and  that  person  practices
without  paying  the renewal fee or issuance fee and the fine
due, an additional fine of $100 shall be imposed.  The  fines
imposed  by  this  Section  are  in  addition  to  any  other
discipline provided under this Act for unlicensed practice or
practice on a nonrenewed license. The Department shall notify
the  person  that  payment of fees and fines shall be paid to
the Department by certified check or money  order  within  30
calendar  days  of the notification. If, after the expiration
of 30 days from the date of the notification, the person  has
failed  to  submit  the  necessary remittance, the Department
shall  automatically  terminate  the  license  or  deny   the
application,   without  hearing.  If,  after  termination  or
denial, the person seeks a license, he or she shall apply  to
the Department for restoration or issuance of the license and
pay  all fees and fines due to the Department. The Department
may establish a fee for the processing of an application  for
restoration  of  a  license to pay all expenses of processing
this application. The Director may waive the fines due  under
this  Section  in  individual  cases where the Director finds
that  the  fines  would  be  unreasonable  or   unnecessarily
burdensome.
(Source: P.A. 90-61, eff. 12-30-97.)

    (225 ILCS 65/20-30, formerly 65/22)
    Sec. 20-30. 22.  Roster.  The Department shall maintain a
roster of the names and addresses of all licensees and of all
persons  whose licenses have been suspended or revoked.  This
roster shall be available upon written request and payment of
the required fees.
(Source: P.A. 85-981.)

    (225 ILCS 65/20-35, formerly 65/23)
    Sec. 20-35. 23. Fees.
    (a)  The Department shall provide by rule for a  schedule
of fees to be paid for licenses by all applicants.
    (a-5)  Except as provided in subsection (b), the fees for
the administration and enforcement of this Act, including but
not  limited to original licensure, renewal, and restoration,
shall be set by rule. The fees shall not be refundable.
    (b)  In addition, applicants for  any  examination  as  a
Registered  Professional  Nurse or a Licensed Practical Nurse
shall be required to pay, either to the Department or to  the
designated  testing  service,  a  fee  covering  the  cost of
providing  the  examination.   Failure  to  appear  for   the
examination  on  the  scheduled  date,  at the time and place
specified, after the applicant's application for  examination
has  been  received and acknowledged by the Department or the
designated testing service, shall result in the forfeiture of
the examination fee.
(Source: P.A. 90-61, eff. 12-30-97.)

    (225 ILCS 65/20-40, formerly 65/24)
    (Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 90-372)
    Sec. 20-40. 24. Fund.  There is hereby created within the
State Treasury the Nursing Dedicated and  Professional  Fund.
The monies in the Fund may be used by and at the direction of
the Department for the administration and enforcement of this
Act, including but not limited to:
         (a)  Distribution  and  publication  of the Illinois
    Nursing and Advanced Practice Nursing Act of 1987 and the
    rules at the time of renewal to  all  persons  Registered
    Professional   Nurses   and   Licensed  Practical  Nurses
    licensed by the Department under this Act.
         (b)  Employment     of     secretarial,     nursing,
    administrative, enforcement,  and  other  staff  for  the
    administration of this Act.
         (c)  Conducting  a  survey, as prescribed by rule of
    the Department, once every 4  years  during  the  license
    renewal period.
         (d)  Conducting  of  training seminars for licensees
    under   this   Act   relating   to    the    obligations,
    responsibilities, enforcement and other provisions of the
    Act and its rules.
         (e)  Disposition of Fees:
              (i)  (Blank).
              (ii)  All  of  the  fees  and  fines  collected
         pursuant  to  this  Act  shall  be  deposited in the
         Nursing Dedicated and Professional Fund.
              (iii)  For the fiscal year  beginning  July  1,
         1988,  the moneys deposited in the Nursing Dedicated
         and Professional Fund shall be appropriated  to  the
         Department  for  expenses  of the Department and the
         Board  in  the  administration  of  this  Act.   All
         earnings received from investment of moneys  in  the
         Nursing  Dedicated  and  Professional  Fund shall be
         deposited in the Nursing Dedicated and  Professional
         Fund and shall be used for the same purposes as fees
         deposited in the Fund.
              (iv)  For  the  fiscal  year  beginning July 1,
         1991 and for each fiscal year thereafter, either 10%
         of the moneys deposited in the Nursing Dedicated and
         Professional Fund each year, not including  interest
         accumulated  on such moneys, or any moneys deposited
         in the Fund in each year which are in excess of  the
         amount  appropriated  in  that year to meet ordinary
         and contingent expenses of the Board,  whichever  is
         less,  shall  be  set  aside and appropriated to the
         Illinois Department of  Public  Health  for  nursing
         scholarships   awarded   pursuant   to  the  Nursing
         Education Scholarship Law.
              (v)  Moneys in the Fund may be  transferred  to
         the  Professions  Indirect  Cost  Fund as authorized
         under Section 61e of the Civil  Administrative  Code
         of Illinois.
    In  addition  to any other permitted use of moneys in the
Fund, and notwithstanding any restriction on the use  of  the
Fund,  moneys  in the Nursing Dedicated and Professional Fund
may be transferred to the General Revenue Fund as  authorized
by  this  amendatory Act of 1992.  The General Assembly finds
that an excess of moneys exists in the Fund.
(Source: P.A.  89-204,  eff.  1-1-96;  89-237,  eff.  8-4-95;
89-626, eff. 8-9-96; 90-61, eff. 12-30-97.)

    (Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 90-372)
    Sec. 20-40. 24. Fund.  There is hereby created within the
State  Treasury  the Nursing Dedicated and Professional Fund.
The monies in the Fund may be used by and at the direction of
the Department for the administration and enforcement of this
Act, including but not limited to:
         (a)  Distribution and publication  of  the  Illinois
    Nursing and Advanced Practice Nursing Act of 1987 and the
    rules  at  the  time of renewal to all persons Registered
    Professional  Nurses  and   Licensed   Practical   Nurses
    licensed by the Department under this Act.
         (b)  Employment     of     secretarial,     nursing,
    administrative,  enforcement,  and  other  staff  for the
    administration of this Act.
         (c)  Conducting a survey, as prescribed by  rule  of
    the  Department,  once  every  4 years during the license
    renewal period.
         (d)  Conducting of training seminars  for  licensees
    under    this    Act   relating   to   the   obligations,
    responsibilities, enforcement and other provisions of the
    Act and its rules.
         (e)  Disposition of Fees:
              (i)  (Blank).
              (ii)  All  of  the  fees  and  fines  collected
         pursuant to this  Act  shall  be  deposited  in  the
         Nursing Dedicated and Professional Fund.
              (iii)  For  the  fiscal  year beginning July 1,
         1988, the moneys deposited in the Nursing  Dedicated
         and  Professional  Fund shall be appropriated to the
         Department for expenses of the  Department  and  the
         Board  in  the  administration  of  this  Act.   All
         earnings  received  from investment of moneys in the
         Nursing Dedicated and  Professional  Fund  shall  be
         deposited  in the Nursing Dedicated and Professional
         Fund and shall be used for the same purposes as fees
         deposited in the Fund.
              (iv)  For the fiscal  year  beginning  July  1,
         1991 and for each fiscal year thereafter, either 10%
         of the moneys deposited in the Nursing Dedicated and
         Professional  Fund each year, not including interest
         accumulated on such moneys, or any moneys  deposited
         in  the Fund in each year which are in excess of the
         amount appropriated in that year  to  meet  ordinary
         and  contingent  expenses of the Board, whichever is
         less, shall be set aside  and  appropriated  to  the
         Illinois  Department  of  Public  Health for nursing
         scholarships  awarded  pursuant   to   the   Nursing
         Education Scholarship Law.
              (v)  Moneys  in  the Fund may be transferred to
         the Professions Indirect  Cost  Fund  as  authorized
         under  Section  61e of the Civil Administrative Code
         of Illinois.
(Source: P.A.  89-204,  eff.  1-1-96;  89-237,  eff.  8-4-95;
89-626,  eff.  8-9-96;  90-61,  eff.  12-30-97;  90-372, eff.
7-1-98; revised 8-18-97.)

    (225 ILCS 65/20-50, formerly 65/26)
    Sec. 20-50. 26. Limitation on action. All proceedings  to
suspend, revoke, or take any other disciplinary action as the
Department  may  deem proper, with regard to a license on any
of the foregoing grounds may not be commenced  later  than  3
years  next after the commission of any act which is a ground
for discipline or a final conviction order  for  any  of  the
acts described herein.  In the event of the settlement of any
claim  or  cause  of  action  in favor of the claimant or the
reduction to the final judgment of any civil action in  favor
of the plaintiff, such claim, cause of action or civil action
being  rounded on the allegation that a person licensed under
this Act was negligent  in  providing  care,  the  Department
shall  have an additional period of one year from the date of
such settlement or final judgment in which to investigate and
commence formal disciplinary proceedings under Section 25  of
this  Act,  except  as  otherwise  provided by law.  The time
during which the holder of the license was outside the  State
of  Illinois  shall not be included within any period of time
limiting the  commencement  of  disciplinary  action  by  the
Board.
(Source: P.A. 90-61, eff. 12-30-97.)

    (225 ILCS 65/20-55, formerly 65/27)
    Sec.  20-55.  27.  Suspension  for  imminent  danger. The
Director of the Department may, upon  receipt  of  a  written
communication  from  the  Secretary  of  Human  Services, the
Director of Public Aid, or the Director of Public Health that
continuation of practice of a person licensed under this  Act
constitutes  an  immediate  danger to the public, immediately
suspend the license of such person  without  a  hearing.   In
instances  in  which  the  Director  immediately  suspends  a
license  under  this  Section,  a  hearing upon such person's
license must be convened by the  Department  within  30  days
after  such  suspension  and  completed  without  appreciable
delay, such hearing held to determine whether to recommend to
the Director that the person's license be revoked, suspended,
placed  on  probationary status or reinstated, or such person
be subject to other disciplinary action.   In  such  hearing,
the  written  communication  and any other evidence submitted
therewith may be introduced as evidence against such  person;
provided,  however,  the person, or his or her counsel, shall
have the opportunity  to  discredit  or  impeach  and  submit
evidence rebutting such evidence.
(Source: P.A. 89-507, eff. 7-1-97; 90-61, eff. 12-30-97.)

    (225 ILCS 65/20-65, formerly 65/29)
    Sec.  20-65.  29.  Liability of State.  In the event that
the Department's order of revocation, suspension, placing the
licensee on probationary status, or  other  order  of  formal
disciplinary action is without any reasonable basis, then the
State  of  Illinois  shall be liable to the injured party for
those special damages suffered as a  direct  result  of  such
order.
(Source: P.A. 85-981.)

    (225 ILCS 65/20-70, formerly 65/30)
    Sec.  20-70.  30. Right to legal counsel.  No action of a
disciplinary nature that is predicated  on  charges  alleging
unethical  or  unprofessional  conduct  of  a person who is a
registered professional nurse or a licensed  practical  nurse
and  that can be reasonably expected to affect adversely that
person's maintenance of her or his present,  or  her  or  his
securing  of  future, employment as such a nurse may be taken
by the Department, by  any  association,  or  by  any  person
unless  the  person  against  whom  such  charges are made is
afforded the right to be represented by legal counsel of  her
or  his  choosing  and  to  present  any  witness, whether an
attorney or otherwise to testify on matters relevant to  such
charges.
(Source: P.A. 90-61, eff. 12-30-97.)

    (225 ILCS 65/20-75, formerly 65/31)
    Sec. 20-75. 31.  Injunctive remedies.
    (a)  If  any  person  violates the provision of this Act,
the Director may, in the name of the People of the  State  of
Illinois,  through  the  Attorney  General  of  the  State of
Illinois, or the State's Attorney of any county in which  the
action  is  brought,  petition  for  an  order enjoining such
violation or for an order enforcing compliance with this Act.
Upon the filing of a verified petition in  court,  the  court
may  issue  a  temporary restraining order, without notice or
bond, and  may  preliminarily  and  permanently  enjoin  such
violation,  and  if  it  is  established that such person has
violated or is violating the injunction, the court may punish
the offender for contempt of court.  Proceedings  under  this
Section  shall  be  in  addition  to, and not in lieu of, all
other remedies and penalties provided by this Act.
    (b)  If any person shall practice  as  a  nurse  or  hold
herself  or  himself  out  as  a nurse without being licensed
under the provisions of this Act, then  any  licensed  nurse,
any  interested  party, or any person injured thereby may, in
addition to the Director, petition for relief as provided  in
subsection (a) of this Section.
    Whoever knowingly practices or offers to practice nursing
in  this  State  without  a license for that purpose shall be
guilty of a Class  A  misdemeanor  and  for  each  subsequent
conviction, shall be guilty of a Class 4 felony. All criminal
fines, monies, or other property collected or received by the
Department  under  this Section or any other State or federal
statute, including, but not limited to, property forfeited to
the Department under Section 505 of the  Illinois  Controlled
Substances  Act,  shall  be  deposited  into the Professional
Regulation Evidence Fund.
    (c)  Whenever in the opinion of the Department any person
violates any provision of this Act, the Department may  issue
a  rule to show cause why an order to cease and desist should
not be entered against him.  The rule shall clearly set forth
the grounds relied upon by the Department and shall provide a
period of 7 days from the date of the rule to file an  answer
to  the satisfaction of the Department.  Failure to answer to
the satisfaction of the Department shall cause  an  order  to
cease and desist to be issued forthwith.
(Source: P.A. 86-685.)

    (225 ILCS 65/20-80, formerly 65/32)
    Sec.  20-80. 32. Investigation; notice; hearing. Prior to
bringing an action  before  the  Board,  the  Department  may
investigate  the actions of any applicant or of any person or
persons  holding  or  claiming  to  hold  a   license.    The
Department  shall,  before  suspending,  revoking, placing on
probationary status, or taking any other disciplinary  action
as the Department may deem proper with regard to any license,
at  least  30  days  prior  to  the date set for the hearing,
notify the accused in writing of any  charges  made  and  the
time and place for a hearing of the charges before the Board,
direct  her  or  him  to file a written answer thereto to the
Board under oath within 20 days after  the  service  of  such
notice  and  inform  the  licensee that if she or he fails to
file such answer default will be taken against  the  licensee
and  such  license  may  be  suspended,  revoked,  placed  on
probationary  status,  or  have  other  disciplinary  action,
including  limiting the scope, nature or extent of her or his
practice, as the Department may deem proper taken with regard
thereto. Such  written  notice  may  be  served  by  personal
delivery or certified or registered mail to the respondent at
the   address   of  her  or  his  last  notification  to  the
Department.  At the time and place fixed in the  notice,  the
Department  shall proceed to hear the charges and the parties
or their counsel  shall  be  accorded  ample  opportunity  to
present  such statements, testimony, evidence and argument as
may be pertinent to the charges or  to  the  defense  to  the
charges.  The  Department may continue a hearing from time to
time.  In case the accused person,  after  receiving  notice,
fails  to  file  an  answer,  her  or  his license may in the
discretion  of  the  Director,  having  received  first   the
recommendation of the Board, be suspended, revoked, placed on
probationary  status,  or  the  Director  may  take  whatever
disciplinary  action  as he or she may deem proper, including
limiting the  scope,  nature,  or  extent  of  said  person's
practice,  without  a  hearing,  if  the  act or acts charged
constitute sufficient grounds for such action under this Act.
(Source: P.A. 90-61, eff. 12-30-97.)

    (225 ILCS 65/20-85, formerly 65/33)
    Sec.   20-85.   33.  Stenographer;    transcript.     The
Department,  at  its expense, shall provide a stenographer to
take  down  the  testimony  and  preserve  a  record  of  all
proceedings  at  the  hearing  of  any   case   wherein   any
disciplinary action is taken regarding a license.  The notice
of  hearing,  complaint and all other documents in the nature
of pleadings and written motions filed  in  the  proceedings,
the  transcript of testimony, the report of the Board and the
orders  of  the  Department  shall  be  the  record  of   the
proceedings.   The  Department  shall furnish a transcript of
the record to any  person  interested  in  the  hearing  upon
payment  of  the  fee required under Section 60f of the Civil
Administrative Code of Illinois.
(Source: P.A. 90-61, eff. 12-30-97.)

    (225 ILCS 65/20-90, formerly 65/34)
    Sec. 20-90. 34.  Compelled testimony  and  production  of
documents.  Any  circuit  court  may, upon application of the
Department or  designee  or  of  the  applicant  or  licensee
against  whom  proceedings  upon Section 20-80 32 of this Act
are pending, enter  an  order  requiring  the  attendance  of
witnesses   and   their  testimony,  and  the  production  of
documents, papers, files, books  and  records  in  connection
with  any  hearing  or  investigation.   The court may compel
obedience to its order by proceedings for contempt.
(Source: P.A. 85-981.)

    (225 ILCS 65/20-95, formerly 65/35)
    Sec. 20-95. 35. Subpoena  power;  oaths.  The  Department
shall  have  power to subpoena and bring before it any person
in this State and to take  testimony,  either  orally  or  by
deposition or both, with the same fees and mileage and in the
same  manner  as prescribed by law in judicial proceedings in
civil cases in circuit courts of this State.
    The Director and any member of the  Board  designated  by
the  Director  shall  each  have power to administer oaths to
witnesses at any hearing which the Department  is  authorized
to  conduct  under  this Act, and any other oaths required or
authorized to be administered by the  Department  under  this
Act.
(Source: P.A. 90-61, eff. 12-30-97.)

    (225 ILCS 65/20-100, formerly 65/36)
    Sec.  20-100.  36. Board report. At the conclusion of the
hearing the Board shall present to  the  Director  a  written
report  of  its  findings  of  fact,  conclusions of law, and
recommendations.  The report shall contain a finding  whether
or  not  the  accused  person  violated this Act or failed to
comply with the conditions required in this Act.  The  report
shall  specify  the  nature  of  the  violation or failure to
comply, and the Board shall make its recommendations  to  the
Director.
    The  report  of findings of fact, conclusions of law, and
recommendation of the  Board  shall  be  the  basis  for  the
Department's  order  of  refusal  or  for  the  granting of a
license or permit unless the Director  shall  determine  that
the  report  is  contrary  to  the  manifest  weight  of  the
evidence,  in  which  case the Director may issue an order in
contravention of the report.  The findings are not admissible
in evidence against the  person  in  a  criminal  prosecution
brought  for  the  violation of this Act, but the hearing and
findings are not a bar to a criminal prosecution brought  for
the violation of this Act.
(Source: P.A. 90-61, eff. 12-30-97.)

    (225 ILCS 65/20-105, formerly 65/37)
    Sec. 20-105. 37. Hearing officer. The Director shall have
the  authority  to  appoint  an  attorney  duly  licensed  to
practice law in the State of Illinois to serve as the hearing
officer  in  any action  before the Board to revoke, suspend,
place on  probation,  reprimand,  fine,  or  take  any  other
disciplinary  action  with  regard to a license.  The hearing
officer shall have full authority  to  conduct  the  hearing.
The  Board  shall  have the right to have at least one member
present at any hearing conducted  by  such  hearing  officer.
There  may  be present at least one RN member of the Board at
any such hearing or disciplinary conference.  An  LPN  member
or  LPN educator may be present for hearings and disciplinary
conferences of an LPN.  The hearing officer shall report  her
or  his  findings  and recommendations to the Board within 30
days of the receipt of the record.  The Board shall  have  90
days  from  receipt of the report to review the report of the
hearing  officer  and  present  their   findings   of   fact,
conclusions  of  law and recommendations to the Director.  If
the Board fails to  present  its  report  within  the  90-day
period,  the  Director may issue an order based on the report
of the hearing officer.  However, if the Board  does  present
its  report  within  the  specified  90  days, the Director's
order shall be based upon the report of the Board.
(Source: P.A. 90-61, eff. 12-30-97.)
    (225 ILCS 65/20-110, formerly 65/38)
    Sec. 20-110.  38.  Motion  for  rehearing.  In  any  case
involving  refusal  to  issue,  renew, or the discipline of a
license, a copy of the Board's report shall  be  served  upon
the  respondent  by  the  Department, either personally or as
provided in this Act,  for  the  service  of  the  notice  of
hearing.   Within  20 days after such service, the respondent
may present to the Department  a  motion  in  writing  for  a
rehearing,  which motion shall specify the particular grounds
for a rehearing. If no motion for rehearing  is  filed,  then
upon  the  expiration  of  the time then upon such denial the
Director   may   enter   an   order   in   accordance    with
recommendations  of  the Board except as provided in Sections
20-100 and 20-105 Section 36 and 37  of  this  Act.   If  the
respondent  shall  order  from the reporting service, and pay
for a transcript of the record within the time for  filing  a
motion  for  rehearing, the 20 day period within which such a
motion may be filed shall commence upon the delivery  of  the
transcript to the respondent.
(Source: P.A. 90-61, eff. 12-30-97.)

    (225 ILCS 65/20-115, formerly 65/39)
    Sec.  20-115.  39.  Order  for  rehearing.  Whenever  the
Director  is  satisfied that substantial justice has not been
done in the revocation, suspension, or refusal  to  issue  or
renew a license, the Director may order a hearing by the same
or another hearing officer or the Board.
(Source: P.A. 90-61, eff. 12-30-97.)

    (225 ILCS 65/20-120, formerly 65/40)
    Sec.  20-120.  40.  Order of Director. An order regarding
any disciplinary action, or a certified copy thereof over the
seal of the Department and purporting to  be  signed  by  the
Director shall be prima facie evidence that:
    (a)  such  signature  is  the  genuine  signature  of the
Director;
    (b)  that such Director is duly appointed and  qualified;
and
    (c)  that  the  Board and the Board members are qualified
to act.
(Source: P.A. 90-61, eff. 12-30-97.)

    (225 ILCS 65/20-125, formerly 65/41)
    Sec.  20-125.  41.   Restoration  after   suspension   or
revocation.   At  any time after the suspension or revocation
of any license, the Department may restore it to the  accused
person,  unless,  after  an  investigation and a hearing, the
Department determines that restoration is not in  the  public
interest.
(Source: P.A. 85-981.)

    (225 ILCS 65/20-130, formerly 65/42)
    Sec. 20-130. 42. Surrender of license. Upon revocation or
suspension  of  any  license,  the  licensee  shall forthwith
surrender the license to the Department and if  the  licensee
fails  to do so, the Department shall have the right to seize
the license.
(Source: P.A. 90-61, eff. 12-30-97.)

    (225 ILCS 65/20-135, formerly 65/43)
    Sec. 20-135. 43. Temporary suspension. The  Director  may
temporarily suspend the license of a nurse without a hearing,
simultaneously  with  the  institution  of  proceedings for a
hearing provided for in Section 20-80 32 of this Act, if  the
Director  finds  that  evidence  in  his  or  her  possession
indicates  that  continuation in practice would constitute an
imminent danger  to  the  public.   In  the  event  that  the
Director   suspends,  temporarily,  this  license  without  a
hearing, a hearing by the Department must be held  within  30
days  after  the  suspension  has  occurred, and be concluded
without appreciable delay.
    Proceedings for judicial review shall be commenced in the
circuit court of the county in which the party  applying  for
review  resides;  but  if the party is not a resident of this
State, the venue shall be in Sangamon County.
(Source: P.A. 90-61, eff. 12-30-97.)

    (225 ILCS 65/20-140, formerly 65/44)
    Sec. 20-140. 44.  Administrative Review Law.   All  final
administrative decisions of the Department hereunder shall be
subject  to  judicial review pursuant to the revisions of the
"Administrative  Review  Law,"   and   all   amendments   and
modifications thereof, and the rule adopted pursuant thereto.
The  term  "administrative decision" is defined as in Section
3-101 of the Code of Civil Procedure.
(Source: P.A. 85-981.)

    (225 ILCS 65/20-145, formerly 65/45)
    Sec. 20-145. 45.  Certification of record. The Department
shall not be required to certify any record to the  Court  or
file  any answer in court or otherwise appear in any court in
a judicial review proceeding, unless there is  filed  in  the
court,  with  the  complaint,  a  receipt from the Department
acknowledging  payment  of  the  costs  of   furnishing   and
certifying  the record.  Failure on the part of the plaintiff
to file such receipt in Court shall be grounds for  dismissal
of the action.
(Source: P.A. 87-1031.)

    (225 ILCS 65/20-150, formerly 65/46)
    Sec.  20-150. 46.  Criminal penalties.  Any person who is
found to have violated any provision of this Act is guilty of
a  Class  A  misdemeanor.   On  conviction  of  a  second  or
subsequent offense, the violator shall be guilty of a Class 4
felony.
(Source: P.A. 85-981.)

    (225 ILCS 65/20-155, formerly 65/47)
    Sec.  20-155.  47.  Pending  actions.  All   disciplinary
actions  taken  or  pending  pursuant to the Illinois Nursing
Act, approved June 14,  1951,  as  amended,  shall,  for  the
actions taken, remain in effect, and for the actions pending,
shall be continued, on the effective date of this Act without
having separate actions filed by the Department.
(Source: P.A. 90-61, eff. 12-30-97.)

    (225 ILCS 65/20-160, formerly 65/48)
    Sec.  20-160.  48. Illinois Administrative Procedure Act.
The Illinois Administrative Procedure Act is hereby expressly
adopted and incorporated herein as if all of  the  provisions
of  that  Act  were  included  in  this  Act, except that the
provision of subsection (d) of Section 10-65 of the  Illinois
Administrative  Procedure  Act that provides that at hearings
the licensee has the right to show compliance with all lawful
requirements for retention, continuation or  renewal  of  the
license  is  specifically  excluded. For the purposes of this
Act, the notice required under Section 10-25 of the  Illinois
Administrative Procedure Act is deemed sufficient when mailed
to the last known address of a party.
(Source: P.A. 88-45.)

    (225 ILCS 65/20-165, formerly 65/49)
    Sec. 20-165. 49.  Home rule preemption. It is declared to
be  the  public  policy of this State, pursuant to paragraphs
(h) and (i) of Section 6  of  Article  VII  of  the  Illinois
Constitution of 1970, that any power or function set forth in
this  Act  to be exercised by the State is an exclusive State
power or function.  Such  power  or  function  shall  not  be
exercised concurrently, either directly or indirectly, by any
unit  of  local government, including home rule units, except
as otherwise provided in this Act.
(Source: P.A. 85-981.)

    (225 ILCS 65/10 rep.)
    (225 ILCS 65/11 rep.)
    (225 ILCS 65/20 rep.)
    (225 ILCS 65/25 rep.)
    (225 ILCS 65/28 rep.)
    Section 20.  The Illinois Nursing Act of 1987 is  amended
by repealing Sections 10, 11, 20, 25, and 28.

    Section  25.  The  Nursing  Home Administrators Licensing
and Disciplinary Act is amended  by  changing  Section  4  as
follows:

    (225 ILCS 70/4) (from Ch. 111, par. 3654)
    Sec.  4.   Definitions.   For  purposes  of this Act, the
following definitions  shall  have  the  following  meanings,
except where the context requires otherwise:
         (1)  "Act"  means  the  Nursing  Home Administrators
    Licensing and Disciplinary Act.
         (2)  "Department"   means    the    Department    of
    Professional Regulation.
         (3)  "Director"  means  the Director of Professional
    Regulation.
         (4)  "Board" means the Nursing  Home  Administrators
    Licensing   and   Disciplinary  Board  appointed  by  the
    Governor.
         (5)  "Nursing   home   administrator"   means    the
    individual   licensed   under   this   Act  and  directly
    responsible  for  planning,  organizing,  directing   and
    supervising  the  operation  of a nursing home, or who in
    fact  performs  such  functions,  whether  or  not   such
    functions are delegated to one or more other persons.
         (6)  "Nursing  home"  or "facility" means any entity
    that is required to be  licensed  by  the  Department  of
    Public  Health  under  the  Nursing  Home  Care  Act,  as
    amended,  other  than  a  sheltered  care home as defined
    thereunder, and  includes  private  homes,  institutions,
    buildings,  residences, or other places, whether operated
    for profit or not, irrespective of the  names  attributed
    to  them, county homes for the infirm and chronically ill
    operated pursuant to the  County  Nursing  Home  Act,  as
    amended,  and  any  similar  institutions  operated  by a
    political subdivision  of  the  State  of  Illinois  that
    provide,    though   their   ownership   or   management,
    maintenance, personal care, and nursing  for  3  or  more
    persons,  not  related to the owner by blood or marriage,
    or  any  similar  facilities  in  which  maintenance   is
    provided to 3 or more persons who by reason of illness of
    physical infirmity require personal care and nursing.
         (7)  "Maintenance" means food, shelter and laundry.
         (8)  "Personal  care"  means  assistance with meals,
    dressing, movement, bathing, or other personal needs,  or
    general supervision of the physical and mental well-being
    of  an individual who because of age, physical, or mental
    disability,  emotion  or  behavior  disorder,  or  mental
    retardation is incapable of managing his or  her  person,
    whether  or  not  a  guardian has been appointed for such
    individual. For the purposes of this Act, this definition
    does not include the professional services of a nurse.
         (9)  "Nursing"   means   professional   nursing   or
    practical nursing, as those  terms  are  defined  in  the
    Illinois  Nursing  and  Advanced  Practice Nursing Act of
    1987, as amended, for sick  or  infirm  persons  who  are
    under  the care and supervision of licensed physicians or
    dentists.
         (10)  "Disciplinary   action"   means    revocation,
    suspension,  probation,  supervision, reprimand, required
    education,  fines  or  any  other  action  taken  by  the
    Department against a person holding a license.
         (11)  "Impaired" means  the  inability  to  practice
    with  reasonable  skill  and  safety  due  to physical or
    mental   disabilities   as   evidenced   by   a   written
    determination  or  written  consent  based  on   clinical
    evidence   including   deterioration  through  the  aging
    process or loss of motor skill,  or  abuse  of  drugs  or
    alcohol,  of  sufficient  degree  to  diminish a person's
    ability to administer a nursing home.
(Source: P.A. 90-61, eff. 12-30-97.)

    Section 30.  The Pharmacy Practice Act of 1987 is amended
by changing Sections 3 and 4 as follows:

    (225 ILCS 85/3) (from Ch. 111, par. 4123)
    Sec. 3. Definitions.  For the purpose of this Act, except
where otherwise limited therein:
    (a)  "Pharmacy" or "drugstore" means and  includes  every
store,  shop,  pharmacy  department,  or  other  place  where
pharmaceutical  care  is  provided  by a pharmacist (1) where
drugs, medicines, or poisons are dispensed, sold  or  offered
for  sale  at retail, or displayed for sale at retail; or (2)
where prescriptions of physicians,  dentists,  veterinarians,
podiatrists,   or   therapeutically  certified  optometrists,
within the limits of their licenses, are compounded,  filled,
or  dispensed;  or  (3) which has upon it or displayed within
it, or affixed to or used  in  connection  with  it,  a  sign
bearing   the   word   or   words  "Pharmacist",  "Druggist",
"Pharmacy", "Pharmaceutical Care", "Apothecary", "Drugstore",
"Medicine Store", "Prescriptions", "Drugs",  "Medicines",  or
any  word  or  words of similar or like import, either in the
English language or any other  language;  or  (4)  where  the
characteristic  prescription  sign  (Rx) or similar design is
exhibited; or (5) any store, or shop,  or  other  place  with
respect  to  which  any of the above words, objects, signs or
designs are used in any advertisement.
    (b)  "Drugs" means and includes (l)  articles  recognized
in   the   official   United   States  Pharmacopoeia/National
Formulary (USP/NF),  or  any  supplement  thereto  and  being
intended  for  and  having  for their main use the diagnosis,
cure, mitigation, treatment or prevention of disease  in  man
or  other  animals, as approved by the United States Food and
Drug Administration, but does not include  devices  or  their
components, parts, or accessories; and (2) all other articles
intended  for  and  having  for their main use the diagnosis,
cure, mitigation, treatment or prevention of disease  in  man
or  other  animals, as approved by the United States Food and
Drug Administration, but does not include  devices  or  their
components,  parts,  or  accessories; and (3) articles (other
than food) having for their main use and intended  to  affect
the  structure  or  any  function of the body of man or other
animals; and (4) articles  having  for  their  main  use  and
intended  for use as a component or any articles specified in
clause (l), (2) or (3); but does not include devices or their
components, parts or accessories.
    (c)  "Medicines" means and includes  all  drugs  intended
for  human  or  veterinary  use approved by the United States
Food and Drug Administration.
    (d)  "Practice  of  pharmacy"  means  the  provision   of
pharmaceutical   care   to  patients  as  determined  by  the
pharmacist's professional judgment in  the  following  areas,
which  may  include  but  are  not  limited  to  (1)  patient
counseling,   (2)   interpretation   and   assisting  in  the
monitoring of  appropriate  drug  use  and  prospective  drug
utilization   review,   (3)   providing  information  on  the
therapeutic  values,  reactions,  drug   interactions,   side
effects,  uses, selection of medications and medical devices,
and outcome  of  drug  therapy,  (4)  participation  in  drug
selection,   drug   monitoring,   drug   utilization  review,
evaluation, administration,  interpretation,  application  of
pharmacokinetic  and  laboratory  data  to  design  safe  and
effective  drug  regimens,  (5)  drug  research (clinical and
scientific), and (6) compounding and dispensing of drugs  and
medical devices.
    (e)  "Prescription" means and includes any written, oral,
facsimile,  or  electronically transmitted order for drugs or
medical devices, issued by a physician licensed  to  practice
medicine  in  all  its  branches,  dentist,  veterinarian, or
podiatrist,  or therapeutically certified optometrist, within
the limits of their licenses, or by a physician assistant  in
accordance  with  subsection  (f)  of  Section  4,  or  by an
advanced practice nurse in accordance with subsection (g)  of
Section 4, containing the following: (l) name of the patient;
(2)  date when prescription was issued; (3) name and strength
of drug or description of the medical device prescribed;  and
(4)  quantity, (5) directions for use, (6) prescriber's name,
address and signature, and (7) DEA number where required, for
controlled substances. DEA numbers shall not be  required  on
inpatient drug orders.
    (f)  "Person"   means  and  includes  a  natural  person,
copartnership, association, corporation,  government  entity,
or any other legal entity.
    (g)  "Department"  means  the  Department of Professional
Regulation.
    (h)  "Board of Pharmacy" or "Board" means the State Board
of Pharmacy of the Department of Professional Regulation.
    (i)  "Director"  means  the  Director   of   Professional
Regulation.
    (j)  "Drug product selection" means the interchange for a
prescribed  pharmaceutical product in accordance with Section
25 of this Act and Section 3.14 of the  Illinois  Food,  Drug
and Cosmetic Act.
    (k)  "Inpatient  drug  order" means an order issued by an
authorized prescriber for a resident or patient of a facility
licensed under the Nursing Home  Care  Act  or  the  Hospital
Licensing  Act,  or  "An  Act in relation to the founding and
operation of the University  of  Illinois  Hospital  and  the
conduct  of  University  of  Illinois  health care programs",
approved July 3, 1931, as amended, or  a  facility  which  is
operated by the Department of Human Services (as successor to
the   Department   of   Mental   Health   and   Developmental
Disabilities) or the Department of Corrections.
    (k-5)  "Pharmacist"   means   an   individual   currently
licensed by this State to engage in the practice of pharmacy.
    (l)  "Pharmacist in charge" means the licensed pharmacist
whose  name  appears on a pharmacy license who is responsible
for all aspects of the operation related to the  practice  of
pharmacy.
    (m)  "Dispense"  means  the delivery of drugs and medical
devices, in accordance with applicable State and federal laws
and  regulations,   to   the   patient   or   the   patient's
representative   authorized   to   receive   these  products,
including the compounding, packaging, and labeling  necessary
for delivery, and any recommending or advising concerning the
contents  and therapeutic values and uses thereof. "Dispense"
does not mean  the  physical  delivery  to  a  patient  or  a
patient's  representative  in  a  home  or  institution  by a
designee of a pharmacist or by  common  carrier.   "Dispense"
also does not mean the physical delivery of a drug or medical
device   to  a  patient  or  patient's  representative  by  a
pharmacist's designee within a pharmacy  or  drugstore  while
the pharmacist is on duty and the pharmacy is open.
    (n)  "Mail-order  pharmacy"  means  a  pharmacy  that  is
located in a state of the United States, other than Illinois,
that  delivers,  dispenses or distributes, through the United
States Postal Service or other common  carrier,  to  Illinois
residents, any substance which requires a prescription.
    (o)  "Compounding"   means   the   preparation,   mixing,
assembling,  packaging,  or  labeling  of  a  drug or medical
device: (1) as the result of  a  practitioner's  prescription
drug  order  or  initiative  that  is dispensed pursuant to a
prescription in the course of professional practice;  or  (2)
for  the  purpose  of, or incident to, research, teaching, or
chemical analysis; or (3)  in  anticipation  of  prescription
drug  orders based on routine, regularly observed prescribing
patterns.
    (p)  "Confidential   information"   means    information,
maintained  by  the  pharmacist  in  the  patient's  records,
released  only (i) to the patient or, as the patient directs,
to other practitioners and other pharmacists or (ii)  to  any
other person authorized by law to receive the information.
    (q)  "Prospective   drug  review"  or  "drug  utilization
evaluation" means a  screening  for  potential  drug  therapy
problems   due   to   therapeutic  duplication,  drug-disease
contraindications, drug-drug interactions (including  serious
interactions with nonprescription or over-the-counter drugs),
drug-food  interactions, incorrect drug dosage or duration of
drug treatment, drug-allergy interactions, and clinical abuse
or misuse.
    (r)  "Patient counseling" means the communication between
a  pharmacist  or  a  student  pharmacist  under  the  direct
supervision of a pharmacist and a patient  or  the  patient's
representative  about  the patient's medication or device for
the  purpose  of  optimizing  proper  use   of   prescription
medications   or  devices.   The  offer  to  counsel  by  the
pharmacist  or  the  pharmacist's  designee,  and  subsequent
patient counseling by the pharmacist or  student  pharmacist,
shall  be  made  in  a  face-to-face  communication  with the
patient  or   patient's   representative   unless,   in   the
professional  judgment  of  the  pharmacist,  a  face-to-face
communication  is  deemed  inappropriate  or unnecessary.  In
that instance, the offer to counsel or patient counseling may
be made in a written communication, by  telephone,  or  in  a
manner determined by the pharmacist to be appropriate.
    (s)  "Patient  profiles" or "patient drug therapy record"
means the obtaining, recording, and  maintenance  of  patient
prescription and personal information.
    (t)  "Pharmaceutical  care"  includes, but is not limited
to, the act of monitoring drug use  and  other  patient  care
services  intended  to  achieve  outcomes  that  improve  the
patient's  quality  of life but shall not include the sale of
over-the-counter drugs by a seller of goods and services  who
does not dispense prescription drugs.
    (u)  "Medical  device"  means  an  instrument, apparatus,
implement, machine, contrivance, implant, in  vitro  reagent,
or  other similar or related article, including any component
part or accessory, required under federal  law  to  bear  the
label  "Caution: Federal law requires dispensing by or on the
order of a physician". A seller of goods  and  services  who,
only  for  the  purpose  of  retail  sales, compounds, sells,
rents, or  leases  medical  devices  shall  not,  by  reasons
thereof, be required to be a licensed pharmacy.
(Source: P.A.  89-202,  eff.  7-21-95;  89-507,  eff. 7-1-97;
90-116, eff. 7-14-97; 90-253, eff. 7-29-97; revised 8-5-97.)

    (225 ILCS 85/4) (from Ch. 111, par. 4124)
    Sec. 4. Exemptions. Nothing contained in any  Section  of
this Act shall apply to, or in any manner interfere with:
    (a)  the  lawful  practice  of  any physician licensed to
practice  medicine  in  all   of   its   branches,   dentist,
podiatrist,     veterinarian,     or    therapeutically    or
diagnostically certified optometrist within the limits of his
or her license, or prevent him or her from supplying  to  his
or  her  bona fide patients such drugs, medicines, or poisons
as may seem to him appropriate;
    (b)  the sale of compressed gases;
    (c)  the sale of  patent  or  proprietary  medicines  and
household   remedies  when  sold  in  original  and  unbroken
packages only, if such patent or  proprietary  medicines  and
household  remedies  be properly and adequately labeled as to
content and usage and generally considered  and  accepted  as
harmless   and   nonpoisonous  when  used  according  to  the
directions on the label, and also do  not  contain  opium  or
coca  leaves, or any compound, salt or derivative thereof, or
any drug which, according  to  the  latest  editions  of  the
following    authoritative   pharmaceutical   treatises   and
standards, namely, The United  States  Pharmacopoeia/National
Formulary  (USP/NF),  the United States Dispensatory, and the
Accepted  Dental  Remedies   of   the   Council   of   Dental
Therapeutics  of  the  American  Dental Association or any or
either of them, in use on the effective date of this Act,  or
according  to  the  existing  provisions of the Federal Food,
Drug, and Cosmetic Act and Regulations of the  Department  of
Health  and  Human  Services,  Food  and Drug Administration,
promulgated  thereunder  now  in   effect,   is   designated,
described  or  considered  as  a  narcotic,  hypnotic,  habit
forming, dangerous, or poisonous drug;
    (d)  the  sale  of  poultry  and  livestock  remedies  in
original  and unbroken packages only, labeled for poultry and
livestock medication; and
    (e)  the sale  of  poisonous  substances  or  mixture  of
poisonous  substances, in unbroken packages, for nonmedicinal
use in the arts or industries or  for  insecticide  purposes;
provided,  they  are  properly  and  adequately labeled as to
content and such nonmedicinal usage, in conformity  with  the
provisions  of  all  applicable federal, state and local laws
and regulations promulgated thereunder now in effect relating
thereto and governing the same, and those which are  required
under such applicable laws and regulations to be labeled with
the  word  "Poison",  are also labeled with the word "Poison"
printed thereon in prominent type and the name of  a  readily
obtainable  antidote  with directions for its administration;
and
    (f)  the delegation of limited prescriptive authority  by
a physician licensed to practice medicine in all its branches
to  a  physician assistant under Section 7.5 of the Physician
Assistant Practice Act of 1987. This delegated authority  may
but  is not required to include prescription of Schedule III,
IV, or V controlled substances, as defined in Article  II  of
the  Illinois  Controlled  Substances Act, in accordance with
written  guidelines  under  Section  7.5  of  the   Physician
Assistant Practice Act of 1987; and.
    (g)  The  delegation of limited prescriptive authority by
a physician licensed to practice medicine in all its branches
to an advanced practice nurse in accordance  with  a  written
collaborative agreement under Sections 15-15 and 15-20 of the
Nursing  and  Advanced  Practice Nursing Act.  This delegated
authority may but is not required to include the prescription
of Schedule III, IV, or V controlled substances as defined in
Article II of the Illinois Controlled Substances Act.
(Source: P.A. 90-116, eff.  7-14-97;  90-253,  eff.  7-29-97;
revised 8-5-97.)

    Section 31.  The Barber, Cosmetology, Esthetics, and Nail
Technology Act of 1985 is amended by changing Section 1-11 as
follows:
    (225 ILCS 410/1-11) (from Ch. 111, par. 1701-11)
    Sec. 1-11.  Exceptions to Act.
    (a)  Nothing  in  this Act shall be construed to apply to
the educational activities conducted in connection  with  any
monthly,  annual  or other special educational program of any
bona   fide   association   of    licensed    cosmetologists,
estheticians,  nail  technicians,  or  barbers,  or  licensed
cosmetology,  esthetics,  nail  technology, or barber schools
from which the general public is excluded.
    (b)  Nothing in this Act shall be construed to  apply  to
the  activities and services of registered nurses or licensed
practical nurses, as defined  in  the  Illinois  Nursing  and
Advanced Practice Nursing Act of 1987.
    (c)  Nothing  in  this  Act  shall  be  deemed to require
licensure of individuals  employed  by  the  motion  picture,
film,  television,  stage  play  or  related industry for the
purpose of providing cosmetology  or  esthetics  services  to
actors  of  that  industry  while  engaged in the practice of
cosmetology  or  esthetics  as  a  part  of   that   person's
employment.
(Source: P.A. 89-387, eff. 1-1-96.)

    Section 32.  The Nurse Agency Licensing Act is amended by
changing Section 3 as follows:

    (225 ILCS 510/3) (from Ch. 111, par. 953)
    Sec. 3.  Definitions.  As used in this Act:
    (a)  "Certified nurse aide" means an individual certified
as  defined in Section 3-206 of the Nursing Home Care Act, as
now or hereafter amended.
    (b)  "Department" means the Department of Labor.
    (c)  "Director" means the Director of Labor.
    (d)  "Health care facility" is defined as in Section 3 of
the Illinois  Health  Facilities  Planning  Act,  as  now  or
hereafter amended.
    (e)  "Licensee"   means   any  nursing  agency  which  is
properly licensed under this Act.
    (f)  "Nurse" means  a  registered  nurse  or  a  licensed
practical  nurse  as  defined  in  the  Illinois  Nursing and
Advanced Practice Nursing Act of 1987, as  now  or  hereafter
amended.
    (g)  "Nurse   agency"   means   any   individual,   firm,
corporation,  partnership or other legal entity that employs,
assigns or refers nurses or certified nurse aides to a health
care facility for a fee.  The term  "nurse  agency"  includes
nurses  registries.  The term "nurse agency" does not include
services  provided  by  home  health  agencies  licensed  and
operated under the Home Health  Agency  Licensing  Act  or  a
licensed  or certified individual who provides his or her own
services as a regular employee of a health care facility, nor
does  it  apply  to  a  health  care  facility's   organizing
nonsalaried  employees  to  provide  services  only  in  that
facility.
(Source: P.A. 86-817; 86-1472.)

    Section  33.  The  Illinois Public Aid Code is amended by
changing Sections 5-16.3 and 8A-7.1 as follows:

    (305 ILCS 5/5-16.3)
    Sec. 5-16.3.  System for integrated health care services.
    (a)  It shall be the public policy of the State to adopt,
to  the  extent  practicable,  a  health  care  program  that
encourages  the  integration  of  health  care  services  and
manages the health care of program enrollees while preserving
reasonable choice within  a  competitive  and  cost-efficient
environment.   In  furtherance  of  this  public  policy, the
Illinois Department shall develop and implement an integrated
health care program consistent with the  provisions  of  this
Section.   The  provisions  of this Section apply only to the
integrated health care program created  under  this  Section.
Persons  enrolled  in  the integrated health care program, as
determined by the  Illinois  Department  by  rule,  shall  be
afforded  a  choice among health care delivery systems, which
shall include, but are not limited to, (i)  fee  for  service
care managed by a primary care physician licensed to practice
medicine  in  all  its  branches,  (ii)  managed  health care
entities,  and  (iii)  federally  qualified  health   centers
(reimbursed  according  to  a  prospective cost-reimbursement
methodology) and rural health clinics  (reimbursed  according
to  the  Medicare  methodology),  where  available.   Persons
enrolled  in  the  integrated health care program also may be
offered indemnity insurance plans, subject to availability.
    For purposes of this  Section,  a  "managed  health  care
entity"  means a health maintenance organization or a managed
care community network as defined in this Section.  A "health
maintenance  organization"   means   a   health   maintenance
organization   as   defined   in   the   Health   Maintenance
Organization  Act.   A "managed care community network" means
an entity, other than a health maintenance organization, that
is owned, operated, or governed by providers of  health  care
services  within  this  State  and  that provides or arranges
primary, secondary, and tertiary managed health care services
under contract with the Illinois  Department  exclusively  to
enrollees  of  the  integrated health care program. A managed
care  community  network  may  contract  with  the   Illinois
Department  to provide only pediatric health care services. A
county provider as defined in Section 15-1 of this  Code  may
contract  with the Illinois Department to provide services to
enrollees of the integrated health care program as a  managed
care  community  network  without  the  need  to  establish a
separate  entity  that  provides  services   exclusively   to
enrollees  of the integrated health care program and shall be
deemed a managed care community network for purposes of  this
Code only to the extent of the provision of services to those
enrollees  in  conjunction  with  the  integrated health care
program.  A county provider shall  be  entitled  to  contract
with  the Illinois Department with respect to any contracting
region located in whole or in  part  within  the  county.   A
county provider shall not be required to accept enrollees who
do not reside within the county.
    Each  managed care community network must demonstrate its
ability to bear the financial risk of serving enrollees under
this program.  The Illinois Department shall  by  rule  adopt
criteria  for  assessing  the  financial  soundness  of  each
managed  care  community  network. These rules shall consider
the extent to which  a  managed  care  community  network  is
comprised  of  providers  who directly render health care and
are located within  the  community  in  which  they  seek  to
contract  rather  than solely arrange or finance the delivery
of health care.  These rules shall further consider a variety
of risk-bearing  and  management  techniques,  including  the
sufficiency  of  quality assurance and utilization management
programs and whether a managed  care  community  network  has
sufficiently  demonstrated  its  financial  solvency  and net
worth. The Illinois Department's criteria must  be  based  on
sound  actuarial,  financial,  and accounting principles.  In
adopting these rules, the Illinois Department  shall  consult
with  the  Illinois  Department  of  Insurance.  The Illinois
Department is  responsible  for  monitoring  compliance  with
these rules.
    This  Section may not be implemented before the effective
date of these rules, the approval of  any  necessary  federal
waivers,  and  the completion of the review of an application
submitted, at least 60 days  before  the  effective  date  of
rules  adopted under this Section, to the Illinois Department
by a managed care community network.
    All health care delivery systems that contract  with  the
Illinois  Department under the integrated health care program
shall clearly recognize a health  care  provider's  right  of
conscience under the Health Care Right of Conscience Act.  In
addition  to  the  provisions  of  that  Act,  no health care
delivery system that contracts with the  Illinois  Department
under the integrated health care program shall be required to
provide,  arrange  for, or pay for any health care or medical
service, procedure, or product if that health  care  delivery
system  is  owned,  controlled, or sponsored by or affiliated
with a religious institution or religious  organization  that
finds  that  health  care  or  medical service, procedure, or
product to violate its  religious  and  moral  teachings  and
beliefs.
    (b)  The  Illinois  Department  may, by rule, provide for
different  benefit  packages  for  different  categories   of
persons  enrolled  in  the  program.  Mental health services,
alcohol and substance abuse  services,  services  related  to
children   with   chronic   or   acute  conditions  requiring
longer-term treatment and follow-up, and rehabilitation  care
provided  by  a  free-standing  rehabilitation  hospital or a
hospital rehabilitation unit may be excluded from  a  benefit
package  if  the  State  ensures that those services are made
available through a separate delivery system.   An  exclusion
does not prohibit the Illinois Department from developing and
implementing demonstration projects for categories of persons
or  services.   Benefit  packages  for  persons  eligible for
medical assistance under Articles V, VI,  and  XII  shall  be
based  on  the  requirements  of  those Articles and shall be
consistent with the Title XIX of  the  Social  Security  Act.
Nothing  in  this Act shall be construed to apply to services
purchased by the Department of Children and  Family  Services
and  the  Department  of  Human Services (as successor to the
Department of Mental Health and  Developmental  Disabilities)
under   the   provisions   of   Title   59  of  the  Illinois
Administrative Code, Part  132  ("Medicaid  Community  Mental
Health Services Program").
    (c)  The  program  established  by  this  Section  may be
implemented by the Illinois Department in various contracting
areas at various times.  The health care delivery systems and
providers available under the program may vary throughout the
State.  For purposes of contracting with managed health  care
entities   and   providers,  the  Illinois  Department  shall
establish contracting areas similar to the  geographic  areas
designated   by   the  Illinois  Department  for  contracting
purposes  under   the   Illinois   Competitive   Access   and
Reimbursement  Equity  Program (ICARE) under the authority of
Section 3-4 of the Illinois  Health  Finance  Reform  Act  or
similarly-sized  or  smaller  geographic areas established by
the Illinois Department by rule. A managed health care entity
shall be permitted to contract in any  geographic  areas  for
which  it  has  a  sufficient  provider network and otherwise
meets the  contracting  terms  of  the  State.  The  Illinois
Department  is  not  prohibited from entering into a contract
with a managed health care entity at any time.
    (c-5)  A managed health care entity  may  not  engage  in
door-to-door  marketing activities or marketing activities at
an office of the Illinois Department or a  county  department
in  order  to  enroll  in  the  entity's health care delivery
system persons who are enrolled in the integrated health care
program  established  under  this  Section.    The   Illinois
Department  shall adopt rules defining "marketing activities"
prohibited by this subsection (c-5).
    Before a managed health care entity may market its health
care delivery system to persons enrolled  in  the  integrated
health  care  program  established  under  this  Section, the
Illinois Department must approve a marketing  plan  submitted
by  the  entity  to  the  Illinois  Department.  The Illinois
Department shall adopt  guidelines  for  approving  marketing
plans  submitted  by  managed health care entities under this
subsection.  Besides   prohibiting   door-to-door   marketing
activities  and  marketing  activities at public aid offices,
the guidelines shall include at least the following:
         (1)  A managed health care entity may not  offer  or
    provide any gift, favor, or other inducement in marketing
    its health care delivery system to integrated health care
    program  enrollees.  A  managed  health  care  entity may
    provide health care related items  that  are  of  nominal
    value  and  pre-approved  by  the  Illinois Department to
    prospective enrollees.  A managed health care entity  may
    also  provide to enrollees health care related items that
    have been pre-approved by the Illinois Department  as  an
    incentive to manage their health care appropriately.
         (2)  All  persons employed or otherwise engaged by a
    managed health care entity to market the entity's  health
    care  delivery  system  to integrated health care program
    enrollees or to supervise  that marketing shall  register
    with the Illinois Department.
    The Inspector General appointed under Section 12-13.1 may
conduct  investigations  to  determine  whether the marketing
practices of managed health care  entities  participating  in
the   integrated   health   care   program  comply  with  the
guidelines.
    (d)  A managed health care entity that contracts with the
Illinois Department for the provision of services  under  the
program shall do all of the following, solely for purposes of
the integrated health care program:
         (1)  Provide  that any individual physician licensed
    under the Medical Practice Act of 1987, any pharmacy, any
    federally qualified health  center,  any  therapeutically
    certified   optometrist,   and   any   podiatrist,   that
    consistently  meets  the  reasonable terms and conditions
    established by the managed health care entity,  including
    but  not  limited  to  credentialing  standards,  quality
    assurance  program  requirements,  utilization management
    requirements,   financial    responsibility    standards,
    contracting  process  requirements,  and provider network
    size and accessibility requirements, must be accepted  by
    the  managed  health  care  entity  for  purposes  of the
    Illinois integrated health care program.  Notwithstanding
    the  preceding  sentence,  only  a  physician licensed to
    practice medicine in all its  branches  shall  act  as  a
    primary  care  physician  within  a  managed  health care
    entity for purposes of  the  Illinois  integrated  health
    care  program.    Any individual who is either terminated
    from or denied inclusion in the panel  of  physicians  of
    the  managed health care entity shall be given, within 10
    business  days  after  that  determination,   a   written
    explanation  of  the  reasons for his or her exclusion or
    termination from the panel. This paragraph (1)  does  not
    apply to the following:
              (A)  A   managed   health   care   entity  that
         certifies to the Illinois Department that:
                   (i)  it employs on a full-time  basis  125
              or   more   Illinois   physicians  licensed  to
              practice medicine in all of its branches; and
                   (ii)  it  will  provide  medical  services
              through its employees to more than 80%  of  the
              recipients  enrolled  with  the  entity  in the
              integrated health care program; or
              (B)  A   domestic   stock   insurance   company
         licensed under clause (b) of class 1 of Section 4 of
         the Illinois Insurance Code if (i) at least  66%  of
         the  stock  of  the  insurance company is owned by a
         professional   corporation   organized   under   the
         Professional Service Corporation Act that has 125 or
         more  shareholders  who  are   Illinois   physicians
         licensed to practice medicine in all of its branches
         and  (ii)  the  insurance  company  certifies to the
         Illinois Department  that  at  least  80%  of  those
         physician  shareholders  will  provide  services  to
         recipients   enrolled   with   the  company  in  the
         integrated health care program.
         (2)  Provide for  reimbursement  for  providers  for
    emergency  care, as defined by the Illinois Department by
    rule, that must be provided to its  enrollees,  including
    an  emergency room screening fee, and urgent care that it
    authorizes  for  its   enrollees,   regardless   of   the
    provider's  affiliation  with  the  managed  health  care
    entity.  Providers shall be reimbursed for emergency care
    at  an  amount  equal  to   the   Illinois   Department's
    fee-for-service rates for those medical services rendered
    by  providers  not under contract with the managed health
    care entity to enrollees of the entity.
         (3)  Provide that any  provider  affiliated  with  a
    managed health care entity may also provide services on a
    fee-for-service  basis to Illinois Department clients not
    enrolled in a managed health care entity.
         (4)  Provide client education services as determined
    and approved by the Illinois  Department,  including  but
    not   limited  to  (i)  education  regarding  appropriate
    utilization of health care services  in  a  managed  care
    system, (ii) written disclosure of treatment policies and
    any  restrictions  or  limitations  on  health  services,
    including,   but   not  limited  to,  physical  services,
    clinical  laboratory   tests,   hospital   and   surgical
    procedures,   prescription   drugs   and  biologics,  and
    radiological examinations, and (iii) written notice  that
    the  enrollee  may  receive  from  another provider those
    services covered under this program that are not provided
    by the managed health care entity.
         (5)  Provide that enrollees within  its  system  may
    choose  the  site for provision of services and the panel
    of health care providers.
         (6)  Not   discriminate   in   its   enrollment   or
    disenrollment  practices  among  recipients  of   medical
    services or program enrollees based on health status.
         (7)  Provide  a  quality  assurance  and utilization
    review  program   that   (i)   for   health   maintenance
    organizations   meets  the  requirements  of  the  Health
    Maintenance Organization Act and (ii)  for  managed  care
    community  networks meets the requirements established by
    the Illinois Department in rules that  incorporate  those
    standards   set   forth   in   the   Health   Maintenance
    Organization Act.
         (8)  Issue    a    managed    health   care   entity
    identification card to  each  enrollee  upon  enrollment.
    The card must contain all of the following:
              (A)  The enrollee's signature.
              (B)  The enrollee's health plan.
              (C)  The  name  and  telephone  number  of  the
         enrollee's primary care physician.
              (D)  A   telephone   number   to  be  used  for
         emergency service 24 hours per day, 7 days per week.
         The  telephone  number  required  to  be  maintained
         pursuant to this subparagraph by each managed health
         care  entity  shall,  at  minimum,  be  staffed   by
         medically   trained   personnel   and   be  provided
         directly, or under  arrangement,  at  an  office  or
         offices  in   locations maintained solely within the
         State   of   Illinois.   For   purposes   of    this
         subparagraph,  "medically  trained  personnel" means
         licensed  practical  nurses  or  registered   nurses
         located  in  the  State of Illinois who are licensed
         pursuant  to  the  Illinois  Nursing  and   Advanced
         Practice Nursing Act of 1987.
         (9)  Ensure  that  every  primary care physician and
    pharmacy in the managed  health  care  entity  meets  the
    standards  established  by  the  Illinois  Department for
    accessibility  and  quality   of   care.   The   Illinois
    Department shall arrange for and oversee an evaluation of
    the  standards  established  under this paragraph (9) and
    may recommend any necessary changes to  these  standards.
    The  Illinois Department shall submit an annual report to
    the Governor and the General Assembly by April 1 of  each
    year  regarding  the  effect of the standards on ensuring
    access and quality of care to enrollees.
         (10)  Provide a procedure  for  handling  complaints
    that  (i)  for health maintenance organizations meets the
    requirements of the Health Maintenance  Organization  Act
    and  (ii)  for  managed care community networks meets the
    requirements established by the  Illinois  Department  in
    rules  that  incorporate those standards set forth in the
    Health Maintenance Organization Act.
         (11)  Maintain, retain, and make  available  to  the
    Illinois  Department records, data, and information, in a
    uniform manner determined  by  the  Illinois  Department,
    sufficient   for   the  Illinois  Department  to  monitor
    utilization, accessibility, and quality of care.
         (12)  Except for providers who are prepaid, pay  all
    approved  claims  for covered services that are completed
    and submitted to the managed health care entity within 30
    days after  receipt  of  the  claim  or  receipt  of  the
    appropriate capitation payment or payments by the managed
    health  care entity from the State for the month in which
    the  services  included  on  the  claim  were   rendered,
    whichever  is  later. If payment is not made or mailed to
    the provider by the managed health care entity by the due
    date under this subsection, an interest penalty of 1%  of
    any  amount  unpaid  shall  be  added  for  each month or
    fraction of a month  after  the  due  date,  until  final
    payment  is  made. Nothing in this Section shall prohibit
    managed health care entities and providers from  mutually
    agreeing to terms that require more timely payment.
         (13)  Provide   integration   with   community-based
    programs  provided  by certified local health departments
    such as Women, Infants, and  Children  Supplemental  Food
    Program  (WIC),  childhood  immunization programs, health
    education programs, case management programs, and  health
    screening programs.
         (14)  Provide  that the pharmacy formulary used by a
    managed health care entity and its contract providers  be
    no   more  restrictive  than  the  Illinois  Department's
    pharmaceutical program on  the  effective  date  of  this
    amendatory Act of 1994 and as amended after that date.
         (15)  Provide   integration   with   community-based
    organizations,   including,   but  not  limited  to,  any
    organization  that  has  operated   within   a   Medicaid
    Partnership  as  defined  by  this Code or by rule of the
    Illinois Department, that may continue to operate under a
    contract with the Illinois Department or a managed health
    care entity under this Section to provide case management
    services to  Medicaid  clients  in  designated  high-need
    areas.
    The   Illinois   Department   may,   by  rule,  determine
methodologies to limit financial liability for managed health
care  entities  resulting  from  payment  for   services   to
enrollees provided under the Illinois Department's integrated
health  care  program.  Any  methodology so determined may be
considered or implemented by the Illinois Department  through
a  contract  with  a  managed  health  care entity under this
integrated health care program.
    The Illinois Department shall contract with an entity  or
entities  to  provide  external  peer-based quality assurance
review for the integrated health  care  program.  The  entity
shall  be  representative  of Illinois physicians licensed to
practice medicine in all  its  branches  and  have  statewide
geographic  representation in all specialties of medical care
that are provided within the integrated health care  program.
The  entity may not be a third party payer and shall maintain
offices in locations around the State  in  order  to  provide
service   and   continuing  medical  education  to  physician
participants within the integrated health care program.   The
review  process  shall be developed and conducted by Illinois
physicians licensed to practice medicine in all its branches.
In consultation with the entity, the Illinois Department  may
contract  with  other  entities  for  professional peer-based
quality assurance review of individual categories of services
other than services provided, supervised, or  coordinated  by
physicians licensed to practice medicine in all its branches.
The Illinois Department shall establish, by rule, criteria to
avoid  conflicts  of  interest  in  the  conduct  of  quality
assurance activities consistent with professional peer-review
standards.   All   quality   assurance  activities  shall  be
coordinated by the Illinois Department.
    (e)  All  persons  enrolled  in  the  program  shall   be
provided   with   a   full   written   explanation   of   all
fee-for-service  and  managed  health care plan options and a
reasonable  opportunity  to  choose  among  the  options   as
provided  by  rule.  The Illinois Department shall provide to
enrollees, upon enrollment  in  the  integrated  health  care
program  and  at  least  annually  thereafter,  notice of the
process  for  requesting  an  appeal   under   the   Illinois
Department's      administrative      appeal      procedures.
Notwithstanding  any other Section of this Code, the Illinois
Department may provide by rule for the Illinois Department to
assign a  person  enrolled  in  the  program  to  a  specific
provider  of  medical  services  or to a specific health care
delivery system if an enrollee has failed to exercise  choice
in  a  timely  manner.  An  enrollee assigned by the Illinois
Department shall be afforded the opportunity to disenroll and
to select a  specific  provider  of  medical  services  or  a
specific health care delivery system within the first 30 days
after  the assignment. An enrollee who has failed to exercise
choice in a timely manner may be assigned only if there are 3
or more managed health care  entities  contracting  with  the
Illinois Department within the contracting area, except that,
outside  the  City of Chicago, this requirement may be waived
for an area by rules adopted by the Illinois Department after
consultation with all hospitals within the contracting  area.
The Illinois Department shall establish by rule the procedure
for  random  assignment  of  enrollees  who  fail to exercise
choice in a timely manner to a specific managed  health  care
entity  in  proportion  to  the  available  capacity  of that
managed health care entity. Assignment to a specific provider
of medical services or to  a  specific  managed  health  care
entity may not exceed that provider's or entity's capacity as
determined  by  the  Illinois Department.  Any person who has
chosen a specific provider of medical services or a  specific
managed  health  care  entity,  or  any  person  who has been
assigned  under  this  subsection,   shall   be   given   the
opportunity to change that choice or assignment at least once
every  12 months, as determined by the Illinois Department by
rule. The Illinois  Department  shall  maintain  a  toll-free
telephone  number  for  program  enrollees'  use in reporting
problems with managed health care entities.
    (f)  If a person becomes eligible  for  participation  in
the  integrated  health  care  program  while  he  or  she is
hospitalized, the Illinois Department  may  not  enroll  that
person  in  the  program  until  after  he  or  she  has been
discharged from the hospital.  This subsection does not apply
to  newborn  infants  whose  mothers  are  enrolled  in   the
integrated health care program.
    (g)  The  Illinois  Department  shall, by rule, establish
for managed health care entities rates that (i) are certified
to be actuarially sound, as determined by an actuary  who  is
an  associate  or  a  fellow of the Society of Actuaries or a
member of the American  Academy  of  Actuaries  and  who  has
expertise  and  experience  in  medical insurance and benefit
programs,  in  accordance  with  the  Illinois   Department's
current  fee-for-service  payment  system, and (ii) take into
account any difference of cost  to  provide  health  care  to
different  populations  based  on  gender, age, location, and
eligibility category.  The  rates  for  managed  health  care
entities shall be determined on a capitated basis.
    The  Illinois Department by rule shall establish a method
to adjust its payments to managed health care entities  in  a
manner intended to avoid providing any financial incentive to
a  managed  health  care entity to refer patients to a county
provider, in an Illinois county having a  population  greater
than  3,000,000,  that  is  paid  directly  by  the  Illinois
Department.   The Illinois Department shall by April 1, 1997,
and  annually  thereafter,  review  the  method   to   adjust
payments.  Payments  by the Illinois Department to the county
provider,  for  persons  not  enrolled  in  a  managed   care
community  network  owned  or  operated by a county provider,
shall be paid on a fee-for-service basis under Article XV  of
this Code.
    The  Illinois Department by rule shall establish a method
to reduce its payments to managed  health  care  entities  to
take  into  consideration (i) any adjustment payments paid to
hospitals under subsection (h) of this Section to the  extent
those  payments,  or  any  part  of those payments, have been
taken into account in establishing capitated rates under this
subsection (g) and (ii) the implementation  of  methodologies
to limit financial liability for managed health care entities
under subsection (d) of this Section.
    (h)  For  hospital  services  provided by a hospital that
contracts with  a  managed  health  care  entity,  adjustment
payments  shall  be  paid  directly  to  the  hospital by the
Illinois Department.  Adjustment  payments  may  include  but
need    not   be   limited   to   adjustment   payments   to:
disproportionate share hospitals under Section 5-5.02 of this
Code; primary care access health care education payments  (89
Ill. Adm. Code 149.140); payments for capital, direct medical
education,  indirect  medical education, certified registered
nurse anesthetist, and kidney acquisition costs (89 Ill. Adm.
Code 149.150(c)); uncompensated care payments (89  Ill.  Adm.
Code  148.150(h));  trauma center payments (89 Ill. Adm. Code
148.290(c)); rehabilitation hospital payments (89  Ill.  Adm.
Code  148.290(d));  perinatal  center  payments (89 Ill. Adm.
Code 148.290(e)); obstetrical care  payments  (89  Ill.  Adm.
Code 148.290(f)); targeted access payments (89 Ill. Adm. Code
148.290(g)); Medicaid high volume payments (89 Ill. Adm. Code
148.290(h));  and  outpatient indigent volume adjustments (89
Ill. Adm. Code 148.140(b)(5)).
    (i)  For  any  hospital  eligible  for   the   adjustment
payments described in subsection (h), the Illinois Department
shall  maintain,  through  the  period  ending June 30, 1995,
reimbursement levels in accordance with statutes and rules in
effect on April 1, 1994.
    (j)  Nothing contained in this Code in any way limits  or
otherwise  impairs  the  authority  or  power of the Illinois
Department to enter into a negotiated  contract  pursuant  to
this  Section  with  a managed health care entity, including,
but not limited to, a health maintenance  organization,  that
provides  for  termination  or  nonrenewal  of  the  contract
without  cause  upon  notice  as provided in the contract and
without a hearing.
    (k)  Section  5-5.15  does  not  apply  to  the   program
developed and implemented pursuant to this Section.
    (l)  The Illinois Department shall, by rule, define those
chronic or acute medical conditions of childhood that require
longer-term  treatment  and  follow-up  care.   The  Illinois
Department shall ensure that services required to treat these
conditions are available through a separate delivery system.
    A  managed  health  care  entity  that contracts with the
Illinois Department may refer a child with medical conditions
described in the rules adopted under this subsection directly
to a children's hospital or  to  a  hospital,  other  than  a
children's  hospital,  that is qualified to provide inpatient
and outpatient  services  to  treat  those  conditions.   The
Illinois    Department    shall    provide    fee-for-service
reimbursement  directly  to  a  children's hospital for those
services pursuant to Title 89 of the Illinois  Administrative
Code,  Section  148.280(a),  at  a rate at least equal to the
rate in effect on March 31, 1994. For hospitals,  other  than
children's hospitals, that are qualified to provide inpatient
and  outpatient  services  to  treat  those  conditions,  the
Illinois  Department  shall  provide  reimbursement for those
services on a fee-for-service basis, at a rate at least equal
to the rate in effect for those other hospitals on March  31,
1994.
    A  children's  hospital  shall be directly reimbursed for
all  services  provided  at  the  children's  hospital  on  a
fee-for-service basis pursuant to Title 89  of  the  Illinois
Administrative  Code,  Section 148.280(a), at a rate at least
equal to the rate in effect on  March  31,  1994,  until  the
later  of  (i)  implementation  of the integrated health care
program under this Section  and  development  of  actuarially
sound  capitation rates for services other than those chronic
or  acute  medical  conditions  of  childhood  that   require
longer-term  treatment  and  follow-up care as defined by the
Illinois  Department  in  the  rules   adopted   under   this
subsection or (ii) March 31, 1996.
    Notwithstanding   anything  in  this  subsection  to  the
contrary, a managed health care  entity  shall  not  consider
sources  or methods of payment in determining the referral of
a child.   The  Illinois  Department  shall  adopt  rules  to
establish   criteria   for  those  referrals.   The  Illinois
Department by rule shall establish a  method  to  adjust  its
payments to managed health care entities in a manner intended
to  avoid  providing  any  financial  incentive  to a managed
health care entity to refer patients to  a  provider  who  is
paid directly by the Illinois Department.
    (m)  Behavioral health services provided or funded by the
Department  of Human Services, the Department of Children and
Family  Services,  and  the  Illinois  Department  shall   be
excluded from a benefit package.  Conditions of an organic or
physical  origin or nature, including medical detoxification,
however,  may  not  be   excluded.    In   this   subsection,
"behavioral health services" means mental health services and
subacute  alcohol  and substance abuse treatment services, as
defined in the Illinois Alcoholism and Other Drug  Dependency
Act.   In this subsection, "mental health services" includes,
at a minimum, the following services funded by  the  Illinois
Department, the Department of Human Services (as successor to
the   Department   of   Mental   Health   and   Developmental
Disabilities),  or  the  Department  of  Children  and Family
Services: (i) inpatient hospital services, including  related
physician  services,  related  psychiatric interventions, and
pharmaceutical services provided  to  an  eligible  recipient
hospitalized   with   a   primary  diagnosis  of  psychiatric
disorder; (ii) outpatient mental health services  as  defined
and  specified  in  Title  59  of the Illinois Administrative
Code, Part 132; (iii)  any  other  outpatient  mental  health
services  funded  by  the Illinois Department pursuant to the
State   of   Illinois    Medicaid    Plan;    (iv)    partial
hospitalization;  and  (v) follow-up stabilization related to
any of those services.  Additional behavioral health services
may be excluded under this subsection as mutually  agreed  in
writing  by  the  Illinois  Department and the affected State
agency or agencies.  The exclusion of any  service  does  not
prohibit   the   Illinois   Department  from  developing  and
implementing demonstration projects for categories of persons
or services.  The Department of Children and Family  Services
and  the  Department of Human Services shall each adopt rules
governing the integration of managed care in the provision of
behavioral health services. The State shall integrate managed
care community networks  and  affiliated  providers,  to  the
extent  practicable,  in  any  separate  delivery  system for
mental health services.
    (n)  The  Illinois  Department  shall  adopt   rules   to
establish  reserve  requirements  for  managed care community
networks,  as  required  by  subsection   (a),   and   health
maintenance  organizations  to protect against liabilities in
the event that a  managed  health  care  entity  is  declared
insolvent or bankrupt.  If a managed health care entity other
than  a  county  provider  is declared insolvent or bankrupt,
after liquidation and application of  any  available  assets,
resources,  and reserves, the Illinois Department shall pay a
portion of the amounts owed by the managed health care entity
to providers for services rendered  to  enrollees  under  the
integrated  health  care  program under this Section based on
the following schedule: (i) from April 1, 1995  through  June
30,  1998,  90%  of  the amounts owed; (ii) from July 1, 1998
through June 30, 2001, 80% of the  amounts  owed;  and  (iii)
from  July  1, 2001 through June 30, 2005, 75% of the amounts
owed.  The  amounts  paid  under  this  subsection  shall  be
calculated  based  on  the  total  amount owed by the managed
health care entity to providers  before  application  of  any
available  assets,  resources,  and reserves.  After June 30,
2005, the Illinois Department may not pay any amounts owed to
providers as a result of an insolvency  or  bankruptcy  of  a
managed  health  care entity occurring after that date.   The
Illinois Department is not obligated, however, to pay amounts
owed to a provider that has an ownership or  other  governing
interest  in the managed health care entity.  This subsection
applies only to managed health care entities and the services
they provide under the integrated health care  program  under
this Section.
    (o)  Notwithstanding   any  other  provision  of  law  or
contractual agreement to the contrary, providers shall not be
required to accept from any other third party payer the rates
determined  or  paid  under  this  Code   by   the   Illinois
Department,  managed health care entity, or other health care
delivery system for services provided to recipients.
    (p)  The Illinois Department  may  seek  and  obtain  any
necessary   authorization   provided  under  federal  law  to
implement the program, including the waiver  of  any  federal
statutes  or  regulations. The Illinois Department may seek a
waiver  of  the  federal  requirement   that   the   combined
membership  of  Medicare  and Medicaid enrollees in a managed
care community network may not exceed 75% of the managed care
community   network's   total   enrollment.    The   Illinois
Department shall not seek a waiver of  this  requirement  for
any  other  category  of  managed  health  care  entity.  The
Illinois Department shall not seek a waiver of the  inpatient
hospital  reimbursement methodology in Section 1902(a)(13)(A)
of Title XIX of the Social Security Act even if  the  federal
agency  responsible  for  administering  Title XIX determines
that Section 1902(a)(13)(A) applies to  managed  health  care
systems.
    Notwithstanding  any other provisions of this Code to the
contrary, the Illinois Department  shall  seek  a  waiver  of
applicable federal law in order to impose a co-payment system
consistent  with  this  subsection  on  recipients of medical
services under Title XIX of the Social Security Act  who  are
not  enrolled  in  a  managed health care entity.  The waiver
request submitted by the Illinois  Department  shall  provide
for co-payments of up to $0.50 for prescribed drugs and up to
$0.50 for x-ray services and shall provide for co-payments of
up  to  $10 for non-emergency services provided in a hospital
emergency room and up  to  $10  for  non-emergency  ambulance
services.   The  purpose of the co-payments shall be to deter
those  recipients  from  seeking  unnecessary  medical  care.
Co-payments may not be used to deter recipients from  seeking
necessary  medical  care.   No recipient shall be required to
pay more than a total of $150 per year in  co-payments  under
the  waiver request required by this subsection.  A recipient
may not be required to pay more than $15 of  any  amount  due
under this subsection in any one month.
    Co-payments  authorized  under this subsection may not be
imposed when the care was  necessitated  by  a  true  medical
emergency.   Co-payments  may  not  be imposed for any of the
following classifications of services:
         (1)  Services furnished to person under 18 years  of
    age.
         (2)  Services furnished to pregnant women.
         (3)  Services  furnished to any individual who is an
    inpatient in a hospital, nursing  facility,  intermediate
    care  facility,  or  other  medical  institution, if that
    person is required to spend for costs of medical care all
    but a minimal amount of his or her  income  required  for
    personal needs.
         (4)  Services furnished to a person who is receiving
    hospice care.
    Co-payments authorized under this subsection shall not be
deducted  from  or  reduce  in  any  way payments for medical
services from  the  Illinois  Department  to  providers.   No
provider  may  deny  those services to an individual eligible
for services based on the individual's inability to  pay  the
co-payment.
    Recipients  who  are  subject  to  co-payments  shall  be
provided  notice,  in plain and clear language, of the amount
of the co-payments, the circumstances under which co-payments
are exempted, the circumstances under which  co-payments  may
be assessed, and their manner of collection.
    The   Illinois  Department  shall  establish  a  Medicaid
Co-Payment Council to assist in the development of co-payment
policies for the medical assistance  program.   The  Medicaid
Co-Payment  Council shall also have jurisdiction to develop a
program to provide financial or non-financial  incentives  to
Medicaid  recipients in order to encourage recipients to seek
necessary health care.  The Council shall be chaired  by  the
Director  of  the  Illinois  Department,  and  shall  have  6
additional members.  Two of the 6 additional members shall be
appointed by the Governor, and one each shall be appointed by
the  President  of  the  Senate,  the  Minority Leader of the
Senate, the Speaker of the House of Representatives, and  the
Minority Leader of the House of Representatives.  The Council
may be convened and make recommendations upon the appointment
of a majority of its members.  The Council shall be appointed
and convened no later than September 1, 1994 and shall report
its   recommendations   to   the  Director  of  the  Illinois
Department and the General Assembly no later than October  1,
1994.   The  chairperson  of  the Council shall be allowed to
vote only in the case of  a  tie  vote  among  the  appointed
members of the Council.
    The  Council  shall be guided by the following principles
as it considers recommendations to be developed to  implement
any  approved  waivers that the Illinois Department must seek
pursuant to this subsection:
         (1)  Co-payments should not be used to deter  access
    to adequate medical care.
         (2)  Co-payments should be used to reduce fraud.
         (3)  Co-payment   policies  should  be  examined  in
    consideration  of  other  states'  experience,  and   the
    ability   of   successful  co-payment  plans  to  control
    unnecessary  or  inappropriate  utilization  of  services
    should be promoted.
         (4)  All   participants,   both    recipients    and
    providers,   in   the  medical  assistance  program  have
    responsibilities to both the State and the program.
         (5)  Co-payments are primarily a tool to educate the
    participants  in  the  responsible  use  of  health  care
    resources.
         (6)  Co-payments should  not  be  used  to  penalize
    providers.
         (7)  A   successful  medical  program  requires  the
    elimination of improper utilization of medical resources.
    The integrated health care program, or any part  of  that
program,   established   under   this   Section  may  not  be
implemented if matching federal funds under Title XIX of  the
Social  Security  Act are not available for administering the
program.
    The Illinois Department shall submit for  publication  in
the Illinois Register the name, address, and telephone number
of  the  individual  to  whom a request may be directed for a
copy of the request for a waiver of provisions of  Title  XIX
of  the  Social  Security  Act  that  the Illinois Department
intends to submit to the Health Care Financing Administration
in order to implement this Section.  The Illinois  Department
shall  mail  a  copy  of  that  request  for  waiver  to  all
requestors  at  least  16 days before filing that request for
waiver with the Health Care Financing Administration.
    (q)  After  the  effective  date  of  this  Section,  the
Illinois Department may take  all  planning  and  preparatory
action  necessary  to  implement this Section, including, but
not limited to, seeking requests for  proposals  relating  to
the   integrated  health  care  program  created  under  this
Section.
    (r)  In  order  to  (i)  accelerate  and  facilitate  the
development of integrated health care  in  contracting  areas
outside  counties with populations in excess of 3,000,000 and
counties adjacent to those counties  and  (ii)  maintain  and
sustain  the high quality of education and residency programs
coordinated and associated with  local  area  hospitals,  the
Illinois Department may develop and implement a demonstration
program  for managed care community networks owned, operated,
or governed by State-funded medical  schools.   The  Illinois
Department  shall  prescribe by rule the criteria, standards,
and procedures for effecting this demonstration program.
    (s)  (Blank).
    (t)  On April 1, 1995 and every 6 months thereafter,  the
Illinois  Department shall report to the Governor and General
Assembly on  the  progress  of  the  integrated  health  care
program   in  enrolling  clients  into  managed  health  care
entities.  The report shall indicate the  capacities  of  the
managed  health care entities with which the State contracts,
the number of clients enrolled by each contractor, the  areas
of  the State in which managed care options do not exist, and
the progress toward  meeting  the  enrollment  goals  of  the
integrated health care program.
    (u)  The  Illinois  Department may implement this Section
through the use of emergency rules in accordance with Section
5-45 of  the  Illinois  Administrative  Procedure  Act.   For
purposes of that Act, the adoption of rules to implement this
Section  is  deemed an emergency and necessary for the public
interest, safety, and welfare.
(Source:  P.A.  89-21,  eff.  7-1-95;  89-507,  eff.  7-1-97;
89-673,  eff.  8-14-96;  90-14,  eff.  7-1-97;  90-254,  eff.
1-1-98; 90-538, eff. 12-1-97; revised 12-3-97.)

    (305 ILCS 5/8A-7.1) (from Ch. 23, par. 8A-7.1)
    Sec. 8A-7.1.  The Director, upon making  a  determination
based  upon  information  in  the  possession of the Illinois
Department, that  continuation  in  practice  of  a  licensed
health care professional would constitute an immediate danger
to  the  public,  shall submit a written communication to the
Director   of   Professional   Regulation   indicating   such
determination and additionally providing a  complete  summary
of  the  information  upon which such determination is based,
and recommending that the Director of Professional Regulation
immediately suspend  such  person's  license.   All  relevant
evidence,  or  copies  thereof,  in the Illinois Department's
possession may also be  submitted  in  conjunction  with  the
written communication.  A copy of such written communication,
which is exempt from the copying and inspection provisions of
The  Freedom  of  Information  Act,  shall  at  the  time  of
submittal  to  the  Director  of  Professional  Regulation be
simultaneously mailed to the last known business  address  of
such  licensed  health  care  professional  by  certified  or
registered   postage,  United  States  Mail,  return  receipt
requested.   Any  evidence,  or  copies  thereof,  which   is
submitted  in  conjunction  with the written communication is
also exempt from the copying and inspection provisions of The
Freedom of Information Act.
    The Director, upon  making  a  determination  based  upon
information  in  the  possession  of the Illinois Department,
that  a  licensed  health  care  professional  is   willfully
committing  fraud  upon  the  Illinois  Department's  medical
assistance  program,  shall submit a written communication to
the  Director  of  Professional  Regulation  indicating  such
determination and additionally providing a  complete  summary
of  the  information  upon which such determination is based.
All relevant evidence, or copies  thereof,  in  the  Illinois
Department's  possession may also be submitted in conjunction
with the written communication.
    Upon receipt of such written communication, the  Director
of  Professional  Regulation  shall  promptly investigate the
allegations contained in such written communication.  A  copy
of  such  written  communication,  which  is  exempt from the
copying  and  inspection  provisions  of   The   Freedom   of
Information  Act,  shall  at  the  time  of submission to the
Director of Professional Regulation, be simultaneously mailed
to the last  known  address  of  such  licensed  health  care
professional  by  certified  or  registered  postage,  United
States  Mail,  return  receipt  requested.   Any evidence, or
copies thereof, which is submitted in  conjunction  with  the
written  communication  is  also  exempt from the copying and
inspection provisions of The Freedom of Information Act.
    For the purposes of this Section, "licensed  health  care
professional"  means  any  person licensed under the Illinois
Dental  Practice  Act,  the  Illinois  Nursing  and  Advanced
Practice Nursing Act of 1987, the  Medical  Practice  Act  of
1987,  the  Pharmacy  Practice  Act  of  1987,  the Podiatric
Medical Practice Act of 1987,  and  the  Illinois  Optometric
Practice Act of 1987.
(Source: P.A. 85-1209.)

    Section 34.  The Prenatal and Newborn Care Act is amended
by changing Section 2 as follows:

    (410 ILCS 225/2) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 7022)
    Sec.  2.   Definitions.   As used in this Act, unless the
context otherwise requires:
    (a)  "Department" means the Illinois Department of  Human

Services.
    (b)  "Early   and   Periodic   Screening,  Diagnosis  and
Treatment (EPSDT)" means the provision of preventative health
care under 42 C.F.R. 441.50 et seq.,  including  medical  and
dental  services, needed to assess growth and development and
detect and treat health problems.
    (c)  "Hospital" means a hospital  as  defined  under  the
Hospital Licensing Act.
    (d)  "Local   health   authority"   means  the  full-time
official health department or board of health, as  recognized
by   the   Illinois   Department  of  Public  Health,  having
jurisdiction over a particular area.
    (e)  "Nurse" means a nurse licensed  under  the  Illinois
Nursing and Advanced Practice Nursing Act.
    (f)  "Physician"  means  a physician licensed to practice
medicine in all of its branches.
    (g)  "Postnatal visit"  means  a  visit  occurring  after
birth, with reference to the newborn.
    (h)  "Prenatal  visit"  means  a  visit  occurring before
birth.
    (i)  "Program"  means  the  Prenatal  and  Newborn   Care
Program established pursuant to this Act.
(Source: P.A. 89-507, eff. 7-1-97.)

    Section 35.  The Illinois Abortion Law of 1975 is amended
by changing Section 11 as follows:

    (720 ILCS 510/11) (from Ch. 38, par. 81-31)
    Sec.  11.  (1)  Any person who intentionally violates any
provision of this Law commits a Class A misdemeanor unless  a
specific  penalty  is  otherwise  provided.   Any  person who
intentionally falsifies any  writing  required  by  this  Law
commits a Class A misdemeanor.
    Intentional,  knowing,  reckless, or negligent violations
of this Law shall  constitute  unprofessional  conduct  which
causes  public  harm under Section 22 of the Medical Practice
Act of 1987, as amended; Sections 10-45 and 15-50 Section  25
of  the Illinois Nursing and Advanced Practice Nursing Act of
1987, as amended, and Section 21 of the  Physician  Assistant
Practice Act of 1987, as amended.
    Intentional, knowing, reckless or negligent violations of
this   Law  will  constitute  grounds  for  refusal,  denial,
revocation,   suspension,   or   withdrawal    of    license,
certificate,  or  permit  under  Section  30  of the Pharmacy
Practice  Act  of  1987,  as  amended;  Section  7   of   the
"Ambulatory  Surgical  Treatment  Center Act", effective July
19,  1973,  as  amended;  and  Section  7  of  the  "Hospital
Licensing Act", approved July 1, 1953, as amended.
    (2)  Any hospital or  licensed  facility  which,  or  any
physician  who  intentionally, knowingly, or recklessly fails
to submit a complete report to the Department  in  accordance
with  the provisions of Section 10 of this Law and any person
who intentionally, knowingly, recklessly or negligently fails
to maintain the confidentiality of any reports required under
this Law or reports required by Sections 10.1 or 12  of  this
Law commits a Class B misdemeanor.
    (3)  Any  person who sells any drug, medicine, instrument
or other substance which he knows to be an abortifacient  and
which  is  in fact an abortifacient, unless upon prescription
of a physician, is guilty of  a  Class  B  misdemeanor.   Any
person   who   prescribes   or  administers  any  instrument,
medicine, drug or other substance or device, which  he  knows
to   be   an   abortifacient,   and   which  is  in  fact  an
abortifacient, and  intentionally,  knowingly  or  recklessly
fails  to inform the person for whom it is prescribed or upon
whom it is administered that it is an abortifacient commits a
Class C misdemeanor.
    (4)  Any   person   who   intentionally,   knowingly   or
recklessly performs upon a woman what he represents  to  that
woman to be an abortion when he knows or should know that she
is  not  pregnant  commits  a  Class  2  felony  and shall be
answerable in civil damages equal to 3 times  the  amount  of
proved damages.
(Source: P.A. 85-1209.)

    Section  37.  The  Illinois  Controlled Substances Act is
amended by changing Sections 102 and 103 as follows:

    (720 ILCS 570/102) (from Ch. 56 1/2, par. 1102)
    Sec. 102.  Definitions.  As used in this Act, unless  the
context otherwise requires:
    (a)  "Addict"  means  any  person who habitually uses any
drug,  chemical,  substance  or  dangerous  drug  other  than
alcohol so as to endanger the public morals,  health,  safety
or  welfare  or  who  is  so  far  addicted  to  the use of a
dangerous drug or controlled substance other than alcohol  as
to  have lost the power of self control with reference to his
addiction.
    (b)  "Administer"  means  the  direct  application  of  a
controlled  substance,  whether  by  injection,   inhalation,
ingestion,  or  any  other means, to the body of a patient or
research subject by:
         (1)  a practitioner (or, in  his  presence,  by  his
    authorized agent), or
         (2)  the  patient  or research subject at the lawful
    direction of the practitioner.
    (c)  "Agent" means  an  authorized  person  who  acts  on
behalf of or at the direction of a manufacturer, distributor,
or  dispenser.   It  does  not  include  a common or contract
carrier, public warehouseman or employee of  the  carrier  or
warehouseman.
    (c-1)  "Anabolic  Steroids"  means  any  drug or hormonal
substance,  chemically  and  pharmacologically   related   to
testosterone   (other   than   estrogens,   progestins,   and
corticosteroids) that promotes muscle growth, and includes:
              (i)  boldenone,
              (ii)  chlorotestosterone,
              (iii)  chostebol,
              (iv)  dehydrochlormethyltestosterone,
              (v)  dihydrotestosterone,
              (vi)  drostanolone,
              (vii)  ethylestrenol,
              (viii)  fluoxymesterone,
              (ix)  formebulone,
              (x)  mesterolone,
              (xi)  methandienone,
              (xii)  methandranone,
              (xiii)  methandriol,
              (xiv)  methandrostenolone,
              (xv)  methenolone,
              (xvi)  methyltestosterone,
              (xvii)  mibolerone,
              (xviii)  nandrolone,
              (xix)  norethandrolone,
              (xx)  oxandrolone,
              (xxi)  oxymesterone,
              (xxii)  oxymetholone,
              (xxiii)  stanolone,
              (xxiv)  stanozolol,
              (xxv)  testolactone,
              (xxvi)  testosterone,
              (xxvii)  trenbolone, and
              (xxviii)  any  salt, ester, or isomer of a drug
         or substance described or listed in this  paragraph,
         if  that  salt,  ester,  or  isomer  promotes muscle
         growth.
    Any person who is otherwise lawfully in possession of  an
anabolic  steroid,  or  who  otherwise lawfully manufactures,
distributes, dispenses, delivers, or possesses with intent to
deliver  an  anabolic  steroid,  which  anabolic  steroid  is
expressly  intended  for   and   lawfully   allowed   to   be
administered  through implants to livestock or other nonhuman
species, and which is approved by the Secretary of Health and
Human Services for such administration, and which the  person
intends  to  administer  or  have  administered  through such
implants, shall not  be  considered  to  be  in  unauthorized
possession   or   to   unlawfully   manufacture,  distribute,
dispense, deliver, or possess with  intent  to  deliver  such
anabolic steroid for purposes of this Act.
    (d)  "Administration"    means   the   Drug   Enforcement
Administration, United States Department of Justice,  or  its
successor agency.
    (e)  "Control" means to add a drug or other substance, or
immediate  precursor,  to a Schedule under Article II of this
Act whether by transfer from another Schedule or otherwise.
    (f)  "Controlled Substance" means a drug,  substance,  or
immediate  precursor  in  the Schedules of Article II of this
Act.
    (g)  "Counterfeit   substance"   means    a    controlled
substance,  which,  or  the  container  or labeling of which,
without authorization bears the  trademark,  trade  name,  or
other  identifying  mark,  imprint,  number or device, or any
likeness  thereof,  of  a   manufacturer,   distributor,   or
dispenser  other  than  the  person who in fact manufactured,
distributed, or dispensed the substance.
    (h)  "Deliver"   or   "delivery"   means   the    actual,
constructive   or  attempted  transfer  of  possession  of  a
controlled substance, with or without consideration,  whether
or not there is an agency relationship.
    (i)  "Department"  means the Illinois Department of Human
Services (as successor to the Department  of  Alcoholism  and
Substance Abuse) or its successor agency.
    (j)  "Department of State Police" means the Department of
State  Police  of  the  State  of  Illinois  or its successor
agency.
    (k)  "Department of Corrections" means the Department  of
Corrections of the State of Illinois or its successor agency.
    (l)  "Department  of  Professional  Regulation" means the
Department  of  Professional  Regulation  of  the  State   of
Illinois or its successor agency.
    (m)  "Depressant" or "stimulant substance" means:
         (1)  a  drug  which  contains  any  quantity  of (i)
    barbituric acid or any of the salts  of  barbituric  acid
    which  has been designated as habit forming under section
    502 (d) of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic  Act  (21
    U.S.C. 352 (d)); or
         (2)  a  drug  which  contains  any  quantity  of (i)
    amphetamine or methamphetamine and any of  their  optical
    isomers;  (ii) any salt of amphetamine or methamphetamine
    or any salt of an optical isomer of amphetamine; or (iii)
    any substance which the Department, after  investigation,
    has found to be, and by rule designated as, habit forming
    because  of  its  depressant  or  stimulant effect on the
    central nervous system; or
         (3)  lysergic acid diethylamide; or
         (4)  any drug  which  contains  any  quantity  of  a
    substance  which the Department, after investigation, has
    found to have,  and  by  rule  designated  as  having,  a
    potential   for   abuse  because  of  its  depressant  or
    stimulant effect on the central  nervous  system  or  its
    hallucinogenic effect.
    (n)  "Designated   product"   means  any  narcotic  drug,
amphetamine, phenmetrazine,  methamphetamine,  gluthethimide,
pentazocine  or  cannabis  product  listed in Schedule II and
also means a controlled substance listed in Schedule II which
is  determined  and  designated  by  the  Department  or  its
successor agency to be such a product. A  designated  product
shall only be dispensed upon an official prescription blank.
    (o)  "Director"  means  the Director of the Department of
State Police or the Department of Professional Regulation  or
his designated agents.
    (p)  "Dispense"  means  to deliver a controlled substance
to an ultimate user or research subject by or pursuant to the
lawful order of  a  prescriber,  including  the  prescribing,
administering,  packaging, labeling, or compounding necessary
to prepare the substance for that delivery.
    (q)  "Dispenser" means a practitioner who dispenses.
    (r)  "Distribute"  means  to  deliver,  other   than   by
administering or dispensing, a controlled substance.
    (s)  "Distributor" means a person who distributes.
    (t)  "Drug"  means  (1) substances recognized as drugs in
the   official   United   States   Pharmacopoeia,    Official
Homeopathic  Pharmacopoeia  of the United States, or official
National Formulary, or any supplement to  any  of  them;  (2)
substances  intended  for use in diagnosis, cure, mitigation,
treatment, or prevention of disease in man  or  animals;  (3)
substances (other than food) intended to affect the structure
of  any  function  of  the  body  of  man  or animals and (4)
substances intended for use as a  component  of  any  article
specified  in clause (1), (2), or (3) of this subsection.  It
does not include  devices  or  their  components,  parts,  or
accessories.
    (u)  "Good  faith" means the prescribing or dispensing of
a controlled substance  by  a  practitioner  in  the  regular
course  of professional treatment to or for any person who is
under his treatment for a pathology or condition  other  than
that  individual's  physical or psychological dependence upon
or addiction to a controlled substance,  except  as  provided
herein:   and  application  of the term to a pharmacist shall
mean the dispensing of a controlled substance pursuant to the
prescriber's order which in the professional judgment of  the
pharmacist  is  lawful.   The  pharmacist  shall be guided by
accepted professional standards including, but not limited to
the following, in making the judgment:
         (1)  lack   of   consistency    of    doctor-patient
    relationship,
         (2)  frequency of prescriptions for same drug by one
    prescriber for large numbers of patients,
         (3)  quantities beyond those normally prescribed,
         (4)  unusual dosages,
         (5)  unusual  geographic  distances between patient,
    pharmacist and prescriber,
         (6)  consistent prescribing of habit-forming drugs.
    (u-1)  "Home infusion services" means  services  provided
by   a   pharmacy   in   compounding   solutions  for  direct
administration to a patient in a private residence, long-term
care facility, or hospice setting  by  means  of  parenteral,
intravenous,   intramuscular,  subcutaneous,  or  intraspinal
infusion.
    (v)  "Immediate precursor" means a substance:
         (1)  which the Department has found  to  be  and  by
    rule  designated  as  being a principal compound used, or
    produced primarily for  use,  in  the  manufacture  of  a
    controlled substance;
         (2)  which  is  an  immediate  chemical intermediary
    used or likely to be used  in  the  manufacture  of  such
    controlled substance; and
         (3)  the  control  of which is necessary to prevent,
    curtail or  limit  the  manufacture  of  such  controlled
    substance.
    (w)  "Instructional   activities"   means   the  acts  of
teaching, educating or  instructing  by  practitioners  using
controlled  substances within educational facilities approved
by the State Board of Education or its successor agency.
    (x)  "Local authorities" means a  duly  organized  State,
County or Municipal peace unit or police force.
    (y)  "Look-alike substance" means a substance, other than
a  controlled  substance  which  (1)  by  overall dosage unit
appearance, including shape, color, size,  markings  or  lack
thereof,   taste,   consistency,  or  any  other  identifying
physical  characteristic  of  the  substance,  would  lead  a
reasonable  person  to  believe  that  the  substance  is   a
controlled  substance,  or  (2)  is  expressly  or  impliedly
represented  to  be  a controlled substance or is distributed
under circumstances which would lead a reasonable  person  to
believe that the substance is a controlled substance. For the
purpose  of  determining  whether the representations made or
the circumstances of the distribution would lead a reasonable
person to believe the substance to be a controlled  substance
under  this  clause (2) of subsection (y), the court or other
authority may consider the following factors in  addition  to
any other factor that may be relevant:
         (a)  statements  made  by  the  owner  or  person in
    control of the substance concerning its  nature,  use  or
    effect;
         (b)  statements  made to the buyer or recipient that
    the substance may be resold for profit;
         (c)  whether the substance is packaged in  a  manner
    normally  used for the illegal distribution of controlled
    substances;
         (d)  whether   the   distribution    or    attempted
    distribution  included an exchange of or demand for money
    or other  property  as  consideration,  and  whether  the
    amount  of  the  consideration  was substantially greater
    than the reasonable retail market value of the substance.
    Clause (1) of this subsection (y) shall not  apply  to  a
noncontrolled  substance in its finished dosage form that was
initially introduced  into  commerce  prior  to  the  initial
introduction  into  commerce of a controlled substance in its
finished dosage form which it may substantially resemble.
    Nothing in this subsection (y) prohibits  the  dispensing
or   distributing  of  noncontrolled  substances  by  persons
authorized to dispense and distribute  controlled  substances
under  this Act, provided that such action would be deemed to
be carried out in good faith  under  subsection  (u)  if  the
substances involved were controlled substances.
    Nothing  in  this subsection (y) or in this Act prohibits
the  manufacture,  preparation,   propagation,   compounding,
processing,  packaging, advertising or distribution of a drug
or drugs by any person registered pursuant to Section 510  of
the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (21 U.S.C. 360).
    (y-1)  "Mail-order  pharmacy"  means  a  pharmacy that is
located in a state of the United States, other than Illinois,
that delivers, dispenses or distributes, through  the  United
States  Postal  Service  or other common carrier, to Illinois
residents, any substance which requires a prescription.
    (z)  "Manufacture"  means  the  production,  preparation,
propagation,  compounding,  conversion  or  processing  of  a
controlled  substance,  either  directly  or  indirectly,  by
extraction   from   substances   of   natural   origin,    or
independently  by  means  of  chemical  synthesis,  or  by  a
combination   of   extraction  and  chemical  synthesis,  and
includes any packaging or repackaging  of  the  substance  or
labeling  of  its  container,  except that this term does not
include:
         (1)  by  an  ultimate  user,  the   preparation   or
    compounding of a controlled substance for his own use; or
         (2)  by  a  practitioner,  or  his  authorized agent
    under  his  supervision,  the  preparation,  compounding,
    packaging, or labeling of a controlled substance:
              (a)  as an incident  to  his  administering  or
         dispensing  of  a controlled substance in the course
         of his professional practice; or
              (b)  as  an  incident   to   lawful   research,
         teaching or chemical analysis and not for sale.
    (aa)  "Narcotic drug" means any of the following, whether
produced directly or indirectly by extraction from substances
of  natural  origin,  or  independently  by means of chemical
synthesis, or by a combination  of  extraction  and  chemical
synthesis:
         (1)  opium  and  opiate,  and  any  salt,  compound,
    derivative, or preparation of opium or opiate;
         (2)  any  salt,  compound,  isomer,  derivative,  or
    preparation  thereof  which  is  chemically equivalent or
    identical with any  of  the  substances  referred  to  in
    clause  (1), but not including the isoquinoline alkaloids
    of opium;
         (3)  opium poppy and poppy straw;
         (4)  coca leaves and any  salts,  compound,  isomer,
    salt  of  an  isomer,  derivative, or preparation of coca
    leaves including  cocaine  or  ecgonine,  and  any  salt,
    compound,  isomer,  derivative,  or  preparation  thereof
    which  is  chemically equivalent or identical with any of
    these substances, but  not  including  decocainized  coca
    leaves or extractions of coca leaves which do not contain
    cocaine  or  ecgonine (for the purpose of this paragraph,
    the  term  "isomer"  includes  optical,  positional   and
    geometric isomers).
    (bb)  "Nurse" means a registered nurse licensed under the
Illinois Nursing and Advanced Practice Nursing Act of 1987.
    (cc)  "Official prescription blanks" means the triplicate
prescription  forms supplied to prescribers by the Department
for prescribing Schedule  II  Designated  Product  controlled
substances.
    (dd)  "Opiate"  means  any  substance having an addiction
forming or addiction sustaining liability similar to morphine
or being capable of conversion into a drug  having  addiction
forming or addiction sustaining liability.
    (ee)  "Opium  poppy"  means  the  plant  of  the  species
Papaver somniferum L., except its seeds.
    (ff)  "Parole  and  Pardon  Board"  means  the Parole and
Pardon Board of  the  State  of  Illinois  or  its  successor
agency.
    (gg)  "Person"   means   any   individual,   corporation,
mail-order  pharmacy,  government or governmental subdivision
or agency, business  trust,  estate,  trust,  partnership  or
association, or any other entity.
    (hh)  "Pharmacist"   means   any   person   who  holds  a
certificate of registration as  a  registered  pharmacist,  a
local   registered   pharmacist  or  a  registered  assistant
pharmacist under the Pharmacy Practice Act of 1987.
    (ii)  "Pharmacy" means any store, ship or other place  in
which  pharmacy  is  authorized  to  be  practiced  under the
Pharmacy Practice Act of 1987.
    (jj)  "Poppy straw" means all parts, except the seeds, of
the opium poppy, after mowing.
    (kk)  "Practitioner"  means  a  physician   licensed   to
practice  medicine  in all its branches, dentist, podiatrist,
veterinarian, scientific investigator, pharmacist,  physician
assistant, advanced practice nurse, licensed practical nurse,
registered nurse, hospital, laboratory, or pharmacy, or other
person  licensed, registered, or otherwise lawfully permitted
by the United States or this State to  distribute,  dispense,
conduct  research  with  respect  to,  administer  or  use in
teaching or chemical analysis, a controlled substance in  the
course of professional practice or research.
    (ll)  "Pre-printed    prescription"   means   a   written
prescription  upon  which  the  designated  drug   has   been
indicated prior to the time of issuance.
    (mm)  "Prescriber" means a physician licensed to practice
medicine   in   all  its  branches,  dentist,  podiatrist  or
veterinarian  who  issues  a  prescription,  or  a  physician
assistant who issues a prescription for a Schedule  III,  IV,
or  V  controlled  substance  as  delegated  by  a  physician
licensed   to  practice  medicine  in  all  its  branches  in
accordance with the written guidelines required under Section
7.5 of the Physician Assistant Practice Act of  1987,  or  an
advanced  practice  nurse  with  prescriptive  authority,  as
delegated by a physician licensed to practice medicine in all
its  branches,  in  accordance  with  a written collaborative
agreement under Sections 15-15 and 15-20 of the  Nursing  and
Advanced Practice Nursing Act.
    (nn)  "Prescription"  means  a lawful written, facsimile,
or verbal order of a physician licensed to practice  medicine
in  all its branches, dentist, podiatrist or veterinarian for
any controlled substance, or of a physician assistant  for  a
Schedule III, IV, or V controlled substance as delegated by a
physician  licensed  to practice medicine in all its branches
in accordance with  the  written  guidelines  required  under
Section  7.5 of the Physician Assistant Practice Act of 1987,
or of an advanced practice nurse who  issues  a  prescription
for  a  Schedule III, IV, or V controlled substance, pursuant
to prescriptive authority delegated by a  physician  licensed
to  practice medicine in all its branches, in accordance with
a written collaborative agreement under  Sections  15-15  and
15-20 of the Nursing and Advanced Practice Nursing Act.
    (oo)  "Production"   or   "produce"   means  manufacture,
planting, cultivating, growing, or harvesting of a controlled
substance.
    (pp)  "Registrant" means every person who is required  to
register under Section 302 of this Act.
    (qq)  "Registry number" means the number assigned to each
person  authorized  to handle controlled substances under the
laws of the United States and of this State.
    (rr)  "State" includes the  State  of  Illinois  and  any
state,  district, commonwealth, territory, insular possession
thereof, and any area subject to the legal authority  of  the
United States of America.
    (ss)  "Ultimate   user"   means  a  person  who  lawfully
possesses a controlled substance for his own use or  for  the
use  of  a member of his household or for administering to an
animal owned by him or by a member of his household.
(Source: P.A. 89-202,  eff.  10-1-95;  89-507,  eff.  7-1-97;
90-116, eff. 7-14-97.)

    (720 ILCS 570/103) (from Ch. 56 1/2, par. 1103)
    Sec.  103.  Scope of Act.  Nothing in this Act limits the
lawful authority granted by the Medical Practice Act of 1987,
the Illinois Nursing and Advanced Practice  Nursing  Act,  of
1987 or the Pharmacy Practice Act of 1987.
(Source: P.A. 85-1209.)

    Section  40.  The Good Samaritan Act is amended by adding
Section 34 and changing Sections 10, 25, 30, 35, 40, 45,  60,
70, and 75 as follows:

    (745 ILCS 49/10)
    Sec.  10.  Cardiopulmonary  resuscitation; exemption from
civil liability for emergency care.    Any  person  currently
certified in basic cardiopulmonary resuscitation who complies
with  generally  recognized standards, and who in good faith,
not  for  compensation,  provides  emergency  cardiopulmonary
resuscitation to a person who is an apparent victim of  acute
cardiopulmonary insufficiency shall not, as the result of his
or  her  acts  or  omissions  in  providing resuscitation, be
liable for  civil  damages,  unless  the  acts  or  omissions
constitute willful and wanton misconduct.
(Source: P.A. 89-607, eff. 1-1-97.)

    (745 ILCS 49/25)
    Sec.  25.  Physicians; exemption from civil liability for
emergency care.    Any  person  licensed  under  the  Medical
Practice  Act  of 1987 or any person licensed to practice the
treatment of human ailments in any other state  or  territory
of  the  United  States, except a person licensed to practice
midwifery, who, in good faith and without prior notice of the
illness or injury, provides emergency care without fee  to  a
person,  shall  not,  as a result of his or her their acts or
omissions, except willful or wanton misconduct on the part of
the person, in  providing  the  care,  be  liable  for  civil
damages.
(Source: P.A. 89-607, eff. 1-1-97.)

    (745 ILCS 49/30)
    Sec.  30.   Free  medical  clinic;  exemption  from civil
liability for services performed without compensation.
    (a)  A person licensed under the Medical Practice Act  of
1987, a person or licensed to practice the treatment of human
ailments  in  any  other  state  or  territory  of the United
States, or a health  care  professional,  including  but  not
limited  to  an advanced practice nurse, physician assistant,
nurse, pharmacist, physical therapist, podiatrist, or  social
worker licensed in this State or any other state or territory
of  the  United  States, except a person licensed to practice
midwifery, who, in good faith,  provides  medical  treatment,
diagnosis,  or  advice  as  a  part  of  the  services  of an
established free medical clinic providing care  to  medically
indigent  patients  which  is  limited  to care that does not
require the services of a  licensed  hospital  or  ambulatory
surgical   treatment  center  and  who  receives  no  fee  or
compensation from that source shall not be liable  for  civil
damages  as  a  result  of  his  or  her acts or omissions in
providing that  medical  treatment,  except  for  willful  or
wanton misconduct.
    (b)  For  purposes  of  this  Section,  a  "free  medical
clinic"  is  an  organized  community based program providing
medical care without charge to individuals unable to pay  for
it,  at  which  the care provided does not include the use of
general  anesthesia  or  require  an  overnight  stay  in   a
health-care facility.
    (c)  The  provisions of subsection (a) of this Section do
not apply to a particular case unless the free medical clinic
has  posted  in  a  conspicuous  place  on  its  premises  an
explanation of the exemption from  civil  liability  provided
herein.
    (d)  The  immunity  from  civil  damages  provided  under
subsection  (a)  also  applies  to physicians, hospitals, and
other health care  providers  that  provide  further  medical
treatment,  diagnosis,  or  advice to a patient upon referral
from an  established  free  medical  clinic  without  fee  or
compensation.
    (e)  Nothing  in  this  Section  prohibits a free medical
clinic from accepting  voluntary  contributions  for  medical
services  provided  to  a patient who has acknowledged his or
her ability and willingness to pay a portion of the value  of
the medical services provided.
    Any  voluntary  contribution collected for providing care
at a free medical clinic shall be used only to  pay  overhead
expenses  of  operating the clinic.  No portion of any moneys
collected  shall  be  used  to  provide  a   fee   or   other
compensation  to  any  person licensed under Medical Practice
Act of 1987.
(Source: P.A. 89-607, eff. 1-1-97.)
    (745 ILCS 49/34 new)
    Sec. 34.  Advanced practice nurse; exemption  from  civil
liability  for  emergency  care.   A  person  licensed  as an
advanced  practice  nurse  under  the  Nursing  and  Advanced
Practice Nursing Act who in  good  faith  provides  emergency
care  without  fee  to a person shall not be liable for civil
damages as a result of his or her acts or  omissions,  except
for willful or wanton misconduct on the part of the person in
providing the care.

    (745 ILCS 49/35)
    Sec.  35.   Nurses;  exemption  from  civil liability for
emergency care.   Any  person  licensed  under  the  Illinois
Nursing  Act of 1987 or any person licensed as a professional
nurse, or as a practical nurse in Illinois or any other state
or territory of the United  States  who  in  good  faith  and
without  prior  notice  of  the  illness  or  injury provides
emergency care without fee to a person shall not, as a result
of her or his acts or omissions, except for willful or wanton
misconduct on the part of the person, in providing the  care,
be liable for civil damages.
(Source: P.A. 89-607, eff. 1-1-97.)

    (745 ILCS 49/40)
    Sec.  40.   Nurses;  exemption  from  civil liability for
services performed without compensation.
    (a)  No person licensed as a professional nurse or  as  a
practical  nurse  under  the  Illinois  Nursing  and Advanced
Practice Nursing  Act  of  1987  who,  without  compensation,
renders  nursing  services,  shall be liable, and no cause of
action may be brought, for damages resulting from an  act  or
omission  in  rendering  such  services  unless  the  act  or
omission involved willful or wanton misconduct.
    (b)  (Blank).  As used in this Section "willful or wanton
misconduct" means a course of action which shows an actual or
deliberate  intention  to  cause  harm  or  which,   if   not
intentional,  shows  an  utter  indifference  to or conscious
disregard for the safety of others or their property.
    (c)  As  used  in   this   Section   "entity"   means   a
proprietorship,   partnership,  association  or  corporation,
whether or not operated for profit.
    (d)  Nothing in this Section is intended to bar any cause
of action against an entity or change  the  liability  of  an
entity  which  arises out of an act or omission of any person
exempt from liability for negligence under this Section.
(Source: P.A. 89-607, eff. 1-1-97.)

    (745 ILCS 49/45)
    Sec.  45.   Physical  Therapist;  exemption  from   civil
liability  for  emergency  care.   Any physical therapist, as
defined in Section 1 of the Illinois  Physical  Therapy  Act,
who  in good faith provides emergency care without fee to any
person shall  not,  as  a  result  of  his  or  her  acts  or
omissions,  except  willful and wanton misconduct on the part
of the person in providing the care, be liable to a person to
whom such care is provided for civil damages.
(Source: P.A. 89-607, eff. 1-1-97.)

    (745 ILCS 49/60)
    Sec. 60.  Veterinarians; exemption from  civil  liability
for  emergency care to humans.  Any person licensed under the
Veterinary Medicine and Surgery Practice Act of 1994  or  any
person  licensed  as  a  veterinarian  in  any other state or
territory of the United States who  in  good  faith  provides
emergency care to a human victim of an accident, at the scene
of  an  accident  or in a catastrophe shall not be liable for
civil damages as a result of his or her  acts  or  omissions,
except  for  willful  or wanton misconduct on the part of the
person in providing the care.
(Source: P.A. 89-607, eff. 1-1-97.)

    (745 ILCS 49/70)
    Sec. 70.  Law enforcement officers or firemen;  exemption
from   civil   liability   for  emergency  care.     Any  law
enforcement officer or fireman as defined in Section 2 of the
Law Enforcement Officers, Civil Defense  Workers,  Civil  Air
Patrol  Members,  Paramedics,  Firemen,  Chaplains, and State
Employees  Compensation  Act,  who  in  good  faith  provides
emergency care without fee to any  person  shall  not,  as  a
result  of  his  or her acts or omissions, except willful and
wanton misconduct on the part of the person, in providing the
care, be liable to a person to whom such care is provided for
civil damages.
(Source: P.A. 89-607, eff. 1-1-97.)

    (745 ILCS 49/75)
    Sec. 75.  Employers and employees under  the  Health  and
Safety  Act;  exemption  from  civil  liability for emergency
care.   Any employer, who in good  faith  provides  emergency
medical  or first aid care without fee to any employee or any
other person employed on the same project  shall  not,  as  a
result  of  his  or her acts or omissions, except willful and
wanton misconduct on  the part of the employer, in  providing
the  care, be liable to such employee or such other person to
whom such care is  provided for civil damages.
    Any employee who in good faith provides emergency medical
or first aid care without fee to any other  employee  or  any
other  person  employed  on  the same project shall not, as a
result of his or her acts or omissions,  except  for  willful
and  wanton  misconduct  on  the  part  of  the  employee  in
providing the care, be liable to the employee or other person
to whom the care is provided for civil damages.
    Excluded  from  the  operation  of  this  Section are any
employees who are licensed physicians, nurses,  dentists,  or
other licensed health services personnel.
    The  provisions  of  this Section do not affect or in any
way diminish or change  an  employer's  liability  under  the
Workers'  Compensation  Act,  or  the  Workers'  Occupational
Diseases Act.
    This  Section  applies  only  to  employers and employees
under the Health and Safety Act.
(Source: P.A. 89-607, eff. 1-1-97.)

    Section 45.  The Unemployment Insurance Act is amended by
changing Section 230 as follows:

    (820 ILCS 405/230) (from Ch. 48, par. 340)
    Sec. 230. The term "employment" shall not include service
performed after 1971:
         (A) A.  In the employ of a hospital, if such service
    is performed by a patient of the hospital.
         (B) B.  As a  student  nurse  in  the  employ  of  a
    hospital  or  a  nurses' training school by an individual
    who is enrolled and is regularly attending classes  in  a
    nurses' training school approved pursuant to the Illinois
    Nursing and Advanced Practice Nursing Act of 1987.
         (C)  C.  As an intern in the employ of a hospital by
    an individual who has completed a 4 years'  course  in  a
    medical  school  chartered  or approved pursuant to State
    law.
(Source: P.A. 85-1209.)
    Section 99.  Effective date.  This Act takes effect  July
1, 1998.

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