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Public Act 099-0173 |
HB0421 Enrolled | LRB099 05828 HAF 25872 b |
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AN ACT concerning regulation.
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Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
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represented in the General Assembly:
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Section 5. The Illinois Identification Card Act is amended |
by changing Section 4 as follows:
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(15 ILCS 335/4) (from Ch. 124, par. 24)
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Sec. 4. Identification Card.
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(a) The Secretary of State shall issue a
standard Illinois |
Identification Card to any natural person who is a resident
of |
the State of Illinois who applies for such card, or renewal |
thereof,
or who applies for a standard Illinois Identification |
Card upon release as a
committed person on parole, mandatory |
supervised release, aftercare release, final discharge, or
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pardon from the Department of Corrections or Department of |
Juvenile Justice by submitting an identification card
issued by |
the Department of Corrections or Department of Juvenile Justice |
under Section 3-14-1 or Section 3-2.5-70 of the Unified
Code of |
Corrections,
together with the prescribed fees. No |
identification card shall be issued to any person who holds a |
valid
foreign state
identification card, license, or permit |
unless the person first surrenders to
the Secretary of
State |
the valid foreign state identification card, license, or |
permit. The card shall be prepared and
supplied by the |
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Secretary of State and shall include a photograph and signature |
or mark of the
applicant. However, the Secretary of State may |
provide by rule for the issuance of Illinois Identification |
Cards without photographs if the applicant has a bona fide |
religious objection to being photographed or to the display of |
his or her photograph. The Illinois Identification Card may be |
used for
identification purposes in any lawful situation only |
by the person to
whom it was issued.
As used in this Act, |
"photograph" means any color photograph or digitally
produced |
and captured image of an applicant for an identification card. |
As
used in this Act, "signature" means the name of a person as |
written by that
person and captured in a manner acceptable to |
the Secretary of State. |
(a-5) If an applicant for an identification card has a |
current driver's license or instruction permit issued by the |
Secretary of State, the Secretary may require the applicant to |
utilize the same residence address and name on the |
identification card, driver's license, and instruction permit |
records maintained by the Secretary. The Secretary may |
promulgate rules to implement this provision.
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(a-10) If the applicant is a judicial officer as defined in |
Section 1-10 of the Judicial Privacy Act or a peace officer, |
the applicant may elect to have his or her office or work |
address listed on the card instead of the applicant's residence |
or mailing address. The Secretary may promulgate rules to |
implement this provision. For the purposes of this subsection |
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(a-10), "peace officer" means any person who by virtue of his |
or her office or public employment is vested by law with a duty |
to maintain public order or to make arrests for a violation of |
any penal statute of this State, whether that duty extends to |
all violations or is limited to specific violations. |
(b) The Secretary of State shall issue a special Illinois
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Identification Card, which shall be known as an Illinois Person |
with a Disability
Identification Card, to any natural person |
who is a resident of the State
of Illinois, who is a person |
with a disability as defined in Section 4A of this Act,
who |
applies for such card, or renewal thereof. No Illinois Person |
with a Disability Identification Card shall be issued to any |
person who
holds a valid
foreign state identification card, |
license, or permit unless the person first
surrenders to the
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Secretary of State the valid foreign state identification card, |
license, or
permit. The Secretary of State
shall charge no fee |
to issue such card. The card shall be prepared and
supplied by |
the Secretary of State, and shall include a photograph and |
signature or mark of the
applicant, a designation indicating |
that the card is an Illinois
Person with a Disability |
Identification Card, and shall include a comprehensible |
designation
of the type and classification of the applicant's |
disability as set out in
Section 4A of this Act. However, the |
Secretary of State may provide by rule for the issuance of |
Illinois Person with a Disability Identification Cards without |
photographs if the applicant has a bona fide religious |
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objection to being photographed or to the display of his or her |
photograph. If the applicant so requests, the card shall
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include a description of the applicant's disability and any |
information
about the applicant's disability or medical |
history which the Secretary
determines would be helpful to the |
applicant in securing emergency medical
care. If a mark is used |
in lieu of a signature, such mark
shall be affixed to the card |
in the presence of two witnesses who attest to
the authenticity |
of the mark. The Illinois
Person with a Disability |
Identification Card may be used for identification purposes
in |
any lawful situation by the person to whom it was issued.
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The Illinois Person with a Disability Identification Card |
may be used as adequate
documentation of disability in lieu of |
a physician's determination of
disability, a determination of |
disability from a physician assistant who has
been delegated |
the authority to make this determination by his or her
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supervising physician , a determination of disability from an |
advanced practice
nurse who has a written collaborative |
agreement with a collaborating physician
that
authorizes the |
advanced practice nurse to make this determination, or any
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other documentation
of disability whenever
any
State law
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requires that a disabled person provide such documentation of |
disability,
however an Illinois Person with a Disability |
Identification Card shall not qualify
the cardholder to |
participate in any program or to receive any benefit
which is |
not available to all persons with like disabilities.
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Notwithstanding any other provisions of law, an Illinois Person |
with a Disability
Identification Card, or evidence that the |
Secretary of State has issued an
Illinois Person with a |
Disability Identification Card, shall not be used by any
person |
other than the person named on such card to prove that the |
person
named on such card is a disabled person or for any other |
purpose unless the
card is used for the benefit of the person |
named on such card, and the
person named on such card consents |
to such use at the time the card is so used.
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An optometrist's determination of a visual disability |
under Section 4A of this Act is acceptable as documentation for |
the purpose of issuing an Illinois Person with a Disability |
Identification Card. |
When medical information is contained on an Illinois Person |
with a Disability
Identification Card, the Office of the |
Secretary of State shall not be
liable for any actions taken |
based upon that medical information.
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(c) The Secretary of State shall provide
that each original |
or renewal Illinois Identification Card or Illinois
Person with |
a Disability Identification Card issued to a person under the |
age of 21
shall be of a distinct nature from those Illinois |
Identification Cards or
Illinois Person with a Disability |
Identification Cards issued to individuals 21
years of age or |
older. The color designated for Illinois Identification
Cards |
or Illinois Person with a Disability Identification Cards for |
persons under
the age of 21 shall be at the discretion of the |
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Secretary of State.
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(c-1) Each original or renewal Illinois
Identification |
Card or Illinois Person with a Disability Identification Card |
issued to
a person under the age of 21 shall display the date |
upon which the person
becomes 18 years of age and the date upon |
which the person becomes 21 years of
age.
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(c-3) The General Assembly recognizes the need to identify |
military veterans living in this State for the purpose of |
ensuring that they receive all of the services and benefits to |
which they are legally entitled, including healthcare, |
education assistance, and job placement. To assist the State in |
identifying these veterans and delivering these vital services |
and benefits, the Secretary of State is authorized to issue |
Illinois Identification Cards and Illinois Person with a |
Disability Identification Cards with the word "veteran" |
appearing on the face of the cards. This authorization is |
predicated on the unique status of veterans. The Secretary may |
not issue any other identification card which identifies an |
occupation, status, affiliation, hobby, or other unique |
characteristics of the identification card holder which is |
unrelated to the purpose of the identification card.
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(c-5) Beginning on or before July 1, 2015, the Secretary of |
State shall designate a space on each original or renewal |
identification card where, at the request of the applicant, the |
word "veteran" shall be placed. The veteran designation shall |
be available to a person identified as a veteran under |
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subsection (b) of Section 5 of this Act who was discharged or |
separated under honorable conditions. |
(d) The Secretary of State may issue a Senior Citizen
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discount card, to any natural person who is a resident of the |
State of
Illinois who is 60 years of age or older and who |
applies for such a card or
renewal thereof. The Secretary of |
State shall charge no fee to issue such
card. The card shall be |
issued in every county and applications shall be
made available |
at, but not limited to, nutrition sites, senior citizen
centers |
and Area Agencies on Aging. The applicant, upon receipt of such
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card and prior to its use for any purpose, shall have affixed |
thereon in
the space provided therefor his signature or mark.
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(e) The Secretary of State, in his or her discretion, may |
designate on each Illinois
Identification Card or Illinois |
Person with a Disability Identification Card a space where the |
card holder may place a sticker or decal, issued by the |
Secretary of State, of uniform size as the Secretary may |
specify, that shall indicate in appropriate language that the |
card holder has renewed his or her Illinois
Identification Card |
or Illinois Person with a Disability Identification Card. |
(Source: P.A. 97-371, eff. 1-1-12; 97-739, eff. 1-1-13; 97-847, |
eff. 1-1-13; 97-1064, eff. 1-1-13; 98-323, eff. 1-1-14; 98-463, |
eff. 8-16-13; 98-558, eff. 1-1-14; 98-756, eff. 7-16-14.)
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Section 10. The Alcoholism and Other Drug Abuse and |
Dependency Act is amended by changing Section 5-23 as follows: |
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(20 ILCS 301/5-23) |
Sec. 5-23. Drug Overdose Prevention Program. |
(a) Reports of drug overdose. |
(1) The Director of the Division of Alcoholism and |
Substance Abuse may publish annually a report on drug |
overdose trends statewide that reviews State death rates |
from available data to ascertain changes in the causes or |
rates of fatal and nonfatal drug overdose for the preceding |
period of not less than 5 years. The report shall also |
provide information on interventions that would be |
effective in reducing the rate of fatal or nonfatal drug |
overdose. |
(2) The report may include: |
(A) Trends in drug overdose death rates. |
(B) Trends in emergency room utilization related |
to drug overdose and the cost impact of emergency room |
utilization. |
(C) Trends in utilization of pre-hospital and |
emergency services and the cost impact of emergency |
services utilization. |
(D) Suggested improvements in data collection. |
(E) A description of other interventions effective |
in reducing the rate of fatal or nonfatal drug |
overdose. |
(b) Programs; drug overdose prevention. |
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(1) The Director may establish a program to provide for |
the production and publication, in electronic and other |
formats, of drug overdose prevention, recognition, and |
response literature. The Director may develop and |
disseminate curricula for use by professionals, |
organizations, individuals, or committees interested in |
the prevention of fatal and nonfatal drug overdose, |
including, but not limited to, drug users, jail and prison |
personnel, jail and prison inmates, drug treatment |
professionals, emergency medical personnel, hospital |
staff, families and associates of drug users, peace |
officers, firefighters, public safety officers, needle |
exchange program staff, and other persons. In addition to |
information regarding drug overdose prevention, |
recognition, and response, literature produced by the |
Department shall stress that drug use remains illegal and |
highly dangerous and that complete abstinence from illegal |
drug use is the healthiest choice. The literature shall |
provide information and resources for substance abuse |
treatment. |
The Director may establish or authorize programs for |
prescribing, dispensing, or distributing naloxone |
hydrochloride or any other similarly acting and equally |
safe drug approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration |
for the treatment of drug overdose. Such programs may |
include the prescribing of naloxone hydrochloride or any |
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other similarly acting and equally safe drug approved by |
the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for the treatment of |
drug overdose to and education about administration by |
individuals who are not personally at risk of opioid |
overdose. |
(2) The Director may provide advice to State and local |
officials on the growing drug overdose crisis, including |
the prevalence of drug overdose incidents, trends in drug |
overdose incidents, and solutions to the drug overdose |
crisis. |
(c) Grants. |
(1) The Director may award grants, in accordance with |
this subsection, to create or support local drug overdose |
prevention, recognition, and response projects. Local |
health departments, correctional institutions, hospitals, |
universities, community-based organizations, and |
faith-based organizations may apply to the Department for a |
grant under this subsection at the time and in the manner |
the Director prescribes. |
(2) In awarding grants, the Director shall consider the |
necessity for overdose prevention projects in various |
settings and shall encourage all grant applicants to |
develop interventions that will be effective and viable in |
their local areas. |
(3) The Director shall give preference for grants to |
proposals that, in addition to providing life-saving |
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interventions and responses, provide information to drug |
users on how to access drug treatment or other strategies |
for abstaining from illegal drugs. The Director shall give |
preference to proposals that include one or more of the |
following elements: |
(A) Policies and projects to encourage persons, |
including drug users, to call 911 when they witness a |
potentially fatal drug overdose. |
(B) Drug overdose prevention, recognition, and |
response education projects in drug treatment centers, |
outreach programs, and other organizations that work |
with, or have access to, drug users and their families |
and communities. |
(C) Drug overdose recognition and response |
training, including rescue breathing, in drug |
treatment centers and for other organizations that |
work with, or have access to, drug users and their |
families and communities. |
(D) The production and distribution of targeted or |
mass media materials on drug overdose prevention and |
response. |
(E) Prescription and distribution of naloxone |
hydrochloride or any other similarly acting and |
equally safe drug approved by the U.S. Food and Drug |
Administration for the treatment of drug overdose. |
(F) The institution of education and training |
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projects on drug overdose response and treatment for |
emergency services and law enforcement personnel. |
(G) A system of parent, family, and survivor |
education and mutual support groups. |
(4) In addition to moneys appropriated by the General |
Assembly, the Director may seek grants from private |
foundations, the federal government, and other sources to |
fund the grants under this Section and to fund an |
evaluation of the programs supported by the grants. |
(d) Health care professional prescription of drug overdose |
treatment medication. |
(1) A health care professional who, acting in good |
faith, directly or by standing order, prescribes or |
dispenses an opioid antidote to a patient who, in the |
judgment of the health care professional, is capable of |
administering the drug in an emergency, shall not, as a |
result of his or her acts or omissions, be subject to |
disciplinary or other adverse action under the Medical |
Practice Act of 1987, the Physician Assistant Practice Act |
of 1987, the Nurse Practice Act, the Pharmacy Practice Act, |
or any other professional licensing statute. |
(2) A person who is not otherwise licensed to |
administer an opioid antidote may in an emergency |
administer without fee an opioid antidote if the person has |
received the patient information specified in paragraph |
(4) of this subsection and believes in good faith that |
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another person is experiencing a drug overdose. The person |
shall not, as a result of his or her acts or omissions, be |
liable for any violation of the Medical Practice Act of |
1987, the Physician Assistant Practice Act of 1987, the |
Nurse Practice Act, the Pharmacy Practice Act, or any other |
professional licensing statute, or subject to any criminal |
prosecution arising from or related to the unauthorized |
practice of medicine or the possession of an opioid |
antidote. |
(3) A health care professional prescribing an opioid |
antidote to a patient shall ensure that the patient |
receives the patient information specified in paragraph |
(4) of this subsection. Patient information may be provided |
by the health care professional or a community-based |
organization, substance abuse program, or other |
organization with which the health care professional |
establishes a written agreement that includes a |
description of how the organization will provide patient |
information, how employees or volunteers providing |
information will be trained, and standards for documenting |
the provision of patient information to patients. |
Provision of patient information shall be documented in the |
patient's medical record or through similar means as |
determined by agreement between the health care |
professional and the organization. The Director of the |
Division of Alcoholism and Substance Abuse, in |
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consultation with statewide organizations representing |
physicians, advanced practice nurses, physician |
assistants, substance abuse programs, and other interested |
groups, shall develop and disseminate to health care |
professionals, community-based organizations, substance |
abuse programs, and other organizations training materials |
in video, electronic, or other formats to facilitate the |
provision of such patient information. |
(4) For the purposes of this subsection: |
"Opioid antidote" means naloxone hydrochloride or any |
other similarly acting and equally safe drug approved by |
the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for the treatment of |
drug overdose. |
"Health care professional" means a physician licensed |
to practice medicine in all its branches, a licensed |
physician assistant who has been delegated the |
prescription or dispensation of an opioid antidote by his |
or her supervising physician , a licensed an advanced |
practice registered nurse who has a written collaborative |
agreement with a collaborating physician that authorizes |
the prescription or dispensation of an opioid antidote , or |
an advanced practice nurse who practices in a hospital or |
ambulatory surgical treatment center and possesses |
appropriate clinical privileges in accordance with the |
Nurse Practice Act. |
"Patient" includes a person who is not at risk of |
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opioid overdose but who, in the judgment of the physician, |
may be in a position to assist another individual during an |
overdose and who has received patient information as |
required in paragraph (2) of this subsection on the |
indications for and administration of an opioid antidote. |
"Patient information" includes information provided to |
the patient on drug overdose prevention and recognition; |
how to perform rescue breathing and resuscitation; opioid |
antidote dosage and administration; the importance of |
calling 911; care for the overdose victim after |
administration of the overdose antidote; and other issues |
as necessary.
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(Source: P.A. 96-361, eff. 1-1-10.) |
Section 15. The School Code is amended by changing Sections |
22-30, 24-5, 24-6, 26-1, and 27-8.1 as follows:
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(105 ILCS 5/22-30)
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Sec. 22-30. Self-administration and self-carry of asthma |
medication and epinephrine auto-injectors; administration of |
undesignated epinephrine auto-injectors.
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(a) For the purpose of this Section only, the following |
terms shall have the meanings set forth below:
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"Asthma inhaler" means a quick reliever asthma inhaler. |
"Epinephrine auto-injector" means a single-use device used |
for the automatic injection of a pre-measured dose of |
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epinephrine into the human body.
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"Asthma medication" means a medicine, prescribed by (i) a |
physician
licensed to practice medicine in all its branches,
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(ii) a licensed physician assistant who has been delegated the |
authority to prescribe
asthma
medications by his or her |
supervising physician , or (iii) a licensed an advanced practice
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nurse who has a written
collaborative agreement with a |
collaborating physician that delegates the
authority
to |
prescribe asthma medications,
for a pupil that pertains to the |
pupil's
asthma and that has an individual prescription label.
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"School nurse" means a registered nurse working in a school |
with or without licensure endorsed in school nursing. |
"Self-administration" means a pupil's discretionary use of |
his or
her prescribed asthma medication or epinephrine |
auto-injector.
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"Self-carry" means a pupil's ability to carry his or her |
prescribed asthma medication or epinephrine auto-injector. |
"Standing protocol" may be issued by (i) a physician |
licensed to practice medicine in all its branches, (ii) a |
licensed physician assistant who has been delegated the |
authority to prescribe asthma medications or epinephrine |
auto-injectors by his or her supervising physician , or (iii) a |
licensed an advanced practice nurse who has a collaborative |
agreement with a collaborating physician that delegates |
authority to issue a standing protocol for asthma medications |
or epinephrine auto-injectors . |
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"Trained personnel" means any school employee or volunteer |
personnel authorized in Sections 10-22.34, 10-22.34a, and |
10-22.34b of this Code who has completed training under |
subsection (g) of this Section to recognize and respond to |
anaphylaxis. |
"Undesignated epinephrine auto-injector" means an |
epinephrine auto-injector prescribed in the name of a school |
district, public school, or nonpublic school. |
(b) A school, whether public or nonpublic, must permit the
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self-administration and self-carry of asthma
medication by a |
pupil with asthma or the self-administration and self-carry of |
an epinephrine auto-injector by a pupil, provided that:
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(1) the parents or
guardians of the pupil provide to |
the school (i) written
authorization from the parents or |
guardians for (A) the self-administration and self-carry |
of asthma medication or (B) the self-carry of asthma |
medication or (ii) for (A) the self-administration and |
self-carry of an epinephrine auto-injector or (B) the |
self-carry of an epinephrine auto-injector, written |
authorization from the pupil's physician, physician |
assistant, or advanced practice nurse; and
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(2) the
parents or guardians of the pupil provide to |
the school (i) the prescription label, which must contain |
the name of the asthma medication, the prescribed dosage, |
and the time at which or circumstances under which the |
asthma medication is to be administered, or (ii) for the |
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self-administration or self-carry of an epinephrine |
auto-injector, a
written
statement from the pupil's |
physician, physician assistant, or advanced practice
nurse |
containing
the following information:
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(A) the name and purpose of the epinephrine |
auto-injector;
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(B) the prescribed dosage; and
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(C) the time or times at which or the special |
circumstances
under which the epinephrine |
auto-injector is to be administered.
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The information provided shall be kept on file in the office of |
the school
nurse or,
in the absence of a school nurse, the |
school's administrator.
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(b-5) A school district, public school, or nonpublic school |
may authorize the provision of a student-specific or |
undesignated epinephrine auto-injector to a student or any |
personnel authorized under a student's Individual Health Care |
Action Plan, Illinois Food Allergy Emergency Action Plan and |
Treatment Authorization Form, or plan pursuant to Section 504 |
of the federal Rehabilitation Act of 1973 to administer an |
epinephrine auto-injector to the student, that meets the |
student's prescription on file. |
(b-10) The school district, public school, or nonpublic |
school may authorize a school nurse or trained personnel to do |
the following: (i) provide an undesignated epinephrine |
auto-injector to a student for self-administration only or any |
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personnel authorized under a student's Individual Health Care |
Action Plan, Illinois Food Allergy Emergency Action Plan and |
Treatment Authorization Form, or plan pursuant to Section 504 |
of the federal Rehabilitation Act of 1973 to administer to the |
student, that meets the student's prescription on file; (ii) |
administer an undesignated epinephrine auto-injector that |
meets the prescription on file to any student who has an |
Individual Health Care Action Plan, Illinois Food Allergy |
Emergency Action Plan and Treatment Authorization Form, or plan |
pursuant to Section 504 of the federal Rehabilitation Act of |
1973 that authorizes the use of an epinephrine auto-injector; |
and (iii) administer an undesignated epinephrine auto-injector |
to any person that the school nurse or trained personnel in |
good faith believes is having an anaphylactic reaction. |
(c) The school district, public school, or nonpublic school |
must inform the parents or
guardians of the
pupil, in writing, |
that the school district, public school, or nonpublic school |
and its
employees and
agents, including a physician, physician |
assistant, or advanced practice nurse providing standing |
protocol or prescription for school epinephrine |
auto-injectors,
are to incur no liability or professional |
discipline, except for willful and wanton conduct, as a result
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of any injury arising from the
administration of asthma |
medication or of an epinephrine auto-injector regardless of |
whether authorization was given by the pupil's parents or |
guardians or by the pupil's physician, physician assistant, or |
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advanced practice nurse. The parents or guardians
of the pupil |
must sign a statement acknowledging that the school district, |
public school,
or nonpublic school and its employees and agents |
are to incur no liability, except for willful and wanton
|
conduct, as a result of any injury arising
from the
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administration of asthma medication or of an epinephrine |
auto-injector regardless of whether authorization was given by |
the pupil's parents or guardians or by the pupil's physician, |
physician assistant, or advanced practice nurse and that the |
parents or
guardians must indemnify and hold harmless the |
school district, public school, or nonpublic
school and
its
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employees and agents against any claims, except a claim based |
on willful and
wanton conduct, arising out of the
|
administration of asthma medication or of an epinephrine |
auto-injector regardless of whether authorization was given by |
the pupil's parents or guardians or by the pupil's physician, |
physician assistant, or advanced practice nurse. |
(c-5) Upon the effective date of this amendatory Act of the |
98th General Assembly, when a school nurse or trained personnel |
administers an undesignated epinephrine auto-injector to a |
person whom the school nurse or trained personnel in good faith |
believes is having an anaphylactic reaction, notwithstanding |
the lack of notice to the parents or guardians of the pupil or |
the absence of the parents or guardians signed statement |
acknowledging no liability, except for willful and wanton |
conduct, the school district, public school, or nonpublic |
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school and its employees and agents, and a physician, a |
physician assistant, or an advanced practice nurse providing |
standing protocol or prescription for undesignated epinephrine |
auto-injectors, are to incur no liability or professional |
discipline, except for willful and wanton conduct, as a result |
of any injury arising from the use of an undesignated |
epinephrine auto-injector regardless of whether authorization |
was given by the pupil's parents or guardians or by the pupil's |
physician, physician assistant, or advanced practice nurse.
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(d) The permission for self-administration and self-carry |
of asthma medication or the self-administration and self-carry |
of an epinephrine auto-injector is effective
for the school |
year for which it is granted and shall be renewed each
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subsequent school year upon fulfillment of the requirements of |
this
Section.
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(e) Provided that the requirements of this Section are |
fulfilled, a
pupil with asthma may self-administer and |
self-carry his or her asthma medication or a pupil may |
self-administer and self-carry an epinephrine auto-injector |
(i) while in
school, (ii) while at a school-sponsored activity, |
(iii) while under the
supervision of
school personnel, or (iv) |
before or after normal school activities, such
as while in |
before-school or after-school care on school-operated
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property.
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(e-5) Provided that the requirements of this Section are |
fulfilled, a school nurse or trained personnel may administer |
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an undesignated epinephrine auto-injector to any person whom |
the school nurse or trained personnel in good faith believes to |
be having an anaphylactic reaction (i) while in school, (ii) |
while at a school-sponsored activity, (iii) while under the |
supervision of school personnel, or (iv) before or after normal |
school activities, such
as while in before-school or |
after-school care on school-operated property. A school nurse |
or trained personnel may carry undesignated epinephrine |
auto-injectors on his or her person while in school or at a |
school-sponsored activity. |
(f) The school district, public school, or nonpublic school |
may maintain a supply of undesignated epinephrine |
auto-injectors in any secure location where an allergic person |
is most at risk, including, but not limited to, classrooms and |
lunchrooms. A physician, a physician assistant who has been |
delegated prescriptive authority for asthma medication or |
epinephrine auto-injectors in accordance with Section 7.5 of |
the Physician Assistant Practice Act of 1987, or an advanced |
practice nurse who has been delegated prescriptive authority |
for asthma medication or epinephrine auto-injectors in |
accordance with Section 65-40 of the Nurse Practice Act may |
prescribe undesignated epinephrine auto-injectors in the name |
of the school district, public school, or nonpublic school to |
be maintained for use when necessary. Any supply of epinephrine |
auto-injectors shall be maintained in accordance with the |
manufacturer's instructions. |
|
(f-5) Upon any administration of an epinephrine |
auto-injector, a school district, public school, or nonpublic |
school must immediately activate the EMS system and notify the |
student's parent, guardian, or emergency contact, if known. |
(f-10) Within 24 hours of the administration of an |
undesignated epinephrine auto-injector, a school district, |
public school, or nonpublic school must notify the physician, |
physician assistant, or advance practice nurse who provided the |
standing protocol or prescription for the undesignated |
epinephrine auto-injector of its use. |
(g) Prior to the administration of an undesignated |
epinephrine auto-injector, trained personnel must submit to |
his or her school's administration proof of completion of a |
training curriculum to recognize and respond to anaphylaxis |
that meets the requirements of subsection (h) of this Section. |
Training must be completed annually. Trained personnel must |
also submit to his or her school's administration proof of |
cardiopulmonary resuscitation and automated external |
defibrillator certification. The school district, public |
school, or nonpublic school must maintain records related to |
the training curriculum and trained personnel. |
(h) A training curriculum to recognize and respond to |
anaphylaxis, including the administration of an undesignated |
epinephrine auto-injector, may be conducted online or in |
person. It must include, but is not limited to: |
(1) how to recognize symptoms of an allergic reaction; |
|
(2) a review of high-risk areas within the school and |
its related facilities; |
(3) steps to take to prevent exposure to allergens; |
(4) how to respond to an emergency involving an |
allergic reaction; |
(5) how to administer an epinephrine auto-injector; |
(6) how to respond to a student with a known allergy as |
well as a student with a previously unknown allergy; |
(7) a test demonstrating competency of the knowledge |
required to recognize anaphylaxis and administer an |
epinephrine auto-injector; and |
(8) other criteria as determined in rules adopted |
pursuant to this Section. |
In consultation with statewide professional organizations |
representing physicians licensed to practice medicine in all of |
its branches, registered nurses, and school nurses, the Board |
shall make available resource materials consistent with |
criteria in this subsection (h) for educating trained personnel |
to recognize and respond to anaphylaxis. The Board may take |
into consideration the curriculum on this subject developed by |
other states, as well as any other curricular materials |
suggested by medical experts and other groups that work on |
life-threatening allergy issues. The Board is not required to |
create new resource materials. The Board shall make these |
resource materials available on its Internet website. |
(i) Within 3 days after the administration of an |
|
undesignated epinephrine auto-injector by a school nurse, |
trained personnel, or a student at a school or school-sponsored |
activity, the school must report to the Board in a form and |
manner prescribed by the Board the following information: |
(1) age and type of person receiving epinephrine |
(student, staff, visitor); |
(2) any previously known diagnosis of a severe allergy; |
(3) trigger that precipitated allergic episode; |
(4) location where symptoms developed; |
(5) number of doses administered; |
(6) type of person administering epinephrine (school |
nurse, trained personnel, student); and |
(7) any other information required by the Board. |
(j) By October 1, 2015 and every year thereafter, the Board |
shall submit a report to the General Assembly identifying the |
frequency and circumstances of epinephrine administration |
during the preceding academic year. This report shall be |
published on the Board's Internet website on the date the |
report is delivered to the General Assembly. |
(k) The Board may adopt rules necessary to implement this |
Section. |
(Source: P.A. 97-361, eff. 8-15-11; 98-795, eff. 8-1-14.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/24-5) (from Ch. 122, par. 24-5)
|
Sec. 24-5. Physical fitness and professional growth. |
(a) In this Section, "employee" means any employee of a |
|
school district, a student teacher, an employee of a contractor |
that provides services to students or in schools, or any other |
individual subject to the requirements of Section 10-21.9 or |
34-18.5 of this Code. |
(b) School boards shall require of new employees evidence |
of physical
fitness to perform duties assigned and freedom from |
communicable disease. Such evidence shall consist of a physical
|
examination
by a physician licensed in Illinois or any other |
state to practice medicine
and surgery in all its branches, a |
licensed an advanced practice nurse who has a written |
collaborative agreement with a collaborating physician that |
authorizes the advanced practice nurse to perform health |
examinations , or a licensed physician assistant who has been |
delegated the authority to perform health examinations by his |
or her supervising physician not more than 90 days preceding |
time of
presentation to the board, and the cost of such |
examination shall rest with the
employee. A new or existing |
employee may be subject to additional health examinations, |
including screening for tuberculosis, as required by rules |
adopted by the Department of Public Health or by order of a |
local public health official. The board may from time to time |
require an examination of any
employee by a physician licensed |
in Illinois to practice medicine and
surgery in all its |
branches, a licensed an advanced practice nurse who has a |
written collaborative agreement with a collaborating physician |
that authorizes the advanced practice nurse to perform health |
|
examinations , or a licensed physician assistant who has been |
delegated the authority to perform health examinations by his |
or her supervising physician and shall pay the expenses thereof |
from school
funds. |
(c) School boards may require teachers in their employ to |
furnish from
time to time evidence of continued professional |
growth.
|
(Source: P.A. 98-716, eff. 7-16-14.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/24-6)
|
Sec. 24-6. Sick leave. The school boards of all school |
districts, including special charter
districts, but not |
including school districts in municipalities of 500,000
or |
more, shall grant their full-time teachers, and also shall |
grant
such of their other employees as are eligible to |
participate in the
Illinois Municipal Retirement Fund under the |
"600-Hour Standard"
established, or under such other |
eligibility participation standard as may
from time to time be |
established, by rules and regulations now or hereafter
|
promulgated by the Board of that Fund under Section 7-198 of |
the Illinois
Pension Code, as now or hereafter amended, sick |
leave
provisions not less in amount than 10 days at full pay in |
each school year.
If any such teacher or employee does not use |
the full amount of annual leave
thus allowed, the unused amount |
shall be allowed to accumulate to a minimum
available leave of |
180 days at full pay, including the leave of the current
year. |
|
Sick leave shall be interpreted to mean personal illness, |
quarantine
at home, serious illness or death in the immediate |
family or household, or
birth, adoption, or placement for |
adoption.
The school board may require a certificate from a |
physician licensed in Illinois to practice medicine and surgery |
in all its branches, a chiropractic physician licensed under |
the Medical Practice Act of 1987, a licensed an advanced |
practice nurse who has a written collaborative agreement with a |
collaborating physician that authorizes the advanced practice |
nurse to perform health examinations , a licensed physician |
assistant who has been delegated the authority to perform |
health examinations by his or her supervising physician , or, if |
the treatment
is by prayer or spiritual means, a spiritual |
adviser or
practitioner of the teacher's or employee's faith as |
a basis for pay during leave after
an absence of 3 days for |
personal illness or 30 days for birth or as the school board |
may deem necessary in
other cases. If the school board does |
require a
certificate
as a basis for pay during leave of
less |
than 3 days for personal illness, the school board shall pay, |
from school funds, the
expenses incurred by the teachers or |
other employees in obtaining the certificate. For paid leave |
for adoption or placement for adoption, the school board may |
require that the teacher or other employee provide evidence |
that the formal adoption process is underway, and such leave is |
limited to 30 days unless a longer leave has been negotiated |
with the exclusive bargaining representative.
|
|
If, by reason of any change in the boundaries of school |
districts, or by
reason of the creation of a new school |
district, the employment of a
teacher is transferred to a new |
or different board, the accumulated sick
leave of such teacher |
is not thereby lost, but is transferred to such new
or |
different district.
|
For purposes of this Section, "immediate family" shall |
include parents,
spouse, brothers, sisters, children, |
grandparents, grandchildren,
parents-in-law, brothers-in-law, |
sisters-in-law, and legal guardians.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-151, eff. 8-14-07; 96-51, eff. 7-23-09; |
96-367, eff. 8-13-09; 96-1000, eff. 7-2-10.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/26-1) (from Ch. 122, par. 26-1)
|
Sec. 26-1. Compulsory school age-Exemptions. Whoever has |
custody or control of any child (i) between the ages of 7 and |
17
years (unless the child has already graduated from high |
school) for school years before the 2014-2015 school year or |
(ii) between the ages
of 6 (on or before September 1) and 17 |
years (unless the child has already graduated from high school) |
beginning with the 2014-2015 school year
shall cause such child |
to attend some public school in the district
wherein the child |
resides the entire time it is in session during the
regular |
school term, except as provided in Section 10-19.1, and during |
a
required summer school program established under Section |
10-22.33B; provided,
that
the following children shall not be |
|
required to attend the public schools:
|
1. Any child attending a private or a parochial school |
where children
are taught the branches of education taught |
to children of corresponding
age and grade in the public |
schools, and where the instruction of the child
in the |
branches of education is in the English language;
|
2. Any child who is physically or mentally unable to |
attend school, such
disability being certified to the |
county or district truant officer by a
competent physician |
licensed in Illinois to practice medicine and surgery in |
all its branches, a chiropractic physician licensed under |
the Medical Practice Act of 1987, a licensed an advanced |
practice nurse who has a written collaborative agreement |
with a collaborating physician that authorizes the |
advanced practice nurse to perform health examinations , a |
licensed physician assistant who has been delegated the |
authority to perform health examinations by his or her |
supervising physician , or a Christian Science practitioner |
residing in this
State and listed in the Christian Science |
Journal; or who is excused for
temporary absence for cause |
by
the principal or teacher of the school which the child |
attends; the exemptions
in this paragraph (2) do not apply |
to any female who is pregnant or the
mother of one or more |
children, except where a female is unable to attend
school |
due to a complication arising from her pregnancy and the |
existence
of such complication is certified to the county |
|
or district truant officer
by a competent physician;
|
3. Any child necessarily and lawfully employed |
according to the
provisions of the law regulating child |
labor may be excused from attendance
at school by the |
county superintendent of schools or the superintendent of
|
the public school which the child should be attending, on |
certification of
the facts by and the recommendation of the |
school board of the public
school district in which the |
child resides. In districts having part time
continuation |
schools, children so excused shall attend such schools at
|
least 8 hours each week;
|
4. Any child over 12 and under 14 years of age while in |
attendance at
confirmation classes;
|
5. Any child absent from a public school on a |
particular day or days
or at a particular time of day for |
the reason that he is unable to attend
classes or to |
participate in any examination, study or work requirements |
on
a particular day or days or at a particular time of day, |
because the tenets
of his religion forbid secular activity |
on a particular day or days or at a
particular time of day. |
Each school board shall prescribe rules and
regulations |
relative to absences for religious holidays including, but |
not
limited to, a list of religious holidays on which it |
shall be mandatory to
excuse a child; but nothing in this |
paragraph 5 shall be construed to limit
the right of any |
school board, at its discretion, to excuse an absence on
|
|
any other day by reason of the observance of a religious |
holiday. A school
board may require the parent or guardian |
of a child who is to be excused
from attending school due |
to the observance of a religious holiday to give
notice, |
not exceeding 5 days, of the child's absence to the school
|
principal or other school personnel. Any child excused from |
attending
school under this paragraph 5 shall not be |
required to submit a written
excuse for such absence after |
returning to school; and |
6. Any child 16 years of age or older who (i) submits |
to a school district evidence of necessary and lawful |
employment pursuant to paragraph 3 of this Section and (ii) |
is enrolled in a graduation incentives program pursuant to |
Section 26-16 of this Code or an alternative learning |
opportunities program established pursuant to Article 13B |
of this Code.
|
(Source: P.A. 98-544, eff. 7-1-14 .)
|
(105 ILCS 5/27-8.1) (from Ch. 122, par. 27-8.1) |
Sec. 27-8.1. Health examinations and immunizations. |
(1) In compliance with rules and regulations which the |
Department of Public
Health shall promulgate, and except as |
hereinafter provided, all children in
Illinois shall have a |
health examination as follows: within one year prior to
|
entering kindergarten or the first grade of any public, |
private, or parochial
elementary school; upon entering the |
|
sixth and ninth grades of any public,
private, or parochial |
school; prior to entrance into any public, private, or
|
parochial nursery school; and, irrespective of grade, |
immediately prior to or
upon entrance into any public, private, |
or parochial school or nursery school,
each child shall present |
proof of having been examined in accordance with this
Section |
and the rules and regulations promulgated hereunder. Any child |
who received a health examination within one year prior to |
entering the fifth grade for the 2007-2008 school year is not |
required to receive an additional health examination in order |
to comply with the provisions of Public Act 95-422 when he or |
she attends school for the 2008-2009 school year, unless the |
child is attending school for the first time as provided in |
this paragraph. |
A tuberculosis skin test screening shall be included as a |
required part of
each health examination included under this |
Section if the child resides in an
area designated by the |
Department of Public Health as having a high incidence
of |
tuberculosis. Additional health examinations of pupils, |
including eye examinations, may be required when deemed |
necessary by school
authorities. Parents are encouraged to have |
their children undergo eye examinations at the same points in |
time required for health
examinations. |
(1.5) In compliance with rules adopted by the Department of |
Public Health and except as otherwise provided in this Section, |
all children in kindergarten and the second and sixth grades of |
|
any public, private, or parochial school shall have a dental |
examination. Each of these children shall present proof of |
having been examined by a dentist in accordance with this |
Section and rules adopted under this Section before May 15th of |
the school year. If a child in the second or sixth grade fails |
to present proof by May 15th, the school may hold the child's |
report card until one of the following occurs: (i) the child |
presents proof of a completed dental examination or (ii) the |
child presents proof that a dental examination will take place |
within 60 days after May 15th. The Department of Public Health |
shall establish, by rule, a waiver for children who show an |
undue burden or a lack of access to a dentist. Each public, |
private, and parochial school must give notice of this dental |
examination requirement to the parents and guardians of |
students at least 60 days before May 15th of each school year.
|
(1.10) Except as otherwise provided in this Section, all |
children enrolling in kindergarten in a public, private, or |
parochial school on or after the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of the 95th General Assembly and any student |
enrolling for the first time in a public, private, or parochial |
school on or after the effective date of this amendatory Act of |
the 95th General Assembly shall have an eye examination. Each |
of these children shall present proof of having been examined |
by a physician licensed to practice medicine in all of its |
branches or a licensed optometrist within the previous year, in |
accordance with this Section and rules adopted under this |
|
Section, before October 15th of the school year. If the child |
fails to present proof by October 15th, the school may hold the |
child's report card until one of the following occurs: (i) the |
child presents proof of a completed eye examination or (ii) the |
child presents proof that an eye examination will take place |
within 60 days after October 15th. The Department of Public |
Health shall establish, by rule, a waiver for children who show |
an undue burden or a lack of access to a physician licensed to |
practice medicine in all of its branches who provides eye |
examinations or to a licensed optometrist. Each public, |
private, and parochial school must give notice of this eye |
examination requirement to the parents and guardians of |
students in compliance with rules of the Department of Public |
Health. Nothing in this Section shall be construed to allow a |
school to exclude a child from attending because of a parent's |
or guardian's failure to obtain an eye examination for the |
child.
|
(2) The Department of Public Health shall promulgate rules |
and regulations
specifying the examinations and procedures |
that constitute a health examination, which shall include the |
collection of data relating to obesity
(including at a minimum, |
date of birth, gender, height, weight, blood pressure, and date |
of exam),
and a dental examination and may recommend by rule |
that certain additional examinations be performed.
The rules |
and regulations of the Department of Public Health shall |
specify that
a tuberculosis skin test screening shall be |
|
included as a required part of each
health examination included |
under this Section if the child resides in an area
designated |
by the Department of Public Health as having a high incidence |
of
tuberculosis.
The Department of Public Health shall specify |
that a diabetes
screening as defined by rule shall be included |
as a required part of each
health examination.
Diabetes testing |
is not required. |
Physicians licensed to practice medicine in all of its |
branches, licensed advanced
practice nurses who have a written |
collaborative agreement with
a collaborating physician which |
authorizes them to perform health
examinations , or licensed |
physician assistants who have been delegated the
performance of |
health examinations by their supervising physician
shall be
|
responsible for the performance of the health examinations, |
other than dental
examinations, eye examinations, and vision |
and hearing screening, and shall sign all report forms
required |
by subsection (4) of this Section that pertain to those |
portions of
the health examination for which the physician, |
advanced practice nurse, or
physician assistant is |
responsible.
If a registered
nurse performs any part of a |
health examination, then a physician licensed to
practice |
medicine in all of its branches must review and sign all |
required
report forms. Licensed dentists shall perform all |
dental examinations and
shall sign all report forms required by |
subsection (4) of this Section that
pertain to the dental |
examinations. Physicians licensed to practice medicine
in all |
|
its branches or licensed optometrists shall perform all eye |
examinations
required by this Section and shall sign all report |
forms required by
subsection (4) of this Section that pertain |
to the eye examination. For purposes of this Section, an eye |
examination shall at a minimum include history, visual acuity, |
subjective refraction to best visual acuity near and far, |
internal and external examination, and a glaucoma evaluation, |
as well as any other tests or observations that in the |
professional judgment of the doctor are necessary. Vision and
|
hearing screening tests, which shall not be considered |
examinations as that
term is used in this Section, shall be |
conducted in accordance with rules and
regulations of the |
Department of Public Health, and by individuals whom the
|
Department of Public Health has certified.
In these rules and |
regulations, the Department of Public Health shall
require that |
individuals conducting vision screening tests give a child's
|
parent or guardian written notification, before the vision |
screening is
conducted, that states, "Vision screening is not a |
substitute for a
complete eye and vision evaluation by an eye |
doctor. Your child is not
required to undergo this vision |
screening if an optometrist or
ophthalmologist has completed |
and signed a report form indicating that
an examination has |
been administered within the previous 12 months." |
(3) Every child shall, at or about the same time as he or |
she receives
a health examination required by subsection (1) of |
this Section, present
to the local school proof of having |
|
received such immunizations against
preventable communicable |
diseases as the Department of Public Health shall
require by |
rules and regulations promulgated pursuant to this Section and |
the
Communicable Disease Prevention Act. |
(4) The individuals conducting the health examination,
|
dental examination, or eye examination shall record the
fact of |
having conducted the examination, and such additional |
information as
required, including for a health examination
|
data relating to obesity
(including at a minimum, date of |
birth, gender, height, weight, blood pressure, and date of |
exam), on uniform forms which the Department of Public Health |
and the State
Board of Education shall prescribe for statewide |
use. The examiner shall
summarize on the report form any |
condition that he or she suspects indicates a
need for special |
services, including for a health examination factors relating |
to obesity. The individuals confirming the administration of
|
required immunizations shall record as indicated on the form |
that the
immunizations were administered. |
(5) If a child does not submit proof of having had either |
the health
examination or the immunization as required, then |
the child shall be examined
or receive the immunization, as the |
case may be, and present proof by October
15 of the current |
school year, or by an earlier date of the current school year
|
established by a school district. To establish a date before |
October 15 of the
current school year for the health |
examination or immunization as required, a
school district must |
|
give notice of the requirements of this Section 60 days
prior |
to the earlier established date. If for medical reasons one or |
more of
the required immunizations must be given after October |
15 of the current school
year, or after an earlier established |
date of the current school year, then
the child shall present, |
by October 15, or by the earlier established date, a
schedule |
for the administration of the immunizations and a statement of |
the
medical reasons causing the delay, both the schedule and |
the statement being
issued by the physician, advanced practice |
nurse, physician assistant,
registered nurse, or local health |
department that will
be responsible for administration of the |
remaining required immunizations. If
a child does not comply by |
October 15, or by the earlier established date of
the current |
school year, with the requirements of this subsection, then the
|
local school authority shall exclude that child from school |
until such time as
the child presents proof of having had the |
health examination as required and
presents proof of having |
received those required immunizations which are
medically |
possible to receive immediately. During a child's exclusion |
from
school for noncompliance with this subsection, the child's |
parents or legal
guardian shall be considered in violation of |
Section 26-1 and subject to any
penalty imposed by Section |
26-10. This subsection (5) does not apply to dental |
examinations and eye examinations. If the student is an |
out-of-state transfer student and does not have the proof |
required under this subsection (5) before October 15 of the |
|
current year or whatever date is set by the school district, |
then he or she may only attend classes (i) if he or she has |
proof that an appointment for the required vaccinations has |
been scheduled with a party authorized to submit proof of the |
required vaccinations. If the proof of vaccination required |
under this subsection (5) is not submitted within 30 days after |
the student is permitted to attend classes, then the student is |
not to be permitted to attend classes until proof of the |
vaccinations has been properly submitted. No school district or |
employee of a school district shall be held liable for any |
injury or illness to another person that results from admitting |
an out-of-state transfer student to class that has an |
appointment scheduled pursuant to this subsection (5). |
(6) Every school shall report to the State Board of |
Education by November
15, in the manner which that agency shall |
require, the number of children who
have received the necessary |
immunizations and the health examination (other than a dental |
examination or eye examination) as
required, indicating, of |
those who have not received the immunizations and
examination |
as required, the number of children who are exempt from health
|
examination and immunization requirements on religious or |
medical grounds as
provided in subsection (8). On or before |
December 1 of each year, every public school district and |
registered nonpublic school shall make publicly available the |
immunization data they are required to submit to the State |
Board of Education by November 15. The immunization data made |
|
publicly available must be identical to the data the school |
district or school has reported to the State Board of |
Education. |
Every school shall report to the State Board of Education |
by June 30, in the manner that the State Board requires, the |
number of children who have received the required dental |
examination, indicating, of those who have not received the |
required dental examination, the number of children who are |
exempt from the dental examination on religious grounds as |
provided in subsection (8) of this Section and the number of |
children who have received a waiver under subsection (1.5) of |
this Section. |
Every school shall report to the State Board of Education |
by June 30, in the manner that the State Board requires, the |
number of children who have received the required eye |
examination, indicating, of those who have not received the |
required eye examination, the number of children who are exempt |
from the eye examination as provided in subsection (8) of this |
Section, the number of children who have received a waiver |
under subsection (1.10) of this Section, and the total number |
of children in noncompliance with the eye examination |
requirement. |
The reported information under this subsection (6) shall be |
provided to the
Department of Public Health by the State Board |
of Education. |
(7) Upon determining that the number of pupils who are |
|
required to be in
compliance with subsection (5) of this |
Section is below 90% of the number of
pupils enrolled in the |
school district, 10% of each State aid payment made
pursuant to |
Section 18-8.05 to the school district for such year may be |
withheld
by the State Board of Education until the number of |
students in compliance with
subsection (5) is the applicable |
specified percentage or higher. |
(8) Parents or legal guardians who object to health,
|
dental, or eye examinations or any part thereof, or to |
immunizations, on religious grounds
shall not be required to |
submit their children or wards to the examinations
or |
immunizations to which they so object if such parents or legal |
guardians
present to the appropriate local school authority a |
signed statement of
objection, detailing the grounds for the |
objection. If the physical condition
of the child is such that |
any one or more of the immunizing agents should not
be |
administered, the examining physician, advanced practice |
nurse, or
physician assistant responsible for the performance |
of the
health examination shall endorse that fact upon the |
health examination form.
Exempting a child from the health,
|
dental, or eye examination does not exempt the child from
|
participation in the program of physical education training |
provided in
Sections 27-5 through 27-7 of this Code. |
(9) For the purposes of this Section, "nursery schools" |
means those nursery
schools operated by elementary school |
systems or secondary level school units
or institutions of |
|
higher learning. |
(Source: P.A. 97-216, eff. 1-1-12; 97-910, eff. 1-1-13; 98-673, |
eff. 6-30-14.)
|
Section 20. 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 |
podiatric physician, (iv) a licensed
optometrist,
(v) a |
licensed
physician assistant in
accordance with the written |
supervision agreement required under Section 7.5 of the |
Physician Assistant Practice Act of 1987 or when authorized |
under Section 7.7 of the Physician Assistant Practice Act of
|
1987 ,
(v-A) a licensed an advanced practice nurse in accordance |
with the
written collaborative agreement required under |
Section 65-35 of the Nurse Practice Act or when authorized |
under Section 65-45 of the Nurse Practice Act ,
(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, or (vii) a genetic counselor with |
the specific authority from a referral to order a test or tests |
pursuant to subsection (b) of Section 20 of the Genetic |
|
Counselor Licensing Act.
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. For purposes of |
this Section, a request
made by electronic mail or fax |
constitutes a written request.
|
(Source: P.A. 97-333, eff. 8-12-11; 98-185, eff. 1-1-14; |
98-214, eff. 8-9-13; 98-756, eff. 7-16-14; 98-767, eff. |
1-1-15 .)
|
Section 25. The Home Health, Home Services, and Home |
Nursing Agency Licensing Act is amended by changing Section |
2.05 as follows:
|
(210 ILCS 55/2.05) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 2802.05)
|
Sec. 2.05.
"Home health services" means services provided
|
to a person at his residence according to a plan of treatment
|
for illness or infirmity
prescribed by a physician licensed to |
practice medicine in all its branches, a licensed physician |
assistant who has been delegated the authority to prescribe |
home health services by his or her supervising physician , or a |
licensed an advanced practice nurse who has a written |
collaborative agreement with a collaborating physician that |
delegates the authority to prescribe home health services . Such |
services include part time and
intermittent nursing services |
|
and other therapeutic services
such as physical therapy, |
occupational therapy, speech therapy,
medical social services, |
or services provided by a home health aide.
|
(Source: P.A. 98-261, eff. 8-9-13.)
|
Section 30. The Illinois Insurance Code is amended by |
changing Sections 356g.5 and 356z.1 as follows: |
(215 ILCS 5/356g.5) |
Sec. 356g.5. Clinical breast exam. |
(a) The General Assembly finds that clinical breast |
examinations are a critical tool in the early detection of |
breast cancer, while the disease is in its earlier and |
potentially more treatable stages. Insurer reimbursement of |
clinical breast examinations is essential to the effort to |
reduce breast cancer deaths in Illinois. |
(b) Every insurer shall provide, in each group or |
individual policy, contract, or certificate of accident or |
health insurance issued or renewed for persons who are |
residents of Illinois, coverage for complete and thorough |
clinical breast examinations as indicated by guidelines of |
practice, performed by a physician licensed to practice |
medicine in all its branches, a licensed an advanced practice |
nurse who has a collaborative agreement with a collaborating |
physician that authorizes breast
examinations , or a licensed |
physician assistant who has been delegated authority to provide |
|
breast examinations , to check for lumps and other changes for |
the purpose of early detection and prevention of breast cancer |
as follows: |
(1) at least every 3 years for women at least 20 years |
of age but less than 40 years of age; and |
(2) annually for women 40 years of age or older. |
(c) Upon approval of a nationally recognized separate and |
distinct clinical breast exam code that is compliant with all |
State and federal laws, rules, and regulations, public and |
private insurance plans shall take action to cover clinical |
breast exams on a separate and distinct basis.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-189, eff. 8-16-07.)
|
(215 ILCS 5/356z.1)
|
Sec. 356z.1. Prenatal HIV testing. An individual or group |
policy of
accident and health insurance that provides maternity |
coverage and is amended,
delivered, issued, or renewed after |
the effective date of this amendatory Act
of the 92nd General |
Assembly must provide coverage for prenatal HIV testing
ordered |
by an attending physician licensed to practice medicine in all |
its
branches, or by a physician assistant or advanced practice |
registered nurse
who has a written collaborative agreement with |
a collaborating physician that
authorizes these services , |
including but not limited to orders consistent with
the |
recommendations of the American College of Obstetricians and |
Gynecologists
or the American Academy of Pediatrics.
|
|
(Source: P.A. 92-130, eff. 7-20-01.)
|
Section 33. The Medical Practice Act of 1987 is amended by |
changing Section 54.5 as follows:
|
(225 ILCS 60/54.5)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2015)
|
Sec. 54.5. Physician delegation of authority to physician |
assistants, advanced practice nurses, and prescribing |
psychologists.
|
(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 5 |
physician assistants as set forth in subsection (a) of Section |
7 of the Physician Assistant Practice Act of 1987.
|
(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 |
the Nurse Practice Act. Collaboration
is for the purpose of |
providing medical consultation,
and no employment relationship |
is required. A
written collaborative agreement shall
conform to |
the requirements of Section 65-35 of the Nurse Practice Act. |
The written collaborative agreement shall
be for
services in |
|
the same area of practice or specialty as the collaborating |
physician generally provides or may provide in
his or her |
clinical medical practice.
A written collaborative agreement |
shall be adequate with respect to collaboration
with advanced |
practice nurses if all of the following apply:
|
(1) The agreement is written to promote the exercise of |
professional judgment by the advanced practice nurse |
commensurate with his or her education and experience. 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 |
those procedures that require a physician's presence as the |
procedures are being performed.
|
(2) Practice guidelines and orders are developed and |
approved jointly by the advanced practice nurse and |
collaborating physician, as needed, based on the practice |
of the practitioners. Such guidelines and orders and the |
patient services provided thereunder are periodically |
reviewed by the collaborating physician.
|
(2) (3) The advance practice nurse provides services |
based upon a written collaborative agreement with the |
collaborating physician generally provides or may provide |
in his or her clinical medical practice , except as set |
forth in subsection (b-5) of this Section. With respect to |
labor and delivery, the collaborating physician must |
provide delivery services in order to participate with a |
|
certified nurse midwife. |
(4) The collaborating physician and advanced practice |
nurse consult at least once a month to provide |
collaboration and consultation. |
(3) (5) Methods of communication are available with the |
collaborating physician in person or through |
telecommunications for consultation, collaboration, and |
referral as needed to address patient care needs. |
(6) The agreement contains provisions detailing notice |
for termination or change of status involving a written |
collaborative agreement, except when such notice is given |
for just cause.
|
(b-5) An anesthesiologist or physician licensed to |
practice medicine in
all its branches may collaborate with a |
certified registered nurse anesthetist
in accordance with |
Section 65-35 of the Nurse Practice Act for the provision of |
anesthesia services. With respect to the provision of |
anesthesia services, the collaborating anesthesiologist or |
physician shall have training and experience in the delivery of |
anesthesia services consistent with Department rules. |
Collaboration shall be
adequate if:
|
(1) an anesthesiologist or a physician
participates in |
the joint formulation and joint approval of orders or
|
guidelines and periodically reviews such orders and the |
services provided
patients under such orders; and
|
(2) for anesthesia services, the anesthesiologist
or |
|
physician participates through discussion of and agreement |
with the
anesthesia plan and is physically present and |
available on the premises during
the delivery of anesthesia |
services for
diagnosis, consultation, and treatment of |
emergency medical conditions.
Anesthesia services in a |
hospital shall be conducted in accordance with
Section 10.7 |
of the Hospital Licensing Act and in an ambulatory surgical
|
treatment center in accordance with Section 6.5 of the |
Ambulatory Surgical
Treatment Center Act.
|
(b-10) The anesthesiologist or operating physician must |
agree with the
anesthesia plan prior to the delivery of |
services.
|
(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) (Blank).
|
(e) A physician shall not be liable for the acts or
|
omissions of a prescribing psychologist, 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 |
prescribing psychologist, physician assistant, or advanced |
practice
nurse to perform acts, unless the physician has
reason |
|
to believe the prescribing psychologist, physician assistant, |
or advanced
practice nurse lacked the competency to perform
the |
act or acts or commits willful and wanton misconduct.
|
(f) A collaborating physician may, but is not required to, |
delegate prescriptive authority to an advanced practice nurse |
as part of a written collaborative agreement, and the |
delegation of prescriptive authority shall conform to the |
requirements of Section 65-40 of the Nurse Practice Act. |
(g) A supervising physician may, but is not required to, |
delegate prescriptive authority to a physician assistant as |
part of a written supervision agreement, and the delegation of |
prescriptive authority shall conform to the requirements of |
Section 7.5 of the Physician Assistant Practice Act of 1987. |
(h) (Blank). For the purposes of this Section, "generally |
provides or may provide in his or her clinical medical |
practice" means categories of care or treatment, not specific |
tasks or duties, that the physician provides individually or |
through delegation to other persons so that the physician has |
the experience and ability to provide collaboration and |
consultation. This definition shall not be construed to |
prohibit an advanced practice nurse from providing primary |
health treatment or care within the scope of his or her |
training and experience, including, but not limited to, health |
screenings, patient histories, physical examinations, women's |
health examinations, or school physicals that may be provided |
as part of the routine practice of an advanced practice nurse |
|
or on a volunteer basis. |
(i) A collaborating physician shall delegate prescriptive |
authority to a prescribing psychologist as part of a written |
collaborative agreement, and the delegation of prescriptive |
authority shall conform to the requirements of Section 4.3 of |
the Clinical Psychologist Licensing Act. |
(Source: P.A. 97-358, eff. 8-12-11; 97-1071, eff. 8-24-12; |
98-192, eff. 1-1-14; 98-668, eff. 6-25-14 .)
|
Section 35. The Nurse Practice Act is amended by changing |
Sections 50-10, 65-35, and 65-45 and by adding Section 65-35.1 |
as follows:
|
(225 ILCS 65/50-10)
(was 225 ILCS 65/5-10)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2018)
|
Sec. 50-10. 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:
|
"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.
|
"Advanced practice nurse" or "APN" means a person who has |
met the qualifications for a (i) certified nurse midwife (CNM); |
(ii) certified nurse practitioner (CNP); (iii) certified |
registered nurse anesthetist (CRNA); or (iv) clinical nurse |
|
specialist (CNS) and has been licensed by the Department. All |
advanced practice nurses licensed and practicing in the State |
of Illinois shall use the title APN and may use specialty |
credentials CNM, CNP, CRNA, or CNS after their name. All |
advanced practice nurses may only practice in accordance with |
national certification and this Act.
|
"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.
|
"Board" means the Board of Nursing appointed by the |
Secretary. |
"Collaboration" means a process involving 2 or more health |
care professionals working together, each contributing one's |
respective area of expertise to provide more comprehensive |
patient care. |
"Consultation" means the process whereby an advanced |
practice nurse seeks the advice or opinion of another health |
care professional. |
"Credentialed" means the process of assessing and |
validating the qualifications of a health care professional. |
"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. |
"Dentist" means a person licensed to practice dentistry |
under the Illinois Dental Practice Act. |
"Department" means the Department of Financial and |
Professional Regulation. |
"Impaired nurse" means a nurse licensed under this Act who |
is unable to practice with reasonable skill and safety because |
of a physical or mental disability as evidenced by a written |
determination or written consent based on clinical evidence, |
including loss of motor skills, abuse of drugs or alcohol, or a |
psychiatric disorder, of sufficient degree to diminish his or |
her ability to deliver competent patient care. |
"License-pending advanced practice nurse" means a |
registered professional nurse who has completed all |
requirements for licensure as an advanced practice nurse except |
the certification examination and has applied to take the next |
available certification exam and received a temporary license |
from the Department. |
"License-pending registered nurse" means a person who has |
passed the Department-approved registered nurse licensure exam |
and has applied for a license from the Department. A |
license-pending registered nurse shall use the title "RN lic |
pend" on all documentation related to nursing practice. |
"Physician" means a person licensed to practice medicine in |
|
all its branches under the Medical Practice Act of 1987. |
"Podiatric physician" means a person licensed to practice |
podiatry under the Podiatric Medical Practice Act of 1987.
|
"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 this Act. Only a |
practical nurse
licensed under this Act is entitled to use the |
title "licensed practical
nurse" and the abbreviation |
"L.P.N.".
|
"Practical nursing" means the performance of
nursing acts |
requiring the basic nursing knowledge, judgment 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 a registered |
professional nurse or an advanced practice nurse. The
practical |
nurse may work under the direction of a licensed physician, |
dentist, podiatric physician, or other health care |
professional determined by the Department.
|
"Privileged" means the authorization granted by the |
governing body of a healthcare facility, agency, or |
organization to provide specific patient care services within |
well-defined limits, based on qualifications reviewed in the |
credentialing process.
|
"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
this Act. 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.".
|
"Registered professional nursing practice" is a scientific |
process founded on a professional body of knowledge; it is a |
learned profession based on the understanding of the human |
condition across the life span and environment and
includes all
|
nursing
specialties and means the performance of any nursing |
act based upon
professional knowledge, judgment, and skills |
acquired by means of completion
of an approved professional |
nursing education program. A registered
professional nurse |
provides holistic nursing care 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 |
podiatric physician, 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 Article 65 of |
this 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 nursing
|
students. The foregoing shall not be deemed to include
those |
acts of medical diagnosis or prescription of therapeutic or
|
corrective measures.
|
"Professional assistance program for nurses" means a |
professional
assistance program that meets criteria |
established by the Board of Nursing
and approved by the |
Secretary, 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.
|
"Secretary" means the Secretary of Financial and |
Professional Regulation. |
"Unencumbered license" means a license issued in good |
standing. |
"Written collaborative agreement" means a written |
agreement between an advanced practice nurse and a |
collaborating physician, dentist, or podiatric physician |
pursuant to Section 65-35.
|
(Source: P.A. 97-813, eff. 7-13-12; 98-214, eff. 8-9-13.)
|
(225 ILCS 65/65-35)
(was 225 ILCS 65/15-15)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2018)
|
Sec. 65-35. Written collaborative
agreements. |
(a) A written collaborative agreement is required for all |
|
advanced practice nurses engaged in clinical practice, except |
for advanced practice nurses who are authorized to practice in |
a hospital , hospital affiliate, or ambulatory surgical |
treatment center. |
(a-5) If an advanced practice nurse engages in clinical |
practice outside of a hospital , hospital affiliate, or |
ambulatory surgical treatment center in which he or she is |
authorized to practice, the advanced practice nurse must have a |
written collaborative agreement.
|
(b) A written collaborative
agreement shall describe the |
working relationship of the
advanced practice nurse with the |
collaborating
physician or podiatric physician and shall |
describe authorize the categories of
care, treatment, or |
procedures to be provided performed by the advanced
practice |
nurse. A collaborative agreement with a dentist must be in |
accordance with subsection (c-10) of this Section. |
Collaboration does not require an
employment relationship |
between the collaborating physician
or podiatric physician and |
advanced practice nurse. Collaboration means
the relationship |
under
which an advanced practice nurse works with a |
collaborating
physician or podiatric 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) collaboration and consultation as |
documented in a
jointly developed written collaborative
|
agreement.
|
|
The agreement shall 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 or podiatric physician is authorized |
to and generally provides or may provide in his or her clinical |
medical or podiatric practice, except as set forth in |
subsection (b-5) or (c-5) of this Section.
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 |
the presence of the collaborating physician or podiatric |
physician as
the procedures are being performed. The |
collaborative
relationship under an agreement shall not be
|
construed to require the personal presence of a physician or |
podiatric physician at the place where services are rendered.
|
Methods of communication shall
be available for consultation |
with the collaborating
physician or podiatric physician in |
person or by telecommunications or electronic communications |
in accordance with
established written guidelines as set forth |
in the written
agreement.
|
(b-5) Absent an employment relationship, a written |
collaborative agreement may not (1) restrict the categories of |
patients of an advanced practice nurse within the scope of the |
advanced practice nurses training and experience, (2) limit |
third party payors or government health programs, such as the |
|
medical assistance program or Medicare with which the advanced |
practice nurse contracts, or (3) limit the geographic area or |
practice location of the advanced practice nurse in this State. |
(c) Collaboration and consultation under all collaboration |
agreements
shall be adequate if a
collaborating physician or |
podiatric physician does each of the following:
|
(1) Participates in the joint formulation and joint |
approval of orders or
guidelines with the advanced practice |
nurse and he or she periodically reviews such orders and |
the
services provided patients under such orders in |
accordance with accepted
standards of medical practice or |
podiatric practice and advanced practice nursing practice.
|
(2) Provides collaboration and consultation with the |
advanced practice nurse at least once a month. In the case |
of anesthesia services provided by a certified registered |
nurse anesthetist, an anesthesiologist, a physician, a |
dentist, or a podiatric physician must participate through |
discussion of and agreement with the anesthesia plan and |
remain physically present and available on the premises |
during the delivery of anesthesia services for diagnosis, |
consultation, and treatment of emergency medical |
conditions.
|
(3) Is available through telecommunications for |
consultation on medical
problems, complications, or |
emergencies or patient referral. In the case of anesthesia |
services provided by a certified registered nurse |
|
anesthetist, an anesthesiologist, a physician, a dentist, |
or a podiatric physician must participate through |
discussion of and agreement with the anesthesia plan and |
remain physically present and available on the premises |
during the delivery of anesthesia services for diagnosis, |
consultation, and treatment of emergency medical |
conditions.
|
The agreement must contain provisions detailing notice for |
termination or change of status involving a written |
collaborative agreement, except when such notice is given for |
just cause. |
(c-5) A certified registered nurse anesthetist, who |
provides anesthesia services outside of a hospital or |
ambulatory surgical treatment center shall enter into a written |
collaborative agreement with an anesthesiologist or the |
physician licensed to practice medicine in all its branches or |
the podiatric physician performing the procedure. Outside of a |
hospital or ambulatory surgical treatment center, the |
certified registered nurse anesthetist may provide only those |
services that the collaborating podiatric physician is |
authorized to provide pursuant to the Podiatric Medical |
Practice Act of 1987 and rules adopted thereunder. A certified |
registered nurse anesthetist may select, order, and administer |
medication, including controlled substances, and apply |
appropriate medical devices for delivery of anesthesia |
services under the anesthesia plan agreed with by the |
|
anesthesiologist or the operating physician or operating |
podiatric physician. |
(c-10) A certified registered nurse anesthetist who |
provides anesthesia services in a dental office shall enter |
into a written collaborative agreement with an |
anesthesiologist or the physician licensed to practice |
medicine in all its branches or the operating dentist |
performing the procedure. The agreement shall describe the |
working relationship of the certified registered nurse |
anesthetist and dentist and shall authorize the categories of |
care, treatment, or procedures to be performed by the certified |
registered nurse anesthetist. In a collaborating dentist's |
office, the certified registered nurse anesthetist may only |
provide those services that the operating dentist with the |
appropriate permit is authorized to provide pursuant to the |
Illinois Dental Practice Act and rules adopted thereunder. For |
anesthesia services, an anesthesiologist, physician, or |
operating dentist shall participate through discussion of and |
agreement with the anesthesia plan and shall remain physically |
present and be available on the premises during the delivery of |
anesthesia services for diagnosis, consultation, and treatment |
of emergency medical conditions. A certified registered nurse |
anesthetist may select, order, and administer medication, |
including controlled substances, and apply appropriate medical |
devices for delivery of anesthesia services under the |
anesthesia plan agreed with by the operating dentist. |
|
(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 , |
dentist, or podiatric physician. |
(e) 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 |
persons in accordance with Section 54.2 of the Medical Practice |
Act of 1987. Nothing in this Act shall be construed to limit |
the method of delegation that may be authorized by any means, |
including, but not limited to, oral, written, electronic, |
standing orders, protocols, guidelines, or verbal orders. |
Nothing in this Act shall be construed to authorize an advanced |
practice nurse to provide health care services required by law |
or rule to be performed by a physician. |
(f) An advanced
practice nurse shall inform each |
collaborating physician, dentist, or podiatric physician of |
all collaborative
agreements he or she
has signed and provide a |
copy of these to any collaborating physician, dentist, or |
podiatric physician upon
request.
|
(g) (Blank). For the purposes of this Act, "generally |
provides or may provide in his or her clinical medical |
practice" means categories of care or treatment, not specific |
tasks or duties, the physician provides individually or through |
delegation to other persons so that the physician has the |
experience and ability to provide collaboration and |
|
consultation. This definition shall not be construed to |
prohibit an advanced practice nurse from providing primary |
health treatment or care within the scope of his or her |
training and experience, including, but not limited to, health |
screenings, patient histories, physical examinations, women's |
health examinations, or school physicals that may be provided |
as part of the routine practice of an advanced practice nurse |
or on a volunteer basis. |
For the purposes of this Act, "generally provides or may |
provide in his or her clinical podiatric practice" means |
services, not specific tasks or duties, that the podiatric |
physician routinely provides individually or through |
delegation to other persons so that the podiatric physician has |
the experience and ability to provide collaboration and |
consultation. |
(Source: P.A. 97-358, eff. 8-12-11; 98-192, eff. 1-1-14; |
98-214, eff. 8-9-13; 98-756, eff. 7-16-14.)
|
(225 ILCS 65/65-35.1 new) |
Sec. 65-35.1. Written collaborative agreement; temporary |
practice. Any advanced practice nurse required to enter into a |
written collaborative agreement with a collaborating physician |
or collaborating podiatrist is authorized to continue to |
practice for up to 90 days after the termination of a |
collaborative agreement provided the advanced practice nurse |
seeks any needed collaboration at a local hospital and refers |
|
patients who require services beyond the training and |
experience of the advanced practice nurse to a physician or |
other health care provider.
|
(225 ILCS 65/65-45)
(was 225 ILCS 65/15-25)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2018)
|
Sec. 65-45. Advanced practice nursing in hospitals, |
hospital affiliates, or ambulatory surgical treatment centers.
|
(a) An advanced practice nurse may provide
services in a |
hospital or a hospital affiliate as those terms are defined in |
the Hospital Licensing Act or the University of Illinois |
Hospital Act or a licensed ambulatory surgical
treatment center |
without a written collaborative agreement pursuant to Section |
65-35 of this Act. An advanced practice nurse must possess |
clinical privileges recommended by the hospital medical staff |
and granted by the hospital or the consulting medical staff |
committee and ambulatory surgical treatment center in order to |
provide services. The medical staff or consulting medical staff |
committee shall periodically review the services of advanced |
practice nurses granted clinical privileges, including any |
care provided in a hospital affiliate. Authority may also be |
granted when recommended by the hospital medical staff and |
granted by the hospital or recommended by the consulting |
medical staff committee and ambulatory surgical treatment |
center to individual advanced practice nurses to select, order, |
and administer medications, including controlled substances, |
|
to provide delineated care. In a hospital, hospital affiliate, |
or ambulatory surgical treatment center, the attending |
physician shall determine an advanced practice nurse's role in |
providing care for his or her patients, except as otherwise |
provided in the medical staff bylaws or consulting committee |
policies.
|
(a-2) An advanced practice nurse granted authority to order |
medications including controlled substances may complete |
discharge prescriptions provided the prescription is in the |
name of the advanced practice nurse and the attending or |
discharging physician. |
(a-3) Advanced practice nurses practicing in a hospital or |
an ambulatory surgical treatment center are not required to |
obtain a mid-level controlled substance license to order |
controlled substances under Section 303.05 of the Illinois |
Controlled Substances Act. |
(a-5) For
anesthesia services provided by a certified |
registered nurse anesthetist, an anesthesiologist,
physician, |
dentist,
or podiatric physician shall participate through |
discussion of and agreement with the
anesthesia plan and shall
|
remain
physically present
and be available on the premises |
during the delivery of anesthesia services for
diagnosis, |
consultation, and treatment of
emergency medical conditions, |
unless hospital policy adopted pursuant to
clause (B) of |
subdivision (3) of Section 10.7 of the Hospital Licensing Act
|
or ambulatory surgical treatment center policy adopted |
|
pursuant to
clause (B) of subdivision (3) of Section 6.5 of the |
Ambulatory Surgical
Treatment Center Act
provides otherwise. A |
certified registered nurse anesthetist may select, order, and |
administer medication for anesthesia services under the |
anesthesia plan agreed to by the anesthesiologist or the |
physician, in accordance with hospital alternative policy or |
the medical staff consulting committee policies of a licensed |
ambulatory surgical treatment center.
|
(b) An advanced practice nurse who provides
services in a |
hospital shall do so in accordance with Section 10.7 of the
|
Hospital
Licensing Act and, in an
ambulatory surgical treatment |
center, in accordance with Section 6.5 of the
Ambulatory
|
Surgical Treatment Center Act.
|
(c) Advanced practice nurses certified as nurse |
practitioners, nurse midwives, or clinical nurse specialists |
practicing in a hospital affiliate may be, but are not required |
to be, granted authority to prescribe Schedule II through V |
controlled substances when such authority is recommended by the |
appropriate physician committee of the hospital affiliate and |
granted by the hospital affiliate. This authority may, but is |
not required to, include prescription of, selection of, orders |
for, administration of, storage of, acceptance of samples of, |
and dispensing over-the-counter medications, legend drugs, |
medical gases, and controlled substances categorized as |
Schedule II through V controlled substances, as defined in |
Article II of the Illinois Controlled Substances Act, and other |
|
preparations, including, but not limited to, botanical and |
herbal remedies. |
To prescribe controlled substances under this subsection |
(c), an advanced practice nurse certified as a nurse |
practitioner, nurse midwife, or clinical nurse specialist must |
obtain a mid-level practitioner controlled substance license. |
Medication orders shall be reviewed periodically by the |
appropriate hospital affiliate physicians committee or its |
physician designee. |
The hospital affiliate shall file with the Department |
notice of a grant of prescriptive authority consistent with |
this subsection (c) and termination of such a grant of |
authority, in accordance with rules of the Department. Upon |
receipt of this notice of grant of authority to prescribe any |
Schedule II through V controlled substances, the licensed |
advanced practice nurse certified as a nurse practitioner, |
nurse midwife, or clinical nurse specialist may register for a |
mid-level practitioner controlled substance license under |
Section 303.05 of the Illinois Controlled Substances Act. |
In addition, a hospital affiliate may, but is not required |
to, grant authority to an advanced practice nurse certified as |
a nurse practitioner, nurse midwife, or clinical nurse |
specialist to prescribe any Schedule II controlled substances, |
if all of the following conditions apply: |
(1) specific Schedule II controlled substances by oral |
dosage or topical or transdermal application may be |
|
designated, provided that the designated Schedule II |
controlled substances are routinely prescribed by advanced |
practice nurses in their area of certification; this grant |
of authority must identify the specific Schedule II |
controlled substances by either brand name or generic name; |
authority to prescribe or dispense Schedule II controlled |
substances to be delivered by injection or other route of |
administration may not be granted; |
(2) any grant of authority must be controlled |
substances limited to the practice of the advanced practice |
nurse; |
(3) any prescription must be limited to no more than a |
30-day supply; |
(4) the advanced practice nurse must discuss the |
condition of any patients for whom a controlled substance |
is prescribed monthly with the appropriate physician |
committee of the hospital affiliate or its physician |
designee; and |
(5) the advanced practice nurse must meet the education |
requirements of Section 303.05 of the Illinois Controlled |
Substances Act. |
(Source: P.A. 97-358, eff. 8-12-11; 98-214, eff. 8-9-13.)
|
Section 40. The Illinois Occupational Therapy Practice Act |
is amended by changing Section 3.1 as follows:
|
|
(225 ILCS 75/3.1)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2024)
|
Sec. 3.1. Referrals. |
(a) A licensed occupational therapist or licensed
|
occupational therapy assistant may consult with, educate, |
evaluate, and monitor
services for individuals, groups, and |
populations concerning occupational therapy needs. Except as |
indicated in subsections (b) and (c) of this Section, |
implementation
of direct occupational therapy treatment to |
individuals for their specific
health care conditions shall be |
based upon a referral from a licensed
physician, dentist, |
podiatric physician, or advanced practice nurse who has a |
written collaborative agreement with a collaborating physician |
to provide or accept referrals from licensed occupational |
therapists , physician assistant who has been delegated |
authority to provide or accept referrals from or to licensed |
occupational therapists , or optometrist.
|
(b) A referral is not required for the purpose of providing |
consultation, habilitation, screening, education, wellness, |
prevention, environmental assessments, and work-related |
ergonomic services to individuals, groups, or populations. |
(c) Referral from a physician or other health care provider |
is not required for evaluation or intervention for children and |
youths if an occupational therapist or occupational therapy |
assistant provides services in a school-based or educational |
environment, including the child's home. |
|
(d) An occupational therapist shall refer to a licensed |
physician, dentist,
optometrist, advanced practice nurse, |
physician assistant, or podiatric physician any patient whose |
medical condition should, at the
time of evaluation or |
treatment, be determined to be beyond the scope of
practice of |
the occupational therapist.
|
(Source: P.A. 98-214, eff. 8-9-13; 98-264, eff. 12-31-13; |
98-756, eff. 7-16-14.)
|
Section 45. The Orthotics, Prosthetics, and Pedorthics |
Practice Act is amended by changing Section 57 as follows:
|
(225 ILCS 84/57)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2020)
|
Sec. 57. Limitation on provision of care and services. A
|
licensed orthotist, prosthetist, or pedorthist may provide |
care or services only if the care
or services are provided |
pursuant to an order from (i) a licensed physician, (ii) a |
licensed podiatric physician, (iii) a licensed an advanced |
practice nurse who has a written collaborative agreement with a |
collaborating physician or podiatric physician that |
specifically authorizes ordering the services of an orthotist, |
prosthetist or pedorthist , or (iv) an advanced practice nurse |
who practices in a hospital or ambulatory surgical treatment |
center and possesses clinical privileges to order services of |
an orthotist, prosthetist, or pedorthist, or (v) a licensed |
|
physician assistant who has been delegated the authority to |
order the services of an orthotist, prosthetist, or pedorthist |
by his or her supervising physician . A licensed podiatric |
physician or advanced practice nurse collaborating with a |
podiatric physician may only order care or services concerning |
the foot from a licensed prosthetist.
|
(Source: P.A. 98-214, eff. 8-9-13.)
|
Section 50. The Illinois Physical Therapy Act is amended by |
changing Section 1 as follows:
|
(225 ILCS 90/1) (from Ch. 111, par. 4251)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2016)
|
Sec. 1. Definitions. As used in this Act:
|
(1) "Physical therapy" means all of the following: |
(A) Examining, evaluating, and testing individuals who |
may have mechanical, physiological, or developmental |
impairments, functional limitations, disabilities, or |
other health and movement-related conditions, classifying |
these disorders, determining a rehabilitation prognosis |
and plan of therapeutic intervention, and assessing the |
on-going effects of the interventions. |
(B) Alleviating impairments, functional limitations, |
or disabilities by designing, implementing, and modifying |
therapeutic interventions that may include, but are not |
limited to, the evaluation or treatment of a person through |
|
the use of the effective properties of physical measures |
and heat, cold, light, water, radiant energy, electricity, |
sound, and air and use of therapeutic massage, therapeutic |
exercise, mobilization, and rehabilitative procedures, |
with or without assistive devices, for the purposes of |
preventing, correcting, or alleviating a physical or |
mental impairment, functional limitation, or disability. |
(C) Reducing the risk of injury, impairment, |
functional limitation, or disability, including the |
promotion and maintenance of fitness, health, and |
wellness. |
(D) Engaging in administration, consultation, |
education, and research.
|
Physical therapy
includes, but is not limited to: (a) |
performance
of specialized tests and measurements, (b) |
administration of specialized
treatment procedures, (c) |
interpretation of referrals from physicians, dentists, |
advanced practice nurses, physician assistants,
and podiatric |
physicians, (d) establishment, and modification of physical |
therapy
treatment programs, (e) administration of topical |
medication used in generally
accepted physical therapy |
procedures when such medication is prescribed
by the patient's |
physician, licensed to practice medicine in all its branches,
|
the patient's physician licensed to practice podiatric |
medicine, the patient's advanced practice nurse, the patient's |
physician assistant, or the
patient's dentist, and (f) |
|
supervision or teaching of physical therapy.
Physical therapy |
does not include radiology, electrosurgery, chiropractic
|
technique or determination of a differential
diagnosis; |
provided, however,
the limitation on determining a |
differential diagnosis shall not in any
manner limit a physical |
therapist licensed under this Act from performing
an evaluation |
pursuant to such license. Nothing in this Section shall limit
a |
physical therapist from employing appropriate physical therapy |
techniques
that he or she is educated and licensed to perform. |
A physical therapist
shall refer to a licensed physician, |
advanced practice nurse, physician assistant, dentist, or |
podiatric physician any patient
whose medical condition |
should, at the time of evaluation or treatment, be
determined |
to be beyond the scope of practice of the physical therapist.
|
(2) "Physical therapist" means a person who practices |
physical therapy
and who has met all requirements as provided |
in this Act.
|
(3) "Department" means the Department of Professional |
Regulation.
|
(4) "Director" means the Director of Professional |
Regulation.
|
(5) "Board" means the Physical Therapy Licensing and |
Disciplinary Board approved
by the Director.
|
(6) "Referral" means a written or oral authorization for |
physical therapy services for a patient by a physician, |
dentist, advanced practice nurse, physician assistant, or |
|
podiatric physician who maintains medical supervision of the |
patient and makes a diagnosis or verifies that the patient's |
condition is such that it may be treated by a physical |
therapist.
|
(7) "Documented current and relevant diagnosis" for the |
purpose of
this Act means a diagnosis, substantiated by |
signature or oral verification
of a physician, dentist, |
advanced practice nurse, physician assistant, or podiatric |
physician, that a patient's condition is such
that it may be |
treated by physical therapy as defined in this Act, which
|
diagnosis shall remain in effect until changed by the |
physician, dentist, advanced practice nurse, physician |
assistant,
or podiatric physician.
|
(8) "State" includes:
|
(a) the states of the United States of America;
|
(b) the District of Columbia; and
|
(c) the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico.
|
(9) "Physical therapist assistant" means a person licensed |
to assist a
physical therapist and who has met all requirements |
as provided in this Act
and who works under the supervision of |
a licensed physical therapist to assist
in implementing the |
physical therapy treatment program as established by the
|
licensed physical therapist. The patient care activities |
provided by the
physical therapist assistant shall not include |
the interpretation of referrals,
evaluation procedures, or the |
planning or major modification of patient programs.
|
|
(10) "Physical therapy aide" means a person who has |
received on
the job training, specific to the facility in which |
he is employed, but who
has not completed an approved physical |
therapist assistant program.
|
(11) "Advanced practice nurse" means a person licensed as |
an advanced practice nurse under the Nurse Practice Act who has |
a collaborative agreement with a collaborating physician that |
authorizes referrals to physical therapists . |
(12) "Physician assistant" means a person licensed under |
the Physician Assistant Practice Act of 1987 who has been |
delegated authority to make referrals to physical therapists .
|
(Source: P.A. 98-214, eff. 8-9-13.)
|
Section 53. The Podiatric Medical Practice Act of 1987 is |
amended by changing Section 20.5 as follows: |
(225 ILCS 100/20.5) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2018)
|
Sec. 20.5. Delegation of authority to advanced practice |
nurses.
|
(a) A podiatric physician in active clinical practice may |
collaborate with an advanced practice nurse in accordance with |
the requirements of the Nurse Practice Act. Collaboration shall |
be for the purpose of providing podiatric care consultation and |
no employment relationship shall be required. A written |
collaborative agreement shall conform to the requirements of |
|
Section 65-35 of the Nurse Practice Act. The written |
collaborative agreement shall be for services the |
collaborating podiatric physician generally provides to his or |
her patients in the normal course of clinical podiatric |
practice, except as set forth in item (3) of this subsection |
(a). A written collaborative agreement and podiatric physician |
collaboration and consultation shall be adequate with respect |
to advanced practice nurses if all of the following apply: |
(1) The agreement is written to promote the exercise of |
professional judgment by the advanced practice nurse |
commensurate with his or her education and experience. 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 procedures require a podiatric physician's presence |
as the procedures are being performed. |
(2) Practice guidelines and orders are developed and |
approved jointly by the advanced practice nurse and |
collaborating podiatric physician, as needed, based on the |
practice of the practitioners. Such guidelines and orders |
and the patient services provided thereunder are |
periodically reviewed by the collaborating podiatric |
physician. |
(1) (3) The advance practice nurse provides services |
that the collaborating podiatric physician generally |
provides to his or her patients in the normal course of |
|
clinical practice. With respect to the provision of |
anesthesia services by a certified registered nurse |
anesthetist, the collaborating podiatric physician must |
have training and experience in the delivery of anesthesia |
consistent with Department rules. |
(4) The collaborating podiatric physician and the |
advanced practice nurse consult at least once a month to |
provide collaboration and consultation. |
(2) (5) Methods of communication are available with the |
collaborating podiatric physician in person or through |
telecommunications or electronic communications for |
consultation, collaboration, and referral as needed to |
address patient care needs. |
(3) (6) With respect to the provision of anesthesia |
services by a certified registered nurse anesthetist, an |
anesthesiologist, physician, or podiatric physician shall |
participate through discussion of and agreement with the |
anesthesia plan and shall remain physically present and be |
available on the premises during the delivery of anesthesia |
services for diagnosis, consultation, and treatment of |
emergency medical conditions. The anesthesiologist or |
operating podiatric physician must agree with the |
anesthesia plan prior to the delivery of services. |
(7) The agreement contains provisions detailing notice |
for termination or change of status involving a written |
collaborative agreement, except when such notice is given |
|
for just cause. |
(b) The collaborating podiatric physician shall have |
access to the records of all patients attended to by an |
advanced practice nurse. |
(c) Nothing in this Section shall be construed to limit the |
delegation of tasks or duties by a podiatric physician to a |
licensed practical nurse, a registered professional nurse, or |
other appropriately trained persons. |
(d) A podiatric physician shall not be liable for the acts |
or omissions of an advanced practice nurse solely on the basis |
of having signed guidelines or a collaborative agreement, an |
order, a standing order, a standing delegation order, or other |
order or guideline authorizing an advanced practice nurse to |
perform acts, unless the podiatric physician has reason to |
believe the advanced practice nurse lacked the competency to |
perform the act or acts or commits willful or wanton |
misconduct.
|
(e) A podiatric physician, may, but is not required to |
delegate prescriptive authority to an advanced practice nurse |
as part of a written collaborative agreement and the delegation |
of prescriptive authority shall conform to the requirements of |
Section 65-40 of the Nurse Practice Act. |
(Source: P.A. 97-358, eff. 8-12-11; 97-813, eff. 7-13-12; |
98-214, eff. 8-9-13.) |
Section 55. The Respiratory Care Practice Act is amended by |
|
changing Section 10 as follows:
|
(225 ILCS 106/10)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2016)
|
Sec. 10. Definitions. In this Act:
|
"Advanced practice nurse" means an advanced practice nurse |
licensed under the Nurse Practice Act.
|
"Board" means the Respiratory Care Board appointed by the |
Director. |
"Basic respiratory care activities" means and includes all |
of the following activities: |
(1) Cleaning, disinfecting, and sterilizing equipment |
used in the practice of respiratory care as delegated by a |
licensed health care professional or other authorized |
licensed personnel. |
(2) Assembling equipment used in the practice of |
respiratory care as delegated by a licensed health care |
professional or other authorized licensed personnel. |
(3) Collecting and reviewing patient data through |
non-invasive means, provided that the collection and |
review does not include the individual's interpretation of |
the clinical significance of the data. Collecting and |
reviewing patient data includes the performance of pulse |
oximetry and non-invasive monitoring procedures in order |
to obtain vital signs and notification to licensed health |
care professionals and other authorized licensed personnel |
|
in a timely manner. |
(4) Maintaining a nasal cannula or face mask for oxygen |
therapy in the proper position on the patient's face. |
(5) Assembling a nasal cannula or face mask for oxygen |
therapy at patient bedside in preparation for use. |
(6) Maintaining a patient's natural airway by |
physically manipulating the jaw and neck, suctioning the |
oral cavity, or suctioning the mouth or nose with a bulb |
syringe. |
(7) Performing assisted ventilation during emergency |
resuscitation using a manual resuscitator. |
(8) Using a manual resuscitator at the direction of a |
licensed health care professional or other authorized |
licensed personnel who is present and performing routine |
airway suctioning. These activities do not include care of |
a patient's artificial airway or the adjustment of |
mechanical ventilator settings while a patient is |
connected to the ventilator.
|
"Basic respiratory care activities" does not mean activities |
that involve any of the following:
|
(1) Specialized knowledge that results from a course of |
education or training in respiratory care. |
(2) An unreasonable risk of a negative outcome for the |
patient. |
(3) The assessment or making of a decision concerning |
patient care. |
|
(4) The administration of aerosol medication or |
oxygen. |
(5) The insertion and maintenance of an artificial |
airway. |
(6) Mechanical ventilatory support. |
(7) Patient assessment. |
(8) Patient education.
|
"Department" means the Department of Professional |
Regulation.
|
"Director" means the Director of
Professional Regulation.
|
"Licensed" means that which is required to hold oneself
out |
as
a respiratory care
practitioner as defined in this Act.
|
"Licensed health care professional" means a physician |
licensed to practice medicine in all its branches, a licensed |
an advanced practice nurse who has a written collaborative |
agreement with a collaborating physician that authorizes the |
advanced practice nurse to transmit orders to a respiratory |
care practitioner , or a licensed physician assistant who has |
been delegated the authority to transmit orders to a |
respiratory care practitioner by his or her supervising |
physician .
|
"Order" means a written, oral, or telecommunicated |
authorization for respiratory care services for a patient by |
(i) a licensed health care professional who maintains medical |
supervision of the patient and makes a diagnosis or verifies |
that the patient's condition is such that it may be treated by |
|
a respiratory care practitioner or (ii) a certified registered |
nurse anesthetist in a licensed hospital or ambulatory surgical |
treatment center.
|
"Other authorized licensed personnel" means a licensed |
respiratory care practitioner, a licensed registered nurse, or |
a licensed practical nurse whose scope of practice authorizes |
the professional to supervise an individual who is not |
licensed, certified, or registered as a health professional. |
"Proximate supervision" means a situation in which an |
individual is
responsible for directing the actions of another |
individual in the facility and is physically close enough to be |
readily available, if needed, by the supervised individual.
|
"Respiratory care" and "cardiorespiratory care"
mean |
preventative services, evaluation and assessment services, |
therapeutic services, and rehabilitative services under the |
order of a licensed health care professional or a certified |
registered nurse anesthetist in a licensed hospital for an |
individual with a disorder, disease, or abnormality of the |
cardiopulmonary system. These terms include, but are not |
limited to, measuring, observing, assessing, and monitoring |
signs and symptoms, reactions, general behavior, and general |
physical response of individuals to respiratory care services, |
including the determination of whether those signs, symptoms, |
reactions, behaviors, or general physical responses exhibit |
abnormal characteristics; the administration of |
pharmacological and therapeutic agents related to respiratory |
|
care services; the collection of blood specimens and other |
bodily fluids and tissues for, and the performance of, |
cardiopulmonary diagnostic testing procedures, including, but |
not limited to, blood gas analysis; development, |
implementation, and modification of respiratory care treatment |
plans based on assessed abnormalities of the cardiopulmonary |
system, respiratory care guidelines, referrals, and orders of a |
licensed health care professional; application, operation, and |
management of mechanical ventilatory support and other means of |
life support; and the initiation of emergency procedures under |
the rules promulgated by the Department. A respiratory care |
practitioner shall refer to a physician licensed to practice |
medicine in all its branches any patient whose condition, at |
the time of evaluation or treatment, is determined to be beyond |
the scope of practice of the respiratory care practitioner.
|
"Respiratory care education program" means a course of |
academic study leading
to eligibility for registry or |
certification in respiratory care. The training
is to be |
approved by an accrediting agency recognized by the Board and |
shall
include an evaluation of competence through a |
standardized testing mechanism
that is determined by the Board |
to be both valid and reliable.
|
"Respiratory care practitioner" means a person who is |
licensed by the
Department of Professional Regulation and meets |
all of the following
criteria:
|
(1) The person is engaged in the practice of |
|
cardiorespiratory care and
has the knowledge and skill |
necessary to administer respiratory care.
|
(2) The person is capable of serving as a resource to |
the
licensed
health care professional in
relation to the |
technical aspects of cardiorespiratory care and the safe |
and
effective methods for administering cardiorespiratory |
care modalities.
|
(3) The person is able to function in situations of |
unsupervised patient
contact requiring great individual |
judgment.
|
(Source: P.A. 94-523, eff. 1-1-06; 95-639, eff. 10-5-07.)
|
Section 60. The Genetic Counselor Licensing Act is amended |
by changing Sections 10, 20, and 95 as follows: |
(225 ILCS 135/10) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2025) |
Sec. 10. Definitions. As used in this Act: |
"ABGC" means the American Board of Genetic Counseling. |
"ABMG" means the American Board of Medical Genetics. |
"Active candidate status" is awarded to applicants who have |
received approval from the ABGC or ABMG to sit for their |
respective certification examinations.
|
"Address of record" means the designated address recorded |
by the Department in the applicant's or licensee's application |
file or license file as maintained by the Department's |
|
licensure maintenance unit. It is the duty of the applicant or |
licensee to inform the Department of any change of address, and |
those changes must be made either through the Department's |
website or by contacting the Department. |
"Department" means the Department of Financial and |
Professional Regulation. |
"Genetic anomaly" means a variation in an individual's DNA |
that has been shown to confer a genetically influenced disease |
or predisposition to a genetically influenced disease or makes |
a person a carrier of such variation. A "carrier" of a genetic |
anomaly means a person who may or may not have a predisposition |
or risk of incurring a genetically influenced condition and who |
is at risk of having offspring with a genetically influenced |
condition.
|
"Genetic counseling" means the provision of services, |
which may include the ordering of genetic tests, pursuant to a |
referral, to individuals, couples, groups, families, and |
organizations by one or more appropriately trained individuals |
to address the physical and psychological issues associated |
with the occurrence or risk of occurrence or recurrence of a |
genetic disorder, birth defect, disease, or potentially |
inherited or genetically influenced condition in an individual |
or a family.
"Genetic counseling" consists of the following: |
(A) Estimating the likelihood of occurrence or |
recurrence of a birth defect or of any potentially |
inherited or genetically influenced condition. This |
|
assessment may involve: |
(i) obtaining and analyzing a complete health |
history of the person and his or her family; |
(ii) reviewing pertinent medical records; |
(iii) evaluating the risks from exposure to |
possible mutagens or teratogens; |
(iv) recommending genetic testing or other |
evaluations to diagnose a condition or determine the |
carrier status of one or more family members; |
(B) Helping the individual, family, health care |
provider, or health care professional
(i) appreciate the |
medical, psychological and social implications of a |
disorder, including its features, variability, usual |
course and management options, (ii) learn how genetic |
factors contribute to the disorder and affect the chance |
for recurrence of the condition in other family members, |
and (iii) understand available options for coping with, |
preventing, or reducing the chance of
occurrence or |
recurrence of a condition.
|
(C) Facilitating an individual's or family's
(i) |
exploration of the perception of risk and burden associated |
with the disorder and (ii) adjustment and adaptation to the |
condition or their genetic risk by addressing needs for
|
psychological, social, and medical support.
|
"Genetic counselor" means a person licensed under this Act |
to engage in the practice of genetic counseling. |
|
"Genetic testing" and "genetic test" mean a test or |
analysis of human genes, gene products, DNA, RNA, chromosomes, |
proteins, or metabolites that detects genotypes, mutations, |
chromosomal changes, abnormalities, or deficiencies, including |
carrier status, that (i) are linked to physical or mental |
disorders or impairments, (ii) indicate a susceptibility to |
illness, disease, impairment, or other disorders, whether |
physical or mental, or (iii) demonstrate genetic or chromosomal |
damage due to environmental factors. "Genetic testing" and |
"genetic tests" do not include routine physical measurements; |
chemical, blood and urine analyses that are widely accepted and |
in use in clinical practice; tests for use of drugs; tests for |
the presence of the human immunodeficiency virus; analyses of |
proteins or metabolites that do not detect genotypes, |
mutations, chromosomal changes, abnormalities, or |
deficiencies; or analyses of proteins or metabolites that are |
directly related to a manifested disease, disorder, or |
pathological condition that could reasonably be detected by a |
health care professional with appropriate training and |
expertise in the field of medicine involved. |
"Person" means an individual, association, partnership, or |
corporation. |
"Qualified supervisor" means any person who is a licensed |
genetic counselor, as defined by rule, or a physician licensed |
to practice medicine in all its branches. A qualified |
supervisor may be provided at the applicant's place of work, or |
|
may be contracted by the applicant to provide supervision. The |
qualified supervisor shall file written documentation with
the |
Department of employment, discharge, or supervisory control of |
a genetic counselor at the time of employment, discharge, or |
assumption of supervision of a genetic counselor. |
"Referral" means a written or telecommunicated |
authorization for genetic counseling services from a physician |
licensed to practice medicine in all its branches, a licensed |
an advanced practice nurse who has a collaborative agreement |
with a collaborating physician that authorizes referrals to a |
genetic counselor , or a licensed physician assistant who has a |
supervision agreement with a supervising physician that |
authorizes referrals to a genetic counselor .
|
"Secretary" means the Secretary of Financial and |
Professional Regulation. |
"Supervision" means review of aspects of genetic |
counseling and case management in a bimonthly meeting with the |
person under supervision.
|
(Source: P.A. 98-813, eff. 1-1-15 .) |
(225 ILCS 135/20) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2025) |
Sec. 20. Restrictions and limitations.
|
(a) Except as provided in Section 15, no person shall, |
without a valid license as a genetic counselor issued by the |
Department (i) in any manner hold himself or herself out to the |
|
public as a genetic counselor under this Act; (ii) use in |
connection with his or her name or place of business the title |
"genetic counselor", "licensed genetic counselor", "gene |
counselor", "genetic consultant", or "genetic associate" or |
any words, letters, abbreviations, or insignia indicating or |
implying a person has met the qualifications for or has the |
license issued under this Act; or (iii) offer to render or |
render to individuals, corporations, or the public genetic |
counseling services if the words "genetic counselor" or |
"licensed genetic counselor" are used to describe the person |
offering to render or rendering them, or "genetic counseling" |
is used to describe the services rendered or offered to be |
rendered.
|
(b) No licensed genetic counselor may provide genetic |
counseling to individuals, couples, groups, or families |
without a referral from a physician licensed to practice |
medicine in all its branches, a licensed an advanced practice |
nurse who has a collaborative agreement with a collaborating |
physician that authorizes referrals to a genetic counselor , or |
a licensed physician assistant who has been delegated authority |
to make referrals to genetic counselors . The physician, |
advanced practice nurse, or physician assistant shall maintain |
supervision of the patient and be provided timely written |
reports on the services, including genetic testing results, |
provided by the licensed genetic counselor. Genetic testing |
shall be ordered by a physician licensed to practice medicine |
|
in all its branches or a genetic counselor pursuant to a |
referral that gives the specific authority to order genetic |
tests. Genetic test results and reports shall be provided to |
the referring physician, advanced practice nurse, or physician |
assistant. General seminars or talks to groups or organizations |
on genetic counseling that do not include individual, couple, |
or family specific counseling may be conducted without a |
referral. In clinical settings, genetic counselors who serve as |
a liaison between family members of a patient and a genetic |
research project, may, with the consent of the patient, provide |
information to family members for the purpose of gathering |
additional information, as it relates to the patient, without a |
referral. In non-clinical settings where no patient is being |
treated, genetic counselors who serve as a liaison between a |
genetic research project and participants in that genetic |
research project may provide information to the participants, |
without a referral.
|
(c) No association or partnership shall practice genetic |
counseling unless every member, partner, and employee of the |
association or partnership who practices genetic counseling or |
who renders genetic counseling services holds a valid license |
issued under this Act. No license shall be issued to a |
corporation, the stated purpose of which includes or which |
practices or which holds itself out as available to practice |
genetic counseling, unless it is organized under the |
Professional Service Corporation Act.
|
|
(d) Nothing in this Act shall be construed as permitting |
persons licensed as genetic counselors to engage in any manner |
in the practice of medicine in all its branches as defined by |
law in this State.
|
(e) Nothing in this Act shall be construed to authorize a |
licensed genetic counselor to diagnose, test (unless |
authorized in a referral), or treat any genetic or other |
disease or condition. |
(f) When, in the course of providing genetic counseling |
services to any person, a genetic counselor licensed under this |
Act finds any indication of a disease or condition that in his |
or her professional judgment requires professional service |
outside the scope of practice as defined in this Act, he or she |
shall refer that person to a physician licensed to practice |
medicine in all of its branches.
|
(Source: P.A. 98-813, eff. 1-1-15 .) |
(225 ILCS 135/95) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2025) |
Sec. 95. Grounds for discipline.
|
(a) The Department may refuse to issue, renew, or may |
revoke, suspend, place on probation, reprimand, or take other |
disciplinary or non-disciplinary action as the Department |
deems appropriate, including the issuance of fines not to |
exceed $10,000 for each violation, with regard to any license |
for any one or more of the following: |
|
(1) Material misstatement in furnishing information to |
the Department or to any other State agency.
|
(2) Violations or negligent or intentional disregard |
of this Act, or any of its rules.
|
(3) Conviction by plea of guilty or nolo contendere, |
finding of guilt, jury verdict, or entry of judgment or |
sentencing, including, but not limited to, convictions, |
preceding sentences of supervision, conditional discharge, |
or first offender probation, under the laws of any |
jurisdiction of the United States: (i) that is a felony or |
(ii) that is a misdemeanor, an essential element of which |
is dishonesty, or that is directly related to the practice |
of genetic counseling.
|
(4) Making any misrepresentation for the purpose of |
obtaining a license, or violating any provision of this Act |
or its rules. |
(5) Negligence in the rendering of genetic counseling |
services.
|
(6) Failure to provide genetic testing results and any |
requested information to a referring physician licensed to |
practice medicine in all its branches, advanced practice |
nurse, or physician assistant.
|
(7) Aiding or assisting another person in violating any |
provision of this Act or any rules.
|
(8) Failing to provide information within 60 days in |
response to a written request made by the Department.
|
|
(9) Engaging in dishonorable, unethical, or |
unprofessional conduct of a character likely to deceive, |
defraud, or harm the public and violating the rules of |
professional conduct adopted by the Department.
|
(10) Failing to maintain the confidentiality of any |
information received from a client, unless otherwise |
authorized or required by law.
|
(10.5) Failure to maintain client records of services |
provided and provide copies to clients upon request. |
(11) Exploiting a client for personal advantage, |
profit, or interest.
|
(12) Habitual or excessive use or addiction to alcohol, |
narcotics, stimulants, or any other chemical agent or drug |
which results in inability to practice with reasonable |
skill, judgment, or safety.
|
(13) Discipline by another governmental agency or unit |
of government, by any jurisdiction of the United States, or |
by a 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.
|
(14) Directly or indirectly giving to or receiving from |
any person, firm, corporation, partnership, or association |
any fee, commission, rebate, or other form of compensation |
for any professional service not actually rendered. |
Nothing in this paragraph (14) affects any bona fide |
independent contractor or employment arrangements among |
|
health care professionals, health facilities, health care |
providers, or other entities, except as otherwise |
prohibited by law. Any employment arrangements may include |
provisions for compensation, health insurance, pension, or |
other employment benefits for the provision of services |
within the scope of the licensee's practice under this Act. |
Nothing in this paragraph (14) shall be construed to |
require an employment arrangement to receive professional |
fees for services rendered. |
(15) A finding by the Department that the licensee, |
after having the license placed on probationary status has |
violated the terms of probation.
|
(16) Failing to refer a client to other health care |
professionals when the licensee is unable or unwilling to |
adequately support or serve the client.
|
(17) Willfully filing false reports relating to a |
licensee's practice, including but not limited to false |
records filed with federal or State agencies or |
departments.
|
(18) Willfully failing to report an instance of |
suspected child abuse or neglect as required by the Abused |
and Neglected Child Reporting Act.
|
(19) Being named as a perpetrator in an indicated |
report by the Department of Children and Family Services |
pursuant to 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.
|
(20) Physical or mental disability, including |
deterioration through the aging process or loss of |
abilities and skills which results in the inability to |
practice the profession with reasonable judgment, skill, |
or safety.
|
(21) Solicitation of professional services by using |
false or misleading advertising.
|
(22) Failure to file a return, or to pay the tax, |
penalty of 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 or any successor agency or the Internal Revenue |
Service or any successor agency.
|
(23) Fraud or making any misrepresentation in applying |
for or procuring a license under this Act or in connection |
with applying for renewal of a license under this Act.
|
(24) Practicing or attempting to practice under a name |
other than the full name as shown on the license or any |
other legally authorized name.
|
(25) Gross overcharging for professional services, |
including filing statements for collection of fees or |
monies for which services are not rendered.
|
(26) Providing genetic counseling services to |
|
individuals, couples, groups, or families without a |
referral from either a physician licensed to practice |
medicine in all its branches, a licensed an advanced |
practice nurse who has a collaborative agreement with a |
collaborating physician that authorizes the advanced |
practice nurse to make referrals to a genetic counselor , or |
a licensed physician assistant who has been delegated |
authority to make referrals to genetic counselors .
|
(27) Charging for professional services not rendered, |
including filing false statements for the collection of |
fees for which services are not rendered. |
(28) Allowing one's license under this Act to be used |
by an unlicensed person in violation of this Act. |
(b) The Department shall deny, without hearing, any |
application or renewal for a license under this Act to any |
person who has defaulted on an educational loan guaranteed by |
the Illinois State Assistance Commission; however, the |
Department may issue a license or renewal if the person in |
default has established a satisfactory repayment record as |
determined by the Illinois Student Assistance Commission.
|
(c) The determination by a court that a licensee is subject |
to involuntary admission or judicial admission as provided in |
the Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities Code will |
result in an automatic suspension of his or her license. The |
suspension will end upon a finding by a court that the licensee |
is no longer subject to involuntary admission or judicial |
|
admission, the issuance of an order so finding and discharging |
the patient, and the determination of the Secretary that the |
licensee be allowed to resume professional practice. |
(d) The Department may refuse to issue or renew or may |
suspend without hearing 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 any Act regarding the |
payment of taxes administered by the Illinois Department of |
Revenue until the requirements of the Act are satisfied in |
accordance with subsection (g) of Section 2105-15 of the Civil |
Administrative Code of Illinois. |
(e) In cases where the Department of Healthcare and Family |
Services has previously determined that a licensee or a |
potential licensee is more than 30 days delinquent in the |
payment of child support and has subsequently certified the |
delinquency to the Department, the Department may refuse to |
issue or renew or may revoke or suspend that person's license |
or may take other disciplinary action against that person based |
solely upon the certification of delinquency made by the |
Department of Healthcare and Family Services in accordance with |
item (5) of subsection (a) of Section 2105-15 of the Department |
of Professional Regulation Law of the Civil Administrative Code |
of Illinois. |
(f) All fines or costs imposed under this Section shall be |
paid within 60 days after the effective date of the order |
|
imposing the fine or costs or in accordance with the terms set |
forth in the order imposing the fine.
|
(Source: P.A. 97-813, eff. 7-13-12; 98-813, eff. 1-1-15 .) |
Section 63. The Illinois Public Aid Code is amended by |
changing Section 5-8 as follows: |
(305 ILCS 5/5-8) (from Ch. 23, par. 5-8)
|
Sec. 5-8. Practitioners. In supplying medical assistance, |
the Illinois
Department may provide for the legally authorized |
services of (i) persons
licensed under the Medical Practice Act |
of 1987, as amended, except as
hereafter in this Section |
stated, whether under a
general or limited license, (ii) |
persons licensed under the Nurse Practice Act as advanced |
practice nurses, regardless of whether or not the persons have |
written collaborative agreements, (iii) persons licensed or |
registered
under
other laws of this State to provide dental, |
medical, pharmaceutical,
optometric, podiatric, or nursing |
services, or other remedial care
recognized under State law, |
and (iv) (iii) persons licensed under other laws of
this State |
as a clinical social worker.
The Department may not provide for |
legally
authorized services of any physician who has been |
convicted of having performed
an abortion procedure in a wilful |
and wanton manner on a woman who was not
pregnant at the time |
such abortion procedure was performed. The
utilization of the |
services of persons engaged in the treatment or care of
the |
|
sick, which persons are not required to be licensed or |
registered under
the laws of this State, is not prohibited by |
this Section.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-518, eff. 8-28-07.)
|
Section 65. The Perinatal Mental Health Disorders |
Prevention and Treatment Act is amended by changing Section 10 |
as follows: |
(405 ILCS 95/10)
|
Sec. 10. Definitions. In this Act: |
"Hospital" has the meaning given to that term in the |
Hospital Licensing Act. |
"Licensed health care professional" means a physician |
licensed to practice medicine in all its branches, a licensed |
an advanced practice nurse who has a collaborative agreement |
with a collaborating physician that authorizes care , or a |
licensed physician physician's assistant who has been |
delegated authority to provide care . |
"Postnatal care" means an office visit to a licensed health |
care professional occurring after birth, with reference to the |
infant or mother. |
"Prenatal care" means an office visit to a licensed health |
care professional for pregnancy-related care occurring before |
birth. |
"Questionnaire" means an assessment tool administered by a |
|
licensed health care professional to detect perinatal mental |
health disorders, such as the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression |
Scale, the Postpartum Depression Screening Scale, the Beck |
Depression Inventory, the Patient Health Questionnaire, or |
other validated assessment methods.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-469, eff. 1-1-08.) |
Section 70. The Lead Poisoning Prevention Act is amended by |
changing Section 6.2 as follows:
|
(410 ILCS 45/6.2) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1306.2)
|
Sec. 6.2. Testing children and pregnant persons.
|
(a) Any physician licensed to practice medicine in all its |
branches or health care provider who sees or treats children 6 |
years
of age or younger shall test those children for
lead |
poisoning when those children reside in an area defined as high |
risk
by the Department. Children residing in areas defined as |
low risk by the
Department shall be evaluated for risk by the |
Childhood Lead Risk Questionnaire developed
by the Department |
and tested if indicated. Children shall be evaluated in |
accordance with rules adopted by the Department.
|
(b) Each licensed, registered, or approved health care |
facility serving
children 6 years of age or younger, including , |
but not
limited to,
health departments, hospitals, clinics, and |
health maintenance
organizations approved, registered, or |
licensed by the Department, shall take
the appropriate steps to |
|
ensure that children 6 years of age or younger be evaluated for |
risk or tested for lead poisoning or both.
|
(c) Children 7 years and older and pregnant persons may |
also be tested by physicians or
health care providers, in |
accordance with rules adopted by the Department. Physicians and |
health care providers shall also evaluate
children for lead |
poisoning in conjunction with the school health
examination, as |
required under the School Code, when, in the medical judgment |
judgement
of the physician, advanced practice nurse who has a |
written collaborative
agreement with a
collaborating
physician
|
that authorizes the advance practice nurse to perform health |
examinations , or
physician
assistant who has been delegated to |
perform health examinations by the
supervising
physician , the |
child is potentially at high risk of lead poisoning.
|
(d) (Blank).
|
(Source: P.A. 98-690, eff. 1-1-15; revised 12-10-14.)
|
Section 75. The Sexual Assault Survivors Emergency |
Treatment Act is amended by changing Sections 2.2, 5, and 5.5 |
as follows:
|
(410 ILCS 70/2.2)
|
Sec. 2.2. Emergency contraception.
|
(a) The General Assembly finds:
|
(1) Crimes of sexual assault and sexual abuse
cause |
significant physical, emotional, and
psychological trauma |
|
to the victims. This trauma is compounded by a victim's
|
fear of becoming pregnant and bearing a child as a result |
of the sexual
assault.
|
(2) Each year over 32,000 women become pregnant in the |
United States as
the result of rape and
approximately 50% |
of these pregnancies end in abortion.
|
(3) As approved for use by the Federal Food and Drug |
Administration (FDA),
emergency contraception can |
significantly reduce the risk of pregnancy if taken
within |
72 hours after the sexual assault.
|
(4) By providing emergency contraception to rape |
victims in a timely
manner, the trauma of rape can be |
significantly reduced.
|
(b) Within 120 days after the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of the
92nd General Assembly, every hospital |
providing services to sexual
assault survivors in accordance |
with a plan approved under Section 2 must
develop a protocol |
that ensures that each survivor of sexual
assault will receive |
medically and factually accurate and written and oral
|
information about emergency contraception; the indications and
|
counter-indications and risks associated with the use of |
emergency
contraception;
and a description of how and when |
victims may be provided emergency
contraception upon
the |
written order of a physician licensed to practice medicine
in |
all its branches, a licensed an advanced practice nurse who has |
a written collaborative agreement with a collaborating |
|
physician that authorizes prescription of emergency |
contraception , or a licensed physician assistant who has been |
delegated authority to prescribe emergency contraception . The |
Department shall approve the protocol if it finds
that the |
implementation of the protocol would provide sufficient |
protection
for survivors of sexual assault.
|
The hospital shall implement the protocol upon approval by |
the Department.
The Department shall adopt rules and |
regulations establishing one or more safe
harbor protocols and |
setting minimum acceptable protocol standards that
hospitals |
may develop and implement. The Department shall approve any |
protocol
that meets those standards. The Department may provide |
a sample acceptable
protocol upon request.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-432, eff. 1-1-08.)
|
(410 ILCS 70/5) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 87-5)
|
Sec. 5. Minimum requirements for hospitals providing |
hospital emergency services and forensic services
to sexual |
assault survivors.
|
(a) Every hospital providing hospital emergency services |
and forensic services to
sexual assault survivors under this |
Act
shall, as minimum requirements for such services, provide, |
with the consent
of the sexual assault survivor, and as ordered |
by the attending
physician, an advanced practice nurse who has |
a written collaborative agreement with a collaborating |
physician that authorizes provision of emergency services , or a |
|
physician assistant who has been delegated authority to provide |
hospital emergency services and forensic services , the |
following:
|
(1) appropriate medical examinations and laboratory
|
tests required to ensure the health, safety, and welfare
of |
a sexual assault survivor or which may be
used as evidence |
in a criminal proceeding against a person accused of the
|
sexual assault, or both; and records of the results of such |
examinations
and tests shall be maintained by the hospital |
and made available to law
enforcement officials upon the |
request of the sexual assault survivor;
|
(2) appropriate oral and written information |
concerning the possibility
of infection, sexually |
transmitted disease and pregnancy
resulting from sexual |
assault;
|
(3) appropriate oral and written information |
concerning accepted medical
procedures, medication, and |
possible contraindications of such medication
available |
for the prevention or treatment of infection or disease |
resulting
from sexual assault;
|
(4) an amount of medication for treatment at the |
hospital and after discharge as is deemed appropriate by |
the attending physician, an advanced practice nurse, or a |
physician assistant and consistent with the hospital's |
current approved protocol for sexual assault survivors;
|
(5) an evaluation of the sexual assault survivor's risk |
|
of contracting human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) from the |
sexual assault;
|
(6) written and oral instructions indicating the need |
for follow-up examinations and laboratory tests after the |
sexual assault to determine the presence or absence of
|
sexually transmitted disease;
|
(7) referral by hospital personnel for appropriate |
counseling; and
|
(8) when HIV prophylaxis is deemed appropriate, an |
initial dose or doses of HIV prophylaxis, along with |
written and oral instructions indicating the importance of
|
timely follow-up healthcare.
|
(b) Any person who is a sexual assault survivor who seeks |
emergency hospital services and forensic services or follow-up |
healthcare
under this Act shall be provided such services |
without the consent
of any parent, guardian, custodian, |
surrogate, or agent.
|
(c) Nothing in this Section creates a physician-patient |
relationship that extends beyond discharge from the hospital |
emergency department.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-432, eff. 1-1-08; 96-318, eff. 1-1-10.)
|
(410 ILCS 70/5.5)
|
Sec. 5.5. Minimum reimbursement requirements for follow-up |
healthcare. |
(a) Every hospital, health care professional, laboratory, |
|
or pharmacy that provides follow-up healthcare to a sexual |
assault survivor, with the consent of the sexual assault |
survivor and as ordered by the attending physician, an advanced |
practice nurse who has a written collaborative agreement with a |
collaborating physician , or physician assistant who has been |
delegated authority by a supervising physician shall be |
reimbursed for the follow-up healthcare services provided. |
Follow-up healthcare services include, but are not limited to, |
the following: |
(1) a physical examination; |
(2) laboratory tests to determine the presence or |
absence of sexually transmitted disease; and |
(3) appropriate medications, including HIV |
prophylaxis. |
(b) Reimbursable follow-up healthcare is limited to office |
visits with a physician, advanced practice nurse, or physician |
assistant within 90 days after an initial visit for hospital |
emergency services. |
(c) Nothing in this Section requires a hospital, health |
care professional, laboratory, or pharmacy to provide |
follow-up healthcare to a sexual assault survivor.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-432, eff. 1-1-08.) |
Section 80. The Consent by Minors to Medical Procedures Act |
is amended by changing Sections 1, 1.5, 2, and 3 as follows:
|
|
(410 ILCS 210/1) (from Ch. 111, par. 4501)
|
Sec. 1. Consent by minor. The consent to the performance of |
a medical or
surgical procedure
by a physician licensed to |
practice medicine and surgery, a licensed an advanced practice |
nurse who has a written collaborative agreement with a |
collaborating physician that authorizes provision of services |
for minors , or a licensed physician assistant who has been |
delegated authority to provide services for minors executed by |
a
married person who is a minor, by a parent who is a minor, by |
a pregnant
woman who is a minor, or by
any person 18 years of |
age or older, is not voidable because of such
minority, and, |
for such purpose, a married person who is a minor, a parent
who |
is a minor, a
pregnant woman who is a minor, or any person 18 |
years of age or older, is
deemed to have the same legal |
capacity to act and has the same powers and
obligations as has |
a person of legal age.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-962, eff. 8-20-04.)
|
(410 ILCS 210/1.5) |
Sec. 1.5. Consent by minor seeking care for primary care |
services. |
(a) The consent to the performance of primary care services |
by a physician licensed to practice medicine in all its |
branches, a licensed an advanced practice nurse who has a |
written collaborative agreement with a collaborating physician |
that authorizes provision of services for minors , or a licensed |
|
physician assistant who has been delegated authority to provide |
services for minors executed by a minor seeking care is not |
voidable because of such minority, and for such purpose, a |
minor seeking care is deemed to have the same legal capacity to |
act and has the same powers and obligations as has a person of |
legal age under the following circumstances: |
(1) the health care professional reasonably believes |
that the minor seeking care understands the benefits and |
risks of any proposed primary care or services; and |
(2) the minor seeking care is identified in writing as |
a minor seeking care by: |
(A) an adult relative; |
(B) a representative of a homeless service agency |
that receives federal, State, county, or municipal |
funding to provide those services or that is otherwise |
sanctioned by a local continuum of care; |
(C) an attorney licensed to practice law in this |
State; |
(D) a public school homeless liaison or school |
social worker; |
(E) a social service agency providing services to |
at risk, homeless, or runaway youth; or |
(F) a representative of a religious organization. |
(b) A health care professional rendering primary care |
services under this Section shall not incur civil or criminal |
liability for failure to obtain valid consent or professional |
|
discipline for failure to obtain valid consent if he or she |
relied in good faith on the representations made by the minor |
or the information provided under paragraph (2) of subsection |
(a) of this Section. Under such circumstances, good faith shall |
be presumed. |
(c) The confidential nature of any communication between a |
health care professional described in Section 1 of this Act and |
a minor seeking care is not waived (1) by the presence, at the |
time of communication, of any additional persons present at the |
request of the minor seeking care, (2) by the health care |
professional's disclosure of confidential information to the |
additional person with the consent of the minor seeking care, |
when reasonably necessary to accomplish the purpose for which |
the additional person is consulted, or (3) by the health care |
professional billing a health benefit insurance or plan under |
which the minor seeking care is insured, is enrolled, or has |
coverage for the services provided. |
(d) Nothing in this Section shall be construed to limit or |
expand a minor's existing powers and obligations under any |
federal, State, or local law. Nothing in this Section shall be |
construed to affect the Parental Notice of Abortion Act of |
1995. Nothing in this Section affects the right or authority of |
a parent or legal guardian to verbally, in writing, or |
otherwise authorize health care services to be provided for a |
minor in their absence. |
(e) For the purposes of this Section: |
|
"Minor seeking care" means a person at least 14 years |
of age but less than 18 years of age who is living separate |
and apart from his or her parents or legal guardian, |
whether with or without the consent of a parent or legal |
guardian who is unable or unwilling to return to the |
residence of a parent, and managing his or her own personal |
affairs. "Minor seeking care" does not include minors who |
are under the protective custody, temporary custody, or |
guardianship of the Department of Children and Family |
Services. |
"Primary care services" means health care services |
that include screening, counseling, immunizations, |
medication, and treatment of illness and conditions |
customarily provided by licensed health care professionals |
in an out-patient setting. "Primary care services" does not |
include invasive care, beyond standard injections, |
laceration care, or non-surgical fracture care.
|
(Source: P.A. 98-671, eff. 10-1-14.)
|
(410 ILCS 210/2) (from Ch. 111, par. 4502)
|
Sec. 2. Any parent, including a parent who is a minor, may |
consent to the
performance upon his or her child of a medical |
or surgical procedure by a
physician licensed to practice |
medicine and surgery, a licensed an advanced practice nurse who |
has a written collaborative agreement with a collaborating |
physician that authorizes provision of services for minors , or |
|
a licensed physician assistant who has been delegated authority |
to provide services for minors or a dental procedure
by a |
licensed dentist. The consent of a parent who is a minor shall |
not be
voidable because of such minority, but, for such |
purpose, a parent who is a
minor shall be deemed to have the |
same legal capacity to act and shall have
the same powers and |
obligations as has a person of legal age.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-962, eff. 8-20-04.)
|
(410 ILCS 210/3) (from Ch. 111, par. 4503)
|
Sec. 3. (a) Where a hospital, a physician licensed to |
practice medicine
or surgery, a licensed an advanced practice |
nurse who has a written collaborative agreement with a |
collaborating physician that authorizes provision of services |
for minors , or a licensed physician assistant who has been |
delegated authority to provide services for minors renders |
emergency treatment or first aid or a licensed dentist
renders |
emergency dental treatment to a minor, consent of the minor's |
parent
or legal guardian need not be obtained if, in the sole |
opinion of the
physician,
advanced practice nurse, physician |
assistant,
dentist, or hospital, the obtaining of consent is |
not reasonably feasible
under the circumstances without |
adversely affecting the condition of such
minor's health.
|
(b) Where a minor is the victim of a predatory criminal |
sexual assault of
a child, aggravated criminal sexual assault, |
criminal sexual assault,
aggravated criminal sexual abuse or |
|
criminal sexual abuse, as provided in
Sections 11-1.20 through |
11-1.60 of the Criminal Code of 2012, the consent
of the |
minor's parent or legal guardian need not be obtained to |
authorize
a hospital, physician, advanced practice nurse, |
physician assistant, or other medical personnel to furnish |
medical care
or counseling related to the diagnosis or |
treatment of any disease or injury
arising from such offense. |
The minor may consent to such counseling, diagnosis
or |
treatment as if the minor had reached his or her age of |
majority. Such
consent shall not be voidable, nor subject to |
later disaffirmance, because
of minority.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-1551, eff. 7-1-11; 97-1150, eff. 1-25-13.)
|
Section 85. 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:
|
"Advanced practice nurse" or "APN" means an advanced |
practice nurse licensed under the Nurse Practice Act who has a |
written collaborative agreement with a collaborating physician |
that authorizes the provision of prenatal and newborn care .
|
"Department" means the Illinois Department of Human |
Services.
|
"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.
|
"Hospital" means a hospital as defined under the Hospital |
Licensing Act.
|
"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.
|
"Nurse" means a nurse licensed under the Nurse Practice |
Act.
|
"Physician" means a physician licensed to practice |
medicine in all of
its branches.
|
"Physician assistant" means a physician assistant licensed |
under the Physician Assistant Practice Act of 1987 who has been |
delegated authority to provide prenatal and newborn care .
|
"Postnatal visit" means a visit occurring after birth, with
|
reference to the newborn.
|
"Prenatal visit" means a visit occurring before birth.
|
"Program" means the Prenatal and Newborn Care Program |
established
pursuant to this Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-639, eff. 10-5-07.)
|
Section 90. The AIDS Confidentiality Act is amended by |
changing Section 3 as follows:
|
|
(410 ILCS 305/3) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 7303)
|
Sec. 3. When used in this Act:
|
(a) "AIDS" means acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. |
(b) "Authority" means the Illinois Health Information |
Exchange Authority established pursuant to the Illinois Health |
Information Exchange and Technology Act. |
(c) "Business associate" has the meaning ascribed to it |
under HIPAA, as specified in 45 CFR 160.103. |
(d) "Covered entity" has the meaning ascribed to it under |
HIPAA, as specified in 45 CFR 160.103. |
(e) "De-identified information" means health information |
that is not individually identifiable as described under HIPAA, |
as specified in 45 CFR 164.514(b). |
(f) "Department" means the Illinois Department of Public |
Health or its designated agents.
|
(g) "Disclosure" has the meaning ascribed to it under |
HIPAA, as specified in 45 CFR 160.103. |
(h) "Health care operations" has the meaning ascribed to it |
under HIPAA, as specified in 45 CFR 164.501. |
(i) "Health care professional" means (i) a licensed |
physician, (ii) a licensed
physician assistant
to whom the |
physician assistant's supervising physician has delegated the
|
provision of AIDS and
HIV-related health services , (iii) a |
licensed an advanced practice registered nurse who
has a |
written
collaborative agreement with a collaborating physician |
|
which authorizes the
provision of AIDS
and HIV-related health |
services , (iv) a licensed dentist, (v) a licensed podiatric |
physician, or (vi) an
individual certified to provide HIV |
testing and counseling by a state or local
public health
|
department. |
(j) "Health care provider" has the meaning ascribed to it |
under HIPAA, as specified in 45 CFR 160.103.
|
(k) "Health facility" means a hospital, nursing home, blood |
bank, blood
center, sperm bank, or other health care |
institution, including any "health
facility" as that term is |
defined in the Illinois Finance Authority
Act.
|
(l) "Health information exchange" or "HIE" means a health |
information exchange or health information organization that |
oversees and governs the electronic exchange of health |
information that (i) is established pursuant to the Illinois |
Health Information Exchange and Technology Act, or any |
subsequent amendments thereto, and any administrative rules |
adopted thereunder; (ii) has established a data sharing |
arrangement with the Authority; or (iii) as of August 16, 2013, |
was designated by the Authority Board as a member of, or was |
represented on, the Authority Board's Regional Health |
Information Exchange Workgroup; provided that such designation
|
shall not require the establishment of a data sharing |
arrangement or other participation with the Illinois Health
|
Information Exchange or the payment of any fee. In certain |
circumstances, in accordance with HIPAA, an HIE will be a |
|
business associate. |
(m) "Health oversight agency" has the meaning ascribed to |
it under HIPAA, as specified in 45 CFR 164.501. |
(n) "HIPAA" means the Health Insurance Portability and |
Accountability Act of 1996, Public Law 104-191, as amended by |
the Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical |
Health Act of 2009, Public Law 111-05, and any subsequent |
amendments thereto and any regulations promulgated thereunder. |
(o) "HIV" means the human immunodeficiency virus. |
(p) "HIV-related information" means the identity of a |
person upon whom an HIV test is performed, the results of an |
HIV test, as well as diagnosis, treatment, and prescription |
information that reveals a patient is HIV-positive, including |
such information contained in a limited data set. "HIV-related |
information" does not include information that has been |
de-identified in accordance with HIPAA. |
(q) "Informed consent" means a written or verbal
agreement |
by the subject of a test or the subject's
legally authorized |
representative without undue inducement or any element
of |
force, fraud, deceit, duress, or other form of constraint or |
coercion,
which entails at least the following pre-test |
information: |
(1) a fair explanation of the test, including its |
purpose, potential
uses, limitations, and the meaning of |
its results; |
(2) a fair explanation of the procedures to be |
|
followed, including the
voluntary nature of the test, the |
right to withdraw consent to the testing
process at any |
time, the right to anonymity to the extent provided by law
|
with respect to participation in the test and disclosure of |
test results,
and the right to confidential treatment of
|
information identifying the subject of the test and the |
results of the
test, to the extent provided by law; and |
(3) where the person providing informed consent is a |
participant in an HIE, a fair explanation that the results |
of the patient's HIV test will be accessible through an HIE |
and meaningful disclosure of the patient's opt-out right |
under Section 9.6 of this Act. |
Pre-test information may be provided in writing, verbally, |
or by video, electronic, or other means. The subject must be |
offered an opportunity to ask questions about the HIV test and |
decline testing. Nothing in this Act shall prohibit a health |
care provider or health care professional from combining a form |
used to obtain informed consent for HIV testing with forms used |
to obtain written consent for general medical care or any other |
medical test or procedure provided that the forms make it clear |
that the subject may consent to general medical care, tests, or |
medical procedures without being required to consent to HIV |
testing and clearly explain how the subject may opt out of HIV |
testing. |
(r) "Limited data set" has the meaning ascribed to it under |
HIPAA, as described in 45 CFR 164.514(e)(2). |
|
(s) "Minimum necessary" means the HIPAA standard for using, |
disclosing, and requesting protected health information found |
in 45 CFR 164.502(b) and 164.514(d). |
(t) "Organized health care arrangement" has the meaning |
ascribed to it under HIPAA, as specified in 45 CFR 160.103. |
(u) "Patient safety activities" has the meaning ascribed to |
it under 42 CFR 3.20. |
(v) "Payment" has the meaning ascribed to it under HIPAA, |
as specified in 45 CFR 164.501. |
(w) "Person" includes any natural person, partnership, |
association, joint venture, trust, governmental entity, public |
or private corporation, health facility, or other legal entity. |
(x) "Protected health information" has the meaning |
ascribed to it under HIPAA, as specified in 45 CFR 160.103. |
(y) "Research" has the meaning ascribed to it under HIPAA, |
as specified in 45 CFR 164.501. |
(z) "State agency" means an instrumentality of the State of |
Illinois and any instrumentality of another state that, |
pursuant to applicable law or a written undertaking with an |
instrumentality of the State of Illinois, is bound to protect |
the privacy of HIV-related information of Illinois persons.
|
(aa) "Test" or "HIV test" means a test to determine the |
presence of the
antibody or antigen to HIV, or of HIV |
infection.
|
(bb) "Treatment" has the meaning ascribed to it under |
HIPAA, as specified in 45 CFR 164.501. |
|
(cc) "Use" has the meaning ascribed to it under HIPAA, as |
specified in 45 CFR 160.103, where context dictates.
|
(Source: P.A. 98-214, eff. 8-9-13; 98-1046, eff. 1-1-15 .) |
Section 95. The Illinois Sexually Transmissible Disease |
Control Act is amended by changing Sections 3 and 4 as follows:
|
(410 ILCS 325/3) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 7403)
|
Sec. 3. Definitions. As used in this Act, unless the |
context clearly
requires otherwise:
|
(1) "Department" means the Department of Public Health.
|
(2) "Local health authority" means the full-time official |
health
department of board of health, as recognized by the |
Department, having
jurisdiction over a particular area.
|
(3) "Sexually transmissible disease" means a bacterial, |
viral, fungal or
parasitic disease, determined by rule of the |
Department to be sexually
transmissible, to be a threat to the |
public health and welfare, and to be a
disease for which a |
legitimate public interest will be served by providing
for |
regulation and treatment. In considering which diseases are to |
be
designated sexually transmissible diseases, the Department |
shall consider
such diseases as chancroid, gonorrhea, |
granuloma inguinale, lymphogranuloma
venereum, genital herpes |
simplex, chlamydia, nongonococcal urethritis
(NGU), pelvic |
inflammatory disease (PID)/Acute
Salpingitis, syphilis, |
Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS), and Human
|
|
Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) for designation, and shall |
consider the
recommendations and classifications of the |
Centers for Disease Control and
other nationally recognized |
medical authorities. Not all diseases that are
sexually |
transmissible need be designated for purposes of this Act.
|
(4) "Health care professional" means a physician licensed |
to practice medicine in all its branches, a licensed physician |
assistant who has been delegated the provision of sexually |
transmissible disease therapy services or expedited partner |
therapy services by his or her supervising physician , or a |
licensed an advanced practice nurse who has a written |
collaborative agreement with a collaborating physician that |
authorizes the provision of sexually transmissible disease |
therapy services or expedited partner therapy services, or an |
advanced practice nurse who practices in a hospital or |
ambulatory surgical treatment center and possesses appropriate |
clinical privileges in accordance with the Nurse Practice Act . |
(5) "Expedited partner therapy" means to prescribe, |
dispense, furnish, or otherwise provide prescription |
antibiotic drugs to the partner or partners of persons |
clinically diagnosed as infected with a sexually transmissible |
disease, without physical examination of the partner or |
partners. |
(Source: P.A. 96-613, eff. 1-1-10.)
|
(410 ILCS 325/4) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 7404)
|
|
Sec. 4. Reporting required.
|
(a) A physician licensed under the provisions of the |
Medical Practice Act
of 1987, an advanced practice nurse |
licensed under the provisions of the Nurse Practice Act who has |
a written collaborative agreement with a collaborating |
physician that authorizes the provision of services for a |
sexually transmissible disease , or a physician assistant |
licensed under the provisions of the Physician Assistant |
Practice Act of 1987 who has been delegated authority to |
provide services for a sexually transmissible disease
who makes |
a diagnosis of or treats a person with a sexually
transmissible |
disease and each laboratory that performs a test for a sexually
|
transmissible disease which concludes with a positive result |
shall report such
facts as may be required by the Department by |
rule, within such time period as
the Department may require by |
rule, but in no case to exceed 2 weeks.
|
(b) The Department shall adopt rules specifying the |
information
required in reporting a sexually transmissible |
disease, the method of
reporting and specifying a minimum time |
period for reporting. In adopting
such rules, the Department |
shall consider the need for information,
protections for the |
privacy and confidentiality of the patient, and the
practical |
abilities of persons and laboratories to report in a reasonable
|
fashion.
|
(c) Any person who knowingly or maliciously disseminates |
any false
information or report concerning the existence of any |
|
sexually
transmissible disease under this Section is guilty of |
a Class A misdemeanor.
|
(d) Any person who violates the provisions of this Section |
or the rules
adopted hereunder may be fined by the Department |
up to $500 for each
violation. The Department shall report each |
violation of this Section to
the regulatory agency responsible |
for licensing a health care professional
or a laboratory to |
which these provisions apply.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-639, eff. 10-5-07.)
|
Section 100. The Perinatal HIV Prevention Act is amended by |
changing Section 5 as follows:
|
(410 ILCS 335/5)
|
Sec. 5. Definitions. In this Act:
|
"Department" means the Department of Public Health.
|
"Health care professional" means a physician licensed to |
practice
medicine in all its branches, a licensed physician |
assistant who has been delegated the
provision of health |
services by his or her supervising physician , or a licensed an
|
advanced
practice registered nurse who has a written |
collaborative agreement with a
collaborating physician that |
authorizes the provision of health services .
|
"Health care facility" or "facility" means any hospital or |
other
institution that is licensed or otherwise authorized to |
deliver health care
services.
|
|
"Health care services" means any prenatal medical care or |
labor or
delivery services to a pregnant woman and her newborn |
infant, including
hospitalization.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-566, eff. 8-20-03; 94-910, eff. 6-23-06.)
|
Section 105. The Genetic Information Privacy Act is amended |
by changing Section 10 as follows:
|
(410 ILCS 513/10)
|
Sec. 10. Definitions. As used in this Act:
|
"Authority" means the Illinois Health Information Exchange |
Authority established pursuant to the Illinois Health |
Information Exchange and Technology Act. |
"Business associate" has the meaning ascribed to it under |
HIPAA, as specified in 45 CFR 160.103. |
"Covered entity" has the meaning ascribed to it under |
HIPAA, as specified in 45 CFR 160.103. |
"De-identified information" means health information that |
is not individually identifiable as described under HIPAA, as |
specified in 45 CFR 164.514(b). |
"Disclosure" has the meaning ascribed to it under HIPAA, as |
specified in 45 CFR 160.103. |
"Employer" means the State of Illinois, any unit of local |
government, and any board, commission, department, |
institution, or school district, any party to a public |
contract, any joint apprenticeship or training committee |
|
within the State, and every other person employing employees |
within the State. |
"Employment agency" means both public and private |
employment agencies and any person, labor organization, or |
labor union having a hiring hall or hiring office regularly |
undertaking, with or without compensation, to procure |
opportunities to work, or to procure, recruit, refer, or place |
employees. |
"Family member" means, with respect to an individual, (i) |
the spouse of the individual; (ii) a dependent child of the |
individual, including a child who is born to or placed for |
adoption with the individual; (iii) any other person qualifying |
as a covered dependent under a managed care plan; and (iv) all |
other individuals related by blood or law to the individual or |
the spouse or child described in subsections (i) through (iii) |
of this definition. |
"Genetic information" has the meaning ascribed to it under |
HIPAA, as specified in 45 CFR 160.103. |
"Genetic monitoring" means the periodic examination of |
employees to evaluate acquired modifications to their genetic |
material, such as chromosomal damage or evidence of increased |
occurrence of mutations that may have developed in the course |
of employment due to exposure to toxic substances in the |
workplace in order to identify, evaluate, and respond to |
effects of or control adverse environmental exposures in the |
workplace. |
|
"Genetic services" has the meaning ascribed to it under |
HIPAA, as specified in 45 CFR 160.103. |
"Genetic testing" and "genetic test" have the meaning |
ascribed to "genetic test" under HIPAA, as specified in 45 CFR |
160.103. |
"Health care operations" has the meaning ascribed to it |
under HIPAA, as specified in 45 CFR 164.501. |
"Health care professional" means (i) a licensed physician, |
(ii) a licensed physician assistant to whom the physician |
assistant's supervising physician has delegated the provision |
of genetic testing or genetic counseling-related services , |
(iii) a licensed an advanced practice registered nurse who has |
a written collaborative agreement with a collaborating |
physician which authorizes the provision of genetic testing or |
genetic counseling-related health services , (iv) a licensed |
dentist, (v) a licensed podiatrist, (vi) a licensed genetic |
counselor, or (vii) an individual certified to provide genetic |
testing by a state or local public health department. |
"Health care provider" has the meaning ascribed to it under |
HIPAA, as specified in 45 CFR 160.103. |
"Health facility" means a hospital, blood bank, blood |
center, sperm bank, or other health care institution, including |
any "health facility" as that term is defined in the Illinois |
Finance Authority Act. |
"Health information exchange" or "HIE" means a health |
information exchange or health information organization that |
|
exchanges health information electronically that (i) is |
established pursuant to the Illinois Health Information |
Exchange and Technology Act, or any subsequent amendments |
thereto, and any administrative rules promulgated thereunder; |
(ii) has established a data sharing arrangement with the |
Authority; or (iii) as of August 16, 2013, was designated by |
the Authority Board as a member of, or was represented on, the |
Authority Board's Regional Health Information Exchange |
Workgroup; provided that such designation
shall not require the |
establishment of a data sharing arrangement or other |
participation with the Illinois Health
Information Exchange or |
the payment of any fee. In certain circumstances, in accordance |
with HIPAA, an HIE will be a business associate. |
"Health oversight agency" has the meaning ascribed to it |
under HIPAA, as specified in 45 CFR 164.501. |
"HIPAA" means the Health Insurance Portability and |
Accountability Act of 1996, Public Law 104-191, as amended by |
the Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical |
Health Act of 2009, Public Law 111-05, and any subsequent |
amendments thereto and any regulations promulgated thereunder.
|
"Insurer" means (i) an entity that is subject to the |
jurisdiction of the Director of Insurance and (ii) a
managed |
care plan.
|
"Labor organization" includes any organization, labor |
union, craft union, or any voluntary unincorporated |
association designed to further the cause of the rights of |
|
union labor that is constituted for the purpose, in whole or in |
part, of collective bargaining or of dealing with employers |
concerning grievances, terms or conditions of employment, or |
apprenticeships or applications for apprenticeships, or of |
other mutual aid or protection in connection with employment, |
including apprenticeships or applications for apprenticeships. |
"Licensing agency" means a board, commission, committee, |
council, department, or officers, except a judicial officer, in |
this State or any political subdivision authorized to grant, |
deny, renew, revoke, suspend, annul, withdraw, or amend a |
license or certificate of registration. |
"Limited data set" has the meaning ascribed to it under |
HIPAA, as described in 45 CFR 164.514(e)(2). |
"Managed care plan" means a plan that establishes, |
operates, or maintains a
network of health care providers that |
have entered into agreements with the
plan to provide health |
care services to enrollees where the plan has the
ultimate and |
direct contractual obligation to the enrollee to arrange for |
the
provision of or pay for services
through:
|
(1) organizational arrangements for ongoing quality |
assurance,
utilization review programs, or dispute |
resolution; or
|
(2) financial incentives for persons enrolled in the |
plan to use the
participating providers and procedures |
covered by the plan.
|
A managed care plan may be established or operated by any |
|
entity including
a licensed insurance company, hospital or |
medical service plan, health
maintenance organization, limited |
health service organization, preferred
provider organization, |
third party administrator, or an employer or employee
|
organization.
|
"Minimum necessary" means HIPAA's standard for using, |
disclosing, and requesting protected health information found |
in 45 CFR 164.502(b) and 164.514(d). |
"Nontherapeutic purpose" means a purpose that is not |
intended to improve or preserve the life or health of the |
individual whom the information concerns. |
"Organized health care arrangement" has the meaning |
ascribed to it under HIPAA, as specified in 45 CFR 160.103. |
"Patient safety activities" has the meaning ascribed to it |
under 42 CFR 3.20. |
"Payment" has the meaning ascribed to it under HIPAA, as |
specified in 45 CFR 164.501. |
"Person" includes any natural person, partnership, |
association, joint venture, trust, governmental entity, public |
or private corporation, health facility, or other legal entity. |
"Protected health information" has the meaning ascribed to |
it under HIPAA, as specified in 45 CFR 164.103. |
"Research" has the meaning ascribed to it under HIPAA, as |
specified in 45 CFR 164.501. |
"State agency" means an instrumentality of the State of |
Illinois and any instrumentality of another state which |
|
pursuant to applicable law or a written undertaking with an |
instrumentality of the State of Illinois is bound to protect |
the privacy of genetic information of Illinois persons. |
"Treatment" has the meaning ascribed to it under HIPAA, as |
specified in 45 CFR 164.501. |
"Use" has the meaning ascribed to it under HIPAA, as |
specified in 45 CFR 160.103, where context dictates. |
(Source: P.A. 98-1046, eff. 1-1-15 .)
|
Section 110. The Home Health and Hospice Drug Dispensation |
and Administration Act is amended by changing Section 10 as |
follows: |
(410 ILCS 642/10)
|
Sec. 10. Definitions. In this Act: |
"Authorized nursing employee" means a registered nurse or |
advanced practice nurse, as defined in the Nurse Practice Act, |
who is employed by a home health agency or hospice licensed in |
this State. |
"Health care professional" means a physician licensed to |
practice medicine in all its branches, a licensed an advanced |
practice nurse who has a written collaborative agreement with a |
collaborating physician that authorizes services under this |
Act , or a licensed physician assistant who has been delegated |
the authority to perform services under this Act by his or her |
supervising physician . |
|
"Home health agency" has the meaning ascribed to it in |
Section 2.04 of the Home Health, Home Services, and Home |
Nursing Agency Licensing Act.
|
"Hospice" means a full hospice, as defined in Section 3 of |
the Hospice Program Licensing Act. |
"Physician" means a physician licensed under the Medical |
Practice Act of 1987 to practice medicine in all its branches.
|
(Source: P.A. 94-638, eff. 8-22-05; 95-331, eff. 8-21-07; |
95-639, eff. 10-5-07.) |
Section 115. The Illinois Vehicle Code is amended by |
changing Sections 1-159.1, 3-616, 6-103, 6-106.1, and 6-901 as |
follows:
|
(625 ILCS 5/1-159.1) (from Ch. 95 1/2, par. 1-159.1)
|
Sec. 1-159.1. Person with disabilities. A natural person |
who, as determined by a licensed physician, by a licensed |
physician
assistant who has been delegated the authority to |
make this determination by
his or her supervising physician , or |
by a licensed an advanced practice nurse who has a
written |
collaborative agreement with a collaborating physician that |
authorizes
the advanced practice nurse to make this |
determination : (1) cannot walk
without the use of, or
|
assistance from, a brace, cane, crutch, another person, |
prosthetic device,
wheelchair, or other assistive device; (2) |
is restricted by lung
disease to
such an extent that his or her |
|
forced (respiratory) expiratory volume for one
second, when |
measured by spirometry, is less than one liter, or the arterial
|
oxygen tension is less than 60 mm/hg on room air at rest; (3) |
uses
portable
oxygen; (4) has a cardiac condition to the extent |
that the person's
functional
limitations are classified in |
severity as Class III or Class IV,
according to standards set |
by the American Heart Association; (5) is
severely limited in |
the person's ability to walk due to an arthritic,
neurological, |
oncological, or orthopedic condition; (6) cannot walk 200 feet |
without
stopping to rest because of one of the above 5 |
conditions; or (7) is missing a hand or arm or has permanently |
lost the use of a hand or arm.
|
(Source: P.A. 98-405, eff. 1-1-14.)
|
(625 ILCS 5/3-616) (from Ch. 95 1/2, par. 3-616)
|
Sec. 3-616. Disability license plates.
|
(a) Upon receiving an application for a certificate of |
registration for
a motor vehicle of the first division or for a |
motor vehicle of the second
division weighing no more than |
8,000 pounds, accompanied with payment of the
registration fees |
required under this Code from a person with disabilities or
a |
person who is deaf or hard of hearing, the Secretary of State,
|
if so requested, shall issue to such person registration plates |
as provided for
in Section 3-611, provided that the person with |
disabilities or person who is
deaf or hard of hearing must not |
be disqualified from obtaining a driver's
license under |
|
subsection 8 of Section 6-103 of this Code, and further |
provided
that any person making such a request must submit a |
statement, certified by
a
licensed physician, by a licensed |
physician assistant who has been delegated the
authority to |
make this certification by his or her supervising physician , or |
by a licensed
an advanced practice nurse who has a written |
collaborative agreement with a
collaborating physician that |
authorizes the advanced practice nurse to make
this |
certification , to
the effect that such person is a person with |
disabilities
as defined by Section 1-159.1 of this Code, or |
alternatively provide adequate
documentation that such person |
has a Class 1A, Class 2A or Type Four
disability under the |
provisions of Section 4A of the Illinois Identification
Card |
Act. For purposes of this Section, an Illinois Person
with a |
Disability Identification Card issued pursuant to the Illinois |
Identification Card Act
indicating that the person thereon |
named has a disability shall be adequate
documentation of such |
a disability.
|
(b) The Secretary shall issue plates under this Section to |
a parent or
legal guardian of a person with disabilities if the |
person with disabilities
has a Class 1A or Class 2A disability |
as defined in Section 4A of the Illinois
Identification Card |
Act or is a person with disabilities as defined by Section
|
1-159.1 of this Code, and does not possess a vehicle registered |
in his or her
name, provided that the person with disabilities |
relies frequently on the
parent or legal guardian for |
|
transportation. Only one vehicle per family
may be registered |
under this subsection, unless the applicant can justify in
|
writing the need for one additional set of plates. Any person |
requesting
special plates under this subsection shall submit |
such documentation or such
physician's, physician assistant's, |
or advanced practice nurse's
statement as is required in |
subsection
(a) and a statement
describing the circumstances |
qualifying for issuance of special plates under
this |
subsection. An optometrist may certify a Class 2A Visual |
Disability, as defined in Section 4A of the Illinois |
Identification Card Act, for the purpose of qualifying a person |
with disabilities for special plates under this subsection.
|
(c) The Secretary may issue a
parking decal or
device to a |
person with disabilities as defined by Section 1-159.1 without
|
regard to qualification of such person with disabilities for a |
driver's license
or registration of a vehicle by such person |
with disabilities or such person's
immediate family, provided |
such person with disabilities making such a request
has been |
issued an Illinois Person with a Disability Identification Card |
indicating that the
person named thereon has a Class 1A or |
Class 2A disability, or alternatively,
submits a statement |
certified by a licensed physician, or by a licensed physician
|
assistant or a licensed an advanced practice nurse as provided |
in subsection (a), to
the effect that such
person is a person |
with disabilities as defined by Section 1-159.1. An optometrist |
may certify a Class 2A Visual Disability as defined in Section |
|
4A of the Illinois Identification Card Act for the purpose of |
qualifying a person with disabilities for a parking decal or |
device under this subsection.
|
(d) The Secretary shall prescribe by rules and regulations |
procedures
to certify or re-certify as necessary the |
eligibility of persons whose
disabilities are other than |
permanent for special plates or
parking decals or devices |
issued under subsections (a), (b)
and (c). Except as provided |
under subsection (f) of this Section, no
such special plates, |
decals or devices shall be issued by the Secretary of
State to |
or on behalf of any person with disabilities unless such person |
is
certified as meeting the definition of a person with |
disabilities pursuant to
Section 1-159.1 or meeting the |
requirement of a Type Four disability as
provided under Section |
4A of the Illinois Identification Card Act for the
period of |
time that the physician, or the physician assistant or advanced
|
practice nurse as provided in
subsection (a), determines the |
applicant will have the
disability, but not to exceed 6 months |
from the date of certification or
recertification.
|
(e) Any person requesting special plates under this Section |
may also apply
to have the special plates personalized, as |
provided under Section 3-405.1.
|
(f) The Secretary of State, upon application, shall issue |
disability registration plates or a parking decal to
|
corporations, school districts, State or municipal agencies, |
limited liability
companies, nursing homes, convalescent |
|
homes, or special education cooperatives
which will transport |
persons with disabilities. The Secretary shall prescribe
by |
rule a means to certify or re-certify the eligibility of |
organizations to
receive disability plates or decals and to |
designate which of the
2 person with disabilities emblems shall |
be placed on qualifying
vehicles.
|
(g) The Secretary of State, or his designee, may enter into
|
agreements with other jurisdictions, including foreign |
jurisdictions, on
behalf of this State relating to the |
extension of parking privileges by
such jurisdictions to |
permanently disabled residents of this State who
display a |
special license plate or parking device that contains the
|
International symbol of access on his or her motor vehicle, and |
to
recognize such plates or devices issued by such other |
jurisdictions. This
State shall grant the same parking |
privileges which are granted to disabled
residents of this |
State to any non-resident whose motor vehicle is licensed
in |
another state, district, territory or foreign country if such |
vehicle
displays the international symbol of access or a |
distinguishing insignia on
license plates or parking device |
issued in accordance with the laws of the
non-resident's state, |
district, territory or foreign country.
|
(Source: P.A. 97-1064, eff. 1-1-13.)
|
(625 ILCS 5/6-103) (from Ch. 95 1/2, par. 6-103)
|
Sec. 6-103. What persons shall not be licensed as drivers |
|
or granted
permits. The Secretary of State shall not issue, |
renew, or
allow the retention of any driver's
license nor issue |
any permit under this Code:
|
1. To any person, as a driver, who is under the age of |
18 years except
as provided in Section 6-107, and except |
that an instruction permit may be
issued under Section |
6-107.1 to a child who
is not less than 15 years of age if |
the child is enrolled in an approved
driver education |
course as defined in Section 1-103 of this Code and
|
requires an instruction permit to participate therein, |
except that an
instruction permit may be issued under the |
provisions of Section 6-107.1
to a child who is 17 years |
and 3 months of age without the child having
enrolled in an
|
approved driver education course and except that an
|
instruction permit may be issued to a child who is at least |
15 years and 3
months of age, is enrolled in school, meets |
the educational requirements of
the Driver Education Act, |
and has passed examinations the Secretary of State in
his |
or her discretion may prescribe;
|
1.5. To any person at least 18 years of age but less |
than 21 years of age unless the person has, in addition to |
any other requirements of this Code, successfully |
completed an adult driver education course as provided in |
Section 6-107.5 of this Code;
|
2. To any person who is under the age of 18 as an |
operator of a motorcycle
other than a motor driven cycle |
|
unless the person has, in addition to
meeting the |
provisions of Section 6-107 of this Code, successfully
|
completed a motorcycle
training course approved by the |
Illinois Department of Transportation and
successfully |
completes the required Secretary of State's motorcycle |
driver's
examination;
|
3. To any person, as a driver, whose driver's license |
or permit has been
suspended, during the suspension, nor to |
any person whose driver's license or
permit has been |
revoked, except as provided in Sections 6-205, 6-206, and
|
6-208;
|
4. To any person, as a driver, who is a user of alcohol |
or any other
drug to a degree that renders the person |
incapable of safely driving a motor
vehicle;
|
5. To any person, as a driver, who has previously been |
adjudged to be
afflicted with or suffering from any mental |
or physical disability or disease
and who has not at the |
time of application been restored to competency by the
|
methods provided by law;
|
6. To any person, as a driver, who is required by the |
Secretary of State
to submit an alcohol and drug evaluation |
or take an examination provided
for in this Code unless the |
person has
successfully passed the examination and |
submitted any required evaluation;
|
7. To any person who is required under the provisions |
of the laws of
this State to deposit security or proof of |
|
financial responsibility and who
has not deposited the |
security or proof;
|
8. To any person when the Secretary of State has good |
cause to believe
that the person by reason of physical or |
mental disability would not be
able to safely operate a |
motor vehicle upon the highways, unless the
person shall |
furnish to the Secretary of State a verified written
|
statement, acceptable to the Secretary of State, from a |
competent medical
specialist, a licensed physician |
assistant who has been delegated the performance of medical |
examinations by his or her supervising physician , or a |
licensed advanced practice nurse who has a written |
collaborative agreement with a collaborating physician |
which authorizes him or her to perform medical |
examinations , to the effect that the operation of a motor |
vehicle by the
person would not be inimical to the public |
safety;
|
9. To any person, as a driver, who is 69 years of age |
or older, unless
the person has successfully complied with |
the provisions of Section 6-109;
|
10. To any person convicted, within 12 months of |
application for a
license, of any of the sexual offenses |
enumerated in paragraph 2 of subsection
(b) of Section |
6-205;
|
11. To any person who is under the age of 21 years with |
a classification
prohibited in paragraph (b) of Section |
|
6-104 and to any person who is under
the age of 18 years |
with a classification prohibited in paragraph (c) of
|
Section 6-104;
|
12. To any person who has been either convicted of or |
adjudicated under
the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 based upon |
a violation of the Cannabis Control
Act, the Illinois |
Controlled Substances Act, or the Methamphetamine Control |
and Community Protection Act while that person was in |
actual
physical control of a motor vehicle. For purposes of |
this Section, any person
placed on probation under Section |
10 of the Cannabis Control Act, Section 410
of the Illinois |
Controlled Substances Act, or Section 70 of the |
Methamphetamine Control and Community Protection Act shall |
not be considered convicted.
Any person found guilty of |
this offense, while in actual physical control of a
motor |
vehicle, shall have an entry made in the court record by |
the judge that
this offense did occur while the person was |
in actual physical control of a
motor vehicle and order the |
clerk of the court to report the violation to the
Secretary |
of State as such. The Secretary of State shall not issue a |
new
license or permit for a period of one year;
|
13. To any person who is under the age of 18 years and |
who has committed
the offense
of operating a motor vehicle |
without a valid license or permit in violation of
Section |
6-101 or a similar out of state offense;
|
14. To any person who is
90 days or more
delinquent in |
|
court ordered child support
payments or has been |
adjudicated in arrears
in an amount equal to 90 days' |
obligation or more
and who has been found in contempt
of
|
court for failure to pay the support, subject to the |
requirements and
procedures of Article VII of Chapter 7 of
|
the Illinois Vehicle Code;
|
14.5. To any person certified by the Illinois |
Department of Healthcare and Family Services as being 90 |
days or more delinquent in payment of support under an |
order of support entered by a court or administrative body |
of this or any other State, subject to the requirements and |
procedures of Article VII of Chapter 7 of this Code |
regarding those certifications;
|
15. To any person released from a term of imprisonment |
for violating
Section 9-3 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or |
the Criminal Code of 2012, or a similar provision of a law |
of another state relating to reckless homicide or for |
violating subparagraph (F) of paragraph (1) of subsection |
(d) of Section 11-501 of this Code relating to aggravated |
driving under the influence of alcohol, other drug or |
drugs, intoxicating compound or compounds, or any |
combination thereof, if the violation was the proximate |
cause of a death, within
24 months of release from a term |
of imprisonment;
|
16. To any person who, with intent to influence any act |
related to the issuance of any driver's license or permit, |
|
by an employee of the Secretary of State's Office, or the |
owner or employee of any commercial driver training school |
licensed by the Secretary of State, or any other individual |
authorized by the laws of this State to give driving |
instructions or administer all or part of a driver's |
license examination, promises or tenders to that person any |
property or personal advantage which that person is not |
authorized by law to accept. Any persons promising or |
tendering such property or personal advantage shall be |
disqualified from holding any class of driver's license or |
permit for 120 consecutive days. The Secretary of State |
shall establish by rule the procedures for implementing |
this period of disqualification and the procedures by which |
persons so disqualified may obtain administrative review |
of the decision to disqualify;
|
17. To any person for whom the Secretary of State |
cannot verify the
accuracy of any information or |
documentation submitted in application for a
driver's |
license; or
|
18. To any person who has been adjudicated under the |
Juvenile Court Act of 1987 based upon an offense that is |
determined by the court to have been committed in |
furtherance of the criminal activities of an organized |
gang, as provided in Section 5-710 of that Act, and that |
involved the operation or use of a motor vehicle or the use |
of a driver's license or permit. The person shall be denied |
|
a license or permit for the period determined by the court.
|
The Secretary of State shall retain all conviction
|
information, if the information is required to be held |
confidential under
the Juvenile Court Act of 1987. |
(Source: P.A. 97-185, eff. 7-22-11; 97-1150, eff. 1-25-13; |
98-167, eff. 7-1-14; 98-756, eff. 7-16-14.)
|
(625 ILCS 5/6-106.1)
|
Sec. 6-106.1. School bus driver permit.
|
(a) The Secretary of State shall issue a school bus driver
|
permit to those applicants who have met all the requirements of |
the
application and screening process under this Section to |
insure the
welfare and safety of children who are transported |
on school buses
throughout the State of Illinois. Applicants |
shall obtain the
proper application required by the Secretary |
of State from their
prospective or current employer and submit |
the completed
application to the prospective or current |
employer along
with the necessary fingerprint submission as |
required by the
Department of
State Police to conduct |
fingerprint based criminal background
checks on current and |
future information available in the state
system and current |
information available through the Federal Bureau
of |
Investigation's system. Applicants who have completed the
|
fingerprinting requirements shall not be subjected to the
|
fingerprinting process when applying for subsequent permits or
|
submitting proof of successful completion of the annual |
|
refresher
course. Individuals who on the effective date of this |
Act possess a valid
school bus driver permit that has been |
previously issued by the appropriate
Regional School |
Superintendent are not subject to the fingerprinting
|
provisions of this Section as long as the permit remains valid |
and does not
lapse. The applicant shall be required to pay all |
related
application and fingerprinting fees as established by |
rule
including, but not limited to, the amounts established by |
the Department of
State Police and the Federal Bureau of |
Investigation to process
fingerprint based criminal background |
investigations. All fees paid for
fingerprint processing |
services under this Section shall be deposited into the
State |
Police Services Fund for the cost incurred in processing the |
fingerprint
based criminal background investigations. All |
other fees paid under this
Section shall be deposited into the |
Road
Fund for the purpose of defraying the costs of the |
Secretary of State in
administering this Section. All |
applicants must:
|
1. be 21 years of age or older;
|
2. possess a valid and properly classified driver's |
license
issued by the Secretary of State;
|
3. possess a valid driver's license, which has not been
|
revoked, suspended, or canceled for 3 years immediately |
prior to
the date of application, or have not had his or |
her commercial motor vehicle
driving privileges
|
disqualified within the 3 years immediately prior to the |
|
date of application;
|
4. successfully pass a written test, administered by |
the
Secretary of State, on school bus operation, school bus |
safety, and
special traffic laws relating to school buses |
and submit to a review
of the applicant's driving habits by |
the Secretary of State at the time the
written test is |
given;
|
5. demonstrate ability to exercise reasonable care in |
the operation of
school buses in accordance with rules |
promulgated by the Secretary of State;
|
6. demonstrate physical fitness to operate school |
buses by
submitting the results of a medical examination, |
including tests for drug
use for each applicant not subject |
to such testing pursuant to
federal law, conducted by a |
licensed physician, a licensed an advanced practice nurse
|
who has a written collaborative agreement with
a |
collaborating physician which authorizes him or her to |
perform medical
examinations , or a licensed physician |
assistant who has been delegated the
performance of medical |
examinations by his or her supervising physician
within 90 |
days of the date
of application according to standards |
promulgated by the Secretary of State;
|
7. affirm under penalties of perjury that he or she has |
not made a
false statement or knowingly concealed a |
material fact
in any application for permit;
|
8. have completed an initial classroom course, |
|
including first aid
procedures, in school bus driver safety |
as promulgated by the Secretary of
State; and after |
satisfactory completion of said initial course an annual
|
refresher course; such courses and the agency or |
organization conducting such
courses shall be approved by |
the Secretary of State; failure to
complete the annual |
refresher course, shall result in
cancellation of the |
permit until such course is completed;
|
9. not have been under an order of court supervision |
for or convicted of 2 or more serious traffic offenses, as
|
defined by rule, within one year prior to the date of |
application that may
endanger the life or safety of any of |
the driver's passengers within the
duration of the permit |
period;
|
10. not have been under an order of court supervision |
for or convicted of reckless driving, aggravated reckless |
driving, driving while under the influence of alcohol, |
other drug or drugs, intoxicating compound or compounds or |
any combination thereof, or reckless homicide resulting |
from the operation of a motor
vehicle within 3 years of the |
date of application;
|
11. not have been convicted of committing or attempting
|
to commit any
one or more of the following offenses: (i) |
those offenses defined in
Sections 8-1.2, 9-1, 9-1.2, 9-2, |
9-2.1, 9-3, 9-3.2, 9-3.3, 10-1, 10-2, 10-3.1,
10-4,
10-5, |
10-5.1, 10-6, 10-7, 10-9, 11-1.20, 11-1.30, 11-1.40, |
|
11-1.50, 11-1.60, 11-6, 11-6.5, 11-6.6,
11-9, 11-9.1, |
11-9.3, 11-9.4, 11-14, 11-14.1, 11-14.3, 11-14.4, 11-15, |
11-15.1, 11-16, 11-17, 11-17.1, 11-18, 11-18.1, 11-19, |
11-19.1,
11-19.2,
11-20, 11-20.1, 11-20.1B, 11-20.3, |
11-21, 11-22, 11-23, 11-24, 11-25, 11-26, 11-30, 12-2.6, |
12-3.1, 12-4, 12-4.1, 12-4.2, 12-4.2-5, 12-4.3, 12-4.4,
|
12-4.5, 12-4.6, 12-4.7, 12-4.9,
12-5.01, 12-6, 12-6.2, |
12-7.1, 12-7.3, 12-7.4, 12-7.5, 12-11,
12-13, 12-14, |
12-14.1, 12-15, 12-16, 12-16.2, 12-21.5, 12-21.6, 12-33, |
12C-5, 12C-10, 12C-20, 12C-30, 12C-45, 16-16, 16-16.1,
|
18-1,
18-2,
18-3, 18-4, 18-5, 19-6,
20-1, 20-1.1, 20-1.2, |
20-1.3, 20-2, 24-1, 24-1.1, 24-1.2, 24-1.2-5, 24-1.6, |
24-1.7, 24-2.1, 24-3.3, 24-3.5, 24-3.8, 24-3.9, 31A-1, |
31A-1.1,
33A-2, and 33D-1, and in subsection (b) of Section |
8-1, and in subdivisions (a)(1), (a)(2), (b)(1), (e)(1), |
(e)(2), (e)(3), (e)(4), and (f)(1) of Section 12-3.05, and |
in subsection (a) and subsection (b), clause (1), of |
Section
12-4, and in subsection (A), clauses (a) and (b), |
of Section 24-3, and those offenses contained in Article |
29D of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of |
2012; (ii) those offenses defined in the
Cannabis Control |
Act except those offenses defined in subsections (a) and
|
(b) of Section 4, and subsection (a) of Section 5 of the |
Cannabis Control
Act; (iii) those offenses defined in the |
Illinois Controlled Substances
Act; (iv) those offenses |
defined in the Methamphetamine Control and Community |
|
Protection Act; (v) any offense committed or attempted in |
any other state or against
the laws of the United States, |
which if committed or attempted in this
State would be |
punishable as one or more of the foregoing offenses; (vi)
|
the offenses defined in Section 4.1 and 5.1 of the Wrongs |
to Children Act or Section 11-9.1A of the Criminal Code of |
1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012; (vii) those offenses |
defined in Section 6-16 of the Liquor Control Act of
1934;
|
and (viii) those offenses defined in the Methamphetamine |
Precursor Control Act;
|
12. not have been repeatedly involved as a driver in |
motor vehicle
collisions or been repeatedly convicted of |
offenses against
laws and ordinances regulating the |
movement of traffic, to a degree which
indicates lack of |
ability to exercise ordinary and reasonable care in the
|
safe operation of a motor vehicle or disrespect for the |
traffic laws and
the safety of other persons upon the |
highway;
|
13. not have, through the unlawful operation of a motor
|
vehicle, caused an accident resulting in the death of any |
person;
|
14. not have, within the last 5 years, been adjudged to |
be
afflicted with or suffering from any mental disability |
or disease; and
|
15. consent, in writing, to the release of results of |
reasonable suspicion drug and alcohol testing under |
|
Section 6-106.1c of this Code by the employer of the |
applicant to the Secretary of State. |
(b) A school bus driver permit shall be valid for a period |
specified by
the Secretary of State as set forth by rule. It |
shall be renewable upon compliance with subsection (a) of this
|
Section.
|
(c) A school bus driver permit shall contain the holder's |
driver's
license number, legal name, residence address, zip |
code, and date
of birth, a brief description of the holder and |
a space for signature. The
Secretary of State may require a |
suitable photograph of the holder.
|
(d) The employer shall be responsible for conducting a |
pre-employment
interview with prospective school bus driver |
candidates, distributing school
bus driver applications and |
medical forms to be completed by the applicant, and
submitting |
the applicant's fingerprint cards to the Department of State |
Police
that are required for the criminal background |
investigations. The employer
shall certify in writing to the |
Secretary of State that all pre-employment
conditions have been |
successfully completed including the successful completion
of |
an Illinois specific criminal background investigation through |
the
Department of State Police and the submission of necessary
|
fingerprints to the Federal Bureau of Investigation for |
criminal
history information available through the Federal |
Bureau of
Investigation system. The applicant shall present the
|
certification to the Secretary of State at the time of |
|
submitting
the school bus driver permit application.
|
(e) Permits shall initially be provisional upon receiving
|
certification from the employer that all pre-employment |
conditions
have been successfully completed, and upon |
successful completion of
all training and examination |
requirements for the classification of
the vehicle to be |
operated, the Secretary of State shall
provisionally issue a |
School Bus Driver Permit. The permit shall
remain in a |
provisional status pending the completion of the
Federal Bureau |
of Investigation's criminal background investigation based
|
upon fingerprinting specimens submitted to the Federal Bureau |
of
Investigation by the Department of State Police. The Federal |
Bureau of
Investigation shall report the findings directly to |
the Secretary
of State. The Secretary of State shall remove the |
bus driver
permit from provisional status upon the applicant's |
successful
completion of the Federal Bureau of Investigation's |
criminal
background investigation.
|
(f) A school bus driver permit holder shall notify the
|
employer and the Secretary of State if he or she is issued an |
order of court supervision for or convicted in
another state of |
an offense that would make him or her ineligible
for a permit |
under subsection (a) of this Section. The
written notification |
shall be made within 5 days of the entry of
the order of court |
supervision or conviction. Failure of the permit holder to |
provide the
notification is punishable as a petty
offense for a |
first violation and a Class B misdemeanor for a
second or |
|
subsequent violation.
|
(g) Cancellation; suspension; notice and procedure.
|
(1) The Secretary of State shall cancel a school bus
|
driver permit of an applicant whose criminal background |
investigation
discloses that he or she is not in compliance |
with the provisions of subsection
(a) of this Section.
|
(2) The Secretary of State shall cancel a school
bus |
driver permit when he or she receives notice that the |
permit holder fails
to comply with any provision of this |
Section or any rule promulgated for the
administration of |
this Section.
|
(3) The Secretary of State shall cancel a school bus
|
driver permit if the permit holder's restricted commercial |
or
commercial driving privileges are withdrawn or |
otherwise
invalidated.
|
(4) The Secretary of State may not issue a school bus
|
driver permit for a period of 3 years to an applicant who |
fails to
obtain a negative result on a drug test as |
required in item 6 of
subsection (a) of this Section or |
under federal law.
|
(5) The Secretary of State shall forthwith suspend
a |
school bus driver permit for a period of 3 years upon |
receiving
notice that the holder has failed to obtain a |
negative result on a
drug test as required in item 6 of |
subsection (a) of this Section
or under federal law.
|
(6) The Secretary of State shall suspend a school bus |
|
driver permit for a period of 3 years upon receiving notice |
from the employer that the holder failed to perform the |
inspection procedure set forth in subsection (a) or (b) of |
Section 12-816 of this Code. |
(7) The Secretary of State shall suspend a school bus |
driver permit for a period of 3 years upon receiving notice |
from the employer that the holder refused to submit to an |
alcohol or drug test as required by Section 6-106.1c or has |
submitted to a test required by that Section which |
disclosed an alcohol concentration of more than 0.00 or |
disclosed a positive result on a National Institute on Drug |
Abuse five-drug panel, utilizing federal standards set |
forth in 49 CFR 40.87. |
The Secretary of State shall notify the State |
Superintendent
of Education and the permit holder's |
prospective or current
employer that the applicant has (1) has |
failed a criminal
background investigation or (2) is no
longer |
eligible for a school bus driver permit; and of the related
|
cancellation of the applicant's provisional school bus driver |
permit. The
cancellation shall remain in effect pending the |
outcome of a
hearing pursuant to Section 2-118 of this Code. |
The scope of the
hearing shall be limited to the issuance |
criteria contained in
subsection (a) of this Section. A |
petition requesting a
hearing shall be submitted to the |
Secretary of State and shall
contain the reason the individual |
feels he or she is entitled to a
school bus driver permit. The |
|
permit holder's
employer shall notify in writing to the |
Secretary of State
that the employer has certified the removal |
of the offending school
bus driver from service prior to the |
start of that school bus
driver's next workshift. An employing |
school board that fails to
remove the offending school bus |
driver from service is
subject to the penalties defined in |
Section 3-14.23 of the School Code. A
school bus
contractor who |
violates a provision of this Section is
subject to the |
penalties defined in Section 6-106.11.
|
All valid school bus driver permits issued under this |
Section
prior to January 1, 1995, shall remain effective until |
their
expiration date unless otherwise invalidated.
|
(h) When a school bus driver permit holder who is a service |
member is called to active duty, the employer of the permit |
holder shall notify the Secretary of State, within 30 days of |
notification from the permit holder, that the permit holder has |
been called to active duty. Upon notification pursuant to this |
subsection, (i) the Secretary of State shall characterize the |
permit as inactive until a permit holder renews the permit as |
provided in subsection (i) of this Section, and (ii) if a |
permit holder fails to comply with the requirements of this |
Section while called to active duty, the Secretary of State |
shall not characterize the permit as invalid. |
(i) A school bus driver permit holder who is a service |
member returning from active duty must, within 90 days, renew a |
permit characterized as inactive pursuant to subsection (h) of |
|
this Section by complying with the renewal requirements of |
subsection (b) of this Section. |
(j) For purposes of subsections (h) and (i) of this |
Section: |
"Active duty" means active duty pursuant to an executive |
order of the President of the United States, an act of the |
Congress of the United States, or an order of the Governor. |
"Service member" means a member of the Armed Services or |
reserve forces of the United States or a member of the Illinois |
National Guard. |
(Source: P.A. 96-89, eff. 7-27-09; 96-818, eff. 11-17-09; |
96-962, eff. 7-2-10; 96-1000, eff. 7-2-10; 96-1182, eff. |
7-22-10; 96-1551, Article 1, Section 950, eff. 7-1-11; 96-1551, |
Article 2, Section 1025, eff. 7-1-11; 97-224, eff. 7-28-11; |
97-229, eff. 7-28-11; 97-333, eff. 8-12-11; 97-466, eff. |
1-1-12; 97-1108, eff. 1-1-13; 97-1109, eff. 1-1-13; 97-1150, |
eff. 1-25-13.)
|
(625 ILCS 5/6-901) (from Ch. 95 1/2, par. 6-901)
|
Sec. 6-901. Definitions. For the purposes of this
Article:
|
"Board" means the Driver's License Medical Advisory Board.
|
"Medical examiner" or "medical practitioner" means: |
(i) any
person licensed to practice medicine in all its |
branches in
the State of Illinois or any other state;
|
(ii) a licensed physician assistant who has been |
delegated the performance of medical examinations by his or |
|
her supervising physician ; or |
(iii) a licensed advanced practice nurse who has a |
written collaborative agreement with a collaborating |
physician which authorizes him or her to perform medical |
examinations . |
(Source: P.A. 96-962, eff. 7-2-10; 97-185, eff. 7-22-11.)
|
Section 120. The Illinois Controlled Substances Act is |
amended by changing Sections 102 and 303.05 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 or her 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, |
research subject, or animal (as
defined by the Humane |
Euthanasia in Animal Shelters Act) by:
|
(1) a practitioner (or, in his or her presence, by his |
or her authorized agent),
|
|
(2) the patient or research subject pursuant to an |
order, or
|
(3) a euthanasia technician as defined by the Humane |
Euthanasia in
Animal Shelters Act.
|
(c) "Agent" means an authorized person who acts on behalf |
of or at
the direction of a manufacturer, distributor, |
dispenser, prescriber, or practitioner. 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, |
corticosteroids, and dehydroepiandrosterone),
and includes:
|
(i) 3[beta],17-dihydroxy-5a-androstane, |
(ii) 3[alpha],17[beta]-dihydroxy-5a-androstane, |
(iii) 5[alpha]-androstan-3,17-dione, |
(iv) 1-androstenediol (3[beta], |
17[beta]-dihydroxy-5[alpha]-androst-1-ene), |
(v) 1-androstenediol (3[alpha], |
17[beta]-dihydroxy-5[alpha]-androst-1-ene), |
(vi) 4-androstenediol |
(3[beta],17[beta]-dihydroxy-androst-4-ene), |
(vii) 5-androstenediol |
(3[beta],17[beta]-dihydroxy-androst-5-ene), |
(viii) 1-androstenedione |
([5alpha]-androst-1-en-3,17-dione), |
|
(ix) 4-androstenedione |
(androst-4-en-3,17-dione), |
(x) 5-androstenedione |
(androst-5-en-3,17-dione), |
(xi) bolasterone (7[alpha],17a-dimethyl-17[beta]- |
hydroxyandrost-4-en-3-one), |
(xii) boldenone (17[beta]-hydroxyandrost- |
1,4,-diene-3-one), |
(xiii) boldione (androsta-1,4- |
diene-3,17-dione), |
(xiv) calusterone (7[beta],17[alpha]-dimethyl-17 |
[beta]-hydroxyandrost-4-en-3-one), |
(xv) clostebol (4-chloro-17[beta]- |
hydroxyandrost-4-en-3-one), |
(xvi) dehydrochloromethyltestosterone (4-chloro- |
17[beta]-hydroxy-17[alpha]-methyl- |
androst-1,4-dien-3-one), |
(xvii) desoxymethyltestosterone |
(17[alpha]-methyl-5[alpha] |
-androst-2-en-17[beta]-ol)(a.k.a., madol), |
(xviii) [delta]1-dihydrotestosterone (a.k.a. |
'1-testosterone') (17[beta]-hydroxy- |
5[alpha]-androst-1-en-3-one), |
(xix) 4-dihydrotestosterone (17[beta]-hydroxy- |
androstan-3-one), |
(xx) drostanolone (17[beta]-hydroxy-2[alpha]-methyl- |
|
5[alpha]-androstan-3-one), |
(xxi) ethylestrenol (17[alpha]-ethyl-17[beta]- |
hydroxyestr-4-ene), |
(xxii) fluoxymesterone (9-fluoro-17[alpha]-methyl- |
1[beta],17[beta]-dihydroxyandrost-4-en-3-one), |
(xxiii) formebolone (2-formyl-17[alpha]-methyl-11[alpha], |
17[beta]-dihydroxyandrost-1,4-dien-3-one), |
(xxiv) furazabol (17[alpha]-methyl-17[beta]- |
hydroxyandrostano[2,3-c]-furazan), |
(xxv) 13[beta]-ethyl-17[beta]-hydroxygon-4-en-3-one) |
(xxvi) 4-hydroxytestosterone (4,17[beta]-dihydroxy- |
androst-4-en-3-one), |
(xxvii) 4-hydroxy-19-nortestosterone (4,17[beta]- |
dihydroxy-estr-4-en-3-one), |
(xxviii) mestanolone (17[alpha]-methyl-17[beta]- |
hydroxy-5-androstan-3-one), |
(xxix) mesterolone (1amethyl-17[beta]-hydroxy- |
[5a]-androstan-3-one), |
(xxx) methandienone (17[alpha]-methyl-17[beta]- |
hydroxyandrost-1,4-dien-3-one), |
(xxxi) methandriol (17[alpha]-methyl-3[beta],17[beta]- |
dihydroxyandrost-5-ene), |
(xxxii) methenolone (1-methyl-17[beta]-hydroxy- |
5[alpha]-androst-1-en-3-one), |
(xxxiii) 17[alpha]-methyl-3[beta], 17[beta]- |
dihydroxy-5a-androstane), |
|
(xxxiv) 17[alpha]-methyl-3[alpha],17[beta]-dihydroxy |
-5a-androstane), |
(xxxv) 17[alpha]-methyl-3[beta],17[beta]- |
dihydroxyandrost-4-ene), |
(xxxvi) 17[alpha]-methyl-4-hydroxynandrolone (17[alpha]- |
methyl-4-hydroxy-17[beta]-hydroxyestr-4-en-3-one), |
(xxxvii) methyldienolone (17[alpha]-methyl-17[beta]- |
hydroxyestra-4,9(10)-dien-3-one), |
(xxxviii) methyltrienolone (17[alpha]-methyl-17[beta]- |
hydroxyestra-4,9-11-trien-3-one), |
(xxxix) methyltestosterone (17[alpha]-methyl-17[beta]- |
hydroxyandrost-4-en-3-one), |
(xl) mibolerone (7[alpha],17a-dimethyl-17[beta]- |
hydroxyestr-4-en-3-one), |
(xli) 17[alpha]-methyl-[delta]1-dihydrotestosterone |
(17b[beta]-hydroxy-17[alpha]-methyl-5[alpha]- |
androst-1-en-3-one)(a.k.a. '17-[alpha]-methyl- |
1-testosterone'), |
(xlii) nandrolone (17[beta]-hydroxyestr-4-en-3-one), |
(xliii) 19-nor-4-androstenediol (3[beta], 17[beta]- |
dihydroxyestr-4-ene), |
(xliv) 19-nor-4-androstenediol (3[alpha], 17[beta]- |
dihydroxyestr-4-ene), |
(xlv) 19-nor-5-androstenediol (3[beta], 17[beta]- |
dihydroxyestr-5-ene), |
(xlvi) 19-nor-5-androstenediol (3[alpha], 17[beta]- |
|
dihydroxyestr-5-ene), |
(xlvii) 19-nor-4,9(10)-androstadienedione |
(estra-4,9(10)-diene-3,17-dione), |
(xlviii) 19-nor-4-androstenedione (estr-4- |
en-3,17-dione), |
(xlix) 19-nor-5-androstenedione (estr-5- |
en-3,17-dione), |
(l) norbolethone (13[beta], 17a-diethyl-17[beta]- |
hydroxygon-4-en-3-one), |
(li) norclostebol (4-chloro-17[beta]- |
hydroxyestr-4-en-3-one), |
(lii) norethandrolone (17[alpha]-ethyl-17[beta]- |
hydroxyestr-4-en-3-one), |
(liii) normethandrolone (17[alpha]-methyl-17[beta]- |
hydroxyestr-4-en-3-one), |
(liv) oxandrolone (17[alpha]-methyl-17[beta]-hydroxy- |
2-oxa-5[alpha]-androstan-3-one), |
(lv) oxymesterone (17[alpha]-methyl-4,17[beta]- |
dihydroxyandrost-4-en-3-one), |
(lvi) oxymetholone (17[alpha]-methyl-2-hydroxymethylene- |
17[beta]-hydroxy-(5[alpha]-androstan-3-one), |
(lvii) stanozolol (17[alpha]-methyl-17[beta]-hydroxy- |
(5[alpha]-androst-2-eno[3,2-c]-pyrazole), |
(lviii) stenbolone (17[beta]-hydroxy-2-methyl- |
(5[alpha]-androst-1-en-3-one), |
(lix) testolactone (13-hydroxy-3-oxo-13,17- |
|
secoandrosta-1,4-dien-17-oic |
acid lactone), |
(lx) testosterone (17[beta]-hydroxyandrost- |
4-en-3-one), |
(lxi) tetrahydrogestrinone (13[beta], 17[alpha]- |
diethyl-17[beta]-hydroxygon- |
4,9,11-trien-3-one), |
(lxii) trenbolone (17[beta]-hydroxyestr-4,9, |
11-trien-3-one).
|
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.
|
(d-5) "Clinical Director, Prescription Monitoring Program" |
|
means a Department of Human Services administrative employee |
licensed to either prescribe or dispense controlled substances |
who shall run the clinical aspects of the Department of Human |
Services Prescription Monitoring Program and its Prescription |
Information Library. |
(d-10) "Compounding" means the preparation and mixing of |
components, excluding flavorings, (1) as the result of a |
prescriber's prescription drug order or initiative based on the |
prescriber-patient-pharmacist relationship in the course of |
professional practice or (2) for the purpose of, or incident |
to, research, teaching, or chemical analysis and not for sale |
or dispensing. "Compounding" includes the preparation of drugs |
or devices in anticipation of receiving prescription drug |
orders based on routine, regularly observed dispensing |
patterns. Commercially available products may be compounded |
for dispensing to individual patients only if both of the |
following conditions are met: (i) the commercial product is not |
reasonably available from normal distribution channels in a |
timely manner to meet the patient's needs and (ii) the |
prescribing practitioner has requested that the drug be |
compounded. |
(e) "Control" means to add a drug or other substance, or |
immediate
precursor, to a Schedule whether by
transfer from |
another Schedule or otherwise.
|
(f) "Controlled Substance" means (i) a drug, substance, or |
immediate
precursor in the Schedules of Article II of this Act |
|
or (ii) a drug or other substance, or immediate precursor, |
designated as a controlled substance by the Department through |
administrative rule. The term does not include distilled |
spirits, wine, malt beverages, or tobacco, as those terms are
|
defined or used in the Liquor Control Act of 1934 and the |
Tobacco Products Tax
Act of 1995.
|
(f-5) "Controlled substance analog" means a substance: |
(1) the chemical structure of which is substantially |
similar to the chemical structure of a controlled substance |
in Schedule I or II; |
(2) which has a stimulant, depressant, or |
hallucinogenic effect on the central nervous system that is |
substantially similar to or greater than the stimulant, |
depressant, or hallucinogenic effect on the central |
nervous system of a controlled substance in Schedule I or |
II; or |
(3) with respect to a particular person, which such |
person represents or intends to have a stimulant, |
depressant, or hallucinogenic effect on the central |
nervous system that is substantially similar to or greater |
than the stimulant, depressant, or hallucinogenic effect |
on the central nervous system of a controlled substance in |
Schedule I or II. |
(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) (Blank).
|
(k) "Department of Corrections" means the Department of |
Corrections
of the State of Illinois or its successor agency.
|
(l) "Department of Financial and Professional Regulation" |
means the Department
of Financial and Professional Regulation |
of the State of Illinois or its successor agency.
|
(m) "Depressant" means any drug that (i) causes an overall |
depression of central nervous system functions, (ii) causes |
impaired consciousness and awareness, and (iii) can be |
habit-forming or lead to a substance abuse problem, including |
but not limited to alcohol, cannabis and its active principles |
and their analogs, benzodiazepines and their analogs, |
barbiturates and their analogs, opioids (natural and |
synthetic) and their analogs, and chloral hydrate and similar |
sedative hypnotics.
|
|
(n) (Blank).
|
(o) "Director" means the Director of the Illinois State |
Police or his or her 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.
|
(t-5) "Euthanasia agency" means
an entity certified by the |
Department of Financial and Professional Regulation for the
|
purpose of animal euthanasia that holds an animal control |
|
facility license or
animal
shelter license under the Animal |
Welfare Act. A euthanasia agency is
authorized to purchase, |
store, possess, and utilize Schedule II nonnarcotic and
|
Schedule III nonnarcotic drugs for the sole purpose of animal |
euthanasia.
|
(t-10) "Euthanasia drugs" means Schedule II or Schedule III |
substances
(nonnarcotic controlled substances) that are used |
by a euthanasia agency for
the purpose of animal euthanasia.
|
(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 or |
her 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 prescriber-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 (recognizing that there may be |
|
clinical circumstances where more or less than the usual |
dose may be used legitimately),
|
(5) unusual geographic distances between patient, |
pharmacist and
prescriber,
|
(6) consistent prescribing of habit-forming drugs.
|
(u-0.5) "Hallucinogen" means a drug that causes markedly |
altered sensory perception leading to hallucinations of any |
type. |
(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.
|
(u-5) "Illinois State Police" means the State
Police of the |
State of Illinois, or its successor agency. |
(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 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 other than methamphetamine, 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 or her own use; or
|
(2) by a practitioner, or his or her authorized agent |
under his or her
supervision, the preparation, |
compounding, packaging, or labeling of a
controlled |
substance:
|
(a) as an incident to his or her administering or |
dispensing of a
controlled substance in the course of |
his or her professional practice; or
|
(b) as an incident to lawful research, teaching or |
chemical
analysis and not for sale.
|
(z-1) (Blank).
|
(z-5) "Medication shopping" means the conduct prohibited |
under subsection (a) of Section 314.5 of this Act. |
|
(z-10) "Mid-level practitioner" means (i) a physician |
assistant who has been delegated authority to prescribe through |
a written delegation of authority by a physician licensed to |
practice medicine in all of its branches, in accordance with |
Section 7.5 of the Physician Assistant Practice Act of 1987, |
(ii) an advanced practice nurse who has been delegated |
authority to prescribe through a written delegation of |
authority by a physician licensed to practice medicine in all |
of its branches or by a podiatric physician, in accordance with |
Section 65-40 of the Nurse Practice Act, (iii) an advanced |
practice nurse certified as a nurse practitioner, nurse |
midwife, or clinical nurse specialist who has been granted |
authority to prescribe by a hospital affiliate in accordance |
with Section 65-45 of the Nurse Practice Act, (iv) an animal |
euthanasia agency, or (v) (iv) a prescribing psychologist. |
(aa) "Narcotic drug" means any of the following, whether |
produced
directly or indirectly by extraction from substances |
of vegetable origin,
or independently by means of chemical |
synthesis, or by a combination of
extraction and chemical |
synthesis:
|
(1) opium, opiates, derivatives of opium and opiates, |
including their isomers, esters, ethers, salts, and salts |
of isomers, esters, and ethers, whenever the existence of |
such isomers, esters, ethers, and salts is possible within |
the specific chemical designation; however the term |
"narcotic drug" does not include the isoquinoline |
|
alkaloids of opium;
|
(2) (blank);
|
(3) opium poppy and poppy straw;
|
(4) coca leaves, except coca leaves and extracts of |
coca leaves from which substantially all of the cocaine and |
ecgonine, and their isomers, derivatives and salts, have |
been removed;
|
(5) cocaine, its salts, optical and geometric isomers, |
and salts of isomers; |
(6) ecgonine, its derivatives, their salts, isomers, |
and salts of isomers; |
(7) any compound, mixture, or preparation which |
contains any quantity of any of the substances referred to |
in subparagraphs (1) through (6). |
(bb) "Nurse" means a registered nurse licensed under the
|
Nurse Practice Act.
|
(cc) (Blank).
|
(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.
|
(ee-5) "Oral dosage" means a tablet, capsule, elixir, or |
solution or other liquid form of medication intended for |
administration by mouth, but the term does not include a form |
|
of medication intended for buccal, sublingual, or transmucosal |
administration. |
(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 license or |
certificate of
registration as a registered pharmacist, a local |
registered pharmacist
or a registered assistant pharmacist |
under the Pharmacy Practice Act.
|
(ii) "Pharmacy" means any store, ship or other place in |
which
pharmacy is authorized to be practiced under the Pharmacy |
Practice Act.
|
(ii-5) "Pharmacy shopping" means the conduct prohibited |
under subsection (b) of Section 314.5 of this Act. |
(ii-10) "Physician" (except when the context otherwise |
requires) means a person licensed to practice medicine in all |
of its branches. |
(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, optometrist, podiatric |
physician,
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; the term does not mean a written |
prescription that is individually generated by machine or |
computer in the prescriber's office.
|
(mm) "Prescriber" means a physician licensed to practice |
medicine in all
its branches, dentist, optometrist, |
prescribing psychologist licensed under Section 4.2 of the |
Clinical Psychologist Licensing Act with prescriptive |
authority delegated under Section 4.3 of the Clinical |
Psychologist Licensing Act, podiatric physician, or
|
veterinarian who issues a prescription, a physician assistant |
who
issues a
prescription for a controlled substance
in |
accordance
with Section 303.05, a written delegation, and a |
written supervision agreement required under Section 7.5
of the
|
Physician Assistant Practice Act of 1987, or an advanced |
practice
nurse with prescriptive authority delegated under |
Section 65-40 of the Nurse Practice Act and in accordance with |
Section 303.05, a written delegation,
and a written
|
|
collaborative agreement under Section 65-35 of the Nurse |
Practice Act , or an advanced practice nurse certified as a |
nurse practitioner, nurse midwife, or clinical nurse |
specialist who has been granted authority to prescribe by a |
hospital affiliate in accordance with Section 65-45 of the |
Nurse Practice Act and in accordance with Section 303.05 .
|
(nn) "Prescription" means a written, facsimile, or oral |
order, or an electronic order that complies with applicable |
federal requirements,
of
a physician licensed to practice |
medicine in all its branches,
dentist, podiatric physician or |
veterinarian for any controlled
substance, of an optometrist |
for a Schedule II, III, IV, or V controlled substance in |
accordance with Section 15.1 of the Illinois Optometric |
Practice Act of 1987, of a prescribing psychologist licensed |
under Section 4.2 of the Clinical Psychologist Licensing Act |
with prescriptive authority delegated under Section 4.3 of the |
Clinical Psychologist Licensing Act, of a physician assistant |
for a
controlled substance
in accordance with Section 303.05, a |
written delegation, and a written supervision agreement |
required under
Section 7.5 of the
Physician Assistant Practice |
Act of 1987, or of an advanced practice
nurse with prescriptive |
authority delegated under Section 65-40 of the Nurse Practice |
Act who issues a prescription for a
controlled substance in |
accordance
with
Section 303.05, a written delegation, and a |
written collaborative agreement under Section 65-35 of the |
Nurse Practice Act , or of an advanced practice nurse certified |
|
as a nurse practitioner, nurse midwife, or clinical nurse |
specialist who has been granted authority to prescribe by a |
hospital affiliate in accordance with Section 65-45 of the |
Nurse Practice Act and in accordance with Section 303.05 when |
required by law.
|
(nn-5) "Prescription Information Library" (PIL) means an |
electronic library that contains reported controlled substance |
data. |
(nn-10) "Prescription Monitoring Program" (PMP) means the |
entity that collects, tracks, and stores reported data on |
controlled substances and select drugs pursuant to Section 316. |
(oo) "Production" or "produce" means manufacture, |
planting,
cultivating, growing, or harvesting of a controlled |
substance other than methamphetamine.
|
(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.
|
(qq-5) "Secretary" means, as the context requires, either |
the Secretary of the Department or the Secretary of the |
Department of Financial and Professional Regulation, and the |
Secretary's designated agents. |
(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.
|
(rr-5) "Stimulant" means any drug that (i) causes an |
overall excitation of central nervous system functions, (ii) |
causes impaired consciousness and awareness, and (iii) can be |
habit-forming or lead to a substance abuse problem, including |
but not limited to amphetamines and their analogs, |
methylphenidate and its analogs, cocaine, and phencyclidine |
and its analogs. |
(ss) "Ultimate user" means a person who lawfully possesses |
a
controlled substance for his or her own use or for the use of |
a member of his or her
household or for administering to an |
animal owned by him or her or by a member
of his or her |
household.
|
(Source: P.A. 97-334, eff. 1-1-12; 98-214, eff. 8-9-13; 98-668, |
eff. 6-25-14; 98-756, eff. 7-16-14; 98-1111, eff. 8-26-14; |
revised 10-1-14.)
|
(720 ILCS 570/303.05)
|
Sec. 303.05. Mid-level practitioner registration.
|
(a) The Department of Financial and Professional |
Regulation shall register licensed
physician assistants, |
licensed advanced practice nurses, and prescribing |
psychologists licensed under Section 4.2 of the Clinical |
Psychologist Licensing Act to prescribe and
dispense |
controlled substances under Section 303 and euthanasia
|
agencies to purchase, store, or administer animal euthanasia |
|
drugs under the
following circumstances:
|
(1) with respect to physician assistants,
|
(A) the physician assistant has been
delegated
|
written authority to prescribe any Schedule III |
through V controlled substances by a physician |
licensed to practice medicine in all its
branches in |
accordance with Section 7.5 of the Physician Assistant |
Practice Act
of 1987;
and
the physician assistant has
|
completed the
appropriate application forms and has |
paid the required fees as set by rule;
or
|
(B) the physician assistant has been delegated
|
authority by a supervising physician licensed to |
practice medicine in all its branches to prescribe or |
dispense Schedule II controlled substances through a |
written delegation of authority and under the |
following conditions: |
(i) Specific Schedule II controlled substances |
by oral dosage or topical or transdermal |
application may be delegated, provided that the |
delegated Schedule II controlled substances are |
routinely prescribed by the supervising physician. |
This delegation must identify the specific |
Schedule II controlled substances by either brand |
name or generic name. Schedule II controlled |
substances to be delivered by injection or other |
route of administration may not be delegated; |
|
(ii) any delegation must be of controlled |
substances prescribed by the supervising |
physician; |
(iii) all prescriptions must be limited to no |
more than a 30-day supply, with any continuation |
authorized only after prior approval of the |
supervising physician; |
(iv) the physician assistant must discuss the |
condition of any patients for whom a controlled |
substance is prescribed monthly with the |
delegating physician; |
(v) the physician assistant must have |
completed the appropriate application forms and |
paid the required fees as set by rule; |
(vi) the physician assistant must provide |
evidence of satisfactory completion of 45 contact |
hours in pharmacology from any physician assistant |
program accredited by the Accreditation Review |
Commission on Education for the Physician |
Assistant (ARC-PA), or its predecessor agency, for |
any new license issued with Schedule II authority |
after the effective date of this amendatory Act of |
the 97th General Assembly; and |
(vii) the physician assistant must annually |
complete at least 5 hours of continuing education |
in pharmacology; |
|
(2) with respect to advanced practice nurses, |
(A) the advanced practice nurse has been delegated
|
authority to prescribe any Schedule III through V |
controlled substances by a collaborating physician |
licensed to practice medicine in all its branches or a |
collaborating podiatric physician in accordance with |
Section 65-40 of the Nurse Practice
Act. The advanced |
practice nurse has completed the
appropriate |
application forms and has paid the required
fees as set |
by rule; or |
(B) the advanced practice nurse has been delegated
|
authority by a collaborating physician licensed to |
practice medicine in all its branches or collaborating |
podiatric physician to prescribe or dispense Schedule |
II controlled substances through a written delegation |
of authority and under the following conditions: |
(i) specific Schedule II controlled substances |
by oral dosage or topical or transdermal |
application may be delegated, provided that the |
delegated Schedule II controlled substances are |
routinely prescribed by the collaborating |
physician or podiatric physician. This delegation |
must identify the specific Schedule II controlled |
substances by either brand name or generic name. |
Schedule II controlled substances to be delivered |
by injection or other route of administration may |
|
not be delegated; |
(ii) any delegation must be of controlled |
substances prescribed by the collaborating |
physician or podiatric physician; |
(iii) all prescriptions must be limited to no |
more than a 30-day supply, with any continuation |
authorized only after prior approval of the |
collaborating physician or podiatric physician; |
(iv) the advanced practice nurse must discuss |
the condition of any patients for whom a controlled |
substance is prescribed monthly with the |
delegating physician or podiatric physician or in |
the course of review as required by Section 65-40 |
of the Nurse Practice Act; |
(v) the advanced practice nurse must have |
completed the appropriate application forms and |
paid the required fees as set by rule; |
(vi) the advanced practice nurse must provide |
evidence of satisfactory completion of at least 45 |
graduate contact hours in pharmacology for any new |
license issued with Schedule II authority after |
the effective date of this amendatory Act of the |
97th General Assembly; and |
(vii) the advanced practice nurse must |
annually complete 5 hours of continuing education |
in pharmacology; |
|
(2.5) with respect to advanced practice nurses |
certified as nurse practitioners, nurse midwives, or |
clinical nurse specialists practicing in a hospital |
affiliate, |
(A) the advanced practice nurse certified as a |
nurse practitioner, nurse midwife, or clinical nurse |
specialist has been granted authority to prescribe any |
Schedule II through V controlled substances by the |
hospital affiliate upon the recommendation of the |
appropriate physician committee of the hospital |
affiliate in accordance with Section 65-45 of the Nurse |
Practice Act, has completed the appropriate |
application forms, and has paid the required fees as |
set by rule; and |
(B) an advanced practice nurse certified as a nurse |
practitioner, nurse midwife, or clinical nurse |
specialist has been granted authority to prescribe any |
Schedule II controlled substances by the hospital |
affiliate upon the recommendation of the appropriate |
physician committee of the hospital affiliate, then |
the following conditions must be met: |
(i) specific Schedule II controlled substances |
by oral dosage or topical or transdermal |
application may be designated, provided that the |
designated Schedule II controlled substances are |
routinely prescribed by advanced practice nurses |
|
in their area of certification; this grant of |
authority must identify the specific Schedule II |
controlled substances by either brand name or |
generic name; authority to prescribe or dispense |
Schedule II controlled substances to be delivered |
by injection or other route of administration may |
not be granted; |
(ii) any grant of authority must be controlled |
substances limited to the practice of the advanced |
practice nurse; |
(iii) any prescription must be limited to no |
more than a 30-day supply; |
(iv) the advanced practice nurse must discuss |
the condition of any patients for whom a controlled |
substance is prescribed monthly with the |
appropriate physician committee of the hospital |
affiliate or its physician designee; and |
(v) the advanced practice nurse must meet the |
education requirements of this Section; |
(3) with respect to animal euthanasia agencies, the |
euthanasia agency has
obtained a license from the |
Department of
Financial and Professional Regulation and |
obtained a registration number from the
Department; or
|
(4) with respect to prescribing psychologists, the |
prescribing psychologist has been delegated
authority to |
prescribe any nonnarcotic Schedule III through V |
|
controlled substances by a collaborating physician |
licensed to practice medicine in all its branches in |
accordance with Section 4.3 of the Clinical Psychologist |
Licensing Act, and the prescribing psychologist has |
completed the
appropriate application forms and has paid |
the required
fees as set by rule. |
(b) The mid-level practitioner shall only be licensed to |
prescribe those
schedules of controlled substances for which a |
licensed physician or licensed podiatric physician has |
delegated
prescriptive authority, except that an animal |
euthanasia agency does not have any
prescriptive authority.
A |
physician assistant and an advanced practice nurse are |
prohibited from prescribing medications and controlled |
substances not set forth in the required written delegation of |
authority.
|
(c) Upon completion of all registration requirements, |
physician
assistants, advanced practice nurses, and animal |
euthanasia agencies may be issued a
mid-level practitioner
|
controlled substances license for Illinois.
|
(d) A collaborating physician or podiatric physician may, |
but is not required to, delegate prescriptive authority to an |
advanced practice nurse as part of a written collaborative |
agreement, and the delegation of prescriptive authority shall |
conform to the requirements of Section 65-40 of the Nurse |
Practice Act. |
(e) A supervising physician may, but is not required to, |