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Public Act 099-0328 | ||||
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AN ACT concerning civil law.
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Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois, | ||||
represented in the General Assembly:
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Section 5. The Illinois Power of Attorney Act is amended by | ||||
changing Sections 4-5.1, 4-10, and 4-12 as follows: | ||||
(755 ILCS 45/4-5.1) | ||||
Sec. 4-5.1. Limitations on who may witness health care | ||||
agencies. | ||||
(a) Every health care agency shall bear the signature of a | ||||
witness to the signing of the agency. No witness may be under | ||||
18 years of age. None of the following licensed professionals | ||||
providing services to the principal may serve as a witness to | ||||
the signing of a health care agency: | ||||
(1) the attending physician, advanced practice nurse, | ||||
physician assistant, dentist, podiatric physician, | ||||
optometrist, or psychologist mental health service | ||||
provider of the principal, or a relative of the physician, | ||||
advanced practice nurse, physician assistant, dentist, | ||||
podiatric physician, optometrist, or psychologist mental | ||||
health service provider ; | ||||
(2) an owner, operator, or relative of an owner or | ||||
operator of a health care facility in which the principal | ||||
is a patient or resident; |
(3) a parent, sibling, or descendant, or the spouse of | ||
a parent, sibling, or descendant, of either the principal | ||
or any agent or successor agent, regardless of whether the | ||
relationship is by blood, marriage, or adoption; | ||
(4) an agent or successor agent for health care. | ||
(b) The prohibition on the operator of a health care | ||
facility from serving as a witness shall extend to directors | ||
and executive officers of an operator that is a corporate | ||
entity but not other employees of the operator such as, but not | ||
limited to, non-owner chaplains or social workers, nurses, and | ||
other employees.
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(Source: P.A. 98-1113, eff. 1-1-15 .)
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(755 ILCS 45/4-10) (from Ch. 110 1/2, par. 804-10)
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Sec. 4-10. Statutory short form power of attorney for | ||
health care.
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(a) The form prescribed in this Section (sometimes also | ||
referred to in this Act as the
"statutory health care power") | ||
may be used to grant an agent powers with
respect to the | ||
principal's own health care; but the statutory health care
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power is not intended to be exclusive nor to cover delegation | ||
of a parent's
power to control the health care of a minor | ||
child, and no provision of this
Article shall be construed to | ||
invalidate or bar use by the principal of any
other or
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different form of power of attorney for health care. | ||
Nonstatutory health
care powers must be
executed by the |
principal, designate the agent and the agent's powers, and
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comply with the limitations in Section 4-5 of this Article, but | ||
they need not be witnessed or
conform in any other respect to | ||
the statutory health care power. | ||
No specific format is required for the statutory health | ||
care power of attorney other than the notice must precede the | ||
form. The statutory health care power may be included in or
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combined with any
other form of power of attorney governing | ||
property or other matters.
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(b) The Illinois Statutory Short Form Power of Attorney for | ||
Health Care shall be substantially as follows: | ||
NOTICE TO THE INDIVIDUAL SIGNING | ||
THE POWER OF ATTORNEY FOR HEALTH CARE | ||
No one can predict when a serious illness or accident might | ||
occur. When it does, you may need someone else to speak or make | ||
health care decisions for you. If you plan now, you can | ||
increase the chances that the medical treatment you get will be | ||
the treatment you want. | ||
In Illinois, you can choose someone to be your "health care | ||
agent". Your agent is the person you trust to make health care | ||
decisions for you if you are unable or do not want to make them | ||
yourself. These decisions should be based on your personal | ||
values and wishes. | ||
It is important to put your choice of agent in writing. The | ||
written form is often called an "advance directive". You may |
use this form or another form, as long as it meets the legal | ||
requirements of Illinois. There are many written and on-line | ||
resources to guide you and your loved ones in having a | ||
conversation about these issues. You may find it helpful to | ||
look at these resources while thinking about and discussing | ||
your advance directive. | ||
WHAT ARE THE THINGS I WANT MY | ||
HEALTH CARE AGENT TO KNOW? | ||
The selection of your agent should be considered carefully, | ||
as your agent will have the ultimate decision making authority | ||
once this document goes into effect, in most instances after | ||
you are no longer able to make your own decisions. While the | ||
goal is for your agent to make decisions in keeping with your | ||
preferences and in the majority of circumstances that is what | ||
happens, please know that the law does allow your agent to make | ||
decisions to direct or refuse health care interventions or | ||
withdraw treatment. Your agent will need to think about | ||
conversations you have had, your personality, and how you | ||
handled important health care issues in the past. Therefore, it | ||
is important to talk with your agent and your family about such | ||
things as: | ||
(i) What is most important to you in your life? | ||
(ii) How important is it to you to avoid pain and | ||
suffering? | ||
(iii) If you had to choose, is it more important to you |
to live as long as possible, or to avoid prolonged | ||
suffering or disability? | ||
(iv) Would you rather be at home or in a hospital for | ||
the last days or weeks of your life? | ||
(v) Do you have religious, spiritual, or cultural | ||
beliefs that you want your agent and others to consider? | ||
(vi) Do you wish to make a significant contribution to | ||
medical science after your death through organ or whole | ||
body donation? | ||
(vii) Do you have an existing advanced directive, such | ||
as a living will, that contains your specific wishes about | ||
health care that is only delaying your death? If you have | ||
another advance directive, make sure to discuss with your | ||
agent the directive and the treatment decisions contained | ||
within that outline your preferences. Make sure that your | ||
agent agrees to honor the wishes expressed in your advance | ||
directive. | ||
WHAT KIND OF DECISIONS CAN MY AGENT MAKE? | ||
If there is ever a period of time when your physician | ||
determines that you cannot make your own health care decisions, | ||
or if you do not want to make your own decisions, some of the | ||
decisions your agent could make are to: | ||
(i) talk with physicians and other health care | ||
providers about your condition. | ||
(ii) see medical records and approve who else can see |
them. | ||
(iii) give permission for medical tests, medicines, | ||
surgery, or other treatments. | ||
(iv) choose where you receive care and which physicians | ||
and others provide it. | ||
(v) decide to accept, withdraw, or decline treatments | ||
designed to keep you alive if you are near death or not | ||
likely to recover. You may choose to include guidelines | ||
and/or restrictions to your agent's authority. | ||
(vi) agree or decline to donate your organs or your | ||
whole body if you have not already made this decision | ||
yourself. This could include donation for transplant, | ||
research, and/or education. You should let your agent know | ||
whether you are registered as a donor in the First Person | ||
Consent registry maintained by the Illinois Secretary of | ||
State or whether you have agreed to donate your whole body | ||
for medical research and/or education. | ||
(vii) decide what to do with your remains after you | ||
have died, if you have not already made plans. | ||
(viii) talk with your other loved ones to help come to | ||
a decision (but your designated agent will have the final | ||
say over your other loved ones). | ||
Your agent is not automatically responsible for your health | ||
care expenses. | ||
WHOM SHOULD I CHOOSE TO BE MY HEALTH CARE AGENT? |
You can pick a family member, but you do not have to. Your | ||
agent will have the responsibility to make medical treatment | ||
decisions, even if other people close to you might urge a | ||
different decision. The selection of your agent should be done | ||
carefully, as he or she will have ultimate decision-making | ||
authority for your treatment decisions once you are no longer | ||
able to voice your preferences. Choose a family member, friend, | ||
or other person who: | ||
(i) is at least 18 years old; | ||
(ii) knows you well; | ||
(iii) you trust to do what is best for you and is | ||
willing to carry out your wishes, even if he or she may not | ||
agree with your wishes; | ||
(iv) would be comfortable talking with and questioning | ||
your physicians and other health care providers; | ||
(v) would not be too upset to carry out your wishes if | ||
you became very sick; and | ||
(vi) can be there for you when you need it and is | ||
willing to accept this important role. | ||
WHAT IF MY AGENT IS NOT AVAILABLE OR IS | ||
UNWILLING TO MAKE DECISIONS FOR ME? | ||
If the person who is your first choice is unable to carry | ||
out this role, then the second agent you chose will make the | ||
decisions; if your second agent is not available, then the | ||
third agent you chose will make the decisions. The second and |
third agents are called your successor agents and they function | ||
as back-up agents to your first choice agent and may act only | ||
one at a time and in the order you list them. | ||
WHAT WILL HAPPEN IF I DO NOT | ||
CHOOSE A HEALTH CARE AGENT? | ||
If you become unable to make your own health care decisions | ||
and have not named an agent in writing, your physician and | ||
other health care providers will ask a family member, friend, | ||
or guardian to make decisions for you. In Illinois, a law | ||
directs which of these individuals will be consulted. In that | ||
law, each of these individuals is called a "surrogate". | ||
There are reasons why you may want to name an agent rather | ||
than rely on a surrogate: | ||
(i) The person or people listed by this law may not be | ||
who you would want to make decisions for you. | ||
(ii) Some family members or friends might not be able | ||
or willing to make decisions as you would want them to. | ||
(iii) Family members and friends may disagree with one | ||
another about the best decisions. | ||
(iv) Under some circumstances, a surrogate may not be | ||
able to make the same kinds of decisions that an agent can | ||
make. | ||
WHAT IF THERE IS NO ONE AVAILABLE | ||
WHOM I TRUST TO BE MY AGENT? |
In this situation, it is especially important to talk to | ||
your physician and other health care providers and create | ||
written guidance about what you want or do not want, in case | ||
you are ever critically ill and cannot express your own wishes. | ||
You can complete a living will. You can also write your wishes | ||
down and/or discuss them with your physician or other health | ||
care provider and ask him or her to write it down in your | ||
chart. You might also want to use written or on-line resources | ||
to guide you through this process. | ||
WHAT DO I DO WITH THIS FORM ONCE I COMPLETE IT? | ||
Follow these instructions after you have completed the | ||
form: | ||
(i) Sign the form in front of a witness. See the form | ||
for a list of who can and cannot witness it. | ||
(ii) Ask the witness to sign it, too. | ||
(iii) There is no need to have the form notarized. | ||
(iv) Give a copy to your agent and to each of your | ||
successor agents. | ||
(v) Give another copy to your physician. | ||
(vi) Take a copy with you when you go to the hospital. | ||
(vii) Show it to your family and friends and others who | ||
care for you. | ||
WHAT IF I CHANGE MY MIND? | ||
You may change your mind at any time. If you do, tell |
someone who is at least 18 years old that you have changed your | ||
mind, and/or destroy your document and any copies. If you wish, | ||
fill out a new form and make sure everyone you gave the old | ||
form to has a copy of the new one, including, but not limited | ||
to, your agents and your physicians. | ||
WHAT IF I DO NOT WANT TO USE THIS FORM? | ||
In the event you do not want to use the Illinois statutory | ||
form provided here, any document you complete must be executed | ||
by you, designate an agent who is over 18 years of age and not | ||
prohibited from serving as your agent, and state the agent's | ||
powers, but it need not be witnessed or conform in any other | ||
respect to the statutory health care power. | ||
If you have questions about the use of any form, you may | ||
want to consult your physician, other health care provider, | ||
and/or an attorney. | ||
MY POWER OF ATTORNEY FOR HEALTH CARE | ||
THIS POWER OF ATTORNEY REVOKES ALL PREVIOUS POWERS OF ATTORNEY | ||
FOR HEALTH CARE. (You must sign this form and a witness must | ||
also sign it before it is valid) | ||
My name (Print your full name): .......... | ||
My address: .................................................. |
I WANT THE FOLLOWING PERSON TO BE MY HEALTH CARE AGENT | ||
(an agent is your personal representative under state and | ||
federal law): | ||
(Agent name) ................. | ||
(Agent address) ............. | ||
(Agent phone number) ......................................... | ||
(Please check box if applicable) .... If a guardian of my | ||
person is to be appointed, I nominate the agent acting under | ||
this power of attorney as guardian. | ||
SUCCESSOR HEALTH CARE AGENT(S) (optional): | ||
If the agent I selected is unable or does not want to make | ||
health care decisions for me, then I request the person(s) I | ||
name below to be my successor health care agent(s). Only one | ||
person at a time can serve as my agent (add another page if you | ||
want to add more successor agent names): | ||
............................................................. | ||
(Successor agent #1 name, address and phone number) | ||
............................................................. | ||
(Successor agent #2 name, address and phone number) | ||
MY AGENT CAN MAKE HEALTH CARE DECISIONS FOR ME, INCLUDING: | ||
(i) Deciding to accept, withdraw or decline treatment | ||
for any physical or mental condition of mine, including | ||
life-and-death decisions. |
(ii) Agreeing to admit me to or discharge me from any | ||
hospital, home, or other institution, including a mental | ||
health facility. | ||
(iii) Having complete access to my medical and mental | ||
health records, and sharing them with others as needed, | ||
including after I die. | ||
(iv) Carrying out the plans I have already made, or, if | ||
I have not done so, making decisions about my body or | ||
remains, including organ, tissue or whole body donation, | ||
autopsy, cremation, and burial. | ||
The above grant of power is intended to be as broad as | ||
possible so that my agent will have the authority to make any | ||
decision I could make to obtain or terminate any type of health | ||
care, including withdrawal of nutrition and hydration and other | ||
life-sustaining measures. | ||
I AUTHORIZE MY AGENT TO (please check any one box): | ||
.... Make decisions for me only when I cannot make them for | ||
myself. The physician(s) taking care of me will determine | ||
when I lack this ability. | ||
(If no box is checked, then the box above shall be | ||
implemented.)
OR | ||
.... Make decisions for me only when I cannot make them for | ||
myself. The physician(s) taking care of me will determine | ||
when I lack this ability. Starting now, for the purpose of | ||
assisting me with my health care plans and decisions, my |
agent shall have complete access to my medical and mental | ||
health records, the authority to share them with others as | ||
needed, and the complete ability to communicate with my | ||
personal physician(s) and other health care providers, | ||
including the ability to require an opinion of my physician | ||
as to whether I lack the ability to make decisions for | ||
myself. OR | ||
.... Make decisions for me starting now and continuing | ||
after I am no longer able to make them for myself. While I | ||
am still able to make my own decisions, I can still do so | ||
if I want to. | ||
The subject of life-sustaining treatment is of particular | ||
importance. Life-sustaining treatments may include tube | ||
feedings or fluids through a tube, breathing machines, and CPR. | ||
In general, in making decisions concerning life-sustaining | ||
treatment, your agent is instructed to consider the relief of | ||
suffering, the quality as well as the possible extension of | ||
your life, and your previously expressed wishes. Your agent | ||
will weigh the burdens versus benefits of proposed treatments | ||
in making decisions on your behalf. | ||
Additional statements concerning the withholding or | ||
removal of life-sustaining treatment are described below. | ||
These can serve as a guide for your agent when making decisions | ||
for you. Ask your physician or health care provider if you have | ||
any questions about these statements. |
SELECT ONLY ONE STATEMENT BELOW THAT BEST EXPRESSES YOUR WISHES | ||
(optional): | ||
.... The quality of my life is more important than the | ||
length of my life. If I am unconscious and my attending | ||
physician believes, in accordance with reasonable medical | ||
standards, that I will not wake up or recover my ability to | ||
think, communicate with my family and friends, and | ||
experience my surroundings, I do not want treatments to | ||
prolong my life or delay my death, but I do want treatment | ||
or care to make me comfortable and to relieve me of pain. | ||
.... Staying alive is more important to me, no matter how | ||
sick I am, how much I am suffering, the cost of the | ||
procedures, or how unlikely my chances for recovery are. I | ||
want my life to be prolonged to the greatest extent | ||
possible in accordance with reasonable medical standards. | ||
SPECIFIC LIMITATIONS TO MY AGENT'S DECISION-MAKING AUTHORITY: | ||
The above grant of power is intended to be as broad as | ||
possible so that your agent will have the authority to make any | ||
decision you could make to obtain or terminate any type of | ||
health care. If you wish to limit the scope of your agent's | ||
powers or prescribe special rules or limit the power to | ||
authorize autopsy or dispose of remains, you may do so | ||
specifically in this form. | ||
.................................. |
.............................. | ||
My signature: .................. | ||
Today's date: ................................................ | ||
HAVE YOUR WITNESS AGREE TO WHAT IS WRITTEN BELOW, AND THEN | ||
COMPLETE THE SIGNATURE PORTION: | ||
I am at least 18 years old. (check one of the options | ||
below): | ||
.... I saw the principal sign this document, or | ||
.... the principal told me that the signature or mark on | ||
the principal signature line is his or hers. | ||
I am not the agent or successor agent(s) named in this | ||
document. I am not related to the principal, the agent, or the | ||
successor agent(s) by blood, marriage, or adoption. I am not | ||
the principal's physician, advanced practice nurse, dentist, | ||
podiatric physician, optometrist, psychologist mental health | ||
service provider , or a relative of one of those individuals. I | ||
am not an owner or operator (or the relative of an owner or | ||
operator) of the health care facility where the principal is a | ||
patient or resident. | ||
Witness printed name: ............ | ||
Witness address: .............. | ||
Witness signature: ............... | ||
Today's date: ................................................ |
SUCCESSOR HEALTH CARE AGENT(S) (optional): | ||
If the agent I selected is unable or does not want to make | ||
health care decisions for me, then I request the person(s) I | ||
name below to be my successor health care agent(s). Only one | ||
person at a time can serve as my agent (add another page if you | ||
want to add more successor agent names): | ||
(Successor agent #1 name, address and phone number) | ||
(Successor agent #2 name, address and phone number)
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(c) The statutory short form power of attorney for health | ||
care (the
"statutory health care power") authorizes the agent | ||
to make any and all
health care decisions on behalf of the | ||
principal which the principal could
make if present and under | ||
no disability, subject to any limitations on the
granted powers | ||
that appear on the face of the form, to be exercised in such
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manner as the agent deems consistent with the intent and | ||
desires of the
principal. The agent will be under no duty to | ||
exercise granted powers or
to assume control of or | ||
responsibility for the principal's health care;
but when | ||
granted powers are exercised, the agent will be required to use
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due care to act for the benefit of the principal in accordance | ||
with the
terms of the statutory health care power and will be | ||
liable
for negligent exercise. The agent may act in person or | ||
through others
reasonably employed by the agent for that |
purpose
but may not delegate authority to make health care | ||
decisions. The agent
may sign and deliver all instruments, | ||
negotiate and enter into all
agreements and do all other acts | ||
reasonably necessary to implement the
exercise of the powers | ||
granted to the agent. Without limiting the
generality of the | ||
foregoing, the statutory health care power shall include
the | ||
following powers, subject to any limitations appearing on the | ||
face of the form:
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(1) The agent is authorized to give consent to and | ||
authorize or refuse,
or to withhold or withdraw consent to, | ||
any and all types of medical care,
treatment or procedures | ||
relating to the physical or mental health of the
principal, | ||
including any medication program, surgical procedures,
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life-sustaining treatment or provision of food and fluids | ||
for the principal.
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(2) The agent is authorized to admit the principal to | ||
or discharge the
principal from any and all types of | ||
hospitals, institutions, homes,
residential or nursing | ||
facilities, treatment centers and other health care
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institutions providing personal care or treatment for any | ||
type of physical
or mental condition. The agent shall have | ||
the same right to visit the
principal in the hospital or | ||
other institution as is granted to a spouse or
adult child | ||
of the principal, any rule of the institution to the | ||
contrary
notwithstanding.
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(3) The agent is authorized to contract for any and all |
types of health
care services and facilities in the name of | ||
and on behalf of the principal
and to bind the principal to | ||
pay for all such services and facilities,
and to have and | ||
exercise those powers over the principal's property as are
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authorized under the statutory property power, to the | ||
extent the agent
deems necessary to pay health care costs; | ||
and
the agent shall not be personally liable for any | ||
services or care contracted
for on behalf of the principal.
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(4) At the principal's expense and subject to | ||
reasonable rules of the
health care provider to prevent | ||
disruption of the principal's health care,
the agent shall | ||
have the same right the principal has to examine and copy
| ||
and consent to disclosure of all the principal's medical | ||
records that the agent deems
relevant to the exercise of | ||
the agent's powers, whether the records
relate to mental | ||
health or any other medical condition and whether they are | ||
in
the possession of or maintained by any physician, | ||
psychiatrist,
psychologist, therapist, hospital, nursing | ||
home or other health care
provider. The authority under | ||
this paragraph (4) applies to any information governed by | ||
the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of | ||
1996 ("HIPAA") and regulations thereunder. The agent | ||
serves as the principal's personal representative, as that | ||
term is defined under HIPAA and regulations thereunder.
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(5) The agent is authorized: to direct that an autopsy | ||
be made pursuant
to Section 2 of "An Act in relation to |
autopsy of dead bodies", approved
August 13, 1965, | ||
including all amendments;
to make a disposition of any
part | ||
or all of the principal's body pursuant to the Illinois | ||
Anatomical Gift
Act, as now or hereafter amended; and to | ||
direct the disposition of the
principal's remains. | ||
(6) At any time during which there is no executor or | ||
administrator appointed for the principal's estate, the | ||
agent is authorized to continue to pursue an application or | ||
appeal for government benefits if those benefits were | ||
applied for during the life of the principal.
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(d) A physician may determine that the principal is unable | ||
to make health care decisions for himself or herself only if | ||
the principal lacks decisional capacity, as that term is | ||
defined in Section 10 of the Health Care Surrogate Act. | ||
(e) If the principal names the agent as a guardian on the | ||
statutory short form, and if a court decides that the | ||
appointment of a guardian will serve the principal's best | ||
interests and welfare, the court shall appoint the agent to | ||
serve without bond or security. | ||
(Source: P.A. 97-148, eff. 7-14-11; 98-1113, eff. 1-1-15 .)
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(755 ILCS 45/4-12) (from Ch. 110 1/2, par. 804-12)
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Sec. 4-12. Saving clause. This Act does not in any way
| ||
invalidate any health care agency executed or any act of any
| ||
agent done, or affect any claim, right or
remedy that accrued, | ||
prior to September 22, 1987.
|
This amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly does not | ||
in any way invalidate any health care agency executed or any | ||
act of any agent done, or affect any claim, right, or remedy | ||
that accrued, prior to the effective date of this amendatory | ||
Act of the 96th General Assembly. | ||
This amendatory Act of the 98th General Assembly does not | ||
in any way invalidate any health care agency executed or any | ||
act of any agent done, or affect any claim, right, or remedy | ||
that accrued, prior to the effective date of this amendatory | ||
Act of the 98th General Assembly. | ||
This amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly does not | ||
in any way invalidate any health care agency executed or any | ||
act of any agent done, or affect any claim, right, or remedy | ||
that accrued, prior to the effective date of this amendatory | ||
Act of the 99th General Assembly. | ||
(Source: P.A. 98-1113, eff. 1-1-15 .)
| ||
Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect January | ||
1, 2016. |