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Public Act 101-0331 Public Act 0331 101ST GENERAL ASSEMBLY |
Public Act 101-0331 | SB1425 Enrolled | LRB101 07367 CPF 52407 b |
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| AN ACT concerning health.
| Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
| represented in the General Assembly:
| Section 5. The Department of Public Health Powers and | Duties Law of the
Civil Administrative Code of Illinois is | amended by adding Section 2310-455 as follows: | (20 ILCS 2310/2310-455 new) | Sec. 2310-455. Suicide prevention. Subject to | appropriation, the Department shall implement activities | associated with the Suicide Prevention, Education, and | Treatment Act, including, but not limited to, the following: | (1) Coordinating suicide prevention, intervention, and | postvention programs, services, and efforts statewide. | (2) Developing and submitting proposals for funding | from federal agencies or other sources of funding to | promote suicide prevention and coordinate activities. | (3) With input from the Illinois Suicide Prevention | Alliance, preparing the Illinois Suicide Prevention | Strategic Plan required under Section 15 of the Suicide | Prevention, Education, and Treatment Act and coordinating | the activities necessary to implement the recommendations | in that Plan. | (4) With input from the Illinois Suicide Prevention |
| Alliance, providing to the Governor and General Assembly | the annual report required under Section 13 of the Suicide | Prevention, Education, and Treatment Act. | (5) Providing technical support for the activities of | the Illinois Suicide Prevention Alliance. | Section 10. The Suicide Prevention, Education, and | Treatment Act is amended by changing Sections 5, 13, 15, 20, | and 30 as follows: | (410 ILCS 53/5)
| Sec. 5. Legislative findings.
The General Assembly makes | the following findings:
| (1) 1,474 Illinoisans lost their lives to suicide in | 2017. During 2016, suicide was the eleventh leading cause | of death in Illinois, causing more deaths than homicide, | motor vehicle accidents, accidental falls, and numerous | prevalent diseases, including liver disease, hypertension, | influenza/pneumonia, Parkinson's disease, and HIV. Suicide | was the third leading cause of death of ages 15 to 34 and | the fourth leading cause of death of ages 35 to 54. Those | living outside of urban areas are particularly at risk for | suicide, with a rate that is 50% higher than those living | in urban areas. | (2) For every person who dies by suicide, more than 30 | others attempt suicide. |
| (3) Each suicide attempt and death impacts countless | other individuals. Family members, friends, co-workers, | and others in the community all suffer the long-lasting | consequences of suicidal behaviors. | (4) Suicide attempts and deaths by suicide have an | economic impact on Illinois. The National Center for Injury | Prevention and Control estimates that in 2010 each suicide | death in Illinois resulted in $1,181,549 in medical costs | and work loss costs. It also estimated that each | hospitalization for self-harm resulted in $31,019 in | medical costs and work loss costs and each emergency room | visit for self-harm resulted in $4,546 in medical costs and | work loss costs. | (5) In 2004, the Illinois General Assembly passed the | Suicide Prevention, Education, and Treatment Act (Public | Act 93-907), which required the Illinois Department of | Public Health to establish the Illinois Suicide Prevention | Strategic Planning Committee to develop the Illinois | Suicide Prevention Strategic Plan. That law required the | use of the 2002 United States Surgeon General's National | Suicide Prevention Strategy as a model for the Plan. Public | Act 95-109 changed the name of the committee to the | Illinois Suicide Prevention Alliance. The Illinois Suicide | Prevention Strategic Plan was submitted in 2007 and updated | in 2018. | (6) In 2004, there were 1,028 suicide deaths in |
| Illinois, which the Centers for Disease Control reports was | an age-adjusted rate of 8.11 deaths per 100,000. The | Centers for Disease Control reports that the 1,474 suicide | deaths in 2017 result in an age-adjusted rate of 11.19 | deaths per 100,000. Thus, since the enactment of Public Act | 93-907, the rate of suicides in Illinois has risen by 38%. | (7) Since the enactment of Public Act 93-907, there | have been numerous developments in suicide prevention, | including the issuance of the 2012 National Strategy for | Suicide Prevention by the United States Surgeon General and | the National Action Alliance for Suicide Prevention | containing new strategies and recommended activities for | local governmental bodies. | (8) Despite the obvious impact of suicide on Illinois | citizens, Illinois has devoted minimal resources to its | prevention. There is no full-time coordinator or director | of suicide prevention activities in the State. Moreover, | the Suicide Prevention Strategic Plan is still modeled on | the now obsolete 2002 National Suicide Prevention | Strategy. | (9) It is necessary to revise the Suicide Prevention | Strategic Plan to reflect the most current National Suicide | Prevention Strategy as well as current research and | experience into the prevention of suicide. | (10) One of the goals adopted in the 2012 National | Strategy for Suicide Prevention is to promote suicide |
| prevention as a core component of health care services so | there is an active engagement of health and social | services, as well as the coordination of care across | multiple settings, thereby ensuring continuity of care and | promoting patient safety. | (11) Integrating suicide prevention into behavioral | and physical health care services can save lives. National | data indicate that: over 30% of individuals are receiving | mental health care at the time of their deaths by suicide; | 45% have seen their primary care physicians within one | month of their deaths; and 25% of those who die of suicide | visited an emergency department in the year prior to their | deaths. | (12) The Zero Suicide model is a part of the National | Strategy for Suicide Prevention, a priority of the National | Action Alliance for Suicide Prevention, and a project of | the Suicide Prevention Resource Center that implements the | goal of making suicide prevention a core component of | health care services. | (13) The Zero Suicide model is built on the | foundational belief and aspirational goal that suicide | deaths of individuals who are under the care of our health | care systems are preventable with the adoption of | comprehensive training, patient engagement, transition, | and quality improvement. | (14) Health care systems, including mental and |
| behavioral health systems and hospitals, that have | implemented the Zero Suicide model have noted significant | reductions in suicide deaths for patients within their | care. | (15) The Suicide Prevention Resource Center | facilitates adoption of the Zero Suicide model by providing | comprehensive information, resources, and tools for its | implementation. | (1) The Surgeon General of the United States has | described suicide prevention as a serious public health | priority and has called upon each state to develop a | statewide comprehensive suicide prevention strategy using | a public health approach. Suicide now ranks 10th among | causes of death, nationally. | (2) In 1998, 1,064 Illinoisans lost their lives to | suicide, an average of 3 Illinois residents per day. It is | estimated that there are between 21,000 and 35,000 suicide | attempts in Illinois every year. Three and one-half percent | of all suicides in the nation take place in Illinois. | (3) Among older adults, suicide rates are increasing, | making suicide the leading fatal injury among the elderly | population in Illinois. As the proportion of Illinois' | population age 75 and older increases, the number of | suicides among persons in this age group will also | increase, unless an effective suicide prevention strategy | is implemented.
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| (4) Adolescents are far more likely to attempt suicide | than other age groups in
Illinois. The data indicates that | there are 100 attempts for every adolescent suicide | completed. In 1998, 156 Illinois youths died by suicide, | between the ages of 15 through 24. Using this estimate, | there were likely more than 15,500 suicide attempts made by | Illinois adolescents or approximately 50% of all estimated | suicide attempts that occurred in Illinois were made by | adolescents. | (5) Homicide and suicide rank as the second and third | leading causes of death in Illinois for youth, | respectively. Both are preventable. While the death rates | for unintentional injuries decreased by more than 35% | between 1979 and 1996, the death rates for homicide and | suicide increased for youth. Evidence is growing in terms | of the links between suicide and other forms of violence. | This provides compelling reasons for broadening the | State's scope in identifying risk factors for self-harmful | behavior. The number of estimated youth suicide attempts | and the growing concerns of youth violence can best be | addressed through the implementation of successful | gatekeeper-training programs to identify and refer youth | at risk for self-harmful behavior. | (6) The American Association of Suicidology | conservatively estimates that the lives of at least 6 | persons related to or connected to individuals who attempt |
| or complete suicide are impacted. Using these estimates, in | 1998, more than 6,000 Illinoisans struggled to cope with | the impact of suicide.
| (7) Decreases in alcohol and other drug abuse, as well | as decreases in access to lethal means, significantly | reduce the number of suicides. | (8) Suicide attempts are expected to be higher than | reported because attempts not requiring medical attention | are not required to be reported. The underreporting of | suicide completion is also likely because suicide | classification involves conclusions regarding the intent | of the deceased. The stigma associated with suicide is also | likely to contribute to underreporting. Without | interagency collaboration and support for proven, | community-based, culturally-competent suicide prevention | and intervention programs, suicides are likely to rise. | (9) Emerging data on rates of suicide based on gender, | ethnicity, age, and geographic areas demand a new strategy | that responds to the needs of a diverse population. | (10) According to Children's Safety Network Economics | Insurance, the cost of youth suicide acts by persons in | Illinois who are under 21 years of age totals $539,000,000, | including medical costs, future earnings lost, and a | measure of quality of life.
| (11) Suicide is the second leading cause of death in | Illinois for persons between the ages of 15 and 24. |
| (12) In 1998, there were 1,116 homicides in Illinois, | which outnumbered suicides by only 52. Yet, so far, only | homicide has received funding, programs, and media | attention. | (13) According to the 1999 national report on | statistics for suicide of the American Association of | Suicidology, categories of unintentional injury, motor | vehicle deaths, and all other deaths include many reported | and unsubstantiated suicides that are not identified | correctly because of poor investigatory techniques, | unsophisticated inquest jurors, and stigmas that cause | families to cover up evidence. | (14) Programs for HIV infectious diseases are very well | funded even though, in Illinois, HIV deaths number 30% less | than suicide deaths.
| (Source: P.A. 93-907, eff. 8-11-04.) | (410 ILCS 53/13)
| Sec. 13. Duration; report. The Department, in consultation | with All projects set forth in this Act must be at least 3 | years in duration, and the Department and related contracts as | well as the Illinois Suicide Prevention Alliance , must submit | an annual report annually to the Governor and General Assembly | on the effectiveness of the these activities and programs | undertaken under the Plan that includes any recommendations for | modification to Illinois law to enhance the effectiveness of |
| the Plan .
| (Source: P.A. 95-109, eff. 1-1-08.) | (410 ILCS 53/15)
| Sec. 15. Suicide Prevention Alliance.
| (a) The Alliance is created as the official grassroots | creator, planner, monitor, and advocate for the Illinois | Suicide Prevention Strategic Plan. No later than one year after | the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 101st General | Assembly Act , the Alliance shall review, finalize, and submit | to the Governor and the General Assembly the 2020 Illinois | Suicide Prevention Strategic Plan and appropriate processes | and outcome objectives for 10 overriding recommendations and a | timeline for reaching these objectives. | (b) The Plan shall include: The Alliance shall use the | United States Surgeon General's National Suicide Prevention | Strategy as a model for the Plan. | (1) recommendations from the most current National | Suicide Prevention Strategy; | (2) current research and experience into the | prevention of suicide; | (3) measures to encourage and assist health care | systems and primary care providers to include suicide | prevention as a core component of their services, | including, but not limited to, implementing the Zero | Suicide model; and |
| (4) additional elements as determined appropriate by | the Alliance. | The Alliance shall review the statutorily prescribed | missions of major State mental health, health, aging, and | school mental health programs and recommend, as necessary and | appropriate, statutory changes to include suicide prevention | in the missions and procedures of those programs. The Alliance | shall prepare a report of that review, including its | recommendations, and shall submit the report to the Department | for inclusion in its annual report to the Governor and the | General Assembly by December 31, 2004 . | (c) The Director of Public Health shall appoint the members | of the Alliance. The membership of the Alliance shall include, | without limitation, representatives of statewide organizations | and other agencies that focus on the prevention of suicide and | the improvement of mental health treatment or that provide | suicide prevention or survivor support services. Other | disciplines that shall be considered for membership on the | Alliance include law enforcement, first responders, | faith-based community leaders, universities, and survivors of | suicide (families and friends who have lost persons to suicide) | as well as consumers of services of these agencies and | organizations.
| (d) The Alliance shall meet at least 4 times a year, and | more as deemed necessary, in various sites statewide in order | to foster as much participation as possible. The Alliance, a |
| steering committee, and core members of the full committee | shall monitor and guide the definition and direction of the | goals of the full Alliance, shall review and approve | productions of the plan, and shall meet before the full | Alliance meetings.
| (Source: P.A. 95-109, eff. 1-1-08.) | (410 ILCS 53/20)
| Sec. 20. General awareness and screening program.
| (a) The Department shall provide technical assistance for | the work of the Alliance and the production of the Plan and | shall distribute general information and screening tools for | suicide prevention to the general public through local public | health departments throughout the State. These materials shall | be distributed to agencies, schools, hospitals, churches, | places of employment, and all related professional caregivers | to educate all citizens about warning signs and interventions | that all persons can do to stop the suicidal cycle. | (b) This program shall include, without limitation, all of | the following: | (1) Educational programs about warning signs and how to | help suicidal individuals. | (2) Educational presentations about suicide risk and | how to help at-risk people in special populations and with | bilingual support to special cultures. | (3) The designation of an annual suicide awareness week |
| or month to include a public awareness campaign on suicide. | (4) An annual A statewide suicide prevention | conference before November of 2004 . | (5) An Illinois Suicide Prevention Speaker's Bureau. | (6) A program to educate the media regarding the | guidelines developed by the American Association for | Suicidology for coverage of suicides and to encourage media | cooperation in adopting these guidelines in reporting | suicides. | (7) Increased training opportunities for volunteers, | professionals, and other caregivers to develop specific | skills for assessing suicide risk and intervening to | prevent suicide.
| (Source: P.A. 95-109, eff. 1-1-08.) | (410 ILCS 53/30)
| Sec. 30. Suicide prevention pilot programs. | (a) The Department shall establish, when funds are | appropriated, programs, including, but not limited to, pilot | and demonstration programs, that are consistent with the Plan. | up to 5 pilot programs that provide training and direct service | programs relating to youth, elderly, special populations, | high-risk populations, and professional caregivers. The | purpose of these pilot programs is to demonstrate and evaluate | the effectiveness of the projects set forth in this Act in the | communities in which they are offered. The pilot programs shall |
| be operational for at least 2 years of the 3-year requirement | set forth in Section 13. | (b) The Director of Public Health is encouraged to ensure | that the pilot programs include the following prevention | strategies: | (1) school gatekeeper and faculty training;
| (2) community gatekeeper training; | (3) general community suicide prevention education; | (4) health providers and physician training and | consultation about high-risk cases; | (5) depression, anxiety, and suicide screening | programs;
| (6) peer support youth and older adult programs;
| (7) the enhancement of 24-hour crisis centers, | hotlines, and person-to-person calling trees; | (8) means restriction advocacy and collaboration; and
| (9) intervening and supporting after a suicide.
| (b) (c) The funds appropriated for purposes of this Section | shall be allocated by the Department on a competitive, | grant-submission basis, which shall include consideration of | different rates of risk of suicide based on age, ethnicity, | gender, prevalence of mental health disorders, different rates | of suicide based on geographic areas in Illinois, and the | services and curriculum offered to fit these needs by the | applying agency. | (d) The Department and Alliance shall prepare a report as |
| to the effectiveness of the demonstration projects established | pursuant to this Section and submit that report no later than 6 | months after the projects are completed to the Governor and | General Assembly.
| (Source: P.A. 95-109, eff. 1-1-08.)
| Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon | becoming law.
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Effective Date: 8/9/2019
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