Public Act 103-0547 Public Act 0547 103RD GENERAL ASSEMBLY |
Public Act 103-0547 | SB0761 Enrolled | LRB103 03215 CPF 48221 b |
|
| AN ACT concerning regulation.
| Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois, | represented in the General Assembly:
| Section 5. The Emergency Medical Services (EMS) Systems | Act is amended by changing Sections 3.20, 3.55, and 3.85 and by | adding Section 3.22 as follows:
| (210 ILCS 50/3.20)
| Sec. 3.20. Emergency Medical Services (EMS) Systems. | (a) "Emergency Medical Services (EMS) System" means an
| organization of hospitals, vehicle service providers and
| personnel approved by the Department in a specific
geographic | area, which coordinates and provides pre-hospital
and | inter-hospital emergency care and non-emergency medical
| transports at a BLS, ILS and/or ALS level pursuant to a
System | program plan submitted to and approved by the
Department, and | pursuant to the EMS Region Plan adopted for
the EMS Region in | which the System is located. | (b) One hospital in each System program plan must be
| designated as the Resource Hospital. All other hospitals
which | are located within the geographic boundaries of a
System and | which have standby, basic or comprehensive level
emergency | departments must function in that EMS System as
either an | Associate Hospital or Participating Hospital and
follow all |
| System policies specified in the System Program
Plan, | including but not limited to the replacement of drugs
and | equipment used by providers who have delivered patients
to | their emergency departments. All hospitals and vehicle
service | providers participating in an EMS System must
specify their | level of participation in the System Program
Plan. | (c) The Department shall have the authority and
| responsibility to: | (1) Approve BLS, ILS and ALS level EMS Systems which
| meet minimum standards and criteria established in rules
| adopted by the Department pursuant to this Act, including
| the submission of a Program Plan for Department approval.
| Beginning September 1, 1997, the Department shall approve
| the development of a new EMS System only when a local or
| regional need for establishing such System has been
| verified by the Department. This shall not be construed as | a needs assessment for health
planning or
other purposes | outside of this Act.
Following Department approval, EMS | Systems must
be fully operational within one year from the | date of
approval. | (2) Monitor EMS Systems, based on minimum standards | for
continuing operation as prescribed in rules adopted by | the
Department pursuant to this Act, which shall include
| requirements for submitting Program Plan amendments to the
| Department for approval. | (3) Renew EMS System approvals every 4 years, after
an |
| inspection, based on compliance with the standards for
| continuing operation prescribed in rules adopted by the
| Department pursuant to this Act. | (4) Suspend, revoke, or refuse to renew approval of
| any EMS System, after providing an opportunity for a
| hearing, when findings show that it does not meet the
| minimum standards for continuing operation as prescribed | by
the Department, or is found to be in violation of its
| previously approved Program Plan. | (5) Require each EMS System to adopt written protocols
| for the bypassing of or diversion to any hospital, trauma
| center or regional trauma center, which provide that a | person
shall not be transported to a facility other than | the nearest
hospital, regional trauma center or trauma | center unless the
medical benefits to the patient | reasonably expected from the
provision of appropriate | medical treatment at a more distant
facility outweigh the | increased risks to the patient from
transport to the more | distant facility, or the transport is in
accordance with | the System's protocols for patient
choice or refusal. | (6) Require that the EMS Medical Director of an ILS or
| ALS level EMS System be a physician licensed to practice
| medicine in all of its branches in Illinois, and certified | by
the American Board of Emergency Medicine or the | American Osteopathic Board
of Emergency Medicine, and that | the EMS Medical
Director of a BLS level EMS System be a |
| physician licensed to
practice medicine in all of its | branches in Illinois, with
regular and frequent | involvement in pre-hospital emergency
medical services. In | addition, all EMS Medical Directors shall: | (A) Have experience on an EMS vehicle at the
| highest level available within the System, or make | provision
to gain such experience within 12 months | prior to the
date responsibility for the System is | assumed or within 90
days after assuming the position; | (B) Be thoroughly knowledgeable of all skills
| included in the scope of practices of all levels of EMS
| personnel within the System; | (C) Have or make provision to gain experience
| instructing students at a level similar to that of the | levels
of EMS personnel within the System; and | (D) For ILS and ALS EMS Medical Directors,
| successfully complete a Department-approved EMS | Medical
Director's Course. | (7) Prescribe statewide EMS data elements to be
| collected and documented by providers in all EMS Systems | for
all emergency and non-emergency medical services, with | a
one-year phase-in for commencing collection of such data
| elements. | (8) Define, through rules adopted pursuant to this | Act,
the terms "Resource Hospital", "Associate Hospital",
| "Participating Hospital", "Basic Emergency Department",
|
| "Standby Emergency Department", "Comprehensive Emergency | Department", "EMS
Medical Director", "EMS Administrative
| Director", and "EMS System Coordinator". | (A) (Blank). | (B) (Blank). | (9) Investigate the
circumstances that caused a | hospital
in an EMS system
to go on
bypass status to | determine whether that hospital's decision to go on bypass
| status was reasonable. The Department may impose | sanctions, as
set forth in Section 3.140 of the Act, upon a | Department determination that the
hospital unreasonably
| went on bypass status in violation of the Act. | (10) Evaluate the capacity and performance of any | freestanding emergency center established under Section | 32.5 of this Act in meeting emergency medical service | needs of the public, including compliance with applicable | emergency medical standards and assurance of the | availability of and immediate access to the highest | quality of medical care possible.
| (11) Permit limited EMS System participation by | facilities operated by the United States Department of | Veterans Affairs, Veterans Health Administration. Subject | to patient preference, Illinois EMS providers may | transport patients to Veterans Health Administration | facilities that voluntarily participate in an EMS System. | Any Veterans Health Administration facility seeking |
| limited participation in an EMS System shall agree to | comply with all Department administrative rules | implementing this Section. The Department may promulgate | rules, including, but not limited to, the types of | Veterans Health Administration facilities that may | participate in an EMS System and the limitations of | participation. | (12) Ensure that EMS systems are transporting pregnant | women to the appropriate facilities based on the | classification of the levels of maternal care described | under subsection (a) of Section 2310-223 of the Department | of Public Health Powers and Duties Law of the Civil | Administrative Code of Illinois. | (13) Provide administrative support to the EMT | Training, Recruitment, and Retention Task Force. | (Source: P.A. 101-447, eff. 8-23-19.) | (210 ILCS 50/3.22 new) | Sec. 3.22. EMT Training, Recruitment, and Retention Task | Force. | (a) The EMT Training, Recruitment, and Retention Task | Force is created to address the following: | (1) the impact that the EMT and Paramedic shortage is | having on this State's EMS System and health care system; | (2) barriers to the training, recruitment, and | retention of Emergency Medical Technicians throughout this |
| State; | (3) steps that the State of Illinois can take, | including coordination and identification of State and | federal funding sources, to assist Illinois high schools, | community colleges, and ground ambulance providers to | train, recruit, and retain emergency medical technicians; | (4) the examination of current testing mechanisms for | EMRs, EMTs, and Paramedics and the utilization of the | National Registry of Emergency Medical Technicians, | including current pass rates by licensure level, national | utilization, and test preparation strategies; | (5) how apprenticeship programs, local, regional, and | statewide, can be utilized to recruit and retain EMRs, | EMTs, and Paramedics; | (6) how ground ambulance reimbursement affects the | recruitment and retention of EMTs and Paramedics; and | (7) all other areas that the Task Force deems | necessary to examine and assist in the recruitment and | retention of EMTs and Paramedics. | (b) The Task Force shall be comprised of the following | members: | (1) one member of the Illinois General Assembly, | appointed by the President of the Senate, who shall serve | as co-chair; | (2) one member of the Illinois General Assembly, | appointed by the Speaker of the House of Representatives; |
| (3) one member of the Illinois General Assembly, | appointed by the Senate Minority Leader; | (4) one member of the Illinois General Assembly, | appointed by the House Minority Leader, who shall serve as | co-chair; | (5) 9 members representing private ground ambulance | providers throughout this State representing for-profit | and non-profit rural and urban ground ambulance providers, | appointed by the President of the Senate; | (6) 3 members representing hospitals, appointed by the | Speaker of the House of Representatives, with one member | representing safety net hospitals and one member | representing rural hospitals; | (7) 3 members representing a statewide association of | nursing homes, appointed by the President of the Senate; | (8) one member representing the State Board of | Education, appointed by the House Minority Leader; | (9) 2 EMS Medical Directors from a Regional EMS | Medical Directors Committee, appointed by the Governor; | and | (10) one member representing the Illinois Community | College Systems, appointed by the Minority Leader of the | Senate. | (c) Members of the Task Force shall serve without | compensation. | (d) The Task Force shall convene at the call of the |
| co-chairs and shall hold at least 6 meetings. | (e) The Task Force shall submit its final report to the | General Assembly and the Governor no later than January 1, | 2024, and upon the submission of its final report, the Task | Force shall be dissolved.
| (210 ILCS 50/3.55)
| Sec. 3.55. Scope of practice.
| (a) Any person currently licensed as an EMR, EMT, EMT-I,
| A-EMT, PHRN, PHAPRN, PHPA, or Paramedic may perform emergency | and non-emergency medical
services as defined in this Act, in | accordance with his or her level of
education, training and | licensure, the standards of
performance and conduct prescribed | by the Department in
rules adopted pursuant to this Act, and | the requirements of
the EMS System in which he or she | practices, as contained in the
approved Program Plan for that | System. The Director may, by written order, temporarily modify | individual scopes of practice in response to public health | emergencies for periods not exceeding 180 days.
| (a-5) EMS personnel who have successfully completed a | Department approved
course in automated defibrillator | operation and who are functioning within a
Department approved | EMS System may utilize such automated defibrillator
according | to the standards of performance and conduct prescribed by the
| Department
in rules adopted pursuant to this Act and the | requirements of the EMS System in
which they practice, as |
| contained in the approved Program Plan for that
System.
| (a-7) An EMT, EMT-I, A-EMT, PHRN, PHAPRN, PHPA, or | Paramedic
who has successfully completed a Department approved | course in the
administration of epinephrine shall be required | to carry epinephrine
with him or her as part of the EMS | personnel medical supplies whenever
he or she is performing | official duties as determined by the EMS System. The | epinephrine may be administered from a glass vial, | auto-injector, ampule, or pre-filled syringe.
| (b) An EMR, EMT,
EMT-I, A-EMT, PHRN, PHAPRN, PHPA, or | Paramedic may practice as an EMR, EMT, EMT-I, A-EMT, or | Paramedic or utilize his or her EMR, EMT, EMT-I, A-EMT, PHRN, | PHAPRN, PHPA, or Paramedic license
in pre-hospital or | inter-hospital emergency care settings or
non-emergency | medical transport situations, under the
written or verbal | direction of the EMS Medical Director.
For purposes of this | Section, a "pre-hospital emergency care
setting" may include a | location, that is not a health care
facility, which utilizes | EMS personnel to render pre-hospital
emergency care prior to | the arrival of a transport vehicle.
The location shall include | communication equipment and all
of the portable equipment and | drugs appropriate for the EMR, EMT, EMT-I, A-EMT, or | Paramedic's
level of care, as required by this Act, rules | adopted
by the Department pursuant to this Act, and the | protocols of
the EMS Systems, and shall operate only with the | approval
and under the direction of the EMS Medical Director.
|
| This Section shall not prohibit an EMR, EMT, EMT-I, A-EMT, | PHRN, PHAPRN, PHPA, or Paramedic
from practicing within an | emergency department or
other health care setting for the | purpose of receiving
continuing education or training approved | by the EMS Medical
Director. This Section shall also not | prohibit an EMT,
EMT-I, A-EMT, PHRN, PHAPRN, PHPA, or | Paramedic from seeking credentials other than his or her EMT, | EMT-I, A-EMT, PHRN, PHAPRN, PHPA, or Paramedic
license and | utilizing such credentials to work in emergency
departments or | other health care settings under the
jurisdiction of that | employer.
| (c) An EMT,
EMT-I, A-EMT, PHRN, PHAPRN, PHPA, or Paramedic | may honor Do Not Resuscitate (DNR) orders and powers
of | attorney for health care only in accordance with rules
adopted | by the Department pursuant to this Act and protocols
of the EMS | System in which he or she practices.
| (d) A student enrolled in a Department approved EMS | personnel
program, while fulfilling the
clinical training and | in-field supervised experience
requirements mandated for | licensure or approval by the
System and the Department, may | perform prescribed procedures
under the direct supervision of | a physician licensed to
practice medicine in all of its | branches, a qualified
registered professional nurse, or | qualified EMS personnel, only when
authorized by the EMS | Medical Director.
| (e) An EMR, EMT, EMT-I, A-EMT, PHRN, PHAPRN, PHPA, or |
| Paramedic may transport a police dog injured in the line of | duty to a veterinary clinic or similar facility if there are no | persons requiring medical attention or transport at that time. | For the purposes of this subsection, "police dog" means a dog | owned or used by a law enforcement department or agency in the | course of the department or agency's work, including a search | and rescue dog, service dog, accelerant detection canine, or | other dog that is in use by a county, municipal, or State law | enforcement agency. | (f) Nothing in this Act shall be construed to prohibit an | EMT, EMT-I, A-EMT, Paramedic, or PHRN from completing an | initial Occupational Safety and Health Administration | Respirator Medical Evaluation Questionnaire on behalf of fire | service personnel, as permitted by his or her EMS System | Medical Director. | (g) An EMT, EMT-I, A-EMT, Paramedic, PHRN, PHAPRN, or PHPA | shall be eligible to work for another EMS System for a period | not to exceed 2 weeks if the individual is under the direct | supervision of another licensed individual operating at the | same or higher level as the EMT, EMT-I, A-EMT, Paramedic, | PHRN, PHAPRN, or PHPA; obtained approval in writing from the | EMS System's Medical Director; and tests into the EMS System | based upon appropriate standards as outlined in the EMS System | Program Plan. The EMS System within which the EMT, EMT-I, | A-EMT, Paramedic, PHRN, PHAPRN, or PHPA is seeking to join | must make all required testing available to the EMT, EMT-I, |
| A-EMT, Paramedic, PHRN, PHAPRN, or PHPA within 2 weeks after | the written request. Failure to do so by the EMS System shall | allow the EMT, EMT-I, A-EMT, Paramedic, PHRN, PHAPRN, or PHPA | to continue working for another EMS System until all required | testing becomes available. | (Source: P.A. 102-79, eff. 1-1-22 .)
| (210 ILCS 50/3.85)
| Sec. 3.85. Vehicle Service Providers.
| (a) "Vehicle Service Provider" means an entity
licensed by | the Department to provide emergency or
non-emergency medical | services in compliance with this Act,
the rules promulgated by | the Department pursuant to this
Act, and an operational plan | approved by its EMS System(s),
utilizing at least ambulances | or specialized emergency
medical service vehicles (SEMSV).
| (1) "Ambulance" means any publicly or
privately owned | on-road vehicle that is specifically designed,
constructed | or modified and equipped, and is intended to be
used for, | and is maintained or operated for the emergency
| transportation of persons who are sick, injured, wounded | or
otherwise incapacitated or helpless, or the | non-emergency
medical transportation of persons who | require the presence
of medical personnel to monitor the | individual's condition
or medical apparatus being used on | such individuals.
| (2) "Specialized Emergency Medical Services
Vehicle" |
| or "SEMSV" means a vehicle or conveyance, other
than those | owned or operated by the federal government, that
is | primarily intended for use in transporting the sick or
| injured by means of air, water, or ground transportation,
| that is not an ambulance as defined in this Act. The term
| includes watercraft, aircraft and special purpose ground
| transport vehicles or conveyances not intended for use on
| public roads.
| (3) An ambulance or SEMSV may also be
designated as a | Limited Operation Vehicle or Special-Use Vehicle:
| (A) "Limited Operation Vehicle" means a
vehicle | which is licensed by the Department to provide
basic, | intermediate or advanced life support emergency or
| non-emergency medical services that are exclusively | limited
to specific events or locales.
| (B) "Special-Use Vehicle" means any
publicly or | privately owned vehicle that is specifically designed,
| constructed or modified and equipped, and is intended | to be
used for, and is maintained or operated solely | for the
emergency or non-emergency transportation of a | specific
medical class or category of persons who are | sick, injured,
wounded or otherwise incapacitated or | helpless (e.g.
high-risk obstetrical patients, | neonatal patients).
| (C) "Reserve Ambulance" means a vehicle that meets | all criteria set forth in this Section and all |
| Department rules, except for the required inventory of | medical supplies and durable medical equipment, which | may be rapidly transferred from a fully functional | ambulance to a reserve ambulance without the use of | tools or special mechanical expertise. | (b) The Department shall have the authority and
| responsibility to:
| (1) Require all Vehicle Service Providers, both
| publicly and privately owned, to function within an EMS
| System.
| (2) Require a Vehicle Service Provider
utilizing | ambulances to have a primary affiliation with an EMS | System
within the EMS Region in which its Primary Service | Area is
located, which is the geographic areas in which | the provider
renders the majority of its emergency | responses. This
requirement shall not apply to Vehicle | Service Providers
which exclusively utilize Limited | Operation Vehicles.
| (3) Establish licensing standards and
requirements for | Vehicle Service Providers, through rules
adopted pursuant | to this Act, including but not limited to:
| (A) Vehicle design, specification,
operation and | maintenance standards, including standards for the use | of reserve ambulances;
| (B) Equipment requirements;
| (C) Staffing requirements; and
|
| (D) License renewal at intervals determined by the | Department, which shall be not less than every 4 | years. | The Department's standards and requirements with | respect to vehicle staffing for private, nonpublic local | government employers must allow for alternative staffing | models that include an EMR who
drives an ambulance with a | licensed EMT, EMT-I, A-EMT,
Paramedic, or PHRN, as | appropriate, in the patient
compartment providing care to | the patient pursuant to the approval of the EMS System | Program Plan developed and approved by the EMS Medical | Director for an EMS System. The EMS personnel licensed at | the highest level shall provide the initial assessment of | the patient to determine the level of care required for | transport to the receiving health care facility, and this | assessment shall be documented in the patient care report | and documented with online medical control. The EMS | personnel licensed at or above the level of care required | by the specific patient as directed by the EMS Medical | Director shall be the primary care provider en route to | the destination facility or patient's residence. The | Department shall monitor the implementation and | performance of alternative staffing models and may issue a | notice of termination of an alternative staffing model | only upon evidence that an EMS System Program Plan is not | being adhered to. Adoption of an alternative staffing |
| model shall not result in a Vehicle Service Provider being | prohibited or limited in the utilization of its staff or | equipment from providing any of the services authorized by | this Act or as otherwise outlined in the approved EMS | System Program Plan, including, without limitation, the | deployment of resources to provide out-of-state disaster | response. EMS System Program Plans must address a process | for out-of-state disaster response deployments that must | meet the following: | (A) All deployments to provide out-of-state | disaster response must first be approved by the EMS | Medical Director and submitted to the Department. | (B) The submission must include the number of | units being deployed, vehicle identification numbers, | length of deployment, and names of personnel and their | licensure level. | (C) Ensure that all necessary in-state requests | for services will be covered during the duration of | the deployment. | An EMS System Program Plan for a Basic Life Support , | advanced life support, and critical care transport
| utilizing an EMR and an EMT shall include the
following: | (A) Alternative staffing models for a Basic Life | Support transport utilizing an EMR and an EMT shall | only be utilized for interfacility Basic Life Support | transports as specified by the EMS System Program Plan |
| as determined by the EMS System Medical Director and | medical appointments, excluding any transport to or | from a dialysis center . | (B) Protocols that shall include dispatch | procedures to properly screen and assess patients for | EMR-staffed transports and EMT-staffed Basic Life | Support transport . | (C) A requirement that a provider and EMS System | shall implement a quality assurance plan that shall | include for the initial waiver period the review of at | least 5% of total interfacility transports utilizing | an EMR with mechanisms outlined to audit dispatch | screening , reason for transport, patient diagnosis, | level of care, and the outcome of transports | performed. Quality assurance reports must be submitted | and reviewed by the provider and EMS System monthly | and made available to the Department upon request. The | percentage of transports reviewed under quality | assurance plans for renewal periods shall be | determined by the EMS Medical Director, however, it | shall not be less than 3%. | (D) The EMS System Medical Director shall develop | a minimum set of requirements for individuals based on | level of licensure that includes education, training, | and credentialing for all team members identified to | participate in an alternative staffing plan. The EMT , |
| Paramedic, PHRN, PHPA, PHAPRN, and critical care | transport staff shall have the minimum at least one | year of experience in performance of pre-hospital and | inter-hospital emergency care , as determined by the | EMS Medical Director in accordance with the EMS System | Program Plan, but at a minimum of 6 months of | prehospital experience or at least 50 documented | patient care interventions during transport as the | primary care provider and approved by the Department . | (E) The licensed EMR must complete a defensive | driving course prior to participation in the | Department's alternative staffing model. | (F) The length of the EMS System Program Plan for a | Basic Life Support transport
utilizing an EMR and an | EMT shall be for one year, and must be renewed annually | if proof of the criteria being met is submitted, | validated, and approved by the EMS Medical Director | for the EMS System and the Department. | (G) Beginning July 1, 2023, the utilization of | EMRs for advanced life support transports and Tier III | Critical Care Transports shall be allowed for periods | not to exceed 3 years under a pilot program. The pilot | program shall not be implemented before Department | approval. Agencies requesting to utilize this staffing | model for the time period of the pilot program must | complete the following: |
| (i) Submit a waiver request to the Department | requesting to participate in the pilot program | with specific details of how quality assurance and | improvement will be gathered, measured, reported | to the Department, and reviewed and utilized | internally by the participating agency. | (ii) Submit a signed approval letter from the | EMS System Medical Director approving | participation in the pilot program. | (iii) Submit updated EMS System plans, | additional education, and training of the EMR and | protocols related to the pilot program. | (iv) Submit agency policies and procedures | related to the pilot program. | (v) Submit the number of individuals currently | participating and committed to participating in | education programs to achieve a higher level of | licensure at the time of submission. | (vi) Submit an explanation of how the provider | will support individuals obtaining a higher level | of licensure and encourage a higher level of | licensure during the year of the alternative | staffing plan and specific examples of recruitment | and retention activities or initiatives. | Upon submission of a renewal application and | recruitment and retention plan, the provider shall |
| include additional data regarding current employment | numbers, attrition rates over the year, and activities | and initiatives over the previous year to address | recruitment and retention. | The information required under this subparagraph | (G) shall be provided to and retained by the EMS System | upon initial application and renewal and shall be | provided to the Department upon request. | The Department must allow for an alternative rural | staffing model for those vehicle service providers that | serve a rural or semi-rural population of 10,000 or fewer | inhabitants and exclusively uses volunteers, paid-on-call, | or a combination thereof.
| (4) License all Vehicle Service Providers
that have | met the Department's requirements for licensure, unless
| such Provider is owned or licensed by the federal
| government. All Provider licenses issued by the Department
| shall specify the level and type of each vehicle covered | by
the license (BLS, ILS, ALS, ambulance, critical care | transport, SEMSV, limited
operation vehicle, special use | vehicle, reserve ambulance).
| (5) Annually inspect all licensed vehicles operated by | Vehicle
Service Providers.
| (6) Suspend, revoke, refuse to issue or refuse to
| renew the license of any Vehicle Service Provider, or that
| portion of a license pertaining to a specific vehicle
|
| operated by the Provider, after an opportunity for a
| hearing, when findings show that the Provider or one or | more
of its vehicles has failed to comply with the | standards and
requirements of this Act or rules adopted by | the Department
pursuant to this Act.
| (7) Issue an Emergency Suspension Order for
any | Provider or vehicle licensed under this Act, when the
| Director or his designee has determined that an immediate
| and serious danger to the public health, safety and | welfare
exists. Suspension or revocation proceedings which | offer an
opportunity for hearing shall be promptly | initiated after
the Emergency Suspension Order has been | issued.
| (8) Exempt any licensed vehicle from
subsequent | vehicle design standards or specifications required by the
| Department, as long as said vehicle is continuously in
| compliance with the vehicle design standards and
| specifications originally applicable to that vehicle, or
| until said vehicle's title of ownership is transferred.
| (9) Exempt any vehicle (except an SEMSV)
which was | being used as an ambulance on or before December 15,
1980, | from vehicle design standards and specifications
required | by the Department, until said vehicle's title of
ownership | is transferred. Such vehicles shall not be exempt
from all | other licensing standards and requirements
prescribed by | the Department.
|
| (10) Prohibit any Vehicle Service Provider
from | advertising, identifying its vehicles, or disseminating
| information in a false or misleading manner concerning the
| Provider's type and level of vehicles, location, primary
| service area, response times, level of personnel, | licensure
status or System participation.
| (10.5) Prohibit any Vehicle Service Provider, whether | municipal, private, or hospital-owned, from advertising | itself as a critical care transport provider unless it | participates in a Department-approved EMS System critical | care transport plan. | (11) Charge each Vehicle Service Provider a
fee per | transport vehicle, due annually at time of inspection. The | fee per transport vehicle shall be set by administrative | rule by the Department and shall not exceed 100 vehicles | per provider. | (12) Beginning July 1, 2023, as part of a pilot | program that shall not exceed a term of 3 years, an | ambulance may be upgraded to a higher level of care for | interfacility transports by an ambulance assistance | vehicle with appropriate equipment and licensed personnel | to intercept with the licensed ambulance at the sending | facility before departure. The pilot program shall not be | implemented before Department approval. To participate in | the pilot program, an agency must: | (A) Submit a waiver request to the Department with |
| intercept vehicle vehicle identification numbers, | calls signs, equipment detail, and a robust quality | assurance plan that shall list, at minimum, detailed | reasons each intercept had to be completed, barriers | to initial dispatch of advanced life support services, | and how this benefited the patient. | (B) Report to the Department quarterly additional | data deemed meaningful by the providing agency along | with the data required under subparagraph (A) of this | paragraph (12). | (C) Obtain a signed letter of approval from the | EMS Medical Director allowing for participation in the | pilot program. | (D) Update EMS System plans and protocols from the | pilot program. | (E) Update policies and procedures from the | agencies participating in the pilot program.
| (Source: P.A. 102-623, eff. 8-27-21.)
| Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon | becoming law. |
Effective Date: 8/11/2023
|