| |
Public Act 096-1158 Public Act 1158 96TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY |
Public Act 096-1158 | HB5991 Enrolled | LRB096 17723 ASK 33088 b |
|
| AN ACT concerning regulation.
| Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois, | represented in the General Assembly:
| Section 5. The Podiatric Medical Practice Act of 1987 is | amended by changing Section 24 and adding Section 24.2 as | follows:
| (225 ILCS 100/24) (from Ch. 111, par. 4824)
| (Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2018)
| Sec. 24. Grounds for disciplinary action.
The Department | may refuse to issue, may refuse to renew,
may refuse to | restore, may suspend, or may revoke any license, or may place
| on probation, reprimand or take other disciplinary or | non-disciplinary action as the
Department may deem proper, | including fines not to exceed $10,000
for each violation upon | anyone licensed under this Act for any of the
following | reasons:
| (1) Making a material misstatement in furnishing | information
to the
Department.
| (2) Violations of this Act, or of the rules or | regulations
promulgated
hereunder.
| (3) Conviction of or entry of a plea of guilty or nolo | contendere to any crime that is a felony under the laws of | the United States or any state or territory of the United |
| States
that
is a misdemeanor, of which an essential
element | is
dishonesty, or of any crime that is directly related to | the
practice of the
profession.
| (4) Making any misrepresentation for the purpose of | obtaining
licenses, or
violating any provision of this Act | or the rules promulgated thereunder
pertaining to | advertising.
| (5) Professional incompetence.
| (6) Gross or repeated malpractice or negligence.
| (7) Aiding or assisting another person in violating any | provision
of this Act or rules.
| (8) Failing, within 30 days, to provide information 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.
| (10) Habitual or excessive use of alcohol, narcotics, | stimulants
or other
chemical agent or drug that results in | the inability to practice
podiatric
medicine with | reasonable judgment, skill or safety.
| (11) Discipline by another United States jurisdiction | if at
least one of
the grounds for the discipline is the | same or substantially equivalent to
those set forth in this | Section.
| (12) Violation of the prohibition against fee | splitting in Section 24.2 of this Act. 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 services not actually or
personally rendered. | This shall not be deemed to include rent or other
| remunerations paid to an individual, partnership, or | corporation, by a
licensee, for the lease, rental or use of | space, owned or controlled, by
the individual, partnership | or corporation.
| (13) A finding by the Podiatric Medical Licensing Board | that the
licensee,
after having his
or her
license placed | on probationary status, has violated the
terms of | probation.
| (14) Abandonment of a patient.
| (15) Willfully making or filing false records or | reports in his
or her practice,
including but not limited | to false records filed with state agencies or
departments.
| (16) Willfully failing to report an instance of | suspected child
abuse or
neglect as required by the Abused | and Neglected Child Report Act.
| (17) Physical illness, mental illness, or other | impairment, including but not limited to,
deterioration | through
the aging process, or loss of motor skill
that | results in the inability to
practice the profession with | reasonable judgment, skill or safety.
| (18) Solicitation of professional services other than |
| permitted
advertising.
| (19) The determination by a circuit court that a | licensed
podiatric
physician is subject to involuntary | admission or judicial admission as
provided in the Mental | Health and Developmental Disabilities Code
operates as an | automatic suspension.
Such suspension will end only upon a | finding by a court that the
patient is no longer subject to | involuntary admission or judicial admission
and issues an | order so finding and discharging the patient; and upon the
| recommendation of the Podiatric Medical Licensing Board to | the Secretary
that the licensee be allowed to resume his or | her practice.
| (20) Holding oneself out to treat human ailments under | any name
other
than his or her own, or the impersonation of | any other physician.
| (21) Revocation or suspension or other action taken | with
respect to a podiatric medical license in
another | jurisdiction that would constitute disciplinary action | under this
Act.
| (22) Promotion of the sale of drugs, devices, | appliances or
goods
provided for a patient in such manner | as to exploit the patient for
financial gain of the | podiatric physician.
| (23) Gross, willful, and continued overcharging for | professional
services
including filing false statements | for collection of fees for those
services, including, but |
| not limited to, filing false statement for
collection of | monies for services not rendered from the medical | assistance
program of the Department of Healthcare and | Family Services (formerly
Department of Public Aid) under | the Illinois Public Aid Code
or other private or public | third party payor.
| (24) Being named as a perpetrator in an indicated | report by the
Department of Children and Family Services | under the Abused and
Neglected Child Reporting Act, and | upon
proof by clear and convincing evidence that the | licensee has caused a child
to be an abused child or | neglected child as defined in the Abused and
Neglected | Child Reporting Act.
| (25) Willfully making or filing false records or | reports in the
practice of podiatric medicine, including, | but not limited to, false
records to support claims against | the medical assistance program of the
Department of | Healthcare and Family Services (formerly Department of | Public Aid) under the Illinois Public Aid Code.
| (26) (Blank).
| (27) Immoral conduct in the commission of any act
| including,
sexual
abuse, sexual misconduct, or sexual | exploitation, related to the licensee's
practice.
| (28) Violation of the Health Care Worker Self-Referral | Act.
| (29) Failure to report to the Department any adverse |
| final action taken
against him or her by another licensing | jurisdiction (another state or a
territory of the United | States or a foreign state or country) by a peer
review
| body, by any health care institution, by a professional | society or association
related to practice under this Act, | by a governmental agency, by a law
enforcement agency, or | by a court for acts or conduct similar to acts or
conduct | that would constitute grounds for action as defined in this | Section.
| The Department may refuse to issue or may suspend the | license of any
person who fails to file a return, or to pay the | tax, penalty or interest
shown in a filed return, or to pay any | final assessment of tax, penalty or
interest, as required by | any tax Act administered by the Illinois
Department of Revenue, | until such time as the requirements of any such tax
Act are | satisfied.
| Upon receipt of a written
communication from the Secretary | of Human Services, the Director of Healthcare and Family | Services (formerly Director of
Public Aid), or the Director of | Public Health that
continuation of practice of a person | licensed under
this Act constitutes an immediate danger to the | public, the Secretary may
immediately suspend
the license of | such person without a hearing. In instances in which the | Secretary immediately suspends a license under this Section, a | hearing upon
such person's license must be convened by the | Board within 15 days after
such suspension and completed |
| without appreciable delay, such hearing held
to determine | whether to recommend to the Secretary that the person's license
| be revoked, suspended, placed on probationary status or | reinstated, or such
person be subject to other disciplinary | action. In such hearing, the
written communication and any | other evidence submitted therewith may be
introduced as | evidence against such person; provided, however, the person
or | his counsel shall have the opportunity to discredit or impeach | such
evidence and submit evidence rebutting the same.
| Except for fraud in procuring a license, all
proceedings to | suspend, revoke, place on probationary status, or take
any
| other disciplinary action as the Department may deem proper, | with regard to a
license on any of the foregoing grounds, must | be commenced within 5 years after
receipt by the Department of | a complaint alleging the commission of or notice
of the | conviction order for any of the acts described in this Section. | Except
for the grounds set forth in items (8), (9), (26), and | (29) of this Section, no action shall be commenced more than 10 | years after
the date of the incident or act alleged to have
| been a
violation of this Section.
In the event of the | settlement of any claim or cause of action in favor of
the | claimant or the reduction to final judgment of any civil action | in favor of
the plaintiff, such claim, cause of action, or | civil action being grounded on
the allegation that a person | licensed under this Act was negligent in providing
care, the | Department shall have an additional period of 2 years from the |
| date
of notification to the Department under Section 26 of this | Act of such
settlement or final judgment in which to | investigate and commence formal
disciplinary proceedings under | Section 24 of this Act, except as otherwise
provided by law.
| The
time during which the holder of the license was outside the | State of Illinois
shall not be included within any period of | time limiting the commencement of
disciplinary action by the | Department.
| In enforcing this Section, the Department or Board upon a | showing of a
possible
violation may compel an individual | licensed to practice under this Act, or
who has applied for | licensure under this Act, to submit
to a mental or physical | examination, or both, as required by and at the expense
of the | Department. The Department or Board may order the examining | physician to
present
testimony concerning the mental or | physical examination of the licensee or
applicant. No | information shall be excluded by reason of any common law or
| statutory privilege relating to communications between the | licensee or
applicant and the examining physician. The | examining
physicians
shall be specifically designated by the | Board or Department.
The individual to be examined may have, at | his or her own expense, another
physician of his or her choice | present during all
aspects of this examination. Failure of an | individual to submit to a mental
or
physical examination, when | directed, shall be grounds for suspension of his or
her
license | until the individual submits to the examination if the |
| Department
finds,
after notice and hearing, that the refusal to | submit to the examination was
without reasonable cause.
| If the Department or Board finds an individual unable to | practice because of
the
reasons
set forth in this Section, the | Department or Board may require that individual
to submit
to
| care, counseling, or treatment by physicians approved
or | designated by the Department or Board, as a condition, term, or | restriction
for continued,
reinstated, or
renewed licensure to | practice; or, in lieu of care, counseling, or treatment,
the | Department may file, or
the Board may recommend to the | Department to file, a complaint to immediately
suspend, revoke, | or otherwise discipline the license of the individual.
An | individual whose
license was granted, continued, reinstated, | renewed, disciplined or supervised
subject to such terms, | conditions, or restrictions, and who fails to comply
with
such | terms, conditions, or restrictions, shall be referred to the | Secretary for
a
determination as to whether the individual | shall have his or her license
suspended immediately, pending a | hearing by the Department.
| In instances in which the Secretary immediately suspends a | person's license
under this Section, a hearing on that person's | license must be convened by
the Department within 30 days after | the suspension and completed without
appreciable
delay.
The | Department and Board shall have the authority to review the | subject
individual's record of
treatment and counseling | regarding the impairment to the extent permitted by
applicable |
| federal statutes and regulations safeguarding the | confidentiality of
medical records.
| An individual licensed under this Act and affected under | this Section shall
be
afforded an opportunity to demonstrate to | the Department or Board that he or
she can resume
practice in | compliance with acceptable and prevailing standards under the
| provisions of his or her license.
| (Source: P.A. 95-235, eff. 8-17-07; 95-331, eff. 8-21-07.)
| (225 ILCS 100/24.2 new) | (Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2018) | Sec. 24.2. Prohibition against fee splitting. | (a) A licensee under this Act may not directly or | indirectly divide, share, or split any professional fee or | other form of compensation for professional services with | anyone in exchange for a referral or otherwise, other than as | provided in this Section 24.2. | (b) Nothing contained in this Section abrogates the right | of 2 or more licensed health care workers as defined in the | Health Care Worker Self-Referral Act to each receive adequate | compensation for concurrently rendering services to a patient | and to divide the fee for such service, whether or not the | worker is employed, provided that the patient has full | knowledge of the division and the division is made in | proportion to the actual services personally performed and | responsibility assumed by each licensee consistent with his or |
| her license, except as prohibited by law. | (c) Nothing contained in this Section prohibits a licensee | under this Act from practicing podiatry through or within any | form of legal entity authorized to conduct business in this | State or from pooling, sharing, dividing, or apportioning the | professional fees and other revenues in accordance with the | agreements and policies of the entity provided: | (1) each owner of the entity is licensed under this
| Act; or | (2) the entity is organized under the Professional
| Services Corporation Act, the Professional Association | Act, or the Limited Liability Company Act; or | (3) the entity is allowed by Illinois law to provide
| podiatry services or employ podiatrists such as a licensed | hospital or hospital affiliate or licensed ambulatory | surgical treatment center owned in full or in part by | Illinois-licensed physicians; or | (4) the entity is a combination or joint venture of
the | entities authorized under this subsection (c). | (d) Nothing contained in this Section prohibits a
licensee | under this Act from paying a fair market value fee to any | person or entity whose purpose is to perform billing, | administrative preparation, or collection services based upon | a percentage of professional service fees billed or collected, | a flat fee, or any other arrangement that directly or | indirectly divides professional fees, for the administrative |
| preparation of the licensee's claims or the collection of the | licensee's charges for professional services, provided that: | (1) the licensee or the licensee's practice under
| subsection (c) of this Section at all times controls the | amount of fees charged and collected; and | (2) all charges collected are paid directly to the
| licensee or the licensee's practice or are deposited | directly into an account in the name of and under the sole | control of the licensee or the licensee's practice or | deposited into a "Trust Account" by a licensed collection | agency in accordance with the requirements of Section 8(c) | of the Illinois Collection Agency Act. | (e) Nothing contained in this Section prohibits the
| granting of a security interest in the accounts receivable or | fees of a licensee under this Act or the licensee's practice | for bona fide advances made to the licensee or licensee's | practice provided the licensee retains control and | responsibility for the collection of the accounts receivable | and fees. | (f) Excluding payments that may be made to the owners of
or | licensees in the licensee's practice under subsection (c) of | this Section, a licensee under this Act may not divide, share | or split a professional service fee with, or otherwise directly | or indirectly pay a percentage of the licensee's professional | service fees, revenues or profits to anyone for: (i) the | marketing or management of the licensee's practice, (ii) |
| including the licensee or the licensee's practice on any | preferred provider list, (iii) allowing the licensee to | participate in any network of health care providers, (iv) | negotiating fees, charges or terms of service or payment on | behalf of the licensee, or (v) including the licensee in a | program whereby patients or beneficiaries are provided an | incentive to use the services of the licensee. | (g) Nothing contained in this Section prohibits the
payment | of rent or other remunerations paid to an individual, | partnership, or corporation by a licensee for the lease, | rental, or use of space, owned or controlled by the individual, | partnership, corporation, or association. | (h) Nothing contained in this Section prohibits the | payment, at no more than fair market value, to an individual, | partnership, or corporation by a licensee for the use of staff, | administrative services, franchise agreements, marketing | required by franchise agreements, or equipment owned or | controlled by the individual, partnership, or corporation, or | the receipt thereof by a licensee. |
Effective Date: 1/1/2011
|
|
|