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Public Act 100-0432
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SB1400 Enrolled | LRB100 08265 MJP 18366 b |
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AN ACT concerning health.
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Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
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represented in the General Assembly:
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Section 5. The Department of Human Services Act is amended |
by changing Section 1-17 as follows:
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(20 ILCS 1305/1-17)
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Sec. 1-17. Inspector General. |
(a) Nature and purpose. It is the express intent of the |
General Assembly to ensure the health, safety, and financial |
condition of individuals receiving services in this State due |
to mental illness, developmental disability, or both by |
protecting those persons from acts of abuse, neglect, or both |
by service providers. To that end, the Office of the Inspector |
General for the Department of Human Services is created to |
investigate and report upon allegations of the abuse, neglect, |
or financial exploitation of individuals receiving services |
within mental health facilities, developmental disabilities |
facilities, and community agencies operated, licensed, funded |
or certified by the Department of Human Services, but not |
licensed or certified by any other State agency. |
(b) Definitions. The following definitions apply to this |
Section: |
"Adult student with a disability" means an adult student, |
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age 18 through 21, inclusive, with an Individual Education |
Program, other than a resident of a facility licensed by the |
Department of Children and Family Services in accordance with |
the Child Care Act of 1969. For purposes of this definition, |
"through age 21, inclusive", means through the day before the |
student's 22nd birthday. |
"Agency" or "community agency" means (i) a community agency |
licensed, funded, or certified by the Department, but not |
licensed or certified by any other human services agency of the |
State, to provide mental health service or developmental |
disabilities service, or (ii) a program licensed, funded, or |
certified by the Department, but not licensed or certified by |
any other human services agency of the State, to provide mental |
health service or developmental disabilities service. |
"Aggravating circumstance" means a factor that is |
attendant to a finding and that tends to compound or increase |
the culpability of the accused. |
"Allegation" means an assertion, complaint, suspicion, or |
incident involving any of the following conduct by an employee, |
facility, or agency against an individual or individuals: |
mental abuse, physical abuse, sexual abuse, neglect, or |
financial exploitation. |
"Day" means working day, unless otherwise specified. |
"Deflection" means a situation in which an individual is |
presented for admission to a facility or agency, and the |
facility staff or agency staff do not admit the individual. |
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"Deflection" includes triage, redirection, and denial of |
admission. |
"Department" means the Department of Human Services. |
"Developmental disability" means "developmental |
disability" as defined in the Mental Health and Developmental |
Disabilities Code. |
"Egregious neglect" means a finding of neglect as |
determined by the Inspector General that (i) represents a gross |
failure to adequately provide for, or a callused indifference |
to, the health, safety, or medical needs of an individual and |
(ii) results in an individual's death or other serious |
deterioration of an individual's physical condition or mental |
condition. |
"Employee" means any person who provides services at the |
facility or agency on-site or off-site. The service |
relationship can be with the individual or with the facility or |
agency. Also, "employee" includes any employee or contractual |
agent of the Department of Human Services or the community |
agency involved in providing or monitoring or administering |
mental health or developmental disability services. This |
includes but is not limited to: owners, operators, payroll |
personnel, contractors, subcontractors, and volunteers. |
"Facility" or "State-operated facility" means a mental |
health facility or developmental disabilities facility |
operated by the Department. |
"Financial exploitation" means taking unjust advantage of |
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an individual's assets, property, or financial resources |
through deception, intimidation, or conversion for the |
employee's, facility's, or agency's own advantage or benefit. |
"Finding" means the Office of Inspector General's |
determination regarding whether an allegation is |
substantiated, unsubstantiated, or unfounded. |
"Health Care Worker Registry" "Health care worker |
registry" or "Registry" "registry" means the Health Care Worker |
Registry health care worker registry under created by the |
Health Care Worker Background Check Act Nursing Home Care Act . |
"Individual" means any person receiving mental health |
service, developmental disabilities service, or both from a |
facility or agency, while either on-site or off-site. |
"Mental abuse" means the use of demeaning, intimidating, or |
threatening words, signs, gestures, or other actions by an |
employee about an individual and in the presence of an |
individual or individuals that results in emotional distress or |
maladaptive behavior, or could have resulted in emotional |
distress or maladaptive behavior, for any individual present. |
"Mental illness" means "mental illness" as defined in the |
Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities Code. |
"Mentally ill" means having a mental illness. |
"Mitigating circumstance" means a condition that (i) is |
attendant to a finding, (ii) does not excuse or justify the |
conduct in question, but (iii) may be considered in evaluating |
the severity of the conduct, the culpability of the accused, or |
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both the severity of the conduct and the culpability of the |
accused. |
"Neglect" means an employee's, agency's, or facility's |
failure to provide adequate medical care, personal care, or |
maintenance and that, as a consequence, (i) causes an |
individual pain, injury, or emotional distress, (ii) results in |
either an individual's maladaptive behavior or the |
deterioration of an individual's physical condition or mental |
condition, or (iii) places the individual's health or safety at |
substantial risk. |
"Person with a developmental disability" means a person |
having a developmental disability. |
"Physical abuse" means an employee's non-accidental and |
inappropriate contact with an individual that causes bodily |
harm. "Physical abuse" includes actions that cause bodily harm |
as a result of an employee directing an individual or person to |
physically abuse another individual. |
"Recommendation" means an admonition, separate from a |
finding, that requires action by the facility, agency, or |
Department to correct a systemic issue, problem, or deficiency |
identified during an investigation. |
"Required reporter" means any employee who suspects, |
witnesses, or is informed of an allegation of any one or more |
of the following: mental abuse, physical abuse, sexual abuse, |
neglect, or financial exploitation. |
"Secretary" means the Chief Administrative Officer of the |
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Department. |
"Sexual abuse" means any sexual contact or intimate |
physical contact between an employee and an individual, |
including an employee's coercion or encouragement of an |
individual to engage in sexual behavior that results in sexual |
contact, intimate physical contact, sexual behavior, or |
intimate physical behavior. Sexual abuse also includes (i) an |
employee's actions that result in the sending or showing of |
sexually explicit images to an individual via computer, |
cellular phone, electronic mail, portable electronic device, |
or other media with or without contact with the individual or |
(ii) an employee's posting of sexually explicit images of an |
individual online or elsewhere whether or not there is contact |
with the individual. |
"Sexually explicit images" includes, but is not limited to, |
any material which depicts nudity, sexual conduct, or |
sado-masochistic abuse, or which contains explicit and |
detailed verbal descriptions or narrative accounts of sexual |
excitement, sexual conduct, or sado-masochistic abuse. |
"Substantiated" means there is a preponderance of the |
evidence to support the allegation. |
"Unfounded" means there is no credible evidence to support |
the allegation. |
"Unsubstantiated" means there is credible evidence, but |
less than a preponderance of evidence to support the |
allegation. |
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(c) Appointment. The Governor shall appoint, and the Senate |
shall confirm, an Inspector General. The Inspector General |
shall be appointed for a term of 4 years and shall function |
within the Department of Human Services and report to the |
Secretary and the Governor. |
(d) Operation and appropriation. The Inspector General |
shall function independently within the Department with |
respect to the operations of the Office, including the |
performance of investigations and issuance of findings and |
recommendations. The appropriation for the Office of Inspector |
General shall be separate from the overall appropriation for |
the Department. |
(e) Powers and duties. The Inspector General shall |
investigate reports of suspected mental abuse, physical abuse, |
sexual abuse, neglect, or financial exploitation of |
individuals in any mental health or developmental disabilities |
facility or agency and shall have authority to take immediate |
action to prevent any one or more of the following from |
happening to individuals under its jurisdiction: mental abuse, |
physical abuse, sexual abuse, neglect, or financial |
exploitation. Upon written request of an agency of this State, |
the Inspector General may assist another agency of the State in |
investigating reports of the abuse, neglect, or abuse and |
neglect of persons with mental illness, persons with |
developmental disabilities, or persons with both. To comply |
with the requirements of subsection (k) of this Section, the |
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Inspector General shall also review all reportable deaths for |
which there is no allegation of abuse or neglect. Nothing in |
this Section shall preempt any duties of the Medical Review |
Board set forth in the Mental Health and Developmental |
Disabilities Code. The Inspector General shall have no |
authority to investigate alleged violations of the State |
Officials and Employees Ethics Act. Allegations of misconduct |
under the State Officials and Employees Ethics Act shall be |
referred to the Office of the Governor's Executive Inspector |
General for investigation. |
(f) Limitations. The Inspector General shall not conduct an |
investigation within an agency or facility if that |
investigation would be redundant to or interfere with an |
investigation conducted by another State agency. The Inspector |
General shall have no supervision over, or involvement in, the |
routine programmatic, licensing, funding, or certification |
operations of the Department. Nothing in this subsection limits |
investigations by the Department that may otherwise be required |
by law or that may be necessary in the Department's capacity as |
central administrative authority responsible for the operation |
of the State's mental health and developmental disabilities |
facilities. |
(g) Rulemaking authority. The Inspector General shall |
promulgate rules establishing minimum requirements for |
reporting allegations as well as for initiating, conducting, |
and completing investigations based upon the nature of the |
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allegation or allegations. The rules shall clearly establish |
that if 2 or more State agencies could investigate an |
allegation, the Inspector General shall not conduct an |
investigation that would be redundant to, or interfere with, an |
investigation conducted by another State agency. The rules |
shall further clarify the method and circumstances under which |
the Office of Inspector General may interact with the |
licensing, funding, or certification units of the Department in |
preventing further occurrences of mental abuse, physical |
abuse, sexual abuse, neglect, egregious neglect, and financial |
exploitation. |
(h) Training programs. The Inspector General shall (i) |
establish a comprehensive program to ensure that every person |
authorized to conduct investigations receives ongoing training |
relative to investigation techniques, communication skills, |
and the appropriate means of interacting with persons receiving |
treatment for mental illness, developmental disability, or |
both mental illness and developmental disability, and (ii) |
establish and conduct periodic training programs for facility |
and agency employees concerning the prevention and reporting of |
any one or more of the following: mental abuse, physical abuse, |
sexual abuse, neglect, egregious neglect, or financial |
exploitation. Nothing in this Section shall be deemed to |
prevent the Office of Inspector General from conducting any |
other training as determined by the Inspector General to be |
necessary or helpful. |
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(i) Duty to cooperate. |
(1) The Inspector General shall at all times be granted |
access to any facility or agency for the purpose of |
investigating any allegation, conducting unannounced site |
visits, monitoring compliance with a written response, or |
completing any other statutorily assigned duty. The |
Inspector General shall conduct unannounced site visits to |
each facility at least annually for the purpose of |
reviewing and making recommendations on systemic issues |
relative to preventing, reporting, investigating, and |
responding to all of the following: mental abuse, physical |
abuse, sexual abuse, neglect, egregious neglect, or |
financial exploitation. |
(2) Any employee who fails to cooperate with an Office |
of the Inspector General investigation is in violation of |
this Act. Failure to cooperate with an investigation |
includes, but is not limited to, any one or more of the |
following: (i) creating and transmitting a false report to |
the Office of the Inspector General hotline, (ii) providing |
false information to an Office of the Inspector General |
Investigator during an investigation, (iii) colluding with |
other employees to cover up evidence, (iv) colluding with |
other employees to provide false information to an Office |
of the Inspector General investigator, (v) destroying |
evidence, (vi) withholding evidence, or (vii) otherwise |
obstructing an Office of the Inspector General |
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investigation. Additionally, any employee who, during an |
unannounced site visit or written response compliance |
check, fails to cooperate with requests from the Office of |
the Inspector General is in violation of this Act. |
(j) Subpoena powers. The Inspector General shall have the |
power to subpoena witnesses and compel the production of all |
documents and physical evidence relating to his or her |
investigations and any hearings authorized by this Act. This |
subpoena power shall not extend to persons or documents of a |
labor organization or its representatives insofar as the |
persons are acting in a representative capacity to an employee |
whose conduct is the subject of an investigation or the |
documents relate to that representation. Any person who |
otherwise fails to respond to a subpoena or who knowingly |
provides false information to the Office of the Inspector |
General by subpoena during an investigation is guilty of a |
Class A misdemeanor. |
(k) Reporting allegations and deaths. |
(1) Allegations. If an employee witnesses, is told of, |
or has reason to believe an incident of mental abuse, |
physical abuse, sexual abuse, neglect, or financial |
exploitation has occurred, the employee, agency, or |
facility shall report the allegation by phone to the Office |
of the Inspector General hotline according to the agency's |
or facility's procedures, but in no event later than 4 |
hours after the initial discovery of the incident, |
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allegation, or suspicion of any one or more of the |
following: mental abuse, physical abuse, sexual abuse, |
neglect, or financial exploitation. A required reporter as |
defined in subsection (b) of this Section who knowingly or |
intentionally fails to comply with these reporting |
requirements is guilty of a Class A misdemeanor. |
(2) Deaths. Absent an allegation, a required reporter |
shall, within 24 hours after initial discovery, report by |
phone to the Office of the Inspector General hotline each |
of the following: |
(i) Any death of an individual occurring within 14 |
calendar days after discharge or transfer of the |
individual from a residential program or facility. |
(ii) Any death of an individual occurring within 24 |
hours after deflection from a residential program or |
facility. |
(iii) Any other death of an individual occurring at |
an agency or facility or at any Department-funded site. |
(3) Retaliation. It is a violation of this Act for any |
employee or administrator of an agency or facility to take |
retaliatory action against an employee who acts in good |
faith in conformance with his or her duties as a required |
reporter. |
(l) Reporting to law enforcement. |
(1) Reporting criminal acts. Within 24 hours after |
determining that there is credible evidence indicating |
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that a criminal act may have been committed or that special |
expertise may be required in an investigation, the |
Inspector General shall notify the Department of State |
Police or other appropriate law enforcement authority, or |
ensure that such notification is made. The Department of |
State Police shall investigate any report from a |
State-operated facility indicating a possible murder, |
sexual assault, or other felony by an employee. All |
investigations conducted by the Inspector General shall be |
conducted in a manner designed to ensure the preservation |
of evidence for possible use in a criminal prosecution. |
(2) Reporting allegations of adult students with |
disabilities. Upon receipt of a reportable allegation |
regarding an adult student with a disability, the |
Department's Office of the Inspector General shall |
determine whether the allegation meets the criteria for the |
Domestic Abuse Program under the Abuse of Adults with |
Disabilities Intervention Act. If the allegation is |
reportable to that program, the Office of the Inspector |
General shall initiate an investigation. If the allegation |
is not reportable to the Domestic Abuse Program, the Office |
of the Inspector General shall make an expeditious referral |
to the respective law enforcement entity. If the alleged |
victim is already receiving services from the Department, |
the Office of the Inspector General shall also make a |
referral to the respective Department of Human Services' |
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Division or Bureau. |
(m) Investigative reports. Upon completion of an |
investigation, the Office of Inspector General shall issue an |
investigative report identifying whether the allegations are |
substantiated, unsubstantiated, or unfounded. Within 10 |
business days after the transmittal of a completed |
investigative report substantiating an allegation, or if a |
recommendation is made, the Inspector General shall provide the |
investigative report on the case to the Secretary and to the |
director of the facility or agency where any one or more of the |
following occurred: mental abuse, physical abuse, sexual |
abuse, neglect, egregious neglect, or financial exploitation. |
In a substantiated case, the investigative report shall include |
any mitigating or aggravating circumstances that were |
identified during the investigation. If the case involves |
substantiated neglect, the investigative report shall also |
state whether egregious neglect was found. An investigative |
report may also set forth recommendations. All investigative |
reports prepared by the Office of the Inspector General shall |
be considered confidential and shall not be released except as |
provided by the law of this State or as required under |
applicable federal law. Unsubstantiated and unfounded reports |
shall not be disclosed except as allowed under Section 6 of the |
Abused and Neglected Long Term Care Facility Residents |
Reporting Act. Raw data used to compile the investigative |
report shall not be subject to release unless required by law |
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or a court order. "Raw data used to compile the investigative |
report" includes, but is not limited to, any one or more of the |
following: the initial complaint, witness statements, |
photographs, investigator's notes, police reports, or incident |
reports. If the allegations are substantiated, the accused |
shall be provided with a redacted copy of the investigative |
report. Death reports where there was no allegation of abuse or |
neglect shall only be released pursuant to applicable State or |
federal law or a valid court order. |
(n) Written responses and reconsideration requests. |
(1) Written responses. Within 30 calendar days from |
receipt of a substantiated investigative report or an |
investigative report which contains recommendations, |
absent a reconsideration request, the facility or agency |
shall file a written response that addresses, in a concise |
and reasoned manner, the actions taken to: (i) protect the |
individual; (ii) prevent recurrences; and (iii) eliminate |
the problems identified. The response shall include the |
implementation and completion dates of such actions. If the |
written response is not filed within the allotted 30 |
calendar day period, the Secretary shall determine the |
appropriate corrective action to be taken. |
(2) Reconsideration requests. The facility, agency, |
victim or guardian, or the subject employee may request |
that the Office of Inspector General reconsider or clarify |
its finding based upon additional information. |
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(o) Disclosure of the finding by the Inspector General. The |
Inspector General shall disclose the finding of an |
investigation to the following persons: (i) the Governor, (ii) |
the Secretary, (iii) the director of the facility or agency, |
(iv) the alleged victims and their guardians, (v) the |
complainant, and (vi) the accused. This information shall |
include whether the allegations were deemed substantiated, |
unsubstantiated, or unfounded. |
(p) Secretary review. Upon review of the Inspector |
General's investigative report and any agency's or facility's |
written response, the Secretary shall accept or reject the |
written response and notify the Inspector General of that |
determination. The Secretary may further direct that other |
administrative action be taken, including, but not limited to, |
any one or more of the following: (i) additional site visits, |
(ii) training, (iii) provision of technical assistance |
relative to administrative needs, licensure or certification, |
or (iv) the imposition of appropriate sanctions. |
(q) Action by facility or agency. Within 30 days of the |
date the Secretary approves the written response or directs |
that further administrative action be taken, the facility or |
agency shall provide an implementation report to the Inspector |
General that provides the status of the action taken. The |
facility or agency shall be allowed an additional 30 days to |
send notice of completion of the action or to send an updated |
implementation report. If the action has not been completed |
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within the additional 30 day period, the facility or agency |
shall send updated implementation reports every 60 days until |
completion. The Inspector General shall conduct a review of any |
implementation plan that takes more than 120 days after |
approval to complete, and shall monitor compliance through a |
random review of approved written responses, which may include, |
but are not limited to: (i) site visits, (ii) telephone |
contact, and (iii) requests for additional documentation |
evidencing compliance. |
(r) Sanctions. Sanctions, if imposed by the Secretary under |
Subdivision (p)(iv) of this Section, shall be designed to |
prevent further acts of mental abuse, physical abuse, sexual |
abuse, neglect, egregious neglect, or financial exploitation |
or some combination of one or more of those acts at a facility |
or agency, and may include any one or more of the following: |
(1) Appointment of on-site monitors. |
(2) Transfer or relocation of an individual or |
individuals. |
(3) Closure of units. |
(4) Termination of any one or more of the following: |
(i) Department licensing, (ii) funding, or (iii) |
certification. |
The Inspector General may seek the assistance of the |
Illinois Attorney General or the office of any State's Attorney |
in implementing sanctions. |
(s) Health Care Worker Registry care worker registry . |
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(1) Reporting to the Registry registry . The Inspector |
General shall report to the Department of Public Health's |
Health Care Worker Registry health care worker registry , a |
public registry, the identity and finding of each employee |
of a facility or agency against whom there is a final |
investigative report containing a substantiated allegation |
of physical or sexual abuse, financial exploitation, or |
egregious neglect of an individual. |
(2) Notice to employee. Prior to reporting the name of |
an employee, the employee shall be notified of the |
Department's obligation to report and shall be granted an |
opportunity to request an administrative hearing, the sole |
purpose of which is to determine if the substantiated |
finding warrants reporting to the Registry registry . |
Notice to the employee shall contain a clear and concise |
statement of the grounds on which the report to the |
Registry registry is based, offer the employee an |
opportunity for a hearing, and identify the process for |
requesting such a hearing. Notice is sufficient if provided |
by certified mail to the employee's last known address. If |
the employee fails to request a hearing within 30 days from |
the date of the notice, the Inspector General shall report |
the name of the employee to the Registry registry . Nothing |
in this subdivision (s)(2) shall diminish or impair the |
rights of a person who is a member of a collective |
bargaining unit under the Illinois Public Labor Relations |
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Act or under any other federal labor statute. |
(3) Registry hearings. If the employee requests an |
administrative hearing, the employee shall be granted an |
opportunity to appear before an administrative law judge to |
present reasons why the employee's name should not be |
reported to the Registry registry . The Department shall |
bear the burden of presenting evidence that establishes, by |
a preponderance of the evidence, that the substantiated |
finding warrants reporting to the Registry registry . After |
considering all the evidence presented, the administrative |
law judge shall make a recommendation to the Secretary as |
to whether the substantiated finding warrants reporting |
the name of the employee to the Registry registry . The |
Secretary shall render the final decision. The Department |
and the employee shall have the right to request that the |
administrative law judge consider a stipulated disposition |
of these proceedings. |
(4) Testimony at Registry registry hearings. A person |
who makes a report or who investigates a report under this |
Act shall testify fully in any judicial proceeding |
resulting from such a report, as to any evidence of abuse |
or neglect, or the cause thereof. No evidence shall be |
excluded by reason of any common law or statutory privilege |
relating to communications between the alleged perpetrator |
of abuse or neglect, or the individual alleged as the |
victim in the report, and the person making or |
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investigating the report. Testimony at hearings is exempt |
from the confidentiality requirements of subsection (f) of |
Section 10 of the Mental Health and Developmental |
Disabilities Confidentiality Act. |
(5) Employee's rights to collateral action. No |
reporting to the Registry registry shall occur and no |
hearing shall be set or proceed if an employee notifies the |
Inspector General in writing, including any supporting |
documentation, that he or she is formally contesting an |
adverse employment action resulting from a substantiated |
finding by complaint filed with the Illinois Civil Service |
Commission, or which otherwise seeks to enforce the |
employee's rights pursuant to any applicable collective |
bargaining agreement. If an action taken by an employer |
against an employee as a result of a finding of physical |
abuse, sexual abuse, or egregious neglect is overturned |
through an action filed with the Illinois Civil Service |
Commission or under any applicable collective bargaining |
agreement and if that employee's name has already been sent |
to the Registry registry , the employee's name shall be |
removed from the Registry registry . |
(6) Removal from Registry registry . At any time after |
the report to the Registry registry , but no more than once |
in any 12-month period, an employee may petition the |
Department in writing to remove his or her name from the |
Registry registry . Upon receiving notice of such request, |
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the Inspector General shall conduct an investigation into |
the petition. Upon receipt of such request, an |
administrative hearing will be set by the Department. At |
the hearing, the employee shall bear the burden of |
presenting evidence that establishes, by a preponderance |
of the evidence, that removal of the name from the Registry |
registry is in the public interest. The parties may jointly |
request that the administrative law judge consider a |
stipulated disposition of these proceedings. |
(t) Review of Administrative Decisions. The Department |
shall preserve a record of all proceedings at any formal |
hearing conducted by the Department involving Health Care |
Worker Registry health care worker registry hearings. Final |
administrative decisions of the Department are subject to |
judicial review pursuant to provisions of the Administrative |
Review Law. |
(u) Quality Care Board. There is created, within the Office |
of the Inspector General, a Quality Care Board to be composed |
of 7 members appointed by the Governor with the advice and |
consent of the Senate. One of the members shall be designated |
as chairman by the Governor. Of the initial appointments made |
by the Governor, 4 Board members shall each be appointed for a |
term of 4 years and 3 members shall each be appointed for a |
term of 2 years. Upon the expiration of each member's term, a |
successor shall be appointed for a term of 4 years. In the case |
of a vacancy in the office of any member, the Governor shall |
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appoint a successor for the remainder of the unexpired term. |
Members appointed by the Governor shall be qualified by |
professional knowledge or experience in the area of law, |
investigatory techniques, or in the area of care of the |
mentally ill or care of persons with developmental |
disabilities. Two members appointed by the Governor shall be |
persons with a disability or a parent of a person with a |
disability. Members shall serve without compensation, but |
shall be reimbursed for expenses incurred in connection with |
the performance of their duties as members. |
The Board shall meet quarterly, and may hold other meetings |
on the call of the chairman. Four members shall constitute a |
quorum allowing the Board to conduct its business. The Board |
may adopt rules and regulations it deems necessary to govern |
its own procedures. |
The Board shall monitor and oversee the operations, |
policies, and procedures of the Inspector General to ensure the |
prompt and thorough investigation of allegations of neglect and |
abuse. In fulfilling these responsibilities, the Board may do |
the following: |
(1) Provide independent, expert consultation to the |
Inspector General on policies and protocols for |
investigations of alleged abuse, neglect, or both abuse and |
neglect. |
(2) Review existing regulations relating to the |
operation of facilities. |
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(3) Advise the Inspector General as to the content of |
training activities authorized under this Section. |
(4) Recommend policies concerning methods for |
improving the intergovernmental relationships between the |
Office of the Inspector General and other State or federal |
offices. |
(v) Annual report. The Inspector General shall provide to |
the General Assembly and the Governor, no later than January 1 |
of each year, a summary of reports and investigations made |
under this Act for the prior fiscal year with respect to |
individuals receiving mental health or developmental |
disabilities services. The report shall detail the imposition |
of sanctions, if any, and the final disposition of any |
corrective or administrative action directed by the Secretary. |
The summaries shall not contain any confidential or identifying |
information of any individual, but shall include objective data |
identifying any trends in the number of reported allegations, |
the timeliness of the Office of the Inspector General's |
investigations, and their disposition, for each facility and |
Department-wide, for the most recent 3-year time period. The |
report shall also identify, by facility, the staff-to-patient |
ratios taking account of direct care staff only. The report |
shall also include detailed recommended administrative actions |
and matters for consideration by the General Assembly. |
(w) Program audit. The Auditor General shall conduct a |
program audit of the Office of the Inspector General on an |
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as-needed basis, as determined by the Auditor General. The |
audit shall specifically include the Inspector General's |
compliance with the Act and effectiveness in investigating |
reports of allegations occurring in any facility or agency. The |
Auditor General shall conduct the program audit according to |
the provisions of the Illinois State Auditing Act and shall |
report its findings to the General Assembly no later than |
January 1 following the audit period.
|
(x) Nothing in this Section shall be construed to mean that |
an individual a patient is a victim of abuse or neglect because |
of health care services appropriately provided or not provided |
by health care professionals. |
(y) Nothing in this Section shall require a facility, |
including its employees, agents, medical staff members, and |
health care professionals, to provide a service to an |
individual a patient in contravention of that individual's |
patient's stated or implied objection to the provision of that |
service on the ground that that service conflicts with the |
individual's patient's religious beliefs or practices, nor |
shall the failure to provide a service to an individual a |
patient be considered abuse under this Section if the |
individual patient has objected to the provision of that |
service based on his or her religious beliefs or practices.
|
(Source: P.A. 98-49, eff. 7-1-13; 98-711, eff. 7-16-14; 99-143, |
eff. 7-27-15; 99-323, eff. 8-7-15; 99-642, eff. 7-28-16.)
|
|
Section 10. The Mental Health and Developmental |
Disabilities Administrative Act is amended by changing Section |
7.3 as follows:
|
(20 ILCS 1705/7.3)
|
Sec. 7.3. Health Care Worker Registry care worker registry ; |
finding of abuse or neglect. The
Department
shall require that |
no facility, service agency, or support agency providing
mental |
health
or developmental disability services that is licensed, |
certified, operated, or
funded by the
Department shall employ a |
person, in any capacity, who is identified by the Health Care |
Worker Registry health care worker
registry as having been |
subject of a substantiated finding of abuse or neglect
of a |
service recipient. Any owner or operator of a community agency |
who is identified by the Health Care Worker Registry health |
care worker registry as having been the subject of a |
substantiated finding of abuse or neglect of a service |
recipient is prohibited from any involvement in any capacity |
with the provision of Department funded mental health or |
developmental disability services. The
Department shall |
establish and maintain the rules that are
necessary or
|
appropriate to effectuate the intent of this Section. The |
provisions of this
Section shall not
apply to any facility, |
service agency, or support agency licensed or certified
by a |
State
agency other than the Department, unless operated by the |
Department of Human
Services.
|
|
(Source: P.A. 94-934, eff. 6-26-06; 95-545, eff. 8-28-07.)
|
Section 15. The Nursing Home Care Act is amended by |
changing Sections 3-206 and 3-206.01 as follows:
|
(210 ILCS 45/3-206) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 4153-206)
|
Sec. 3-206.
The Department shall prescribe a curriculum for |
training
nursing assistants, habilitation aides, and child |
care aides.
|
(a) No person, except a volunteer who receives no |
compensation from a
facility and is not included for the |
purpose of meeting any staffing
requirements set forth by the |
Department, shall act as a nursing assistant,
habilitation |
aide, or child care aide in a facility, nor shall any person, |
under any
other title, not licensed, certified, or registered |
to render medical care
by the Department of Professional |
Regulation, assist with the
personal, medical, or nursing care |
of residents in a facility, unless such
person meets the |
following requirements:
|
(1) Be at least 16 years of age, of temperate habits |
and good moral
character, honest, reliable and |
trustworthy.
|
(2) Be able to speak and understand the English |
language or a language
understood by a substantial |
percentage of the facility's residents.
|
(3) Provide evidence of employment or occupation, if |
|
any, and residence
for 2 years prior to his present |
employment.
|
(4) Have completed at least 8 years of grade school or |
provide proof of
equivalent knowledge.
|
(5) Begin a current course of training for nursing |
assistants,
habilitation aides, or child care aides, |
approved by the Department, within 45 days of initial
|
employment in the capacity of a nursing assistant, |
habilitation aide, or
child care aide
at any facility. Such |
courses of training shall be successfully completed
within |
120 days of initial employment in the capacity of nursing |
assistant,
habilitation aide, or child care aide at a |
facility. Nursing assistants, habilitation
aides, and |
child care aides who are enrolled in approved courses in |
community
colleges or other educational institutions on a |
term, semester or trimester
basis, shall be exempt from the |
120 day completion time limit. The
Department shall adopt |
rules for such courses of training.
These rules shall |
include procedures for facilities to
carry on an approved |
course of training within the facility.
|
The Department may accept comparable training in lieu |
of the 120 hour
course for student nurses, foreign nurses, |
military personnel, or employes of
the Department of Human |
Services.
|
The facility shall develop and implement procedures, |
which shall be
approved by the Department, for an ongoing |
|
review process, which shall take
place within the facility, |
for nursing assistants, habilitation aides, and
child care |
aides.
|
At the time of each regularly scheduled licensure |
survey, or at the time
of a complaint investigation, the |
Department may require any nursing
assistant, habilitation |
aide, or child care aide to demonstrate, either through |
written
examination or action, or both, sufficient |
knowledge in all areas of
required training. If such |
knowledge is inadequate the Department shall
require the |
nursing assistant, habilitation aide, or child care aide to |
complete inservice
training and review in the facility |
until the nursing assistant, habilitation
aide, or child |
care aide demonstrates to the Department, either through |
written
examination or action, or both, sufficient |
knowledge in all areas of
required training.
|
(6) Be familiar with and have general skills related to |
resident care.
|
(a-0.5) An educational entity, other than a secondary |
school, conducting a
nursing assistant, habilitation aide, or |
child care aide
training program
shall initiate a criminal |
history record check in accordance with the Health Care Worker |
Background Check Act prior to entry of an
individual into the |
training program.
A secondary school may initiate a criminal |
history record check in accordance with the Health Care Worker |
Background Check Act at any time during or after a training |
|
program.
|
(a-1) Nursing assistants, habilitation aides, or child |
care aides seeking to be included on the Health Care Worker |
Registry under the Health Care Worker Background Check Act |
registry maintained under Section 3-206.01 on or
after January |
1, 1996 must authorize the Department of Public Health or its
|
designee
to request a criminal history record check in |
accordance with the Health Care Worker Background Check Act and |
submit all necessary
information. An individual may not newly |
be included on the Health Care Worker Registry registry unless |
a criminal history record check has been conducted with respect |
to the individual.
|
(b) Persons subject to this Section shall perform their |
duties under the
supervision of a licensed nurse.
|
(c) It is unlawful for any facility to employ any person in |
the capacity
of nursing assistant, habilitation aide, or child |
care aide, or under any other title, not
licensed by the State |
of Illinois to assist in the personal, medical, or
nursing care |
of residents in such facility unless such person has complied
|
with this Section.
|
(d) Proof of compliance by each employee with the |
requirements set out
in this Section shall be maintained for |
each such employee by each facility
in the individual personnel |
folder of the employee. Proof of training shall be obtained |
only from the Health Care Worker Registry health care worker |
registry .
|
|
(e) Each facility shall obtain access to the Health Care |
Worker Registry's health care worker registry's web |
application, maintain the employment and demographic |
information relating to each employee, and verify by the |
category and type of employment that
each employee subject to |
this Section meets all the requirements of this
Section.
|
(f) Any facility that is operated under Section 3-803 shall |
be
exempt
from the requirements of this Section.
|
(g) Each skilled nursing and intermediate care facility |
that
admits
persons who are diagnosed as having Alzheimer's |
disease or related
dementias shall require all nursing |
assistants, habilitation aides, or child
care aides, who did |
not receive 12 hours of training in the care and
treatment of |
such residents during the training required under paragraph
(5) |
of subsection (a), to obtain 12 hours of in-house training in |
the care
and treatment of such residents. If the facility does |
not provide the
training in-house, the training shall be |
obtained from other facilities,
community colleges or other |
educational institutions that have a
recognized course for such |
training. The Department shall, by rule,
establish a recognized |
course for such training. The Department's rules shall provide |
that such
training may be conducted in-house at each facility |
subject to the
requirements of this subsection, in which case |
such training shall be
monitored by the Department.
|
The Department's rules shall also provide for |
circumstances and procedures
whereby any person who has |
|
received training that meets
the
requirements of this |
subsection shall not be required to undergo additional
training |
if he or she is transferred to or obtains employment at a
|
different facility or a facility other than a long-term care |
facility but remains continuously employed for pay as a nursing |
assistant,
habilitation aide, or child care aide. Individuals
|
who have performed no nursing or nursing-related services
for a |
period of 24 consecutive months shall be listed as "inactive"
|
and as such do not meet the requirements of this Section. |
Licensed sheltered care facilities
shall be
exempt from the |
requirements of this Section.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-1372, eff. 7-29-10.)
|
(210 ILCS 45/3-206.01) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 4153-206.01)
|
Sec. 3-206.01. Health Care Worker Registry care worker |
registry . |
(a) The Department shall establish and maintain a Health |
Care Worker Registry accessible by health care employers, as |
defined in the Health Care Worker Background Check Act, that |
includes background check and training information of all
|
individuals who (i) have satisfactorily completed the training |
required
by Section 3-206, (ii) have begun a current course of |
training as set forth in Section 3-206, or (iii) are otherwise |
acting as a nursing assistant, habilitation aide, home health |
aide, psychiatric services rehabilitation aide, or child care |
aide. Any individual placed on the
registry is required to |
|
inform the Department of any change of address
within 30 days. |
A facility shall not employ an individual as a nursing
|
assistant, habilitation aide, home health aide, psychiatric |
services rehabilitation aide, or child care aide, or newly |
hired as an individual who may have access to a resident, a |
resident's living quarters, or a resident's personal, |
financial, or medical records,
unless the facility has inquired |
of the Department's Health Care Worker Registry and the |
individual is listed on the Health Care Worker Registry as |
eligible to work for a health care employer health care worker |
registry as to information in the
registry concerning the |
individual . The facility shall not employ an individual as a |
nursing assistant, habilitation aide, or child care aide if |
that individual is not on the Health Care Worker Registry
|
registry unless the individual is enrolled in a training |
program under
paragraph (5) of subsection (a) of Section 3-206 |
of this Act. The Department may also maintain a publicly
|
accessible registry. |
(a-5) The Health Care Worker Registry registry maintained |
by the Department exclusive
to health care employers, as |
defined in the Health Care Worker Background Check Act, shall |
clearly indicate whether an
applicant or employee is eligible |
for employment and shall
include the following: |
(1) information about the individual, including the
|
individual's name, his or her current address, Social
|
Security number, the date and location of the training
|
|
course completed by the individual, whether the individual
|
has any of the disqualifying convictions listed in Section
|
25 of the Health Care Worker Background Check Act from the
|
date of the individual's last criminal record check,
|
whether the individual has a waiver pending under Section
|
40 of the Health Care Worker Background Check Act, and |
whether the individual has received a
waiver under Section |
40 of that
Act; |
(2) the following language: |
"A waiver granted by the Department of Public |
Health is a determination that the applicant or
|
employee is eligible to work in a health care facility.
|
The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission provides
|
guidance about federal law regarding hiring of |
individuals with criminal records."; and |
(3) a link to Equal Employment Opportunity Commission |
guidance regarding hiring of individuals with criminal |
records. |
(a-10) After January 1, 2017, the publicly accessible
|
registry maintained by the Department shall report that an |
individual is ineligible to work if he or she has a |
disqualifying offense under Section 25 of the Health Care
|
Worker Background Check Act and has not received a waiver under
|
Section 40 of that Act. If an applicant or employee has
|
received a waiver for one or more disqualifying offenses under
|
Section 40 of the Health Care Worker Background Check Act and |
|
he or she is otherwise eligible to work, the Department of
|
Public Health shall report on the public registry that the
|
applicant or employee is eligible to work. The Department,
|
however, shall not report information regarding the waiver on
|
the public registry.
|
(a-15) (Blank). If the Department finds that a nursing |
assistant, habilitation aide, home health aide, psychiatric |
services rehabilitation aide, or
child care aide, or an |
unlicensed individual, has abused or neglected a resident or an |
individual under his or her care or misappropriated
property of |
a resident or an individual under his or her care, the |
Department shall notify the individual of
this finding by |
certified mail sent to the address contained in the registry. |
The notice shall give the individual an opportunity to contest |
the finding in a
hearing before the Department or to submit a |
written response to the findings
in lieu of requesting a |
hearing. If, after a hearing or if the individual does
not |
request a hearing, the Department finds that the individual |
abused a
resident, neglected a resident, or misappropriated |
resident property in a
facility, the finding shall be included |
as part of the registry as well as a clear and accurate summary
|
from the individual, if he or she chooses to make such a
|
statement. The Department shall make the following information |
in the registry available to
the public: an individual's full |
name; the date an individual successfully completed a nurse |
aide training or competency evaluation; and whether the |
|
Department has made a finding that an individual has been |
guilty of abuse or neglect of a resident or misappropriation of |
resident property. In the case of inquiries to the registry |
concerning an individual
listed in the registry, any |
information disclosed concerning such a finding
shall also |
include disclosure of the individual's statement in the |
registry relating to the
finding or a clear and accurate |
summary of the statement.
|
(b) (Blank). The Department shall add to the health care |
worker registry records
of findings as reported by the |
Inspector General or remove from
the health care worker |
registry records of findings as reported by the
Department of |
Human Services, under subsection (s) of Section 1-17 of the |
Department of Human Services Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 99-78, eff. 7-20-15; 99-872, eff. 1-1-17 .)
|
(210 ILCS 45/3-206.02 rep.) |
Section 20. The Nursing Home Care Act is amended by |
repealing Section 3-206.02.
|
Section 25. The MC/DD Act is amended by changing Sections |
3-206 and 3-206.01 as follows:
|
(210 ILCS 46/3-206)
|
Sec. 3-206. Curriculum for training nursing assistants and |
aides. The Department shall prescribe a curriculum for training |
|
nursing assistants, habilitation aides, and child care aides. |
(a) No person, except a volunteer who receives no |
compensation from a facility and is not included for the |
purpose of meeting any staffing requirements set forth by the |
Department, shall act as a nursing assistant, habilitation |
aide, or child care aide in a facility, nor shall any person, |
under any other title, not licensed, certified, or registered |
to render medical care by the Department of Financial and |
Professional Regulation, assist with the personal, medical, or |
nursing care of residents in a facility, unless such person |
meets the following requirements: |
(1) Be at least 16 years of age, of temperate habits
|
and good moral character, honest, reliable and |
trustworthy. |
(2) Be able to speak and understand the English
|
language or a language understood by a substantial |
percentage of the facility's residents. |
(3) Provide evidence of employment or occupation, if
|
any, and residence for 2 years prior to his or her present |
employment. |
(4) Have completed at least 8 years of grade school
or |
provide proof of equivalent knowledge. |
(5) Begin a current course of training for nursing
|
assistants, habilitation aides, or child care aides, |
approved by the Department, within 45 days of initial |
employment in the capacity of a nursing assistant, |
|
habilitation aide, or child care aide at any facility. Such |
courses of training shall be successfully completed within |
120 days of initial employment in the capacity of nursing |
assistant, habilitation aide, or child care aide at a |
facility. Nursing assistants, habilitation aides, and |
child care aides who are enrolled in approved courses in |
community colleges or other educational institutions on a |
term, semester or trimester basis, shall be exempt from the |
120-day completion time limit. The Department shall adopt |
rules for such courses of training. These rules shall |
include procedures for facilities to carry on an approved |
course of training within the facility. |
The Department may accept comparable training in
lieu |
of the 120-hour course for student nurses, foreign nurses, |
military personnel, or employees of the Department of Human |
Services. |
The facility shall develop and implement procedures,
|
which shall be approved by the Department, for an ongoing |
review process, which shall take place within the facility, |
for nursing assistants, habilitation aides, and child care |
aides. |
At the time of each regularly scheduled licensure
|
survey, or at the time of a complaint investigation, the |
Department may require any nursing assistant, habilitation |
aide, or child care aide to demonstrate, either through |
written examination or action, or both, sufficient |
|
knowledge in all areas of required training. If such |
knowledge is inadequate the Department shall require the |
nursing assistant, habilitation aide, or child care aide to |
complete inservice training and review in the facility |
until the nursing assistant, habilitation aide, or child |
care aide demonstrates to the Department, either through |
written examination or action, or both, sufficient |
knowledge in all areas of required training; and |
(6) Be familiar with and have general skills related
to |
resident care. |
(a-0.5) An educational entity, other than a secondary |
school, conducting a nursing assistant, habilitation aide, or |
child care aide training program shall initiate a criminal |
history record check in accordance with the Health Care Worker |
Background Check Act prior to entry of an individual into the |
training program. A secondary school may initiate a criminal |
history record check in accordance with the Health Care Worker |
Background Check Act at any time during or after a training |
program. |
(a-1) Nursing assistants, habilitation aides, or child |
care aides seeking to be included on the Health Care Worker |
Registry under the Health Care Worker Background Check Act |
registry maintained under Section 3-206.01 of this Act must |
authorize the Department of Public Health or its designee to |
request a criminal history record check in accordance with the |
Health Care Worker Background Check Act and submit all |
|
necessary information. An individual may not newly be included |
on the Health Care Worker Registry registry unless a criminal |
history record check has been conducted with respect to the |
individual. |
(b) Persons subject to this Section shall perform their |
duties under the supervision of a licensed nurse or other |
appropriately trained, licensed, or certified personnel. |
(c) It is unlawful for any facility to employ any person in |
the capacity of nursing assistant, habilitation aide, or child |
care aide, or under any other title, not licensed by the State |
of Illinois to assist in the personal, medical, or nursing care |
of residents in such facility unless such person has complied |
with this Section. |
(d) Proof of compliance by each employee with the |
requirements set out in this Section shall be maintained for |
each such employee by each facility in the individual personnel |
folder of the employee. Proof of training shall be obtained |
only from the Health Care Worker Registry health care worker |
registry . |
(e) Each facility shall obtain access to the Health Care |
Worker Registry's health care worker registry's web |
application, maintain the employment and demographic |
information relating to each employee, and verify by the |
category and type of employment that each employee subject to |
this Section meets all the requirements of this Section. |
(f) Any facility that is operated under Section 3-803 shall |
|
be exempt from the requirements of this Section. |
(g) Each skilled nursing and intermediate care facility |
that admits persons who are diagnosed as having Alzheimer's |
disease or related dementias shall require all nursing |
assistants, habilitation aides, or child care aides, who did |
not receive 12 hours of training in the care and treatment of |
such residents during the training required under paragraph (5) |
of subsection (a), to obtain 12 hours of in house training in |
the care and treatment of such residents. If the facility does |
not provide the training in house, the training shall be |
obtained from other facilities, community colleges or other |
educational institutions that have a recognized course for such |
training. The Department shall, by rule, establish a recognized |
course for such training. |
The Department's rules shall provide that such training may |
be conducted in house at each facility subject to the |
requirements of this subsection, in which case such training |
shall be monitored by the Department.
The Department's rules |
shall also provide for circumstances and procedures whereby any |
person who has received training that meets the requirements of |
this subsection shall not be required to undergo additional |
training if he or she is transferred to or obtains employment |
at a different facility or a facility other than those licensed |
under this Act but remains continuously employed as a nursing |
assistant, habilitation aide, or child care aide. Individuals |
who have performed no nursing, nursing-related services, or |
|
habilitation services for a period of 24 consecutive months |
shall be listed as inactive and as such do not meet the |
requirements of this Section. Licensed sheltered care |
facilities shall be exempt from the requirements of this |
Section.
|
(Source: P.A. 99-180, eff. 7-29-15.)
|
(210 ILCS 46/3-206.01)
|
Sec. 3-206.01. Health Care Worker Registry care worker |
registry . |
(a) The Department shall establish and maintain a registry |
of all individuals who (i) have satisfactorily completed the |
training required by Section 3-206, (ii) have begun a current |
course of training as set forth in Section 3-206, or (iii) are |
otherwise acting as a nursing assistant, habilitation aide, |
home health aide, or child care aide. The registry shall |
include the individual's name, his or her current address, |
Social Security number, and whether the individual has any of |
the disqualifying convictions listed in Section 25 of the |
Health Care Worker Background Check Act from the date and |
location of the training course completed by the individual, |
and the date of the individual's last criminal records check. |
Any individual placed on the registry is required to inform the |
Department of any change of address within 30 days. A facility |
shall not employ an individual as a nursing assistant, |
habilitation aide, home health aide, or child care aide, or |
|
newly hired as an individual who may have access to a resident, |
a resident's living quarters, or a resident's personal, |
financial, or medical records, unless the facility has checked |
inquired of the Department's Health Care Worker Registry and |
the individual is listed on the Health Care Worker Registry as |
eligible to work for a health care employer health care worker |
registry as to information in the registry concerning the |
individual . The facility shall not employ an individual as a |
nursing assistant, habilitation aide, or child care aide if |
that individual is not on the Health Care Worker Registry |
registry unless the individual is enrolled in a training |
program under paragraph (5) of subsection (a) of Section 3-206 |
of this Act. |
If the Department finds that a nursing assistant, |
habilitation aide, home health aide, child care aide, or an |
unlicensed individual, has abused or neglected a resident or an |
individual under his or her care, or misappropriated property |
of a resident or an individual under his or her care in a |
facility, the Department shall notify the individual of this |
finding by certified mail sent to the address contained in the |
registry. The notice shall give the individual an opportunity |
to contest the finding in a hearing before the Department or to |
submit a written response to the findings in lieu of requesting |
a hearing. If, after a hearing or if the individual does not |
request a hearing, the Department finds that the individual |
abused a resident, neglected a resident, or misappropriated |
|
resident property in a facility, the finding shall be included |
as part of the registry as well as a clear and accurate summary |
statement from the individual, if he or she chooses to make |
such a statement. The Department shall make the following |
information in the registry available to the public: an |
individual's full name; the date an individual successfully |
completed a nurse aide training or competency evaluation; and |
whether the Department has made a finding that an individual |
has been guilty of abuse or neglect of a resident or |
misappropriation of resident's property. In the case of |
inquiries to the registry concerning an individual listed in |
the registry, any information disclosed concerning such a |
finding shall also include disclosure of the individual's |
statement in the registry relating to the finding or a clear |
and accurate summary of the statement. |
(b) (Blank). The Department shall add to the health care |
worker registry records of findings as reported by the |
Inspector General or remove from the health care worker |
registry records of findings as reported by the Department of |
Human Services, under subsection (s) of Section 1-17 of
the |
Department of Human Services Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 99-180, eff. 7-29-15.)
|
(210 ILCS 46/3-206.02 rep.) |
Section 30. The MC/DD Act is amended by repealing Section |
3-206.02.
|
|
Section 35. The ID/DD Community Care Act is amended by |
changing Sections 3-206 and 3-206.01 as follows:
|
(210 ILCS 47/3-206)
|
Sec. 3-206. Curriculum for training nursing assistants and |
aides. The Department shall prescribe a curriculum for training |
nursing assistants, habilitation aides, and child care aides. |
(a) No person, except a volunteer who receives no |
compensation from a facility and is not included for the |
purpose of meeting any staffing requirements set forth by the |
Department, shall act as a nursing assistant, habilitation |
aide, or child care aide in a facility, nor shall any person, |
under any other title, not licensed, certified, or registered |
to render medical care by the Department of Financial and |
Professional Regulation, assist with the personal, medical, or |
nursing care of residents in a facility, unless such person |
meets the following requirements: |
(1) Be at least 16 years of age, of temperate habits
|
and good moral character, honest, reliable and |
trustworthy. |
(2) Be able to speak and understand the English
|
language or a language understood by a substantial |
percentage of the facility's residents. |
(3) Provide evidence of employment or occupation, if
|
any, and residence for 2 years prior to his or her present |
|
employment. |
(4) Have completed at least 8 years of grade school
or |
provide proof of equivalent knowledge. |
(5) Begin a current course of training for nursing
|
assistants, habilitation aides, or child care aides, |
approved by the Department, within 45 days of initial |
employment in the capacity of a nursing assistant, |
habilitation aide, or child care aide at any facility. Such |
courses of training shall be successfully completed within |
120 days of initial employment in the capacity of nursing |
assistant, habilitation aide, or child care aide at a |
facility. Nursing assistants, habilitation aides, and |
child care aides who are enrolled in approved courses in |
community colleges or other educational institutions on a |
term, semester or trimester basis, shall be exempt from the |
120-day completion time limit. The Department shall adopt |
rules for such courses of training. These rules shall |
include procedures for facilities to carry on an approved |
course of training within the facility. |
The Department may accept comparable training in
lieu |
of the 120-hour course for student nurses, foreign nurses, |
military personnel, or employees of the Department of Human |
Services. |
The facility shall develop and implement procedures,
|
which shall be approved by the Department, for an ongoing |
review process, which shall take place within the facility, |
|
for nursing assistants, habilitation aides, and child care |
aides. |
At the time of each regularly scheduled licensure
|
survey, or at the time of a complaint investigation, the |
Department may require any nursing assistant, habilitation |
aide, or child care aide to demonstrate, either through |
written examination or action, or both, sufficient |
knowledge in all areas of required training. If such |
knowledge is inadequate the Department shall require the |
nursing assistant, habilitation aide, or child care aide to |
complete inservice training and review in the facility |
until the nursing assistant, habilitation aide, or child |
care aide demonstrates to the Department, either through |
written examination or action, or both, sufficient |
knowledge in all areas of required training; and |
(6) Be familiar with and have general skills related
to |
resident care. |
(a-0.5) An educational entity, other than a secondary |
school, conducting a nursing assistant, habilitation aide, or |
child care aide training program shall initiate a criminal |
history record check in accordance with the Health Care Worker |
Background Check Act prior to entry of an individual into the |
training program. A secondary school may initiate a criminal |
history record check in accordance with the Health Care Worker |
Background Check Act at any time during or after a training |
program. |
|
(a-1) Nursing assistants, habilitation aides, or child |
care aides seeking to be included on the Health Care Worker |
Registry under the Health Care Worker Background Check Act |
registry maintained under Section 3-206.01 of this Act must |
authorize the Department of Public Health or its designee to |
request a criminal history record check in accordance with the |
Health Care Worker Background Check Act and submit all |
necessary information. An individual may not newly be included |
on the Health Care Worker Registry registry unless a criminal |
history record check has been conducted with respect to the |
individual. |
(b) Persons subject to this Section shall perform their |
duties under the supervision of a licensed nurse or other |
appropriately trained, licensed, or certified personnel. |
(c) It is unlawful for any facility to employ any person in |
the capacity of nursing assistant, habilitation aide, or child |
care aide, or under any other title, not licensed by the State |
of Illinois to assist in the personal, medical, or nursing care |
of residents in such facility unless such person has complied |
with this Section. |
(d) Proof of compliance by each employee with the |
requirements set out in this Section shall be maintained for |
each such employee by each facility in the individual personnel |
folder of the employee. Proof of training shall be obtained |
only from the Health Care Worker Registry health care worker |
registry . |
|
(e) Each facility shall obtain access to the Health Care |
Worker Registry's health care worker registry's web |
application, maintain the employment and demographic |
information relating to each employee, and verify by the |
category and type of employment that each employee subject to |
this Section meets all the requirements of this Section. |
(f) Any facility that is operated under Section 3-803 shall |
be exempt from the requirements of this Section. |
(g) Each skilled nursing and intermediate care facility |
that admits persons who are diagnosed as having Alzheimer's |
disease or related dementias shall require all nursing |
assistants, habilitation aides, or child care aides, who did |
not receive 12 hours of training in the care and treatment of |
such residents during the training required under paragraph (5) |
of subsection (a), to obtain 12 hours of in house training in |
the care and treatment of such residents. If the facility does |
not provide the training in house, the training shall be |
obtained from other facilities, community colleges or other |
educational institutions that have a recognized course for such |
training. The Department shall, by rule, establish a recognized |
course for such training. |
The Department's rules shall provide that such training may |
be conducted in house at each facility subject to the |
requirements of this subsection, in which case such training |
shall be monitored by the Department.
The Department's rules |
shall also provide for circumstances and procedures whereby any |
|
person who has received training that meets the requirements of |
this subsection shall not be required to undergo additional |
training if he or she is transferred to or obtains employment |
at a different facility or a facility other than those licensed |
under this Act but remains continuously employed as a nursing |
assistant, habilitation aide, or child care aide. Individuals |
who have performed no nursing, nursing-related services, or |
habilitation services for a period of 24 consecutive months |
shall be listed as inactive and as such do not meet the |
requirements of this Section. Licensed sheltered care |
facilities shall be exempt from the requirements of this |
Section.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-339, eff. 7-1-10; 97-38, eff. 6-28-11.)
|
(210 ILCS 47/3-206.01)
|
Sec. 3-206.01. Health Care Worker Registry care worker |
registry . |
(a) The Department shall establish and maintain a registry |
of all individuals who (i) have satisfactorily completed the |
training required by Section 3-206, (ii) have begun a current |
course of training as set forth in Section 3-206, or (iii) are |
otherwise acting as a nursing assistant, habilitation aide, |
home health aide, or child care aide. The registry shall |
include the individual's name, his or her current address, |
Social Security number, and whether the individual has any of |
the disqualifying convictions listed in Section 25 of the |
|
Health Care Worker Background Check Act from the date and |
location of the training course completed by the individual, |
and the date of the individual's last criminal records check. |
Any individual placed on the registry is required to inform the |
Department of any change of address within 30 days. A facility |
shall not employ an individual as a nursing assistant, |
habilitation aide, home health aide, or child care aide, or |
newly hired as an individual who may have access to a resident, |
a resident's living quarters, or a resident's personal, |
financial, or medical records, unless the facility has checked |
inquired of the Department's Health Care Worker Registry and |
the individual is listed on the Health Care Worker Registry as |
eligible to work for a health care employer health care worker |
registry as to information in the registry concerning the |
individual . The facility shall not employ an individual as a |
nursing assistant, habilitation aide, or child care aide if |
that individual is not on the Health Care Worker Registry |
registry unless the individual is enrolled in a training |
program under paragraph (5) of subsection (a) of Section 3-206 |
of this Act. |
If the Department finds that a nursing assistant, |
habilitation aide, home health aide, child care aide, or an |
unlicensed individual, has abused or neglected a resident or an |
individual under his or her care, or misappropriated property |
of a resident or an individual under his or her care in a |
facility, the Department shall notify the individual of this |
|
finding by certified mail sent to the address contained in the |
registry. The notice shall give the individual an opportunity |
to contest the finding in a hearing before the Department or to |
submit a written response to the findings in lieu of requesting |
a hearing. If, after a hearing or if the individual does not |
request a hearing, the Department finds that the individual |
abused a resident, neglected a resident, or misappropriated |
resident property in a facility, the finding shall be included |
as part of the registry as well as a clear and accurate summary |
statement from the individual, if he or she chooses to make |
such a statement. The Department shall make the following |
information in the registry available to the public: an |
individual's full name; the date an individual successfully |
completed a nurse aide training or competency evaluation; and |
whether the Department has made a finding that an individual |
has been guilty of abuse or neglect of a resident or |
misappropriation of resident's property. In the case of |
inquiries to the registry concerning an individual listed in |
the registry, any information disclosed concerning such a |
finding shall also include disclosure of the individual's |
statement in the registry relating to the finding or a clear |
and accurate summary of the statement. |
(b) (Blank). The Department shall add to the health care |
worker registry records of findings as reported by the |
Inspector General or remove from the health care worker |
registry records of findings as reported by the Department of |
|
Human Services, under subsection (s) of Section 1-17 of
the |
Department of Human Services Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 99-78, eff. 7-20-15.)
|
(210 ILCS 47/3-206.02 rep.) |
Section 40. The ID/DD Community Care Act is amended by |
repealing Section 3-206.02.
|
Section 45. The Health Care Worker Background Check Act is |
amended by changing Sections 15, 25, 33, and 40 and by adding |
Sections 26, 27, 28, and 75 as follows:
|
(225 ILCS 46/15)
|
Sec. 15. Definitions. In this Act:
|
"Applicant" means an individual seeking employment , |
whether paid or on a volunteer basis, with a health care
|
employer who has received a bona fide conditional offer of |
employment.
|
"Conditional offer of employment" means a bona fide offer |
of employment by a
health care employer to an applicant, which |
is contingent upon the receipt of a
report from the Department |
of Public Health indicating that the applicant does
not have a |
record of conviction of any of the criminal offenses enumerated |
in
Section 25.
|
"Department" means the Department of Public Health. |
"Direct care" means the provision of nursing care or |
|
assistance with feeding,
dressing, movement, bathing, |
toileting, or other personal needs, including home services as |
defined in the Home Health, Home Services, and Home Nursing |
Agency Licensing Act. The entity
responsible for inspecting and |
licensing, certifying, or registering the
health care employer |
may, by administrative rule, prescribe guidelines for
|
interpreting this definition with regard to the health care |
employers that it
licenses.
|
"Director" means the Director of Public Health. |
"Disqualifying offenses" means those offenses set forth in |
Section 25 of this Act. |
"Employee" means any individual hired, employed, or |
retained , whether paid or on a volunteer basis, to which this |
Act applies. |
"Finding" means the Department's determination of whether |
an allegation is verified and substantiated. |
"Fingerprint-based criminal history records check" means a |
livescan fingerprint-based criminal history records check |
submitted as a fee applicant inquiry in the form and manner |
prescribed by the Department of State Police.
|
"Health care employer" means:
|
(1) the owner or licensee of any of the
following:
|
(i) a community living facility, as defined in the |
Community Living
Facilities Act;
|
(ii) a life care facility, as defined in the Life |
Care Facilities Act;
|
|
(iii) a long-term care facility;
|
(iv) a home health agency, home services agency, or |
home nursing agency as defined in the Home Health, Home |
Services, and Home Nursing Agency Licensing
Act;
|
(v) a hospice care program or volunteer hospice |
program, as defined in the Hospice Program Licensing |
Act;
|
(vi) a hospital, as defined in the Hospital |
Licensing Act;
|
(vii) (blank);
|
(viii) a nurse agency, as defined in the Nurse |
Agency Licensing Act;
|
(ix) a respite care provider, as defined in the |
Respite Program Act;
|
(ix-a) an establishment licensed under the |
Assisted Living and Shared
Housing Act;
|
(x) a supportive living program, as defined in the |
Illinois Public Aid
Code;
|
(xi) early childhood intervention programs as |
described in 59 Ill. Adm.
Code 121;
|
(xii) the University of Illinois Hospital, |
Chicago;
|
(xiii) programs funded by the Department on Aging |
through the Community
Care Program;
|
(xiv) programs certified to participate in the |
Supportive Living Program
authorized pursuant to |
|
Section 5-5.01a of the Illinois Public Aid Code;
|
(xv) programs listed by the Emergency Medical |
Services (EMS) Systems Act
as
Freestanding Emergency |
Centers;
|
(xvi) locations licensed under the Alternative |
Health Care Delivery
Act;
|
(2) a day training program certified by the Department |
of Human Services;
|
(3) a community integrated living arrangement operated |
by a community
mental health and developmental service |
agency, as defined in the
Community-Integrated Living |
Arrangements Licensing and Certification Act; or
|
(4) the State Long Term Care Ombudsman Program, |
including any regional long term care ombudsman programs |
under Section 4.04 of the Illinois Act on the Aging, only |
for the purpose of securing background checks.
|
"Initiate" means obtaining from
a student, applicant, or |
employee his or her social security number, demographics, a |
disclosure statement, and an authorization for the Department |
of Public Health or its designee to request a fingerprint-based |
criminal history records check; transmitting this information |
electronically to the Department of Public Health; conducting |
Internet searches on certain web sites, including without |
limitation the Illinois Sex Offender Registry, the Department |
of Corrections' Sex Offender Search Engine, the Department of |
Corrections' Inmate Search Engine, the Department of |
|
Corrections Wanted Fugitives Search Engine, the National Sex |
Offender Public Registry, and the List of Excluded Individuals |
and Entities database on the website of the Health and Human |
Services Office of Inspector General to determine if the |
applicant has been adjudicated a sex offender, has been a |
prison inmate, or has committed Medicare or Medicaid fraud, or |
conducting similar searches as defined by rule; and having the |
student, applicant, or employee's fingerprints collected and |
transmitted electronically to the Department of State Police.
|
"Livescan vendor" means an entity whose equipment has been |
certified by the Department of State Police to collect an |
individual's demographics and inkless fingerprints and, in a |
manner prescribed by the Department of State Police and the |
Department of Public Health, electronically transmit the |
fingerprints and required data to the Department of State |
Police and a daily file of required data to the Department of |
Public Health. The Department of Public Health shall negotiate |
a contract with one or more vendors that effectively |
demonstrate that the vendor has 2 or more years of experience |
transmitting fingerprints electronically to the Department of |
State Police and that the vendor can successfully transmit the |
required data in a manner prescribed by the Department of |
Public Health. Vendor authorization may be further defined by |
administrative rule.
|
"Long-term care facility" means a facility licensed by the |
State or certified under federal law as a long-term care |
|
facility, including without limitation facilities licensed |
under the Nursing Home Care Act, the Specialized Mental Health |
Rehabilitation Act of 2013, the ID/DD Community Care Act, or |
the MC/DD Act, a supportive living facility, an assisted living |
establishment, or a shared housing establishment or registered |
as a board and care home.
|
"Resident" means a person, individual, or patient under the |
direct care of a health care employer or who has been provided |
goods or services by a health care employer. |
(Source: P.A. 98-104, eff. 7-22-13; 99-180, eff. 7-29-15.)
|
(225 ILCS 46/25)
|
Sec. 25. Hiring of people with criminal records by health |
care employers and long-term care facilities.
|
(a) A health care employer or long-term care facility may |
hire, employ, or retain any individual in a position involving |
direct care for clients, patients, or residents, or access to |
the living quarters or the financial, medical, or personal |
records of clients, patients, or residents who has been |
convicted of committing or attempting to commit one or more of |
the following offenses only with a waiver described in Section |
40: those defined in Sections 8-1(b), 8-1.1, 8-1.2, 9-1,
9-1.2, |
9-2, 9-2.1, 9-3, 9-3.1, 9-3.2, 9-3.3, 9-3.4, 10-1, 10-2, 10-3, |
10-3.1, 10-4,
10-5, 10-7, 11-1.20, 11-1.30, 11-1.40, 11-1.50, |
11-1.60, 11-6, 11-9.1, 11-9.2, 11-9.3, 11-9.4-1, 11-9.5, |
11-19.2, 11-20.1, 11-20.1B, 11-20.3, 12-1, 12-2, 12-3.05, |
|
12-3.1,
12-3.2, 12-3.3, 12-4, 12-4.1, 12-4.2, 12-4.3, 12-4.4, |
12-4.5, 12-4.6, 12-4.7, 12-7.4,
12-11, 12-13, 12-14, 12-14.1, |
12-15, 12-16, 12-19, 12-20.5, 12-21, 12-21.5, 12-21.6, 12-32,
|
12-33, 12C-5, 12C-10, 16-1, 16-1.3, 16-25,
16A-3, 17-3, 17-56, |
18-1, 18-2, 18-3, 18-4, 18-5, 19-1, 19-3, 19-4, 19-6, 20-1, |
20-1.1,
24-1, 24-1.2, 24-1.5, 24-1.8, 24-3.8, or 33A-2, or |
subdivision (a)(4) of Section 11-14.4, or in subsection (a) of |
Section 12-3 or subsection (a) or (b) of Section 12-4.4a, of |
the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012; those |
provided in
Section 4 of the Wrongs to Children Act; those |
provided in Section 53 of the
Criminal Jurisprudence Act; those |
defined in subsection (c), (d), (e), (f), or (g) of Section 5 |
or Section 5.1, 5.2, 7, or 9 of
the Cannabis Control Act; those |
defined in the Methamphetamine Control and Community |
Protection Act; or those defined in Sections 401, 401.1, 404, |
405,
405.1, 407, or 407.1 of the Illinois Controlled Substances |
Act ; or subsection (a) of Section 3.01, Section 3.02, or |
Section 3.03 of the Humane Care for Animals Act .
|
(a-1) A health care employer or long-term care facility may |
hire, employ, or retain any individual in a position involving |
direct care for clients, patients, or residents, or access to |
the living quarters or the financial, medical, or personal |
records of clients, patients, or residents who has been |
convicted of committing or attempting to commit one or more of |
the following offenses only with a waiver described in Section |
40: those offenses defined in Section 12-3.3, 12-4.2-5,
16-2, |
|
16-30, 16G-15, 16G-20, 17-33, 17-34, 17-36, 17-44, 18-5, |
20-1.2, 24-1.1, 24-1.2-5, 24-1.6, 24-3.2, or 24-3.3, or |
subsection (b) of Section 17-32, subsection (b) of Section |
18-1, or subsection (b) of Section 20-1,
of the Criminal Code |
of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012; Section 4, 5, 6, 8, or |
17.02 of the Illinois
Credit Card and Debit Card Act; or |
Section 11-9.1A of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal |
Code of 2012 or Section 5.1 of the Wrongs to Children Act;
or |
(ii) violated Section 50-50 of the Nurse Practice Act.
|
A health care employer is not required to retain an |
individual in a position
with duties involving direct care for |
clients, patients, or residents, and no long-term care facility |
is required to retain an individual in a position with duties |
that involve or may involve
contact with residents or access to |
the living quarters or the financial, medical, or personal |
records of residents, who has
been convicted of committing or |
attempting to commit one or more of
the offenses enumerated in |
this subsection.
|
(b) A health care employer shall not hire, employ, or |
retain , whether paid or on a volunteer basis, any
individual in |
a position with duties involving direct care of clients,
|
patients, or residents, and no long-term care facility shall |
knowingly hire, employ, or retain , whether paid or on a |
volunteer basis, any individual in a position with duties that |
involve or may involve
contact with residents or access to the |
living quarters or the financial, medical, or personal records |
|
of residents, if the health care employer becomes aware that |
the
individual has been convicted in another state of |
committing or attempting to
commit an offense that has the same |
or similar elements as an offense listed in
subsection (a) or |
(a-1), as verified by court records, records from a state
|
agency, or an FBI criminal history record check, unless the |
applicant or employee obtains a waiver pursuant to Section 40 |
of this Act. This shall not be construed to
mean that a health |
care employer has an obligation to conduct a criminal
history |
records check in other states in which an employee has resided.
|
(c) A health care employer shall not hire, employ, or |
retain, whether paid or on a volunteer basis, any individual in |
a position with duties involving direct care of clients, |
patients, or residents, who has a finding by the Department of |
abuse, neglect, misappropriation of property, or theft denoted |
on the Health Care Worker Registry. |
(d) A health care employer shall not hire, employ, or |
retain, whether paid or on a volunteer basis, any individual in |
a position with duties involving direct care of clients, |
patients, or residents if the individual has a verified and |
substantiated finding of abuse, neglect, or financial |
exploitation, as identified within the Adult Protective |
Service Registry established under Section 7.5 of the Adult |
Protective Services Act. |
(e) A health care employer shall not hire, employ, or |
retain, whether paid or on a volunteer basis, any individual in |
|
a position with duties involving direct care of clients, |
patients, or residents who has a finding by the Department of |
Human Services of physical or sexual abuse, financial |
exploitation, or egregious neglect of an individual denoted on |
the Health Care Worker Registry. |
(Source: P.A. 99-872, eff. 1-1-17 .)
|
(225 ILCS 46/26 new) |
Sec. 26. Health Care Worker Registry. The Department shall |
establish and maintain the Health Care Worker Registry, a |
registry of all individuals who (i) have satisfactorily |
completed the training required by Section 3-206 of the Nursing |
Home Care Act, Section 3-206 of the MC/DD Act, or Section 3-206 |
of the ID/DD Community Care Act, (ii) have begun a current |
course of training as set forth in Section 3-206 of the Nursing |
Home Care Act, Section 3-206 of the MC/DD Act, or Section 3-206 |
of the ID/DD Community Care Act, or (iii) are otherwise acting |
as a nursing assistant, habilitation aide, home health aide, or |
child care aide. The Health Care Worker Registry shall include |
the individual's name, current address, and Social Security |
number, the date and location of the training course completed |
by the individual, whether the individual has any of the |
disqualifying convictions listed in Section 25 of the Health |
Care Worker Background Check Act from the date of the training |
course completed by the individual, and the date of the |
individual's last criminal records check. Any individual |
|
placed on the Health Care Worker Registry is required to inform |
the Department of any change of address within 30 days after |
the effective date of the change of address. |
The Department shall include in the Health Care Worker |
Registry established under this Section the information |
contained in the registries established under Section 3-206.01 |
of the Nursing Home Care Act, Section 3-206.01 of the MC/DD |
Act, and Section 3-206.01 of the ID/DD Community Care Act.
|
(225 ILCS 46/27 new) |
Sec. 27. Notice and hearing prior to designation on Health |
Care Worker Registry for offense. |
(a) If the Department finds that an employee or former |
employee has abused or neglected a resident or misappropriated |
property of a resident, then the Department shall notify the |
employee or individual of this finding by certified mail sent |
to the address contained in the Health Care Worker Registry. |
The notice shall give the employee or individual an opportunity |
to contest the finding in a hearing before the Department or to |
submit a written response to the findings in lieu of requesting |
a hearing. As used in this subsection, "abuse" and "neglect" |
shall have the meanings provided in the Nursing Home Care Act, |
except that the term "resident" as used in those definitions |
shall have the meaning provided in this Act. As used in this |
subsection, "misappropriate property of a resident" shall have |
the meaning provided to "misappropriation of a resident's |
|
property" in the Nursing Home Care Act, except that the term |
"resident" as used in that definition shall have the meaning |
provided in this Act. |
(b) The Department shall have the authority to hold |
hearings to be conducted by the Director, or by an individual |
designated by the Director as hearing officer to conduct the |
hearing. On the basis of a hearing, or upon default of the |
employee, the Director shall make a determination specifying |
his or her findings and conclusions. A copy of the |
determination shall be sent by certified mail, return receipt |
requested, or served personally upon the employee to the |
address last provided by the employee to the Department. |
(c) The procedure governing hearings authorized by this |
Section shall be in accordance with rules adopted by the |
Department. A full and complete record shall be kept of all |
proceedings, including the notice of hearing, and all other |
documents in the nature of pleadings, written motions filed in |
the proceedings, and the report and orders of the Director or |
the Director's designee. All testimony shall be reported but |
need not be transcribed unless the decision is sought to be |
reviewed under the Administrative Review Law. A copy or copies |
of the transcript and record of the proceedings may be obtained |
by any interested party subsequent to payment to the Department |
of the cost of preparing the copy or copies. All final |
administrative decisions of the Department under this Act are |
subject to judicial review under the Administrative Review Law |
|
and the rules adopted pursuant thereto. For purposes of this |
subsection, "administrative decision" has the meaning provided |
in Section 3-101 of the Code of Civil Procedure. |
(d) The Department may issue subpoenas requiring the |
attendance and the giving of testimony by witnesses, and |
subpoenas duces tecum requiring the production of books, |
papers, records, or memoranda. All subpoenas and subpoenas |
duces tecum issued under this Act may be served by mail or by |
any person of legal age. The fees of witnesses for attendance |
and travel shall be the same as the fees of witnesses before |
the courts of this State. The fees shall be paid when the |
witness is excused from further attendance. When the witness is |
subpoenaed at the instance of the Department, the fees shall be |
paid in the same manner as other expenses of the Department, |
and when the witness is subpoenaed at the instance of any other |
party to any such proceeding, the Department may require that |
the cost of service of the subpoena or subpoena duces tecum and |
the fee of the witness be borne by the party at whose instance |
the witness is summoned. A subpoena or subpoena duces tecum |
issued pursuant to this Section shall be served in the same |
manner as a subpoena issued by a circuit court. |
(e) If, after a hearing or if the employee, or former |
employee, does not request a hearing, the Department finds that |
the employee, or former employee, abused a resident, neglected |
a resident, or misappropriated resident property or makes any |
other applicable finding as set forth by rule, the finding |
|
shall be included as part of the Health Care Worker Registry as |
well as a clear and accurate summary from the employee, if he |
or she chooses to make a statement. |
(f) The Department shall make the following information in |
the Health Care Worker Registry available to the public: an |
individual's full name; the date an individual successfully |
completed a nurse aide training or competency evaluation; and |
whether the Department has made a finding that an employee, or |
former employee, has been guilty of abuse or neglect of a |
resident or misappropriation of resident property or has made |
any other applicable finding as set forth by rule. In the case |
of inquiries to the Health Care Worker Registry concerning an |
employee, or former employee, listed in the Health Care Worker |
Registry, any information disclosed concerning a finding shall |
also include disclosure of the employee's, or former |
employee's, statement in the Health Care Worker Registry |
relating to the finding or a clear and accurate summary of the |
statement. |
(g) The Department shall add to the Health Care Worker |
Registry records of findings as reported by the Inspector |
General or remove from the Health Care Worker Registry records |
of findings as reported by the Department of Human Services, |
under subsection (s) of Section 1-17 of the Department of Human |
Services Act.
|
(225 ILCS 46/28 new) |
|
Sec. 28. Designation on Registry for offense. |
(a) The Department, after notice to the employee, or former |
employee, may denote on the Health Care Worker Registry that |
the Department has found any of the following: |
(1) The employee, or former employee, has abused a |
resident. |
(2) The employee, or former employee, has neglected a |
resident. |
(3) The employee, or former employee, has |
misappropriated resident property. |
(4) The employee, or former employee, has been |
convicted of (i) a felony; (ii) a misdemeanor, an essential |
element of which is dishonesty; or (iii) any crime that is |
directly related to the duties of an employee, a nursing |
assistant, habilitation aide, or child care aide. |
(b) Notice under this Section shall include a clear and |
concise statement of the grounds denoting abuse, neglect, |
theft, or other applicable finding, and notice of the |
opportunity for a hearing to contest the designation. |
(c) The Department shall document criminal history records |
check results pursuant to the requirements of this Act. |
(d) After the designation of neglect on the Health Care |
Worker Registry, made pursuant to this Section, an employee, or |
former employee, may petition the Department for removal of a |
designation of neglect on the Health Care Worker Registry, |
after durations set forth within the Department's notice made |
|
pursuant to subsections (a) and (b) of this Section. Upon |
receipt of a petition, the Department may remove the |
designation for a finding of neglect after no less than one |
year, or the designation of applicable findings set forth by |
rule of an employee, or former employee, for minimum durations |
set forth by the Department, on the Health Care Worker Registry |
unless the Department determines that removal of designation is |
not in the public interest. The Department shall set forth by |
rule the discretionary factors by which designations of |
employees or former employees may be removed.
|
(225 ILCS 46/33) |
Sec. 33. Fingerprint-based criminal history records check. |
(a) A fingerprint-based criminal history records check is |
not required for health care employees who have been |
continuously employed by a health care employer since October |
1, 2007, have met the requirements for criminal history |
background checks prior to October 1, 2007, and have no |
disqualifying convictions or requested and received a waiver of |
those disqualifying convictions. These employees shall be |
retained on the Health Care Worker Registry as long as they |
remain active. Nothing in this subsection (a) shall be |
construed to prohibit a health care employer from initiating a |
criminal history records check for these employees. Should |
these employees seek a new position with a different health |
care employer, then a fingerprint-based criminal history |
|
records check shall be required.
|
(b) On October 1, 2007 or as soon thereafter as is |
reasonably practical, in the discretion of the Director of |
Public Health, and thereafter, any student,
applicant, or |
employee who desires to be included on the Department of Public |
Health's Health Care Worker Registry shall must authorize the |
Department of Public Health or its designee to request a |
fingerprint-based criminal history records check to determine |
if the individual has a conviction for a disqualifying offense. |
This authorization shall allow the Department of Public Health |
to request and receive information and assistance from any |
State or local governmental agency. Each individual shall |
submit his or her fingerprints to the Department of State |
Police in an electronic format that complies with the form and |
manner for requesting and furnishing criminal history record |
information prescribed by the Department of State Police. The |
fingerprints submitted under this Section shall be checked |
against the fingerprint records now and hereafter filed in the |
Department of State Police criminal history record databases. |
The Department of State Police shall charge a fee for |
conducting the criminal history records check, which shall not |
exceed the actual cost of the records check. The livescan |
vendor may act as the designee for individuals, educational |
entities, or health care employers in the collection of |
Department of State Police fees and deposit those fees into the |
State Police Services Fund. The Department of State Police |
|
shall provide information concerning any criminal convictions, |
now or hereafter filed, against the individual. |
(c) On October 1, 2007 or as soon thereafter as is |
reasonably practical, in the discretion of the Director of |
Public Health, and thereafter, an educational
entity, other |
than a secondary school, conducting a nurse aide training |
program shall must initiate a fingerprint-based criminal |
history records check required by this Act requested by the |
Department of Public Health prior to entry of an individual |
into the training program. |
(d) On October 1, 2007 or as soon thereafter as is |
reasonably practical, in the discretion of the Director of |
Public Health, and thereafter, a health care
employer who makes |
a conditional offer of employment to an applicant for a |
position as an employee shall must initiate a fingerprint-based |
criminal history record check, requested by the Department of |
Public Health, on the applicant, if such a background check has |
not been previously conducted. |
(e) When initiating a background check requested by the
|
Department of Public Health, an educational entity or health |
care employer shall electronically submit to the Department of |
Public Health the student's, applicant's, or employee's social |
security number, demographics, disclosure, and authorization |
information in a format prescribed by the Department of Public |
Health within 2 working days after the authorization is |
secured. The student, applicant, or employee shall must have |
|
his or her fingerprints collected electronically and |
transmitted to the Department of State Police within 10 working |
days. The educational entity or health care employer shall must |
transmit all necessary information and fees to the livescan |
vendor and Department of State Police within 10 working days |
after receipt of the authorization. This information and the |
results of the criminal history record checks shall be |
maintained by the Department of Public Health's Health Care |
Worker Registry. |
(f) A direct care employer may initiate a fingerprint-based |
background check required by this Act requested by the |
Department of Public Health for any of its employees, but may |
not use this process to initiate background checks for |
residents. The results of any fingerprint-based background |
check that is initiated with the Department as the requester |
requestor shall be entered in the Health Care Worker Registry. |
(g) As long as the employee has had a fingerprint-based |
criminal history record check required by this Act requested by |
the Department of Public Health and stays active on the Health |
Care Worker Registry, no further criminal history record checks |
are required shall be deemed necessary , as the Department of |
State Police shall notify the Department of Public Health of |
any additional convictions associated with the fingerprints |
previously submitted. Health care employers shall are required |
to check the Health Care Worker Registry before hiring an |
employee to determine that the individual has had a |
|
fingerprint-based record check required by this Act requested |
by the Department of Public Health and has no disqualifying |
convictions or has been granted a waiver pursuant to Section 40 |
of this Act. If the individual has not had such a background |
check or is not active on the Health Care Worker Registry, then |
the health care employer shall must initiate a |
fingerprint-based record check requested by the Department of |
Public Health. If an individual is inactive on the Health Care |
Worker Registry, that individual is prohibited from being hired |
to work as a certified nursing assistant nurse aide if, since |
the individual's most recent completion of a competency test, |
there has been a period of 24 consecutive months during which |
the individual has not provided nursing or nursing-related |
services for pay. If the individual can provide proof of having |
retained his or her certification by not having a |
24-consecutive-month 24 consecutive month break in service for |
pay, he or she may be hired as a certified nursing assistant |
nurse aide and that employment information shall be entered |
into the Health Care Worker Registry. |
(h) On October 1, 2007 or as soon thereafter as is |
reasonably practical, in the discretion of the Director of |
Public Health, and thereafter, if the Department of State |
Police notifies the Department of Public Health that an |
employee has a new conviction of a disqualifying offense, based |
upon the fingerprints that were previously submitted, then (i) |
the Health Care Worker Registry shall notify the employee's |
|
last known employer of the offense, (ii) a record of the |
employee's disqualifying offense shall be entered on the Health |
Care Worker Registry, and (iii) the individual shall no longer |
be eligible to work as an employee unless he or she obtains a |
waiver pursuant to Section 40 of this Act. |
(i) On October 1, 2007, or as soon thereafter, in the |
discretion of the Director of Public Health, as is reasonably |
practical, and thereafter, each direct care employer or its |
designee shall must provide an employment verification for each |
employee no less than annually. The direct care employer or its |
designee shall must log into the Health Care Worker Registry |
through a secure login. The health care employer or its |
designee shall must indicate employment and termination dates |
within 30 days after hiring or terminating an employee, as well |
as the employment category and type. Failure to comply with |
this subsection (i) constitutes a licensing violation. A For |
health care employers that are not licensed or certified, a |
fine of up to $500 may be imposed for failure to maintain these |
records. This information shall be used by the Department of |
Public Health to notify the last known employer of any |
disqualifying offenses that are reported by the Department of |
State Police.
|
(j) The Department of Public Health shall notify each
|
health care employer or long-term care facility inquiring as to |
the information on the Health Care Worker Registry if the |
applicant or employee listed on the registry has a |
|
disqualifying offense and is therefore ineligible to work. In |
the event that an applicant or employee has a waiver for one or |
more disqualifying offenses pursuant to Section 40 of this Act |
and he or she is otherwise eligible to work, the Health Care |
Worker Registry Department of Public Health shall indicate |
report that the applicant or employee is eligible to work and |
that additional information is available on the Health Care |
Worker Registry. The Health Care Worker Registry Department may |
indicate report that the applicant or employee has received a |
waiver. |
(k) The student, applicant, or employee shall must be |
notified
of each of the following whenever a fingerprint-based |
criminal history records check is required: |
(1) That the educational entity, health care
employer, |
or long-term care facility shall initiate a |
fingerprint-based criminal history record check required |
by this Act requested by the Department of Public Health of |
the student, applicant, or employee pursuant to this Act . |
(2) That the student, applicant, or employee has a
|
right to obtain a copy of the criminal records report that |
indicates a conviction for a disqualifying offense and |
challenge the accuracy and completeness of the report |
through an established Department of State Police |
procedure of Access and Review. |
(3) That the applicant, if hired conditionally, may
be |
terminated if the criminal records report indicates that |
|
the applicant has a record of a conviction of any of the |
criminal offenses enumerated in Section 25, unless the |
applicant obtains a waiver pursuant to Section 40 of this |
Act. |
(4) That the applicant, if not hired conditionally,
|
shall not be hired if the criminal records report indicates |
that the applicant has a record of a conviction of any of |
the criminal offenses enumerated in Section 25, unless the |
applicant obtains a waiver pursuant to Section 40 of this |
Act. |
(5) That the employee shall be terminated if the
|
criminal records report indicates that the employee has a |
record of a conviction of any of the criminal offenses |
enumerated in Section 25. |
(6) If, after the employee has originally been |
determined not to have disqualifying offenses, the |
employer is notified that the employee has a new |
conviction(s) of any of the criminal offenses enumerated in |
Section 25, then the employee shall be terminated. |
(l) A health care employer or long-term care facility may
|
conditionally employ an applicant for up to 3 months pending |
the results of a fingerprint-based criminal history record |
check requested by the Department of Public Health. |
(m) The Department of Public Health or an entity
|
responsible for inspecting, licensing, certifying, or |
registering the health care employer or long-term care facility |
|
shall be immune from liability for notices given based on the |
results of a fingerprint-based criminal history record check.
|
(Source: P.A. 99-872, eff. 1-1-17 .)
|
(225 ILCS 46/40)
|
Sec. 40. Waiver.
|
(a) Any student, applicant, or employee listed on the |
Health Care Worker Registry may request a waiver of the
|
prohibition against
employment by:
|
(1) completing a waiver application on a form |
prescribed by the Department of Public Health;
|
(2) providing a written explanation of each conviction |
to include (i) what happened, (ii) how many years have |
passed since the offense, (iii) the individuals involved, |
(iv) the age of the applicant at the time of the offense, |
and (v) any other circumstances surrounding the offense; |
and |
(3) providing official documentation showing that all |
fines have been paid, if applicable and except for in the |
instance of payment of court-imposed fines or restitution |
in which the applicant is adhering to a payment schedule, |
and the date probation or parole was satisfactorily |
completed, if applicable.
|
(b) The applicant may, but is not required to, submit |
employment and character references and any other evidence |
demonstrating the ability of the applicant or employee
to |
|
perform the employment responsibilities competently and |
evidence that the
applicant or employee does not pose a threat |
to the health or safety of
residents, patients, or clients.
|
(c) The Department of Public Health may, at the discretion |
of the Director of Public Health, grant a waiver to an |
applicant, student, or employee listed on the Health Care |
Worker Registry registry . The Department of Public Health shall
|
act upon the waiver request within 30 days
of
receipt of all |
necessary information, as defined by rule. The Department of |
Public Health shall send an applicant, student, or employee |
written notification of its decision whether to grant a waiver, |
including listing the specific disqualifying offenses for |
which the waiver is being granted or denied. The Department |
shall issue additional copies of this written notification upon |
the applicant's, student's, or employee's request.
|
(d) An individual shall not be employed from the
time that |
the employer receives a notification from the Department of |
Public Health based upon the results of a fingerprint-based |
criminal history records check
containing disqualifying |
conditions until the time that the individual receives
a |
waiver.
|
(e) The entity responsible for inspecting, licensing,
|
certifying, or
registering the health care employer and the |
Department of Public Health shall be immune from liability for |
any
waivers granted under this Section.
|
(f) A health care employer is not obligated to employ or |
|
offer
permanent
employment to an applicant, or to retain an |
employee who is granted a waiver
under this Section.
|
(Source: P.A. 99-872, eff. 1-1-17 .)
|
(225 ILCS 46/75 new) |
Sec. 75. Rulemaking. The Department shall have the |
authority to adopt administrative rules and procedures to carry |
out the purpose of this Act. The provisions of the Illinois |
Administrative Procedure Act are hereby expressly adopted and |
shall apply to all administrative rules and procedures of the |
Department under this Act.
|
Section 50. The Mental Health and Developmental |
Disabilities Confidentiality Act is amended by changing |
Section 10 as follows:
|
(740 ILCS 110/10) (from Ch. 91 1/2, par. 810)
|
Sec. 10. (a) Except as provided herein, in any civil, |
criminal,
administrative, or legislative proceeding, or in any |
proceeding preliminary
thereto, a recipient, and a therapist on |
behalf and in the interest of a
recipient, has the privilege to |
refuse to disclose and to prevent the
disclosure of the |
recipient's record or communications.
|
(1) Records and communications may be disclosed in a |
civil, criminal
or administrative proceeding in which the |
recipient introduces his mental
condition or any aspect of |
|
his services received for such condition as an
element of |
his claim or defense, if and only to the extent the court |
in
which the proceedings have been brought, or, in the case |
of an administrative
proceeding, the court to which an |
appeal or other action for review of an
administrative |
determination may be taken, finds, after in camera
|
examination of testimony or other evidence, that it is |
relevant, probative,
not unduly prejudicial or |
inflammatory, and otherwise clearly
admissible; that other |
satisfactory evidence is demonstrably unsatisfactory
as |
evidence of the facts sought to be established by such |
evidence; and
that disclosure is more important to the |
interests of substantial justice
than protection from |
injury to the therapist-recipient relationship or to
the |
recipient or other whom disclosure is likely to harm. |
Except in a criminal
proceeding in which the recipient, who |
is accused in that proceeding, raises
the defense of |
insanity, no record or communication between a therapist
|
and a recipient shall be deemed relevant for purposes of |
this subsection,
except the fact of treatment, the cost of |
services and the ultimate
diagnosis unless the party |
seeking disclosure of the communication clearly
|
establishes in the trial court a compelling need for its |
production.
However, for purposes of this Act, in any |
action brought or defended under
the Illinois Marriage and |
Dissolution of Marriage Act, or in any action in
which pain |
|
and suffering is an element of the claim, mental condition |
shall
not be deemed to be introduced merely by making such |
claim and shall be
deemed to be introduced only if the |
recipient or a witness on his behalf
first testifies |
concerning the record or communication.
|
(2) Records or communications may be disclosed in a |
civil proceeding after
the recipient's death when the |
recipient's physical or mental condition
has been |
introduced as an element of a claim or defense by any party |
claiming
or defending through or as a beneficiary of the |
recipient, provided the
court finds, after in camera |
examination of the evidence, that it is relevant,
|
probative, and otherwise clearly admissible; that other |
satisfactory evidence
is not available regarding the facts |
sought to be established by such evidence;
and that |
disclosure is more important to the interests of |
substantial justice
than protection from any injury which |
disclosure is likely to cause.
|
(3) In the event of a claim made or an action filed by |
a recipient, or,
following the recipient's death, by any |
party claiming as a beneficiary
of the recipient for injury |
caused in the course of providing services to such |
recipient, the therapist and other persons whose actions
|
are alleged
to have been the cause of injury may disclose |
pertinent records and
communications to an attorney or |
attorneys engaged to render advice about
and to provide |
|
representation in connection with such matter and to |
persons
working under the supervision of such attorney or |
attorneys, and may
testify as to such records or
|
communication in any administrative, judicial
or discovery |
proceeding for the purpose of preparing and presenting a
|
defense against such claim or action.
|
(4) Records and communications made to or by a |
therapist in the course
of examination ordered by a court |
for good cause shown may, if otherwise
relevant and |
admissible, be disclosed in a civil, criminal,
or |
administrative proceeding in which the recipient is a party |
or in
appropriate pretrial proceedings, provided such |
court has found that the
recipient has been as adequately |
and as effectively as possible informed
before submitting |
to such examination that such records and communications
|
would not be considered confidential or privileged. Such |
records and
communications shall be admissible only as to |
issues involving the
recipient's physical or mental |
condition and only to the extent that these
are germane to |
such proceedings.
|
(5) Records and communications may be disclosed in a |
proceeding under
the Probate Act of 1975, to determine a |
recipient's competency or need for
guardianship, provided |
that the disclosure is made only with respect to that |
issue.
|
(6) Records and communications may be disclosed to a |
|
court-appointed therapist, psychologist, or psychiatrist |
for use in determining a person's fitness to stand trial if |
the records were made within the 180-day period immediately |
preceding the date of the therapist's, psychologist's or |
psychiatrist's court appointment. These records and |
communications shall be admissible only as to the issue of |
the person's fitness to stand trial. Records and |
communications may be disclosed when such are made during
|
treatment which the recipient is ordered to undergo to |
render him fit to
stand trial on a criminal charge, |
provided that the disclosure is made only
with respect to |
the issue of fitness to stand trial.
|
(7) Records and communications of the recipient may be |
disclosed in any
civil or administrative proceeding |
involving the validity of or benefits
under a life, |
accident, health or disability insurance policy or |
certificate,
or Health Care Service Plan Contract, |
insuring the recipient, but only if
and to the extent that |
the recipient's mental condition, or treatment or
services |
in connection therewith, is a material element of any claim |
or
defense of any party, provided that information sought |
or disclosed shall
not be redisclosed except in connection |
with the proceeding in which
disclosure is made.
|
(8) Records or communications may be disclosed when |
such are relevant
to a matter in issue in any action |
brought under this Act and proceedings
preliminary |
|
thereto, provided that any information so disclosed shall |
not
be utilized for any other purpose nor be redisclosed |
except in connection
with such action or preliminary |
proceedings.
|
(9) Records and communications of the recipient may be |
disclosed in
investigations of and trials for homicide when |
the disclosure relates directly
to the fact or immediate |
circumstances of the homicide.
|
(10) Records and communications of a deceased |
recipient shall be
disclosed to a coroner conducting a |
preliminary investigation into the
recipient's death under |
Section 3-3013 of the Counties Code.
|
(11) Records and communications of a recipient shall be |
disclosed in a
proceeding
where a petition or motion is |
filed under the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 and
the |
recipient is
named as a parent, guardian, or legal |
custodian of a minor who is the subject
of a petition for |
wardship as
described in Section
2-3 of that Act or a minor |
who is the subject of a petition for wardship as
described |
in Section 2-4 of that
Act alleging the
minor is abused, |
neglected, or dependent or the recipient is named as a |
parent
of a child
who is the subject of
a petition, |
supplemental petition, or motion to appoint a guardian with |
the
power to consent to
adoption under Section 2-29 of the |
Juvenile Court Act
of 1987.
|
(12) Records and communications of a recipient may be
|
|
disclosed when disclosure is necessary to collect sums or |
receive
third party payment representing charges for |
mental health or
developmental disabilities services |
provided by a therapist or
agency to a recipient; however, |
disclosure shall be limited to
information needed to pursue |
collection, and the information so
disclosed may not be |
used for any other purposes nor may it be
redisclosed |
except in connection with collection activities.
Whenever |
records are disclosed pursuant to this subdivision (12), |
the
recipient of the records shall be advised in writing |
that any person who
discloses mental health records and |
communications in violation of this Act may
be subject to |
civil liability pursuant to Section 15 of this Act or to |
criminal
penalties pursuant to Section 16 of this Act or |
both.
|
(b) Before a disclosure is made under subsection (a), any |
party to the
proceeding or any other interested person may |
request an in camera review
of the record or communications to |
be disclosed. The court or agency
conducting the proceeding may |
hold an in camera review on its own motion.
When, contrary to |
the express wish of the recipient, the therapist asserts
a |
privilege on behalf and in the interest of a recipient, the |
court may
require that the therapist, in an in camera hearing, |
establish that
disclosure is not in the best interest of the |
recipient. The court or
agency may prevent disclosure or limit |
disclosure to the extent that other
admissible evidence is |
|
sufficient to establish the facts in issue. The
court or agency |
may enter such orders as may be necessary in order to
protect |
the confidentiality, privacy, and safety of the recipient or of
|
other persons. Any order to disclose or to not disclose shall |
be
considered a final order for purposes of appeal and shall be |
subject to
interlocutory appeal.
|
(c) A recipient's records and communications may be |
disclosed to a
duly authorized committee, commission or |
subcommittee of the General
Assembly which possesses subpoena |
and hearing powers, upon a written
request approved by a |
majority vote of the committee, commission or
subcommittee |
members. The committee, commission or subcommittee may
request |
records only for the purposes of investigating or studying
|
possible violations of recipient rights. The request shall |
state the
purpose for which disclosure is sought.
|
The facility shall notify the recipient, or his guardian, |
and therapist in
writing of any disclosure request under this |
subsection within 5 business
days after such request. Such |
notification shall also inform the
recipient, or guardian, and |
therapist of their right to object to the
disclosure within 10 |
business days after receipt of the notification and
shall |
include the name, address and telephone number of the
|
committee, commission or subcommittee member or staff person |
with whom an
objection shall be filed. If no objection has been |
filed within 15
business days after the request for disclosure, |
the facility shall disclose
the records and communications to |
|
the committee, commission or
subcommittee. If an objection has |
been filed within 15 business days after
the request for |
disclosure, the facility shall disclose the records and
|
communications only after the committee, commission or |
subcommittee has
permitted the recipient, guardian or |
therapist to present his objection in
person before it and has |
renewed its request for disclosure by a majority
vote of its |
members.
|
Disclosure under this subsection shall not occur until all |
personally
identifiable data of the recipient and provider are |
removed from the
records and communications. Disclosure under |
this subsection shall not
occur in any public proceeding.
|
(d) No party to any proceeding described under paragraphs |
(1), (2),
(3), (4), (7), or (8) of subsection (a) of this |
Section, nor his or
her attorney, shall serve a subpoena |
seeking to obtain access to records or
communications under |
this Act unless the subpoena is accompanied by a
written order |
issued by a judge or by the written consent under Section 5 of |
this Act of the person whose records are being sought, |
authorizing the disclosure of the records
or the issuance of |
the subpoena. No such written order shall be issued without |
written notice of the motion to the recipient and the treatment |
provider. Prior to issuance of the order, each party or other |
person entitled to notice shall be permitted an opportunity to |
be heard pursuant to subsection (b) of this Section. In the |
absence of the written consent under Section 5 of this Act of |
|
the person whose records are being sought, no person shall |
comply with a subpoena for
records or communications under this |
Act, unless the subpoena is
accompanied by a written order |
authorizing the issuance of the subpoena or
the disclosure of |
the records. Each subpoena issued by a court or administrative |
agency or served on any person pursuant to this subsection (d) |
shall include the following language: "No person shall comply |
with a subpoena for mental health records or communications |
pursuant to Section 10 of the Mental Health and Developmental |
Disabilities Confidentiality Act, 740 ILCS 110/10, unless the |
subpoena is accompanied by a written order that authorizes the |
issuance of the subpoena and the disclosure of records or |
communications or by the written consent under Section 5 of |
that Act of the person whose records are being sought."
|
(e) When a person has been transported by a peace officer |
to a mental
health facility, then upon the request of a peace |
officer, if the person is
allowed to leave the mental health |
facility within 48 hours of arrival,
excluding Saturdays, |
Sundays, and holidays, the facility director shall notify
the |
local law enforcement authority prior to the release of the |
person. The
local law enforcement authority may re-disclose the |
information as necessary to
alert the appropriate enforcement |
or prosecuting authority.
|
(f) A recipient's records and communications shall be |
disclosed to the
Inspector General of the Department of Human |
Services within 10 business days
of a request by the Inspector |
|
General
(i) in the course of an investigation authorized by the |
Department of Human Services Act and applicable rule or (ii) |
during the course of an assessment authorized by the Abuse of |
Adults with Disabilities Intervention Act and applicable rule. |
The request
shall be
in writing and signed by the Inspector |
General or his or her designee. The
request shall state the |
purpose for which disclosure is sought. Any person who
|
knowingly and willfully refuses to comply with such a request |
is guilty of a
Class A misdemeanor. A recipient's records and |
communications shall also be disclosed pursuant to subsection |
(s) of Section 1-17 of the Department of Human Services Act in |
testimony at Health Care Worker Registry health care worker |
registry hearings or preliminary proceedings when such are |
relevant to the matter in issue, provided that any information |
so disclosed shall not be utilized for any other purpose nor be |
redisclosed except in connection with such action or |
preliminary proceedings.
|
(Source: P.A. 98-221, eff. 1-1-14; 98-908, eff. 1-1-15; 99-78, |
eff. 7-20-15.)
|
Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon |
becoming law.
|
|
INDEX
|
Statutes amended in order of appearance
|
|