(210 ILCS 85/1) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 142)
Sec. 1.
This Act may be cited as the Hospital Licensing Act.
(Source: Laws 1953, p. 811.)
(210 ILCS 85/2) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 143)
Sec. 2.
Purpose; findings.
(a) The purpose of this Act is to provide for the better protection of
the public health through the development, establishment, and enforcement
of standards (1) for the care of individuals in hospitals, (2) for the
construction, maintenance, and operation of hospitals which, in light of
advancing knowledge, will promote safe and adequate treatment of such
individuals in hospital, and (3) that will have regard to the necessity of
determining that a person establishing a hospital have the qualifications,
background, character and financial resources to adequately provide a
proper standard of hospital service for the community.
(b) The Illinois General Assembly finds:
(Source: P.A. 88-654, eff. 1-1-95.)
(210 ILCS 85/3)
Sec. 3. As used in this Act:
(A) "Hospital" means any institution, place, building, buildings on a campus, or agency, public
or private, whether organized for profit or not, devoted primarily to the
maintenance and operation of facilities for the diagnosis and treatment or
care of 2 or more unrelated persons admitted for overnight stay or longer
in order to obtain medical, including obstetric, psychiatric and nursing,
care of illness, disease, injury, infirmity, or deformity.
The term "hospital", without regard to length of stay, shall also
include:
The term "hospital" includes general and specialized hospitals,
tuberculosis sanitaria, mental or psychiatric hospitals and sanitaria, and
includes maternity homes, lying-in homes, and homes for unwed mothers in
which care is given during delivery.
The term "hospital" does not include:
(B) "Person" means the State, and any political subdivision or municipal
corporation, individual, firm, partnership, corporation, company,
association, or joint stock association, or the legal successor thereof.
(C) "Department" means the Department of Public Health of the State of
Illinois.
(D) "Director" means the Director of Public Health of
the State of Illinois.
(E) "Perinatal" means the period of time
between the conception of an
infant and the end of the first month after birth.
(F) "Federally designated organ procurement agency" means the organ
procurement agency designated by the Secretary of the U.S. Department of Health
and Human Services for the service area in which a hospital is located; except
that in the case of a hospital located in a county adjacent to Wisconsin
which currently contracts with an organ procurement agency located in Wisconsin
that is not the organ procurement agency designated by the U.S. Secretary of
Health and Human Services for the service area in which the hospital is
located, if the hospital applies for a waiver pursuant to 42 U.S.C.
1320b-8(a), it may designate an organ procurement agency
located in Wisconsin to be thereafter deemed its federally designated organ
procurement agency for the purposes of this Act.
(G) "Tissue bank" means any facility or program operating in Illinois
that is certified by the American Association of Tissue Banks or the Eye Bank
Association of America and is involved in procuring, furnishing, donating,
or distributing corneas, bones, or other human tissue for the purpose of
injecting, transfusing, or transplanting any of them into the human body.
"Tissue bank" does not include a licensed blood bank. For the purposes of this
Act, "tissue" does not include organs.
(H) "Campus", as this term applies to operations, has the same meaning as the term "campus" as set forth in federal Medicare regulations, 42 CFR 413.65.
(Source: P.A. 102-1118, eff. 1-18-23.)
(210 ILCS 85/4) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 145)
Sec. 4.
No person shall establish a hospital without first obtaining a
permit from the Department and no person shall open, conduct, operate, or
maintain a hospital without first obtaining a license from the Department.
Nothing in this Act shall be construed to impair or abridge the power of
municipalities to license and regulate hospitals, provided that the
municipal ordinance substantially complies with the minimum standards and
regulations developed by the Department pursuant to the provisions of this
Act. Such compliance shall be determined by the Department subject to
review as provided in Section 13 of this Act. Section 13 of this Act
shall also be applicable to the judicial review of final administrative
decisions of the regulatory agency of the municipality. Any municipality
having an ordinance licensing and regulating hospitals which provides for
minimum standards and regulations substantially in compliance with those
developed pursuant to this Act shall make such periodic reports to the
Department as the Department deems necessary. This report shall include a
list of hospitals meeting standards substantially equivalent to those
promulgated by the Department under this Act, and upon the receipt of such
report the Department may then issue a license to such hospital.
(Source: Laws 1965, p. 2350.)
(210 ILCS 85/4.5)
Sec. 4.5. Hospital with multiple locations; single license.
(a) A hospital located in a county with fewer than 3,000,000 inhabitants may
apply to the Department for approval to conduct its operations from more than
one location within the county under a single license. At the time of the application to operate under a single license, a hospital located in a county with fewer than 125,000 inhabitants may apply to the Department for approval to conduct its operations from more than one location within contiguous counties in which both facilities are located, provided that the second county has fewer than 35,000 inhabitants.
(b) The facilities or buildings at those locations must be owned or
operated together by a single corporation or other legal entity serving as the
licensee and must share:
(c) Each hospital building or facility that is located on a site
geographically separate from the campus or premises of another hospital
building or facility operated by the licensee must, at a minimum, individually
comply with the Department's hospital licensing requirements for emergency
services.
(d) The hospital shall submit to the Department a comprehensive plan in
relation to the waiver or waivers requested
describing the services and operations of each facility or building and how
common services or operations will be coordinated between the various
locations. With the exception of items required by subsection (c), the
Department is authorized to waive compliance with the hospital
licensing requirements for specific buildings or facilities, provided that the
hospital has documented which other building or facility under its single
license provides that service or operation, and that doing so would not
endanger the public's health, safety, or welfare. Nothing in this Section
relieves a hospital from the requirements of the Health Facilities Planning
Act.
(Source: P.A. 102-887, eff. 5-17-22.)
(210 ILCS 85/4.6)
Sec. 4.6. Additional licensing requirements.
(a) Notwithstanding any other law or rule to the contrary, the Department
may license as a hospital a building
that (i) is owned or operated by a hospital licensed
under
this Act, (ii) is located in a municipality with a population of less than
60,000, and
(iii) includes a postsurgical recovery care center licensed under the
Alternative
Health Care Delivery Act for a period of not less than 2 years, an ambulatory
surgical treatment center licensed under the Ambulatory Surgical Treatment
Center Act, and a
Freestanding
Emergency Center licensed under the Emergency Medical Services (EMS)
Systems Act. Only the components of the building which are currently licensed
shall be eligible under the provisions of this Section.
(b) Prior to issuing a license, the Department shall inspect the facility
and
require the facility to meet such of the Department's rules relating to
the
establishment of hospitals as the Department determines are appropriate to such
facility. Once the Department approves the facility and issues a hospital
license, all other licenses as listed in subsection (a) above shall be null and
void.
(c) Only one license may be issued under the authority of this Section.
No license may be issued after 18 months after the effective date of this
amendatory Act of the 91st General Assembly.
(d) Beginning on the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly, each hospital building or facility that is (i) located on the campus of the licensee but on a site that is not contiguous, adjacent, or otherwise attached to the main hospital building of the campus of the licensee, (ii) operated by the licensee, and (iii) provides inpatient services to patients at this building or facility shall, at a minimum, individually comply with the Department's hospital licensing requirements for emergency services. The hospital shall submit to the Department a comprehensive plan describing the services and operations of each facility or building and how common services or operations will be coordinated between the various locations. The Department shall review the plan and may authorize a waiver granting an exemption for compliance with the hospital licensing requirements for specific buildings or facilities, including requirements for emergency services, provided that the hospital has documented which other building or facility under its single license provides that service or operation, and that doing so would not endanger the public's health, safety, or welfare. Nothing in this Section relieves a hospital from the requirements of the Illinois Health Facilities Planning Act.
(Source: P.A. 96-1515, eff. 2-4-11.)
(210 ILCS 85/4.7)
Sec. 4.7. Additional licensing requirements.
(a) A hospital located in a county with fewer than 325,000 inhabitants may apply to the Department for approval to conduct its operations from more than one location within the county under a single license at a separate building or facility already licensed as a hospital. The operations shall be limited to psychiatric services. The host hospital shall house the licensee. The licensee's application shall be supported by information that its operations at the host hospital will provide access to necessary services for the region that the host hospital does not provide. The services proposed by the licensee at the host hospital shall not consist of emergency services.
(b) The portion of the facilities or buildings operated by the licensee at the host hospital shall be leased in part and operated by a single corporation or other legal entity serving as the licensee and shall have a single:
The host hospital and licensee shall be jointly responsible for hospital licensing requirements relating to design and construction, engineering and maintenance of the physical plan, waste disposal, and fire safety.
(c) The licensee and host hospital shall notify the public and patients through general signage and written notification provided upon admission that services are provided at the host hospital site by 2 separately licensed hospitals. The signage shall specify which services are provided by the host hospital or the licensee or both.
(d) One emergency department shall serve the host hospital. Patients shall be notified that emergency services are provided by the host hospital. Those patients that require admission from the emergency department to a service that is operated by the licensee shall be admitted according to the Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act regulations and transferred to the licensee. The admission, registration, and consent form documents shall be specific to the licensee.
(e) The licensee and host hospital shall submit to the Department a comprehensive plan describing the services and operations of each facility or building and between the licensee and host hospital, and how common services or operations will be coordinated between the various locations. Nothing in this Section relieves a hospital from the requirements in the Illinois Health Facilities Planning Act.
(Source: P.A. 96-1505, eff. 1-27-11.)
(210 ILCS 85/5) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 146)
Sec. 5.
(a) An application for a permit to establish a hospital shall be
made to the Department upon forms provided by it. This application shall
contain such information as the Department reasonably requires, which shall
include affirmative evidence on which the Director may make the findings
required under Section 6a of this Act.
(b) An application for a license to open, conduct, operate, and maintain
a hospital shall be made to the Department upon forms provided by it, accompanied by a license fee of $55 per bed (except as otherwise provided in this subsection), or such lesser amount as the Department may establish by administrative rule in consultation with the Department of Healthcare and Family Services to comply with the limitations on health care-related taxes imposed by 42 U.S.C. 1396b(w) that, if violated, would result in reductions to the amount of federal financial participation received by the State for Medicaid expenditures, and
shall contain such information as the Department reasonably requires, which
may include affirmative evidence of ability to comply with the provisions
of this Act and the standards, rules, and regulations, promulgated by
virtue thereof. The license fee for a critical access hospital, as defined in Section 5-5e.1 of the Illinois Public Aid Code, or a safety-net hospital, as defined in Section 5-5e of the Illinois Public Aid Code, shall be $0 per bed.
(c) All applications required under this Section shall be signed by the
applicant and shall be verified. Applications on behalf of a corporation or
association or a governmental unit or agency shall be made and verified by
any two officers thereof.
(Source: P.A. 98-683, eff. 6-30-14.)
(210 ILCS 85/6) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 147)
Sec. 6.
(a) Upon receipt of an application for a permit to establish
a hospital the Director shall issue a permit if he finds (1) that the
applicant is fit, willing, and able to provide a proper standard of
hospital service for the community with particular regard to the
qualification, background, and character of the applicant, (2) that the
financial resources available to the applicant demonstrate an ability to
construct, maintain, and operate a hospital in accordance with the
standards, rules, and regulations adopted pursuant to this Act, and (3)
that safeguards are provided which assure hospital operation and
maintenance consistent with the public interest having particular regard
to safe, adequate, and efficient hospital facilities and services.
The Director may request the cooperation of county and
multiple-county health departments, municipal boards of health, and
other governmental and non-governmental agencies in obtaining
information and in conducting investigations relating to such
applications.
A permit to establish a hospital shall be valid only for the premises
and person named in the application for such permit and shall not be
transferable or assignable.
In the event the Director issues a permit to establish a hospital the
applicant shall thereafter submit plans and specifications to the
Department in accordance with Section 8 of this Act.
(b) Upon receipt of an application for license to open, conduct,
operate, and maintain a hospital, the Director shall issue a license if
he finds the applicant and the hospital facilities comply with
standards, rules, and regulations promulgated under this Act. A license,
unless sooner suspended or revoked, shall be renewable annually upon
approval by the Department and payment of a license fee as established pursuant to Section 5 of this Act. Each license shall be issued only for the
premises and persons named in the application and shall not be
transferable or assignable. Licenses shall be posted, either by physical or electronic means, in a conspicuous
place on the licensed premises. The Department may, either before or
after the issuance of a license, request the cooperation of the State Fire
Marshal, county
and multiple county health departments, or municipal boards of health to
make investigations to determine if the applicant or licensee is
complying with the minimum standards prescribed by the Department. The
report and recommendations of any such agency shall be in writing and
shall state with particularity its findings with respect to compliance
or noncompliance with such minimum standards, rules, and regulations.
The Director may issue a provisional license to any hospital which
does not substantially comply with the provisions of this Act and the
standards, rules, and regulations promulgated by virtue thereof provided
that he finds that such hospital has undertaken changes and corrections
which upon completion will render the hospital in substantial compliance
with the provisions of this Act, and the standards, rules, and
regulations adopted hereunder, and provided that the health and safety
of the patients of the hospital will be protected during the period for
which such provisional license is issued. The Director shall advise the
licensee of the conditions under which such provisional license is
issued, including the manner in which the hospital facilities fail to
comply with the provisions of the Act, standards, rules, and
regulations, and the time within which the changes and corrections
necessary for such hospital facilities to substantially comply with this
Act, and the standards, rules, and regulations of the Department
relating thereto shall be completed.
(Source: P.A. 102-4, eff. 4-27-21.)
(210 ILCS 85/6.01)
Sec. 6.01.
Domestic violence.
A hospital licensed
under this Act must comply with the standards relating to domestic violence
established by the Department. In establishing these standards, the Department
shall take into consideration similar standards adopted by the Joint Commission
on Health Care Accreditation or other accrediting organization. Nothing in
this Section requires a hospital to become accredited by the Joint Commission
on Health Care Accreditation or any other accreditation program.
(Source: P.A. 91-163, eff. 1-1-00.)
(210 ILCS 85/6.05) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 147.05)
Sec. 6.05.
(Repealed).
(Source: P.A. 89-507, eff. 7-1-97. Repealed by P.A. 92-790, eff. 8-6-02.)
(210 ILCS 85/6.06) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 147.06)
Sec. 6.06.
The Department shall prescribe, by regulation, standards for
hospitals to meet in order to assure proper identification of newborn infants.
Such regulations shall include but not be limited to standards that are
consistent with procedures for the identification of newborn infants recommended
by the American Academy of Pediatrics.
(Source: P.A. 83-615.)
(210 ILCS 85/6.07) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 147.07)
Sec. 6.07.
The Department shall by regulation require the availability
and proper use of hypothermic thermometers or electronic thermometers
capable of aiding in the diagnosis of hypothermia in adequate quantity
in hospitals.
(Source: P.A. 84-313.)
(210 ILCS 85/6.08) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 147.08)
Sec. 6.08.
(a) Every hospital shall provide notification as required in
this Section to police officers, firefighters, emergency
medical technicians, private emergency medical services providers, and
ambulance personnel who have provided or are about to provide transport services, emergency
care, or life support services to a patient who has been diagnosed as having
a dangerous communicable or infectious disease. Such notification shall
not include the name of the patient, and the emergency services provider
agency and any person receiving such
notification shall treat the information received as a confidential medical
record.
(b) The Department shall utilize the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's list of potentially life-threatening infectious diseases to determine the diseases for which notification shall
be provided.
(c) The hospital shall send the letter of notification no later than 48 hours
after a confirmed diagnosis of any of the bloodborne communicable diseases listed by
the Department pursuant to subsection (b). The hospital shall attempt to make verbal communication, followed by written notification only
if the police officers, firefighters, emergency medical
technicians, private emergency medical services providers, or ambulance personnel have
indicated both verbally and on the ambulance run
sheet that a reasonable possibility exists that they have had blood or body
fluid contact with the patient, or if hospital personnel providing the
notification have reason to know of a possible exposure.
(c-5) The hospital shall send the letter of notification no later than 48 hours after a confirmed diagnosis of any of the airborne or droplet-transmitted communicable diseases listed by the Department pursuant to subsection (b) and the hospital shall attempt to make verbal communication, followed by written notification.
(d) Notification letters shall be sent to the designated officer at the
municipal or private provider agencies listed on the ambulance run sheet.
Except in municipalities with a population over 1,000,000, a list
attached to the
ambulance run sheet must contain all municipal and private provider
agency
personnel who have provided any pre-hospital care immediately prior to
transport.
In municipalities with a population over 1,000,000, the
ambulance run sheet must contain the company number or unit
designation number for any fire department personnel who have
provided any pre-hospital care immediately prior to transport.
The letter
shall state the names of crew members listed on
the attachment to
the ambulance
run sheet and the name of the
communicable disease diagnosed, but shall not
contain the patient's name. Upon receipt of such notification letter, the
applicable private provider agency or the designated infectious disease
control officer of a municipal fire department or fire protection
district shall contact all personnel involved in the pre-hospital or
inter-hospital care and transport of the patient. Such notification letter
may, but is not required to, consist of the following form:
TO:...... (Name of Organization)
FROM:.....(Infection Control Coordinator)
DATE:.....
As required by Section 6.08 of the Illinois Hospital Licensing Act,
.....(name of hospital) is hereby providing notification that the following
crew
members or agencies transported or provided pre-hospital care to a patient
on ..... (date), and the transported patient was later
diagnosed as
having .....(name
of communicable disease): .....(list of crew members if known). The Hospital
Licensing Act requires you to maintain this information as a confidential
medical record. Disclosure of this information may therefore result in
civil liability for the individual or company breaching the patient's
confidentiality, or both.
If you have any questions regarding this patient, please contact me at
.....(telephone number), between .....(hours). Questions regarding exposure
or the financial aspects of obtaining medical care should be directed to your
employer.
(e) Upon discharge of a patient with a communicable disease to emergency
personnel, the hospital shall notify the emergency personnel of appropriate
precautions against the communicable disease, but shall not identify the
name of the disease.
(f) The hospital may, in its discretion, take any measures in addition
to those required in this Section to notify
police officers, firefighters,
emergency medical technicians, and ambulance
personnel of possible exposure to any communicable disease. However, in
all cases this information shall be maintained as a confidential medical
record.
(g) Any person providing or failing to provide notification under the
protocol required by this Section shall have immunity from any liability,
either criminal or civil, that might result by reason of such action or
inaction, unless such action or inaction is willful.
(h) Any person who willfully fails to provide any notification required
pursuant to an applicable protocol which has been adopted and approved
pursuant to this Section commits a petty offense, and shall be subject
to a fine of $200 for the first offense, and $500 for a second or subsequent
offense.
(i) Nothing in this Section shall preclude a civil action by a
firefighter,
emergency medical technician, or ambulance crew member against
an emergency services provider
agency, municipal fire department, or fire protection district that fails to
inform the member in a timely
fashion of the
receipt of a notification letter.
(Source: P.A. 98-851, eff. 8-1-14.)
(210 ILCS 85/6.09) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 147.09)
Sec. 6.09. (a) In order to facilitate the orderly transition of aged
patients and patients with disabilities from hospitals to post-hospital care, whenever a
patient who qualifies for the
federal Medicare program is hospitalized, the patient shall be notified
of discharge at least
24 hours prior to discharge from
the hospital. With regard to pending discharges to a skilled nursing facility, the hospital must notify the case coordination unit, as defined in 89 Ill. Adm. Code 240.260, at least 24 hours prior to discharge. When the assessment is completed in the hospital, the case coordination unit shall provide a copy of the required assessment documentation directly to the nursing home to which the patient is being discharged prior to discharge. The Department on Aging shall provide notice of this requirement to case coordination units. When a case coordination unit is unable to complete an assessment in a hospital prior to the discharge of a patient, 60 years of age or older, to a nursing home, the case coordination unit shall notify the Department on Aging which shall notify the Department of Healthcare and Family Services. The Department of Healthcare and Family Services and the Department on Aging shall adopt rules to address these instances to ensure that the patient is able to access nursing home care, the nursing home is not penalized for accepting the admission, and the patient's timely discharge from the hospital is not delayed, to the extent permitted under federal law or regulation. Nothing in this subsection shall preclude federal requirements for a pre-admission screening/mental health (PAS/MH) as required under Section 2-201.5 of the Nursing Home Care Act or State or federal law or regulation. If home health services are ordered, the hospital must inform its designated case coordination unit, as defined in 89 Ill. Adm. Code 240.260, of the pending discharge and must provide the patient with the case coordination unit's telephone number and other contact information.
(b) Every hospital shall develop procedures for a physician with medical
staff privileges at the hospital or any appropriate medical staff member to
provide the discharge notice prescribed in subsection (a) of this Section. The procedures must include prohibitions against discharging or referring a patient to any of the following if unlicensed, uncertified, or unregistered: (i) a board and care facility, as defined in the Board and Care Home Act; (ii) an assisted living and shared housing establishment, as defined in the Assisted Living and Shared Housing Act; (iii) a facility 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; (iv) a supportive living facility, as defined in Section 5-5.01a of the Illinois Public Aid Code; or (v) a free-standing hospice facility licensed under the Hospice Program Licensing Act if licensure, certification, or registration is required. The Department of Public Health shall annually provide hospitals with a list of licensed, certified, or registered board and care facilities, assisted living and shared housing establishments, nursing homes, supportive living facilities, facilities licensed under the ID/DD Community Care Act, the MC/DD Act, or the Specialized Mental Health Rehabilitation Act of 2013, and hospice facilities. Reliance upon this list by a hospital shall satisfy compliance with this requirement.
The procedure may also include a waiver for any case in which a discharge
notice is not feasible due to a short length of stay in the hospital by the patient,
or for any case in which the patient voluntarily desires to leave the
hospital before the expiration of the
24 hour period.
(c) At least
24 hours prior to discharge from the hospital, the
patient shall receive written information on the patient's right to appeal the
discharge pursuant to the
federal Medicare program, including the steps to follow to appeal
the discharge and the appropriate telephone number to call in case the
patient intends to appeal the discharge.
(d) Before transfer of a patient to a long term care facility licensed under the Nursing Home Care Act where elderly persons reside, a hospital shall as soon as practicable initiate a name-based criminal history background check by electronic submission to the Illinois State Police for all persons between the ages of 18 and 70 years; provided, however, that a hospital shall be required to initiate such a background check only with respect to patients who:
A hospital may also request a criminal history background check for a patient who does not meet any of the criteria set forth in items (1) through (5).
A hospital shall notify a long term care facility if the hospital has initiated a criminal history background check on a patient being discharged to that facility. In all circumstances in which the hospital is required by this subsection to initiate the criminal history background check, the transfer to the long term care facility may proceed regardless of the availability of criminal history results. Upon receipt of the results, the hospital shall promptly forward the results to the appropriate long term care facility. If the results of the background check are inconclusive, the hospital shall have no additional duty or obligation to seek additional information from, or about, the patient.
(Source: P.A. 102-538, eff. 8-20-21.)
(210 ILCS 85/6.09a)
Sec. 6.09a. Report of death. Every hospital shall promptly report the death of a person readily known to be, without an investigation by the hospital, a resident of a facility licensed under the ID/DD Community Care Act or the MC/DD Act, to the coroner or medical examiner. The coroner or medical examiner shall promptly respond to the report by accepting or not accepting the body for investigation.
(Source: P.A. 99-180, eff. 7-29-15.)
(210 ILCS 85/6.09b)
Sec. 6.09b. Patient notice of observation status. Within 24 hours after a patient's placement into observation status by a hospital, the hospital shall provide that patient with an oral and written notice that the patient is not admitted to the hospital and is under observation status. The written notice shall be signed by the patient or the patient's legal representative to acknowledge receipt of the written notice and shall include, but not be limited to, the following information:
(Source: P.A. 99-383, eff. 8-17-15.)
(210 ILCS 85/6.10) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 147.10)
Sec. 6.10.
The Department shall adopt rules requiring hospitals
licensed under this Act to offer testing for infection with human
immunodeficiency virus (HIV) to patients upon request. Such rules shall
provide for appropriate pre-test and post-test counseling, and may provide
for payment of the cost of testing the medically indigent in appropriate cases.
Tests requested or administered under such rules shall be subject to the
provisions of the AIDS Confidentiality Act.
(Source: P.A. 86-764; 86-1028.)
(210 ILCS 85/6.11) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 147.11)
Sec. 6.11.
In licensing any hospital which provides for the diagnosis, care
or treatment for persons suffering from mental or emotional disorders or
for persons with intellectual disabilities, the Department shall consult with the
Department of Human Services in developing
standards for and evaluating the psychiatric programs of such hospitals.
(Source: P.A. 99-143, eff. 7-27-15.)
(210 ILCS 85/6.12) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 147.12)
Sec. 6.12.
The provisions of the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act
are hereby expressly adopted and shall apply to all administrative rules
and procedures of the Department of Public Health under this Act, except
that Section 5-35 of the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act
relating to procedures for rule-making does not apply to the adoption of any
rule required by federal law in connection with which the Department is
precluded by law from exercising any discretion.
(Source: P.A. 87-435; 88-45.)
(210 ILCS 85/6.13) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 147.13)
Sec. 6.13.
Any hospital licensed under this Act may provide a program
or service for the temporary custodial care of mildly ill children who,
because of their illness, are unable to attend school or to participate in
their normal day care program. The Department shall develop minimum
standards, rules and regulations to govern the operation of a sick child
day program which is operated by a hospital and located on the hospital's
licensed premises. Any such standards, rules and regulations shall provide
that:
(a) a sick child day program may be located anywhere on the hospital's
licensed premises, including patient care units, when the following
conditions are met:
(b) children registered in a sick child day program are not considered
to be hospital patients, and are not required to be under the professional
care of a member of the hospital's medical staff except in those cases
where emergency medical treatment is needed during the time the child is on
the program premises; and
(c) medication may be administered to a child in a sick child program
when the following conditions are met:
(Source: P.A. 86-1461; 87-435.)
(210 ILCS 85/6.14) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 147.14)
Sec. 6.14.
Resident and intern duty hour requirements.
Hospitals
licensed under this Act shall comply with the duty hour requirements for
residents and interns established by the Accreditation Council for Graduate
Medical Education.
(Source: P.A. 87-947.)
(210 ILCS 85/6.14a)
Sec. 6.14a. Public disclosure of information. The following
information is subject to disclosure to
the public from the Department:
The Department shall disclose information under this Section in
accordance with provisions for inspection and copying of public records
required by the Freedom of Information Act.
However, the disclosure of information described in subsection (1) shall
not be restricted by any provision of the Freedom of Information Act.
Notwithstanding any other provision of law, under no circumstances shall the
Department disclose information obtained from a hospital that is confidential
under Part 21 of Article VIII of the Code of Civil Procedure.
Any records or reports of inspections, surveys, or evaluations of hospitals
may be disclosed only after the acceptance of a plan of correction by the
Health Care Financing Administration of the U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services or the Department, as appropriate, or at the conclusion of any
administrative review of the Department's decision, or at the conclusion of any
judicial review of such administrative decision. Whenever any record or report
is subject to disclosure under this Section, the Department shall permit the
hospital to provide a written statement pertaining to such report which shall
be included as part of the information to be disclosed. The Department shall
not divulge or disclose any record or report in a manner that identifies or
would permit the identification of any natural person.
(Source: P.A. 98-463, eff. 8-16-13.)
(210 ILCS 85/6.14b)
Sec. 6.14b.
Confidentiality of patient records.
(a) The Department shall
respect the confidentiality of a patient's record and shall not divulge or
disclose the contents of a
record in a manner which identifies a patient, except upon a patient's
death to a relative or guardian, as permitted by law, or under judicial
proceedings. This
Section shall not be construed to limit the right of a patient to inspect
or copy his or her records.
(b) Confidential medical, social, personal, or financial information
identifying a patient shall not be available for public inspection in a
manner which identifies a patient.
(Source: P.A. 91-242, eff. 1-1-00.)
(210 ILCS 85/6.14c)
Sec. 6.14c. Posting of information. Every hospital shall conspicuously post, either by physical or electronic means,
for display in an
area of its offices accessible to patients, employees, and visitors the
following:
Each hospital shall post, either by physical or electronic means, in each facility that has an emergency room, a notice in a conspicuous location in the emergency room with information about how to enroll in health insurance through the Illinois health insurance marketplace in accordance with Sections 1311 and 1321 of the federal Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act.
(Source: P.A. 101-117, eff. 1-1-20; 102-4, eff. 4-27-21.)
(210 ILCS 85/6.14d)
Sec. 6.14d.
Materials available for public inspection.
A hospital shall
retain for 5 years the following for public inspection:
(Source: P.A. 91-242, eff. 1-1-00.)
(210 ILCS 85/6.14e)
Sec. 6.14e.
Storage and transfer of patient records.
If a facility closes
due to insolvency or for any other reason, the facility must notify the
Department where the patient records are stored or transferred.
(Source: P.A. 93-322, eff. 1-1-04.)
(210 ILCS 85/6.14f)
Sec. 6.14f. Reports to the trauma registry; certain accidents involving persons under the age of 18 years. A trauma center that treats any person under the age of 18 years for injuries suffered in an accident involving a motor vehicle backing over a child or the power window of a motor vehicle must report the accident to the trauma registry.
(Source: P.A. 94-671, eff. 8-23-05.)
(210 ILCS 85/6.14g)
Sec. 6.14g. Reports to the Department; opioid overdoses.
(a) As used in this Section:
"Overdose" has the same meaning as provided in Section 414 of the Illinois Controlled Substances Act.
"Health care professional" includes a physician licensed to practice medicine in all its branches, a physician assistant, or an advanced practice registered nurse licensed in the State.
(b) When treatment is provided in a hospital's emergency department, a health care professional who treats a drug overdose or hospital administrator or designee shall report the case to the Department of Public Health within 48 hours of providing treatment for the drug overdose or at such time the drug overdose is confirmed. The Department shall by rule create a form for this purpose which requires the following information, if known: (1) whether an opioid antagonist was administered; (2) the cause of the overdose; and (3) the demographic information of the person treated. The Department shall create the form with input from the statewide association representing a majority of hospitals in Illinois. The person completing the form may not disclose the name, address, or any other personal information of the individual experiencing the overdose.
(c) The identity of the person and entity reporting under this subsection shall not be disclosed to the subject of the report. For the purposes of this subsection, the health care professional, hospital administrator, or designee making the report and his or her employer shall not be held criminally, civilly, or professionally liable for reporting under this subsection, except for willful or wanton misconduct.
(d) The Department shall provide a semiannual report to the General Assembly summarizing the reports received. The Department shall also provide on its website a monthly report of drug overdose figures. The figures shall be organized by the overdose location, the age of the victim, the cause of the overdose, and any other factors the Department deems appropriate.
(Source: P.A. 99-480, eff. 9-9-15; 100-513, eff. 1-1-18.)
(210 ILCS 85/6.15)
Sec. 6.15.
Abduction of infant patient.
Every hospital, as a condition of
licensure under this Act, shall demonstrate to the Department that the hospital
has adopted the following procedures:
(Source: P.A. 88-689, eff. 1-1-96.)
(210 ILCS 85/6.16)
Sec. 6.16. Agreement with designated organ procurement agency. Each
hospital licensed under this Act shall have an agreement with its federally
designated organ procurement agency providing for notification of the organ
procurement agency when potential organ donors become available, as
required in Section 5-25 of the Illinois Anatomical Gift Act.
(Source: P.A. 93-794, eff. 7-22-04.)
(210 ILCS 85/6.17)
Sec. 6.17.
Protection of and confidential access to medical records
and information.
(a) Every hospital licensed under this Act shall develop a medical record
for each of its patients as required by the Department by rule.
(b) All information regarding a hospital patient gathered by the hospital's
medical staff and its agents and employees shall be the property and
responsibility of the hospital and must be protected from inappropriate
disclosure as provided in this Section.
(c) Every hospital shall preserve its medical records in a format and for a
duration established by hospital policy and for not less than 10 years,
provided that if the hospital has been notified in writing by an attorney
before the expiration of the 10 year retention period that there is litigation
pending in court involving the record of a particular patient as possible
evidence and that the patient is his client or is the person who has instituted
such litigation against his client, then the hospital shall retain the record
of that patient until notified in writing by the plaintiff's attorney, with the
approval of the defendant's attorney of record, that the case in court
involving
such record has been concluded or for a period of 12 years from the date that
the record was produced, whichever occurs first in time.
(d) No member of a hospital's medical staff and no agent or employee of a
hospital shall disclose the nature or details of services provided to patients,
except that the information may be disclosed to the patient, persons authorized
by the patient, the party making treatment decisions, if the patient
is incapable of making decisions regarding the health services provided, those
parties directly involved with providing treatment to the patient or processing
the payment for that treatment, those parties responsible for peer review,
utilization review or quality assurance, risk management, or
defense of claims
brought against the hospital arising out of the care, and those parties
required to be notified under the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act, the
Illinois Sexually Transmissible Disease Control Act, or where otherwise
authorized or required by law.
(e) The hospital's medical staff members and the hospital's agents and
employees may communicate, at any time and in any fashion, with legal counsel
for
the hospital concerning the patient medical record privacy and retention
requirements of this Section and any care or treatment they provided or
assisted in providing to any patient within the scope of their employment
or affiliation with the hospital.
(e-5) Notwithstanding subsections (d) and (e), for actions filed on or
after January 1, 2004, after a complaint for healing art malpractice is
served upon the hospital or upon its agents or employees, members of the
hospital's medical staff who are not actual or alleged agents, employees, or
apparent agents of the hospital may not communicate with legal counsel for the
hospital or with risk management of the hospital concerning the claim alleged
in
the complaint for healing art malpractice against the hospital except with the
patient's consent or in discovery authorized by the Code of Civil Procedure or
the Supreme Court rules. For the purposes of this subsection (e-5),
"hospital" includes a hospital affiliate as defined in subsection (b) of
Section 10.8 of this Act.
(f) Each hospital licensed under this Act shall provide its
federally
designated organ procurement agency and any tissue bank with which it has an
agreement with access to the medical records of deceased patients for the
following purposes:
(g) All hospital and patient information, interviews, reports,
statements,
memoranda, and other data obtained or created by a tissue bank or federally
designated organ procurement agency from the medical records review described
in subsection (f) shall be privileged, strictly confidential, and
used
only for
the purposes put forth in subsection (f) of this Section and shall
not
be
admissible as evidence nor discoverable in an action of any kind in court or
before a tribunal, board, agency, or person.
(h) Any person who, in good faith, acts in accordance with the
terms
of this Section shall not be subject to any type of civil or criminal liability
or
discipline for unprofessional conduct for those actions under any
professional
licensing statute.
(i) Any individual who wilfully or wantonly discloses hospital or medical
record information in violation of
this Section is guilty of a Class A
misdemeanor. As used in this subsection, "wilfully or wantonly" means a course
of action that shows an actual or deliberate intention to cause harm or that,
if not intentional, shows an utter indifference to or conscious disregard for
the safety of others or their property.
(j) The changes to this Section made by this amendatory Act of the 93rd
General Assembly apply to any action filed on or after January 1, 2004.
(Source: P.A. 93-492, eff. 1-1-04.)
(210 ILCS 85/6.18)
Sec. 6.18.
(Repealed).
(Source: P.A. 90-710, eff. 8-7-98. Repealed by P.A. 92-790, eff.
8-6-02.)
(210 ILCS 85/6.19)
Sec. 6.19. Do-not-resuscitate orders and Department of Public Health Uniform POLST form. Every facility licensed under this
Act shall establish a policy for the implementation of practitioner orders
concerning cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) or life-sustaining treatment including, but not limited to,
"do-not-resuscitate" orders. This policy may prescribe only the format,
method of documentation, and duration of any practitioner orders. The policy may include forms to be used. Any orders issued
under the policy shall be honored by the facility. The Department of Public
Health Uniform POLST form described in Section 2310-600 of the Department of Public Health Powers and Duties Law of the
Civil Administrative Code of Illinois, or a copy of that form or a previous version of the uniform form, shall be honored under any
policy established under this Section.
(Source: P.A. 98-1110, eff. 8-26-14; 99-319, eff. 1-1-16.)
(210 ILCS 85/6.20)
Sec. 6.20.
Use of restraints.
Each hospital licensed under this Act must
have a written policy to address the use of
restraints and seclusion in the hospital. The Department shall establish, by
rule, the provisions that the policy must include, which,
to the extent practicable, should be consistent with the requirements for
participation in the federal Medicare program. Each
hospital policy shall include periodic review of the use of restraints or
seclusion in the hospital.
In hospitals, restraints or seclusion may only be ordered by (i) a physician
licensed to practice medicine in all its branches
or (ii) a registered nurse with supervisory responsibilities as authorized by
the medical staff. The medical staff of a hospital may
adopt a policy specifying the requirements for the use of restraints or
seclusion and identifying whether a registered nurse with
supervisory responsibilities may order restraints or seclusion in the hospital
when the patient's treating physician is
not available.
Registered nurses authorized to order restraints or seclusion shall have
appropriate training and experience as determined
by medical staff policy. The treating physician shall be notified when
restraints or seclusion are ordered by a registered
nurse. Nothing in this Section requires that a medical staff
authorize a registered nurse with supervisory responsibilities
to order restraints or seclusion.
(Source: P.A. 92-356, eff. 10-1-01.)
(210 ILCS 85/6.21)
Sec. 6.21. Umbilical cord blood donation.
(a) All licensed hospitals shall offer a pregnant patient the option to
donate, to a publicly accessible certified cord blood bank, blood extracted
from the umbilical cord following the delivery of a newborn child if the
donation can be made at no expense to the patient or
hospital for collection or storage.
(b) Nothing in this Section obligates a hospital to collect umbilical cord
blood if, in the professional judgment of a physician licensed to practice
medicine in all its branches or a nurse, the collection would threaten the
health of the mother or child.
(c) Nothing in this Section imposes a requirement upon any hospital
employee, physician, nurse, or hospital that is directly affiliated with a bona
fide religious denomination that includes as an integral part of its beliefs
and practices the tenet that blood transfer is contrary to the moral
principles
the
denomination considers to be an essential part of its beliefs.
(d) Subject to appropriations for that purpose, the Department of Public Health shall make the maximization of umbilical cord blood donations a public health goal. All licensed hospitals and birthing centers shall cooperate with the Department of Public Health in implementing this goal of increasing donations of umbilical cord blood.
(Source: P.A. 93-143, eff. 1-1-04; 94-832, eff. 6-5-06.)
(210 ILCS 85/6.22)
Sec. 6.22. Arrangement for transportation of patient by an ambulance service provider.
(a) In this Section:
"Ambulance service provider" means a Vehicle Service Provider as defined in the Emergency Medical Services (EMS) Systems Act who provides non-emergency transportation services by ambulance.
"Patient" means a person who is transported by an ambulance service provider.
(b) If a hospital arranges for medi-car, service car, or ground ambulance transportation of a patient of the hospital, the hospital must provide the ambulance service provider, at or prior to transport, a Physician Certification Statement formatted and completed in compliance with federal regulations or an equivalent form developed by the hospital. Each hospital shall develop a policy requiring a physician or the physician's designee to complete the Physician Certification
Statement. The Physician Certification
Statement shall be maintained as part of the patient's medical record. A hospital shall, upon request, furnish assistance to the ambulance service provider in the completion of the form if the Physician Certification
Statement is incomplete. The Physician Certification Statement or equivalent form is not required prior to transport if a delay in transport can be expected to negatively affect the patient outcome; however, a hospital shall provide a copy of the Physician Certification
Statement to the ambulance service provider at no charge within 10 days after the request.
(c) If a hospital is unable to provide a Physician Certification Statement or equivalent form, then the hospital shall provide to the patient a written notice and a verbal explanation of the written notice, which notice must meet all of the following requirements:
(d) The notice set forth in subsection (c) of this Section shall not be required if a delay in transport can be expected to negatively affect the patient outcome.
(e) If a patient is physically or mentally unable to sign the notice described in subsection (c) of this Section and no authorized representative of the patient is available to sign the notice on the patient's behalf, the hospital must be able to provide documentation of the patient's inability to sign the notice and the unavailability of an authorized representative. In any case described in this subsection (e), the hospital shall be considered to have met the requirements of subsection (c) of this Section.
(Source: P.A. 100-646, eff. 7-27-18.)
(210 ILCS 85/6.23)
Sec. 6.23. Prevention and control of Multidrug-Resistant Organisms. Each hospital shall develop and implement comprehensive interventions to prevent and control multidrug-resistant organisms (MDROs), including methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), vancomycin-resistant enterococci (VRE), and certain gram-negative bacilli (GNB), that take into consideration guidelines of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for the management of MDROs in healthcare settings. The Department shall adopt administrative rules that require hospitals to perform an annual facility-wide infection control risk assessment and enforce hand hygiene and contact precaution requirements.
(Source: P.A. 95-282, eff. 8-20-07; 95-876, eff. 8-21-08.)
(210 ILCS 85/6.23a)
Sec. 6.23a. Sepsis screening protocols.
(a) Each hospital shall adopt, implement, and periodically update evidence-based protocols for the early recognition and treatment of patients with sepsis, severe sepsis, or septic shock (sepsis protocols) that are based on generally accepted standards of care. Sepsis protocols must include components specific to the identification, care, and treatment of adults and of children, and must clearly identify where and when components will differ for adults and for children seeking treatment in the emergency department or as an inpatient. These protocols must also include the following components:
(b) Each hospital shall ensure that professional staff with direct patient care responsibilities and, as appropriate, staff with indirect patient care responsibilities, including, but not limited to, laboratory and pharmacy staff, are periodically trained to implement the sepsis protocols required under subsection (a). The hospital shall ensure updated training of staff if the hospital initiates substantive changes to the sepsis protocols.
(c) Each hospital shall be responsible for the collection and utilization of quality measures related to the recognition and treatment of severe sepsis for purposes of internal quality improvement.
(d) The evidence-based protocols adopted under this Section shall be provided to the Department upon the Department's request.
(e) Hospitals submitting sepsis data as required by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services Hospital Inpatient Quality Reporting program as of fiscal year 2016 are presumed to meet the sepsis protocol requirements outlined in this Section.
(f) Subject to appropriation, the Department shall:
If the Department receives an appropriation and carries out the requirements of paragraphs (1), (2), (3), and (4), then the Department may adopt rules concerning the collection of data from hospitals regarding sepsis and requiring that each hospital shall be responsible for reporting to the Department.
Any publicly released hospital-specific information under this Section is subject to data provisions specified in Section 25 of the Hospital Report Card Act.
(Source: P.A. 99-828, eff. 8-18-16; 100-513, eff. 1-1-18.)
(210 ILCS 85/6.24)
Sec. 6.24. Time of death; patient's religious beliefs. Every hospital must adopt policies and procedures to allow health care professionals, in documenting a patient's time of death at the hospital, to take into account the patient's religious beliefs concerning the patient's time of death.
(Source: P.A. 95-181, eff. 1-1-08; 95-876, eff. 8-21-08.)
(210 ILCS 85/6.25)
Sec. 6.25. Safe patient handling policy.
(a) In this Section:
"Health care worker" means an individual providing direct patient care services who may be required to lift, transfer, reposition, or move a patient.
"Nurse" means an advanced practice registered nurse, a registered nurse, or a licensed practical nurse licensed under the Nurse Practice Act.
"Safe lifting equipment and accessories" means mechanical equipment designed to lift, move, reposition, and transfer patients, including, but not limited to, fixed and portable ceiling lifts, sit-to-stand lifts, slide sheets and boards, slings, and repositioning and turning sheets.
"Safe lifting team" means at least 2 individuals who are trained in the use of both safe lifting techniques and safe lifting equipment and accessories, including the responsibility for knowing the location and condition of such equipment and accessories.
(b) A hospital must adopt and ensure implementation of a policy to identify, assess, and develop strategies to control risk of injury to patients and nurses and other health care workers associated with the lifting, transferring, repositioning, or movement of a patient. The policy shall establish a process that, at a minimum, includes all of the following:
(210 ILCS 85/6.26)
Sec. 6.26. Immunization against influenza virus and pneumococcal disease.
(a) Every hospital shall adopt an influenza and pneumococcal
immunization policy that includes, but need not be limited to, the
following:
The hospital shall provide a copy of its influenza and pneumococcal immunization policy to the Department upon request.
(b) A home rule unit may not regulate immunization against influenza virus and pneumococcal disease in a manner inconsistent with the regulation of such immunizations under this Section. This subsection is a limitation under subsection (i) of Section 6 of Article VII of the Illinois Constitution on the concurrent exercise by home rule units of powers and functions exercised by the State.
(Source: P.A. 98-271, eff. 1-1-14.)
(210 ILCS 85/6.27)
Sec. 6.27. Intended parent; delivery room.
(a) As used in this Section, "gestational surrogate", "gestational surrogacy contract", and "intended parent" have the meanings given to those terms in Section 10 of the Gestational Surrogacy Act.
(b) If a hospital has a gestational surrogacy contract on file for a gestational surrogate or has otherwise received the gestational surrogacy contract from a gestational surrogate, the hospital may not deny an intended parent entry into the delivery room where the gestational surrogate is being induced or in labor, except as provided under subsection (c).
(c) A hospital is not required to allow entry into the delivery room to an intended parent if: (1) medical personnel determine that the gestational surrogate's life or health could be jeopardized if an intended parent is present; (2) the gestational surrogacy contract prohibits an intended parent from being present; or (3) medical personnel determine there is other good cause to prohibit an intended parent from being present, including, but not limited to, if the intended parent is causing a disturbance or other security concerns.
(Source: P.A. 101-286, eff. 8-9-19.)
(210 ILCS 85/6.28)
Sec. 6.28. (Repealed).
(Source: P.A. 102-813, eff. 5-13-22. Repealed internally, eff. 12-31-22.)
(210 ILCS 85/6.29)
Sec. 6.29. Testing for Legionella bacteria. A hospital shall develop a policy for testing its water supply for Legionella bacteria. The policy shall include the frequency with which testing is conducted. The policy and the results of any tests shall be made available to the Department upon request.
(Source: P.A. 102-4, eff. 4-27-21.)
(210 ILCS 85/6.30)
Sec. 6.30. Facility-provided medication upon discharge.
(a) The General Assembly finds that this Section is necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace, health, and safety.
(b) In this Section, "facility-provided medication" has the same meaning as provided under Section 15.10 of the Pharmacy Practice Act.
(c) When a facility-provided medication is ordered at least 24 hours in advance for surgical procedures and is administered to a patient at a hospital licensed under this Act, any unused portion of the facility-provided medication must be offered to the patient upon discharge when it is required for continuing treatment.
(d) A facility-provided medication shall be labeled consistent with labeling requirements under Section 22 of the Pharmacy Practice Act.
(e) If the facility-provided medication is used in an operating room or emergency department setting, the prescriber is responsible for counseling the patient on its proper use and administration and the requirement of pharmacist counseling is waived.
(Source: P.A. 102-155, eff. 7-23-21; 102-813, eff. 5-13-22.)
(210 ILCS 85/6.31)
Sec. 6.31. Patient contact policy during pandemics or other public health emergencies. During a pandemic or other public health emergency, a hospital licensed under this Act shall develop and implement a contact policy to encourage patients' ability to engage with family members throughout the duration of the pandemic or other public health emergency, including through the use of phone calls, videos calls, or other electronic mechanisms.
(Source: P.A. 102-398, eff. 8-16-21; 102-813, eff. 5-13-22.)
(210 ILCS 85/6.32)
Sec. 6.32. Surgical smoke plume evacuation.
(a) In this Section:
"Surgical smoke plume" means the by-product of the use of energy-based devices on tissue during surgery and containing hazardous materials, including, but not limited to, bioaerosols, smoke, gases, tissue and cellular fragments and particulates, and viruses.
"Surgical smoke plume evacuation system" means a dedicated device that is designed to capture, transport, and filter surgical smoke plume at the site of origin and before it can diffuse and pose a risk to the occupants of the operating or treatment room.
(b) To protect patients and health care workers from the hazards of surgical smoke plume, a hospital licensed under this Act shall adopt policies to ensure the elimination of surgical smoke plume by use of a surgical smoke plume evacuation system for each procedure that generates surgical smoke plume from the use of energy-based devices, including, but not limited to, electrosurgery and lasers.
(c) A hospital licensed under this Act shall report to the Department within 90 days after January 1, 2022 (the effective date of Public Act 102-533) that policies under subsection (b) of this Section have been adopted.
(Source: P.A. 102-533, eff. 1-1-22; 102-750, eff. 5-6-22; 102-813, eff. 5-13-22.)
(210 ILCS 85/6.33)
Sec. 6.33. Hospital employee assistance programs. A hospital licensed under this Act shall ensure that employees of the hospital are made aware of employee assistance programs or other like programs available for the physical and mental well-being of the employees. Hospitals shall provide information on these programs, no less than at the time of employment and during any benefit open enrollment period. A hospital may provide this information to employees electronically.
(Source: P.A. 102-1007, eff. 1-1-23.)
(210 ILCS 85/7) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 148)
Sec. 7. (a) The Director after notice and opportunity for hearing to the
applicant or licensee may deny, suspend, or revoke a permit to establish a
hospital or deny, suspend, or revoke a license to open, conduct, operate,
and maintain a hospital in any case in which he finds that there has been a
substantial failure to comply with the provisions of this Act, the Hospital
Report Card Act, or the Illinois Adverse Health Care Events Reporting Law of 2005 or the standards, rules, and regulations established by
virtue of any of those Acts. The Department may impose fines on hospitals, not to exceed $500 per occurrence, for failing to (1) initiate a criminal background check on a patient that meets the criteria for hospital-initiated background checks or (2) report the death of a person known to be a resident of a facility licensed under the ID/DD Community Care Act or the MC/DD Act to the coroner or medical examiner within 24 hours as required by Section 6.09a of this Act. In assessing whether to impose such a fine for failure to initiate a criminal background check, the Department shall consider various factors including, but not limited to, whether the hospital has engaged in a pattern or practice of failing to initiate criminal background checks. Money from fines shall be deposited into the Long Term Care Provider Fund.
(a-5) If a hospital demonstrates a pattern or practice of failing to substantially comply with the requirements of Section 10.10 or the hospital's written staffing plan, the hospital shall provide a plan of correction to the Department within 60 days. The Department may impose fines as follows: (i) if a hospital fails to implement a written staffing plan for nursing services, a fine not to exceed $500 per occurrence may be imposed; (ii) if a hospital demonstrates a pattern or practice of failing to substantially comply with a plan of correction within 60 days after the plan takes effect, a fine not to exceed $500 per occurrence may be imposed; and (iii) if a hospital demonstrates for a second or subsequent time a pattern or practice of failing to substantially comply with a plan of correction within 60 days after the plan takes effect, a fine not to exceed $1,000 per occurrence may be imposed. Reports of violations of Section 10.10 shall be subject to public disclosure under Section 6.14a. Money from fines within this subsection (a-5) shall be deposited into the Hospital Licensure Fund, and money from fines for violations of Section 10.10 shall be used for scholarships under the Nursing Education Scholarship Law.
(b) Such notice shall be effected by registered mail or by personal
service setting forth the particular reasons for the proposed action and
fixing a date, not less than 15 days from the date of such mailing or
service, at which time the applicant or licensee shall be given an
opportunity for a hearing. Such hearing shall be conducted by the Director
or by an employee of the Department designated in writing by the Director
as Hearing Officer to conduct the hearing. On the basis of any such
hearing, or upon default of the applicant or licensee, the Director shall
make a determination specifying his findings and conclusions. In case of a
denial to an applicant of a permit to establish a hospital, such
determination shall specify the subsection of Section 6 under which the
permit was denied and shall contain findings of fact forming the basis of
such denial. A copy of such determination shall be sent by registered mail
or served personally upon the applicant or licensee. The decision denying,
suspending, or revoking a permit or a license shall become final 35 days
after it is so mailed or served, unless the applicant or licensee, within
such 35 day period, petitions for review pursuant to Section 13.
(c) The procedure governing hearings authorized by this Section shall be
in accordance with rules promulgated by the Department and approved by the
Hospital Licensing Board. A full and complete record shall be kept of all
proceedings, including the notice of hearing, complaint, and all other
documents in the nature of pleadings, written motions filed in the
proceedings, and the report and orders of the Director and Hearing Officer.
All testimony shall be reported but need not be transcribed unless the
decision is appealed pursuant to Section 13. A copy or copies of the
transcript may be obtained by any interested party on payment of the cost
of preparing such copy or copies.
(d) The Director or Hearing Officer shall upon his own motion, or on the
written request of any party to the proceeding, 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 the terms
of this Act may be served by any person of full age. The fees of witnesses
for attendance and travel shall be the same as the fees of witnesses before
the Circuit Court of this State, such fees to be paid when the witness is
excused from further attendance. When the witness is subpoenaed at the
instance of the Director, or Hearing Officer, such 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. In such case, the Department in its
discretion, may require a deposit to cover the cost of such service and
witness fees. A subpoena or subpoena duces tecum issued as aforesaid shall
be served in the same manner as a subpoena issued out of a court.
(e) Any Circuit Court of this State upon the application of the
Director, or upon the application of any other party to the proceeding,
may, in its discretion, compel the attendance of witnesses, the production
of books, papers, records, or memoranda and the giving of testimony before
the Director or Hearing Officer conducting an investigation or holding a
hearing authorized by this Act, by an attachment for contempt, or
otherwise, in the same manner as production of evidence may be compelled
before the court.
(f) The Director or Hearing Officer, or any party in an investigation or
hearing before the Department, may cause the depositions of witnesses
within the State to be taken in the manner prescribed by law for like
depositions in civil actions in courts of this State, and to that end
compel the attendance of witnesses and the production of books, papers,
records, or memoranda.
(Source: P.A. 102-641, eff. 8-27-21.)
(210 ILCS 85/7.5)
Sec. 7.5.
Fire Safety Evaluation System.
Upon request by a
hospital, the Department, if applicable, must evaluate or allow for an
evaluation of
compliance with the Life Safety Code using the Fire Safety Evaluation
System.
(Source: P.A. 92-803, eff. 8-16-02.)
(210 ILCS 85/8) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 149)
Sec. 8. Facility plan review; fees.
(a) Before commencing construction of new facilities or specified types
of alteration or additions to an existing hospital involving major
construction, as defined by rule by the Department, with an estimated
cost greater than $100,000, architectural plans and
specifications therefor shall be submitted by the licensee to the
Department for review and approval.
A hospital may submit architectural drawings and specifications for other
construction projects for Department review according to subsection (b) that
shall not be subject to fees under subsection (d).
The Department must give a hospital that is planning to submit a construction
project for review the opportunity to discuss its plans and specifications with
the Department before the hospital formally submits the plans and
specifications for Department review.
Review of drawings and specifications shall be conducted by an employee of
the Department meeting the qualifications established by the Department of
Central Management Services class specifications for such an individual's
position or by a person contracting with the Department who meets those class
specifications.
Final approval of the plans and specifications for compliance
with design and construction standards shall be obtained from the
Department before the alteration, addition, or new construction is begun. Subject to this Section 8, and prior to January 1, 2012, the Department shall consider the re-licensing of an existing hospital structure according to the standards for an existing hospital, as set forth in the Department's rules. Re-licensing under this provision shall occur only if that facility operated as a licensed hospital on July 1, 2005, has had no intervening use as other than a hospital, and exists in a county with a population of less than 20,000 that does not have another licensed hospital on the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 95th General Assembly.
(b) The Department shall inform an applicant in writing within 10 working
days after receiving drawings and specifications and the required fee, if any,
from the applicant whether the applicant's submission is complete or
incomplete. Failure to provide the applicant with this notice within 10
working days shall result in the submission being deemed complete for purposes
of initiating the 60-day review period under this Section. If the submission
is incomplete, the Department shall inform the applicant of the deficiencies
with the submission in writing. If the submission is complete and the required
fee, if any, has been paid,
the Department shall approve or disapprove drawings and specifications
submitted to the Department no later than 60 days following receipt by the
Department. The drawings and specifications shall be of sufficient detail, as
provided by Department rule, to
enable the Department to
render a determination of compliance with design and construction standards
under this Act.
If the Department finds that the drawings are not of sufficient detail for it
to render a determination of compliance, the plans shall be determined to be
incomplete and shall not be considered for purposes of initiating the 60 day
review period.
If a submission of drawings and specifications is incomplete, the applicant
may submit additional information. The 60-day review period shall not commence
until the Department determines that a submission of drawings and
specifications is complete or the submission is deemed complete.
If the Department has not approved or disapproved the
drawings and specifications within 60 days, the construction, major alteration,
or addition shall be deemed approved. If the drawings and specifications are
disapproved, the Department shall state in writing, with specificity, the
reasons for the disapproval. The entity submitting the drawings and
specifications may submit additional information in response to the written
comments from the Department or request a reconsideration of the disapproval.
A final decision of approval or disapproval shall be made within 45 days of the
receipt of the additional information or reconsideration request. A final decision shall be subject to review under the Administrative Review Law.
(c) The Department shall provide written approval for occupancy pursuant
to subsection (g) and shall not issue a violation to a facility as a result of
a licensure or complaint survey based upon the facility's physical structure
if:
(c-5) The Department shall not issue a violation to a facility if the
inspected aspects of the facility were previously found to be in compliance
with applicable standards, the relevant law or rules have not been amended,
conditions at the facility
reasonably protect the safety of its patients, and alterations or new hazards
have not been
identified.
(d) The Department shall charge the following fees in connection with its
reviews conducted before June 30, 2004 under this Section:
The fees provided in this subsection (d) shall not apply to major
construction projects involving facility changes that are required by
Department rule amendments or to projects related to homeland security.
The fees provided in this subsection (d) shall also not apply to major
construction projects if 51% or more of the estimated cost of the project is
attributed to capital equipment. For major construction projects where 51% or
more of the estimated cost of the project is attributed to capital equipment,
the Department shall by rule establish a fee that is reasonably related to the
cost of reviewing the project.
Disproportionate share hospitals and rural hospitals shall only pay
one-half of the fees
required in this subsection (d).
For the purposes of this subsection (d),
(i) "disproportionate share hospital" means a hospital described in items (1)
through (5) of subsection (b) of Section 5-5.02 of the Illinois Public Aid
Code and (ii)
"rural hospital" means a hospital that
is (A) located
outside a metropolitan statistical area or (B) located 15 miles or less from a
county that is
outside a metropolitan statistical area and is licensed to perform
medical/surgical or
obstetrical services and has a combined total bed capacity of 75 or fewer beds
in these 2
service categories as of July 14, 1993, as determined by the Department.
The Department shall not commence the facility plan review process under this
Section until the applicable fee has been paid.
(e) All fees received by the Department under this Section shall be
deposited into the Health Facility Plan Review Fund, a special fund created in
the State treasury.
All fees paid by hospitals under subsection (d) shall be used only to cover
the direct and reasonable costs relating to the Department's review of hospital
projects under this
Section.
Moneys shall be appropriated from that Fund to the
Department only to pay the costs of conducting reviews under this Section.
None of the moneys in the Health Facility Plan Review Fund shall be used to
reduce the amount of General Revenue Fund moneys appropriated to the Department
for facility plan reviews conducted pursuant to this Section.
(f) (Blank).
(g) The Department shall conduct an on-site inspection of the completed
project no later than 15 business days after notification from the
applicant that the
project has been completed and all certifications required by the Department
have been received and accepted by the Department. The Department may extend
this deadline only if a federally mandated survey time frame takes
precedence. The Department shall
provide written approval for occupancy to the applicant within 5 working days
of the Department's final inspection, provided the applicant has demonstrated
substantial compliance as defined by Department rule.
Occupancy of new major construction is prohibited until Department approval is
received, unless the Department has not acted within the time frames provided
in this subsection (g), in which case the construction shall be deemed
approved. Occupancy shall be authorized after any
required health inspection by the Department has been conducted.
(h) The Department shall establish, by rule, a procedure to conduct interim
on-site review of large or complex construction projects.
(i) The Department shall establish, by rule, an expedited process for
emergency repairs or replacement of like equipment.
(j) Nothing in this Section shall be construed to apply to maintenance,
upkeep, or renovation that does not affect the structural integrity of the
building, does not add beds or services over the number for which the facility
is licensed, and provides a reasonable degree of safety for the patients.
(Source: P.A. 99-639, eff. 7-28-16.)
(210 ILCS 85/8.5)
Sec. 8.5.
Waiver or alternative compliance.
Upon application by a hospital, the Department may grant or
renew a waiver or alternative compliance methodology with a rule or standard, including without limitation rules and standards for
(i) design and construction, (ii) engineering and maintenance of the physical
plant, site,
equipment, and systems (heating, cooling, electrical, ventilation, plumbing,
water, sewer, and solid waste disposal), (iii) fire and safety, and
(iv) other rules or standards that may present a barrier to the development,
adoption, or implementation of an innovation designed to improve patient
care, for a period not to exceed the duration of the current
license or, in the
case of an application for license renewal, the duration of the renewal period.
The waiver
may be conditioned upon the hospital taking action prescribed by the Department
as a
measure equivalent to compliance. In determining whether to grant or renew a
waiver,
the Department shall consider the duration and basis for any current waiver
with respect
to the same rule or standard and the validity and effect upon patient health
and safety of
extending it on the same basis, the effect upon the health and safety of patients, the
quality of patient care, the hospital's history of compliance with the rules
and standards of
this Act, and the hospital's attempts to comply with the particular rule or
standard in
question. The Department may provide, by rule, for the automatic renewal of
waivers
concerning construction or physical plant requirements upon the renewal of a
license. The
Department
shall renew waivers relating to construction or physical plant standards issued
pursuant to
this Section at
the time of the indicated reviews, unless it can show why such waivers should
not be
extended for the following reasons:
A copy of each waiver application and each waiver granted or renewed shall be
on file with the Department and available for public inspection.
The Department shall advise hospitals of any applicable federal waivers about
which it is aware and for
which the hospital may apply.
In the event that the Department does not grant or renew a waiver
of a rule or standard, the Department must notify the hospital in writing
detailing the specific reasons for not granting or renewing the waiver and
must discuss possible options, if any, the hospital could take to
have the waiver approved.
This Section shall apply to both new and existing construction.
(Source: P.A. 92-803, eff. 8-16-02; 93-41, eff. 6-27-03.)
(210 ILCS 85/9) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 150)
Sec. 9. Inspections and investigations. The Department shall make or
cause
to be made such inspections and
investigations as it deems necessary, except that, subject to appropriation, the Department shall investigate every allegation of abuse of a patient received by the Department. Information received by the
Department through filed reports, inspection, or as otherwise authorized
under this Act shall not be disclosed publicly in such manner as to
identify individuals or hospitals, except (i) in a proceeding involving the
denial, suspension, or revocation of a permit to establish a hospital or a
proceeding involving the denial, suspension, or revocation of a license to
open, conduct, operate, and maintain a hospital, (ii) to the Department of
Children and Family Services in the course of a child abuse or neglect
investigation conducted by that Department or by the Department of Public
Health, (iii) in accordance with Section 6.14a of this Act, or (iv)
in other circumstances as may be approved by the Hospital Licensing Board.
(Source: P.A. 96-692, eff. 1-1-10.)
(210 ILCS 85/9.1) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 150.1)
Sec. 9.1.
The Department shall regularly inspect each State mental health
and developmental disabilities institution under the jurisdiction of the
Department of Human Services to ascertain if the institution is complying with
the
regulations applicable to it. Such inspection shall be made at least annually,
and special inspections may be made at the discretion of the Director. The
results of every inspection shall be reported in writing to the Governor, the
Director of the Department, the General Assembly, and any permanent
mental health committee, board or commission that may be established
by the Governor or General Assembly.
(Source: P.A. 89-507, eff. 7-1-97.)
(210 ILCS 85/9.2)
Sec. 9.2.
Disclosure.
Prior to conducting a survey of a hospital
operating under an approved waiver, equivalency, or other approval, a
surveyor must be made aware of the waiver, equivalency, or other
approval prior to entering the hospital. Prior to commencing an
inspection, the Department must provide the hospital with
documentation that the survey is being conducted, with consideration of
the relevant waiver, equivalency, or approval. After conducting the
survey, the Department must conduct a comprehensive exit interview
with designated hospital representatives
at which the hospital may present additional information
regarding findings.
(Source: P.A. 92-803, eff. 8-16-02.)
(210 ILCS 85/9.3)
Sec. 9.3.
Informal dispute resolution.
The Department must offer an
opportunity for informal dispute resolution concerning
Department rules
and standards before the advisory committee under subsection (b) of Section
2310-560 of the Department of Public Health Powers and Duties Law of the Civil
Administrative Code of Illinois. Participants in this process must include
representatives from the Department, representatives of the hospital, and
additional representatives deemed appropriate by both parties with expertise
regarding the contested deficiencies and the management of health care
facilities. If the Department does not resolve disputed deficiencies after
the informal dispute resolution process, the Department must provide a written
explanation to the hospital of why the deficiencies have not been removed from
the statement of deficiencies.
(Source: P.A. 92-803, eff. 8-16-02; 93-41, eff. 6-27-03.)
(210 ILCS 85/9.4)
Sec. 9.4.
Findings, conclusions, and citations.
The Department must
consider any factual information offered by the hospital during the survey,
inspection, or investigation, at daily status briefings, and in the exit
briefing required under Section 9.2 before making final findings and
conclusions or issuing citations. The Department must document receipt of such
information. The Department must provide the
hospital with written notice of its findings and conclusions within 10 days of
the exit briefing required under Section 9.2. This notice must provide the
following information: (i) identification of all deficiencies and areas of
noncompliance with applicable law; (ii) identification of the applicable
statutes, rules, codes, or standards that were violated; and (iii) the factual
basis for each deficiency or violation.
(Source: P.A. 93-41, eff. 6-27-03.)
(210 ILCS 85/9.5)
Sec. 9.5.
Reviewer quality improvement.
The Department must implement a
reviewer performance improvement program for hospital survey, inspection, and
investigation staff. The Department must also,
on a quarterly basis, assess whether
its surveyors, inspectors, and investigators: (i) apply the same protocols and
criteria consistently to substantially similar situations; (ii) reach similar
findings and conclusions when reviewing substantially similar situations; (iii)
conduct surveys, inspections, or investigations in a professional manner; and
(iv) comply with the provisions of this Act. The Department must also
implement continuing education programs for its surveyors, inspectors, and
investigators pursuant to the findings of the performance improvement
program.
(Source: P.A. 93-41, eff. 6-27-03.)
(210 ILCS 85/9.6)
Sec. 9.6. Patient protection from abuse.
(a) No administrator, agent, or employee of a hospital or a member of its medical staff may abuse a patient in the hospital.
(b) Any hospital administrator, agent, employee, or medical staff member who has reasonable cause to believe that any patient with whom he or she has direct contact has been subjected to abuse in the hospital shall promptly report or cause a report to be made to a designated hospital administrator responsible for providing such reports to the Department as required by this Section.
(c) Retaliation against a person who lawfully and in good faith makes a report under this Section is prohibited.
(d) Upon receiving a report under subsection (b) of this Section, the hospital shall submit the report to the Department within 24 hours of obtaining such report. In the event that the hospital receives multiple reports involving a single alleged instance of abuse, the hospital shall submit one report to the Department.
(e) Upon receiving a report under this Section, the hospital shall promptly conduct an internal review to ensure the alleged victim's safety. Measures to protect the alleged victim shall be taken as deemed necessary by the hospital's administrator and may include, but are not limited to, removing suspected violators from further patient contact during the hospital's internal review. If the alleged victim lacks decision-making capacity under the Health Care Surrogate Act and no health care surrogate is available, the hospital may contact the Illinois Guardianship and Advocacy Commission to determine the need for a temporary guardian of that person.
(f) All internal hospital reviews shall be conducted by a designated hospital employee or agent who is qualified to detect abuse and is not involved in the alleged victim's treatment. All internal review findings must be documented and filed according to hospital procedures and shall be made available to the Department upon request.
(g) Any other person may make a report of patient abuse to the Department if that person has reasonable cause to believe that a patient has been abused in the hospital.
(h) The report required under this Section shall include: the name of the patient; the name and address of the hospital treating the patient; the age of the patient; the nature of the patient's condition, including any evidence of previous injuries or disabilities; and any other information that the reporter believes might be helpful in establishing the cause of the reported abuse and the identity of the person believed to have caused the abuse.
(i) Except for willful or wanton misconduct, any individual, person, institution, or agency participating in good faith in the making of a report under this Section, or in the investigation of such a report or in making a disclosure of information concerning reports of abuse under this Section, shall have immunity from any liability, whether civil, professional, or criminal, that otherwise might result by reason of such actions. For the purpose of any proceedings, whether civil, professional, or criminal, the good faith of any persons required to report cases of suspected abuse under this Section or who disclose information concerning reports of abuse in compliance with this Section, shall be presumed.
(j) No administrator, agent, or employee of a hospital shall adopt or employ practices or procedures designed to discourage good faith reporting of patient abuse under this Section.
(k) Every hospital shall ensure that all new and existing employees are trained in the detection and reporting of abuse of patients and retrained at least every 2 years thereafter.
(l) The Department shall investigate each report of patient abuse made under this Section according to the procedures of the Department, except that a report of abuse which indicates that a patient's life or safety is in imminent danger shall be investigated within 24 hours of such report. Under no circumstances may a hospital's internal review of an allegation of abuse replace an investigation of the allegation by the Department.
(m) The Department shall keep a continuing record of all reports made pursuant to this Section, including indications of the final determination of any investigation and the final disposition of all reports. The Department shall inform the investigated hospital and any other person making a report under subsection (g) of its final determination or disposition in writing.
(n) The Department shall not disclose to the public any information regarding any reports and investigations under this Section unless and until the report of abuse is substantiated following a full and proper investigation.
(o) All patient identifiable information in any report or investigation under this Section shall be confidential and shall not be disclosed except as authorized by this Act or other applicable law.
(p) Nothing in this Section relieves a hospital administrator, employee, agent, or medical staff member from contacting appropriate law enforcement authorities as required by law.
(q) Nothing in this Section shall be construed to mean that a patient is a victim of abuse because of health care services provided or not provided by health care professionals.
(r) Nothing in this Section shall require a hospital, including its employees, agents, and medical staff members, to provide any services to a patient in contravention of his or her stated or implied objection thereto upon grounds that such services conflict with his or her religious beliefs or practices, nor shall such a patient be considered abused under this Section for the exercise of such beliefs or practices.
(s) The Department's implementation of this Section is subject to appropriations to the Department for that purpose.
(t) As used in this Section, the following terms have the following meanings:
"Abuse" means any physical or mental injury or sexual abuse intentionally inflicted by a hospital employee, agent, or medical staff member on a patient of the hospital and does not include any hospital, medical, health care, or other personal care services done in good faith in the interest of the patient according to established medical and clinical standards of care.
"Mental injury" means intentionally caused emotional distress in a patient from words or gestures that would be considered by a reasonable person to be humiliating, harassing, or threatening and which causes observable and substantial impairment.
"Sexual abuse" means any intentional act of sexual contact or sexual penetration of a patient in the hospital.
"Substantiated", with respect to a report of abuse, means that a preponderance of the evidence indicates that abuse occurred.
(Source: P.A. 96-692, eff. 1-1-10.)
(210 ILCS 85/9.7)
Sec. 9.7. List of individuals that may not be admitted for treatment prohibited. No hospital may maintain a list of individuals that may not be admitted for treatment at the hospital. Nothing in this Section shall be construed to prohibit a hospital or a member of the hospital's medical staff from recommending an alternate provider, coordinating an appropriate transfer, or arranging access to care services that best meets the needs of an individual patient.
(Source: P.A. 100-306, eff. 1-1-18.)
(210 ILCS 85/9.8)
Sec. 9.8. Compliance with the Health Care Violence Prevention Act. A hospital licensed under this Act shall comply with the Health Care Violence Prevention Act.
(Source: P.A. 100-1051, eff. 1-1-19.)
(210 ILCS 85/10) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 151)
Sec. 10. Board creation; Department rules.
(a) The Governor shall appoint a Hospital Licensing Board composed
of 14 persons, which shall advise and consult with the Director
in the administration of this Act. The Secretary of Human Services (or his
or her designee) shall serve on the Board, along with one additional
representative of the Department of Human Services to be designated by the
Secretary. Four appointive members shall represent
the general public and 2 of these shall be members of hospital governing
boards; one appointive member shall be a registered professional nurse or
advanced practice registered nurse as
defined in the Nurse Practice Act, who is employed in a
hospital; 3 appointive
members shall be hospital administrators actively engaged in the supervision
or administration of hospitals; 2 appointive members shall be practicing
physicians, licensed in Illinois to practice medicine in all of its
branches; and one appointive member shall be a physician licensed to practice
podiatric medicine under the Podiatric Medical Practice Act of 1987;
and one appointive member shall be a
dentist licensed to practice dentistry under
the Illinois Dental Practice Act. In making Board appointments, the Governor shall give
consideration to recommendations made through the Director by professional
organizations concerned with hospital administration for the hospital
administrative and governing board appointments, registered professional
nurse organizations for the registered professional nurse appointment,
professional medical organizations for the physician appointments, and
professional dental organizations for the dentist appointment.
(b) Each appointive member shall hold office for a term of 3 years,
except that any member appointed to fill a vacancy occurring prior to the
expiration of the term for which his predecessor was appointed shall be
appointed for the remainder of such term and the terms of office of the
members first taking office shall expire, as designated at the time of
appointment, 2 at the end of the first year, 2 at the end of the second
year, and 3 at the end of the third year, after the date of appointment.
The initial terms of office of the 2 additional members representing the
general public provided for in this Section shall expire at the end of the
third year after the date of appointment. The term of office of each
original appointee shall commence July 1, 1953; the term of office of the
original registered professional nurse appointee shall commence July 1,
1969; the term of office of the original licensed podiatric physician appointee shall
commence July 1, 1981; the term of office of the original dentist
appointee shall commence July 1, 1987; and the term of office of each
successor shall commence on July 1 of
the year in which his predecessor's term expires. Board members, while
serving on business of the Board, shall receive actual and necessary travel
and subsistence expenses while so serving away from their places of
residence. The Board shall meet as frequently as the Director deems
necessary, but not less than once a year. Upon request of 5 or more
members, the Director shall call a meeting of the Board.
(c) The Director shall prescribe rules, regulations, standards, and
statements of policy needed to implement, interpret, or make specific the
provisions and purposes of this Act. The Department shall adopt rules which
set forth standards for determining when the public interest, safety
or welfare requires emergency action in relation to termination of a research
program or experimental procedure conducted by a hospital licensed under
this Act. No rule, regulation, or standard shall
be adopted by the Department concerning the operation of hospitals licensed
under this Act which has not had prior approval of the Hospital Licensing
Board, nor shall the Department adopt any rule, regulation or standard
relating to the establishment of a hospital without consultation with the
Hospital Licensing Board.
(d) Within one year after August 7, 1984 (the effective date of Public Act 83-1248), all hospitals licensed under this Act and providing perinatal care
shall comply with standards of perinatal care promulgated by the Department.
The Director shall promulgate rules or regulations under this Act which
are consistent with the Developmental Disability Prevention Act.
(Source: P.A. 100-201, eff. 8-18-17; 100-513, eff. 1-1-18.)
(210 ILCS 85/10.1) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 151.1)
Sec. 10.1.
In connection with any application for a license or a renewal
thereof, the Department may request such information about the applicant's
internship or residency training program as may be necessary to establish
that the intern, resident, or physician is in compliance with the
requirements of paragraph (1)(a) or (2)(a) of subsection (A) of Section 11,
or Section 17, of the Medical Practice Act of 1987, in these respects.
(Source: P.A. 85-1209.)
(210 ILCS 85/10.2) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 151.2)
Sec. 10.2.
Because the candid and conscientious evaluation of
clinical practices is essential to the provision of adequate hospital care,
it is the policy of this State to encourage peer review by health care
providers. Therefore, no hospital and no individual who is a member, agent, or
employee of a hospital, hospital medical staff, hospital administrative
staff, or hospital governing board shall be liable for civil damages as a
result of the acts, omissions, decisions, or any other conduct, except those
involving wilful or wanton misconduct, of a medical
utilization committee, medical review committee, patient care audit
committee, medical care evaluation committee, quality review committee,
credential committee, peer review committee, or any other committee or
individual whose
purpose, directly or indirectly, is internal quality control or medical
study to reduce morbidity or mortality, or for improving patient care
within a hospital, or the improving or benefiting of patient care and
treatment, whether within a hospital or not, or for the purpose of
professional discipline including institution of a summary suspension
in accordance with Section 10.4 of this Act and the medical staff bylaws.
Nothing in this Section shall relieve any
individual or hospital from liability arising from treatment of a patient.
For the purposes of this Section, "wilful and wanton misconduct" means a
course of action that shows actual or deliberate intention to harm or that, if
not intentional, shows an utter indifference to or conscious disregard for a
person's own safety and the safety of others.
(Source: P.A. 99-642, eff. 7-28-16.)
(210 ILCS 85/10.3) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 151.3)
Sec. 10.3.
No hospital shall allow any person to take part as a
student in a clinical training program of that hospital which is designed,
in whole or in part, to fulfill the requirements for licensure as a
physician unless that person is currently enrolled as a student in a
curriculum of a medical or osteopathic college or school which has been
approved as being reputable and in good standing by the Department of
Professional Regulation or is enrolled in a curriculum of a professional
school, college or institution teaching the treatment of human ailments
without drugs or medicines and without operative surgery which has been
approved as being reputable and in good standing by the Department of
Professional Regulation.
(Source: P.A. 85-1209.)
(210 ILCS 85/10.4) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 151.4)
Sec. 10.4. Medical staff privileges.
(a) Any hospital licensed under this Act or any hospital organized under the
University of Illinois Hospital Act shall, prior to the granting of any medical
staff privileges to an applicant, or renewing a current medical staff member's
privileges, request of the Director of Professional Regulation information
concerning the licensure status, proper credentials, required certificates, and any disciplinary action taken against the
applicant's or medical staff member's license, except: (1) for medical personnel who
enter a hospital to obtain organs and tissues for transplant from a donor in accordance with the Illinois Anatomical Gift Act; or (2) for medical personnel who have been granted disaster privileges pursuant to the procedures and requirements established by rules adopted by the Department. Any hospital and any employees of the hospital or others involved in granting privileges who, in good faith, grant disaster privileges pursuant to this Section to respond to an emergency shall not, as a result of their acts or omissions, be liable for civil damages for granting or denying disaster privileges except in the event of willful and wanton misconduct, as that term is defined in Section 10.2 of this Act. Individuals granted privileges who provide care in an emergency situation, in good faith and without direct compensation, shall not, as a result of their acts or omissions, except for acts or omissions involving willful and wanton misconduct, as that term is defined in Section 10.2 of this Act, on the part of the person, be liable for civil damages. The Director of
Professional Regulation shall transmit, in writing and in a timely fashion,
such information regarding the license of the applicant or the medical staff
member, including the record of imposition of any periods of
supervision or monitoring as a result of alcohol or
substance abuse, as provided by Section 23 of the Medical
Practice Act of 1987, and such information as may have been
submitted to the Department indicating that the application
or medical staff member has been denied, or has surrendered,
medical staff privileges at a hospital licensed under this
Act, or any equivalent facility in another state or
territory of the United States. The Director of Professional Regulation
shall define by rule the period for timely response to such requests.
No transmittal of information by the Director of Professional Regulation,
under this Section shall be to other than the president, chief
operating officer, chief administrative officer, or chief of
the medical staff of a hospital licensed under this Act, a
hospital organized under the University of Illinois Hospital Act, or a hospital
operated by the United States, or any of its instrumentalities. The
information so transmitted shall be afforded the same status
as is information concerning medical studies by Part 21 of Article VIII of the
Code of Civil Procedure, as now or hereafter amended.
(b) All hospitals licensed under this Act, except county hospitals as
defined in subsection (c) of Section 15-1 of the Illinois Public Aid Code,
shall comply with, and the medical staff bylaws of these hospitals shall
include rules consistent with, the provisions of this Section in granting,
limiting, renewing, or denying medical staff membership and
clinical staff privileges. Hospitals that require medical staff members to
possess
faculty status with a specific institution of higher education are not required
to comply with subsection (1) below when the physician does not possess faculty
status.
(c) All hospitals shall consult with the medical staff prior to closing
membership in the entire or any portion of the medical staff or a department.
If
the hospital closes membership in the medical staff, any portion of the medical
staff, or the department over the objections of the medical staff, then the
hospital
shall provide a detailed written explanation for the decision to the medical
staff
10 days prior to the effective date of any closure. No applications need to be
provided when membership in the medical staff or any relevant portion of the
medical staff is closed.
(Source: P.A. 102-4, eff. 4-27-21.)
(210 ILCS 85/10.6)
Sec. 10.6.
Hospital merger; medical staff bylaws.
When one or more
hospitals combine or merge in any
manner that does not require any of the parties to the transaction to obtain a
new license under this Act, the medical staff bylaws of each individual
hospital shall remain in
effect until such time as the bylaws are amended according to the terms of the
bylaws.
This Section shall not apply to a county hospital as
defined in
subsection (c) of Section 15-1 of the Illinois Public Aid Code.
(Source: P.A. 92-731, eff. 7-25-02.)
(210 ILCS 85/10.7)
Sec. 10.7. Clinical privileges; advanced practice registered nurses.
All hospitals licensed under this Act shall comply with the following
requirements:
(Source: P.A. 99-642, eff. 7-28-16; 100-513, eff. 1-1-18.)
(210 ILCS 85/10.8)
Sec. 10.8. Requirements for employment of physicians.
(a) Physician employment by hospitals and hospital affiliates. Employing
entities may
employ physicians to practice medicine in all of its branches provided that the
following
requirements are met:
(b) Definitions. For the purpose of this Section:
"Employing entity" means a hospital licensed under the Hospital Licensing Act
or a hospital
affiliate.
"Employed physician" means a physician who receives an IRS W-2 form, or any
successor
federal income tax form, from an employing entity.
"Hospital" means a hospital licensed under the Hospital Licensing Act, except
county hospitals as defined in subsection (c) of Section 15-1 of the Illinois Public Aid
Code.
"Hospital affiliate" means a corporation, partnership, joint venture, limited
liability company,
or similar organization, other than a hospital, that is devoted primarily to
the provision, management,
or support of health care services and that directly or indirectly controls, is
controlled by, or is under
common control of the hospital. "Control" means having at least an equal or a
majority ownership
or membership interest. A hospital affiliate shall be 100% owned or controlled
by any combination
of hospitals, their parent corporations, or physicians licensed to practice
medicine in all its branches
in Illinois.
"Hospital affiliate" does not include a health maintenance
organization regulated under the Health Maintenance
Organization Act.
"Physician" means an individual licensed to practice medicine in all its
branches in Illinois.
"Professional judgment" means the exercise of a physician's independent
clinical judgment
in providing medically appropriate diagnoses, care, and treatment to a
particular patient at a
particular time. Situations in which an employing entity does not interfere
with an employed
physician's professional judgment include, without limitation, the following:
(c) Private enforcement. An employed physician aggrieved by a violation of
this Act may
seek to obtain an injunction or reinstatement of employment with the employing
entity as the court
may deem appropriate. Nothing in this Section limits or abrogates any common
law cause of action.
Nothing in this Section shall be deemed to alter the law of negligence.
(d) Department enforcement. The Department may enforce the provisions of
this Section,
but nothing in this Section shall require or permit the Department to license,
certify, or otherwise
investigate the activities of a
hospital affiliate not otherwise required to be licensed by the
Department.
(e) Retaliation prohibited. No employing entity shall retaliate against any
employed
physician for requesting a hearing or review under this Section.
No action may be taken that
affects
the ability of a physician to practice during this review, except in
circumstances
where the medical staff bylaws authorize summary suspension.
(f) Physician collaboration. No employing entity shall adopt or enforce,
either formally or
informally, any policy, rule, regulation, or practice inconsistent with
the provision of adequate
collaboration, including medical direction of licensed advanced practice registered
nurses or supervision
of licensed physician assistants and delegation to other personnel under
Section 54.5 of the Medical
Practice Act of 1987.
(g) Physician disciplinary actions. Nothing in this Section shall be
construed to limit or
prohibit the governing body of an employing entity or its medical staff, if
any, from taking
disciplinary actions against a physician as permitted by law.
(h) Physician review. Nothing in this Section shall be construed to prohibit
a hospital or
hospital affiliate from making a determination not to pay for a particular
health care service or to
prohibit a medical group, independent practice association, hospital medical
staff, or hospital
governing body from enforcing reasonable peer review or utilization review
protocols or determining
whether the employed physician complied with those protocols.
(i) Review. Nothing in this Section may be used or construed to establish
that any activity
of a hospital or hospital affiliate is subject to review under the Illinois
Health Facilities Planning Act.
(j) Rules. The Department shall adopt any
rules necessary to
implement this Section.
(Source: P.A. 100-201, eff. 8-18-17; 100-513, eff. 1-1-18.)
(210 ILCS 85/10.9)
Sec. 10.9. Nurse mandated overtime prohibited.
(a) Definitions. As used in this Section:
"Mandated overtime" means work that is required by the hospital in excess
of an agreed-to, predetermined work shift. Time spent by nurses required to be available as a condition of employment in specialized units, such as surgical nursing services, shall not be counted or considered in calculating the amount of time worked for the purpose of applying the prohibition against mandated overtime under subsection (b).
"Nurse" means any advanced practice registered nurse, registered
professional nurse, or licensed practical nurse, as defined in
the Nurse Practice Act, who receives an hourly wage and has direct responsibility to oversee or carry
out nursing care. For the purposes of this Section, "advanced practice registered nurse" does not include a certified registered nurse anesthetist who is primarily engaged in performing the duties of a nurse anesthetist.
"Unforeseen emergent circumstance" means (i) any declared
national, State, or municipal disaster or other catastrophic event, or any implementation of a hospital's disaster plan, that will substantially affect or increase the need for health
care services or (ii) any circumstance in which patient care needs require specialized nursing skills through the completion of a procedure. An "unforeseen emergent circumstance" does not include situations in which the hospital fails to have enough nursing staff to meet the usual and reasonably predictable nursing needs of its patients.
(b) Mandated overtime prohibited. No nurse may be required
to work mandated overtime except in the case of an unforeseen emergent circumstance when such overtime is required only as a
last resort. Such mandated overtime shall not exceed 4 hours beyond an agreed-to, predetermined work shift.
(c) Off-duty period. When a nurse is mandated to work up to 12 consecutive hours, the nurse must be allowed at least 8 consecutive hours of off-duty time immediately following the completion of a shift.
(d) Retaliation prohibited. No hospital may discipline, discharge, or take any other adverse employment action against a nurse solely because the nurse refused to work mandated overtime as prohibited under subsection (b).
(e) Violations. Any employee of a hospital that is subject
to this Act may file a complaint with the Department of Public Health regarding an alleged violation of this Section. The complaint must be filed within 45 days following the occurrence of the incident giving rise to the alleged violation. The Department must forward notification of the alleged violation to the hospital in question within 3 business days after the complaint is filed. Upon receiving a complaint of a violation of this Section, the Department may take any action authorized under Section 7 or 9 of this Act.
(f) Proof of violation. Any violation of this Section must
be proved by clear and convincing evidence that a nurse was required to work overtime against his or her will. The hospital may defeat the claim of a violation by presenting clear and convincing evidence that an unforeseen emergent circumstance, which required overtime work, existed at the time the employee was required or compelled to work.
(Source: P.A. 100-513, eff. 1-1-18.)
(210 ILCS 85/10.10)
Sec. 10.10. Nurse Staffing by Patient Acuity.
(a) Findings. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:
(b) Definitions. As used in this Section:
"Acuity model" means an assessment tool selected and implemented by a hospital, as recommended by a nursing care committee, that assesses the complexity of patient care needs requiring professional nursing care and skills and aligns patient care needs and nursing skills consistent with professional nursing standards.
"Department" means the Department of Public Health.
"Direct patient care" means care provided by a registered professional nurse with direct responsibility to oversee or carry out medical regimens or nursing care for one or more patients.
"Nursing care committee" means a hospital-wide committee or committees of nurses whose functions, in part or in whole, contribute to the development, recommendation, and review of the hospital's nurse staffing plan established pursuant to subsection (d).
"Registered professional nurse" means a person licensed as a Registered Nurse under the Nurse
Practice Act.
"Written staffing plan for nursing care services" means a written plan for the assignment of patient care nursing staff based on multiple nurse and patient considerations that yield minimum staffing levels for inpatient care units and the adopted acuity model aligning patient care needs with nursing skills required for quality patient care consistent with professional nursing standards.
(c) Written staffing plan.
(d) Nursing care committee.
(e) Nothing in this Section 10.10 shall be construed to limit, alter, or modify any of the terms, conditions, or provisions of a collective bargaining agreement entered into by the hospital.
(f) No hospital may discipline, discharge, or take any other adverse employment action against an employee solely because the employee expresses a concern or complaint regarding an alleged violation of this Section or concerns related to nurse staffing.
(g) Any employee of a hospital may file a complaint with the Department regarding an alleged violation of this Section. The Department must forward notification of the alleged violation to the hospital in question within 10 business days after the complaint is filed. Upon receiving a complaint of a violation of this Section, the Department may take any action authorized under Sections 7 or 9 of this Act.
(Source: P.A. 102-4, eff. 4-27-21; 102-641, eff. 8-27-21; 102-813, eff. 5-13-22.)
(210 ILCS 85/10.11)
Sec. 10.11. Clinical privileges; physician assistants. No hospital licensed under this Act shall adopt any policy, rule, regulation, or practice inconsistent with the provision of adequate supervision in accordance with Section 54.5 of the Medical Practice Act of 1987 and the Physician Assistant Practice Act of 1987.
(Source: P.A. 97-1071, eff. 8-24-12.)
(210 ILCS 85/11) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 152)
Sec. 11.
No hospital, nor any person connected with any hospital, shall
place children for adoption or for care in foster family homes, or shall
place children anywhere other than in the custody of their mothers, unless
the hospital shall also be licensed as a child welfare agency, pursuant to
the "Child Care Act", approved July 10, 1957, as amended, or unless the
written consent of the State Department of Children and Family Services be
first had and obtained; provided, that any hospital may release children
therefrom to a licensed child welfare agency.
(Source: Laws 1965, p. 3668.)
(210 ILCS 85/11.1) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 152.1)
Sec. 11.1.
No hospital may refuse necessary treatment to a pregnant
woman in active labor whose life or safety would be threatened in the
absence of such treatment,
because she is unable to pay for medical services or because
she does not carry medical insurance. After providing services to such
woman, the hospital shall obtain payment from the woman or a third party source.
(Source: P.A. 84-929.)
(210 ILCS 85/11.1a)
Sec. 11.1a. Instruments for taking a pregnant woman's blood pressure. Every hospital shall ensure that it has the proper instruments available for taking a pregnant woman's blood pressure. The Department shall adopt rules for the implementation of this Section.
(Source: P.A. 101-91, eff. 1-1-20.)
(210 ILCS 85/11.2) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 152.2)
Sec. 11.2.
(a) Each hospital licensed under this Act shall allow a
recipient of blood to designate a donor of his choice for the purpose of
receiving red blood cells, under the following conditions:
(1) The recipient, or someone on his behalf, has solicited the donors;
(2) The designated donor consents to such donation;
(3) The designated donor's blood may be obtained in sufficient time to
meet the health care needs of the recipient;
(4) The designated donor is qualified to donate blood under the criteria
for donor selection promulgated by the Department of Public Health under
the Blood Labeling Act; and
(5) The blood of the donor is acceptable for the patient's medical needs.
(b) Blood donated for such designated use shall be reserved for the
designated recipient; however, if it has not been used within 7 days from
the day of donation, it may be used for any other medically appropriate
purpose.
(c) This Section shall not limit other procedures hospitals may
establish to enable directed donations.
(Source: P.A. 86-719.)
(210 ILCS 85/11.3) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 152.3)
Sec. 11.3.
No hospital shall
require any patient or any member of the patient's family to write or to sign
any document during those times when the religious tenets of such person
temporarily prohibit him or her from performing the acts of writing or
signing. The patient or
the member of the patient's family shall agree to supply written
information required by the hospital and to sign any necessary documents as
soon as the religious tenets of such person no longer prohibit the acts of
writing or signing.
(Source: P.A. 85-1209.)
(210 ILCS 85/11.4)
Sec. 11.4. Disposition of fetus. A hospital having custody of a fetus
following a spontaneous fetal demise occurring after a gestation period of less
than 20 completed weeks must notify the mother
of her right to arrange for
the burial or cremation of the fetus.
Notification may also include other options such as, but not limited to, a
ceremony, a certificate, or common burial or cremation of fetal tissue. If, within 24 hours
after being notified
under this Section, the mother elects in writing to arrange for the burial or
cremation of the fetus, the disposition of the fetus shall be subject to the
same laws and rules that apply in the case of a fetal death that occurs in this
State after a gestation period of 20 completed weeks or more. The
Department of Public Health shall develop forms to be used for notifications
and elections under this Section
and hospitals shall provide the forms to
the mother.
(Source: P.A. 96-338, eff. 1-1-10.)
(210 ILCS 85/11.5)
Sec. 11.5. Uniform standards of obstetrical care regardless of
ability to pay.
(a) No hospital may promulgate policies or implement practices that determine
differing standards of obstetrical care based upon a patient's source of
payment or ability
to pay for medical services.
(b) Each hospital shall develop a written policy statement reflecting the
requirements of subsection (a) and shall post, either by physical or electronic means, written notices of this policy in
the obstetrical admitting areas of the hospital by July 1, 2004. Notices
posted pursuant to this Section shall be posted in the predominant language or
languages spoken in the hospital's service area.
(Source: P.A. 102-4, eff. 4-27-21.)
(210 ILCS 85/11.6)
Sec. 11.6. Policy and procedure for patient bathroom door locks. Hospitals shall have policies and procedures for readily gaining access to a locked bathroom in a patient's room.
(Source: P.A. 96-925, eff. 1-1-11; 97-333, eff. 8-12-11.)
(210 ILCS 85/11.7)
Sec. 11.7. Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS) Education.
(a) A hospital shall provide, free of charge, information
and instructional materials regarding sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS), explaining the medical effects upon infants and young children and emphasizing measures that may reduce the risk. The materials shall include information concerning safe sleep environments developed by the American Academy of Pediatrics or a statewide or nationally recognized SIDS or medical association.
(b) The information and materials described in subsection (a)
shall be provided to parents or legal guardians of each newborn, upon
discharge from the hospital. Prior to discharge, a nurse or appropriate staff person shall review the proffered materials with the infant's parents or legal guardian and shall discuss best practices to reduce the incidence of SIDS as recommended by the American Academy of Pediatrics.
(c) Nothing in this Section prohibits a hospital from
obtaining free and suitable information from a public or
private agency.
(Source: P.A. 99-48, eff. 7-15-15.)
(210 ILCS 85/11.8)
Sec. 11.8. Closed captioning required. A hospital licensed under this Act must make reasonable efforts to have activated at all times the closed captioning feature on a television in a common area provided for use by the general public or in a patient's room, or enable the closed captioning feature when requested to do so by a member of the general public or a patient, if the television includes a closed captioning feature.
It is not a violation of this Section if the closed captioning feature is deactivated by a member of the hospital's staff after such feature is enabled in a common area or in a patient's room unless the deactivation of the closed captioning feature is knowing or intentional. It is not a violation of this Section if the closed captioning feature is deactivated by a member of the general public, a patient, or a member of the hospital's staff at the request of a patient of a hospital licensed under this Act.
If a hospital licensed under this Act does not have a television that includes a closed captioning feature, then the hospital must ensure that all televisions obtained for common areas and patient rooms after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 101st General Assembly include a closed captioning feature. This Section does not affect any other provision of law relating to disability discrimination or providing reasonable accommodations or diminish the rights of a person with a disability under any other law.
As used in this Section, "closed captioning" means a text display of spoken words presented on a television that allows a deaf or hard of hearing viewer to follow the dialogue and the action of a program simultaneously.
(Source: P.A. 101-116, eff. 1-1-20.)
(210 ILCS 85/12) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 153)
Sec. 12.
The Department shall prepare an annual report of its activities
and operations under this Act.
(Source: Laws 1953, p. 811.)
(210 ILCS 85/13) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 154)
Sec. 13.
Whenever the Department refuses to grant, or revokes or suspends a
permit to establish a hospital, or a license to open, conduct, operate, or
maintain a hospital, the applicant or licensee may have such decision
judicially reviewed. The provisions of the Administrative Review Law, as
heretofore or hereafter amended, and the rules
adopted pursuant thereto shall apply to and govern all proceedings for the
judicial review of final administrative decisions of the Department
hereunder. The term "administrative decisions"
is defined as in Section 3-101 of the Code of Civil Procedure.
(Source: P.A. 82-783.)
(210 ILCS 85/14) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 155)
Sec. 14.
Any person establishing a hospital without a permit issued pursuant to
this Act, or any person opening, conducting, operating or maintaining any
hospital without a license issued pursuant to this Act shall be guilty of a
petty offense, and each day of a continuing violation after conviction
shall be considered a separate offense. The State's Attorneys of the
several counties shall represent the People of the State of Illinois in
proceedings under this Act in their respective counties.
(Source: P.A. 77-2576.)
(210 ILCS 85/14.5)
Sec. 14.5. Hospital Licensure Fund.
(a) There is created in the State treasury the Hospital Licensure Fund. The Fund is created for the purpose of providing funding for the administration of the licensure program and patient safety and quality initiatives for hospitals, including, without limitation, the implementation of the Illinois Adverse Health Care Events Reporting Law of 2005.
(b) The Fund shall consist of the following:
(c) Disbursements from the Fund shall be made only for:
(d) The uses described in paragraph (2) of subsection (c) shall be developed in conjunction with a statewide organization representing a majority of hospitals.
(Source: P.A. 102-641, eff. 8-27-21; 102-813, eff. 5-13-22.)
(210 ILCS 85/15) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 156)
Sec. 15.
Notwithstanding the existence or pursuit of any other remedy, the
Director may, in the manner provided by law, upon the advice of the
Attorney General who shall represent the Director in the proceedings,
maintain an action in the name of the State for injunction or other process
against any person or governmental unit to restrain or prevent the
establishment of a hospital without a permit issued pursuant to this Act,
or to restrain or prevent the opening, conducting, operating, or
maintaining of a hospital without a license issued pursuant to this Act.
(Source: Laws 1965, p. 2350.)
(210 ILCS 85/16) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 157)
Sec. 16.
If any provision of this Act or the application thereof to any person or
circumstance shall be held invalid, such invalidity shall not affect the
provisions or application of this Act which can be given effect without the
invalid provision or application, and to this end the provisions of the Act
are declared to be severable.
(Source: Laws 1953, p. 811.)
Structure Illinois Compiled Statutes
Chapter 210 - HEALTH FACILITIES AND REGULATION
210 ILCS 3/ - Alternative Health Care Delivery Act.
210 ILCS 4/ - Alzheimer's Disease and Related Dementias Special Care Disclosure Act.
210 ILCS 5/ - Ambulatory Surgical Treatment Center Act.
210 ILCS 9/ - Assisted Living and Shared Housing Act.
210 ILCS 15/ - Blood Donation Act.
210 ILCS 25/ - Illinois Clinical Laboratory and Blood Bank Act.
210 ILCS 26/ - Accountable Care Organization Clinical Laboratory Testing Advisory Board Act.
210 ILCS 28/ - Abuse Prevention Review Team Act.
210 ILCS 30/ - Abused and Neglected Long Term Care Facility Residents Reporting Act.
210 ILCS 32/ - Authorized Electronic Monitoring in Long-Term Care Facilities Act.
210 ILCS 34/ - Illinois Certified Community Behavioral Health Clinics Act.
210 ILCS 35/ - Community Living Facilities Licensing Act.
210 ILCS 40/ - Life Care Facilities Act.
210 ILCS 42/ - Continuum of Care Services for the Developmentally Disabled Act.
210 ILCS 45/ - Nursing Home Care Act.
210 ILCS 47/ - ID/DD Community Care Act.
210 ILCS 49/ - Specialized Mental Health Rehabilitation Act of 2013.
210 ILCS 50/ - Emergency Medical Services (EMS) Systems Act.
210 ILCS 55/ - Home Health, Home Services, and Home Nursing Agency Licensing Act.
210 ILCS 60/ - Hospice Program Licensing Act.
210 ILCS 65/ - Supportive Residences Licensing Act.
210 ILCS 70/ - Emergency Medical Treatment Act.
210 ILCS 74/ - Physical Fitness Facility Medical Emergency Preparedness Act.
210 ILCS 76/ - Community Benefits Act.
210 ILCS 80/ - Hospital Emergency Service Act.
210 ILCS 81/ - Hospital Infant Feeding Act.
210 ILCS 83/ - MRSA Screening and Reporting Act.
210 ILCS 85/ - Hospital Licensing Act.
210 ILCS 86/ - Hospital Report Card Act.
210 ILCS 87/ - Language Assistance Services Act.
210 ILCS 88/ - Fair Patient Billing Act.
210 ILCS 89/ - Hospital Uninsured Patient Discount Act.
210 ILCS 90/ - X-Ray Retention Act.
210 ILCS 91/ - Caregiver Advise, Record, and Enable Act.
210 ILCS 95/ - Campground Licensing and Recreational Area Act.
210 ILCS 100/ - Youth Camp Act.
210 ILCS 105/ - Field Sanitation Act.
210 ILCS 110/ - Illinois Migrant Labor Camp Law.
210 ILCS 115/ - Mobile Home Park Act.
210 ILCS 117/ - Abandoned Mobile Home Act.
210 ILCS 120/ - Illinois Mobile Home Tiedown Act.
210 ILCS 125/ - Swimming Facility Act.
210 ILCS 130/ - Swimming Pool Safety Act.
210 ILCS 135/ - Community-Integrated Living Arrangements Licensure and Certification Act.
210 ILCS 145/ - Tanning Facility Permit Act.
210 ILCS 150/ - Safe Pharmaceutical Disposal Act.
210 ILCS 155/ - Long Term Acute Care Hospital Quality Improvement Transfer Program Act.