|
(vi) brother-in-law or sister-in-law; |
(vii) legal guardian; or |
(viii) caregiver designated by the legally |
responsible caregiver as documented in the Medical |
Plan of Care; |
(3) is a legally responsible caregiver, or has been |
designated by a legally responsible caregiver, for a |
person who receives or is eligible to receive: |
(i) in-home shift nursing services under the Early |
and Periodic Screening, Diagnostic and Treatment |
requirement of Medicaid under 42 U.S.C. 1396d(r); or |
(ii) in-home shift nursing through the home and |
community-based services waiver program authorized |
under Section 1915(c) of the Social Security Act for |
persons who are medically fragile and technology |
dependent; and |
(4) is certified pursuant to this Section to perform |
or to assist in performance of services to and for a person |
receiving or eligible to receive: (A) in-home shift |
nursing services under the Early and Periodic Screening, |
Diagnostic and Treatment requirement of Medicaid under 42 |
U.S.C. 1396d(r); or (B) in-home shift nursing services |
through the home and community-based services waiver |
program authorized under Section 1915(c) of the Social |
Security Act for a designated person or designated persons |
who are medically fragile and technology dependent and |
|
eligible to receive the services laid out in this Section, |
including: |
(i) the same tasks as a certified nursing |
assistant; |
(ii) medication administration; |
(iii) enteral care and therapy; and |
(iv) other needed services to support the |
individual as provided by rule. |
Section 2-15. Certified family health aide program for |
children and adults. |
(a) The Department of Public Health, in partnership with |
the Department of Healthcare and Family Services, may create a |
certification pathway for a legally responsible caregiver, or |
a person who has been designated by a legally responsible |
caregiver, who is seeking certification as a certified family |
health aide, including the adoption of any necessary rules for |
the certification process. This certification pathway shall |
include documentation, in a manner designated by the |
Department of Public Health, of initial training provided by |
hospitals licensed in the Hospital Licensing Act, children's |
community-based health care centers as defined in the |
Alternative Health Care Delivery Act, or home nursing agencies |
as defined in the Home Health, Home Services, and Home Nursing |
Agency Licensing Act. |
(b) A certified family health aide may only perform |
|
services to and for a person receiving or eligible to receive: |
(1) in-home shift nursing services under the Early and |
Periodic Screening, Diagnostic and Treatment benefit |
requirement of Medicaid under 42 U.S.C. 1396d(r); or |
(2) in-home shift nursing services through the home |
and community-based services waiver program authorized |
under Section 1915(c) of the Social Security Act for |
persons who are medically fragile and technology |
dependent. |
To be eligible for reimbursement as a certified family |
health aide, a legally responsible caregiver or a person |
designated by a legally responsible caregiver must meet all |
certification requirements as set forth in this Section, in |
Section 5-2.06b of Article V of the Illinois Public Aid Code, |
and in any applicable administrative rule. |
(d) The Department of Public Health, in consultation with |
the Department of Healthcare and Family Services, may adopt |
rules necessary to implement the provisions of this Act, |
including, but not limited to, rules requiring background |
checks for the certified family health aide, establishing the |
scope of services a certified family health aide can perform, |
and establishing any utilization controls of services |
performed by a certified family health aide. |
Section 2-100. The Alternative Health Care Delivery Act is |
amended by changing Section 35 as follows: |
|
(210 ILCS 3/35) |
Sec. 35. Alternative health care models authorized. |
Notwithstanding any other law to the contrary, alternative |
health care models described in this Section may be |
established on a demonstration basis. |
(1) (Blank). |
(2) Alternative health care delivery model; |
postsurgical recovery care center. A postsurgical recovery |
care center is a designated site which provides |
postsurgical recovery care for generally healthy patients |
undergoing surgical procedures that potentially require |
overnight nursing care, pain control, or observation that |
would otherwise be provided in an inpatient setting. |
Patients may be discharged from the postsurgical recovery |
care center in less than 24 hours if the attending |
physician or the facility's medical director believes the |
patient has recovered enough to be discharged. A |
postsurgical recovery care center is either freestanding |
or a defined unit of an ambulatory surgical treatment |
center or hospital. No facility, or portion of a facility, |
may participate in a demonstration program as a |
postsurgical recovery care center unless the facility has |
been licensed as an ambulatory surgical treatment center |
or hospital for at least 2 years before August 20, 1993 |
(the effective date of Public Act 88-441). The maximum |
|
length of stay for patients in a postsurgical recovery |
care center is not to exceed 48 hours unless the treating |
physician requests an extension of time from the recovery |
center's medical director on the basis of medical or |
clinical documentation that an additional care period is |
required for the recovery of a patient and the medical |
director approves the extension of time. In no case, |
however, shall a patient's length of stay in a |
postsurgical recovery care center be longer than 72 hours. |
If a patient requires an additional care period after the |
expiration of the 72-hour limit, the patient shall be |
transferred to an appropriate facility. Reports on |
variances from the 24-hour or 48-hour limit shall be sent |
to the Department for its evaluation. The reports shall, |
before submission to the Department, have removed from |
them all patient and physician identifiers. Blood products |
may be administered in the postsurgical recovery care |
center model. In order to handle cases of complications, |
emergencies, or exigent circumstances, every postsurgical |
recovery care center as defined in this paragraph shall |
maintain a contractual relationship, including a transfer |
agreement, with a general acute care hospital. A |
postsurgical recovery care center shall be no larger than |
20 beds. A postsurgical recovery care center shall be |
located within 15 minutes travel time from the general |
acute care hospital with which the center maintains a |
|
contractual relationship, including a transfer agreement, |
as required under this paragraph. |
No postsurgical recovery care center shall |
discriminate against any patient requiring treatment |
because of the source of payment for services, including |
Medicare and Medicaid recipients. |
The Department shall adopt rules to implement the |
provisions of Public Act 88-441 concerning postsurgical |
recovery care centers within 9 months after August 20, |
1993. Notwithstanding any other law to the contrary, a |
postsurgical recovery care center model may provide sleep |
laboratory or similar sleep studies in accordance with |
applicable State and federal laws and regulations. |
(3) Alternative health care delivery model; children's |
community-based health care center. A children's |
community-based health care center model is a designated |
site that provides nursing care, clinical support |
services, and therapies for a period of one to 14 days for |
short-term stays and 120 days to facilitate transitions to |
home or other appropriate settings for medically fragile |
children, technology dependent children, and children with |
special health care needs who are deemed clinically stable |
by a physician and are younger than 22 years of age. This |
care is to be provided in a home-like environment that |
serves no more than 12 children at a time, except that a |
children's community-based health care center in existence |
|
on the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 100th |
General Assembly that is located in Chicago on grade level |
for Life Safety Code purposes may provide care to no more |
than 16 children at a time. Children's community-based |
health care center services must be available through the |
model to all families, including those whose care is paid |
for through the Department of Healthcare and Family |
Services, the Department of Children and Family Services, |
the Department of Human Services, and insurance companies |
who cover home health care services or private duty |
nursing care in the home. |
Each children's community-based health care center |
model location shall be physically separate and apart from |
any other facility licensed by the Department of Public |
Health under this or any other Act and shall provide the |
following services: respite care, registered nursing or |
licensed practical nursing care, transitional care to |
facilitate home placement or other appropriate settings |
and reunite families, medical day care, weekend camps, and |
diagnostic studies typically done in the home setting. |
A children's community-based health care center may |
provide initial training, prior to home placement for, and |
shall keep records in a manner designated by the |
Department regarding, the certified family health aide, as |
defined in the Certified Family Health Aide Program for |
Children and Adults Act, identified as the legally |
|
responsible caregiver or designated by a legally |
responsible caregiver for the medical care of an |
individual who receives or is eligible to receive: |
(i) in-home shift nursing services under the Early |
and Periodic Screening, Diagnostic and Treatment |
requirement of Medicaid under 42 U.S.C. 1396d(r); or |
(ii) in-home shift nursing through the home and |
community-based services waiver program authorized |
under Section 1915(c) of the Social Security Act for |
persons who are medically fragile and technology |
dependent. |
Coverage for the services provided by the Department |
of Healthcare and Family Services under this paragraph (3) |
is contingent upon federal waiver approval and is provided |
only to Medicaid eligible clients participating in the |
home and community based services waiver designated in |
Section 1915(c) of the Social Security Act for medically |
frail and technologically dependent children or children |
in Department of Children and Family Services foster care |
who receive home health benefits. |
(4) Alternative health care delivery model; community |
based residential rehabilitation center. A community-based |
residential rehabilitation center model is a designated |
site that provides rehabilitation or support, or both, for |
persons who have experienced severe brain injury, who are |
medically stable, and who no longer require acute |
|
rehabilitative care or intense medical or nursing |
services. The average length of stay in a community-based |
residential rehabilitation center shall not exceed 4 |
months. As an integral part of the services provided, |
individuals are housed in a supervised living setting |
while having immediate access to the community. The |
residential rehabilitation center authorized by the |
Department may have more than one residence included under |
the license. A residence may be no larger than 12 beds and |
shall be located as an integral part of the community. Day |
treatment or individualized outpatient services shall be |
provided for persons who reside in their own home. |
Functional outcome goals shall be established for each |
individual. Services shall include, but are not limited |
to, case management, training and assistance with |
activities of daily living, nursing consultation, |
traditional therapies (physical, occupational, speech), |
functional interventions in the residence and community |
(job placement, shopping, banking, recreation), |
counseling, self-management strategies, productive |
activities, and multiple opportunities for skill |
acquisition and practice throughout the day. The design of |
individualized program plans shall be consistent with the |
outcome goals that are established for each resident. The |
programs provided in this setting shall be accredited by |
the Commission on Accreditation of Rehabilitation |
|
Facilities (CARF). The program shall have been accredited |
by CARF as a Brain Injury Community-Integrative Program |
for at least 3 years. |
(5) Alternative health care delivery model; |
Alzheimer's disease management center. An Alzheimer's |
disease management center model is a designated site that |
provides a safe and secure setting for care of persons |
diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease. An Alzheimer's disease |
management center model shall be a facility separate from |
any other facility licensed by the Department of Public |
Health under this or any other Act. An Alzheimer's disease |
management center shall conduct and document an assessment |
of each resident every 6 months. The assessment shall |
include an evaluation of daily functioning, cognitive |
status, other medical conditions, and behavioral problems. |
An Alzheimer's disease management center shall develop and |
implement an ongoing treatment plan for each resident. The |
treatment plan shall have defined goals. The Alzheimer's |
disease management center shall treat behavioral problems |
and mood disorders using nonpharmacologic approaches such |
as environmental modification, task simplification, and |
other appropriate activities. All staff must have |
necessary training to care for all stages of Alzheimer's |
Disease. An Alzheimer's disease management center shall |
provide education and support for residents and |
caregivers. The education and support shall include |
|
referrals to support organizations for educational |
materials on community resources, support groups, legal |
and financial issues, respite care, and future care needs |
and options. The education and support shall also include |
a discussion of the resident's need to make advance |
directives and to identify surrogates for medical and |
legal decision-making. The provisions of this paragraph |
establish the minimum level of services that must be |
provided by an Alzheimer's disease management center. An |
Alzheimer's disease management center model shall have no |
more than 100 residents. Nothing in this paragraph (5) |
shall be construed as prohibiting a person or facility |
from providing services and care to persons with |
Alzheimer's disease as otherwise authorized under State |
law. |
(6) Alternative health care delivery model; birth |
center. A birth center shall be exclusively dedicated to |
serving the childbirth-related needs of women and their |
newborns and shall have no more than 10 beds. A birth |
center is a designated site that is away from the mother's |
usual place of residence and in which births are planned |
to occur following a normal, uncomplicated, and low-risk |
pregnancy. A birth center shall offer prenatal care and |
community education services and shall coordinate these |
services with other health care services available in the |
community. |
|
(A) A birth center shall not be separately |
licensed if it is one of the following: |
(1) A part of a hospital; or |
(2) A freestanding facility that is physically |
distinct from a hospital but is operated under a |
license issued to a hospital under the Hospital |
Licensing Act. |
(B) A separate birth center license shall be |
required if the birth center is operated as: |
(1) A part of the operation of a federally |
qualified health center as designated by the |
United States Department of Health and Human |
Services; or |
(2) A facility other than one described in |
subparagraph (A)(1), (A)(2), or (B)(1) of this |
paragraph (6) whose costs are reimbursable under |
Title XIX of the federal Social Security Act. |
In adopting rules for birth centers, the Department |
shall consider: the American Association of Birth Centers' |
Standards for Freestanding Birth Centers; the American |
Academy of Pediatrics/American College of Obstetricians |
and Gynecologists Guidelines for Perinatal Care; and the |
Regionalized Perinatal Health Care Code. The Department's |
rules shall stipulate the eligibility criteria for birth |
center admission. The Department's rules shall stipulate |
the necessary equipment for emergency care according to |
|
the American Association of Birth Centers' standards and |
any additional equipment deemed necessary by the |
Department. The Department's rules shall provide for a |
time period within which each birth center not part of a |
hospital must become accredited by either the Commission |
for the Accreditation of Freestanding Birth Centers or The |
Joint Commission. |
A birth center shall be certified to participate in |
the Medicare and Medicaid programs under Titles XVIII and |
XIX, respectively, of the federal Social Security Act. To |
the extent necessary, the Illinois Department of |
Healthcare and Family Services shall apply for a waiver |
from the United States Health Care Financing |
Administration to allow birth centers to be reimbursed |
under Title XIX of the federal Social Security Act. |
A birth center that is not operated under a hospital |
license shall be located within a ground travel time |
distance from the general acute care hospital with which |
the birth center maintains a contractual relationship, |
including a transfer agreement, as required under this |
paragraph, that allows for an emergency caesarian delivery |
to be started within 30 minutes of the decision a |
caesarian delivery is necessary. A birth center operating |
under a hospital license shall be located within a ground |
travel time distance from the licensed hospital that |
allows for an emergency caesarian delivery to be started |
|
within 30 minutes of the decision a caesarian delivery is |
necessary. |
The services of a medical director physician, licensed |
to practice medicine in all its branches, who is certified |
or eligible for certification by the American College of |
Obstetricians and Gynecologists or the American Board of |
Osteopathic Obstetricians and Gynecologists or has |
hospital obstetrical privileges are required in birth |
centers. The medical director in consultation with the |
Director of Nursing and Midwifery Services shall |
coordinate the clinical staff and overall provision of |
patient care. The medical director or his or her physician |
designee shall be available on the premises or within a |
close proximity as defined by rule. The medical director |
and the Director of Nursing and Midwifery Services shall |
jointly develop and approve policies defining the criteria |
to determine which pregnancies are accepted as normal, |
uncomplicated, and low-risk, and the anesthesia services |
available at the center. No general anesthesia may be |
administered at the center. |
If a birth center employs certified nurse midwives, a |
certified nurse midwife shall be the Director of Nursing |
and Midwifery Services who is responsible for the |
development of policies and procedures for services as |
provided by Department rules. |
An obstetrician, family practitioner, or certified |
|
nurse midwife shall attend each woman in labor from the |
time of admission through birth and throughout the |
immediate postpartum period. Attendance may be delegated |
only to another physician or certified nurse midwife. |
Additionally, a second staff person shall also be present |
at each birth who is licensed or certified in Illinois in a |
health-related field and under the supervision of the |
physician or certified nurse midwife in attendance, has |
specialized training in labor and delivery techniques and |
care of newborns, and receives planned and ongoing |
training as needed to perform assigned duties effectively. |
The maximum length of stay in a birth center shall be |
consistent with existing State laws allowing a 48-hour |
stay or appropriate post-delivery care, if discharged |
earlier than 48 hours. |
A birth center shall participate in the Illinois |
Perinatal System under the Developmental Disability |
Prevention Act. At a minimum, this participation shall |
require a birth center to establish a letter of agreement |
with a hospital designated under the Perinatal System. A |
hospital that operates or has a letter of agreement with a |
birth center shall include the birth center under its |
maternity service plan under the Hospital Licensing Act |
and shall include the birth center in the hospital's |
letter of agreement with its regional perinatal center. |
A birth center may not discriminate against any |
|
patient requiring treatment because of the source of |
payment for services, including Medicare and Medicaid |
recipients. |
No general anesthesia and no surgery may be performed |
at a birth center. The Department may by rule add birth |
center patient eligibility criteria or standards as it |
deems necessary. The Department shall by rule require each |
birth center to report the information which the |
Department shall make publicly available, which shall |
include, but is not limited to, the following: |
(i) Birth center ownership. |
(ii) Sources of payment for services. |
(iii) Utilization data involving patient length of |
stay. |
(iv) Admissions and discharges. |
(v) Complications. |
(vi) Transfers. |
(vii) Unusual incidents. |
(viii) Deaths. |
(ix) Any other publicly reported data required |
under the Illinois Consumer Guide. |
(x) Post-discharge patient status data where |
patients are followed for 14 days after discharge from |
the birth center to determine whether the mother or |
baby developed a complication or infection. |
Within 9 months after the effective date of this |
|
amendatory Act of the 95th General Assembly, the |
Department shall adopt rules that are developed with |
consideration of: the American Association of Birth |
Centers' Standards for Freestanding Birth Centers; the |
American Academy of Pediatrics/American College of |
Obstetricians and Gynecologists Guidelines for Perinatal |
Care; and the Regionalized Perinatal Health Care Code. |
The Department shall adopt other rules as necessary to |
implement the provisions of this amendatory Act of the |
95th General Assembly within 9 months after the effective |
date of this amendatory Act of the 95th General Assembly. |
(Source: P.A. 100-518, eff. 12-8-17 (see Section 5 of P.A. |
100-558 for the effective date of changes made by P.A. |
100-518).) |
Section 2-105. The Home Health, Home Services, and Home |
Nursing Agency Licensing Act is amended by changing Section |
2.11 and by adding Section 2.13 as follows: |
(210 ILCS 55/2.11) |
Sec. 2.11. "Home nursing agency" means an agency that |
provides services directly, or acts as a placement agency, in |
order to deliver skilled nursing and home health aide services |
to persons in their personal residences or a certified family |
health aide, as defined by the Certified Family Health Aide |
Program for Children and Adults Act, for individuals receiving |
|
or eligible to receive: (1) in-home shift nursing services |
under the Early and Periodic Screening, Diagnostic and |
Treatment requirement of Medicaid under 42 U.S.C. 1396d(r); or |
(2) in-home shift nursing services through the home and |
community-based services waiver program authorized under |
Section 1915(c) of the Social Security Act for persons who are |
medically fragile and technology dependent. A home nursing |
agency provides services that would require a licensed nurse |
to perform. Home health aide services are provided under the |
direction of a registered professional nurse or advanced |
practice registered nurse. A home nursing agency does not |
require licensure as a home health agency under this Act. |
"Home nursing agency" does not include an individually |
licensed nurse acting as a private contractor or a person that |
provides or procures temporary employment in health care |
facilities, as defined in the Nurse Agency Licensing Act. |
(Source: P.A. 100-513, eff. 1-1-18.) |
(210 ILCS 55/2.13 new) |
Sec. 2.13. Certified family health aide. A home nursing |
agency may provide initial and ongoing training for, and shall |
keep records in a manner designated by the Department |
regarding, the certified family health aide, as defined in the |
Certified Family Health Aide Program for Children and Adults |
Act, identified as the legally responsible caregiver or |
designated by the legally responsible caregiver for an |
|
individual who receives or is eligible to receive: |
(1) in-home shift nursing services under the Early and |
Periodic Screening, Diagnostic and Treatment requirement |
of Medicaid under 42 U.S.C. 1396d(r); or |
(2) in-home shift nursing through the home and |
community-based services waiver program authorized under |
Section 1915(c) of the Social Security Act for persons who |
are medically fragile and technology dependent. |
Section 2-110. The Hospital Licensing Act is amended by |
adding Section 17 as follows: |
(210 ILCS 85/17 new) |
Sec. 17. Certified family health aide. Hospitals managing |
the care of an individual to be discharged under the care of a |
home nursing agency may provide initial training, and shall |
document in a manner designated by the Department, for the |
certified family health aide, as defined in the Certified |
Family Health Aide Program for Children and Adults Act, |
identified as the legally responsible caregiver or designated |
by a legally responsible caregiver for an individual who |
receives or is eligible to receive: (1) in-home shift nursing |
services under the Early and Periodic Screening, Diagnostic |
and Treatment requirement of Medicaid under 42 U.S.C. 1396d(r) |
or (2) in-home shift nursing through the home and |
community-based services waiver program authorized under |
|
Section 1915(c) of the Social Security Act for persons who are |
medically fragile and technology dependent. |
Section 2-115. The Nurse Practice Act is amended by |
changing Section 50-15 as follows: |
(225 ILCS 65/50-15) (was 225 ILCS 65/5-15) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2028) |
Sec. 50-15. Policy; application of Act. |
(a) For the protection of life and the promotion of |
health, and the prevention of illness and communicable |
diseases, any person practicing or offering to practice |
advanced, professional, or practical nursing in Illinois shall |
submit evidence that he or she is qualified to practice, and |
shall be licensed as provided under this Act. No person shall |
practice or offer to practice advanced, professional, or |
practical nursing in Illinois or use any title, sign, card or |
device to indicate that such a person is practicing |
professional or practical nursing unless such person has been |
licensed under the provisions of this Act. |
(b) This Act does not prohibit the following: |
(1) The practice of nursing in Federal employment in |
the discharge of the employee's duties by a person who is |
employed by the United States government or any bureau, |
division or agency thereof and is a legally qualified and |
licensed nurse of another state or territory and not in |
|
conflict with Sections 50-50, 55-10, 60-10, and 70-5 of |
this Act. |
(2) Nursing that is included in the program of study |
by students enrolled in programs of nursing or in current |
nurse practice update courses approved by the Department. |
(3) The furnishing of nursing assistance in an |
emergency. |
(4) The practice of nursing by a nurse who holds an |
active license in another state when providing services to |
patients in Illinois during a bonafide emergency or in |
immediate preparation for or during interstate transit. |
(5) The incidental care of the sick by members of the |
family, domestic servants or housekeepers, or care of the |
sick where treatment is by prayer or spiritual means. |
(6) Persons from being employed as unlicensed |
assistive personnel in private homes, long term care |
facilities, nurseries, hospitals or other institutions. |
(7) The practice of practical nursing by one who is a |
licensed practical nurse under the laws of another U.S. |
jurisdiction and has applied in writing to the Department, |
in form and substance satisfactory to the Department, for |
a license as a licensed practical nurse and who is |
qualified to receive such license under this Act, until |
(i) the expiration of 6 months after the filing of such |
written application, (ii) the withdrawal of such |
application, or (iii) the denial of such application by |
|
the Department. |
(8) The practice of advanced practice registered |
nursing by one who is an advanced practice registered |
nurse under the laws of another United States jurisdiction |
or a foreign jurisdiction and has applied in writing to |
the Department, in form and substance satisfactory to the |
Department, for a license as an advanced practice |
registered nurse and who is qualified to receive such |
license under this Act, until (i) the expiration of 6 |
months after the filing of such written application, (ii) |
the withdrawal of such application, or (iii) the denial of |
such application by the Department. |
(9) The practice of professional nursing by one who is |
a registered professional nurse under the laws of another |
United States jurisdiction or a foreign jurisdiction and |
has applied in writing to the Department, in form and |
substance satisfactory to the Department, for a license as |
a registered professional nurse and who is qualified to |
receive such license under Section 55-10, until (1) the |
expiration of 6 months after the filing of such written |
application, (2) the withdrawal of such application, or |
(3) the denial of such application by the Department. |
(10) The practice of professional nursing that is |
included in a program of study by one who is a registered |
professional nurse under the laws of another United States |
jurisdiction or a foreign jurisdiction and who is enrolled |
|
in a graduate nursing education program or a program for |
the completion of a baccalaureate nursing degree in this |
State, which includes clinical supervision by faculty as |
determined by the educational institution offering the |
program and the health care organization where the |
practice of nursing occurs. |
(11) Any person licensed in this State under any other |
Act from engaging in the practice for which she or he is |
licensed. |
(12) Delegation to authorized direct care staff |
trained under Section 15.4 of the Mental Health and |
Developmental Disabilities Administrative Act consistent |
with the policies of the Department. |
(13) (Blank). |
(14) County correctional personnel from delivering |
prepackaged medication for self-administration to an |
individual detainee in a correctional facility. |
(15) The practice of relevant care by a legally |
responsible caregiver or a person designated by a legally |
responsible caregiver who has been certified as a |
certified family health aide, as defined in the Certified |
Family Health Aide Program for Children and Adults Act, to |
perform for a person who receives or is eligible to |
receive: (i) in-home shift nursing services under the |
Early and Periodic Screening, Diagnostic and Treatment |
requirement of Medicaid under 42 U.S.C. 1396d(r); or (ii) |
|
in-home shift nursing services through the home and |
community-based services waiver program authorized under |
Section 1915(c) of the Social Security Act for persons who |
are medically fragile and technology dependent. |
Nothing in this Act shall be construed to limit the |
delegation of tasks or duties by a physician, dentist, or |
podiatric physician to a licensed practical nurse, a |
registered professional nurse, or other persons. |
(Source: P.A. 100-513, eff. 1-1-18.) |
Section 2-120. The Illinois Public Aid Code is amended by |
adding Section 5-2.06b as follows: |
(305 ILCS 5/5-2.06b new) |
Sec. 5-2.06b. Certified family health aide program for |
children and adults. |
(a) The Department of Healthcare and Family Services may |
seek any federal approval from the Centers for Medicare and |
Medicaid Services necessary to reimburse a legally responsible |
caregiver or a person designated by a legally responsible |
caregiver, as defined in the Certified Family Health Aide |
Program for Children and Adults Act, who has achieved |
certification as a certified family health aide to perform or |
assist in performance of services for a person who receives or |
is eligible to receive: (1) in-home shift nursing services |
under the Early and Periodic Screening, Diagnostic and |
|
Treatment requirement of Medicaid under 42 U.S.C. 1396d(r); or |
(2) the home and community-based services waiver program |
authorized under Section 1915(c) of the Social Security Act |
for a designated person or designated persons who are |
medically fragile and technology dependent. Implementation of |
any and all parts of the certified family health aide program |
is subject to the Department of Healthcare and Family Services |
receiving all necessary federal approval. If the Department of |
Healthcare and Family Services receives all necessary federal |
approval the Department may adopt rules in consultation with |
the Department of Public Health to specify the federally |
approved services eligible for reimbursement under the |
certified family health aide certification and to adopt any |
other policies or procedures necessary to implement this |
Section. |
(b) The Department of Healthcare and Family Services, in |
partnership with the Department of Public Health, may consult |
with stakeholders for expertise regarding implementation of |
the certified family health aide program. Stakeholders may |
include, the University of Illinois at Chicago, Division of |
Specialized Care for Children, home nurse agencies, a |
physician with medical experience with the population being |
served by the program, children's hospitals, a legally |
responsible caregiver as described in item (3) of Section 10 |
of the Certified Family Health Aide Program for Children and |
Adults Act, and a Children's Community-Based Health Care |
|
Clinic. |
(c) Subject to federal approval, the Department of |
Healthcare and Family Services may adopt rules to disregard |
income earned by a legally responsible caregiver in the |
performance of or assisting in the performance of services for |
a person receiving or eligible to receive: (1) in-home shift |
nursing services under the Early and Periodic Screening, |
Diagnostic and Treatment requirement of Medicaid under 42 |
U.S.C. 1396d(r); or (2) the home and community-based services |
waiver program authorized under Section 1915(c) of the Social |
Security Act for a designated person or designated persons who |
are medically fragile and technology dependent, when |
determining the child's eligibility for medical assistance |
under the Medical Assistance-No Grant (MANG (AABD)) Income |
Standard. |
ARTICLE 5. |
Section 5-5. The Illinois Public Aid Code is amended by |
adding Sections 5-18.6 and 5-18.7 as follows: |
(305 ILCS 5/5-18.6 new) |
Sec. 5-18.6. Doula policies; hospitals and birthing |
centers. |
(a) Recognizing the importance that doulas provide in the |
support and advocacy for pregnant persons, within 6 months |
|
after this amendatory Act of the 104th General Assembly, all |
hospitals with licensed obstetric beds and birthing centers |
shall adopt and maintain written policies and procedures to |
permit a patient enrolled in the medical assistance program to |
have an Illinois Medicaid certified and enrolled doula of the |
patient's choice accompany the patient within the facility's |
premises for the purposes of providing support before, during, |
and after labor and childbirth. |
(1) An Illinois Medicaid certified and enrolled doula |
shall not be counted as a support person or against the |
guest quota before, during, or after childbirth. |
(2) Each applicable facility shall post a summary of |
the facility's policies and procedures adopted in |
accordance with this subsection on its website, including |
contact information to facilitate communication between |
the facility and Illinois Medicaid enrolled doulas and |
doula organizations. |
(b) Nothing in this Section shall be construed to provide |
a doula with access to a patient when that access is |
inconsistent with generally accepted medical standards or |
practices. |
(c) Nothing in this Section is intended to expand or limit |
the malpractice liability of a hospital beyond the limits |
existing in current Illinois statutory and common law; |
however, no hospital shall be liable for any act or omission |
resulting from the provision of services by any doula solely |
|
on the basis that the hospital permitted an Illinois Medicaid |
certified and enrolled doula of the patient's choice to |
accompany the patient within the facility's premises for the |
purposes of providing support before, during, and after labor |
and childbirth. The hospital and Illinois Medicaid certified |
and enrolled doula providing care are responsible for their |
own acts and omissions. |
(d) At the request of the hospital or birthing facility, |
Illinois Medicaid enrolled doulas must provide written |
acknowledgment of Illinois Medicaid doula certification and |
enrollment in the medical assistance program. |
(305 ILCS 5/5-18.7 new) |
Sec. 5-18.7. Standing recommendations. The Department of |
Healthcare and Family Services and the Department of Public |
Health may establish standing recommendations to meet Centers |
for Medicare and Medicaid Services requirements and ensure |
access to preventive services, including Medicaid-covered |
maternal and reproductive health supports and services, such |
as, but not limited to, doulas, lactation consultants, home |
visitors, community health workers, and 1115 Waiver services. |
No employee of the Department of Healthcare and Family |
Services or the Department of Public Health issuing a standing |
recommendation in accordance with this Section shall, as a |
result of the employee's acts or omissions in issuing the |
standing recommendation, be subject to (i) any disciplinary or |
|
other adverse action under the Medical Practice Act of 1987, |
(ii) any civil liability, or (iii) any criminal liability. |
ARTICLE 10. |
Section 10-5. The Illinois Public Aid Code is amended by |
changing Section 5-2 as follows: |
(305 ILCS 5/5-2) (from Ch. 23, par. 5-2) |
Sec. 5-2. Classes of persons eligible. Medical assistance |
under this Article shall be available to any of the following |
classes of persons in respect to whom a plan for coverage has |
been submitted to the Governor by the Illinois Department and |
approved by him. If changes made in this Section 5-2 require |
federal approval, they shall not take effect until such |
approval has been received: |
1. Recipients of basic maintenance grants under |
Articles III and IV. |
2. Beginning January 1, 2014, persons otherwise |
eligible for basic maintenance under Article III, |
excluding any eligibility requirements that are |
inconsistent with any federal law or federal regulation, |
as interpreted by the U.S. Department of Health and Human |
Services, but who fail to qualify thereunder on the basis |
of need, and who have insufficient income and resources to |
meet the costs of necessary medical care, including, but |
|
not limited to, the following: |
(a) All persons otherwise eligible for basic |
maintenance under Article III but who fail to qualify |
under that Article on the basis of need and who meet |
either of the following requirements: |
(i) their income, as determined by the |
Illinois Department in accordance with any federal |
requirements, is equal to or less than 100% of the |
federal poverty level; or |
(ii) their income, after the deduction of |
costs incurred for medical care and for other |
types of remedial care, is equal to or less than |
100% of the federal poverty level. |
(b) (Blank). |
3. (Blank). |
4. Persons not eligible under any of the preceding |
paragraphs who fall sick, are injured, or die, not having |
sufficient money, property or other resources to meet the |
costs of necessary medical care or funeral and burial |
expenses. |
5.(a) Beginning January 1, 2020, individuals during |
pregnancy and during the 12-month period beginning on the |
last day of the pregnancy, together with their infants, |
whose income is at or below 200% of the federal poverty |
level. Until September 30, 2019, or sooner if the |
maintenance of effort requirements under the Patient |
|
Protection and Affordable Care Act are eliminated or may |
be waived before then, individuals during pregnancy and |
during the 12-month period beginning on the last day of |
the pregnancy, whose countable monthly income, after the |
deduction of costs incurred for medical care and for other |
types of remedial care as specified in administrative |
rule, is equal to or less than the Medical Assistance-No |
Grant(C) (MANG(C)) Income Standard in effect on April 1, |
2013 as set forth in administrative rule. |
(b) The plan for coverage shall provide ambulatory |
prenatal care to pregnant individuals during a presumptive |
eligibility period and establish an income eligibility |
standard that is equal to 200% of the federal poverty |
level, provided that costs incurred for medical care are |
not taken into account in determining such income |
eligibility. |
(c) The Illinois Department may conduct a |
demonstration in at least one county that will provide |
medical assistance to pregnant individuals together with |
their infants and children up to one year of age, where the |
income eligibility standard is set up to 185% of the |
nonfarm income official poverty line, as defined by the |
federal Office of Management and Budget. The Illinois |
Department shall seek and obtain necessary authorization |
provided under federal law to implement such a |
demonstration. Such demonstration may establish resource |
|
standards that are not more restrictive than those |
established under Article IV of this Code. |
6. (a) Subject to federal approval, children younger |
than age 19 when countable income is at or below 313% of |
the federal poverty level, as determined by the Department |
and in accordance with all applicable federal |
requirements. The Department is authorized to adopt |
emergency rules to implement the changes made to this |
paragraph by Public Act 102-43. Until September 30, 2019, |
or sooner if the maintenance of effort requirements under |
the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act are |
eliminated or may be waived before then, children younger |
than age 19 whose countable monthly income, after the |
deduction of costs incurred for medical care and for other |
types of remedial care as specified in administrative |
rule, is equal to or less than the Medical Assistance-No |
Grant(C) (MANG(C)) Income Standard in effect on April 1, |
2013 as set forth in administrative rule. |
(b) Children and youth who are under temporary custody |
or guardianship of the Department of Children and Family |
Services or who receive financial assistance in support of |
an adoption or guardianship placement from the Department |
of Children and Family Services. |
7. (Blank). |
8. As required under federal law, persons who are |
eligible for Transitional Medical Assistance as a result |
|
of an increase in earnings or child or spousal support |
received. The plan for coverage for this class of persons |
shall: |
(a) extend the medical assistance coverage to the |
extent required by federal law; and |
(b) offer persons who have initially received 6 |
months of the coverage provided in paragraph (a) |
above, the option of receiving an additional 6 months |
of coverage, subject to the following: |
(i) such coverage shall be pursuant to |
provisions of the federal Social Security Act; |
(ii) such coverage shall include all services |
covered under Illinois' State Medicaid Plan; |
(iii) no premium shall be charged for such |
coverage; and |
(iv) such coverage shall be suspended in the |
event of a person's failure without good cause to |
file in a timely fashion reports required for this |
coverage under the Social Security Act and |
coverage shall be reinstated upon the filing of |
such reports if the person remains otherwise |
eligible. |
9. Persons with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome |
(AIDS) or with AIDS-related conditions with respect to |
whom there has been a determination that but for home or |
community-based services such individuals would require |
|
the level of care provided in an inpatient hospital, |
skilled nursing facility or intermediate care facility the |
cost of which is reimbursed under this Article. Assistance |
shall be provided to such persons to the maximum extent |
permitted under Title XIX of the Federal Social Security |
Act. |
10. Participants in the long-term care insurance |
partnership program established under the Illinois |
Long-Term Care Partnership Program Act who meet the |
qualifications for protection of resources described in |
Section 15 of that Act. |
11. Persons with disabilities who are employed and |
eligible for Medicaid, pursuant to Section |
1902(a)(10)(A)(ii)(xv) of the Social Security Act, and, |
subject to federal approval, persons with a medically |
improved disability who are employed and eligible for |
Medicaid pursuant to Section 1902(a)(10)(A)(ii)(xvi) of |
the Social Security Act, as provided by the Illinois |
Department by rule. In establishing eligibility standards |
under this paragraph 11, the Department shall, subject to |
federal approval: |
(a) set the income eligibility standard at not |
lower than 350% of the federal poverty level; |
(b) exempt retirement accounts that the person |
cannot access without penalty before the age of 59 |
1/2, and medical savings accounts established pursuant |
|
to 26 U.S.C. 220; |
(c) allow non-exempt assets up to $25,000 as to |
those assets accumulated during periods of eligibility |
under this paragraph 11; and |
(d) continue to apply subparagraphs (b) and (c) in |
determining the eligibility of the person under this |
Article even if the person loses eligibility under |
this paragraph 11. |
12. Subject to federal approval, persons who are |
eligible for medical assistance coverage under applicable |
provisions of the federal Social Security Act and the |
federal Breast and Cervical Cancer Prevention and |
Treatment Act of 2000. Those eligible persons are defined |
to include, but not be limited to, the following persons: |
(1) persons who have been screened for breast or |
cervical cancer under the U.S. Centers for Disease |
Control and Prevention Breast and Cervical Cancer |
Program established under Title XV of the federal |
Public Health Service Act in accordance with the |
requirements of Section 1504 of that Act as |
administered by the Illinois Department of Public |
Health; and |
(2) persons whose screenings under the above |
program were funded in whole or in part by funds |
appropriated to the Illinois Department of Public |
Health for breast or cervical cancer screening. |
|
"Medical assistance" under this paragraph 12 shall be |
identical to the benefits provided under the State's |
approved plan under Title XIX of the Social Security Act. |
The Department must request federal approval of the |
coverage under this paragraph 12 within 30 days after July |
3, 2001 (the effective date of Public Act 92-47). |
In addition to the persons who are eligible for |
medical assistance pursuant to subparagraphs (1) and (2) |
of this paragraph 12, and to be paid from funds |
appropriated to the Department for its medical programs, |
any uninsured person as defined by the Department in rules |
residing in Illinois who is younger than 65 years of age, |
who has been screened for breast and cervical cancer in |
accordance with standards and procedures adopted by the |
Department of Public Health for screening, and who is |
referred to the Department by the Department of Public |
Health as being in need of treatment for breast or |
cervical cancer is eligible for medical assistance |
benefits that are consistent with the benefits provided to |
those persons described in subparagraphs (1) and (2). |
Medical assistance coverage for the persons who are |
eligible under the preceding sentence is not dependent on |
federal approval, but federal moneys may be used to pay |
for services provided under that coverage upon federal |
approval. |
13. Subject to appropriation and to federal approval, |
|
persons living with HIV/AIDS who are not otherwise |
eligible under this Article and who qualify for services |
covered under Section 5-5.04 as provided by the Illinois |
Department by rule. |
14. Subject to the availability of funds for this |
purpose, the Department may provide coverage under this |
Article to persons who |
(a) reside in Illinois; who |
(b) are not eligible under any of the preceding |
paragraphs of this Section; and who |
(c) meet the income guidelines of paragraph 2(a) |
of this Section; and |
(d) meet one of the following conditions: |
(i) have filed an application for asylum |
status under 8 U.S.C. 1158 that is pending with |
the appropriate federal agency or have a pending |
appeal of such an application pending before the |
federal Department of Homeland Security or on |
appeal before a court of competent jurisdiction |
and are represented either by counsel or by an |
advocate accredited by the appropriate federal |
agency Department of Homeland Security and |
employed by a not-for-profit organization in |
regard to that application or appeal; , or |
(ii) are receiving services through a |
federally funded torture treatment center; |
|
(iii) have filed a pending application for T |
nonimmigrant status pursuant to 8 U.S.C. |
1101(a)(15)(T); |
(iv) have filed a pending application for U |
nonimmigrant status pursuant to 8 U.S.C. |
1101(a)(15)(U); or |
(v) have filed as a derivative family member |
or are included in the application for item (i), |
(iii), or (iv) as provided by Department rule. |
Medical coverage under this paragraph 14 may be |
provided for up to 24 continuous months from the initial |
eligibility date so long as an individual continues to |
satisfy the criteria of this paragraph 14. If an |
individual has an application or appeal pending regarding |
an application for asylum, T nonimmigrant status, or U |
nonimmigrant status before the appropriate federal agency |
for such applications or appeals Department of Homeland |
Security, eligibility under this paragraph 14 may be |
extended until a final decision is rendered with respect |
to the application or appeal, except that an individual |
who is approved for a U visa continues to qualify for |
medical coverage under this paragraph 14 as long as the |
individual meets all other eligibility criteria on the |
appeal. The Department shall may adopt rules governing the |
implementation of this paragraph 14. |
15. Family Care Eligibility. |
|
(a) On and after July 1, 2012, a parent or other |
caretaker relative who is 19 years of age or older when |
countable income is at or below 133% of the federal |
poverty level. A person may not spend down to become |
eligible under this paragraph 15. |
(b) Eligibility shall be reviewed annually. |
(c) (Blank). |
(d) (Blank). |
(e) (Blank). |
(f) (Blank). |
(g) (Blank). |
(h) (Blank). |
(i) Following termination of an individual's |
coverage under this paragraph 15, the individual must |
be determined eligible before the person can be |
re-enrolled. |
16. Subject to appropriation, uninsured persons who |
are not otherwise eligible under this Section who have |
been certified and referred by the Department of Public |
Health as having been screened and found to need |
diagnostic evaluation or treatment, or both diagnostic |
evaluation and treatment, for prostate or testicular |
cancer. For the purposes of this paragraph 16, uninsured |
persons are those who do not have creditable coverage, as |
defined under the Health Insurance Portability and |
Accountability Act, or have otherwise exhausted any |
|
insurance benefits they may have had, for prostate or |
testicular cancer diagnostic evaluation or treatment, or |
both diagnostic evaluation and treatment. To be eligible, |
a person must furnish a Social Security number. A person's |
assets are exempt from consideration in determining |
eligibility under this paragraph 16. Such persons shall be |
eligible for medical assistance under this paragraph 16 |
for so long as they need treatment for the cancer. A person |
shall be considered to need treatment if, in the opinion |
of the person's treating physician, the person requires |
therapy directed toward cure or palliation of prostate or |
testicular cancer, including recurrent metastatic cancer |
that is a known or presumed complication of prostate or |
testicular cancer and complications resulting from the |
treatment modalities themselves. Persons who require only |
routine monitoring services are not considered to need |
treatment. "Medical assistance" under this paragraph 16 |
shall be identical to the benefits provided under the |
State's approved plan under Title XIX of the Social |
Security Act. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, |
the Department (i) does not have a claim against the |
estate of a deceased recipient of services under this |
paragraph 16 and (ii) does not have a lien against any |
homestead property or other legal or equitable real |
property interest owned by a recipient of services under |
this paragraph 16. |
|
17. Persons who, pursuant to a waiver approved by the |
Secretary of the U.S. Department of Health and Human |
Services, are eligible for medical assistance under Title |
XIX or XXI of the federal Social Security Act. |
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Code and |
consistent with the terms of the approved waiver, the |
Illinois Department, may by rule: |
(a) Limit the geographic areas in which the waiver |
program operates. |
(b) Determine the scope, quantity, duration, and |
quality, and the rate and method of reimbursement, of |
the medical services to be provided, which may differ |
from those for other classes of persons eligible for |
assistance under this Article. |
(c) Restrict the persons' freedom in choice of |
providers. |
18. Beginning January 1, 2014, persons aged 19 or |
older, but younger than 65, who are not otherwise eligible |
for medical assistance under this Section 5-2, who qualify |
for medical assistance pursuant to 42 U.S.C. |
1396a(a)(10)(A)(i)(VIII) and applicable federal |
regulations, and who have income at or below 133% of the |
federal poverty level plus 5% for the applicable family |
size as determined pursuant to 42 U.S.C. 1396a(e)(14) and |
applicable federal regulations. Persons eligible for |
medical assistance under this paragraph 18 shall receive |
|
coverage for the Health Benefits Service Package as that |
term is defined in subsection (m) of Section 5-1.1 of this |
Code. If Illinois' federal medical assistance percentage |
(FMAP) is reduced below 90% for persons eligible for |
medical assistance under this paragraph 18, eligibility |
under this paragraph 18 shall cease no later than the end |
of the third month following the month in which the |
reduction in FMAP takes effect. |
19. Beginning January 1, 2014, as required under 42 |
U.S.C. 1396a(a)(10)(A)(i)(IX), persons older than age 18 |
and younger than age 26 who are not otherwise eligible for |
medical assistance under paragraphs (1) through (17) of |
this Section who (i) were in foster care under the |
responsibility of the State on the date of attaining age |
18 or on the date of attaining age 21 when a court has |
continued wardship for good cause as provided in Section |
2-31 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 and (ii) received |
medical assistance under the Illinois Title XIX State Plan |
or waiver of such plan while in foster care. |
20. (Blank). Beginning January 1, 2018, persons who |
are foreign-born victims of human trafficking, torture, or |
other serious crimes as defined in Section 2-19 of this |
Code and their derivative family members if such persons: |
(i) reside in Illinois; (ii) are not eligible under any of |
the preceding paragraphs; (iii) meet the income guidelines |
of subparagraph (a) of paragraph 2; and (iv) meet the |
|
nonfinancial eligibility requirements of Sections 16-2, |
16-3, and 16-5 of this Code. The Department may extend |
medical assistance for persons who are foreign-born |
victims of human trafficking, torture, or other serious |
crimes whose medical assistance would be terminated |
pursuant to subsection (b) of Section 16-5 if the |
Department determines that the person, during the year of |
initial eligibility (1) experienced a health crisis, (2) |
has been unable, after reasonable attempts, to obtain |
necessary information from a third party, or (3) has other |
extenuating circumstances that prevented the person from |
completing his or her application for status. The |
Department may adopt any rules necessary to implement the |
provisions of this paragraph. |
21. Persons who are not otherwise eligible for medical |
assistance under this Section who may qualify for medical |
assistance pursuant to 42 U.S.C. |
1396a(a)(10)(A)(ii)(XXIII) and 42 U.S.C. 1396(ss) for the |
duration of any federal or State declared emergency due to |
COVID-19. Medical assistance to persons eligible for |
medical assistance solely pursuant to this paragraph 21 |
shall be limited to any in vitro diagnostic product (and |
the administration of such product) described in 42 U.S.C. |
1396d(a)(3)(B) on or after March 18, 2020, any visit |
described in 42 U.S.C. 1396o(a)(2)(G), or any other |
medical assistance that may be federally authorized for |
|
this class of persons. The Department may also cover |
treatment of COVID-19 for this class of persons, or any |
similar category of uninsured individuals, to the extent |
authorized under a federally approved 1115 Waiver or other |
federal authority. Notwithstanding the provisions of |
Section 1-11 of this Code, due to the nature of the |
COVID-19 public health emergency, the Department may cover |
and provide the medical assistance described in this |
paragraph 21 to noncitizens who would otherwise meet the |
eligibility requirements for the class of persons |
described in this paragraph 21 for the duration of the |
State emergency period. |
In implementing the provisions of Public Act 96-20, the |
Department is authorized to adopt only those rules necessary, |
including emergency rules. Nothing in Public Act 96-20 permits |
the Department to adopt rules or issue a decision that expands |
eligibility for the FamilyCare Program to a person whose |
income exceeds 185% of the Federal Poverty Level as determined |
from time to time by the U.S. Department of Health and Human |
Services, unless the Department is provided with express |
statutory authority. |
The eligibility of any such person for medical assistance |
under this Article is not affected by the payment of any grant |
under the Senior Citizens and Persons with Disabilities |
Property Tax Relief Act or any distributions or items of |
income described under subparagraph (X) of paragraph (2) of |
|
subsection (a) of Section 203 of the Illinois Income Tax Act. |
The Department shall by rule establish the amounts of |
assets to be disregarded in determining eligibility for |
medical assistance, which shall at a minimum equal the amounts |
to be disregarded under the Federal Supplemental Security |
Income Program. The amount of assets of a single person to be |
disregarded shall not be less than $2,000, and the amount of |
assets of a married couple to be disregarded shall not be less |
than $3,000. |
To the extent permitted under federal law, any person |
found guilty of a second violation of Article VIIIA shall be |
ineligible for medical assistance under this Article, as |
provided in Section 8A-8. |
The eligibility of any person for medical assistance under |
this Article shall not be affected by the receipt by the person |
of donations or benefits from fundraisers held for the person |
in cases of serious illness, as long as neither the person nor |
members of the person's family have actual control over the |
donations or benefits or the disbursement of the donations or |
benefits. |
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Code, if the |
United States Supreme Court holds Title II, Subtitle A, |
Section 2001(a) of Public Law 111-148 to be unconstitutional, |
or if a holding of Public Law 111-148 makes Medicaid |
eligibility allowed under Section 2001(a) inoperable, the |
State or a unit of local government shall be prohibited from |
|
enrolling individuals in the Medical Assistance Program as the |
result of federal approval of a State Medicaid waiver on or |
after June 14, 2012 (the effective date of Public Act 97-687), |
and any individuals enrolled in the Medical Assistance Program |
pursuant to eligibility permitted as a result of such a State |
Medicaid waiver shall become immediately ineligible. |
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Code, if an |
Act of Congress that becomes a Public Law eliminates Section |
2001(a) of Public Law 111-148, the State or a unit of local |
government shall be prohibited from enrolling individuals in |
the Medical Assistance Program as the result of federal |
approval of a State Medicaid waiver on or after June 14, 2012 |
(the effective date of Public Act 97-687), and any individuals |
enrolled in the Medical Assistance Program pursuant to |
eligibility permitted as a result of such a State Medicaid |
waiver shall become immediately ineligible. |
Effective October 1, 2013, the determination of |
eligibility of persons who qualify under paragraphs 5, 6, 8, |
15, 17, and 18 of this Section shall comply with the |
requirements of 42 U.S.C. 1396a(e)(14) and applicable federal |
regulations. |
The Department of Healthcare and Family Services, the |
Department of Human Services, and the Illinois health |
insurance marketplace shall work cooperatively to assist |
persons who would otherwise lose health benefits as a result |
of changes made under Public Act 98-104 to transition to other |
|
health insurance coverage. |
(Source: P.A. 101-10, eff. 6-5-19; 101-649, eff. 7-7-20; |
102-43, eff. 7-6-21; 102-558, eff. 8-20-21; 102-665, eff. |
10-8-21; 102-813, eff. 5-13-22.) |
ARTICLE 15. |
Section 15-5. The Illinois Public Aid Code is amended by |
changing Section 5-5.09a as follows: |
(305 ILCS 5/5-5.09a new) |
Sec. 5-5.09a. Screening for tardive dyskinesia. |
(a) Notwithstanding any other provisions of law, the |
Department of Healthcare and Family Services shall develop, in |
collaboration with the Department of Human Services and the |
Department of Public Health, recommended screening guidelines |
for tardive dyskinesia for providers serving patients |
prescribed antipsychotic medications under the medical |
assistance program in State-operated residential facilities |
and community-based settings. |
(b) The recommended screening guidelines shall be based on |
current, nationally accepted, evidence-based recommendations |
for the assessment and treatment of tardive dyskinesia, and |
shall include structured assessment tools, which can be both |
quantitative and qualitative. |
(c) The Department of Healthcare and Family Services and |
|
the Department of Human Services, in collaboration with the |
Department of Public Health, shall develop communication |
strategies and educational materials to be offered to health |
care providers regarding tardive dyskinesia, the recommended |
screening guidelines, and any subsequent revisions. In |
developing the information to be disseminated under this |
Section, the Departments of Healthcare and Family Services, |
Human Services, and Public Health shall consult with a |
statewide association representing physicians licensed to |
practice medicine in all its branches and a statewide |
association representing psychiatrists. |
ARTICLE 20. |
Section 20-5. The Illinois Public Aid Code is amended by |
changing Section 5-5.12f as follows: |
(305 ILCS 5/5-5.12f) |
Sec. 5-5.12f. Prescription drugs for mental illness; no |
utilization or prior approval mandates. |
(a) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Code to |
the contrary, except as otherwise provided in subsection (b), |
for the purpose of removing barriers to the timely treatment |
of serious mental illnesses, prior authorization mandates and |
utilization management controls shall not be imposed under the |
fee-for-service and managed care medical assistance programs |
|
on any FDA-approved prescription drug that is recognized by a |
generally accepted standard medical reference as effective in |
the treatment of conditions specified in the most recent |
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders |
published by the American Psychiatric Association if a |
preferred or non-preferred drug is prescribed to an adult |
patient to treat serious mental illness and one of the |
following applies: |
(1) the patient has changed providers, including, but |
not limited to, a change from an inpatient to an |
outpatient provider, and is stable on the drug that has |
been previously prescribed, and received prior |
authorization, if required; |
(2) the patient has changed Medical assistance program |
or managed care plan insurance coverage and is stable on |
the drug that has been previously prescribed and received |
prior authorization under the previous source of coverage; |
or |
(3) subject to federal law on maximum dosage limits |
and safety edits adopted by the Department's Drug and |
Therapeutics Board, including those safety edits and |
limits needed to comply with federal requirements |
contained in 42 CFR 456.703, the patient has previously |
been prescribed and obtained prior authorization for the |
drug and the prescription modifies the dosage, dosage |
frequency, or both, of the drug as part of the same |
|
treatment for which the drug was previously prescribed. |
(b) The following safety edits shall be permitted for |
prescription drugs covered under this Section: |
(1) clinically appropriate drug utilization review |
(DUR) edits, including, but not limited to, drug-to-drug, |
drug-age, and drug-dose; |
(2) generic drug substitution if a generic drug is |
available for the prescribed medication in the same dosage |
and formulation; and |
(3) any utilization management control that is |
necessary for the Department to comply with any current |
consent decrees or federal waivers. |
(c) As used in this Section, "serious mental illness" |
means any one or more of the following diagnoses and |
International Classification of Diseases, Tenth Revision, |
Clinical Modification (ICD-10-CM) codes listed by the |
Department of Human Services' Division of Mental Health, as |
amended, on its official website: |
(1) Delusional Disorder (F22) |
(2) Brief Psychotic Disorder (F23) |
(3) Schizophreniform Disorder (F20.81) |
(4) Schizophrenia (F20.9) |
(5) Schizoaffective Disorder (F25.x) |
(6) Catatonia Associated with Another Mental Disorder |
(Catatonia Specifier) (F06.1) |
(7) Other Specified Schizophrenia Spectrum and Other |
|
Psychotic Disorder (F28) |
(8) Unspecified Schizophrenia Spectrum and Other |
Psychotic Disorder (F29) |
(9) Bipolar I Disorder (F31.xx) |
(10) Bipolar II Disorder (F31.81) |
(11) Cyclothymic Disorder (F34.0) |
(12) Unspecified Bipolar and Related Disorder (F31.9) |
(13) Disruptive Mood Dysregulation Disorder (F34.8) |
(14) Major Depressive Disorder Single episode (F32.xx) |
(15) Major Depressive Disorder, Recurrent episode |
(F33.xx) |
(16) Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (F42) |
(17) Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (F43.10) |
(18) Anorexia Nervosa (F50.0x) |
(19) Bulimia Nervosa (F50.2) |
(20) Postpartum Depression (F53.0) |
(21) Puerperal Psychosis (F53.1) |
(22) Factitious Disorder Imposed on Another (F68.A) |
(d) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, nothing in |
this Section shall not be construed to conflict with Section |
1927(a)(1) and (b)(1)(A) of the federal Social Security Act |
and any implementing regulations and agreements. |
(e) The Department shall publish a report semi-annually on |
its website on compliance with the conditions of this Section |
by the fee-for-service program and managed care organizations |
beginning with dates of service on and after July 1, 2025. |
|
These reports shall be due 12 months after the end of the |
period to be reported. These reports shall include: |
(1) The number of clinically denied prescriptions |
summarized by each of the allowed categories specified in |
subsection (b). This paragraph shall include the number of |
prior authorization denials. |
(2) The number of clinically denied prescriptions as |
summarized by each of the nonallowed categories specified |
in subsection (a), categorized by denial reason. |
(3) The number of prior authorizations of |
prescriptions contrary to the prohibition described in |
subsection (a). |
(4) The number of complaints filed concerning denials |
for prescriptions, which meet the conditions specified in |
subsection (a). |
(5) The number of approved and paid prescriptions |
described in subsection (a) and the potential net cost to |
the State. |
(6) The number of persons enrolled in the medical |
assistance program using emergency room services based on |
categories specified in subsection (c) as the primary |
diagnosis for the emergency room visit. |
(7) The number of persons admitted into a hospital and |
the number of hospital readmissions, based on categories |
specified in subsection (c) as the primary diagnosis for |
the hospital admission or readmission. |
|
As used in this Section, "net cost" means the difference |
in total ingredient cost due to changes in product mix plus |
total loss in aggregate rebate revenue based on product mix |
realized in Fiscal Year 2025. Nothing in this Section shall |
require the Department to disclose information that is exempt |
from disclosure under paragraph (g) of subsection (1) of |
Section 7 of the Freedom of Information Act. |
For purposes of this Section, a hospital readmission |
occurs when a patient is discharged from a hospital and then |
admitted into the same or another hospital within 30 days of |
discharge for the same primary diagnosis. |
(Source: P.A. 103-593, eff. 6-7-24.) |
ARTICLE 30. |
Section 30-5. The Illinois Public Aid Code is amended by |
changing Section 5-2b as follows: |
(305 ILCS 5/5-2b) |
Sec. 5-2b. Medically fragile and technology dependent |
children eligibility and program; provider reimbursement |
rates. |
(a) Notwithstanding any other provision of law except as |
provided in Section 5-30a, on and after September 1, 2012, |
subject to federal approval, medical assistance under this |
Article shall be available to children who qualify as persons |
|
with a disability, as defined under the federal Supplemental |
Security Income program and who are medically fragile and |
technology dependent. The program shall allow eligible |
children to receive the medical assistance provided under this |
Article in the community and must maximize, to the fullest |
extent permissible under federal law, federal reimbursement |
and family cost-sharing, including co-pays, premiums, or any |
other family contributions, except that the Department shall |
be permitted to incentivize the utilization of selected |
services through the use of cost-sharing adjustments. The |
Department shall establish the policies, procedures, |
standards, services, and criteria for this program by rule. |
(b) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Code, |
subject to federal approval, on and after January 1, 2024, the |
reimbursement rates for nursing paid through Nursing and |
Personal Care Services for non-waiver customers and to |
providers of private duty nursing services for children |
eligible for medical assistance under this Section shall be |
20% higher than the reimbursement rates in effect for nursing |
services on December 31, 2023. |
(c) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Code, |
subject to federal approval, on and after January 1, 2025, the |
reimbursement rates for nursing paid through Nursing and |
Personal Care Services for non-waiver customers and to |
providers of private duty nursing services for children |
eligible for medical assistance under this Section shall be 7% |
|
higher than the reimbursement rates in effect for nursing |
services on December 31, 2024. |
(d) The Department shall conduct an evaluation to study |
the program, including service provision and design, waiver |
operations, and methodologies and policies for setting rates |
and reimbursements for services and supports that are provided |
to (i) individuals under the age of 21 who are approved by the |
Department for in-home shift nursing services and (ii) |
individuals over the age of 21 who are receiving in-home shift |
nursing services under the Home and Community-Based Services |
Waiver for Medically Fragile and Technology Dependent |
Children, including, but not limited to, in-home shift nursing |
services and related home and community-based services and |
supports, made to nursing agencies for such services. As |
needed, the Department shall consult with Department-enrolled |
providers of in-home shift nursing services to ensure accurate |
information is considered in the evaluation, and the |
Department may, to the extent it deems necessary and |
appropriate, contract with an outside entity to assist or |
provide further analysis in the support of the evaluation. |
(Source: P.A. 103-102, eff. 1-1-24; 103-593, eff. 6-7-24.) |
ARTICLE 35. |
Section 35-5. The Illinois Public Aid Code is amended by |
adding Section 5-65 as follows: |
|
(305 ILCS 5/5-65 new) |
Sec. 5-65. Reimbursement rates for long-term |
electrocardiogram monitoring. |
(a) As used in this Section, "long-term ambulatory |
electrocardiogram monitoring services" means the provision of |
external cardiac patch monitoring devices to patients to wear |
for 48 hours or greater and the interpretation of data |
gathered by such devices to detect heart arrhythmias that can |
lead to stroke, cardiac arrest, or other comorbidities or |
medical complications if not correctly diagnosed. |
(b) Subject to federal approval, for dates of service on |
and after January 1, 2026, the Department shall reimburse |
diagnostic testing facilities that provide long-term |
ambulatory electrocardiogram monitoring services at a rate not |
less than 80% of the Medicare Physician Fee Schedule rate in |
effect for such services on the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of the 104th General Assembly. |
ARTICLE 40. |
Section 40-5. The Illinois Public Aid Code is amended by |
changing Section 5-5 as follows: |
(305 ILCS 5/5-5) |
(Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 103-808) |
|
Sec. 5-5. Medical services. The Illinois Department, by |
rule, shall determine the quantity and quality of and the rate |
of reimbursement for the medical assistance for which payment |
will be authorized, and the medical services to be provided, |
which may include all or part of the following: (1) inpatient |
hospital services; (2) outpatient hospital services; (3) other |
laboratory and X-ray services; (4) skilled nursing home |
services; (5) physicians' services whether furnished in the |
office, the patient's home, a hospital, a skilled nursing |
home, or elsewhere; (6) medical care, or any other type of |
remedial care furnished by licensed practitioners; (7) home |
health care services; (8) private duty nursing service; (9) |
clinic services; (10) dental services, including prevention |
and treatment of periodontal disease and dental caries disease |
for pregnant individuals, provided by an individual licensed |
to practice dentistry or dental surgery; for purposes of this |
item (10), "dental services" means diagnostic, preventive, or |
corrective procedures provided by or under the supervision of |
a dentist in the practice of his or her profession; (11) |
physical therapy and related services; (12) prescribed drugs, |
dentures, and prosthetic devices; and eyeglasses prescribed by |
a physician skilled in the diseases of the eye, or by an |
optometrist, whichever the person may select; (13) other |
diagnostic, screening, preventive, and rehabilitative |
services, including to ensure that the individual's need for |
intervention or treatment of mental disorders or substance use |
|
disorders or co-occurring mental health and substance use |
disorders is determined using a uniform screening, assessment, |
and evaluation process inclusive of criteria, for children and |
adults; for purposes of this item (13), a uniform screening, |
assessment, and evaluation process refers to a process that |
includes an appropriate evaluation and, as warranted, a |
referral; "uniform" does not mean the use of a singular |
instrument, tool, or process that all must utilize; (14) |
transportation and such other expenses as may be necessary; |
(15) medical treatment of sexual assault survivors, as defined |
in Section 1a of the Sexual Assault Survivors Emergency |
Treatment Act, for injuries sustained as a result of the |
sexual assault, including examinations and laboratory tests to |
discover evidence which may be used in criminal proceedings |
arising from the sexual assault; (16) the diagnosis and |
treatment of sickle cell anemia; (16.5) services performed by |
a chiropractic physician licensed under the Medical Practice |
Act of 1987 and acting within the scope of his or her license, |
including, but not limited to, chiropractic manipulative |
treatment; and (17) any other medical care, and any other type |
of remedial care recognized under the laws of this State. The |
term "any other type of remedial care" shall include nursing |
care and nursing home service for persons who rely on |
treatment by spiritual means alone through prayer for healing. |
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Section, a |
comprehensive tobacco use cessation program that includes |
|
purchasing prescription drugs or prescription medical devices |
approved by the Food and Drug Administration shall be covered |
under the medical assistance program under this Article for |
persons who are otherwise eligible for assistance under this |
Article. |
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Code, |
reproductive health care that is otherwise legal in Illinois |
shall be covered under the medical assistance program for |
persons who are otherwise eligible for medical assistance |
under this Article. |
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Section, all |
tobacco cessation medications approved by the United States |
Food and Drug Administration and all individual and group |
tobacco cessation counseling services and telephone-based |
counseling services and tobacco cessation medications provided |
through the Illinois Tobacco Quitline shall be covered under |
the medical assistance program for persons who are otherwise |
eligible for assistance under this Article. The Department |
shall comply with all federal requirements necessary to obtain |
federal financial participation, as specified in 42 CFR |
433.15(b)(7), for telephone-based counseling services provided |
through the Illinois Tobacco Quitline, including, but not |
limited to: (i) entering into a memorandum of understanding or |
interagency agreement with the Department of Public Health, as |
administrator of the Illinois Tobacco Quitline; and (ii) |
developing a cost allocation plan for Medicaid-allowable |
|
Illinois Tobacco Quitline services in accordance with 45 CFR |
95.507. The Department shall submit the memorandum of |
understanding or interagency agreement, the cost allocation |
plan, and all other necessary documentation to the Centers for |
Medicare and Medicaid Services for review and approval. |
Coverage under this paragraph shall be contingent upon federal |
approval. |
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Code, the |
Illinois Department may not require, as a condition of payment |
for any laboratory test authorized under this Article, that a |
physician's handwritten signature appear on the laboratory |
test order form. The Illinois Department may, however, impose |
other appropriate requirements regarding laboratory test order |
documentation. |
Upon receipt of federal approval of an amendment to the |
Illinois Title XIX State Plan for this purpose, the Department |
shall authorize the Chicago Public Schools (CPS) to procure a |
vendor or vendors to manufacture eyeglasses for individuals |
enrolled in a school within the CPS system. CPS shall ensure |
that its vendor or vendors are enrolled as providers in the |
medical assistance program and in any capitated Medicaid |
managed care entity (MCE) serving individuals enrolled in a |
school within the CPS system. Under any contract procured |
under this provision, the vendor or vendors must serve only |
individuals enrolled in a school within the CPS system. Claims |
for services provided by CPS's vendor or vendors to recipients |
|
of benefits in the medical assistance program under this Code, |
the Children's Health Insurance Program, or the Covering ALL |
KIDS Health Insurance Program shall be submitted to the |
Department or the MCE in which the individual is enrolled for |
payment and shall be reimbursed at the Department's or the |
MCE's established rates or rate methodologies for eyeglasses. |
On and after July 1, 2012, the Department of Healthcare |
and Family Services may provide the following services to |
persons eligible for assistance under this Article who are |
participating in education, training or employment programs |
operated by the Department of Human Services as successor to |
the Department of Public Aid: |
(1) dental services provided by or under the |
supervision of a dentist; and |
(2) eyeglasses prescribed by a physician skilled in |
the diseases of the eye, or by an optometrist, whichever |
the person may select. |
On and after July 1, 2018, the Department of Healthcare |
and Family Services shall provide dental services to any adult |
who is otherwise eligible for assistance under the medical |
assistance program. As used in this paragraph, "dental |
services" means diagnostic, preventative, restorative, or |
corrective procedures, including procedures and services for |
the prevention and treatment of periodontal disease and dental |
caries disease, provided by an individual who is licensed to |
practice dentistry or dental surgery or who is under the |
|
supervision of a dentist in the practice of his or her |
profession. |
On and after July 1, 2018, targeted dental services, as |
set forth in Exhibit D of the Consent Decree entered by the |
United States District Court for the Northern District of |
Illinois, Eastern Division, in the matter of Memisovski v. |
Maram, Case No. 92 C 1982, that are provided to adults under |
the medical assistance program shall be established at no less |
than the rates set forth in the "New Rate" column in Exhibit D |
of the Consent Decree for targeted dental services that are |
provided to persons under the age of 18 under the medical |
assistance program. |
Subject to federal approval, on and after January 1, 2025, |
the rates paid for sedation evaluation and the provision of |
deep sedation and intravenous sedation for the purpose of |
dental services shall be increased by 33% above the rates in |
effect on December 31, 2024. The rates paid for nitrous oxide |
sedation shall not be impacted by this paragraph and shall |
remain the same as the rates in effect on December 31, 2024. |
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Code and |
subject to federal approval, the Department may adopt rules to |
allow a dentist who is volunteering his or her service at no |
cost to render dental services through an enrolled |
not-for-profit health clinic without the dentist personally |
enrolling as a participating provider in the medical |
assistance program. A not-for-profit health clinic shall |
|
include a public health clinic or Federally Qualified Health |
Center or other enrolled provider, as determined by the |
Department, through which dental services covered under this |
Section are performed. The Department shall establish a |
process for payment of claims for reimbursement for covered |
dental services rendered under this provision. |
Subject to appropriation and to federal approval, the |
Department shall file administrative rules updating the |
Handicapping Labio-Lingual Deviation orthodontic scoring tool |
by January 1, 2025, or as soon as practicable. |
On and after January 1, 2022, the Department of Healthcare |
and Family Services shall administer and regulate a |
school-based dental program that allows for the out-of-office |
delivery of preventative dental services in a school setting |
to children under 19 years of age. The Department shall |
establish, by rule, guidelines for participation by providers |
and set requirements for follow-up referral care based on the |
requirements established in the Dental Office Reference Manual |
published by the Department that establishes the requirements |
for dentists participating in the All Kids Dental School |
Program. Every effort shall be made by the Department when |
developing the program requirements to consider the different |
geographic differences of both urban and rural areas of the |
State for initial treatment and necessary follow-up care. No |
provider shall be charged a fee by any unit of local government |
to participate in the school-based dental program administered |
|
by the Department. Nothing in this paragraph shall be |
construed to limit or preempt a home rule unit's or school |
district's authority to establish, change, or administer a |
school-based dental program in addition to, or independent of, |
the school-based dental program administered by the |
Department. |
The Illinois Department, by rule, may distinguish and |
classify the medical services to be provided only in |
accordance with the classes of persons designated in Section |
5-2. |
The Department of Healthcare and Family Services must |
provide coverage and reimbursement for amino acid-based |
elemental formulas, regardless of delivery method, for the |
diagnosis and treatment of (i) eosinophilic disorders and (ii) |
short bowel syndrome when the prescribing physician has issued |
a written order stating that the amino acid-based elemental |
formula is medically necessary. |
The Illinois Department shall authorize the provision of, |
and shall authorize payment for, screening by low-dose |
mammography for the presence of occult breast cancer for |
individuals 35 years of age or older who are eligible for |
medical assistance under this Article, as follows: |
(A) A baseline mammogram for individuals 35 to 39 |
years of age. |
(B) An annual mammogram for individuals 40 years of |
age or older. |
|
(C) A mammogram at the age and intervals considered |
medically necessary by the individual's health care |
provider for individuals under 40 years of age and having |
a family history of breast cancer, prior personal history |
of breast cancer, positive genetic testing, or other risk |
factors. |
(D) A comprehensive ultrasound screening and MRI of an |
entire breast or breasts if a mammogram demonstrates |
heterogeneous or dense breast tissue or when medically |
necessary as determined by a physician licensed to |
practice medicine in all of its branches. |
(E) A screening MRI when medically necessary, as |
determined by a physician licensed to practice medicine in |
all of its branches. |
(F) A diagnostic mammogram when medically necessary, |
as determined by a physician licensed to practice medicine |
in all its branches, advanced practice registered nurse, |
or physician assistant. |
The Department shall not impose a deductible, coinsurance, |
copayment, or any other cost-sharing requirement on the |
coverage provided under this paragraph; except that this |
sentence does not apply to coverage of diagnostic mammograms |
to the extent such coverage would disqualify a high-deductible |
health plan from eligibility for a health savings account |
pursuant to Section 223 of the Internal Revenue Code (26 |
U.S.C. 223). |
|
All screenings shall include a physical breast exam, |
instruction on self-examination and information regarding the |
frequency of self-examination and its value as a preventative |
tool. |
For purposes of this Section: |
"Diagnostic mammogram" means a mammogram obtained using |
diagnostic mammography. |
"Diagnostic mammography" means a method of screening that |
is designed to evaluate an abnormality in a breast, including |
an abnormality seen or suspected on a screening mammogram or a |
subjective or objective abnormality otherwise detected in the |
breast. |
"Low-dose mammography" means the x-ray examination of the |
breast using equipment dedicated specifically for mammography, |
including the x-ray tube, filter, compression device, and |
image receptor, with an average radiation exposure delivery of |
less than one rad per breast for 2 views of an average size |
breast. The term also includes digital mammography and |
includes breast tomosynthesis. |
"Breast tomosynthesis" means a radiologic procedure that |
involves the acquisition of projection images over the |
stationary breast to produce cross-sectional digital |
three-dimensional images of the breast. |
If, at any time, the Secretary of the United States |
Department of Health and Human Services, or its successor |
agency, promulgates rules or regulations to be published in |
|
the Federal Register or publishes a comment in the Federal |
Register or issues an opinion, guidance, or other action that |
would require the State, pursuant to any provision of the |
Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (Public Law |
111-148), including, but not limited to, 42 U.S.C. |
18031(d)(3)(B) or any successor provision, to defray the cost |
of any coverage for breast tomosynthesis outlined in this |
paragraph, then the requirement that an insurer cover breast |
tomosynthesis is inoperative other than any such coverage |
authorized under Section 1902 of the Social Security Act, 42 |
U.S.C. 1396a, and the State shall not assume any obligation |
for the cost of coverage for breast tomosynthesis set forth in |
this paragraph. |
On and after January 1, 2016, the Department shall ensure |
that all networks of care for adult clients of the Department |
include access to at least one breast imaging Center of |
Imaging Excellence as certified by the American College of |
Radiology. |
On and after January 1, 2012, providers participating in a |
quality improvement program approved by the Department shall |
be reimbursed for screening and diagnostic mammography at the |
same rate as the Medicare program's rates, including the |
increased reimbursement for digital mammography and, after |
January 1, 2023 (the effective date of Public Act 102-1018), |
breast tomosynthesis. |
The Department shall convene an expert panel including |
|
representatives of hospitals, free-standing mammography |
facilities, and doctors, including radiologists, to establish |
quality standards for mammography. |
On and after January 1, 2017, providers participating in a |
breast cancer treatment quality improvement program approved |
by the Department shall be reimbursed for breast cancer |
treatment at a rate that is no lower than 95% of the Medicare |
program's rates for the data elements included in the breast |
cancer treatment quality program. |
The Department shall convene an expert panel, including |
representatives of hospitals, free-standing breast cancer |
treatment centers, breast cancer quality organizations, and |
doctors, including breast surgeons, reconstructive breast |
surgeons, oncologists, and primary care providers to establish |
quality standards for breast cancer treatment. |
Subject to federal approval, the Department shall |
establish a rate methodology for mammography at federally |
qualified health centers and other encounter-rate clinics. |
These clinics or centers may also collaborate with other |
hospital-based mammography facilities. By January 1, 2016, the |
Department shall report to the General Assembly on the status |
of the provision set forth in this paragraph. |
The Department shall establish a methodology to remind |
individuals who are age-appropriate for screening mammography, |
but who have not received a mammogram within the previous 18 |
months, of the importance and benefit of screening |
|
mammography. The Department shall work with experts in breast |
cancer outreach and patient navigation to optimize these |
reminders and shall establish a methodology for evaluating |
their effectiveness and modifying the methodology based on the |
evaluation. |
The Department shall establish a performance goal for |
primary care providers with respect to their female patients |
over age 40 receiving an annual mammogram. This performance |
goal shall be used to provide additional reimbursement in the |
form of a quality performance bonus to primary care providers |
who meet that goal. |
The Department shall devise a means of case-managing or |
patient navigation for beneficiaries diagnosed with breast |
cancer. This program shall initially operate as a pilot |
program in areas of the State with the highest incidence of |
mortality related to breast cancer. At least one pilot program |
site shall be in the metropolitan Chicago area and at least one |
site shall be outside the metropolitan Chicago area. On or |
after July 1, 2016, the pilot program shall be expanded to |
include one site in western Illinois, one site in southern |
Illinois, one site in central Illinois, and 4 sites within |
metropolitan Chicago. An evaluation of the pilot program shall |
be carried out measuring health outcomes and cost of care for |
those served by the pilot program compared to similarly |
situated patients who are not served by the pilot program. |
The Department shall require all networks of care to |
|
develop a means either internally or by contract with experts |
in navigation and community outreach to navigate cancer |
patients to comprehensive care in a timely fashion. The |
Department shall require all networks of care to include |
access for patients diagnosed with cancer to at least one |
academic commission on cancer-accredited cancer program as an |
in-network covered benefit. |
The Department shall provide coverage and reimbursement |
for a human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine that is approved for |
marketing by the federal Food and Drug Administration for all |
persons between the ages of 9 and 45. Subject to federal |
approval, the Department shall provide coverage and |
reimbursement for a human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine for |
persons of the age of 46 and above who have been diagnosed with |
cervical dysplasia with a high risk of recurrence or |
progression. The Department shall disallow any |
preauthorization requirements for the administration of the |
human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine. |
On or after July 1, 2022, individuals who are otherwise |
eligible for medical assistance under this Article shall |
receive coverage for perinatal depression screenings for the |
12-month period beginning on the last day of their pregnancy. |
Medical assistance coverage under this paragraph shall be |
conditioned on the use of a screening instrument approved by |
the Department. |
Any medical or health care provider shall immediately |
|
recommend, to any pregnant individual who is being provided |
prenatal services and is suspected of having a substance use |
disorder as defined in the Substance Use Disorder Act, |
referral to a local substance use disorder treatment program |
licensed by the Department of Human Services or to a licensed |
hospital which provides substance abuse treatment services. |
The Department of Healthcare and Family Services shall assure |
coverage for the cost of treatment of the drug abuse or |
addiction for pregnant recipients in accordance with the |
Illinois Medicaid Program in conjunction with the Department |
of Human Services. |
All medical providers providing medical assistance to |
pregnant individuals under this Code shall receive information |
from the Department on the availability of services under any |
program providing case management services for addicted |
individuals, including information on appropriate referrals |
for other social services that may be needed by addicted |
individuals in addition to treatment for addiction. |
The Illinois Department, in cooperation with the |
Departments of Human Services (as successor to the Department |
of Alcoholism and Substance Abuse) and Public Health, through |
a public awareness campaign, may provide information |
concerning treatment for alcoholism and drug abuse and |
addiction, prenatal health care, and other pertinent programs |
directed at reducing the number of drug-affected infants born |
to recipients of medical assistance. |
|
Neither the Department of Healthcare and Family Services |
nor the Department of Human Services shall sanction the |
recipient solely on the basis of the recipient's substance |
abuse. |
The Illinois Department shall establish such regulations |
governing the dispensing of health services under this Article |
as it shall deem appropriate. The Department should seek the |
advice of formal professional advisory committees appointed by |
the Director of the Illinois Department for the purpose of |
providing regular advice on policy and administrative matters, |
information dissemination and educational activities for |
medical and health care providers, and consistency in |
procedures to the Illinois Department. |
The Illinois Department may develop and contract with |
Partnerships of medical providers to arrange medical services |
for persons eligible under Section 5-2 of this Code. |
Implementation of this Section may be by demonstration |
projects in certain geographic areas. The Partnership shall be |
represented by a sponsor organization. The Department, by |
rule, shall develop qualifications for sponsors of |
Partnerships. Nothing in this Section shall be construed to |
require that the sponsor organization be a medical |
organization. |
The sponsor must negotiate formal written contracts with |
medical providers for physician services, inpatient and |
outpatient hospital care, home health services, treatment for |
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alcoholism and substance abuse, and other services determined |
necessary by the Illinois Department by rule for delivery by |
Partnerships. Physician services must include prenatal and |
obstetrical care. The Illinois Department shall reimburse |
medical services delivered by Partnership providers to clients |
in target areas according to provisions of this Article and |
the Illinois Health Finance Reform Act, except that: |
(1) Physicians participating in a Partnership and |
providing certain services, which shall be determined by |
the Illinois Department, to persons in areas covered by |
the Partnership may receive an additional surcharge for |
such services. |
(2) The Department may elect to consider and negotiate |
financial incentives to encourage the development of |
Partnerships and the efficient delivery of medical care. |
(3) Persons receiving medical services through |
Partnerships may receive medical and case management |
services above the level usually offered through the |
medical assistance program. |
Medical providers shall be required to meet certain |
qualifications to participate in Partnerships to ensure the |
delivery of high quality medical services. These |
qualifications shall be determined by rule of the Illinois |
Department and may be higher than qualifications for |
participation in the medical assistance program. Partnership |
sponsors may prescribe reasonable additional qualifications |
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for participation by medical providers, only with the prior |
written approval of the Illinois Department. |
Nothing in this Section shall limit the free choice of |
practitioners, hospitals, and other providers of medical |
services by clients. In order to ensure patient freedom of |
choice, the Illinois Department shall immediately promulgate |
all rules and take all other necessary actions so that |
provided services may be accessed from therapeutically |
certified optometrists to the full extent of the Illinois |
Optometric Practice Act of 1987 without discriminating between |
service providers. |
The Department shall apply for a waiver from the United |
States Health Care Financing Administration to allow for the |
implementation of Partnerships under this Section. |
The Illinois Department shall require health care |
providers to maintain records that document the medical care |
and services provided to recipients of Medical Assistance |
under this Article. Such records must be retained for a period |
of not less than 6 years from the date of service or as |
provided by applicable State law, whichever period is longer, |
except that if an audit is initiated within the required |
retention period then the records must be retained until the |
audit is completed and every exception is resolved. The |
Illinois Department shall require health care providers to |
make available, when authorized by the patient, in writing, |
the medical records in a timely fashion to other health care |
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providers who are treating or serving persons eligible for |
Medical Assistance under this Article. All dispensers of |
medical services shall be required to maintain and retain |
business and professional records sufficient to fully and |
accurately document the nature, scope, details and receipt of |
the health care provided to persons eligible for medical |
assistance under this Code, in accordance with regulations |
promulgated by the Illinois Department. The rules and |
regulations shall require that proof of the receipt of |
prescription drugs, dentures, prosthetic devices and |
eyeglasses by eligible persons under this Section accompany |
each claim for reimbursement submitted by the dispenser of |
such medical services. No such claims for reimbursement shall |
be approved for payment by the Illinois Department without |
such proof of receipt, unless the Illinois Department shall |
have put into effect and shall be operating a system of |
post-payment audit and review which shall, on a sampling |
basis, be deemed adequate by the Illinois Department to assure |
that such drugs, dentures, prosthetic devices and eyeglasses |
for which payment is being made are actually being received by |
eligible recipients. Within 90 days after September 16, 1984 |
(the effective date of Public Act 83-1439), the Illinois |
Department shall establish a current list of acquisition costs |
for all prosthetic devices and any other items recognized as |
medical equipment and supplies reimbursable under this Article |
and shall update such list on a quarterly basis, except that |
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the acquisition costs of all prescription drugs shall be |
updated no less frequently than every 30 days as required by |
Section 5-5.12. |
Notwithstanding any other law to the contrary, the |
Illinois Department shall, within 365 days after July 22, 2013 |
(the effective date of Public Act 98-104), establish |
procedures to permit skilled care facilities licensed under |
the Nursing Home Care Act to submit monthly billing claims for |
reimbursement purposes. Following development of these |
procedures, the Department shall, by July 1, 2016, test the |
viability of the new system and implement any necessary |
operational or structural changes to its information |
technology platforms in order to allow for the direct |
acceptance and payment of nursing home claims. |
Notwithstanding any other law to the contrary, the |
Illinois Department shall, within 365 days after August 15, |
2014 (the effective date of Public Act 98-963), establish |
procedures to permit ID/DD facilities licensed under the ID/DD |
Community Care Act and MC/DD facilities licensed under the |
MC/DD Act to submit monthly billing claims for reimbursement |
purposes. Following development of these procedures, the |
Department shall have an additional 365 days to test the |
viability of the new system and to ensure that any necessary |
operational or structural changes to its information |
technology platforms are implemented. |
The Illinois Department shall require all dispensers of |
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medical services, other than an individual practitioner or |
group of practitioners, desiring to participate in the Medical |
Assistance program established under this Article to disclose |
all financial, beneficial, ownership, equity, surety or other |
interests in any and all firms, corporations, partnerships, |
associations, business enterprises, joint ventures, agencies, |
institutions or other legal entities providing any form of |
health care services in this State under this Article. |
The Illinois Department may require that all dispensers of |
medical services desiring to participate in the medical |
assistance program established under this Article disclose, |
under such terms and conditions as the Illinois Department may |
by rule establish, all inquiries from clients and attorneys |
regarding medical bills paid by the Illinois Department, which |
inquiries could indicate potential existence of claims or |
liens for the Illinois Department. |
Enrollment of a vendor shall be subject to a provisional |
period and shall be conditional for one year. During the |
period of conditional enrollment, the Department may terminate |
the vendor's eligibility to participate in, or may disenroll |
the vendor from, the medical assistance program without cause. |
Unless otherwise specified, such termination of eligibility or |
disenrollment is not subject to the Department's hearing |
process. However, a disenrolled vendor may reapply without |
penalty. |
The Department has the discretion to limit the conditional |
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enrollment period for vendors based upon the category of risk |
of the vendor. |
Prior to enrollment and during the conditional enrollment |
period in the medical assistance program, all vendors shall be |
subject to enhanced oversight, screening, and review based on |
the risk of fraud, waste, and abuse that is posed by the |
category of risk of the vendor. The Illinois Department shall |
establish the procedures for oversight, screening, and review, |
which may include, but need not be limited to: criminal and |
financial background checks; fingerprinting; license, |
certification, and authorization verifications; unscheduled or |
unannounced site visits; database checks; prepayment audit |
reviews; audits; payment caps; payment suspensions; and other |
screening as required by federal or State law. |
The Department shall define or specify the following: (i) |
by provider notice, the "category of risk of the vendor" for |
each type of vendor, which shall take into account the level of |
screening applicable to a particular category of vendor under |
federal law and regulations; (ii) by rule or provider notice, |
the maximum length of the conditional enrollment period for |
each category of risk of the vendor; and (iii) by rule, the |
hearing rights, if any, afforded to a vendor in each category |
of risk of the vendor that is terminated or disenrolled during |
the conditional enrollment period. |
To be eligible for payment consideration, a vendor's |
payment claim or bill, either as an initial claim or as a |
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resubmitted claim following prior rejection, must be received |
by the Illinois Department, or its fiscal intermediary, no |
later than 180 days after the latest date on the claim on which |
medical goods or services were provided, with the following |
exceptions: |
(1) In the case of a provider whose enrollment is in |
process by the Illinois Department, the 180-day period |
shall not begin until the date on the written notice from |
the Illinois Department that the provider enrollment is |
complete. |
(2) In the case of errors attributable to the Illinois |
Department or any of its claims processing intermediaries |
which result in an inability to receive, process, or |
adjudicate a claim, the 180-day period shall not begin |
until the provider has been notified of the error. |
(3) In the case of a provider for whom the Illinois |
Department initiates the monthly billing process. |
(4) In the case of a provider operated by a unit of |
local government with a population exceeding 3,000,000 |
when local government funds finance federal participation |
for claims payments. |
For claims for services rendered during a period for which |
a recipient received retroactive eligibility, claims must be |
filed within 180 days after the Department determines the |
applicant is eligible. For claims for which the Illinois |
Department is not the primary payer, claims must be submitted |
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to the Illinois Department within 180 days after the final |
adjudication by the primary payer. |
In the case of long term care facilities, within 120 |
calendar days of receipt by the facility of required |
prescreening information, new admissions with associated |
admission documents shall be submitted through the Medical |
Electronic Data Interchange (MEDI) or the Recipient |
Eligibility Verification (REV) System or shall be submitted |
directly to the Department of Human Services using required |
admission forms. Effective September 1, 2014, admission |
documents, including all prescreening information, must be |
submitted through MEDI or REV. Confirmation numbers assigned |
to an accepted transaction shall be retained by a facility to |
verify timely submittal. Once an admission transaction has |
been completed, all resubmitted claims following prior |
rejection are subject to receipt no later than 180 days after |
the admission transaction has been completed. |
Claims that are not submitted and received in compliance |
with the foregoing requirements shall not be eligible for |
payment under the medical assistance program, and the State |
shall have no liability for payment of those claims. |
To the extent consistent with applicable information and |
privacy, security, and disclosure laws, State and federal |
agencies and departments shall provide the Illinois Department |
access to confidential and other information and data |
necessary to perform eligibility and payment verifications and |
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other Illinois Department functions. This includes, but is not |
limited to: information pertaining to licensure; |
certification; earnings; immigration status; citizenship; wage |
reporting; unearned and earned income; pension income; |
employment; supplemental security income; social security |
numbers; National Provider Identifier (NPI) numbers; the |
National Practitioner Data Bank (NPDB); program and agency |
exclusions; taxpayer identification numbers; tax delinquency; |
corporate information; and death records. |
The Illinois Department shall enter into agreements with |
State agencies and departments, and is authorized to enter |
into agreements with federal agencies and departments, under |
which such agencies and departments shall share data necessary |
for medical assistance program integrity functions and |
oversight. The Illinois Department shall develop, in |
cooperation with other State departments and agencies, and in |
compliance with applicable federal laws and regulations, |
appropriate and effective methods to share such data. At a |
minimum, and to the extent necessary to provide data sharing, |
the Illinois Department shall enter into agreements with State |
agencies and departments, and is authorized to enter into |
agreements with federal agencies and departments, including, |
but not limited to: the Secretary of State; the Department of |
Revenue; the Department of Public Health; the Department of |
Human Services; and the Department of Financial and |
Professional Regulation. |
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Beginning in fiscal year 2013, the Illinois Department |
shall set forth a request for information to identify the |
benefits of a pre-payment, post-adjudication, and post-edit |
claims system with the goals of streamlining claims processing |
and provider reimbursement, reducing the number of pending or |
rejected claims, and helping to ensure a more transparent |
adjudication process through the utilization of: (i) provider |
data verification and provider screening technology; and (ii) |
clinical code editing; and (iii) pre-pay, pre-adjudicated, or |
post-adjudicated predictive modeling with an integrated case |
management system with link analysis. Such a request for |
information shall not be considered as a request for proposal |
or as an obligation on the part of the Illinois Department to |
take any action or acquire any products or services. |
The Illinois Department shall establish policies, |
procedures, standards and criteria by rule for the |
acquisition, repair and replacement of orthotic and prosthetic |
devices and durable medical equipment. Such rules shall |
provide, but not be limited to, the following services: (1) |
immediate repair or replacement of such devices by recipients; |
and (2) rental, lease, purchase or lease-purchase of durable |
medical equipment in a cost-effective manner, taking into |
consideration the recipient's medical prognosis, the extent of |
the recipient's needs, and the requirements and costs for |
maintaining such equipment. Subject to prior approval, such |
rules shall enable a recipient to temporarily acquire and use |
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alternative or substitute devices or equipment pending repairs |
or replacements of any device or equipment previously |
authorized for such recipient by the Department. |
Notwithstanding any provision of Section 5-5f to the contrary, |
the Department may, by rule, exempt certain replacement |
wheelchair parts from prior approval and, for wheelchairs, |
wheelchair parts, wheelchair accessories, and related seating |
and positioning items, determine the wholesale price by |
methods other than actual acquisition costs. |
The Department shall require, by rule, all providers of |
durable medical equipment to be accredited by an accreditation |
organization approved by the federal Centers for Medicare and |
Medicaid Services and recognized by the Department in order to |
bill the Department for providing durable medical equipment to |
recipients. No later than 15 months after the effective date |
of the rule adopted pursuant to this paragraph, all providers |
must meet the accreditation requirement. |
In order to promote environmental responsibility, meet the |
needs of recipients and enrollees, and achieve significant |
cost savings, the Department, or a managed care organization |
under contract with the Department, may provide recipients or |
managed care enrollees who have a prescription or Certificate |
of Medical Necessity access to refurbished durable medical |
equipment under this Section (excluding prosthetic and |
orthotic devices as defined in the Orthotics, Prosthetics, and |
Pedorthics Practice Act and complex rehabilitation technology |
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products and associated services) through the State's |
assistive technology program's reutilization program, using |
staff with the Assistive Technology Professional (ATP) |
Certification if the refurbished durable medical equipment: |
(i) is available; (ii) is less expensive, including shipping |
costs, than new durable medical equipment of the same type; |
(iii) is able to withstand at least 3 years of use; (iv) is |
cleaned, disinfected, sterilized, and safe in accordance with |
federal Food and Drug Administration regulations and guidance |
governing the reprocessing of medical devices in health care |
settings; and (v) equally meets the needs of the recipient or |
enrollee. The reutilization program shall confirm that the |
recipient or enrollee is not already in receipt of the same or |
similar equipment from another service provider, and that the |
refurbished durable medical equipment equally meets the needs |
of the recipient or enrollee. Nothing in this paragraph shall |
be construed to limit recipient or enrollee choice to obtain |
new durable medical equipment or place any additional prior |
authorization conditions on enrollees of managed care |
organizations. |
The Department shall execute, relative to the nursing home |
prescreening project, written inter-agency agreements with the |
Department of Human Services and the Department on Aging, to |
effect the following: (i) intake procedures and common |
eligibility criteria for those persons who are receiving |
non-institutional services; and (ii) the establishment and |
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development of non-institutional services in areas of the |
State where they are not currently available or are |
undeveloped; and (iii) notwithstanding any other provision of |
law, subject to federal approval, on and after July 1, 2012, an |
increase in the determination of need (DON) scores from 29 to |
37 for applicants for institutional and home and |
community-based long term care; if and only if federal |
approval is not granted, the Department may, in conjunction |
with other affected agencies, implement utilization controls |
or changes in benefit packages to effectuate a similar savings |
amount for this population; and (iv) no later than July 1, |
2013, minimum level of care eligibility criteria for |
institutional and home and community-based long term care; and |
(v) no later than October 1, 2013, establish procedures to |
permit long term care providers access to eligibility scores |
for individuals with an admission date who are seeking or |
receiving services from the long term care provider. In order |
to select the minimum level of care eligibility criteria, the |
Governor shall establish a workgroup that includes affected |
agency representatives and stakeholders representing the |
institutional and home and community-based long term care |
interests. This Section shall not restrict the Department from |
implementing lower level of care eligibility criteria for |
community-based services in circumstances where federal |
approval has been granted. |
The Illinois Department shall develop and operate, in |
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cooperation with other State Departments and agencies and in |
compliance with applicable federal laws and regulations, |
appropriate and effective systems of health care evaluation |
and programs for monitoring of utilization of health care |
services and facilities, as it affects persons eligible for |
medical assistance under this Code. |
The Illinois Department shall report annually to the |
General Assembly, no later than the second Friday in April of |
1979 and each year thereafter, in regard to: |
(a) actual statistics and trends in utilization of |
medical services by public aid recipients; |
(b) actual statistics and trends in the provision of |
the various medical services by medical vendors; |
(c) current rate structures and proposed changes in |
those rate structures for the various medical vendors; and |
(d) efforts at utilization review and control by the |
Illinois Department. |
The period covered by each report shall be the 3 years |
ending on the June 30 prior to the report. The report shall |
include suggested legislation for consideration by the General |
Assembly. The requirement for reporting to the General |
Assembly shall be satisfied by filing copies of the report as |
required by Section 3.1 of the General Assembly Organization |
Act, and filing such additional copies with the State |
Government Report Distribution Center for the General Assembly |
as is required under paragraph (t) of Section 7 of the State |
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Library Act. |
Rulemaking authority to implement Public Act 95-1045, if |
any, is conditioned on the rules being adopted in accordance |
with all provisions of the Illinois Administrative Procedure |
Act and all rules and procedures of the Joint Committee on |
Administrative Rules; any purported rule not so adopted, for |
whatever reason, is unauthorized. |
On and after July 1, 2012, the Department shall reduce any |
rate of reimbursement for services or other payments or alter |
any methodologies authorized by this Code to reduce any rate |
of reimbursement for services or other payments in accordance |
with Section 5-5e. |
Because kidney transplantation can be an appropriate, |
cost-effective alternative to renal dialysis when medically |
necessary and notwithstanding the provisions of Section 1-11 |
of this Code, beginning October 1, 2014, the Department shall |
cover kidney transplantation for noncitizens with end-stage |
renal disease who are not eligible for comprehensive medical |
benefits, who meet the residency requirements of Section 5-3 |
of this Code, and who would otherwise meet the financial |
requirements of the appropriate class of eligible persons |
under Section 5-2 of this Code. To qualify for coverage of |
kidney transplantation, such person must be receiving |
emergency renal dialysis services covered by the Department. |
Providers under this Section shall be prior approved and |
certified by the Department to perform kidney transplantation |
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and the services under this Section shall be limited to |
services associated with kidney transplantation. |
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Code to the |
contrary, on or after July 1, 2015, all FDA-approved FDA |
approved forms of medication assisted treatment prescribed for |
the treatment of alcohol dependence or treatment of opioid |
dependence shall be covered under both fee-for-service and |
managed care medical assistance programs for persons who are |
otherwise eligible for medical assistance under this Article |
and shall not be subject to any (1) utilization control, other |
than those established under the American Society of Addiction |
Medicine patient placement criteria, (2) prior authorization |
mandate, (3) lifetime restriction limit mandate, or (4) |
limitations on dosage. |
On or after July 1, 2015, opioid antagonists prescribed |
for the treatment of an opioid overdose, including the |
medication product, administration devices, and any pharmacy |
fees or hospital fees related to the dispensing, distribution, |
and administration of the opioid antagonist, shall be covered |
under the medical assistance program for persons who are |
otherwise eligible for medical assistance under this Article. |
As used in this Section, "opioid antagonist" means a drug that |
binds to opioid receptors and blocks or inhibits the effect of |
opioids acting on those receptors, including, but not limited |
to, naloxone hydrochloride or any other similarly acting drug |
approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. The |
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Department shall not impose a copayment on the coverage |
provided for naloxone hydrochloride under the medical |
assistance program. |
Upon federal approval, the Department shall provide |
coverage and reimbursement for all drugs that are approved for |
marketing by the federal Food and Drug Administration and that |
are recommended by the federal Public Health Service or the |
United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for |
pre-exposure prophylaxis and related pre-exposure prophylaxis |
services, including, but not limited to, HIV and sexually |
transmitted infection screening, treatment for sexually |
transmitted infections, medical monitoring, assorted labs, and |
counseling to reduce the likelihood of HIV infection among |
individuals who are not infected with HIV but who are at high |
risk of HIV infection. |
A federally qualified health center, as defined in Section |
1905(l)(2)(B) of the federal Social Security Act, shall be |
reimbursed by the Department in accordance with the federally |
qualified health center's encounter rate for services provided |
to medical assistance recipients that are performed by a |
dental hygienist, as defined under the Illinois Dental |
Practice Act, working under the general supervision of a |
dentist and employed by a federally qualified health center. |
Within 90 days after October 8, 2021 (the effective date |
of Public Act 102-665), the Department shall seek federal |
approval of a State Plan amendment to expand coverage for |
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family planning services that includes presumptive eligibility |
to individuals whose income is at or below 208% of the federal |
poverty level. Coverage under this Section shall be effective |
beginning no later than December 1, 2022. |
Subject to approval by the federal Centers for Medicare |
and Medicaid Services of a Title XIX State Plan amendment |
electing the Program of All-Inclusive Care for the Elderly |
(PACE) as a State Medicaid option, as provided for by Subtitle |
I (commencing with Section 4801) of Title IV of the Balanced |
Budget Act of 1997 (Public Law 105-33) and Part 460 |
(commencing with Section 460.2) of Subchapter E of Title 42 of |
the Code of Federal Regulations, PACE program services shall |
become a covered benefit of the medical assistance program, |
subject to criteria established in accordance with all |
applicable laws. |
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Code, |
community-based pediatric palliative care from a trained |
interdisciplinary team shall be covered under the medical |
assistance program as provided in Section 15 of the Pediatric |
Palliative Care Act. |
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Code, within |
12 months after June 2, 2022 (the effective date of Public Act |
102-1037) and subject to federal approval, acupuncture |
services performed by an acupuncturist licensed under the |
Acupuncture Practice Act who is acting within the scope of his |
or her license shall be covered under the medical assistance |
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program. The Department shall apply for any federal waiver or |
State Plan amendment, if required, to implement this |
paragraph. The Department may adopt any rules, including |
standards and criteria, necessary to implement this paragraph. |
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Code, the |
medical assistance program shall, subject to federal approval, |
reimburse hospitals for costs associated with a newborn |
screening test for the presence of metachromatic |
leukodystrophy, as required under the Newborn Metabolic |
Screening Act, at a rate not less than the fee charged by the |
Department of Public Health. Notwithstanding any other |
provision of this Code, the medical assistance program shall, |
subject to appropriation and federal approval, also reimburse |
hospitals for costs associated with all newborn screening |
tests added on and after August 9, 2024 (the effective date of |
Public Act 103-909) this amendatory Act of the 103rd General |
Assembly to the Newborn Metabolic Screening Act and required |
to be performed under that Act at a rate not less than the fee |
charged by the Department of Public Health. The Department |
shall seek federal approval before the implementation of the |
newborn screening test fees by the Department of Public |
Health. |
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Code, |
beginning on January 1, 2024, subject to federal approval, |
cognitive assessment and care planning services provided to a |
person who experiences signs or symptoms of cognitive |
|
impairment, as defined by the Diagnostic and Statistical |
Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition, shall be covered |
under the medical assistance program for persons who are |
otherwise eligible for medical assistance under this Article. |
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Code, |
medically necessary reconstructive services that are intended |
to restore physical appearance shall be covered under the |
medical assistance program for persons who are otherwise |
eligible for medical assistance under this Article. As used in |
this paragraph, "reconstructive services" means treatments |
performed on structures of the body damaged by trauma to |
restore physical appearance. |
Subject to federal approval, for dates of services on and |
after January 1, 2026, over-the-counter choline dietary |
supplements for pregnant persons shall be covered under the |
medical assistance program. |
(Source: P.A. 102-43, Article 30, Section 30-5, eff. 7-6-21; |
102-43, Article 35, Section 35-5, eff. 7-6-21; 102-43, Article |
55, Section 55-5, eff. 7-6-21; 102-95, eff. 1-1-22; 102-123, |
eff. 1-1-22; 102-558, eff. 8-20-21; 102-598, eff. 1-1-22; |
102-655, eff. 1-1-22; 102-665, eff. 10-8-21; 102-813, eff. |
5-13-22; 102-1018, eff. 1-1-23; 102-1037, eff. 6-2-22; |
102-1038, eff. 1-1-23; 103-102, Article 15, Section 15-5, eff. |
1-1-24; 103-102, Article 95, Section 95-15, eff. 1-1-24; |
103-123, eff. 1-1-24; 103-154, eff. 6-30-23; 103-368, eff. |
1-1-24; 103-593, Article 5, Section 5-5, eff. 6-7-24; 103-593, |
|
Article 90, Section 90-5, eff. 6-7-24; 103-605, eff. 7-1-24; |
103-909, eff. 8-9-24; 103-1040, eff. 8-9-24; revised |
10-10-24.) |
(Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 103-808) |
Sec. 5-5. Medical services. The Illinois Department, by |
rule, shall determine the quantity and quality of and the rate |
of reimbursement for the medical assistance for which payment |
will be authorized, and the medical services to be provided, |
which may include all or part of the following: (1) inpatient |
hospital services; (2) outpatient hospital services; (3) other |
laboratory and X-ray services; (4) skilled nursing home |
services; (5) physicians' services whether furnished in the |
office, the patient's home, a hospital, a skilled nursing |
home, or elsewhere; (6) medical care, or any other type of |
remedial care furnished by licensed practitioners; (7) home |
health care services; (8) private duty nursing service; (9) |
clinic services; (10) dental services, including prevention |
and treatment of periodontal disease and dental caries disease |
for pregnant individuals, provided by an individual licensed |
to practice dentistry or dental surgery; for purposes of this |
item (10), "dental services" means diagnostic, preventive, or |
corrective procedures provided by or under the supervision of |
a dentist in the practice of his or her profession; (11) |
physical therapy and related services; (12) prescribed drugs, |
dentures, and prosthetic devices; and eyeglasses prescribed by |
|
a physician skilled in the diseases of the eye, or by an |
optometrist, whichever the person may select; (13) other |
diagnostic, screening, preventive, and rehabilitative |
services, including to ensure that the individual's need for |
intervention or treatment of mental disorders or substance use |
disorders or co-occurring mental health and substance use |
disorders is determined using a uniform screening, assessment, |
and evaluation process inclusive of criteria, for children and |
adults; for purposes of this item (13), a uniform screening, |
assessment, and evaluation process refers to a process that |
includes an appropriate evaluation and, as warranted, a |
referral; "uniform" does not mean the use of a singular |
instrument, tool, or process that all must utilize; (14) |
transportation and such other expenses as may be necessary; |
(15) medical treatment of sexual assault survivors, as defined |
in Section 1a of the Sexual Assault Survivors Emergency |
Treatment Act, for injuries sustained as a result of the |
sexual assault, including examinations and laboratory tests to |
discover evidence which may be used in criminal proceedings |
arising from the sexual assault; (16) the diagnosis and |
treatment of sickle cell anemia; (16.5) services performed by |
a chiropractic physician licensed under the Medical Practice |
Act of 1987 and acting within the scope of his or her license, |
including, but not limited to, chiropractic manipulative |
treatment; and (17) any other medical care, and any other type |
of remedial care recognized under the laws of this State. The |
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term "any other type of remedial care" shall include nursing |
care and nursing home service for persons who rely on |
treatment by spiritual means alone through prayer for healing. |
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Section, a |
comprehensive tobacco use cessation program that includes |
purchasing prescription drugs or prescription medical devices |
approved by the Food and Drug Administration shall be covered |
under the medical assistance program under this Article for |
persons who are otherwise eligible for assistance under this |
Article. |
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Code, |
reproductive health care that is otherwise legal in Illinois |
shall be covered under the medical assistance program for |
persons who are otherwise eligible for medical assistance |
under this Article. |
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Section, all |
tobacco cessation medications approved by the United States |
Food and Drug Administration and all individual and group |
tobacco cessation counseling services and telephone-based |
counseling services and tobacco cessation medications provided |
through the Illinois Tobacco Quitline shall be covered under |
the medical assistance program for persons who are otherwise |
eligible for assistance under this Article. The Department |
shall comply with all federal requirements necessary to obtain |
federal financial participation, as specified in 42 CFR |
433.15(b)(7), for telephone-based counseling services provided |
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through the Illinois Tobacco Quitline, including, but not |
limited to: (i) entering into a memorandum of understanding or |
interagency agreement with the Department of Public Health, as |
administrator of the Illinois Tobacco Quitline; and (ii) |
developing a cost allocation plan for Medicaid-allowable |
Illinois Tobacco Quitline services in accordance with 45 CFR |
95.507. The Department shall submit the memorandum of |
understanding or interagency agreement, the cost allocation |
plan, and all other necessary documentation to the Centers for |
Medicare and Medicaid Services for review and approval. |
Coverage under this paragraph shall be contingent upon federal |
approval. |
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Code, the |
Illinois Department may not require, as a condition of payment |
for any laboratory test authorized under this Article, that a |
physician's handwritten signature appear on the laboratory |
test order form. The Illinois Department may, however, impose |
other appropriate requirements regarding laboratory test order |
documentation. |
Upon receipt of federal approval of an amendment to the |
Illinois Title XIX State Plan for this purpose, the Department |
shall authorize the Chicago Public Schools (CPS) to procure a |
vendor or vendors to manufacture eyeglasses for individuals |
enrolled in a school within the CPS system. CPS shall ensure |
that its vendor or vendors are enrolled as providers in the |
medical assistance program and in any capitated Medicaid |
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managed care entity (MCE) serving individuals enrolled in a |
school within the CPS system. Under any contract procured |
under this provision, the vendor or vendors must serve only |
individuals enrolled in a school within the CPS system. Claims |
for services provided by CPS's vendor or vendors to recipients |
of benefits in the medical assistance program under this Code, |
the Children's Health Insurance Program, or the Covering ALL |
KIDS Health Insurance Program shall be submitted to the |
Department or the MCE in which the individual is enrolled for |
payment and shall be reimbursed at the Department's or the |
MCE's established rates or rate methodologies for eyeglasses. |
On and after July 1, 2012, the Department of Healthcare |
and Family Services may provide the following services to |
persons eligible for assistance under this Article who are |
participating in education, training or employment programs |
operated by the Department of Human Services as successor to |
the Department of Public Aid: |
(1) dental services provided by or under the |
supervision of a dentist; and |
(2) eyeglasses prescribed by a physician skilled in |
the diseases of the eye, or by an optometrist, whichever |
the person may select. |
On and after July 1, 2018, the Department of Healthcare |
and Family Services shall provide dental services to any adult |
who is otherwise eligible for assistance under the medical |
assistance program. As used in this paragraph, "dental |
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services" means diagnostic, preventative, restorative, or |
corrective procedures, including procedures and services for |
the prevention and treatment of periodontal disease and dental |
caries disease, provided by an individual who is licensed to |
practice dentistry or dental surgery or who is under the |
supervision of a dentist in the practice of his or her |
profession. |
On and after July 1, 2018, targeted dental services, as |
set forth in Exhibit D of the Consent Decree entered by the |
United States District Court for the Northern District of |
Illinois, Eastern Division, in the matter of Memisovski v. |
Maram, Case No. 92 C 1982, that are provided to adults under |
the medical assistance program shall be established at no less |
than the rates set forth in the "New Rate" column in Exhibit D |
of the Consent Decree for targeted dental services that are |
provided to persons under the age of 18 under the medical |
assistance program. |
Subject to federal approval, on and after January 1, 2025, |
the rates paid for sedation evaluation and the provision of |
deep sedation and intravenous sedation for the purpose of |
dental services shall be increased by 33% above the rates in |
effect on December 31, 2024. The rates paid for nitrous oxide |
sedation shall not be impacted by this paragraph and shall |
remain the same as the rates in effect on December 31, 2024. |
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Code and |
subject to federal approval, the Department may adopt rules to |
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allow a dentist who is volunteering his or her service at no |
cost to render dental services through an enrolled |
not-for-profit health clinic without the dentist personally |
enrolling as a participating provider in the medical |
assistance program. A not-for-profit health clinic shall |
include a public health clinic or Federally Qualified Health |
Center or other enrolled provider, as determined by the |
Department, through which dental services covered under this |
Section are performed. The Department shall establish a |
process for payment of claims for reimbursement for covered |
dental services rendered under this provision. |
Subject to appropriation and to federal approval, the |
Department shall file administrative rules updating the |
Handicapping Labio-Lingual Deviation orthodontic scoring tool |
by January 1, 2025, or as soon as practicable. |
On and after January 1, 2022, the Department of Healthcare |
and Family Services shall administer and regulate a |
school-based dental program that allows for the out-of-office |
delivery of preventative dental services in a school setting |
to children under 19 years of age. The Department shall |
establish, by rule, guidelines for participation by providers |
and set requirements for follow-up referral care based on the |
requirements established in the Dental Office Reference Manual |
published by the Department that establishes the requirements |
for dentists participating in the All Kids Dental School |
Program. Every effort shall be made by the Department when |
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developing the program requirements to consider the different |
geographic differences of both urban and rural areas of the |
State for initial treatment and necessary follow-up care. No |
provider shall be charged a fee by any unit of local government |
to participate in the school-based dental program administered |
by the Department. Nothing in this paragraph shall be |
construed to limit or preempt a home rule unit's or school |
district's authority to establish, change, or administer a |
school-based dental program in addition to, or independent of, |
the school-based dental program administered by the |
Department. |
The Illinois Department, by rule, may distinguish and |
classify the medical services to be provided only in |
accordance with the classes of persons designated in Section |
5-2. |
The Department of Healthcare and Family Services must |
provide coverage and reimbursement for amino acid-based |
elemental formulas, regardless of delivery method, for the |
diagnosis and treatment of (i) eosinophilic disorders and (ii) |
short bowel syndrome when the prescribing physician has issued |
a written order stating that the amino acid-based elemental |
formula is medically necessary. |
The Illinois Department shall authorize the provision of, |
and shall authorize payment for, screening by low-dose |
mammography for the presence of occult breast cancer for |
individuals 35 years of age or older who are eligible for |
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medical assistance under this Article, as follows: |
(A) A baseline mammogram for individuals 35 to 39 |
years of age. |
(B) An annual mammogram for individuals 40 years of |
age or older. |
(C) A mammogram at the age and intervals considered |
medically necessary by the individual's health care |
provider for individuals under 40 years of age and having |
a family history of breast cancer, prior personal history |
of breast cancer, positive genetic testing, or other risk |
factors. |
(D) A comprehensive ultrasound screening and MRI of an |
entire breast or breasts if a mammogram demonstrates |
heterogeneous or dense breast tissue or when medically |
necessary as determined by a physician licensed to |
practice medicine in all of its branches. |
(E) A screening MRI when medically necessary, as |
determined by a physician licensed to practice medicine in |
all of its branches. |
(F) A diagnostic mammogram when medically necessary, |
as determined by a physician licensed to practice medicine |
in all its branches, advanced practice registered nurse, |
or physician assistant. |
(G) Molecular breast imaging (MBI) and MRI of an |
entire breast or breasts if a mammogram demonstrates |
heterogeneous or dense breast tissue or when medically |
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necessary as determined by a physician licensed to |
practice medicine in all of its branches, advanced |
practice registered nurse, or physician assistant. |
The Department shall not impose a deductible, coinsurance, |
copayment, or any other cost-sharing requirement on the |
coverage provided under this paragraph; except that this |
sentence does not apply to coverage of diagnostic mammograms |
to the extent such coverage would disqualify a high-deductible |
health plan from eligibility for a health savings account |
pursuant to Section 223 of the Internal Revenue Code (26 |
U.S.C. 223). |
All screenings shall include a physical breast exam, |
instruction on self-examination and information regarding the |
frequency of self-examination and its value as a preventative |
tool. |
For purposes of this Section: |
"Diagnostic mammogram" means a mammogram obtained using |
diagnostic mammography. |
"Diagnostic mammography" means a method of screening that |
is designed to evaluate an abnormality in a breast, including |
an abnormality seen or suspected on a screening mammogram or a |
subjective or objective abnormality otherwise detected in the |
breast. |
"Low-dose mammography" means the x-ray examination of the |
breast using equipment dedicated specifically for mammography, |
including the x-ray tube, filter, compression device, and |
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image receptor, with an average radiation exposure delivery of |
less than one rad per breast for 2 views of an average size |
breast. The term also includes digital mammography and |
includes breast tomosynthesis. |
"Breast tomosynthesis" means a radiologic procedure that |
involves the acquisition of projection images over the |
stationary breast to produce cross-sectional digital |
three-dimensional images of the breast. |
If, at any time, the Secretary of the United States |
Department of Health and Human Services, or its successor |
agency, promulgates rules or regulations to be published in |
the Federal Register or publishes a comment in the Federal |
Register or issues an opinion, guidance, or other action that |
would require the State, pursuant to any provision of the |
Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (Public Law |
111-148), including, but not limited to, 42 U.S.C. |
18031(d)(3)(B) or any successor provision, to defray the cost |
of any coverage for breast tomosynthesis outlined in this |
paragraph, then the requirement that an insurer cover breast |
tomosynthesis is inoperative other than any such coverage |
authorized under Section 1902 of the Social Security Act, 42 |
U.S.C. 1396a, and the State shall not assume any obligation |
for the cost of coverage for breast tomosynthesis set forth in |
this paragraph. |
On and after January 1, 2016, the Department shall ensure |
that all networks of care for adult clients of the Department |
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include access to at least one breast imaging Center of |
Imaging Excellence as certified by the American College of |
Radiology. |
On and after January 1, 2012, providers participating in a |
quality improvement program approved by the Department shall |
be reimbursed for screening and diagnostic mammography at the |
same rate as the Medicare program's rates, including the |
increased reimbursement for digital mammography and, after |
January 1, 2023 (the effective date of Public Act 102-1018), |
breast tomosynthesis. |
The Department shall convene an expert panel including |
representatives of hospitals, free-standing mammography |
facilities, and doctors, including radiologists, to establish |
quality standards for mammography. |
On and after January 1, 2017, providers participating in a |
breast cancer treatment quality improvement program approved |
by the Department shall be reimbursed for breast cancer |
treatment at a rate that is no lower than 95% of the Medicare |
program's rates for the data elements included in the breast |
cancer treatment quality program. |
The Department shall convene an expert panel, including |
representatives of hospitals, free-standing breast cancer |
treatment centers, breast cancer quality organizations, and |
doctors, including radiologists that are trained in all forms |
of FDA-approved FDA approved breast imaging technologies, |
breast surgeons, reconstructive breast surgeons, oncologists, |
|
and primary care providers to establish quality standards for |
breast cancer treatment. |
Subject to federal approval, the Department shall |
establish a rate methodology for mammography at federally |
qualified health centers and other encounter-rate clinics. |
These clinics or centers may also collaborate with other |
hospital-based mammography facilities. By January 1, 2016, the |
Department shall report to the General Assembly on the status |
of the provision set forth in this paragraph. |
The Department shall establish a methodology to remind |
individuals who are age-appropriate for screening mammography, |
but who have not received a mammogram within the previous 18 |
months, of the importance and benefit of screening |
mammography. The Department shall work with experts in breast |
cancer outreach and patient navigation to optimize these |
reminders and shall establish a methodology for evaluating |
their effectiveness and modifying the methodology based on the |
evaluation. |
The Department shall establish a performance goal for |
primary care providers with respect to their female patients |
over age 40 receiving an annual mammogram. This performance |
goal shall be used to provide additional reimbursement in the |
form of a quality performance bonus to primary care providers |
who meet that goal. |
The Department shall devise a means of case-managing or |
patient navigation for beneficiaries diagnosed with breast |
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cancer. This program shall initially operate as a pilot |
program in areas of the State with the highest incidence of |
mortality related to breast cancer. At least one pilot program |
site shall be in the metropolitan Chicago area and at least one |
site shall be outside the metropolitan Chicago area. On or |
after July 1, 2016, the pilot program shall be expanded to |
include one site in western Illinois, one site in southern |
Illinois, one site in central Illinois, and 4 sites within |
metropolitan Chicago. An evaluation of the pilot program shall |
be carried out measuring health outcomes and cost of care for |
those served by the pilot program compared to similarly |
situated patients who are not served by the pilot program. |
The Department shall require all networks of care to |
develop a means either internally or by contract with experts |
in navigation and community outreach to navigate cancer |
patients to comprehensive care in a timely fashion. The |
Department shall require all networks of care to include |
access for patients diagnosed with cancer to at least one |
academic commission on cancer-accredited cancer program as an |
in-network covered benefit. |
The Department shall provide coverage and reimbursement |
for a human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine that is approved for |
marketing by the federal Food and Drug Administration for all |
persons between the ages of 9 and 45. Subject to federal |
approval, the Department shall provide coverage and |
reimbursement for a human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine for |
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persons of the age of 46 and above who have been diagnosed with |
cervical dysplasia with a high risk of recurrence or |
progression. The Department shall disallow any |
preauthorization requirements for the administration of the |
human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine. |
On or after July 1, 2022, individuals who are otherwise |
eligible for medical assistance under this Article shall |
receive coverage for perinatal depression screenings for the |
12-month period beginning on the last day of their pregnancy. |
Medical assistance coverage under this paragraph shall be |
conditioned on the use of a screening instrument approved by |
the Department. |
Any medical or health care provider shall immediately |
recommend, to any pregnant individual who is being provided |
prenatal services and is suspected of having a substance use |
disorder as defined in the Substance Use Disorder Act, |
referral to a local substance use disorder treatment program |
licensed by the Department of Human Services or to a licensed |
hospital which provides substance abuse treatment services. |
The Department of Healthcare and Family Services shall assure |
coverage for the cost of treatment of the drug abuse or |
addiction for pregnant recipients in accordance with the |
Illinois Medicaid Program in conjunction with the Department |
of Human Services. |
All medical providers providing medical assistance to |
pregnant individuals under this Code shall receive information |
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from the Department on the availability of services under any |
program providing case management services for addicted |
individuals, including information on appropriate referrals |
for other social services that may be needed by addicted |
individuals in addition to treatment for addiction. |
The Illinois Department, in cooperation with the |
Departments of Human Services (as successor to the Department |
of Alcoholism and Substance Abuse) and Public Health, through |
a public awareness campaign, may provide information |
concerning treatment for alcoholism and drug abuse and |
addiction, prenatal health care, and other pertinent programs |
directed at reducing the number of drug-affected infants born |
to recipients of medical assistance. |
Neither the Department of Healthcare and Family Services |
nor the Department of Human Services shall sanction the |
recipient solely on the basis of the recipient's substance |
abuse. |
The Illinois Department shall establish such regulations |
governing the dispensing of health services under this Article |
as it shall deem appropriate. The Department should seek the |
advice of formal professional advisory committees appointed by |
the Director of the Illinois Department for the purpose of |
providing regular advice on policy and administrative matters, |
information dissemination and educational activities for |
medical and health care providers, and consistency in |
procedures to the Illinois Department. |
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The Illinois Department may develop and contract with |
Partnerships of medical providers to arrange medical services |
for persons eligible under Section 5-2 of this Code. |
Implementation of this Section may be by demonstration |
projects in certain geographic areas. The Partnership shall be |
represented by a sponsor organization. The Department, by |
rule, shall develop qualifications for sponsors of |
Partnerships. Nothing in this Section shall be construed to |
require that the sponsor organization be a medical |
organization. |
The sponsor must negotiate formal written contracts with |
medical providers for physician services, inpatient and |
outpatient hospital care, home health services, treatment for |
alcoholism and substance abuse, and other services determined |
necessary by the Illinois Department by rule for delivery by |
Partnerships. Physician services must include prenatal and |
obstetrical care. The Illinois Department shall reimburse |
medical services delivered by Partnership providers to clients |
in target areas according to provisions of this Article and |
the Illinois Health Finance Reform Act, except that: |
(1) Physicians participating in a Partnership and |
providing certain services, which shall be determined by |
the Illinois Department, to persons in areas covered by |
the Partnership may receive an additional surcharge for |
such services. |
(2) The Department may elect to consider and negotiate |
|
financial incentives to encourage the development of |
Partnerships and the efficient delivery of medical care. |
(3) Persons receiving medical services through |
Partnerships may receive medical and case management |
services above the level usually offered through the |
medical assistance program. |
Medical providers shall be required to meet certain |
qualifications to participate in Partnerships to ensure the |
delivery of high quality medical services. These |
qualifications shall be determined by rule of the Illinois |
Department and may be higher than qualifications for |
participation in the medical assistance program. Partnership |
sponsors may prescribe reasonable additional qualifications |
for participation by medical providers, only with the prior |
written approval of the Illinois Department. |
Nothing in this Section shall limit the free choice of |
practitioners, hospitals, and other providers of medical |
services by clients. In order to ensure patient freedom of |
choice, the Illinois Department shall immediately promulgate |
all rules and take all other necessary actions so that |
provided services may be accessed from therapeutically |
certified optometrists to the full extent of the Illinois |
Optometric Practice Act of 1987 without discriminating between |
service providers. |
The Department shall apply for a waiver from the United |
States Health Care Financing Administration to allow for the |
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implementation of Partnerships under this Section. |
The Illinois Department shall require health care |
providers to maintain records that document the medical care |
and services provided to recipients of Medical Assistance |
under this Article. Such records must be retained for a period |
of not less than 6 years from the date of service or as |
provided by applicable State law, whichever period is longer, |
except that if an audit is initiated within the required |
retention period then the records must be retained until the |
audit is completed and every exception is resolved. The |
Illinois Department shall require health care providers to |
make available, when authorized by the patient, in writing, |
the medical records in a timely fashion to other health care |
providers who are treating or serving persons eligible for |
Medical Assistance under this Article. All dispensers of |
medical services shall be required to maintain and retain |
business and professional records sufficient to fully and |
accurately document the nature, scope, details and receipt of |
the health care provided to persons eligible for medical |
assistance under this Code, in accordance with regulations |
promulgated by the Illinois Department. The rules and |
regulations shall require that proof of the receipt of |
prescription drugs, dentures, prosthetic devices and |
eyeglasses by eligible persons under this Section accompany |
each claim for reimbursement submitted by the dispenser of |
such medical services. No such claims for reimbursement shall |
|
be approved for payment by the Illinois Department without |
such proof of receipt, unless the Illinois Department shall |
have put into effect and shall be operating a system of |
post-payment audit and review which shall, on a sampling |
basis, be deemed adequate by the Illinois Department to assure |
that such drugs, dentures, prosthetic devices and eyeglasses |
for which payment is being made are actually being received by |
eligible recipients. Within 90 days after September 16, 1984 |
(the effective date of Public Act 83-1439), the Illinois |
Department shall establish a current list of acquisition costs |
for all prosthetic devices and any other items recognized as |
medical equipment and supplies reimbursable under this Article |
and shall update such list on a quarterly basis, except that |
the acquisition costs of all prescription drugs shall be |
updated no less frequently than every 30 days as required by |
Section 5-5.12. |
Notwithstanding any other law to the contrary, the |
Illinois Department shall, within 365 days after July 22, 2013 |
(the effective date of Public Act 98-104), establish |
procedures to permit skilled care facilities licensed under |
the Nursing Home Care Act to submit monthly billing claims for |
reimbursement purposes. Following development of these |
procedures, the Department shall, by July 1, 2016, test the |
viability of the new system and implement any necessary |
operational or structural changes to its information |
technology platforms in order to allow for the direct |
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acceptance and payment of nursing home claims. |
Notwithstanding any other law to the contrary, the |
Illinois Department shall, within 365 days after August 15, |
2014 (the effective date of Public Act 98-963), establish |
procedures to permit ID/DD facilities licensed under the ID/DD |
Community Care Act and MC/DD facilities licensed under the |
MC/DD Act to submit monthly billing claims for reimbursement |
purposes. Following development of these procedures, the |
Department shall have an additional 365 days to test the |
viability of the new system and to ensure that any necessary |
operational or structural changes to its information |
technology platforms are implemented. |
The Illinois Department shall require all dispensers of |
medical services, other than an individual practitioner or |
group of practitioners, desiring to participate in the Medical |
Assistance program established under this Article to disclose |
all financial, beneficial, ownership, equity, surety or other |
interests in any and all firms, corporations, partnerships, |
associations, business enterprises, joint ventures, agencies, |
institutions or other legal entities providing any form of |
health care services in this State under this Article. |
The Illinois Department may require that all dispensers of |
medical services desiring to participate in the medical |
assistance program established under this Article disclose, |
under such terms and conditions as the Illinois Department may |
by rule establish, all inquiries from clients and attorneys |
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regarding medical bills paid by the Illinois Department, which |
inquiries could indicate potential existence of claims or |
liens for the Illinois Department. |
Enrollment of a vendor shall be subject to a provisional |
period and shall be conditional for one year. During the |
period of conditional enrollment, the Department may terminate |
the vendor's eligibility to participate in, or may disenroll |
the vendor from, the medical assistance program without cause. |
Unless otherwise specified, such termination of eligibility or |
disenrollment is not subject to the Department's hearing |
process. However, a disenrolled vendor may reapply without |
penalty. |
The Department has the discretion to limit the conditional |
enrollment period for vendors based upon the category of risk |
of the vendor. |
Prior to enrollment and during the conditional enrollment |
period in the medical assistance program, all vendors shall be |
subject to enhanced oversight, screening, and review based on |
the risk of fraud, waste, and abuse that is posed by the |
category of risk of the vendor. The Illinois Department shall |
establish the procedures for oversight, screening, and review, |
which may include, but need not be limited to: criminal and |
financial background checks; fingerprinting; license, |
certification, and authorization verifications; unscheduled or |
unannounced site visits; database checks; prepayment audit |
reviews; audits; payment caps; payment suspensions; and other |
|
screening as required by federal or State law. |
The Department shall define or specify the following: (i) |
by provider notice, the "category of risk of the vendor" for |
each type of vendor, which shall take into account the level of |
screening applicable to a particular category of vendor under |
federal law and regulations; (ii) by rule or provider notice, |
the maximum length of the conditional enrollment period for |
each category of risk of the vendor; and (iii) by rule, the |
hearing rights, if any, afforded to a vendor in each category |
of risk of the vendor that is terminated or disenrolled during |
the conditional enrollment period. |
To be eligible for payment consideration, a vendor's |
payment claim or bill, either as an initial claim or as a |
resubmitted claim following prior rejection, must be received |
by the Illinois Department, or its fiscal intermediary, no |
later than 180 days after the latest date on the claim on which |
medical goods or services were provided, with the following |
exceptions: |
(1) In the case of a provider whose enrollment is in |
process by the Illinois Department, the 180-day period |
shall not begin until the date on the written notice from |
the Illinois Department that the provider enrollment is |
complete. |
(2) In the case of errors attributable to the Illinois |
Department or any of its claims processing intermediaries |
which result in an inability to receive, process, or |
|
adjudicate a claim, the 180-day period shall not begin |
until the provider has been notified of the error. |
(3) In the case of a provider for whom the Illinois |
Department initiates the monthly billing process. |
(4) In the case of a provider operated by a unit of |
local government with a population exceeding 3,000,000 |
when local government funds finance federal participation |
for claims payments. |
For claims for services rendered during a period for which |
a recipient received retroactive eligibility, claims must be |
filed within 180 days after the Department determines the |
applicant is eligible. For claims for which the Illinois |
Department is not the primary payer, claims must be submitted |
to the Illinois Department within 180 days after the final |
adjudication by the primary payer. |
In the case of long term care facilities, within 120 |
calendar days of receipt by the facility of required |
prescreening information, new admissions with associated |
admission documents shall be submitted through the Medical |
Electronic Data Interchange (MEDI) or the Recipient |
Eligibility Verification (REV) System or shall be submitted |
directly to the Department of Human Services using required |
admission forms. Effective September 1, 2014, admission |
documents, including all prescreening information, must be |
submitted through MEDI or REV. Confirmation numbers assigned |
to an accepted transaction shall be retained by a facility to |
|
verify timely submittal. Once an admission transaction has |
been completed, all resubmitted claims following prior |
rejection are subject to receipt no later than 180 days after |
the admission transaction has been completed. |
Claims that are not submitted and received in compliance |
with the foregoing requirements shall not be eligible for |
payment under the medical assistance program, and the State |
shall have no liability for payment of those claims. |
To the extent consistent with applicable information and |
privacy, security, and disclosure laws, State and federal |
agencies and departments shall provide the Illinois Department |
access to confidential and other information and data |
necessary to perform eligibility and payment verifications and |
other Illinois Department functions. This includes, but is not |
limited to: information pertaining to licensure; |
certification; earnings; immigration status; citizenship; wage |
reporting; unearned and earned income; pension income; |
employment; supplemental security income; social security |
numbers; National Provider Identifier (NPI) numbers; the |
National Practitioner Data Bank (NPDB); program and agency |
exclusions; taxpayer identification numbers; tax delinquency; |
corporate information; and death records. |
The Illinois Department shall enter into agreements with |
State agencies and departments, and is authorized to enter |
into agreements with federal agencies and departments, under |
which such agencies and departments shall share data necessary |
|
for medical assistance program integrity functions and |
oversight. The Illinois Department shall develop, in |
cooperation with other State departments and agencies, and in |
compliance with applicable federal laws and regulations, |
appropriate and effective methods to share such data. At a |
minimum, and to the extent necessary to provide data sharing, |
the Illinois Department shall enter into agreements with State |
agencies and departments, and is authorized to enter into |
agreements with federal agencies and departments, including, |
but not limited to: the Secretary of State; the Department of |
Revenue; the Department of Public Health; the Department of |
Human Services; and the Department of Financial and |
Professional Regulation. |
Beginning in fiscal year 2013, the Illinois Department |
shall set forth a request for information to identify the |
benefits of a pre-payment, post-adjudication, and post-edit |
claims system with the goals of streamlining claims processing |
and provider reimbursement, reducing the number of pending or |
rejected claims, and helping to ensure a more transparent |
adjudication process through the utilization of: (i) provider |
data verification and provider screening technology; and (ii) |
clinical code editing; and (iii) pre-pay, pre-adjudicated, or |
post-adjudicated predictive modeling with an integrated case |
management system with link analysis. Such a request for |
information shall not be considered as a request for proposal |
or as an obligation on the part of the Illinois Department to |
|
take any action or acquire any products or services. |
The Illinois Department shall establish policies, |
procedures, standards and criteria by rule for the |
acquisition, repair and replacement of orthotic and prosthetic |
devices and durable medical equipment. Such rules shall |
provide, but not be limited to, the following services: (1) |
immediate repair or replacement of such devices by recipients; |
and (2) rental, lease, purchase or lease-purchase of durable |
medical equipment in a cost-effective manner, taking into |
consideration the recipient's medical prognosis, the extent of |
the recipient's needs, and the requirements and costs for |
maintaining such equipment. Subject to prior approval, such |
rules shall enable a recipient to temporarily acquire and use |
alternative or substitute devices or equipment pending repairs |
or replacements of any device or equipment previously |
authorized for such recipient by the Department. |
Notwithstanding any provision of Section 5-5f to the contrary, |
the Department may, by rule, exempt certain replacement |
wheelchair parts from prior approval and, for wheelchairs, |
wheelchair parts, wheelchair accessories, and related seating |
and positioning items, determine the wholesale price by |
methods other than actual acquisition costs. |
The Department shall require, by rule, all providers of |
durable medical equipment to be accredited by an accreditation |
organization approved by the federal Centers for Medicare and |
Medicaid Services and recognized by the Department in order to |
|
bill the Department for providing durable medical equipment to |
recipients. No later than 15 months after the effective date |
of the rule adopted pursuant to this paragraph, all providers |
must meet the accreditation requirement. |
In order to promote environmental responsibility, meet the |
needs of recipients and enrollees, and achieve significant |
cost savings, the Department, or a managed care organization |
under contract with the Department, may provide recipients or |
managed care enrollees who have a prescription or Certificate |
of Medical Necessity access to refurbished durable medical |
equipment under this Section (excluding prosthetic and |
orthotic devices as defined in the Orthotics, Prosthetics, and |
Pedorthics Practice Act and complex rehabilitation technology |
products and associated services) through the State's |
assistive technology program's reutilization program, using |
staff with the Assistive Technology Professional (ATP) |
Certification if the refurbished durable medical equipment: |
(i) is available; (ii) is less expensive, including shipping |
costs, than new durable medical equipment of the same type; |
(iii) is able to withstand at least 3 years of use; (iv) is |
cleaned, disinfected, sterilized, and safe in accordance with |
federal Food and Drug Administration regulations and guidance |
governing the reprocessing of medical devices in health care |
settings; and (v) equally meets the needs of the recipient or |
enrollee. The reutilization program shall confirm that the |
recipient or enrollee is not already in receipt of the same or |
|
similar equipment from another service provider, and that the |
refurbished durable medical equipment equally meets the needs |
of the recipient or enrollee. Nothing in this paragraph shall |
be construed to limit recipient or enrollee choice to obtain |
new durable medical equipment or place any additional prior |
authorization conditions on enrollees of managed care |
organizations. |
The Department shall execute, relative to the nursing home |
prescreening project, written inter-agency agreements with the |
Department of Human Services and the Department on Aging, to |
effect the following: (i) intake procedures and common |
eligibility criteria for those persons who are receiving |
non-institutional services; and (ii) the establishment and |
development of non-institutional services in areas of the |
State where they are not currently available or are |
undeveloped; and (iii) notwithstanding any other provision of |
law, subject to federal approval, on and after July 1, 2012, an |
increase in the determination of need (DON) scores from 29 to |
37 for applicants for institutional and home and |
community-based long term care; if and only if federal |
approval is not granted, the Department may, in conjunction |
with other affected agencies, implement utilization controls |
or changes in benefit packages to effectuate a similar savings |
amount for this population; and (iv) no later than July 1, |
2013, minimum level of care eligibility criteria for |
institutional and home and community-based long term care; and |
|
(v) no later than October 1, 2013, establish procedures to |
permit long term care providers access to eligibility scores |
for individuals with an admission date who are seeking or |
receiving services from the long term care provider. In order |
to select the minimum level of care eligibility criteria, the |
Governor shall establish a workgroup that includes affected |
agency representatives and stakeholders representing the |
institutional and home and community-based long term care |
interests. This Section shall not restrict the Department from |
implementing lower level of care eligibility criteria for |
community-based services in circumstances where federal |
approval has been granted. |
The Illinois Department shall develop and operate, in |
cooperation with other State Departments and agencies and in |
compliance with applicable federal laws and regulations, |
appropriate and effective systems of health care evaluation |
and programs for monitoring of utilization of health care |
services and facilities, as it affects persons eligible for |
medical assistance under this Code. |
The Illinois Department shall report annually to the |
General Assembly, no later than the second Friday in April of |
1979 and each year thereafter, in regard to: |
(a) actual statistics and trends in utilization of |
medical services by public aid recipients; |
(b) actual statistics and trends in the provision of |
the various medical services by medical vendors; |
|
(c) current rate structures and proposed changes in |
those rate structures for the various medical vendors; and |
(d) efforts at utilization review and control by the |
Illinois Department. |
The period covered by each report shall be the 3 years |
ending on the June 30 prior to the report. The report shall |
include suggested legislation for consideration by the General |
Assembly. The requirement for reporting to the General |
Assembly shall be satisfied by filing copies of the report as |
required by Section 3.1 of the General Assembly Organization |
Act, and filing such additional copies with the State |
Government Report Distribution Center for the General Assembly |
as is required under paragraph (t) of Section 7 of the State |
Library Act. |
Rulemaking authority to implement Public Act 95-1045, if |
any, is conditioned on the rules being adopted in accordance |
with all provisions of the Illinois Administrative Procedure |
Act and all rules and procedures of the Joint Committee on |
Administrative Rules; any purported rule not so adopted, for |
whatever reason, is unauthorized. |
On and after July 1, 2012, the Department shall reduce any |
rate of reimbursement for services or other payments or alter |
any methodologies authorized by this Code to reduce any rate |
of reimbursement for services or other payments in accordance |
with Section 5-5e. |
Because kidney transplantation can be an appropriate, |
|
cost-effective alternative to renal dialysis when medically |
necessary and notwithstanding the provisions of Section 1-11 |
of this Code, beginning October 1, 2014, the Department shall |
cover kidney transplantation for noncitizens with end-stage |
renal disease who are not eligible for comprehensive medical |
benefits, who meet the residency requirements of Section 5-3 |
of this Code, and who would otherwise meet the financial |
requirements of the appropriate class of eligible persons |
under Section 5-2 of this Code. To qualify for coverage of |
kidney transplantation, such person must be receiving |
emergency renal dialysis services covered by the Department. |
Providers under this Section shall be prior approved and |
certified by the Department to perform kidney transplantation |
and the services under this Section shall be limited to |
services associated with kidney transplantation. |
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Code to the |
contrary, on or after July 1, 2015, all FDA-approved FDA |
approved forms of medication assisted treatment prescribed for |
the treatment of alcohol dependence or treatment of opioid |
dependence shall be covered under both fee-for-service and |
managed care medical assistance programs for persons who are |
otherwise eligible for medical assistance under this Article |
and shall not be subject to any (1) utilization control, other |
than those established under the American Society of Addiction |
Medicine patient placement criteria, (2) prior authorization |
mandate, (3) lifetime restriction limit mandate, or (4) |
|
limitations on dosage. |
On or after July 1, 2015, opioid antagonists prescribed |
for the treatment of an opioid overdose, including the |
medication product, administration devices, and any pharmacy |
fees or hospital fees related to the dispensing, distribution, |
and administration of the opioid antagonist, shall be covered |
under the medical assistance program for persons who are |
otherwise eligible for medical assistance under this Article. |
As used in this Section, "opioid antagonist" means a drug that |
binds to opioid receptors and blocks or inhibits the effect of |
opioids acting on those receptors, including, but not limited |
to, naloxone hydrochloride or any other similarly acting drug |
approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. The |
Department shall not impose a copayment on the coverage |
provided for naloxone hydrochloride under the medical |
assistance program. |
Upon federal approval, the Department shall provide |
coverage and reimbursement for all drugs that are approved for |
marketing by the federal Food and Drug Administration and that |
are recommended by the federal Public Health Service or the |
United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for |
pre-exposure prophylaxis and related pre-exposure prophylaxis |
services, including, but not limited to, HIV and sexually |
transmitted infection screening, treatment for sexually |
transmitted infections, medical monitoring, assorted labs, and |
counseling to reduce the likelihood of HIV infection among |
|
individuals who are not infected with HIV but who are at high |
risk of HIV infection. |
A federally qualified health center, as defined in Section |
1905(l)(2)(B) of the federal Social Security Act, shall be |
reimbursed by the Department in accordance with the federally |
qualified health center's encounter rate for services provided |
to medical assistance recipients that are performed by a |
dental hygienist, as defined under the Illinois Dental |
Practice Act, working under the general supervision of a |
dentist and employed by a federally qualified health center. |
Within 90 days after October 8, 2021 (the effective date |
of Public Act 102-665), the Department shall seek federal |
approval of a State Plan amendment to expand coverage for |
family planning services that includes presumptive eligibility |
to individuals whose income is at or below 208% of the federal |
poverty level. Coverage under this Section shall be effective |
beginning no later than December 1, 2022. |
Subject to approval by the federal Centers for Medicare |
and Medicaid Services of a Title XIX State Plan amendment |
electing the Program of All-Inclusive Care for the Elderly |
(PACE) as a State Medicaid option, as provided for by Subtitle |
I (commencing with Section 4801) of Title IV of the Balanced |
Budget Act of 1997 (Public Law 105-33) and Part 460 |
(commencing with Section 460.2) of Subchapter E of Title 42 of |
the Code of Federal Regulations, PACE program services shall |
become a covered benefit of the medical assistance program, |
|
subject to criteria established in accordance with all |
applicable laws. |
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Code, |
community-based pediatric palliative care from a trained |
interdisciplinary team shall be covered under the medical |
assistance program as provided in Section 15 of the Pediatric |
Palliative Care Act. |
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Code, within |
12 months after June 2, 2022 (the effective date of Public Act |
102-1037) and subject to federal approval, acupuncture |
services performed by an acupuncturist licensed under the |
Acupuncture Practice Act who is acting within the scope of his |
or her license shall be covered under the medical assistance |
program. The Department shall apply for any federal waiver or |
State Plan amendment, if required, to implement this |
paragraph. The Department may adopt any rules, including |
standards and criteria, necessary to implement this paragraph. |
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Code, the |
medical assistance program shall, subject to federal approval, |
reimburse hospitals for costs associated with a newborn |
screening test for the presence of metachromatic |
leukodystrophy, as required under the Newborn Metabolic |
Screening Act, at a rate not less than the fee charged by the |
Department of Public Health. Notwithstanding any other |
provision of this Code, the medical assistance program shall, |
subject to appropriation and federal approval, also reimburse |
|
hospitals for costs associated with all newborn screening |
tests added on and after August 9, 2024 (the effective date of |
Public Act 103-909) this amendatory Act of the 103rd General |
Assembly to the Newborn Metabolic Screening Act and required |
to be performed under that Act at a rate not less than the fee |
charged by the Department of Public Health. The Department |
shall seek federal approval before the implementation of the |
newborn screening test fees by the Department of Public |
Health. |
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Code, |
beginning on January 1, 2024, subject to federal approval, |
cognitive assessment and care planning services provided to a |
person who experiences signs or symptoms of cognitive |
impairment, as defined by the Diagnostic and Statistical |
Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition, shall be covered |
under the medical assistance program for persons who are |
otherwise eligible for medical assistance under this Article. |
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Code, |
medically necessary reconstructive services that are intended |
to restore physical appearance shall be covered under the |
medical assistance program for persons who are otherwise |
eligible for medical assistance under this Article. As used in |
this paragraph, "reconstructive services" means treatments |
performed on structures of the body damaged by trauma to |
restore physical appearance. |
Subject to federal approval, for dates of services on and |
|
after January 1, 2026, over-the-counter choline dietary |
supplements for pregnant persons shall be covered under the |
medical assistance program. |
(Source: P.A. 102-43, Article 30, Section 30-5, eff. 7-6-21; |
102-43, Article 35, Section 35-5, eff. 7-6-21; 102-43, Article |
55, Section 55-5, eff. 7-6-21; 102-95, eff. 1-1-22; 102-123, |
eff. 1-1-22; 102-558, eff. 8-20-21; 102-598, eff. 1-1-22; |
102-655, eff. 1-1-22; 102-665, eff. 10-8-21; 102-813, eff. |
5-13-22; 102-1018, eff. 1-1-23; 102-1037, eff. 6-2-22; |
102-1038, eff. 1-1-23; 103-102, Article 15, Section 15-5, eff. |
1-1-24; 103-102, Article 95, Section 95-15, eff. 1-1-24; |
103-123, eff. 1-1-24; 103-154, eff. 6-30-23; 103-368, eff. |
1-1-24; 103-593, Article 5, Section 5-5, eff. 6-7-24; 103-593, |
Article 90, Section 90-5, eff. 6-7-24; 103-605, eff. 7-1-24; |
103-808, eff. 1-1-26; 103-909, eff. 8-9-24; 103-1040, eff. |
8-9-24; revised 10-10-24.) |
ARTICLE 45. |
Section 45-5. The Illinois Public Aid Code is amended by |
changing Section 11-4 as follows: |
(305 ILCS 5/11-4) (from Ch. 23, par. 11-4) |
Sec. 11-4. Applications; assistance in making |
applications. An initial application for public assistance |
shall be deemed an application for all such benefits to which |
|
any person may be entitled except to the extent that the |
applicant expressly declines in writing to apply for |
particular benefits. The redetermination is an annual |
redetermination of eligibility of current benefits and is not |
an initial application. The Illinois Department shall provide |
information in writing about all benefits provided under this |
Code to any person seeking public assistance. The Illinois |
Department shall also provide information in writing and |
orally to all applicants about an election to have financial |
aid deposited directly in a recipient's savings account or |
checking account or in any electronic benefits account or |
accounts as provided in Section 11-3.1, to the extent that |
those elections are actually available, including information |
on any programs administered by the State Treasurer to |
facilitate or encourage the distribution of financial aid by |
direct deposit or electronic benefits transfer. The Illinois |
Department shall determine the applicant's eligibility for |
cash assistance, medical assistance and food stamps unless the |
applicant expressly declines in writing to apply for |
particular benefits. The Illinois Department shall adopt |
policies and procedures to facilitate timely changes between |
programs that result from changes in categorical eligibility |
factors. |
The County departments, local governmental units and the |
Illinois Department shall assist applicants for public |
assistance to properly complete their applications. Such |
|
assistance shall include, but not be limited to, assistance in |
securing evidence in support of their eligibility. |
(Source: P.A. 88-232.) |
ARTICLE 66. |
Section 66-5. The Illinois Public Aid Code is amended by |
changing Section 14-12 as follows: |
(305 ILCS 5/14-12) |
Sec. 14-12. Hospital rate reform payment system. The |
hospital payment system pursuant to Section 14-11 of this |
Article shall be as follows: |
(a) Inpatient hospital services. Effective for discharges |
on and after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the |
104th General Assembly July 1, 2014, reimbursement for |
inpatient general acute care services shall utilize the All |
Patient Refined Diagnosis Related Grouping (APR-DRG) software, |
version 30, distributed by SolventumTM previously known as 3MTM |
Health Information System. SolventumTM shall be the exclusive |
provider of this software unless the Department determines |
that SolventumTM is unable to meet the required operational or |
contractual terms. Only under these circumstances may an |
alternative authorized provider of the software be considered. |
(1) The Department shall establish Medicaid weighting |
factors to be used in the reimbursement system established |
|
under this subsection. Initial weighting factors shall be |
the weighting factors as published by the authorized |
provider of this software 3M Health Information System, |
associated with Version 30.0 adjusted for the Illinois |
experience. |
(2) The Department shall establish a |
statewide-standardized amount to be used in the inpatient |
reimbursement system. The Department shall publish these |
amounts on its website no later than 10 calendar days |
prior to their effective date. |
(3) In addition to the statewide-standardized amount, |
the Department shall develop adjusters to adjust the rate |
of reimbursement for critical Medicaid providers or |
services for trauma, transplantation services, perinatal |
care, and Graduate Medical Education (GME). |
(4) The Department shall develop add-on payments to |
account for exceptionally costly inpatient stays, |
consistent with Medicare outlier principles. Outlier fixed |
loss thresholds may be updated to control for excessive |
growth in outlier payments no more frequently than on an |
annual basis, but at least once every 4 years. Upon |
updating the fixed loss thresholds, the Department shall |
be required to update base rates within 12 months. |
(5) The Department shall define those hospitals or |
distinct parts of hospitals that shall be exempt from the |
APR-DRG reimbursement system established under this |
|
Section. The Department shall publish these hospitals' |
inpatient rates on its website no later than 10 calendar |
days prior to their effective date. |
(6) Beginning July 1, 2014 and ending on December 31, |
2023, in addition to the statewide-standardized amount, |
the Department shall develop an adjustor to adjust the |
rate of reimbursement for safety-net hospitals defined in |
Section 5-5e.1 of this Code excluding pediatric hospitals. |
(7) Beginning July 1, 2014, in addition to the |
statewide-standardized amount, the Department shall |
develop an adjustor to adjust the rate of reimbursement |
for Illinois freestanding inpatient psychiatric hospitals |
that are not designated as children's hospitals by the |
Department but are primarily treating patients under the |
age of 21. |
(7.5) (Blank). |
(8) Beginning July 1, 2018, in addition to the |
statewide-standardized amount, the Department shall adjust |
the rate of reimbursement for hospitals designated by the |
Department of Public Health as a Perinatal Level II or II+ |
center by applying the same adjustor that is applied to |
Perinatal and Obstetrical care cases for Perinatal Level |
III centers, as of December 31, 2017. |
(9) Beginning July 1, 2018, in addition to the |
statewide-standardized amount, the Department shall apply |
the same adjustor that is applied to trauma cases as of |
|
December 31, 2017 to inpatient claims to treat patients |
with burns, including, but not limited to, APR-DRGs 841, |
842, 843, and 844. |
(10) Beginning July 1, 2018, the |
statewide-standardized amount for inpatient general acute |
care services shall be uniformly increased so that base |
claims projected reimbursement is increased by an amount |
equal to the funds allocated in paragraph (1) of |
subsection (b) of Section 5A-12.6, less the amount |
allocated under paragraphs (8) and (9) of this subsection |
and paragraphs (3) and (4) of subsection (b) multiplied by |
40%. |
(11) Beginning July 1, 2018, the reimbursement for |
inpatient rehabilitation services shall be increased by |
the addition of a $96 per day add-on. |
(b) Outpatient hospital services. Effective on and after |
the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 104th General |
Assembly, for dates of service on and after July 1, 2014, |
reimbursement for outpatient services shall utilize the |
Enhanced Ambulatory Procedure Grouping (EAPG) software, |
version 3.7 distributed by SolventumTM previously known as 3MTM |
Health Information System. SolventumTM shall be the exclusive |
provider of this software unless the Agency determines that |
SolventumTM is unable to meet the required operational or |
contractual terms. Only under these circumstances may an |
alternative authorized provider of the software be considered. |
|
(1) The Department shall establish Medicaid weighting |
factors to be used in the reimbursement system established |
under this subsection. The initial weighting factors shall |
be the weighting factors as published by the authorized |
provider 3M Health Information System, associated with |
Version 3.7. |
(2) The Department shall establish service specific |
statewide-standardized amounts to be used in the |
reimbursement system. |
(A) The initial statewide standardized amounts, |
with the labor portion adjusted by the Calendar Year |
2013 Medicare Outpatient Prospective Payment System |
wage index with reclassifications, shall be published |
by the Department on its website no later than 10 |
calendar days prior to their effective date. |
(B) The Department shall establish adjustments to |
the statewide-standardized amounts for each Critical |
Access Hospital, as designated by the Department of |
Public Health in accordance with 42 CFR 485, Subpart |
F. For outpatient services provided on or before June |
30, 2018, the EAPG standardized amounts are determined |
separately for each critical access hospital such that |
simulated EAPG payments using outpatient base period |
paid claim data plus payments under Section 5A-12.4 of |
this Code net of the associated tax costs are equal to |
the estimated costs of outpatient base period claims |
|
data with a rate year cost inflation factor applied. |
(3) In addition to the statewide-standardized amounts, |
the Department shall develop adjusters to adjust the rate |
of reimbursement for critical Medicaid hospital outpatient |
providers or services, including outpatient high volume or |
safety-net hospitals. Beginning July 1, 2018, the |
outpatient high volume adjustor shall be increased to |
increase annual expenditures associated with this adjustor |
by $79,200,000, based on the State Fiscal Year 2015 base |
year data and this adjustor shall apply to public |
hospitals, except for large public hospitals, as defined |
under 89 Ill. Adm. Code 148.25(a). |
(4) Beginning July 1, 2018, in addition to the |
statewide standardized amounts, the Department shall make |
an add-on payment for outpatient expensive devices and |
drugs. This add-on payment shall at least apply to claim |
lines that: (i) are assigned with one of the following |
EAPGs: 490, 1001 to 1020, and coded with one of the |
following revenue codes: 0274 to 0276, 0278; or (ii) are |
assigned with one of the following EAPGs: 430 to 441, 443, |
444, 460 to 465, 495, 496, 1090. The add-on payment shall |
be calculated as follows: the claim line's covered charges |
multiplied by the hospital's total acute cost to charge |
ratio, less the claim line's EAPG payment plus $1,000, |
multiplied by 0.8. |
(5) Beginning July 1, 2018, the statewide-standardized |
|
amounts for outpatient services shall be increased by a |
uniform percentage so that base claims projected |
reimbursement is increased by an amount equal to no less |
than the funds allocated in paragraph (1) of subsection |
(b) of Section 5A-12.6, less the amount allocated under |
paragraphs (8) and (9) of subsection (a) and paragraphs |
(3) and (4) of this subsection multiplied by 46%. |
(6) Effective for dates of service on or after July 1, |
2018, the Department shall establish adjustments to the |
statewide-standardized amounts for each Critical Access |
Hospital, as designated by the Department of Public Health |
in accordance with 42 CFR 485, Subpart F, such that each |
Critical Access Hospital's standardized amount for |
outpatient services shall be increased by the applicable |
uniform percentage determined pursuant to paragraph (5) of |
this subsection. It is the intent of the General Assembly |
that the adjustments required under this paragraph (6) by |
Public Act 100-1181 shall be applied retroactively to |
claims for dates of service provided on or after July 1, |
2018. |
(7) Effective for dates of service on or after March |
8, 2019 (the effective date of Public Act 100-1181), the |
Department shall recalculate and implement an updated |
statewide-standardized amount for outpatient services |
provided by hospitals that are not Critical Access |
Hospitals to reflect the applicable uniform percentage |
|
determined pursuant to paragraph (5). |
(1) Any recalculation to the |
statewide-standardized amounts for outpatient services |
provided by hospitals that are not Critical Access |
Hospitals shall be the amount necessary to achieve the |
increase in the statewide-standardized amounts for |
outpatient services increased by a uniform percentage, |
so that base claims projected reimbursement is |
increased by an amount equal to no less than the funds |
allocated in paragraph (1) of subsection (b) of |
Section 5A-12.6, less the amount allocated under |
paragraphs (8) and (9) of subsection (a) and |
paragraphs (3) and (4) of this subsection, for all |
hospitals that are not Critical Access Hospitals, |
multiplied by 46%. |
(2) It is the intent of the General Assembly that |
the recalculations required under this paragraph (7) |
by Public Act 100-1181 shall be applied prospectively |
to claims for dates of service provided on or after |
March 8, 2019 (the effective date of Public Act |
100-1181) and that no recoupment or repayment by the |
Department or an MCO of payments attributable to |
recalculation under this paragraph (7), issued to the |
hospital for dates of service on or after July 1, 2018 |
and before March 8, 2019 (the effective date of Public |
Act 100-1181), shall be permitted. |
|
(8) The Department shall ensure that all necessary |
adjustments to the managed care organization capitation |
base rates necessitated by the adjustments under |
subparagraph (6) or (7) of this subsection are completed |
and applied retroactively in accordance with Section |
5-30.8 of this Code within 90 days of March 8, 2019 (the |
effective date of Public Act 100-1181). |
(9) Within 60 days after federal approval of the |
change made to the assessment in Section 5A-2 by Public |
Act 101-650, the Department shall incorporate into the |
EAPG system for outpatient services those services |
performed by hospitals currently billed through the |
Non-Institutional Provider billing system. |
(b-5) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Section, |
beginning with dates of service on and after January 1, 2023, |
any general acute care hospital with more than 500 outpatient |
psychiatric Medicaid services to persons under 19 years of age |
in any calendar year shall be paid the outpatient add-on |
payment of no less than $113. |
(c) In consultation with the hospital community, the |
Department is authorized to replace 89 Ill. Adm. Code 152.150 |
as published in 38 Ill. Reg. 4980 through 4986 within 12 months |
of June 16, 2014 (the effective date of Public Act 98-651). If |
the Department does not replace these rules within 12 months |
of June 16, 2014 (the effective date of Public Act 98-651), the |
rules in effect for 152.150 as published in 38 Ill. Reg. 4980 |
|
through 4986 shall remain in effect until modified by rule by |
the Department. Nothing in this subsection shall be construed |
to mandate that the Department file a replacement rule. |
(d) Transition period. There shall be a transition period |
to the reimbursement systems authorized under this Section |
that shall begin on the effective date of these systems and |
continue until June 30, 2018, unless extended by rule by the |
Department. To help provide an orderly and predictable |
transition to the new reimbursement systems and to preserve |
and enhance access to the hospital services during this |
transition, the Department shall allocate a transitional |
hospital access pool of at least $290,000,000 annually so that |
transitional hospital access payments are made to hospitals. |
(1) After the transition period, the Department may |
begin incorporating the transitional hospital access pool |
into the base rate structure; however, the transitional |
hospital access payments in effect on June 30, 2018 shall |
continue to be paid, if continued under Section 5A-16. |
(2) After the transition period, if the Department |
reduces payments from the transitional hospital access |
pool, it shall increase base rates, develop new adjustors, |
adjust current adjustors, develop new hospital access |
payments based on updated information, or any combination |
thereof by an amount equal to the decreases proposed in |
the transitional hospital access pool payments, ensuring |
that the entire transitional hospital access pool amount |
|
shall continue to be used for hospital payments. |
(d-5) Hospital and health care transformation program. The |
Department shall develop a hospital and health care |
transformation program to provide financial assistance to |
hospitals in transforming their services and care models to |
better align with the needs of the communities they serve. The |
payments authorized in this Section shall be subject to |
approval by the federal government. |
(1) Phase 1. In State fiscal years 2019 through 2020, |
the Department shall allocate funds from the transitional |
access hospital pool to create a hospital transformation |
pool of at least $262,906,870 annually and make hospital |
transformation payments to hospitals. Subject to Section |
5A-16, in State fiscal years 2019 and 2020, an Illinois |
hospital that received either a transitional hospital |
access payment under subsection (d) or a supplemental |
payment under subsection (f) of this Section in State |
fiscal year 2018, shall receive a hospital transformation |
payment as follows: |
(A) If the hospital's Rate Year 2017 Medicaid |
inpatient utilization rate is equal to or greater than |
45%, the hospital transformation payment shall be |
equal to 100% of the sum of its transitional hospital |
access payment authorized under subsection (d) and any |
supplemental payment authorized under subsection (f). |
(B) If the hospital's Rate Year 2017 Medicaid |
|
inpatient utilization rate is equal to or greater than |
25% but less than 45%, the hospital transformation |
payment shall be equal to 75% of the sum of its |
transitional hospital access payment authorized under |
subsection (d) and any supplemental payment authorized |
under subsection (f). |
(C) If the hospital's Rate Year 2017 Medicaid |
inpatient utilization rate is less than 25%, the |
hospital transformation payment shall be equal to 50% |
of the sum of its transitional hospital access payment |
authorized under subsection (d) and any supplemental |
payment authorized under subsection (f). |
(2) Phase 2. |
(A) The funding amount from phase one shall be |
incorporated into directed payment and pass-through |
payment methodologies described in Section 5A-12.7. |
(B) Because there are communities in Illinois that |
experience significant health care disparities due to |
systemic racism, as recently emphasized by the |
COVID-19 pandemic, aggravated by social determinants |
of health and a lack of sufficiently allocated health |
care healthcare resources, particularly |
community-based services, preventive care, obstetric |
care, chronic disease management, and specialty care, |
the Department shall establish a health care |
transformation program that shall be supported by the |
|
transformation funding pool. It is the intention of |
the General Assembly that innovative partnerships |
funded by the pool must be designed to establish or |
improve integrated health care delivery systems that |
will provide significant access to the Medicaid and |
uninsured populations in their communities, as well as |
improve health care equity. It is also the intention |
of the General Assembly that partnerships recognize |
and address the disparities revealed by the COVID-19 |
pandemic, as well as the need for post-COVID care. |
During State fiscal years 2021 through 2027, the |
hospital and health care transformation program shall |
be supported by an annual transformation funding pool |
of up to $150,000,000, pending federal matching funds, |
to be allocated during the specified fiscal years for |
the purpose of facilitating hospital and health care |
transformation. No disbursement of moneys for |
transformation projects from the transformation |
funding pool described under this Section shall be |
considered an award, a grant, or an expenditure of |
grant funds. Funding agreements made in accordance |
with the transformation program shall be considered |
purchases of care under the Illinois Procurement Code, |
and funds shall be expended by the Department in a |
manner that maximizes federal funding to expend the |
entire allocated amount. |
|
The Department shall convene, within 30 days after |
March 12, 2021 (the effective date of Public Act |
101-655), a workgroup that includes subject matter |
experts on health care healthcare disparities and |
stakeholders from distressed communities, which could |
be a subcommittee of the Medicaid Advisory Committee, |
to review and provide recommendations on how |
Department policy, including health care |
transformation, can improve health disparities and the |
impact on communities disproportionately affected by |
COVID-19. The workgroup shall consider and make |
recommendations on the following issues: a community |
safety-net designation of certain hospitals, racial |
equity, and a regional partnership to bring additional |
specialty services to communities. |
(C) As provided in paragraph (9) of Section 3 of |
the Illinois Health Facilities Planning Act, any |
hospital participating in the transformation program |
may be excluded from the requirements of the Illinois |
Health Facilities Planning Act for those projects |
related to the hospital's transformation. To be |
eligible, the hospital must submit to the Health |
Facilities and Services Review Board approval from the |
Department that the project is a part of the |
hospital's transformation. |
(D) As provided in subsection (a-20) of Section |
|
32.5 of the Emergency Medical Services (EMS) Systems |
Act, a hospital that received hospital transformation |
payments under this Section may convert to a |
freestanding emergency center. To be eligible for such |
a conversion, the hospital must submit to the |
Department of Public Health approval from the |
Department that the project is a part of the |
hospital's transformation. |
(E) Criteria for proposals. To be eligible for |
funding under this Section, a transformation proposal |
shall meet all of the following criteria: |
(i) the proposal shall be designed based on |
community needs assessment completed by either a |
University partner or other qualified entity with |
significant community input; |
(ii) the proposal shall be a collaboration |
among providers across the care and community |
spectrum, including preventative care, primary |
care specialty care, hospital services, mental |
health and substance abuse services, as well as |
community-based entities that address the social |
determinants of health; |
(iii) the proposal shall be specifically |
designed to improve health care healthcare |
outcomes and reduce health care healthcare |
disparities, and improve the coordination, |
|
effectiveness, and efficiency of care delivery; |
(iv) the proposal shall have specific |
measurable metrics related to disparities that |
will be tracked by the Department and made public |
by the Department; |
(v) the proposal shall include a commitment to |
include Business Enterprise Program certified |
vendors or other entities controlled and managed |
by minorities or women; and |
(vi) the proposal shall specifically increase |
access to primary, preventive, or specialty care. |
(F) Entities eligible to be funded. |
(i) Proposals for funding should come from |
collaborations operating in one of the most |
distressed communities in Illinois as determined |
by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and |
Prevention's Social Vulnerability Index for |
Illinois and areas disproportionately impacted by |
COVID-19 or from rural areas of Illinois. |
(ii) The Department shall prioritize |
partnerships from distressed communities, which |
include Business Enterprise Program certified |
vendors or other entities controlled and managed |
by minorities or women and also include one or |
more of the following: safety-net hospitals, |
critical access hospitals, the campuses of |
|
hospitals that have closed since January 1, 2018, |
or other health care healthcare providers designed |
to address specific health care healthcare |
disparities, including the impact of COVID-19 on |
individuals and the community and the need for |
post-COVID care. All funded proposals must include |
specific measurable goals and metrics related to |
improved outcomes and reduced disparities which |
shall be tracked by the Department. |
(iii) The Department should target the funding |
in the following ways: $30,000,000 of |
transformation funds to projects that are a |
collaboration between a safety-net hospital, |
particularly community safety-net hospitals, and |
other providers and designed to address specific |
health care healthcare disparities, $20,000,000 of |
transformation funds to collaborations between |
safety-net hospitals and a larger hospital partner |
that increases specialty care in distressed |
communities, $30,000,000 of transformation funds |
to projects that are a collaboration between |
hospitals and other providers in distressed areas |
of the State designed to address specific health |
care healthcare disparities, $15,000,000 to |
collaborations between critical access hospitals |
and other providers designed to address specific |
|
health care healthcare disparities, and |
$15,000,000 to cross-provider collaborations |
designed to address specific health care |
healthcare disparities, and $5,000,000 to |
collaborations that focus on workforce |
development. |
(iv) The Department may allocate up to |
$5,000,000 for planning, racial equity analysis, |
or consulting resources for the Department or |
entities without the resources to develop a plan |
to meet the criteria of this Section. Any contract |
for consulting services issued by the Department |
under this subparagraph shall comply with the |
provisions of Section 5-45 of the State Officials |
and Employees Ethics Act. Based on availability of |
federal funding, the Department may directly |
procure consulting services or provide funding to |
the collaboration. The provision of resources |
under this subparagraph is not a guarantee that a |
project will be approved. |
(v) The Department shall take steps to ensure |
that safety-net hospitals operating in |
under-resourced communities receive priority |
access to hospital and health care healthcare |
transformation funds, including consulting funds, |
as provided under this Section. |
|
(G) Process for submitting and approving projects |
for distressed communities. The Department shall issue |
a template for application. The Department shall post |
any proposal received on the Department's website for |
at least 2 weeks for public comment, and any such |
public comment shall also be considered in the review |
process. Applicants may request that proprietary |
financial information be redacted from publicly posted |
proposals and the Department in its discretion may |
agree. Proposals for each distressed community must |
include all of the following: |
(i) A detailed description of how the project |
intends to affect the goals outlined in this |
subsection, describing new interventions, new |
technology, new structures, and other changes to |
the health care healthcare delivery system |
planned. |
(ii) A detailed description of the racial and |
ethnic makeup of the entities' board and |
leadership positions and the salaries of the |
executive staff of entities in the partnership |
that is seeking to obtain funding under this |
Section. |
(iii) A complete budget, including an overall |
timeline and a detailed pathway to sustainability |
within a 5-year period, specifying other sources |
|
of funding, such as in-kind, cost-sharing, or |
private donations, particularly for capital needs. |
There is an expectation that parties to the |
transformation project dedicate resources to the |
extent they are able and that these expectations |
are delineated separately for each entity in the |
proposal. |
(iv) A description of any new entities formed |
or other legal relationships between collaborating |
entities and how funds will be allocated among |
participants. |
(v) A timeline showing the evolution of sites |
and specific services of the project over a 5-year |
period, including services available to the |
community by site. |
(vi) Clear milestones indicating progress |
toward the proposed goals of the proposal as |
checkpoints along the way to continue receiving |
funding. The Department is authorized to refine |
these milestones in agreements, and is authorized |
to impose reasonable penalties, including |
repayment of funds, for substantial lack of |
progress. |
(vii) A clear statement of the level of |
commitment the project will include for minorities |
and women in contracting opportunities, including |
|
as equity partners where applicable, or as |
subcontractors and suppliers in all phases of the |
project. |
(viii) If the community study utilized is not |
the study commissioned and published by the |
Department, the applicant must define the |
methodology used, including documentation of clear |
community participation. |
(ix) A description of the process used in |
collaborating with all levels of government in the |
community served in the development of the |
project, including, but not limited to, |
legislators and officials of other units of local |
government. |
(x) Documentation of a community input process |
in the community served, including links to |
proposal materials on public websites. |
(xi) Verifiable project milestones and quality |
metrics that will be impacted by transformation. |
These project milestones and quality metrics must |
be identified with improvement targets that must |
be met. |
(xii) Data on the number of existing employees |
by various job categories and wage levels by the |
zip code of the employees' residence and |
benchmarks for the continued maintenance and |
|
improvement of these levels. The proposal must |
also describe any retraining or other workforce |
development planned for the new project. |
(xiii) If a new entity is created by the |
project, a description of how the board will be |
reflective of the community served by the |
proposal. |
(xiv) An explanation of how the proposal will |
address the existing disparities that exacerbated |
the impact of COVID-19 and the need for post-COVID |
care in the community, if applicable. |
(xv) An explanation of how the proposal is |
designed to increase access to care, including |
specialty care based upon the community's needs. |
(H) The Department shall evaluate proposals for |
compliance with the criteria listed under subparagraph |
(G). Proposals meeting all of the criteria may be |
eligible for funding with the areas of focus |
prioritized as described in item (ii) of subparagraph |
(F). Based on the funds available, the Department may |
negotiate funding agreements with approved applicants |
to maximize federal funding. Nothing in this |
subsection requires that an approved project be funded |
to the level requested. Agreements shall specify the |
amount of funding anticipated annually, the |
methodology of payments, the limit on the number of |
|
years such funding may be provided, and the milestones |
and quality metrics that must be met by the projects in |
order to continue to receive funding during each year |
of the program. Agreements shall specify the terms and |
conditions under which a health care facility that |
receives funds under a purchase of care agreement and |
closes in violation of the terms of the agreement must |
pay an early closure fee no greater than 50% of the |
funds it received under the agreement, prior to the |
Health Facilities and Services Review Board |
considering an application for closure of the |
facility. Any project that is funded shall be required |
to provide quarterly written progress reports, in a |
form prescribed by the Department, and at a minimum |
shall include the progress made in achieving any |
milestones or metrics or Business Enterprise Program |
commitments in its plan. The Department may reduce or |
end payments, as set forth in transformation plans, if |
milestones or metrics or Business Enterprise Program |
commitments are not achieved. The Department shall |
seek to make payments from the transformation fund in |
a manner that is eligible for federal matching funds. |
In reviewing the proposals, the Department shall |
take into account the needs of the community, data |
from the study commissioned by the Department from the |
University of Illinois-Chicago if applicable, feedback |
|
from public comment on the Department's website, as |
well as how the proposal meets the criteria listed |
under subparagraph (G). Alignment with the |
Department's overall strategic initiatives shall be an |
important factor. To the extent that fiscal year |
funding is not adequate to fund all eligible projects |
that apply, the Department shall prioritize |
applications that most comprehensively and effectively |
address the criteria listed under subparagraph (G). |
(3) (Blank). |
(4) Hospital Transformation Review Committee. There is |
created the Hospital Transformation Review Committee. The |
Committee shall consist of 14 members. No later than 30 |
days after March 12, 2018 (the effective date of Public |
Act 100-581), the 4 legislative leaders shall each appoint |
3 members; the Governor shall appoint the Director of |
Healthcare and Family Services, or his or her designee, as |
a member; and the Director of Healthcare and Family |
Services shall appoint one member. Any vacancy shall be |
filled by the applicable appointing authority within 15 |
calendar days. The members of the Committee shall select a |
Chair and a Vice-Chair from among its members, provided |
that the Chair and Vice-Chair cannot be appointed by the |
same appointing authority and must be from different |
political parties. The Chair shall have the authority to |
establish a meeting schedule and convene meetings of the |
|
Committee, and the Vice-Chair shall have the authority to |
convene meetings in the absence of the Chair. The |
Committee may establish its own rules with respect to |
meeting schedule, notice of meetings, and the disclosure |
of documents; however, the Committee shall not have the |
power to subpoena individuals or documents and any rules |
must be approved by 9 of the 14 members. The Committee |
shall perform the functions described in this Section and |
advise and consult with the Director in the administration |
of this Section. In addition to reviewing and approving |
the policies, procedures, and rules for the hospital and |
health care transformation program, the Committee shall |
consider and make recommendations related to qualifying |
criteria and payment methodologies related to safety-net |
hospitals and children's hospitals. Members of the |
Committee appointed by the legislative leaders shall be |
subject to the jurisdiction of the Legislative Ethics |
Commission, not the Executive Ethics Commission, and all |
requests under the Freedom of Information Act shall be |
directed to the applicable Freedom of Information officer |
for the General Assembly. The Department shall provide |
operational support to the Committee as necessary. The |
Committee is dissolved on April 1, 2019. |
(e) Beginning 36 months after initial implementation, the |
Department shall update the reimbursement components in |
subsections (a) and (b), including standardized amounts and |
|
weighting factors, and at least once every 4 years and no more |
frequently than annually thereafter. The Department shall |
publish these updates on its website no later than 30 calendar |
days prior to their effective date. |
(f) Continuation of supplemental payments. Any |
supplemental payments authorized under 89 Illinois |
Administrative Code 148 effective January 1, 2014 and that |
continue during the period of July 1, 2014 through December |
31, 2014 shall remain in effect as long as the assessment |
imposed by Section 5A-2 that is in effect on December 31, 2017 |
remains in effect. |
(g) Notwithstanding subsections (a) through (f) of this |
Section and notwithstanding the changes authorized under |
Section 5-5b.1, any updates to the system shall not result in |
any diminishment of the overall effective rates of |
reimbursement as of the implementation date of the new system |
(July 1, 2014). These updates shall not preclude variations in |
any individual component of the system or hospital rate |
variations. Nothing in this Section shall prohibit the |
Department from increasing the rates of reimbursement or |
developing payments to ensure access to hospital services. |
Nothing in this Section shall be construed to guarantee a |
minimum amount of spending in the aggregate or per hospital as |
spending may be impacted by factors, including, but not |
limited to, the number of individuals in the medical |
assistance program and the severity of illness of the |
|
individuals. |
(h) The Department shall have the authority to modify by |
rulemaking any changes to the rates or methodologies in this |
Section as required by the federal government to obtain |
federal financial participation for expenditures made under |
this Section. |
(i) Except for subsections (g) and (h) of this Section, |
the Department shall, pursuant to subsection (c) of Section |
5-40 of the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act, provide for |
presentation at the June 2014 hearing of the Joint Committee |
on Administrative Rules (JCAR) additional written notice to |
JCAR of the following rules in order to commence the second |
notice period for the following rules: rules published in the |
Illinois Register, rule dated February 21, 2014 at 38 Ill. |
Reg. 4559 (Medical Payment), 4628 (Specialized Health Care |
Delivery Systems), 4640 (Hospital Services), 4932 (Diagnostic |
Related Grouping (DRG) Prospective Payment System (PPS)), and |
4977 (Hospital Reimbursement Changes), and published in the |
Illinois Register dated March 21, 2014 at 38 Ill. Reg. 6499 |
(Specialized Health Care Delivery Systems) and 6505 (Hospital |
Services). |
(j) Out-of-state hospitals. Beginning July 1, 2018, for |
purposes of determining for State fiscal years 2019 and 2020 |
and subsequent fiscal years the hospitals eligible for the |
payments authorized under subsections (a) and (b) of this |
Section, the Department shall include out-of-state hospitals |
|
that are designated a Level I pediatric trauma center or a |
Level I trauma center by the Department of Public Health as of |
December 1, 2017. |
(k) The Department shall notify each hospital and managed |
care organization, in writing, of the impact of the updates |
under this Section at least 30 calendar days prior to their |
effective date. |
(l) This Section is subject to Section 14-12.5. |
(Source: P.A. 102-682, eff. 12-10-21; 102-1037, eff. 6-2-22; |
103-102, eff. 6-16-23; 103-154, eff. 6-30-23; revised |
10-16-24.) |
ARTICLE 67. |
Section 67-5. The Illinois Public Aid Code is amended by |
adding Section 10-3.5 as follows: |
(305 ILCS 5/10-3.5 new) |
Sec. 10-3.5. Connecting parents to available resources. |
Beginning July 1, 2025, subject to appropriation and the |
availability of federal matching funds for the costs to the |
Department of Healthcare and Family Services for the |
implementation of this Section, the Illinois Department shall |
enter into agreements with other State agencies, including, |
but not limited to, the Department of Employment Security and |
the Department of Central Management Services, to implement a |
|
program designed to connect available resources to |
noncustodial parents whose families are receiving child |
support enforcement services; who have a child support order |
or are cooperating to establish a child support order; and who |
are unemployed or underemployed or at risk of not being able to |
comply with their support order. The program shall seek to |
connect parents with resources providing: job search |
assistance; job readiness training; job development and job |
placement services; skills assessments to facilitate job |
placement; job retention services; work supports; and |
occupational training and other skills training related to |
employment. The opportunities provided to program participants |
shall include opportunities offered by employers located in |
the State, including, but not limited to, State employment. |
ARTICLE 68. |
Section 68-3. The Illinois Administrative Procedure Act is |
amended by adding Section 5-45.65 as follows: |
(5 ILCS 100/5-45.65 new) |
Sec. 5-45.65. Emergency rulemaking; Medicaid managed care |
organization practices. To provide for the expeditious and |
timely implementation of changes made by this amendatory Act |
of the 104th General Assembly to subsection (g-13) of Section |
5-30.1 of the Illinois Public Aid Code, emergency rules |
|
implementing the changes made by this amendatory Act of the |
104th General Assembly to subsection (g-13) of Section 5-30.1 |
of the Illinois Public Aid Code may be adopted in accordance |
with Section 5-45 by the Department of Healthcare and Family |
Services. The adoption of emergency rules authorized by |
Section 5-45 and this Section is deemed to be necessary for the |
public interest, safety, and welfare. |
This Section is repealed one year after the effective date |
of this amendatory Act of the 104th General Assembly. |
Section 68-5. The Illinois Public Aid Code is amended by |
changing Sections 5-30.1 and 5-30.18 as follows: |
(305 ILCS 5/5-30.1) |
Sec. 5-30.1. Managed care protections. |
(a) As used in this Section: |
"Managed care organization" or "MCO" means any entity |
which contracts with the Department to provide services where |
payment for medical services is made on a capitated basis. |
"Emergency services" means health care items and services, |
including inpatient and outpatient hospital services, |
furnished or required to evaluate and stabilize an emergency |
medical condition. "Emergency services" include inpatient |
stabilization services furnished during the inpatient |
stabilization period. "Emergency services" do not include |
post-stabilization medical services. |
|
"Emergency medical condition" means a medical condition |
manifesting itself by acute symptoms of sufficient severity, |
regardless of the final diagnosis given, such that a prudent |
layperson, who possesses an average knowledge of health and |
medicine, could reasonably expect the absence of immediate |
medical attention to result in: |
(1) placing the health of the individual (or, with |
respect to a pregnant woman, the health of the woman or her |
unborn child) in serious jeopardy; |
(2) serious impairment to bodily functions; |
(3) serious dysfunction of any bodily organ or part; |
(4) inadequately controlled pain; or |
(5) with respect to a pregnant woman who is having |
contractions: |
(A) inadequate time to complete a safe transfer to |
another hospital before delivery; or |
(B) a transfer to another hospital may pose a |
threat to the health or safety of the woman or unborn |
child. |
"Emergency medical screening examination" means a medical |
screening examination and evaluation by a physician licensed |
to practice medicine in all its branches or, to the extent |
permitted by applicable laws, by other appropriately licensed |
personnel under the supervision of or in collaboration with a |
physician licensed to practice medicine in all its branches to |
determine whether the need for emergency services exists. |
|
"Health care services" mean any medical or behavioral |
health services covered under the medical assistance program |
that are subject to review under a service authorization |
program. |
"Inpatient stabilization period" means the initial 72 |
hours of inpatient stabilization services, beginning from the |
date and time of the order for inpatient admission to the |
hospital. |
"Inpatient stabilization services" mean emergency services |
furnished in the inpatient setting at a hospital pursuant to |
an order for inpatient admission by a physician or other |
qualified practitioner who has admitting privileges at the |
hospital, as permitted by State law, to stabilize an emergency |
medical condition following an emergency medical screening |
examination. |
"Post-stabilization medical services" means health care |
services provided to an enrollee that are furnished in a |
hospital by a provider that is qualified to furnish such |
services and determined to be medically necessary by the |
provider and directly related to the emergency medical |
condition following stabilization. |
"Provider" means a facility or individual who is actively |
enrolled in the medical assistance program and licensed or |
otherwise authorized to order, prescribe, refer, or render |
health care services in this State. |
"Service authorization determination" means a decision |
|
made by a service authorization program in advance of, |
concurrent to, or after the provision of a health care service |
to approve, change the level of care, partially deny, deny, or |
otherwise limit coverage and reimbursement for a health care |
service upon review of a service authorization request. |
"Service authorization program" means any utilization |
review, utilization management, peer review, quality review, |
or other medical management activity conducted by an MCO, or |
its contracted utilization review organization, including, but |
not limited to, prior authorization, prior approval, |
pre-certification, concurrent review, retrospective review, or |
certification of admission, of health care services provided |
in the inpatient or outpatient hospital setting. |
"Service authorization request" means a request by a |
provider to a service authorization program to determine |
whether a health care service meets the reimbursement |
eligibility requirements for medically necessary, clinically |
appropriate care, resulting in the issuance of a service |
authorization determination. |
"Utilization review organization" or "URO" means an MCO's |
utilization review department or a peer review organization or |
quality improvement organization that contracts with an MCO to |
administer a service authorization program and make service |
authorization determinations. |
(b) As provided by Section 5-16.12, managed care |
organizations are subject to the provisions of the Managed |
|
Care Reform and Patient Rights Act. |
(c) An MCO shall pay any provider of emergency services, |
including for inpatient stabilization services provided during |
the inpatient stabilization period, that does not have in |
effect a contract with the contracted Medicaid MCO. The |
default rate of reimbursement shall be the rate paid under |
Illinois Medicaid fee-for-service program methodology, |
including all policy adjusters, including but not limited to |
Medicaid High Volume Adjustments, Medicaid Percentage |
Adjustments, Outpatient High Volume Adjustments, and all |
outlier add-on adjustments to the extent such adjustments are |
incorporated in the development of the applicable MCO |
capitated rates. |
(d) (Blank). |
(e) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the |
following requirements apply to MCOs in determining payment |
for all emergency services, including inpatient stabilization |
services provided during the inpatient stabilization period: |
(1) The MCO shall not impose any service authorization |
program requirements for emergency services, including, |
but not limited to, prior authorization, prior approval, |
pre-certification, certification of admission, concurrent |
review, or retrospective review. |
(A) Notification period: Hospitals shall notify |
the enrollee's Medicaid MCO within 48 hours of the |
date and time the order for inpatient admission is |
|
written. Notification shall be limited to advising the |
MCO that the patient has been admitted to a hospital |
inpatient level of care. |
(B) If the admitting hospital complies with the |
notification provisions of subparagraph (A), the |
Medicaid MCO may not initiate concurrent review before |
the end of the inpatient stabilization period. If the |
admitting hospital does not comply with the |
notification requirements in subparagraph (A), the |
Medicaid MCO may initiate concurrent review for the |
continuation of the stay beginning at the end of the |
48-hour notification period. |
(C) Coverage for services provided during the |
48-hour notification period may not be retrospectively |
denied. |
(2) The MCO shall cover emergency services provided to |
enrollees who are temporarily away from their residence |
and outside the contracting area to the extent that the |
enrollees would be entitled to the emergency services if |
they still were within the contracting area. |
(3) The MCO shall have no obligation to cover |
emergency services provided on an emergency basis that are |
not covered services under the contract between the MCO |
and the Department. |
(4) The MCO shall not condition coverage for emergency |
services on the treating provider notifying the MCO of the |
|
enrollee's emergency medical screening examination and |
treatment within 10 days after presentation for emergency |
services. |
(5) The determination of the attending emergency |
physician, or the practitioner responsible for the |
enrollee's care at the hospital, of whether an enrollee |
requires inpatient stabilization services, can be |
stabilized in the outpatient setting, or is sufficiently |
stabilized for discharge or transfer to another setting, |
shall be binding on the MCO. The MCO shall cover and |
reimburse providers for emergency services as billed by |
the provider for all enrollees whether the emergency |
services are provided by an affiliated or non-affiliated |
provider, except in cases of fraud. The MCO shall |
reimburse inpatient stabilization services provided during |
the inpatient stabilization period and billed as inpatient |
level of care based on the appropriate inpatient |
reimbursement methodology. |
(6) The MCO's financial responsibility for |
post-stabilization medical services it has not |
pre-approved ends when: |
(A) a plan physician with privileges at the |
treating hospital assumes responsibility for the |
enrollee's care; |
(B) a plan physician assumes responsibility for |
the enrollee's care through transfer; |
|
(C) a contracting entity representative and the |
treating physician reach an agreement concerning the |
enrollee's care; or |
(D) the enrollee is discharged. |
(e-5) An MCO shall pay for all post-stabilization medical |
services as a covered service in any of the following |
situations: |
(1) the MCO or its URO authorized such services; |
(2) such services were administered to maintain the |
enrollee's stabilized condition within one hour after a |
request to the MCO for authorization of further |
post-stabilization services; |
(3) the MCO or its URO did not respond to a request to |
authorize such services within one hour; |
(4) the MCO or its URO could not be contacted; or |
(5) the MCO or its URO and the treating provider, if |
the treating provider is a non-affiliated provider, could |
not reach an agreement concerning the enrollee's care and |
an affiliated provider was unavailable for a consultation, |
in which case the MCO must pay for such services rendered |
by the treating non-affiliated provider until an |
affiliated provider was reached and either concurred with |
the treating non-affiliated provider's plan of care or |
assumed responsibility for the enrollee's care. Such |
payment shall be made at the default rate of reimbursement |
paid under the State's Medicaid fee-for-service program |
|
methodology, including all policy adjusters, including, |
but not limited to, Medicaid High Volume Adjustments, |
Medicaid Percentage Adjustments, Outpatient High Volume |
Adjustments, and all outlier add-on adjustments to the |
extent that such adjustments are incorporated in the |
development of the applicable MCO capitated rates. |
(f) Network adequacy and transparency. |
(1) The Department shall: |
(A) ensure that an adequate provider network is in |
place, taking into consideration health professional |
shortage areas and medically underserved areas; |
(B) publicly release an explanation of its process |
for analyzing network adequacy; |
(C) periodically ensure that an MCO continues to |
have an adequate network in place; |
(D) require MCOs, including Medicaid Managed Care |
Entities as defined in Section 5-30.2, to meet |
provider directory requirements under Section 5-30.3; |
(E) require MCOs to ensure that any |
Medicaid-certified provider under contract with an MCO |
and previously submitted on a roster on the date of |
service is paid for any medically necessary, |
Medicaid-covered, and authorized service rendered to |
any of the MCO's enrollees, regardless of inclusion on |
the MCO's published and publicly available directory |
of available providers; and |
|
(F) require MCOs, including Medicaid Managed Care |
Entities as defined in Section 5-30.2, to meet each of |
the requirements under subsection (d-5) of Section 10 |
of the Network Adequacy and Transparency Act; with |
necessary exceptions to the MCO's network to ensure |
that admission and treatment with a provider or at a |
treatment facility in accordance with the network |
adequacy standards in paragraph (3) of subsection |
(d-5) of Section 10 of the Network Adequacy and |
Transparency Act is limited to providers or facilities |
that are Medicaid certified. |
(2) Each MCO shall confirm its receipt of information |
submitted specific to physician or dentist additions or |
physician or dentist deletions from the MCO's provider |
network within 3 days after receiving all required |
information from contracted physicians or dentists, and |
electronic physician and dental directories must be |
updated consistent with current rules as published by the |
Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services or its |
successor agency. |
(g) Timely payment of claims. |
(1) The MCO shall pay a claim within 30 days of |
receiving a claim that contains all the essential |
information needed to adjudicate the claim. |
(2) The MCO shall notify the billing party of its |
inability to adjudicate a claim within 30 days of |
|
receiving that claim. |
(3) The MCO shall pay a penalty that is at least equal |
to the timely payment interest penalty imposed under |
Section 368a of the Illinois Insurance Code for any claims |
not timely paid. |
(A) When an MCO is required to pay a timely payment |
interest penalty to a provider, the MCO must calculate |
and pay the timely payment interest penalty that is |
due to the provider within 30 days after the payment of |
the claim. In no event shall a provider be required to |
request or apply for payment of any owed timely |
payment interest penalties. |
(B) Such payments shall be reported separately |
from the claim payment for services rendered to the |
MCO's enrollee and clearly identified as interest |
payments. |
(4)(A) The Department shall require MCOs to expedite |
payments to providers identified on the Department's |
expedited provider list, determined in accordance with 89 |
Ill. Adm. Code 140.71(b), on a schedule at least as |
frequently as the providers are paid under the |
Department's fee-for-service expedited provider schedule. |
(B) Compliance with the expedited provider requirement |
may be satisfied by an MCO through the use of a Periodic |
Interim Payment (PIP) program that has been mutually |
agreed to and documented between the MCO and the provider, |
|
if the PIP program ensures that any expedited provider |
receives regular and periodic payments based on prior |
period payment experience from that MCO. Total payments |
under the PIP program may be reconciled against future PIP |
payments on a schedule mutually agreed to between the MCO |
and the provider. |
(C) The Department shall share at least monthly its |
expedited provider list and the frequency with which it |
pays providers on the expedited list. |
(g-5) Recognizing that the rapid transformation of the |
Illinois Medicaid program may have unintended operational |
challenges for both payers and providers: |
(1) in no instance shall a medically necessary covered |
service rendered in good faith, based upon eligibility |
information documented by the provider, be denied coverage |
or diminished in payment amount if the eligibility or |
coverage information available at the time the service was |
rendered is later found to be inaccurate in the assignment |
of coverage responsibility between MCOs or the |
fee-for-service system, except for instances when an |
individual is deemed to have not been eligible for |
coverage under the Illinois Medicaid program; and |
(2) the Department shall, by December 31, 2016, adopt |
rules establishing policies that shall be included in the |
Medicaid managed care policy and procedures manual |
addressing payment resolutions in situations in which a |
|
provider renders services based upon information obtained |
after verifying a patient's eligibility and coverage plan |
through either the Department's current enrollment system |
or a system operated by the coverage plan identified by |
the patient presenting for services: |
(A) such medically necessary covered services |
shall be considered rendered in good faith; |
(B) such policies and procedures shall be |
developed in consultation with industry |
representatives of the Medicaid managed care health |
plans and representatives of provider associations |
representing the majority of providers within the |
identified provider industry; and |
(C) such rules shall be published for a review and |
comment period of no less than 30 days on the |
Department's website with final rules remaining |
available on the Department's website. |
The rules on payment resolutions shall include, but |
not be limited to: |
(A) the extension of the timely filing period; |
(B) retroactive prior authorizations; and |
(C) guaranteed minimum payment rate of no less |
than the current, as of the date of service, |
fee-for-service rate, plus all applicable add-ons, |
when the resulting service relationship is out of |
network. |
|
The rules shall be applicable for both MCO coverage |
and fee-for-service coverage. |
If the fee-for-service system is ultimately determined to |
have been responsible for coverage on the date of service, the |
Department shall provide for an extended period for claims |
submission outside the standard timely filing requirements. |
(g-6) MCO Performance Metrics Report. |
(1) The Department shall publish, on at least a |
quarterly basis, each MCO's operational performance, |
including, but not limited to, the following categories of |
metrics: |
(A) claims payment, including timeliness and |
accuracy; |
(B) prior authorizations; |
(C) grievance and appeals; |
(D) utilization statistics; |
(E) provider disputes; |
(F) provider credentialing; and |
(G) member and provider customer service. |
(2) The Department shall ensure that the metrics |
report is accessible to providers online by January 1, |
2017. |
(3) The metrics shall be developed in consultation |
with industry representatives of the Medicaid managed care |
health plans and representatives of associations |
representing the majority of providers within the |
|
identified industry. |
(4) Metrics shall be defined and incorporated into the |
applicable Managed Care Policy Manual issued by the |
Department. |
(g-7) MCO claims processing and performance analysis. In |
order to monitor MCO payments to hospital providers, pursuant |
to Public Act 100-580, the Department shall post an analysis |
of MCO claims processing and payment performance on its |
website every 6 months. Such analysis shall include a review |
and evaluation of a representative sample of hospital claims |
that are rejected and denied for clean and unclean claims and |
the top 5 reasons for such actions and timeliness of claims |
adjudication, which identifies the percentage of claims |
adjudicated within 30, 60, 90, and over 90 days, and the dollar |
amounts associated with those claims. |
(g-8) Dispute resolution process. The Department shall |
maintain a provider complaint portal through which a provider |
can submit to the Department unresolved disputes with an MCO. |
An unresolved dispute means an MCO's decision that denies in |
whole or in part a claim for reimbursement to a provider for |
health care services rendered by the provider to an enrollee |
of the MCO with which the provider disagrees. Disputes shall |
not be submitted to the portal until the provider has availed |
itself of the MCO's internal dispute resolution process. |
Disputes that are submitted to the MCO internal dispute |
resolution process may be submitted to the Department of |
|
Healthcare and Family Services' complaint portal no sooner |
than 30 days after submitting to the MCO's internal process |
and not later than 30 days after the unsatisfactory resolution |
of the internal MCO process or 60 days after submitting the |
dispute to the MCO internal process. Multiple claim disputes |
involving the same MCO may be submitted in one complaint, |
regardless of whether the claims are for different enrollees, |
when the specific reason for non-payment of the claims |
involves a common question of fact or policy. Within 10 |
business days of receipt of a complaint, the Department shall |
present such disputes to the appropriate MCO, which shall then |
have 30 days to issue its written proposal to resolve the |
dispute. The Department may grant one 30-day extension of this |
time frame to one of the parties to resolve the dispute. If the |
dispute remains unresolved at the end of this time frame or the |
provider is not satisfied with the MCO's written proposal to |
resolve the dispute, the provider may, within 30 days, request |
the Department to review the dispute and make a final |
determination. Within 30 days of the request for Department |
review of the dispute, both the provider and the MCO shall |
present all relevant information to the Department for |
resolution and make individuals with knowledge of the issues |
available to the Department for further inquiry if needed. |
Within 30 days of receiving the relevant information on the |
dispute, or the lapse of the period for submitting such |
information, the Department shall issue a written decision on |
|
the dispute based on contractual terms between the provider |
and the MCO, contractual terms between the MCO and the |
Department of Healthcare and Family Services and applicable |
Medicaid policy. The decision of the Department shall be |
final. By January 1, 2020, the Department shall establish by |
rule further details of this dispute resolution process. |
Disputes between MCOs and providers presented to the |
Department for resolution are not contested cases, as defined |
in Section 1-30 of the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act, |
conferring any right to an administrative hearing. |
(g-9)(1) The Department shall publish annually on its |
website a report on the calculation of each managed care |
organization's medical loss ratio showing the following: |
(A) Premium revenue, with appropriate adjustments. |
(B) Benefit expense, setting forth the aggregate |
amount spent for the following: |
(i) Direct paid claims. |
(ii) Subcapitation payments. |
(iii) Other claim payments. |
(iv) Direct reserves. |
(v) Gross recoveries. |
(vi) Expenses for activities that improve health |
care quality as allowed by the Department. |
(2) The medical loss ratio shall be calculated consistent |
with federal law and regulation following a claims runout |
period determined by the Department. |
|
(g-10)(1) "Liability effective date" means the date on |
which an MCO becomes responsible for payment for medically |
necessary and covered services rendered by a provider to one |
of its enrollees in accordance with the contract terms between |
the MCO and the provider. The liability effective date shall |
be the later of: |
(A) The execution date of a network participation |
contract agreement. |
(B) The date the provider or its representative |
submits to the MCO the complete and accurate standardized |
roster form for the provider in the format approved by the |
Department. |
(C) The provider effective date contained within the |
Department's provider enrollment subsystem within the |
Illinois Medicaid Program Advanced Cloud Technology |
(IMPACT) System. |
(2) The standardized roster form may be submitted to the |
MCO at the same time that the provider submits an enrollment |
application to the Department through IMPACT. |
(3) By October 1, 2019, the Department shall require all |
MCOs to update their provider directory with information for |
new practitioners of existing contracted providers within 30 |
days of receipt of a complete and accurate standardized roster |
template in the format approved by the Department provided |
that the provider is effective in the Department's provider |
enrollment subsystem within the IMPACT system. Such provider |
|
directory shall be readily accessible for purposes of |
selecting an approved health care provider and comply with all |
other federal and State requirements. |
(g-11) The Department shall work with relevant |
stakeholders on the development of operational guidelines to |
enhance and improve operational performance of Illinois' |
Medicaid managed care program, including, but not limited to, |
improving provider billing practices, reducing claim |
rejections and inappropriate payment denials, and |
standardizing processes, procedures, definitions, and response |
timelines, with the goal of reducing provider and MCO |
administrative burdens and conflict. The Department shall |
include a report on the progress of these program improvements |
and other topics in its Fiscal Year 2020 annual report to the |
General Assembly. |
(g-12) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, if the |
Department or an MCO requires submission of a claim for |
payment in a non-electronic format, a provider shall always be |
afforded a period of no less than 90 business days, as a |
correction period, following any notification of rejection by |
either the Department or the MCO to correct errors or |
omissions in the original submission. |
Under no circumstances, either by an MCO or under the |
State's fee-for-service system, shall a provider be denied |
payment for failure to comply with any timely submission |
requirements under this Code or under any existing contract, |
|
unless the non-electronic format claim submission occurs after |
the initial 180 days following the latest date of service on |
the claim, or after the 90 business days correction period |
following notification to the provider of rejection or denial |
of payment. |
(g-13) Utilization Review Standardization and |
Transparency. |
(1) To ensure greater standardization and transparency |
related to service authorization determinations, for all |
individuals covered under the medical assistance program, |
including both the fee-for-service and managed care |
programs, the Department shall, in consultation with the |
MCOs, a statewide association representing the MCOs, a |
statewide association representing the majority of |
Illinois hospitals, a statewide association representing |
physicians, or any other interested parties deemed |
appropriate by the Department, adopt administrative rules |
consistent with this subsection, in accordance with the |
Illinois Administrative Procedure Act. |
(2) No later than Prior to July 1, 2025, the |
Department shall in accordance with the Illinois |
Administrative Procedure Act file emergency rules, and |
adopt permanent rules no later than October 1, 2025, adopt |
rules which govern MCO practices for dates of services on |
and after July 1, 2025, as follows: |
(A) guidelines related to the publication of MCO |
|
authorization policies; |
(B) procedures that, due to medical complexity, |
must be reimbursed under the applicable inpatient |
methodology, when provided in the inpatient setting |
and billed as an inpatient service; |
(C) standardization of administrative forms used |
in the member appeal process; |
(D) limitations on second or subsequent medical |
necessity review of a health care service already |
authorized by the MCO or URO under a service |
authorization program; |
(E) standardization of peer-to-peer processes and |
timelines; |
(F) defined criteria for urgent and standard |
post-acute care and long-term acute care service |
authorization requests; and |
(G) standardized criteria for service |
authorization programs for authorization of admission |
to a long-term acute care hospital. |
(3) The Department shall expand the scope of the |
quality and compliance audits conducted by its contracted |
external quality review organization to include, but not |
be limited to: |
(A) an analysis of the Medicaid MCO's compliance |
with nationally recognized clinical decision |
guidelines; |
|
(B) an analysis that compares and contrasts the |
Medicaid MCO's service authorization determination |
outcomes to the outcomes of each other MCO plan and the |
State's fee-for-service program model to evaluate |
whether service authorization determinations are being |
made consistently by all Medicaid MCOs to ensure that |
all individuals are being treated in accordance with |
equitable standards of care; |
(C) an analysis, for each Medicaid MCO, of the |
number of service authorization requests, including |
requests for concurrent review and certification of |
admissions, received, initially denied, overturned |
through any post-denial process including, but not |
limited to, enrollee or provider appeal, peer-to-peer |
review, or the provider dispute resolution process, |
denied but approved for a lower or different level of |
care, and the number denied on final determination; |
and |
(D) provide a written report to the General |
Assembly, detailing the items listed in this |
subsection and any other metrics deemed necessary by |
the Department, by the second April, following June 7, |
2024 (the effective date of Public Act 103-593) this |
amendatory Act of the 103rd General Assembly, and each |
April thereafter. The Department shall make this |
report available within 30 days of delivery to the |
|
General Assembly, on its public facing website. |
(h) The Department shall not expand mandatory MCO |
enrollment into new counties beyond those counties already |
designated by the Department as of June 1, 2014 for the |
individuals whose eligibility for medical assistance is not |
the seniors or people with disabilities population until the |
Department provides an opportunity for accountable care |
entities and MCOs to participate in such newly designated |
counties. |
(h-5) Leading indicator data sharing. By January 1, 2024, |
the Department shall obtain input from the Department of Human |
Services, the Department of Juvenile Justice, the Department |
of Children and Family Services, the State Board of Education, |
managed care organizations, providers, and clinical experts to |
identify and analyze key indicators and data elements that can |
be used in an analysis of lead indicators from assessments and |
data sets available to the Department that can be shared with |
managed care organizations and similar care coordination |
entities contracted with the Department as leading indicators |
for elevated behavioral health crisis risk for children, |
including data sets such as the Illinois Medicaid |
Comprehensive Assessment of Needs and Strengths (IM-CANS), |
calls made to the State's Crisis and Referral Entry Services |
(CARES) hotline, health services information from Health and |
Human Services Innovators, or other data sets that may include |
key indicators. The workgroup shall complete its |
|
recommendations for leading indicator data elements on or |
before September 1, 2024. To the extent permitted by State and |
federal law, the identified leading indicators shall be shared |
with managed care organizations and similar care coordination |
entities contracted with the Department on or before December |
1, 2024 for the purpose of improving care coordination with |
the early detection of elevated risk. Leading indicators shall |
be reassessed annually with stakeholder input. The Department |
shall implement guidance to managed care organizations and |
similar care coordination entities contracted with the |
Department, so that the managed care organizations and care |
coordination entities respond to lead indicators with services |
and interventions that are designed to help stabilize the |
child. |
(i) The requirements of this Section apply to contracts |
with accountable care entities and MCOs entered into, amended, |
or renewed after June 16, 2014 (the effective date of Public |
Act 98-651). |
(j) Health care information released to managed care |
organizations. A health care provider shall release to a |
Medicaid managed care organization, upon request, and subject |
to the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of |
1996 and any other law applicable to the release of health |
information, the health care information of the MCO's |
enrollee, if the enrollee has completed and signed a general |
release form that grants to the health care provider |
|
permission to release the recipient's health care information |
to the recipient's insurance carrier. |
(k) The Department of Healthcare and Family Services, |
managed care organizations, a statewide organization |
representing hospitals, and a statewide organization |
representing safety-net hospitals shall explore ways to |
support billing departments in safety-net hospitals. |
(l) The requirements of this Section added by Public Act |
102-4 shall apply to services provided on or after the first |
day of the month that begins 60 days after April 27, 2021 (the |
effective date of Public Act 102-4). |
(m) Except where otherwise expressly specified, the |
requirements of this Section added by Public Act 103-593 this |
amendatory Act of the 103rd General Assembly shall apply to |
services provided on and after July 1, 2026 on or after July 1, |
2025. |
(Source: P.A. 102-4, eff. 4-27-21; 102-43, eff. 7-6-21; |
102-144, eff. 1-1-22; 102-454, eff. 8-20-21; 102-813, eff. |
5-13-22; 103-546, eff. 8-11-23; 103-593, eff. 6-7-24; 103-885, |
eff. 8-9-24; revised 10-7-24.) |
(305 ILCS 5/5-30.18) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2030) |
Sec. 5-30.18. Service authorization program performance. |
(a) Definitions. As used in this Section: |
"Gold Card provider" means a provider identified by each |
|
Medicaid Managed Care Organization (MCO) as qualified under |
the guidelines outlined by the Department in accordance with |
subsection (c) and thereby granted a service authorization |
exemption when ordering a health care service. |
"Health care service" means any medical or behavioral |
health service covered under the medical assistance program |
that is rendered in the inpatient or outpatient hospital |
setting, including hospital-based clinics, and subject to |
review under a service authorization program. |
"Provider" means an individual actively enrolled in the |
medical assistance program and licensed or otherwise |
authorized to order, prescribe, refer, or render health care |
services in this State, and, as determined by the Department, |
may also include hospitals that submit service authorization |
requests. |
"Service authorization exemption" means an exception |
granted by a Medicaid MCO to a provider under which all service |
authorization requests for covered health care services, |
excluding pharmacy services and durable medical equipment, are |
automatically deemed to be medically necessary, clinically |
appropriate, and approved for reimbursement as ordered. |
"Service authorization program" means any utilization |
review, utilization management, peer review, quality review, |
or other medical management activity conducted in advance of, |
concurrent to, or after the provision of a health care service |
by a Medicaid MCO, either directly or through a contracted |
|
utilization review organization (URO), including, but not |
limited to, prior authorization, pre-certification, |
certification of admission, concurrent review, and |
retrospective review of health care services. |
"Service authorization request" means a request by a |
provider to a service authorization program to determine |
whether a health care service that is otherwise covered under |
the medical assistance program meets the reimbursement |
requirements established by the Medicaid MCO, or its |
contracted URO, for medically necessary, clinically |
appropriate care and to issue a service authorization |
determination. |
"Utilization review organization" or "URO" means a managed |
care organization or other entity that has established or |
administers one or more service authorization programs. |
(b) In consultation with the Medicaid MCOs, a statewide |
association representing managed care organizations, a |
statewide association representing the majority of Illinois |
hospitals, and a statewide association representing |
physicians, the Department shall in accordance with the |
Illinois Administrative Procedure Act, adopt administrative |
rules no later than July 1, 2026, consistent with this |
Section, to require each Medicaid MCO to identify Gold Card |
providers with such identification initially being effective |
for health care services provided on and after July 1, 2026 |
2025. |
|
(c) The Department shall adopt rules, in accordance with |
the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act, to implement this |
Section that include, but are not limited to, the following |
provisions: |
(1) Require each Medicaid MCO to provide a service |
authorization exemption to a provider if the provider has |
submitted at least 50 service authorization requests to |
its service authorization program in the preceding |
calendar year and the service authorization program |
approved at least 90% of all service authorization |
requests, regardless of the type of health care services |
requested. |
(2) Require that service authorization exemptions be |
limited to services provided in an inpatient or outpatient |
hospital setting inclusive of hospital-based clinics. |
Service authorization exemptions under this Section shall |
not pertain to pharmacy services and durable medical |
equipment and supplies. |
(3) The service authorization exemption shall be valid |
for at least one year, shall be made by each Medicaid MCO |
or its URO, and shall be binding on the Medicaid MCO and |
its URO. |
(4) The provider shall be required to continue to |
document medically necessary, clinically appropriate care |
and submit such documentation to the Medicaid MCO for the |
purpose of continuous performance monitoring. If a |
|
provider fails to maintain the 90% service authorization |
standard, as determined on no more frequent a basis than |
bi-annually, the provider's service authorization |
exemption is subject to temporary or permanent suspension. |
(5) Require that each Medicaid MCO publish on its |
provider portal a list of all providers that have |
qualified for a service authorization exemption or |
indicate that a provider has qualified for a service |
authorization exemption on its provider-facing provider |
roster. |
(6) Require that no later than June 1 December 1 of |
each calendar year, each Medicaid MCO shall provide |
written notification to all providers who qualify for a |
service authorization exemption, for the subsequent State |
fiscal calendar year. |
(7) Require that each Medicaid MCO or its URO use the |
policies and guidelines published by the Department to |
evaluate whether a provider meets the criteria to qualify |
for a service authorization exemption and the conditions |
under which a service authorization exemption may be |
rescinded, including review of the provider's service |
authorization determinations during the preceding calendar |
year. |
(8) Require each Medicaid MCO to provide the |
Department a list of all providers who were denied a |
service authorization exemption or had a previously |
|
granted service authorization exemption suspended, with |
such denials being subject to an annual audit conducted by |
an independent third-party URO to ensure their |
appropriateness. |
(A) The independent third-party URO shall issue a |
written report consistent with this paragraph. |
(B) The independent third-party URO shall not be |
owned by, affiliated with, or employed by any Medicaid |
MCO or its contracted URO, nor shall it have any |
financial interest in the Medicaid MCO's service |
authorization exemption program. |
(d) Each Medicaid MCO must have a standard method to |
accept and process professional claims and facility claims, as |
billed by the provider, for a health care service that is |
rendered, prescribed, or ordered by a provider granted a |
service authorization exemption, except in cases of fraud. |
(e) A service authorization program shall not deny, |
partially deny, reduce the level of care, or otherwise limit |
reimbursement to the rendering or supervising provider, |
including the rendering facility, for health care services |
ordered by a provider who qualifies for a service |
authorization exemption, except in cases of fraud. |
(f) This Section is repealed on December 31, 2030. |
(Source: P.A. 103-593, eff. 6-7-24.) |
ARTICLE 72. |
|
Section 72-5. The Hospital Licensing Act is amended by |
changing Section 4.5 as follows: |
(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 235,000 inhabitants. 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 contiguous counties provided |
that the facility located in the contiguous county is |
separately licensed under this Act and was acquired out of |
bankruptcy proceedings under the United States Bankruptcy Code |
before the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 104th |
General Assembly. |
(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: |
(1) a single board of directors with responsibility |
for governance, including financial oversight and the |
authority to designate or remove the chief executive |
officer; |
(2) a single medical staff accountable to the board of |
directors and governed by a single set of medical staff |
bylaws, rules, and regulations with responsibility for the |
quality of the medical services; and |
(3) a single chief executive officer, accountable to |
the board of directors, with management responsibility. |
(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; 103-1075, eff. 3-21-25.) |
ARTICLE 73. |
Section 73-5. The Nursing Home Care Act is amended by |
changing Sections 3-202.05 and 3-209 as follows: |
(210 ILCS 45/3-202.05) |
Sec. 3-202.05. Staffing ratios effective July 1, 2010 and |
thereafter. |
(a) For the purpose of computing staff to resident ratios, |
direct care staff shall include: |
(1) registered nurses; |
(2) licensed practical nurses; |
(3) certified nurse assistants; |
(4) psychiatric services rehabilitation aides; |
(5) rehabilitation and therapy aides; |
(6) psychiatric services rehabilitation coordinators; |
(7) assistant directors of nursing; |
(8) 50% of the Director of Nurses' time; and |
(9) 30% of the Social Services Directors' time. |
|
The Department shall, by rule, allow certain facilities |
subject to 77 Ill. Adm. Code 300.4000 and following (Subpart |
S) to utilize specialized clinical staff, as defined in rules, |
to count towards the staffing ratios. |
Within 120 days of June 14, 2012 (the effective date of |
Public Act 97-689), the Department shall promulgate rules |
specific to the staffing requirements for facilities federally |
defined as Institutions for Mental Disease. These rules shall |
recognize the unique nature of individuals with chronic mental |
health conditions, shall include minimum requirements for |
specialized clinical staff, including clinical social workers, |
psychiatrists, psychologists, and direct care staff set forth |
in paragraphs (4) through (6) and any other specialized staff |
which may be utilized and deemed necessary to count toward |
staffing ratios. |
Within 120 days of June 14, 2012 (the effective date of |
Public Act 97-689), the Department shall promulgate rules |
specific to the staffing requirements for facilities licensed |
under the Specialized Mental Health Rehabilitation Act of |
2013. These rules shall recognize the unique nature of |
individuals with chronic mental health conditions, shall |
include minimum requirements for specialized clinical staff, |
including clinical social workers, psychiatrists, |
psychologists, and direct care staff set forth in paragraphs |
(4) through (6) and any other specialized staff which may be |
utilized and deemed necessary to count toward staffing ratios. |
|
(a-5) The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services' |
payroll-based journal job title codes, which correspond to the |
staff used for the staffing ratios in subsection (a), are as |
follows: |
(1) Registered Nurse Director of Nursing, job title |
code 5. |
(2) Registered Nurse with Administrative Duties, job |
title code 6. |
(3) Registered Nurse, job title code 7. |
(4) Licensed Practical/Vocational Nurse with |
Administrative Duties, job title code 8. |
(5) Licensed Practical/Vocational Nurse, job title |
code 9. |
(6) Certified Nurse Aide, job title code 10. |
(7) Nurse Aide in Training, job title code 11. |
(8) Medication Aide/Technician, job title code 12. |
(9) Nurse Practitioner, job title code 13. |
(10) Clinical Nurse Specialist, job title code 14. |
(11) Occupational Therapist, job title code 18. |
(12) Occupational Therapy Assistant, job title code |
19. |
(13) Occupational Therapy Aide, job title code 20. |
(14) Physical Therapist, job title code 21. |
(15) Physical Therapy Assistant, job title code 22. |
(16) Physical Therapy Assistant, job title code 23. |
(17) Respiratory Therapist, job title code 24. |
|
(18) Respiratory Therapy Technician, job title code |
25. |
(19) Speech/Language Pathologist, job title code 26. |
(20) Qualified Activities Professional, job title code |
28. |
(21) Other Activities Staff, job title code 29. |
(22) Qualified Social Worker, job title code 30. |
(23) Other Social Worker, job title code 31. |
(24) Mental Health Service Worker, job title code 34. |
For all job title codes in this subsection, 100% of the |
hours worked by the staff must be counted toward the |
staff-to-resident ratio, except job code title 5, which is |
limited to 50%, and job title codes 28, 30, and 31, which are |
limited to 30%. |
(b) (Blank). |
(b-5) For purposes of the minimum staffing ratios in this |
Section, all residents shall be classified as requiring either |
skilled care or intermediate care. |
As used in this subsection: |
"Intermediate care" means basic nursing care and other |
restorative services under periodic medical direction. |
"Skilled care" means skilled nursing care, continuous |
skilled nursing observations, restorative nursing, and other |
services under professional direction with frequent medical |
supervision. |
(c) Facilities shall notify the Department within 60 days |
|
after July 29, 2010 (the effective date of Public Act |
96-1372), in a form and manner prescribed by the Department, |
of the staffing ratios in effect on July 29, 2010 (the |
effective date of Public Act 96-1372) for both intermediate |
and skilled care and the number of residents receiving each |
level of care. |
(d)(1) (Blank). |
(2) (Blank). |
(3) (Blank). |
(4) (Blank). |
(5) Effective January 1, 2014, the minimum staffing ratios |
shall be increased to 3.8 hours of nursing and personal care |
each day for a resident needing skilled care and 2.5 hours of |
nursing and personal care each day for a resident needing |
intermediate care. |
(e) Ninety days after June 14, 2012 (the effective date of |
Public Act 97-689), a minimum of 25% of nursing and personal |
care time shall be provided by licensed nurses, with at least |
10% of nursing and personal care time provided by registered |
nurses. These minimum requirements shall remain in effect |
until an acuity based registered nurse requirement is |
promulgated by rule concurrent with the adoption of the |
Resource Utilization Group classification-based payment |
methodology, as provided in Section 5-5.2 of the Illinois |
Public Aid Code. Registered nurses and licensed practical |
nurses employed by a facility in excess of these requirements |
|
may be used to satisfy the remaining 75% of the nursing and |
personal care time requirements. Notwithstanding this |
subsection, no staffing requirement in statute in effect on |
June 14, 2012 (the effective date of Public Act 97-689) shall |
be reduced on account of this subsection. |
(f) The Department shall submit proposed rules for |
adoption by January 1, 2020 establishing a system for |
determining compliance with minimum staffing set forth in this |
Section and the requirements of 77 Ill. Adm. Code 300.1230 |
adjusted for any waivers granted under Section 3-303.1. |
Compliance shall be determined quarterly by comparing the |
number of hours provided per resident per day using the |
Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services' payroll-based |
journal and the facility's daily census, broken down by |
intermediate and skilled care as self-reported by the facility |
to the Department on a quarterly basis. The Department shall |
use the quarterly payroll-based journal and the self-reported |
census to calculate the number of hours provided per resident |
per day and compare this ratio to the minimum staffing |
standards required under this Section, as impacted by any |
waivers granted under Section 3-303.1. Discrepancies between |
job titles contained in this Section and the payroll-based |
journal shall be addressed by rule. The manner in which the |
Department requests payroll-based journal information to be |
submitted shall align with the federal Centers for Medicare |
and Medicaid Services' requirements that allow providers to |
|
submit the quarterly data in an aggregate manner. |
(g) Monetary penalties for non-compliance. The Department |
shall submit proposed rules for adoption by January 1, 2020 |
establishing monetary penalties for facilities not in |
compliance with minimum staffing standards under this Section. |
Facilities shall be required to comply with the provisions of |
this subsection beginning January 1, 2025. No monetary penalty |
may be issued for noncompliance prior to the revised |
implementation date, which shall be January 1, 2025. If a |
facility is found to be noncompliant prior to the revised |
implementation date, the Department shall provide a written |
notice identifying the staffing deficiencies and require the |
facility to provide a sufficiently detailed correction plan |
that describes proposed and completed actions the facility |
will take or has taken, including hiring actions, to address |
the facility's failure to meet the statutory minimum staffing |
levels. Monetary penalties shall be imposed beginning no later |
than July 1, 2025, based on data for the quarter beginning |
January 1, 2025 through March 31, 2025 and quarterly |
thereafter. Monetary penalties shall be established based on a |
formula that calculates on a daily basis the cost of wages and |
benefits for the missing staffing hours. All notices of |
noncompliance shall include the computations used to determine |
noncompliance and establishing the variance between minimum |
staffing ratios and the Department's computations. The penalty |
for the first offense shall be 125% of the cost of wages and |
|
benefits for the missing staffing hours. The penalty shall |
increase to 150% of the cost of wages and benefits for the |
missing staffing hours for the second offense and 200% the |
cost of wages and benefits for the missing staffing hours for |
the third and all subsequent offenses. The penalty shall be |
imposed regardless of whether the facility has committed other |
violations of this Act during the same period that the |
staffing offense occurred. The penalty may not be waived, |
except but the Department shall have the discretion to |
determine the gravity of the violation in situations where |
there is no more than a 10% deviation from the staffing |
requirements, in which case the facility shall not receive a |
violation or penalty and make appropriate adjustments to the |
penalty. The Department is granted discretion to waive the |
violation and penalty when unforeseen circumstances have |
occurred that resulted in call-offs of scheduled staff. This |
provision shall be applied no more than 6 times per quarter. |
Nothing in this Section diminishes a facility's right to |
appeal the imposition of a monetary penalty. No facility may |
appeal a notice of noncompliance issued during the revised |
implementation period. The changes made to this subsection by |
this amendatory Act of the 104th General Assembly in regard to |
nursing home staffing fines shall apply to the July 1, 2025 |
fines based on data for the quarter beginning January 1, 2025 |
through March 31, 2025 and quarterly thereafter. |
(Source: P.A. 101-10, eff. 6-5-19; 102-16, eff. 6-17-21; |
|
102-1118, eff. 1-18-23.) |
(210 ILCS 45/3-209) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 4153-209) |
(Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 103-1069) |
Sec. 3-209. Required posting of information. |
(a) Every facility shall conspicuously post for display in |
an area of its offices accessible to residents, employees, and |
visitors the following: |
(1) Its current license; |
(2) A description, provided by the Department, of |
complaint procedures established under this Act and the |
name, address, and telephone number of a person authorized |
by the Department to receive complaints; |
(3) A copy of any order pertaining to the facility |
issued by the Department or a court; |
(4) A list of the material available for public |
inspection under Section 3-210; |
(5) Phone numbers and websites for rights protection |
services must be posted in common areas and at the main |
entrance and provided upon entry and at the request of |
residents or the resident's representative in accordance |
with 42 CFR 483.10(j)(4); and |
(6) The statement "The Illinois Long-Term Care |
Ombudsman Program is a free resident advocacy service |
available to the public.". |
In accordance with F574 of the State Operations Manual for |
|
Long-Term Care Facilities, the administrator shall post for |
all residents and at the main entrance the name, address, and |
telephone number of the appropriate State governmental office |
where complaints may be lodged in language the resident can |
understand, which must include notice of the grievance |
procedure of the facility or program as well as addresses and |
phone numbers for the Office of Health Care Regulation and the |
Long-Term Care Ombudsman Program and a website showing the |
information of a facility's ownership. The facility shall |
include a link to the Long-Term Care Ombudsman Program's |
website on the home page of the facility's website. |
(b) A facility that has received a notice of violation for |
a violation of the minimum staffing requirements under Section |
3-202.05 shall display, for a consecutive 60 days immediately |
after the facility is notified of the violation during the |
period of time the facility is out of compliance, a notice |
stating in Calibri (body) font and 26-point type in black |
letters on an 8.5 by 11 inch white paper the following: |
"Notice Dated: ................... |
This facility did does not currently meet the minimum staffing |
ratios required by law for [insert applicable quarter]. Posted |
at the direction of the Illinois Department of Public |
Health.". |
The notice must be posted, at a minimum, at all publicly used |
|
exterior entryways into the facility, inside the main entrance |
lobby, and next to any registration desk for easily accessible |
viewing. The notice must also be posted on the main page of the |
facility's website. The Department shall have the discretion |
to determine the gravity of any violation and, taking into |
account mitigating and aggravating circumstances and facts, |
may reduce the requirement of, and amount of time for, posting |
the notice. Facilities shall not be required to post for the |
violation if they are within the 10% deviation of staffing |
requirements as provided in Section 3-202.05. |
(Source: P.A. 101-10, eff. 6-5-19; 102-1080, eff. 1-1-23.) |
(Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 103-1069) |
Sec. 3-209. Required posting of information. |
(a) Every facility shall conspicuously post for display in |
an area of its offices accessible to residents, employees, and |
visitors the following: |
(1) Its current license; |
(2) A description, provided by the Department, of |
complaint procedures established under this Act and the |
name, address, and telephone number of a person authorized |
by the Department to receive complaints; |
(3) A copy of any order pertaining to the facility |
issued by the Department or a court; |
(4) A list of the material available for public |
inspection under Section 3-210; |
|
(5) Phone numbers and websites for rights protection |
services must be posted in common areas and at the main |
entrance and provided upon entry and at the request of |
residents or the resident's representative in accordance |
with 42 CFR 483.10(j)(4); |
(6) The statement "The Illinois Long-Term Care |
Ombudsman Program is a free resident advocacy service |
available to the public."; and |
(7) A description of the retaliation complaint |
procedures and the remedies established under this Act. |
In accordance with F574 of the State Operations Manual for |
Long-Term Care Facilities, the administrator shall post for |
all residents and at the main entrance the name, address, and |
telephone number of the appropriate State governmental office |
where complaints may be lodged in language the resident can |
understand, which must include notice of the grievance |
procedure of the facility or program as well as addresses and |
phone numbers for the Office of Health Care Regulation and the |
Long-Term Care Ombudsman Program and a website showing the |
information of a facility's ownership. The facility shall |
include a link to the Long-Term Care Ombudsman Program's |
website on the home page of the facility's website. |
(b) A facility that has received a notice of violation for |
a violation of the minimum staffing requirements under Section |
3-202.05 shall display, for a consecutive 60 days immediately |
after the facility is notified of the violation during the |
|
period of time the facility is out of compliance, a notice |
stating in Calibri (body) font and 26-point type in black |
letters on an 8.5 by 11 inch white paper the following: |
"Notice Dated: ................... |
This facility did does not currently meet the minimum staffing |
ratios required by law for [insert applicable quarter]. Posted |
at the direction of the Illinois Department of Public |
Health.". |
The notice must be posted, at a minimum, at all publicly used |
exterior entryways into the facility, inside the main entrance |
lobby, and next to any registration desk for easily accessible |
viewing. The notice must also be posted on the main page of the |
facility's website. The Department shall have the discretion |
to determine the gravity of any violation and, taking into |
account mitigating and aggravating circumstances and facts, |
may reduce the requirement of, and amount of time for, posting |
the notice. Facilities shall not be required to post for the |
violation if they are within the 10% deviation of staffing |
requirements as provided in Section 3-202.05. |
(Source: P.A. 102-1080, eff. 1-1-23; 103-1069, eff. 1-1-26.) |
ARTICLE 74. |
Section 74-5. The Illinois Public Aid Code is amended by |
|
changing Section 5-5.01a as follows: |
(305 ILCS 5/5-5.01a) |
Sec. 5-5.01a. Supportive living facilities program. |
(a) The Department shall establish and provide oversight |
for a program of supportive living facilities that seek to |
promote resident independence, dignity, respect, and |
well-being in the most cost-effective manner. |
A supportive living facility is (i) a free-standing |
facility or (ii) a distinct physical and operational entity |
within a mixed-use building that meets the criteria |
established in subsection (d). A supportive living facility |
integrates housing with health, personal care, and supportive |
services and is a designated setting that offers residents |
their own separate, private, and distinct living units. |
Sites for the operation of the program shall be selected |
by the Department based upon criteria that may include the |
need for services in a geographic area, the availability of |
funding, and the site's ability to meet the standards. |
(b) Beginning July 1, 2014, subject to federal approval, |
the Medicaid rates for supportive living facilities shall be |
equal to the supportive living facility Medicaid rate |
effective on June 30, 2014 increased by 8.85%. Once the |
assessment imposed at Article V-G of this Code is determined |
to be a permissible tax under Title XIX of the Social Security |
Act, the Department shall increase the Medicaid rates for |
|
supportive living facilities effective on July 1, 2014 by |
9.09%. The Department shall apply this increase retroactively |
to coincide with the imposition of the assessment in Article |
V-G of this Code in accordance with the approval for federal |
financial participation by the Centers for Medicare and |
Medicaid Services. |
The Medicaid rates for supportive living facilities |
effective on July 1, 2017 must be equal to the rates in effect |
for supportive living facilities on June 30, 2017 increased by |
2.8%. |
The Medicaid rates for supportive living facilities |
effective on July 1, 2018 must be equal to the rates in effect |
for supportive living facilities on June 30, 2018. |
Subject to federal approval, the Medicaid rates for |
supportive living services on and after July 1, 2019 must be at |
least 54.3% of the average total nursing facility services per |
diem for the geographic areas defined by the Department while |
maintaining the rate differential for dementia care and must |
be updated whenever the total nursing facility service per |
diems are updated. Beginning July 1, 2022, upon the |
implementation of the Patient Driven Payment Model, Medicaid |
rates for supportive living services must be at least 54.3% of |
the average total nursing services per diem rate for the |
geographic areas. For purposes of this provision, the average |
total nursing services per diem rate shall include all add-ons |
for nursing facilities for the geographic area provided for in |
|
Section 5-5.2. The rate differential for dementia care must be |
maintained in these rates and the rates shall be updated |
whenever nursing facility per diem rates are updated. |
Subject to federal approval, beginning January 1, 2024, |
the dementia care rate for supportive living services must be |
no less than the non-dementia care supportive living services |
rate multiplied by 1.5. |
(b-5) Subject to federal approval, beginning January 1, |
2025, Medicaid rates for supportive living services must be at |
least 54.75% of the average total nursing facility services |
per diem rate for the geographic areas defined by the |
Department and shall include all add-ons for nursing |
facilities for the geographic area provided for in Section |
5-5.2. |
(c) The Department may adopt rules to implement this |
Section. Rules that establish or modify the services, |
standards, and conditions for participation in the program |
shall be adopted by the Department in consultation with the |
Department on Aging, the Department of Rehabilitation |
Services, and the Department of Mental Health and |
Developmental Disabilities (or their successor agencies). |
(d) Subject to federal approval by the Centers for |
Medicare and Medicaid Services, the Department shall accept |
for consideration of certification under the program any |
application for a site or building where distinct parts of the |
site or building are designated for purposes other than the |
|
provision of supportive living services, but only if: |
(1) those distinct parts of the site or building are |
not designated for the purpose of providing assisted |
living services as required under the Assisted Living and |
Shared Housing Act; |
(2) those distinct parts of the site or building are |
completely separate from the part of the building used for |
the provision of supportive living program services, |
including separate entrances; |
(3) those distinct parts of the site or building do |
not share any common spaces with the part of the building |
used for the provision of supportive living program |
services; and |
(4) those distinct parts of the site or building do |
not share staffing with the part of the building used for |
the provision of supportive living program services. |
(e) Facilities or distinct parts of facilities which are |
selected as supportive living facilities and are in good |
standing with the Department's rules are exempt from the |
provisions of the Nursing Home Care Act and the Illinois |
Health Facilities Planning Act. |
(f) Section 9817 of the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021 |
(Public Law 117-2) authorizes a 10% enhanced federal medical |
assistance percentage for supportive living services for a |
12-month period from April 1, 2021 through March 31, 2022. |
Subject to federal approval, including the approval of any |
|
necessary waiver amendments or other federally required |
documents or assurances, for a 12-month period the Department |
must pay a supplemental $26 per diem rate to all supportive |
living facilities with the additional federal financial |
participation funds that result from the enhanced federal |
medical assistance percentage from April 1, 2021 through March |
31, 2022. The Department may issue parameters around how the |
supplemental payment should be spent, including quality |
improvement activities. The Department may alter the form, |
methods, or timeframes concerning the supplemental per diem |
rate to comply with any subsequent changes to federal law, |
changes made by guidance issued by the federal Centers for |
Medicare and Medicaid Services, or other changes necessary to |
receive the enhanced federal medical assistance percentage. |
(g) All applications for the expansion of supportive |
living dementia care settings involving sites not approved by |
the Department by January 1, 2024 (Public Act 103-102) may |
allow new elderly non-dementia units in addition to new |
dementia care units. The Department may approve such |
applications only if the application has: (1) no more than one |
non-dementia care unit for each dementia care unit and (2) the |
site is not located within 4 miles of an existing supportive |
living program site in Cook County (including the City of |
Chicago), not located within 12 miles of an existing |
supportive living program site in Alexander, Bond, Boone, |
Calhoun, Champaign, Clinton, DeKalb, DuPage Fulton, Grundy, |
|
Henry, Jackson, Jersey, Johnson, Kane, Kankakee, Kendall, |
Lake, Macon, Macoupin, Madison, Marshall, McHenry, McLean, |
Menard, Mercer, Monroe, Peoria, Piatt, Rock Island, Sangamon, |
Stark, St. Clair, Tazewell, Vermilion, Will, Williamson, |
Winnebago, or Woodford counties, or not located within 25 |
miles of an existing supportive living program site in any |
other county. |
(h) Beginning January 1, 2025, subject to federal |
approval, for a person who is a resident of a supportive living |
facility under this Section, the monthly personal needs |
allowance shall be $120 per month. |
(i) (h) As stated in the supportive living program home |
and community-based service waiver approved by the federal |
Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, and beginning July |
1, 2025, the Department must maintain the rate add-on |
implemented on January 1, 2023 for the provision of 2 meals per |
day at no less than $6.15 per day. |
(j) (f) Subject to federal approval, the Department shall |
allow a certified medication aide to administer medication in |
a supportive living facility. For purposes of this subsection, |
"certified medication aide" means a person who has met the |
qualifications for certification under Section 79 of the |
Assisted Living and Shared Housing Act and assists with |
medication administration while under the supervision of a |
registered professional nurse as authorized by Section 50-75 |
of the Nurse Practice Act. The Department may adopt rules to |
|
implement this subsection. |
(Source: P.A. 102-43, eff. 7-6-21; 102-699, eff. 4-19-22; |
103-102, Article 20, Section 20-5, eff. 1-1-24; 103-102, |
Article 100, Section 100-5, eff. 1-1-24; 103-593, Article 15, |
Section 15-5, eff. 6-7-24; 103-593, Article 100, Section |
100-5, eff. 6-7-24; 103-593, Article 165, Section 165-5, eff. |
6-7-24; 103-605, eff. 7-1-24; 103-886, eff. 8-9-24; revised |
10-8-24.) |
ARTICLE 75. |
Section 75-5. The Illinois Public Aid Code is amended by |
changing Section 5A-2 as follows: |
(305 ILCS 5/5A-2) (from Ch. 23, par. 5A-2) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2026) |
Sec. 5A-2. Assessment. |
(a)(1) Subject to Sections 5A-3 and 5A-10, for State |
fiscal years 2009 through 2018, or as long as continued under |
Section 5A-16, an annual assessment on inpatient services is |
imposed on each hospital provider in an amount equal to |
$218.38 multiplied by the difference of the hospital's |
occupied bed days less the hospital's Medicare bed days, |
provided, however, that the amount of $218.38 shall be |
increased by a uniform percentage to generate an amount equal |
to 75% of the State share of the payments authorized under |
|
Section 5A-12.5, with such increase only taking effect upon |
the date that a State share for such payments is required under |
federal law. For the period of April through June 2015, the |
amount of $218.38 used to calculate the assessment under this |
paragraph shall, by emergency rule under subsection (s) of |
Section 5-45 of the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act, be |
increased by a uniform percentage to generate $20,250,000 in |
the aggregate for that period from all hospitals subject to |
the annual assessment under this paragraph. |
(2) In addition to any other assessments imposed under |
this Article, effective July 1, 2016 and semi-annually |
thereafter through June 2018, or as provided in Section 5A-16, |
in addition to any federally required State share as |
authorized under paragraph (1), the amount of $218.38 shall be |
increased by a uniform percentage to generate an amount equal |
to 75% of the ACA Assessment Adjustment, as defined in |
subsection (b-6) of this Section. |
For State fiscal years 2009 through 2018, or as provided |
in Section 5A-16, a hospital's occupied bed days and Medicare |
bed days shall be determined using the most recent data |
available from each hospital's 2005 Medicare cost report as |
contained in the Healthcare Cost Report Information System |
file, for the quarter ending on December 31, 2006, without |
regard to any subsequent adjustments or changes to such data. |
If a hospital's 2005 Medicare cost report is not contained in |
the Healthcare Cost Report Information System, then the |
|
Illinois Department may obtain the hospital provider's |
occupied bed days and Medicare bed days from any source |
available, including, but not limited to, records maintained |
by the hospital provider, which may be inspected at all times |
during business hours of the day by the Illinois Department or |
its duly authorized agents and employees. |
(3) Subject to Sections 5A-3, 5A-10, and 5A-16, for State |
fiscal years 2019 and 2020, an annual assessment on inpatient |
services is imposed on each hospital provider in an amount |
equal to $197.19 multiplied by the difference of the |
hospital's occupied bed days less the hospital's Medicare bed |
days. For State fiscal years 2019 and 2020, a hospital's |
occupied bed days and Medicare bed days shall be determined |
using the most recent data available from each hospital's 2015 |
Medicare cost report as contained in the Healthcare Cost |
Report Information System file, for the quarter ending on |
March 31, 2017, without regard to any subsequent adjustments |
or changes to such data. If a hospital's 2015 Medicare cost |
report is not contained in the Healthcare Cost Report |
Information System, then the Illinois Department may obtain |
the hospital provider's occupied bed days and Medicare bed |
days from any source available, including, but not limited to, |
records maintained by the hospital provider, which may be |
inspected at all times during business hours of the day by the |
Illinois Department or its duly authorized agents and |
employees. Notwithstanding any other provision in this |
|
Article, for a hospital provider that did not have a 2015 |
Medicare cost report, but paid an assessment in State fiscal |
year 2018 on the basis of hypothetical data, that assessment |
amount shall be used for State fiscal years 2019 and 2020. |
(4) Subject to Sections 5A-3 and 5A-10 and to subsection |
(b-8), for the period of July 1, 2020 through December 31, 2020 |
and calendar years 2021 through 2026, an annual assessment on |
inpatient services is imposed on each hospital provider in an |
amount equal to $221.50 multiplied by the difference of the |
hospital's occupied bed days less the hospital's Medicare bed |
days, provided however: for the period of July 1, 2020 through |
December 31, 2020, (i) the assessment shall be equal to 50% of |
the annual amount; and (ii) the amount of $221.50 shall be |
retroactively adjusted by a uniform percentage to generate an |
amount equal to 50% of the Assessment Adjustment, as defined |
in subsection (b-7). For the period of July 1, 2020 through |
December 31, 2020 and calendar years 2021 through 2026, a |
hospital's occupied bed days and Medicare bed days shall be |
determined using the most recent data available from each |
hospital's 2015 Medicare cost report as contained in the |
Healthcare Cost Report Information System file, for the |
quarter ending on March 31, 2017, without regard to any |
subsequent adjustments or changes to such data. If a |
hospital's 2015 Medicare cost report is not contained in the |
Healthcare Cost Report Information System, then the Illinois |
Department may obtain the hospital provider's occupied bed |
|
days and Medicare bed days from any source available, |
including, but not limited to, records maintained by the |
hospital provider, which may be inspected at all times during |
business hours of the day by the Illinois Department or its |
duly authorized agents and employees. Should the change in the |
assessment methodology for fiscal years 2021 through December |
31, 2022 not be approved on or before June 30, 2020, the |
assessment and payments under this Article in effect for |
fiscal year 2020 shall remain in place until the new |
assessment is approved. If the assessment methodology for July |
1, 2020 through December 31, 2022, is approved on or after July |
1, 2020, it shall be retroactive to July 1, 2020, subject to |
federal approval and provided that the payments authorized |
under Section 5A-12.7 have the same effective date as the new |
assessment methodology. In giving retroactive effect to the |
assessment approved after June 30, 2020, credit toward the new |
assessment shall be given for any payments of the previous |
assessment for periods after June 30, 2020. Notwithstanding |
any other provision of this Article, for a hospital provider |
that did not have a 2015 Medicare cost report, but paid an |
assessment in State Fiscal Year 2020 on the basis of |
hypothetical data, the data that was the basis for the 2020 |
assessment shall be used to calculate the assessment under |
this paragraph until December 31, 2023. Beginning July 1, 2022 |
and through December 31, 2024, a safety-net hospital that had |
a change of ownership in calendar year 2021, and whose |
|
inpatient utilization had decreased by 90% from the prior year |
and prior to the change of ownership, may be eligible to pay a |
tax based on hypothetical data based on a determination of |
financial distress by the Department. Subject to federal |
approval, the Department may, by January 1, 2024, develop a |
hypothetical tax for a specialty cancer hospital which had a |
structural change of ownership during calendar year 2022 from |
a for-profit entity to a non-profit entity, and which has |
experienced a decline of 60% or greater in inpatient days of |
care as compared to the prior owners 2015 Medicare cost |
report. This change of ownership may make the hospital |
eligible for a hypothetical tax under the new hospital |
provision of the assessment defined in this Section. This new |
hypothetical tax may be applicable from January 1, 2024 |
through December 31, 2026. |
(6) For calendar year 2026, and for each year thereafter |
in which a tax is imposed under this Section, the Department |
may seek to obtain a waiver from the federal Centers for |
Medicare and Medicaid Services of the uniformity requirements |
in place for the tax imposed under this Section, provided that |
such waiver request does not risk the assessment imposed or |
payments authorized under this Section from continuing. Such |
uniformity requirements shall only be waived for |
not-for-profit hospitals operating as a freestanding cancer |
hospital that have contracted to provide services to members |
served by at least 50% of the managed care organizations |
|
contracted with the Department. Such tax rates imposed on a |
hospital shall be no more than 50% and no less than 25% of the |
tax imposed on all other hospitals in this State unless |
different rates are necessary to meet federal statistical |
tests necessary for continued federal financial participation. |
Upon federal approval of such a waiver, other tax rates |
imposed under this Article shall be adjusted to ensure budget |
neutrality. |
(b) (Blank). |
(b-5)(1) Subject to Sections 5A-3 and 5A-10, for the |
portion of State fiscal year 2012, beginning June 10, 2012 |
through June 30, 2012, and for State fiscal years 2013 through |
2018, or as provided in Section 5A-16, an annual assessment on |
outpatient services is imposed on each hospital provider in an |
amount equal to .008766 multiplied by the hospital's |
outpatient gross revenue, provided, however, that the amount |
of .008766 shall be increased by a uniform percentage to |
generate an amount equal to 25% of the State share of the |
payments authorized under Section 5A-12.5, with such increase |
only taking effect upon the date that a State share for such |
payments is required under federal law. For the period |
beginning June 10, 2012 through June 30, 2012, the annual |
assessment on outpatient services shall be prorated by |
multiplying the assessment amount by a fraction, the numerator |
of which is 21 days and the denominator of which is 365 days. |
For the period of April through June 2015, the amount of |
|
.008766 used to calculate the assessment under this paragraph |
shall, by emergency rule under subsection (s) of Section 5-45 |
of the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act, be increased by |
a uniform percentage to generate $6,750,000 in the aggregate |
for that period from all hospitals subject to the annual |
assessment under this paragraph. |
(2) In addition to any other assessments imposed under |
this Article, effective July 1, 2016 and semi-annually |
thereafter through June 2018, in addition to any federally |
required State share as authorized under paragraph (1), the |
amount of .008766 shall be increased by a uniform percentage |
to generate an amount equal to 25% of the ACA Assessment |
Adjustment, as defined in subsection (b-6) of this Section. |
For the portion of State fiscal year 2012, beginning June |
10, 2012 through June 30, 2012, and State fiscal years 2013 |
through 2018, or as provided in Section 5A-16, a hospital's |
outpatient gross revenue shall be determined using the most |
recent data available from each hospital's 2009 Medicare cost |
report as contained in the Healthcare Cost Report Information |
System file, for the quarter ending on June 30, 2011, without |
regard to any subsequent adjustments or changes to such data. |
If a hospital's 2009 Medicare cost report is not contained in |
the Healthcare Cost Report Information System, then the |
Department may obtain the hospital provider's outpatient gross |
revenue from any source available, including, but not limited |
to, records maintained by the hospital provider, which may be |
|
inspected at all times during business hours of the day by the |
Department or its duly authorized agents and employees. |
(3) Subject to Sections 5A-3, 5A-10, and 5A-16, for State |
fiscal years 2019 and 2020, an annual assessment on outpatient |
services is imposed on each hospital provider in an amount |
equal to .01358 multiplied by the hospital's outpatient gross |
revenue. For State fiscal years 2019 and 2020, a hospital's |
outpatient gross revenue shall be determined using the most |
recent data available from each hospital's 2015 Medicare cost |
report as contained in the Healthcare Cost Report Information |
System file, for the quarter ending on March 31, 2017, without |
regard to any subsequent adjustments or changes to such data. |
If a hospital's 2015 Medicare cost report is not contained in |
the Healthcare Cost Report Information System, then the |
Department may obtain the hospital provider's outpatient gross |
revenue from any source available, including, but not limited |
to, records maintained by the hospital provider, which may be |
inspected at all times during business hours of the day by the |
Department or its duly authorized agents and employees. |
Notwithstanding any other provision in this Article, for a |
hospital provider that did not have a 2015 Medicare cost |
report, but paid an assessment in State fiscal year 2018 on the |
basis of hypothetical data, that assessment amount shall be |
used for State fiscal years 2019 and 2020. |
(4) Subject to Sections 5A-3 and 5A-10 and to subsection |
(b-8), for the period of July 1, 2020 through December 31, 2020 |
|
and calendar years 2021 through 2026, an annual assessment on |
outpatient services is imposed on each hospital provider in an |
amount equal to .01525 multiplied by the hospital's outpatient |
gross revenue, provided however: (i) for the period of July 1, |
2020 through December 31, 2020, the assessment shall be equal |
to 50% of the annual amount; and (ii) the amount of .01525 |
shall be retroactively adjusted by a uniform percentage to |
generate an amount equal to 50% of the Assessment Adjustment, |
as defined in subsection (b-7). For the period of July 1, 2020 |
through December 31, 2020 and calendar years 2021 through |
2026, a hospital's outpatient gross revenue shall be |
determined using the most recent data available from each |
hospital's 2015 Medicare cost report as contained in the |
Healthcare Cost Report Information System file, for the |
quarter ending on March 31, 2017, without regard to any |
subsequent adjustments or changes to such data. If a |
hospital's 2015 Medicare cost report is not contained in the |
Healthcare Cost Report Information System, then the Illinois |
Department may obtain the hospital provider's outpatient |
revenue data from any source available, including, but not |
limited to, records maintained by the hospital provider, which |
may be inspected at all times during business hours of the day |
by the Illinois Department or its duly authorized agents and |
employees. Should the change in the assessment methodology |
above for fiscal years 2021 through calendar year 2022 not be |
approved prior to July 1, 2020, the assessment and payments |
|
under this Article in effect for fiscal year 2020 shall remain |
in place until the new assessment is approved. If the change in |
the assessment methodology above for July 1, 2020 through |
December 31, 2022, is approved after June 30, 2020, it shall |
have a retroactive effective date of July 1, 2020, subject to |
federal approval and provided that the payments authorized |
under Section 12A-7 have the same effective date as the new |
assessment methodology. In giving retroactive effect to the |
assessment approved after June 30, 2020, credit toward the new |
assessment shall be given for any payments of the previous |
assessment for periods after June 30, 2020. Notwithstanding |
any other provision of this Article, for a hospital provider |
that did not have a 2015 Medicare cost report, but paid an |
assessment in State Fiscal Year 2020 on the basis of |
hypothetical data, the data that was the basis for the 2020 |
assessment shall be used to calculate the assessment under |
this paragraph until December 31, 2023. Beginning July 1, 2022 |
and through December 31, 2024, a safety-net hospital that had |
a change of ownership in calendar year 2021, and whose |
inpatient utilization had decreased by 90% from the prior year |
and prior to the change of ownership, may be eligible to pay a |
tax based on hypothetical data based on a determination of |
financial distress by the Department. |
(6) For calendar year 2026, and for each year thereafter |
in which a tax is imposed under this Section, the Department |
may seek to obtain a waiver from the federal Centers for |
|
Medicare and Medicaid Services of the uniformity requirements |
in place for the tax imposed under this Section, provided that |
such waiver request does not risk the assessment imposed or |
payments authorized under this Section from continuing. Such |
uniformity requirements shall only be waived for |
not-for-profit hospitals operating as a freestanding cancer |
hospital that have contracted to provide services to members |
served by at least 50% of the managed care organizations |
contracted with the Department. Such tax rates imposed on a |
hospital shall be no more than 50% and no less than 25% of the |
tax imposed on all other hospitals in this State unless |
different rates are necessary to meet federal statistical |
tests necessary for continued federal financial participation. |
Upon federal approval of such a waiver, other tax rates |
imposed under this Article shall be adjusted to ensure budget |
neutrality. |
(b-6)(1) As used in this Section, "ACA Assessment |
Adjustment" means: |
(A) For the period of July 1, 2016 through December |
31, 2016, the product of .19125 multiplied by the sum of |
the fee-for-service payments to hospitals as authorized |
under Section 5A-12.5 and the adjustments authorized under |
subsection (t) of Section 5A-12.2 to managed care |
organizations for hospital services due and payable in the |
month of April 2016 multiplied by 6. |
(B) For the period of January 1, 2017 through June 30, |
|
2017, the product of .19125 multiplied by the sum of the |
fee-for-service payments to hospitals as authorized under |
Section 5A-12.5 and the adjustments authorized under |
subsection (t) of Section 5A-12.2 to managed care |
organizations for hospital services due and payable in the |
month of October 2016 multiplied by 6, except that the |
amount calculated under this subparagraph (B) shall be |
adjusted, either positively or negatively, to account for |
the difference between the actual payments issued under |
Section 5A-12.5 for the period beginning July 1, 2016 |
through December 31, 2016 and the estimated payments due |
and payable in the month of April 2016 multiplied by 6 as |
described in subparagraph (A). |
(C) For the period of July 1, 2017 through December |
31, 2017, the product of .19125 multiplied by the sum of |
the fee-for-service payments to hospitals as authorized |
under Section 5A-12.5 and the adjustments authorized under |
subsection (t) of Section 5A-12.2 to managed care |
organizations for hospital services due and payable in the |
month of April 2017 multiplied by 6, except that the |
amount calculated under this subparagraph (C) shall be |
adjusted, either positively or negatively, to account for |
the difference between the actual payments issued under |
Section 5A-12.5 for the period beginning January 1, 2017 |
through June 30, 2017 and the estimated payments due and |
payable in the month of October 2016 multiplied by 6 as |
|
described in subparagraph (B). |
(D) For the period of January 1, 2018 through June 30, |
2018, the product of .19125 multiplied by the sum of the |
fee-for-service payments to hospitals as authorized under |
Section 5A-12.5 and the adjustments authorized under |
subsection (t) of Section 5A-12.2 to managed care |
organizations for hospital services due and payable in the |
month of October 2017 multiplied by 6, except that: |
(i) the amount calculated under this subparagraph |
(D) shall be adjusted, either positively or |
negatively, to account for the difference between the |
actual payments issued under Section 5A-12.5 for the |
period of July 1, 2017 through December 31, 2017 and |
the estimated payments due and payable in the month of |
April 2017 multiplied by 6 as described in |
subparagraph (C); and |
(ii) the amount calculated under this subparagraph |
(D) shall be adjusted to include the product of .19125 |
multiplied by the sum of the fee-for-service payments, |
if any, estimated to be paid to hospitals under |
subsection (b) of Section 5A-12.5. |
(2) The Department shall complete and apply a final |
reconciliation of the ACA Assessment Adjustment prior to June |
30, 2018 to account for: |
(A) any differences between the actual payments issued |
or scheduled to be issued prior to June 30, 2018 as |
|
authorized in Section 5A-12.5 for the period of January 1, |
2018 through June 30, 2018 and the estimated payments due |
and payable in the month of October 2017 multiplied by 6 as |
described in subparagraph (D); and |
(B) any difference between the estimated |
fee-for-service payments under subsection (b) of Section |
5A-12.5 and the amount of such payments that are actually |
scheduled to be paid. |
The Department shall notify hospitals of any additional |
amounts owed or reduction credits to be applied to the June |
2018 ACA Assessment Adjustment. This is to be considered the |
final reconciliation for the ACA Assessment Adjustment. |
(3) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Section, |
if for any reason the scheduled payments under subsection (b) |
of Section 5A-12.5 are not issued in full by the final day of |
the period authorized under subsection (b) of Section 5A-12.5, |
funds collected from each hospital pursuant to subparagraph |
(D) of paragraph (1) and pursuant to paragraph (2), |
attributable to the scheduled payments authorized under |
subsection (b) of Section 5A-12.5 that are not issued in full |
by the final day of the period attributable to each payment |
authorized under subsection (b) of Section 5A-12.5, shall be |
refunded. |
(4) The increases authorized under paragraph (2) of |
subsection (a) and paragraph (2) of subsection (b-5) shall be |
limited to the federally required State share of the total |
|
payments authorized under Section 5A-12.5 if the sum of such |
payments yields an annualized amount equal to or less than |
$450,000,000, or if the adjustments authorized under |
subsection (t) of Section 5A-12.2 are found not to be |
actuarially sound; however, this limitation shall not apply to |
the fee-for-service payments described in subsection (b) of |
Section 5A-12.5. |
(b-7)(1) As used in this Section, "Assessment Adjustment" |
means: |
(A) For the period of July 1, 2020 through December |
31, 2020, the product of .3853 multiplied by the total of |
the actual payments made under subsections (c) through (k) |
of Section 5A-12.7 attributable to the period, less the |
total of the assessment imposed under subsections (a) and |
(b-5) of this Section for the period. |
(B) For each calendar quarter beginning January 1, |
2021 through December 31, 2022, the product of .3853 |
multiplied by the total of the actual payments made under |
subsections (c) through (k) of Section 5A-12.7 |
attributable to the period, less the total of the |
assessment imposed under subsections (a) and (b-5) of this |
Section for the period. |
(C) Beginning on January 1, 2023, and each subsequent |
July 1 and January 1, the product of .3853 multiplied by |
the total of the actual payments made under subsections |
(c) through (j) of Section 5A-12.7 attributable to the |
|
6-month period immediately preceding the period to which |
the adjustment applies, less the total of the assessment |
imposed under subsections (a) and (b-5) of this Section |
for the 6-month period immediately preceding the period to |
which the adjustment applies. |
(2) The Department shall calculate and notify each |
hospital of the total Assessment Adjustment and any additional |
assessment owed by the hospital or refund owed to the hospital |
on either a semi-annual or annual basis. Such notice shall be |
issued at least 30 days prior to any period in which the |
assessment will be adjusted. Any additional assessment owed by |
the hospital or refund owed to the hospital shall be uniformly |
applied to the assessment owed by the hospital in monthly |
installments for the subsequent semi-annual period or calendar |
year. If no assessment is owed in the subsequent year, any |
amount owed by the hospital or refund due to the hospital, |
shall be paid in a lump sum. |
(3) The Department shall publish all details of the |
Assessment Adjustment calculation performed each year on its |
website within 30 days of completing the calculation, and also |
submit the details of the Assessment Adjustment calculation as |
part of the Department's annual report to the General |
Assembly. |
(b-8) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Article, |
the Department shall reduce the assessments imposed on each |
hospital under subsections (a) and (b-5) by the uniform |
|
percentage necessary to reduce the total assessment imposed on |
all hospitals by an aggregate amount of $240,000,000, with |
such reduction being applied by June 30, 2022. The assessment |
reduction required for each hospital under this subsection |
shall be forever waived, forgiven, and released by the |
Department. |
(c) (Blank). |
(d) Notwithstanding any of the other provisions of this |
Section, the Department is authorized to adopt rules to reduce |
the rate of any annual assessment imposed under this Section, |
as authorized by Section 5-46.2 of the Illinois Administrative |
Procedure Act. |
(e) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Section, |
any plan providing for an assessment on a hospital provider as |
a permissible tax under Title XIX of the federal Social |
Security Act and Medicaid-eligible payments to hospital |
providers from the revenues derived from that assessment shall |
be reviewed by the Illinois Department of Healthcare and |
Family Services, as the Single State Medicaid Agency required |
by federal law, to determine whether those assessments and |
hospital provider payments meet federal Medicaid standards. If |
the Department determines that the elements of the plan may |
meet federal Medicaid standards and a related State Medicaid |
Plan Amendment is prepared in a manner and form suitable for |
submission, that State Plan Amendment shall be submitted in a |
timely manner for review by the Centers for Medicare and |
|
Medicaid Services of the United States Department of Health |
and Human Services and subject to approval by the Centers for |
Medicare and Medicaid Services of the United States Department |
of Health and Human Services. No such plan shall become |
effective without approval by the Illinois General Assembly by |
the enactment into law of related legislation. Notwithstanding |
any other provision of this Section, the Department is |
authorized to adopt rules to reduce the rate of any annual |
assessment imposed under this Section. Any such rules may be |
adopted by the Department under Section 5-50 of the Illinois |
Administrative Procedure Act. |
(Source: P.A. 102-886, eff. 5-17-22; 103-102, eff. 1-1-24.) |
ARTICLE 800. |
Section 800-95. No acceleration or delay. Where this Act |
makes changes in a statute that is represented in this Act by |
text that is not yet or no longer in effect (for example, a |
Section represented by multiple versions), the use of that |
text does not accelerate or delay the taking effect of (i) the |
changes made by this Act or (ii) provisions derived from any |
other Public Act. |
ARTICLE 999. |
Section 999-99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon |
becoming law, except that Article 10 takes effect January 1, |