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Public Act 104-0499 |
| HB4606 Enrolled | LRB104 17639 KTG 31070 b |
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AN ACT concerning State government. |
Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois, |
represented in the General Assembly: |
Section 5. The Department of Human Services Act is amended |
by adding Section 10-85 as follows: |
(20 ILCS 1305/10-85 new) |
Sec. 10-85. Short-term Universal Newborn Home Visiting |
Services. |
(a) The General Assembly finds all of the following: |
(1) The weeks following birth are a critical period |
for the person who has given birth, the newborn infant, |
and the entire family, setting the stage for long-term |
health and well-being. |
(2) Families may struggle to navigate and access early |
childhood, health and mental health, and other support |
service networks in the early postpartum period, and |
targeted services and supports may fail to identify |
families who do not present with risk factors. |
(3) Research also indicates that postpartum education |
and care leads to lower rates of morbidity and mortality |
in persons who have given birth, as many of the risk |
factors for post-delivery complications, such as |
hemorrhaging or a pulmonary embolism, may not be |
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identifiable before a person who has given birth is |
discharged following the birth. Research also indicates |
that parenting education on health risks for newborns, |
including substance use, lactation, safe sleep, and other |
topics, leads to lower infant mortality and morbidity. |
(4) Illinois communities have invested in and are |
already implementing short-term universal newborn home |
visiting services, including Stephenson, Peoria, |
Winnebago, and Macon counties, and the city of Chicago, |
and have demonstrated positive outcomes for the physical, |
mental, and social well-being of newborns and the parents |
or caregivers of newborns. |
(5) The 2018 Illinois Maternal Morbidity and Mortality |
Report from the Department of Public Health recommended |
that the State expand efforts to provide short-term |
universal home visiting to all mothers within 3 weeks of |
giving birth. |
(6) In October 2021, the Department of Human Services |
received an Early Childhood Comprehensive Services grant |
from the federal Health Resources and Services |
Administration to investigate ways to enhance the |
prenatal-to-age 3 statewide maternal and early childhood |
system of care by establishing a Universal Newborn Support |
System that better connects families to programs and |
services. |
(7) Short-term universal newborn home visiting |
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services are a covered Medicaid benefit under the approved |
State Plan Amendment. |
(8) While no unified State system exists, local |
communities are already implementing universal newborn |
home visiting services with some combination of local, |
State, federal, and philanthropic funding, and current |
programs, future programs, and the State would benefit |
from the cohesion and guidance generated by a statewide |
vision and supported by a permanent agency administrative |
home and related infrastructure. |
(b) The purpose of this Section is to authorize the |
Department of Human Services to identify, develop, and manage |
the administrative infrastructure needed to support existing |
and future short-term universal newborn home visiting |
services. In carrying out this work, the Department may |
consider the recommendations contained in the Early Childhood |
Comprehensive Services grant report when adopting rules to |
support implementation. |
(c) By January 1, 2028, the Department may do the |
following: |
(1) Create and maintain a list of the voluntary |
universal newborn home visiting models that align with the |
State's priorities for approach and outcomes and that may |
inform future local implementation or support existing |
State grants. Any universal newborn home visiting model |
included on the list must: |
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(A) Be validated by evidence demonstrating |
effectiveness in promoting the physical, mental, and |
social well-being of newborn infants and the parents |
or caregivers of newborn infants. |
(B) Include an evidence-based assessment of the |
physical, social, and emotional factors affecting the |
family and newborn infant, including a health and |
wellness check of the newborn infant, an assessment of |
the physical and mental health of a person who has |
given birth, lactation support as needed, and |
screening for social determinants or drivers of health |
and perinatal mood and anxiety disorders using |
validated tools. |
(C) Provide information, referrals, and |
connections to community resources, early childhood |
services, family supports, community-based |
organizations, social service agencies, and medically |
necessary follow-up health care. |
(D) Offer at least one visit within the first 3 |
weeks after the newborn's discharge from the birth |
hospital with up to 2 follow-up visits as determined |
by clinical judgment. |
(E) Be voluntary and offered at no cost to each |
family with a newborn infant that resides in the |
participating community. For purposes of this Section, |
the family of a newborn infant includes biological |
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parents, foster and adoptive parents, kinship |
caregivers, and parents who have recently experienced |
a stillbirth. |
(F) Impose no adverse consequences on families who |
decline to receive services or participate in the |
program. |
(2) Coordinate with relevant State agencies to support |
implementation of State-administered funding for local |
programs; request, collect, and report available data from |
universal newborn home visiting implementers and develop |
recommendations for future data collection and data |
infrastructure; and develop criteria for prioritizing |
future State funding, including the identification of |
communities for potential implementation. |
(3) Consult, coordinate, and collaborate with relevant |
stakeholders when designing the infrastructure to support |
universal newborn home visiting services, including early |
childhood home visiting programs, community-based |
organizations, social service providers, maternal and |
child health stakeholders, hospitals, birth centers, local |
public health authorities, insurance carriers, and other |
State agencies. |
(d) Funds received under this Section shall supplement, |
and not supplant, existing or new federal, State, or local |
funding for these services. |
(e) The Department may adopt any rules necessary to |