|
(Source: P.A. 95-187, eff. 8-16-07; 95-235, eff. 8-17-07; |
95-450, eff. 8-27-07; 95-465, eff. 8-27-07; 95-617, eff. |
9-12-07; 95-639, eff. 10-5-07; 95-687, eff. 10-23-07; 95-689, |
eff. 10-29-07; 95-703, eff. 12-31-07; 95-876, eff. 8-21-08; |
96-328, eff. 8-11-09.) |
(5 ILCS 80/4.30) |
Sec. 4.30. Acts repealed on January 1, 2020. The following |
Acts are repealed on January 1, 2020: |
The Auction License Act. |
The Community Association Manager Licensing and |
Disciplinary Act. |
The Illinois Architecture Practice Act of 1989. |
The Illinois Landscape Architecture Act of 1989. |
The Illinois Professional Land Surveyor Act of 1989. |
The Land Sales Registration Act of 1999. |
The Orthotics, Prosthetics, and Pedorthics Practice Act. |
The Perfusionist Practice Act.
|
The Pharmacy Practice Act. |
The Professional Engineering Practice Act of 1989. |
The Real Estate License Act of 2000. |
The Structural Engineering Practice Act of 1989. |
(Source: P.A. 96-610, eff. 8-24-09; 96-626, eff. 8-24-09; |
96-682, eff. 8-25-09; 96-726, eff. 7-1-10; 96-730, eff. |
8-25-09; 96-855, eff. 12-31-09; 96-856, eff. 12-31-09; |
96-1000, eff. 7-2-10.) |
|
Section 10. The Pharmacy Practice Act is amended by |
changing Sections 3, 5.5, 7, 9, 9.5, 10, 11, 12, 13, 15, 16, |
16a, 17, 17.1, 18, 19, 20, 22, 25.10, 25.15, 27, 28, 30, 30.5, |
32, 33, 34, 35.1, 35.2, 35.5, 35.6, 35.7, 35.8, 35.12, 35.13, |
35.14, 35.15, 35.16, 35.18, and 36 and by adding Sections 3.5, |
4.5, 35.20, and 35.21 as follows:
|
(225 ILCS 85/3)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2018)
|
Sec. 3. Definitions. For the purpose of this Act, except |
where otherwise
limited therein:
|
(a) "Pharmacy" or "drugstore" means and includes every |
store, shop,
pharmacy department, or other place where |
pharmacist
care is
provided
by a pharmacist (1) where drugs, |
medicines, or poisons are
dispensed, sold or
offered for sale |
at retail, or displayed for sale at retail; or
(2)
where
|
prescriptions of physicians, dentists, advanced practice |
nurses, physician assistants, veterinarians, podiatric |
physicians, or
optometrists, within the limits of their
|
licenses, are
compounded, filled, or dispensed; or (3) which |
has upon it or
displayed within
it, or affixed to or used in |
connection with it, a sign bearing the word or
words |
"Pharmacist", "Druggist", "Pharmacy", "Pharmaceutical
Care", |
"Apothecary", "Drugstore",
"Medicine Store", "Prescriptions", |
"Drugs", "Dispensary", "Medicines", or any word
or words of |
|
similar or like import, either in the English language
or any |
other language; or (4) where the characteristic prescription
|
sign (Rx) or similar design is exhibited; or (5) any store, or
|
shop,
or other place with respect to which any of the above |
words, objects,
signs or designs are used in any advertisement.
|
(b) "Drugs" means and includes (1) articles recognized
in |
the official United States Pharmacopoeia/National Formulary |
(USP/NF),
or any supplement thereto and being intended for and |
having for their
main use the diagnosis, cure, mitigation, |
treatment or prevention of
disease in man or other animals, as |
approved by the United States Food and
Drug Administration, but |
does not include devices or their components, parts,
or |
accessories; and (2) all other articles intended
for and having |
for their main use the diagnosis, cure, mitigation,
treatment |
or prevention of disease in man or other animals, as approved
|
by the United States Food and Drug Administration, but does not |
include
devices or their components, parts, or accessories; and |
(3) articles
(other than food) having for their main use and |
intended
to affect the structure or any function of the body of |
man or other
animals; and (4) articles having for their main |
use and intended
for use as a component or any articles |
specified in clause (1), (2)
or (3); but does not include |
devices or their components, parts or
accessories.
|
(c) "Medicines" means and includes all drugs intended for
|
human or veterinary use approved by the United States Food and |
Drug
Administration.
|
|
(d) "Practice of pharmacy" means (1) the interpretation and |
the provision of assistance in the monitoring, evaluation, and |
implementation of prescription drug orders; (2) the dispensing |
of prescription drug orders; (3) participation in drug and |
device selection; (4) drug administration limited to the |
administration of oral, topical, injectable, and inhalation as |
follows: in the context of patient education on the proper use |
or delivery of medications; vaccination of patients 14 years of |
age and older pursuant to a valid prescription or standing |
order, by a physician licensed to practice medicine in all its |
branches, upon completion of appropriate training, including |
how to address contraindications and adverse reactions set |
forth by rule, with notification to the patient's physician and |
appropriate record retention, or pursuant to hospital pharmacy |
and therapeutics committee policies and procedures; (5) |
vaccination of patients ages 10 through 13 limited to the |
Influenza (inactivated influenza vaccine and live attenuated |
influenza intranasal vaccine) and Tdap (defined as tetanus, |
diphtheria, acellular pertussis) vaccines, pursuant to a valid |
prescription or standing order, by a physician licensed to |
practice medicine in all its branches, upon completion of |
appropriate training, including how to address |
contraindications and adverse reactions set forth by rule, with |
notification to the patient's physician and appropriate record |
retention, or pursuant to hospital pharmacy and therapeutics |
committee policies and procedures; (6) drug regimen review; (7) |
|
drug or drug-related research; (8) the provision of patient |
counseling; (9) the practice of telepharmacy; (10) the |
provision of those acts or services necessary to provide |
pharmacist care; (11) medication therapy management; and (12) |
the responsibility for compounding and labeling of drugs and |
devices (except labeling by a manufacturer, repackager, or |
distributor of non-prescription drugs and commercially |
packaged legend drugs and devices), proper and safe storage of |
drugs and devices, and maintenance of required records. A |
pharmacist who performs any of the acts defined as the practice |
of pharmacy in this State must be actively licensed as a |
pharmacist under this Act.
|
(e) "Prescription" means and includes any written, oral, |
facsimile, or
electronically transmitted order for drugs
or |
medical devices, issued by a physician licensed to practice |
medicine in
all its branches, dentist, veterinarian, podiatric |
physician, or
optometrist, within the
limits of their licenses, |
by a physician assistant in accordance with
subsection (f) of |
Section 4, or by an advanced practice nurse in
accordance with |
subsection (g) of Section 4, containing the
following: (1) name
|
of the patient; (2) date when prescription was issued; (3) name
|
and strength of drug or description of the medical device |
prescribed;
and (4) quantity; (5) directions for use; (6) |
prescriber's name,
address,
and signature; and (7) DEA |
registration number where required, for controlled
substances.
|
The prescription may, but is not required to, list the illness, |
|
disease, or condition for which the drug or device is being |
prescribed. DEA registration numbers shall not be required on |
inpatient drug orders.
|
(f) "Person" means and includes a natural person, |
partnership copartnership ,
association, corporation, |
government entity, or any other legal
entity.
|
(g) "Department" means the Department of Financial and
|
Professional Regulation.
|
(h) "Board of Pharmacy" or "Board" means the State Board
of |
Pharmacy of the Department of Financial and Professional |
Regulation.
|
(i) "Secretary"
means the Secretary
of Financial and |
Professional Regulation.
|
(j) "Drug product selection" means the interchange for a
|
prescribed pharmaceutical product in accordance with Section |
25 of
this Act and Section 3.14 of the Illinois Food, Drug and |
Cosmetic Act.
|
(k) "Inpatient drug order" means an order issued by an |
authorized
prescriber for a resident or patient of a facility |
licensed under the
Nursing Home Care Act, the ID/DD Community |
Care Act, the MC/DD Act, the Specialized Mental Health |
Rehabilitation Act of 2013, or the Hospital Licensing Act, or |
"An Act in relation to
the founding and operation of the |
University of Illinois Hospital and the
conduct of University |
of Illinois health care programs", approved July 3, 1931,
as |
amended, or a facility which is operated by the Department of |
|
Human
Services (as successor to the Department of Mental Health
|
and Developmental Disabilities) or the Department of |
Corrections.
|
(k-5) "Pharmacist" means an individual health care |
professional and
provider currently licensed by this State to |
engage in the practice of
pharmacy.
|
(l) "Pharmacist in charge" means the licensed pharmacist |
whose name appears
on a pharmacy license and who is responsible |
for all aspects of the
operation related to the practice of |
pharmacy.
|
(m) "Dispense" or "dispensing" means the interpretation, |
evaluation, and implementation of a prescription drug order, |
including the preparation and delivery of a drug or device to a |
patient or patient's agent in a suitable container |
appropriately labeled for subsequent administration to or use |
by a patient in accordance with applicable State and federal |
laws and regulations.
"Dispense" or "dispensing" does not mean |
the physical delivery to a patient or a
patient's |
representative in a home or institution by a designee of a |
pharmacist
or by common carrier. "Dispense" or "dispensing" |
also does not mean the physical delivery
of a drug or medical |
device to a patient or patient's representative by a
|
pharmacist's designee within a pharmacy or drugstore while the |
pharmacist is
on duty and the pharmacy is open.
|
(n) "Nonresident pharmacy"
means a pharmacy that is located |
in a state, commonwealth, or territory
of the United States, |
|
other than Illinois, that delivers, dispenses, or
distributes, |
through the United States Postal Service, commercially |
acceptable parcel delivery service, or other common
carrier, to |
Illinois residents, any substance which requires a |
prescription.
|
(o) "Compounding" means the preparation and mixing of |
components, excluding flavorings, (1) as the result of a |
prescriber's prescription drug order or initiative based on the |
prescriber-patient-pharmacist relationship in the course of |
professional practice or (2) for the purpose of, or incident |
to, research, teaching, or chemical analysis and not for sale |
or dispensing. "Compounding" includes the preparation of drugs |
or devices in anticipation of receiving prescription drug |
orders based on routine, regularly observed dispensing |
patterns. Commercially available products may be compounded |
for dispensing to individual patients only if all of the |
following conditions are met: (i) the commercial product is not |
reasonably available from normal distribution channels in a |
timely manner to meet the patient's needs and (ii) the |
prescribing practitioner has requested that the drug be |
compounded.
|
(p) (Blank).
|
(q) (Blank).
|
(r) "Patient counseling" means the communication between a |
pharmacist or a student pharmacist under the supervision of a |
pharmacist and a patient or the patient's representative about |
|
the patient's medication or device for the purpose of |
optimizing proper use of prescription medications or devices. |
"Patient counseling" may include without limitation (1) |
obtaining a medication history; (2) acquiring a patient's |
allergies and health conditions; (3) facilitation of the |
patient's understanding of the intended use of the medication; |
(4) proper directions for use; (5) significant potential |
adverse events; (6) potential food-drug interactions; and (7) |
the need to be compliant with the medication therapy. A |
pharmacy technician may only participate in the following |
aspects of patient counseling under the supervision of a |
pharmacist: (1) obtaining medication history; (2) providing |
the offer for counseling by a pharmacist or student pharmacist; |
and (3) acquiring a patient's allergies and health conditions.
|
(s) "Patient profiles" or "patient drug therapy record" |
means the
obtaining, recording, and maintenance of patient |
prescription
information, including prescriptions for |
controlled substances, and
personal information.
|
(t) (Blank).
|
(u) "Medical device" or "device" means an instrument, |
apparatus, implement, machine,
contrivance, implant, in vitro |
reagent, or other similar or related article,
including any |
component part or accessory, required under federal law to
bear |
the label "Caution: Federal law requires dispensing by or on |
the order
of a physician". A seller of goods and services who, |
only for the purpose of
retail sales, compounds, sells, rents, |
|
or leases medical devices shall not,
by reasons thereof, be |
required to be a licensed pharmacy.
|
(v) "Unique identifier" means an electronic signature, |
handwritten
signature or initials, thumb print, or other |
acceptable biometric
or electronic identification process as |
approved by the Department.
|
(w) "Current usual and customary retail price" means the |
price that a pharmacy charges to a non-third-party payor.
|
(x) "Automated pharmacy system" means a mechanical system |
located within the confines of the pharmacy or remote location |
that performs operations or activities, other than compounding |
or administration, relative to storage, packaging, dispensing, |
or distribution of medication, and which collects, controls, |
and maintains all transaction information. |
(y) "Drug regimen review" means and includes the evaluation |
of prescription drug orders and patient records for (1)
known |
allergies; (2) drug or potential therapy contraindications;
|
(3) reasonable dose, duration of use, and route of |
administration, taking into consideration factors such as age, |
gender, and contraindications; (4) reasonable directions for |
use; (5) potential or actual adverse drug reactions; (6) |
drug-drug interactions; (7) drug-food interactions; (8) |
drug-disease contraindications; (9) therapeutic duplication; |
(10) patient laboratory values when authorized and available; |
(11) proper utilization (including over or under utilization) |
and optimum therapeutic outcomes; and (12) abuse and misuse.
|
|
(z) " Electronically transmitted Electronic transmission |
prescription" means a prescription that is created, recorded, |
or stored by electronic means; issued and validated with an |
electronic signature; and transmitted by electronic means |
directly from the prescriber to a pharmacy. An electronic |
prescription is not an image of a physical prescription that is |
transferred by electronic means from computer to computer, |
facsimile to facsimile, or facsimile to computer any |
prescription order for which a facsimile or electronic image of |
the order is electronically transmitted from a licensed |
prescriber to a pharmacy. "Electronic transmission |
prescription" includes both data and image prescriptions .
|
(aa) "Medication therapy management services" means a |
distinct service or group of services offered by licensed |
pharmacists, physicians licensed to practice medicine in all |
its branches, advanced practice nurses authorized in a written |
agreement with a physician licensed to practice medicine in all |
its branches, or physician assistants authorized in guidelines |
by a supervising physician that optimize therapeutic outcomes |
for individual patients through improved medication use. In a |
retail or other non-hospital pharmacy, medication therapy |
management services shall consist of the evaluation of |
prescription drug orders and patient medication records to |
resolve conflicts with the following: |
(1) known allergies; |
(2) drug or potential therapy contraindications; |
|
(3) reasonable dose, duration of use, and route of |
administration, taking into consideration factors such as |
age, gender, and contraindications; |
(4) reasonable directions for use; |
(5) potential or actual adverse drug reactions; |
(6) drug-drug interactions; |
(7) drug-food interactions; |
(8) drug-disease contraindications; |
(9) identification of therapeutic duplication; |
(10) patient laboratory values when authorized and |
available; |
(11) proper utilization (including over or under |
utilization) and optimum therapeutic outcomes; and |
(12) drug abuse and misuse. |
"Medication therapy management services" includes the |
following: |
(1) documenting the services delivered and |
communicating the information provided to patients' |
prescribers within an appropriate time frame, not to exceed |
48 hours; |
(2) providing patient counseling designed to enhance a |
patient's understanding and the appropriate use of his or |
her medications; and |
(3) providing information, support services, and |
resources designed to enhance a patient's adherence with |
his or her prescribed therapeutic regimens. |
|
"Medication therapy management services" may also include |
patient care functions authorized by a physician licensed to |
practice medicine in all its branches for his or her identified |
patient or groups of patients under specified conditions or |
limitations in a standing order from the physician. |
"Medication therapy management services" in a licensed |
hospital may also include the following: |
(1) reviewing assessments of the patient's health |
status; and |
(2) following protocols of a hospital pharmacy and |
therapeutics committee with respect to the fulfillment of |
medication orders.
|
(bb) "Pharmacist care" means the provision by a pharmacist |
of medication therapy management services, with or without the |
dispensing of drugs or devices, intended to achieve outcomes |
that improve patient health, quality of life, and comfort and |
enhance patient safety.
|
(cc) "Protected health information" means individually |
identifiable health information that, except as otherwise |
provided, is:
|
(1) transmitted by electronic media; |
(2) maintained in any medium set forth in the |
definition of "electronic media" in the federal Health |
Insurance Portability and Accountability Act; or |
(3) transmitted or maintained in any other form or |
medium. |
|
"Protected health information" does not include |
individually identifiable health information found in: |
(1) education records covered by the federal Family |
Educational Right and Privacy Act; or |
(2) employment records held by a licensee in its role |
as an employer. |
(dd) "Standing order" means a specific order for a patient |
or group of patients issued by a physician licensed to practice |
medicine in all its branches in Illinois. |
(ee) "Address of record" means the designated address |
recorded by the Department in the applicant's application file |
or licensee's license file maintained by the Department's |
licensure maintenance unit. address recorded by the Department |
in the applicant's or licensee's application file or license |
file, as maintained by the Department's licensure maintenance |
unit. |
(ff) "Home pharmacy" means the location of a pharmacy's |
primary operations.
|
(gg) "Email address of record" means the designated email |
address recorded by the Department in the applicant's |
application file or the licensee's license file, as maintained |
by the Department's licensure maintenance unit. |
(Source: P.A. 98-104, eff. 7-22-13; 98-214, eff. 8-9-13; |
98-756, eff. 7-16-14; 99-180, eff. 7-29-15 .) |
(225 ILCS 85/3.5 new) |
|
Sec. 3.5. Address of record; email address of record. All |
applicants and licensees shall: |
(1) provide a valid address and email address to the |
Department, which shall serve as the address of record and |
email address of record, respectively, at the time of |
application for licensure or renewal of a license; and |
(2) inform the Department of any change of address of |
record or email address of record within 14 days after such |
change either through the Department's website or by |
contacting the Department's licensure maintenance unit. |
(225 ILCS 85/4.5 new) |
Sec. 4.5. The Collaborative Pharmaceutical Task Force. In |
order to protect the public and provide quality pharmaceutical |
care, the Collaborative Pharmaceutical Task Force is |
established. The Task Force shall discuss how to further |
advance the practice of pharmacy in a manner that recognizes |
the needs of the healthcare system, patients, pharmacies, |
pharmacists, and pharmacy technicians. As a part of its |
discussions, the Task Force shall consider, at a minimum, the |
following: |
(1) the extent to which providing whistleblower |
protections for pharmacists and pharmacy technicians |
reporting violation of worker policies and requiring |
pharmacies to have at least one pharmacy technician on duty |
whenever the practice of pharmacy is conducted, to set a |
|
prescription filling limit of not more than 10 |
prescriptions filled per hour, to mandate at least 10 |
pharmacy technician hours per 100 prescriptions filled, to |
place a general prohibition on activities that distract |
pharmacists, to provide a pharmacist a minimum of 2 |
15-minute paid rest breaks and one 30-minute meal period in |
each workday on which the pharmacist works at least 7 |
hours, to not require a pharmacist to work during a break |
period, to pay to the pharmacist 3 times the pharmacist's |
regular hourly rate of pay for each workday during which |
the required breaks were not provided, to make available at |
all times a room on the pharmacy's premises with adequate |
seating and tables for the purpose of allowing a pharmacist |
to enjoy break periods in a clean and comfortable |
environment, to keep a complete and accurate record of the |
break periods of its pharmacists, to limit a pharmacist |
from working more than 8 hours a workday, and to retain |
records of any errors in the receiving, filling, or |
dispensing of prescriptions of any kind could be integrated |
into the Pharmacy Practice Act; and |
(2) the extent to which requiring the Department to |
adopt rules requiring pharmacy prescription systems |
contain mechanisms to require prescription discontinuation |
orders to be forwarded to a pharmacy, to require patient |
verification features for pharmacy automated prescription |
refills, and to require that automated prescription |
|
refills notices clearly communicate to patients the |
medication name, dosage strength, and any other |
information required by the Department governing the use of |
automated dispensing and storage systems to ensure that |
discontinued medications are not dispensed to a patient by |
a pharmacist or by any automatic refill dispensing systems |
whether prescribed through electronic prescriptions or |
paper prescriptions may be integrated into the Pharmacy |
Practice Act to better protect the public. |
In developing standards related to its discussions, the |
Collaborative Pharmaceutical Task Force shall consider the |
extent to which Public Act 99-473 (enhancing continuing |
education requirements for pharmacy technicians) and Public |
Act 99-863 (enhancing reporting requirements to the Department |
of pharmacy employee terminations) may be relevant to the |
issues listed in paragraphs (1) and (2). |
The voting members of the Collaborative Pharmaceutical |
Task Force shall be appointed as follows: |
(1) the Speaker of the House of Representatives, or his |
or her designee, shall appoint: a representative of a |
statewide organization exclusively representing retailers, |
including pharmacies; and a retired licensed pharmacist |
who has previously served on the Board of Pharmacy and on |
the executive committee of a national association |
representing pharmacists and who shall serve as the |
chairperson of the Collaborative Pharmaceutical Task |
|
Force; |
(2) the President of the Senate, or his or her |
designee, shall appoint: a representative of a statewide |
organization representing pharmacists; and a |
representative of a statewide organization representing |
unionized pharmacy employees; |
(3) the Minority Leader of the House of |
Representatives, or his or her designee, shall appoint: a |
representative of a statewide organization representing |
physicians licensed to practice medicine in all its |
branches in Illinois; and a representative of a statewide |
professional association representing pharmacists, |
pharmacy technicians, pharmacy students, and others |
working in or with an interest in hospital and |
health-system pharmacy; and |
(4) the Minority Leader of the Senate, or his or her |
designee, shall appoint: a representative of a statewide |
organization representing hospitals; and a representative |
of a statewide association exclusively representing |
long-term care pharmacists. |
The Secretary, or his or her designee, shall appoint the |
following non-voting members of the Task Force: a |
representative of the University of Illinois at Chicago College |
of Pharmacy; a clinical pharmacist who has done extensive study |
in pharmacy e-prescribing and e-discontinuation; and a |
representative of the Department. |
|
The Department shall provide administrative support to the |
Collaborative Pharmaceutical Task Force. The Collaborative |
Pharmaceutical Task Force shall meet at least monthly at the |
call of the chairperson. |
No later than September 1, 2019, the voting members of the |
Collaborative Pharmaceutical Task Force shall vote on |
recommendations concerning the standards in paragraphs (1) and |
(2) of this Section. |
No later than November 1, 2019, the Department, in direct |
consultation with the Collaborative Pharmaceutical Task Force, |
shall propose rules for adoption that are consistent with the |
Collaborative Pharmaceutical Task Force's recommendations, or |
recommend legislation to the General Assembly, concerning the |
standards in paragraphs (1) and (2) of this Section. |
This Section is repealed on November 1, 2020.
|
(225 ILCS 85/5.5)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2018)
|
Sec. 5.5. Unlicensed practice; violation; civil penalty.
|
(a) Any person who practices, offers to practice, attempts |
to practice, or
holds oneself out to practice pharmacy without |
being licensed under this Act
shall, in
addition to any other |
penalty provided by law, pay a civil penalty to the
Department |
in an amount not to exceed $10,000 $5,000 for each offense as |
determined by
the Department. The civil penalty shall be |
assessed by the Department after a
hearing is held in |
|
accordance with the provisions set forth in this Act
regarding |
the provision of a hearing for the discipline of a licensee.
|
(b) The Department has the authority and power to |
investigate any and all
unlicensed activity.
|
(c) The civil penalty shall be paid within 60 days after |
the effective date
of the order imposing the civil penalty. The |
order shall constitute a judgment
and may be filed and |
execution had thereon in the same manner as any judgment
from |
any court of record.
|
(Source: P.A. 89-474, eff. 6-18-96 .)
|
(225 ILCS 85/7) (from Ch. 111, par. 4127)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2018)
|
Sec. 7. Application; examination. Applications for |
original licenses
shall be made to the Department
in writing or |
electronically on forms prescribed by the Department and shall |
be accompanied by
the required fee, which shall not be |
refundable. Any such application shall
require such |
information as in the judgment of the Department will enable |
the
Board and Department to pass on the qualifications of the |
applicant for a
license.
|
The Department shall authorize examinations of applicants |
as pharmacists not
less than 3 times per year at such times and |
places as it may
determine.
The
examination of applicants shall |
be of a character to give a fair test of the
qualifications of |
the applicant to practice pharmacy.
|
|
Applicants for examination as pharmacists shall be |
required to pay,
either to the Department or the designated |
testing service, a fee covering
the cost of providing the |
examination. Failure to appear for the examination
on the |
scheduled date, at the time and place specified, after the |
applicant's
application for examination has been received and |
acknowledged by the
Department or the designated testing |
service, shall result in the forfeiture
of the examination fee. |
The examination shall be developed and provided by the
National |
Association of Boards of Pharmacy.
|
If an applicant neglects, fails or refuses to take an |
examination or
fails to pass an examination for a license under |
this Act within 3
years after filing his application, the |
application is denied. However,
such applicant may thereafter |
make a new application accompanied by
the required fee and show |
evidence of meeting the requirements in force
at the time of |
the new application.
|
The Department shall notify applicants taking the |
examination of their
results within 7 weeks of the examination |
date. Further, the Department
shall have the authority to |
immediately authorize such applicants who
successfully pass |
the examination to engage in the practice of pharmacy.
|
An applicant shall have one year from the date of |
notification of successful
completion of the examination to |
apply to the Department for a license.
If an applicant fails to |
make such application within one year the
applicant shall be |
|
required to again take and pass the examination. |
An applicant who has graduated with a professional degree |
from a school of pharmacy located outside of the United States |
must do the following: |
(1) obtain a Foreign Pharmacy Graduate Examination |
Committee (FPGEC) Certificate; |
(2) complete 1,200 hours of clinical training and |
experience, as defined by rule, in the United States or its |
territories; and |
(3) successfully complete the licensing requirements |
set forth in Section 6 of this Act, as well as those |
adopted by the Department by rule.
|
The Department may employ consultants for the purpose of |
preparing
and conducting examinations.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-689, eff. 10-29-07.)
|
(225 ILCS 85/9) (from Ch. 111, par. 4129)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2018)
|
Sec. 9. Licensure Registration as registered pharmacy |
technician. |
(a) Any person shall be entitled
to licensure registration |
as a registered pharmacy technician who is of the age of 16
or |
over, has not engaged in conduct or behavior determined to be |
grounds for
discipline under this Act, is attending or has
|
graduated from an accredited high school or comparable school |
or educational
institution or received a high school |
|
equivalency certificate, and has filed a written or electronic |
application for licensure registration on a form
to be |
prescribed and furnished by the Department for that purpose. |
The
Department shall issue a license certificate of
|
registration as a registered pharmacy technician to any |
applicant who has
qualified as aforesaid, and such license |
registration shall be the sole authority
required to assist |
licensed pharmacists in the practice of pharmacy, under
the |
supervision of a licensed pharmacist. A registered pharmacy |
technician may, under the supervision of a pharmacist, assist |
in the practice of pharmacy and perform such functions as |
assisting in the dispensing process, offering counseling, |
receiving new verbal prescription orders, and having |
prescriber contact concerning prescription drug order |
clarification. A registered pharmacy technician may not engage |
in patient counseling, drug regimen review, or clinical |
conflict resolution. |
(b) Beginning on January 1, 2017, within 2 years after |
initial licensure registration as a registered pharmacy |
technician, the licensee registrant must meet the requirements |
described in Section 9.5 of this Act and become licensed |
register as a registered certified pharmacy technician. If the |
licensee registrant has not yet attained the age of 18, then |
upon the next renewal as a registered pharmacy technician, the |
licensee registrant must meet the requirements described in |
Section 9.5 of this Act and become licensed register as a |
|
registered certified pharmacy technician. This requirement |
does not apply to pharmacy technicians registered prior to |
January 1, 2008.
|
(c) Any person registered
as a pharmacy technician who is |
also enrolled in a first professional
degree program in |
pharmacy in a school or college of pharmacy or a
department of |
pharmacy of a university approved by the Department or has |
graduated from such a program within the last 18 months, shall |
be
considered a "student pharmacist"
and entitled to use the |
title "student pharmacist". A student pharmacist must meet all |
of the requirements for licensure registration as a registered |
pharmacy technician set forth in this Section excluding the |
requirement of certification prior to the second license |
registration renewal and pay the required registered pharmacy |
technician license registration fees. A student pharmacist |
may, under the supervision of a pharmacist, assist in the |
practice of pharmacy and perform any and all functions |
delegated to him or her by the pharmacist. |
(d) Any person seeking licensure as a pharmacist who has |
graduated from a pharmacy program outside the United States |
must register as a pharmacy technician and shall be considered |
a "student pharmacist" and be entitled to use the title |
"student pharmacist" while completing the 1,200 clinical hours |
of training approved by the Board of Pharmacy described and for |
no more than 18 months after completion of these hours. These |
individuals are not required to become registered certified |
|
pharmacy technicians while completing their Board approved |
clinical training, but must become licensed as a pharmacist or |
become licensed as a registered certified pharmacy technician |
before the second pharmacy technician license registration |
renewal following completion of the Board approved clinical |
training. |
(e) The Department shall not renew the registered pharmacy |
technician license of any person who has been licensed |
registered as a registered pharmacy technician with the |
designation "student pharmacist" who: (1) and has dropped out |
of or been expelled from an ACPE accredited college of |
pharmacy ; (2) , who has failed to complete his or her 1,200 |
hours of Board approved clinical training within 24 months ; or |
(3) who has failed the pharmacist licensure examination 3 |
times . The Department and shall require these individuals to |
meet the requirements of and become licensed registered as a |
registered certified pharmacy technician. |
(f) The Department may
take any action set forth in Section |
30 of this Act with regard to a license registrations
pursuant |
to this Section.
|
(g) Any person who is enrolled in a non-traditional |
Pharm.D.
program at an ACPE accredited college of pharmacy and |
is a licensed as a registered pharmacist
under the laws of |
another United States jurisdiction shall be permitted to
engage |
in the program of practice experience required in the academic |
program
by virtue of such license. Such person shall be exempt |
|
from the requirement
of licensure registration as a registered |
pharmacy technician or registered certified pharmacy |
technician while engaged in the
program of practice experience |
required in the academic program.
|
An applicant for licensure registration as a registered |
pharmacy technician may assist a
pharmacist in the practice of |
pharmacy for a period of up to
60 days prior to the issuance of |
a license certificate of registration if the
applicant has |
submitted the required fee and an application for licensure |
registration
to the Department. The applicant shall keep a copy |
of the submitted
application on the premises where the |
applicant is assisting in the
practice of pharmacy. The |
Department shall forward confirmation of receipt of the |
application with start and expiration dates of practice pending |
licensure registration .
|
(Source: P.A. 98-718, eff. 1-1-15; 99-473, eff. 1-1-17 .)
|
(225 ILCS 85/9.5) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2018)
|
Sec. 9.5. Registered certified pharmacy technician. |
(a) An individual licensed registered as a registered |
pharmacy technician under this Act may be licensed registered |
as a registered certified pharmacy technician, if he or she |
meets all of the following requirements: |
(1) He or she has submitted a written application in |
the form and manner prescribed by the Department. |
|
(2) He or she has attained the age of 18. |
(3) He or she is of good moral character, as determined |
by the Department. |
(4) He or she has (i) graduated from pharmacy |
technician training meeting the requirements set forth in |
subsection (a) of Section 17.1 of this Act or (ii) obtained |
documentation from the pharmacist-in-charge of the |
pharmacy where the applicant is employed verifying that he |
or she has successfully completed a training program and |
has successfully completed an objective assessment |
mechanism prepared in accordance with rules established by |
the Department. |
(5) He or she has successfully passed an examination |
accredited by the National Commission for Certifying |
Agencies, as approved and required by the Board or by rule . |
(6) He or she has paid the required licensure |
certification fees. |
(b) No pharmacist whose license has been denied, revoked, |
suspended, or restricted for disciplinary purposes may be |
eligible to be registered as a certified pharmacy technician |
unless authorized by order of the Department as a condition of |
restoration from revocation, suspension, or restriction . |
(c) The Department may, by rule, establish any additional |
requirements for licensure certification under this Section.
|
(d) A person who is not a licensed registered pharmacy |
technician and meets the requirements of this Section may be |
|
licensed register as a registered certified pharmacy |
technician without first being licensed registering as a |
registered pharmacy technician. |
(e) As a condition for the renewal of a license certificate |
of registration as a registered certified pharmacy technician, |
the licensee registrant shall provide evidence to the |
Department of completion of a total of 20 hours of continuing |
pharmacy education during the 24 months preceding the |
expiration date of the certificate as established by rule . One |
hour of continuing pharmacy education must be in the subject of |
pharmacy law. One hour of continuing pharmacy education must be |
in the subject of patient safety. The continuing education |
shall be approved by the Accreditation Council on Pharmacy |
Education. |
The Department may shall establish by rule a means for the |
verification of completion of the continuing education |
required by this subsection (e). This verification may be |
accomplished through audits of records maintained by licensees |
registrants , by requiring the filing of continuing education |
certificates with the Department or a qualified organization |
selected by the Department to maintain such records, or by |
other means established by the Department. |
Rules developed under this subsection (e) may provide for a |
reasonable annual fee, not to exceed $20, to fund the cost of |
such recordkeeping. The Department may shall , by rule, further |
provide an orderly process for the restoration reinstatement of |
|
a license registration that has not been renewed due to the |
failure to meet the continuing pharmacy education requirements |
of this subsection (e). The Department may waive the |
requirements of continuing pharmacy education, in whole or in |
part, in cases of extreme hardship as defined by rule of the |
Department. The waivers may shall be granted for not more than |
one of any 3 consecutive renewal periods. |
(Source: P.A. 99-473, eff. 1-1-17 .)
|
(225 ILCS 85/10) (from Ch. 111, par. 4130)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2018)
|
Sec. 10. State Board of Pharmacy. |
(a) There is created in the Department the
State Board of |
Pharmacy.
It shall consist of 9 members, 7 of whom shall be |
licensed pharmacists.
Each of those 7 members must be a |
licensed pharmacist in good standing
in this State, a graduate |
of an accredited college of pharmacy or hold
a Bachelor of |
Science degree in Pharmacy and have at least 5 years'
practical |
experience in the practice of pharmacy subsequent to the
date |
of his licensure as a licensed pharmacist in the State of |
Illinois.
There shall be 2 public members, who shall be voting |
members, who
shall not be engaged in any way, directly or |
indirectly, as providers of health care licensed pharmacists in |
this State or any other state.
|
(b) Each member shall be appointed by the Governor.
|
(c) Members
shall be appointed to 5 year terms. The |
|
Governor shall fill any vacancy for the remainder of the |
unexpired term. Partial terms over 3 years in length shall be |
considered full terms. A member may be reappointed for a |
successive term, but no member shall serve more than 2 full |
terms in his or her lifetime.
|
(d) In making the appointment of members on the Board, the |
Governor shall
give due consideration to recommendations by the |
members of the profession
of pharmacy and by pharmacy
|
organizations therein. The Governor
shall notify the pharmacy
|
organizations promptly of any vacancy
of members on the Board |
and in appointing members shall give consideration
to |
individuals engaged in all types and settings of pharmacy |
practice.
|
(e) The Governor may remove any member of the Board for |
misconduct, incapacity ,
or neglect of duty , and he or she shall |
be the sole judge of the sufficiency of the
cause for removal.
|
(f) Each member of the Board shall be reimbursed for such |
actual
and legitimate expenses as he or she may incur in going |
to and from the place
of meeting and remaining there thereat |
during sessions of the Board. In
addition, each member of the |
Board may
receive a per diem payment
in an amount determined |
from time to time by the Director for attendance
at meetings of |
the Board and conducting other official business of
the Board.
|
(g) The Board shall hold quarterly meetings at such times |
and places and upon
notice as the Department
may determine and |
as its business may require.
A majority of the Board members |
|
currently appointed shall constitute a quorum. A vacancy in the |
membership of the Board shall not impair the right of a quorum |
to exercise all the rights and perform all the duties of the |
Board.
|
(h) The Board shall exercise the rights, powers and duties |
which have been
vested in the Board under this Act, and any |
other duties conferred
upon the Board by law.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-689, eff. 10-29-07.)
|
(225 ILCS 85/11) (from Ch. 111, par. 4131)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2018)
|
Sec. 11. Duties of the Department. The Department shall |
exercise the
powers and duties prescribed by
the Civil |
Administrative Code of Illinois for the administration of |
Licensing
Acts and shall exercise such other powers and duties |
necessary for effectuating
the purpose of this Act. The powers |
and duties of the Department also include However, the |
following powers and duties shall be
exercised only upon review
|
of the Board of
Pharmacy to take such action :
|
(a) Formulation of Formulate such rules, not inconsistent |
with law and subject to
the Illinois Administrative Procedure |
Act, as may be necessary to carry
out the purposes and enforce |
the provisions of this Act. The Secretary Director
may grant |
variances from any such rules as provided for in this Section . ;
|
(b) The suspension, revocation, placing on probationary
|
status, reprimand, and refusing to issue or restore , or taking |
|
any other disciplinary or non-disciplinary action against any |
license or
certificate of registration issued under the |
provisions of this Act
for the reasons set forth in Section 30 |
of this Act.
|
(c) The issuance, renewal, restoration , or reissuance of |
any license
or certificate which has been previously refused to |
be issued or renewed,
or has been revoked, suspended or placed |
on probationary status.
|
(c-5) The granting of variances from rules promulgated |
pursuant to this Section in
individual cases where there is a |
finding that:
|
(1) the provision from which the variance is granted is |
not statutorily
mandated;
|
(2) no party will be injured by the granting of the |
variance; and
|
(3) the rule from which the variance is granted would, |
in the particular
case, be unreasonable or unnecessarily |
burdensome.
|
The Secretary Director shall give consideration to the |
recommendations of notify the State Board of Pharmacy regarding |
of the granting
of such variance and the reasons therefor , at |
the next meeting of the Board .
|
(d) The Secretary shall appoint a chief pharmacy |
coordinator who and at least 2 deputy pharmacy coordinators, |
all of whom shall be a licensed pharmacist registered |
pharmacists in good standing in this State, shall be a graduate |
|
graduates of an accredited college of pharmacy or hold, at a |
minimum, a bachelor of science degree in pharmacy, and shall |
have at least 5 years of experience in the practice of pharmacy |
immediately prior to his or her appointment. The chief pharmacy |
coordinator shall be the executive administrator and the chief |
enforcement officer of this Act. The deputy pharmacy |
coordinators shall report to the chief pharmacy coordinator. |
The Secretary shall assign at least one deputy pharmacy |
coordinator to a region composed of Cook County and such other |
counties as the Secretary may deem appropriate, and such deputy |
pharmacy coordinator shall have his or her primary office in |
Chicago. The Secretary shall assign at least one deputy |
pharmacy coordinator to a region composed of the balance of |
counties in the State, and such deputy pharmacy coordinator |
shall have his or her primary office in Springfield. |
(e) The Department Secretary shall, in conformity with the |
Personnel Code, employ such pharmacy investigators as deemed |
necessary not less than 4 pharmacy investigators who shall |
report to the chief pharmacy coordinator or a deputy pharmacy |
coordinator . Each pharmacy investigator shall be a licensed |
pharmacist unless employed as a pharmacy investigator on or |
before August 27, 2015 ( the effective date of Public Act |
99-473) this amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly . The |
Department shall also employ at least one attorney to prosecute |
violations of this Act and its rules. The Department may, in |
conformity with the Personnel Code, employ such clerical and |
|
other employees as are necessary to carry out the duties of the |
Board and Department. |
The duly authorized pharmacy investigators of the |
Department shall have the right to enter and inspect, during |
business hours, any pharmacy or any other place in this State |
holding itself out to be a pharmacy where medicines, drugs or |
drug products, or proprietary medicines are sold, offered for |
sale, exposed for sale, or kept for sale.
|
(Source: P.A. 99-473, eff. 8-27-15.)
|
(225 ILCS 85/12) (from Ch. 111, par. 4132)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2018)
|
Sec. 12. Expiration of license; renewal. |
(a) The expiration date and renewal
period for
each license |
and certificate of registration issued under this Act
shall be |
set by rule.
|
(b) As a condition for the renewal of a license certificate |
of registration as
a pharmacist, the licensee registrant shall |
provide evidence to the
Department of completion of a total of |
30 hours of pharmacy continuing
education during the 24 months
|
preceding the expiration date
of the certificate. Such |
continuing education shall be approved by
the Accreditation |
Council on Pharmacy
Education.
|
(c) The Department may shall establish by rule a means for |
the verification
of completion of the continuing education |
required by this Section.
This verification may be accomplished |
|
through audits of records maintained
by licensees registrants , |
by requiring the filing of continuing education certificates
|
with the Department or a qualified organization selected by the |
Department
to maintain such records or by other means |
established by the Department.
|
(d) Rules developed under this Section may provide for a |
reasonable biennial
fee, not to exceed $20, to fund the cost of |
such recordkeeping.
The Department may shall , by rule, further |
provide an orderly process
for the restoration reinstatement of |
licenses which have not been renewed due to
the failure to meet |
the continuing education requirements of this Section.
The |
requirements of continuing education may be waived, in whole or
|
in part, in cases of extreme hardship as defined by rule of the |
Department.
Such waivers shall be granted for not more than one |
of any 3 consecutive
renewal periods.
|
(e) Any pharmacist who has permitted his license to expire |
or who has had
his license on inactive status may have his |
license restored by making
application to the Department and |
filing proof acceptable to the Department
of his fitness to |
have his license restored, and by paying the required
|
restoration fee.
The Department shall determine, by an |
evaluation program established
by rule his fitness for |
restoration of his license and shall establish
procedures and |
requirements for such restoration. However, any pharmacist
who |
demonstrates that he has continuously maintained active |
practice
in another jurisdiction pursuant to a license in good |
|
standing, and
who has substantially complied with the |
continuing education requirements
of this Section shall not be |
subject to further evaluation for purposes
of this Section.
|
(f) Any licensee who shall engage in the practice for which |
his or her
license
was issued while the license is expired or |
on inactive status
shall
be considered to be practicing without |
a license which, shall be grounds
for discipline under Section |
30 of this Act.
|
(g) Any pharmacy operating on an expired license is engaged |
in
the unlawful
practice of pharmacy and is subject to |
discipline under Section 30 of this
Act. A pharmacy whose |
license has been expired for one year or
more may not
have its |
license restored but must apply for a new license and meet all
|
requirements for licensure. Any pharmacy whose license has been |
expired for
less than one year may apply for restoration of its |
license and shall have
its license restored.
|
(h) However, any pharmacist whose license expired while he |
was (1) in
Federal Service on active duty with the Armed Forces |
of the United
States, or the State Militia called into service |
or training, or (2)
in training or education under the |
supervision of the United States
preliminary to induction into |
the military service, may have his license
or certificate |
restored without paying any lapsed renewal fees, if
within 2 |
years after honorable termination of such service, training
or |
education he furnishes the Department with satisfactory |
evidence
to the effect that he has been so engaged and that his |
|
service, training
or education has been so terminated.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-689, eff. 10-29-07 .)
|
(225 ILCS 85/13) (from Ch. 111, par. 4133)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2018)
|
Sec. 13. Inactive status. |
(a) Any pharmacist , registered certified pharmacy |
technician, or registered pharmacy technician who notifies the |
Department,
in writing or electronically on forms prescribed by |
the Department, may elect to place
his or her
license on an |
inactive status and shall be excused from payment
of renewal |
fees and completion of continuing education requirements
until |
he or she notifies the Department in writing of his or her |
intent to restore
his license.
|
(b) Any pharmacist , registered certified pharmacy |
technician, or registered pharmacy pharmacist technician |
requesting restoration from inactive status shall be
required |
to pay the current renewal fee and shall be required to restore
|
his or her license or certificate, as provided by rule of the |
Department.
|
(c) Any pharmacist , registered certified pharmacy |
technician, or registered pharmacy pharmacist technician whose |
license is in inactive status shall not practice
in the State |
of Illinois.
|
(d) A
pharmacy license may not be
placed on inactive |
status.
|
|
(e) Continued practice on a license which has lapsed or |
been placed on
inactive status shall be considered to be |
practicing without a license.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-689, eff. 10-29-07.)
|
(225 ILCS 85/15) (from Ch. 111, par. 4135)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2018)
|
Sec. 15. Pharmacy requirements. |
(1) It shall be unlawful
for the owner of any pharmacy, as |
defined in this Act, to operate or conduct
the same, or to |
allow the same to be
operated or conducted, unless:
|
(a) It has a licensed pharmacist, authorized to |
practice pharmacy
in this State under the provisions of |
this Act, on duty whenever the
practice of pharmacy is |
conducted;
|
(b) Security provisions for all drugs and devices, as |
determined by
rule of the Department, are provided during |
the absence from the licensed
pharmacy of all licensed |
pharmacists. Maintenance of security provisions
is the |
responsibility of the licensed pharmacist in charge;
and
|
(c) The pharmacy is licensed under this Act to conduct |
the practice of pharmacy in any and all forms from the |
physical address of the pharmacy's primary inventory where |
U.S. mail is delivered. If a facility, company, or |
organization operates multiple pharmacies from multiple |
physical addresses, a separate pharmacy license is |
|
required for each different physical address.
|
(2) The Department may allow a pharmacy that is not located |
at the same location as its home pharmacy and at which pharmacy |
services are provided during an emergency situation, as defined |
by rule, to be operated as an emergency remote pharmacy. An |
emergency remote pharmacy operating under this subsection (2) |
shall operate under the license of the home pharmacy.
|
(3) The Secretary may waive the requirement for a |
pharmacist to be on duty
at all times for State facilities not |
treating human ailments. This waiver of the requirement remains |
in effect until it is rescinded by the Secretary and the |
Department provides written notice of the rescission to the |
State facility.
|
(4) It shall be unlawful for any person, who is not a |
licensed pharmacy
or health care facility, to purport to be |
such or to use in name, title,
or sign designating, or in |
connection with that place of business,
any of the words: |
"pharmacy", "pharmacist", "pharmacy department",
"apothecary", |
"druggist", "drug", "drugs", "medicines", "medicine store",
|
"drug sundries", "prescriptions filled", or any list of words |
indicating
that drugs are compounded or sold to the lay public, |
or prescriptions
are dispensed therein. Each day during which, |
or a part which, such
representation is made or appears or such |
a sign is allowed to remain
upon or in such a place of business |
shall constitute a separate offense
under this Act.
|
(5) The holder of any license or certificate of |
|
registration shall conspicuously
display it in the pharmacy in |
which he is engaged in the practice of
pharmacy. The pharmacist |
in charge shall conspicuously
display his name in such |
pharmacy. The pharmacy license shall also
be conspicuously |
displayed.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-689, eff. 10-29-07; 96-219, eff. 8-10-09; |
96-1000, eff. 7-2-10.)
|
(225 ILCS 85/16) (from Ch. 111, par. 4136)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2018)
|
Sec. 16. The Department shall require
and provide for the |
licensure of every pharmacy doing business in this
State. Such |
licensure shall expire 30
days after the pharmacist in
charge |
dies or is no longer employed by or leaves the place where the |
pharmacy is licensed or after
such pharmacist's license has |
been suspended or revoked.
|
In the event the designated pharmacist in charge dies or |
otherwise
ceases to function in that capacity, or when the |
license of the pharmacist
in charge has been suspended or |
revoked, the owner of the pharmacy
shall be required to notify |
the Department, on forms provided by the
Department, of the |
identity of the new pharmacist in charge.
|
It is the duty of every pharmacist in charge who ceases to |
function
in that capacity to report to the Department within 30
|
days of the
date on which he ceased such functions for such |
pharmacy. It is the
duty of every owner of a pharmacy licensed |
|
under this Act to report
to the Department within 30
days of |
the date on which the pharmacist
in charge died or ceased to |
function in that capacity and to specify a new pharmacist in |
charge . Failure to
provide such notification to the Department |
shall be grounds for disciplinary
action.
|
No license shall be issued to any pharmacy unless such |
pharmacy has
a pharmacist in charge and each such pharmacy |
license shall indicate
on the face thereof the pharmacist in |
charge.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-689, eff. 10-29-07.)
|
(225 ILCS 85/16a) (from Ch. 111, par. 4136a)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2018)
|
Sec. 16a. (a) The Department shall establish rules and |
regulations ,
consistent with the provisions of this Act, |
governing nonresident
pharmacies,
including pharmacies |
providing services via the Internet,
which sell, or offer for |
sale, drugs, medicines, or other pharmaceutical
services in |
this State.
|
(b) The Department shall require and provide for a an |
annual nonresident
special pharmacy license registration for |
all pharmacies located outside of this
State that dispense |
medications for Illinois residents and mail, ship, or
deliver |
prescription medications into this State. A nonresident |
Nonresident special
pharmacy license registration shall be |
granted by the Department upon the disclosure and
certification |
|
by a pharmacy:
|
(1) that it is licensed in the state in which the |
dispensing facility
is located and from which the drugs are |
dispensed;
|
(2) of the location, names, and titles of all principal |
corporate
officers of the business and all pharmacists who |
are dispensing drugs to residents of this
State;
|
(3) that it complies with all lawful directions and |
requests for
information from the board of pharmacy of each |
state in which it is
licensed or registered, except that it |
shall respond directly to all
communications from the Board |
or Department concerning any circumstances arising
from |
the dispensing of drugs to residents of this State;
|
(4) that it maintains its records of drugs dispensed to |
residents of
this State so that the records are readily |
retrievable from the records of
other drugs dispensed;
|
(5) that it cooperates with the Board or Department in |
providing information to the
board of pharmacy of the state |
in which it is licensed concerning matters
related to the |
dispensing of drugs to residents of this State; and
|
(6) that during its regular hours of operation, but not |
less than 6
days per week, for a minimum of 40 hours per |
week, a toll-free telephone
service is provided to |
facilitate communication between patients in this
State |
and a pharmacist at the nonresident pharmacy who has access |
to the patients'
records. The toll-free number must be |
|
disclosed on the label affixed to
each container of drugs |
dispensed to residents of this State.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-689, eff. 10-29-07; 96-673, eff. 1-1-10.)
|
(225 ILCS 85/17) (from Ch. 111, par. 4137)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2018)
|
Sec. 17. Disposition of legend drugs on cessation of |
pharmacy operations.
|
(a) The pharmacist in charge of a pharmacy which has
its |
pharmacy license revoked or otherwise ceases operation shall |
notify
the Department and forward to the Department a copy of |
the closing
inventory of controlled substances and a statement |
indicating the intended
manner of disposition of all legend |
drugs and prescription files within
30
days of such revocation |
or cessation of operation.
|
(b) The Department shall approve the intended manner of |
disposition
of all legend drugs prior to disposition of such |
drugs by the pharmacist
in charge.
|
(1) The Department shall notify the pharmacist in |
charge of approval
of the manner of disposition of all |
legend drugs, or disapproval accompanied
by reasons for |
such disapproval, within 30
days of receipt of the |
statement
from the pharmacist in charge. In the event that |
the manner of disposition
is not approved, the pharmacist |
in charge shall notify the Department
of an alternative |
manner of disposition within 30
days of the receipt
of |
|
disapproval.
|
(2) If disposition of all legend drugs does not occur |
within 30
days
after approval is received from the |
Department, or if no alternative
method of disposition is |
submitted to the Department within 30
days
of the |
Department's disapproval, the Secretary Director shall |
notify the pharmacist
in charge by mail at the address of |
the closing pharmacy, of the Department's
intent to |
confiscate all legend drugs. The Notice of Intent to |
Confiscate
shall be the final administrative decision of |
the Department, as that
term is defined in the |
Administrative Review Law, and the confiscation of all
|
prescription drugs shall be effected.
|
(b-5) In the event that the pharmacist in charge has died |
or is otherwise
physically incompetent to perform the duties of |
this Section, the owner of a
pharmacy that has its license |
revoked or otherwise ceases operation shall be
required to |
fulfill the duties otherwise imposed upon the pharmacist in
|
charge.
|
(c) The pharmacist in charge of a pharmacy which acquires |
prescription
files from a pharmacy which ceases operation shall |
be responsible for
the preservation of such acquired |
prescriptions for the remainder of
the term that such |
prescriptions are required to be preserved by this
Act.
|
(d) Failure to comply with this Section shall be grounds |
for denying
an application or renewal application for a |
|
pharmacy license or for
disciplinary action against a license |
registration .
|
(e) Compliance with the provisions of the Illinois |
Controlled Substances
Act concerning the disposition of |
controlled substances shall be deemed
compliance with this |
Section with respect to legend drugs which are
controlled |
substances.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-689, eff. 10-29-07.)
|
(225 ILCS 85/17.1)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2018)
|
Sec. 17.1. Registered pharmacy Pharmacy technician |
training.
|
(a) Beginning January 1, 2004, it shall be the joint |
responsibility of a
pharmacy
and its pharmacist in charge to |
have trained all of its registered pharmacy technicians
or |
obtain
proof of prior training in all of the following topics |
as they relate to the
practice site:
|
(1) The duties and responsibilities of the technicians |
and pharmacists.
|
(2) Tasks and technical skills, policies, and |
procedures.
|
(3) Compounding, packaging, labeling, and storage.
|
(4) Pharmaceutical and medical terminology.
|
(5) Record keeping requirements.
|
(6) The ability to perform and apply arithmetic |
|
calculations.
|
(b) Within 6 months after initial employment or changing |
the duties and
responsibilities of a registered pharmacy |
technician, it
shall be
the joint responsibility of the |
pharmacy and the pharmacist in charge to
train the registered
|
pharmacy technician or obtain proof of prior training in the |
areas listed in
subsection (a)
of this Section as they relate |
to the practice site or to document that the pharmacy |
technician is making appropriate progress.
|
(c) All pharmacies shall maintain an up-to-date training
|
program
describing the duties and responsibilities of a |
registered pharmacy technician.
|
(d) All pharmacies shall create and maintain retrievable
|
records
of
training or proof of training as required in this |
Section.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-689, eff. 10-29-07.)
|
(225 ILCS 85/18) (from Ch. 111, par. 4138)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2018)
|
Sec. 18. Record retention. There Except as provided in |
subsection (b), there shall be kept in every drugstore or
|
pharmacy a suitable
book, file, or electronic record keeping |
system in which shall be preserved
for a period of not less |
than 5 years the original, or an exact, unalterable image, of |
every written
prescription and the original transcript or copy |
of every verbal prescription
filled, compounded, or dispensed, |
|
in such pharmacy; and such book , or
file , or electronic record |
keeping system of prescriptions shall at all reasonable times |
be open to inspection
to the chief pharmacy coordinator and the |
duly authorized agents or
employees of the Department.
|
Every prescription filled or refilled shall contain the
|
unique identifiers
of the persons
authorized to practice
|
pharmacy under the provision of this Act who fills or refills |
the
prescription.
|
Records kept pursuant to this Section may be maintained in |
an alternative
data retention system, such as a direct digital |
imaging system, provided that:
|
(1) the records maintained in the alternative data |
retention system
contain all of the information required in |
a manual record;
|
(2) the data processing system is capable of producing |
a hard copy of the
electronic record on the request of the |
Board, its representative, or other
authorized local, |
State, or federal law enforcement or regulatory agency;
|
(3) the digital images are recorded and stored only by |
means of a
technology that does not allow subsequent |
revision or replacement of the
images; and
|
(4) the prescriptions may be retained in written form |
or recorded in a data processing system, provided that such |
order can be produced in printed form upon lawful request.
|
As used in this Section, "digital imaging system" means a |
system, including
people, machines, methods of organization, |
|
and procedures, that provides input,
storage, processing, |
communications, output, and control functions for
digitized
|
representations of original prescription records.
|
Inpatient drug orders may be maintained
within an |
institution in a manner approved by the Department.
|
(Source: P.A. 94-84, eff. 6-28-05; 95-689, eff. 10-29-07.)
|
(225 ILCS 85/19) (from Ch. 111, par. 4139)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2018)
|
Sec. 19. Nothing contained in this Act shall be construed |
to prohibit
a pharmacist licensed in this State from filling or |
refilling a valid
prescription for prescription drugs which is |
on file in a pharmacy licensed in
any state and has been |
transferred from one pharmacy to another by any means,
|
including by way of electronic data processing equipment upon |
the following
conditions and exceptions:
|
(1) Prior to dispensing pursuant to any such prescription, |
the dispensing
pharmacist shall:
|
(a) Advise the patient that the prescription on file at |
such other
pharmacy must be canceled before he or she will |
be able to fill or refill it.
|
(b) Determine that the prescription is valid and on |
file at such other
pharmacy and that such prescription may |
be filled or refilled, as requested,
in accordance with the |
prescriber's intent expressed on such prescription.
|
(c) Notify the pharmacy where the prescription is on |
|
file that the
prescription must be canceled.
|
(d) Record in writing or electronically the |
prescription order, the name of the pharmacy
at which the |
prescription was on file, the prescription number, the
name |
of the drug and the original amount dispensed, the date of |
original
dispensing, and the number of remaining |
authorized refills.
|
(e) Obtain the consent of the prescriber to the |
refilling of the
prescription when the prescription, in the |
professional judgment of the
dispensing pharmacist, so |
requires.
|
(2) Upon receipt of a request for prescription information |
set forth
in subparagraph (d) of paragraph (1) of this Section, |
if the requested
pharmacist is satisfied in his professional |
judgment that such request
is valid and legal, the requested |
pharmacist shall:
|
(a) Provide such information accurately and |
completely.
|
(b) Record electronically or, if in writing, on the |
face of the prescription, the name of the requesting
|
pharmacy and pharmacist and the date of request.
|
(c) Cancel the prescription on file by writing the word |
"void" on
its face or the electronic equivalent, if not in |
written format. No further prescription information shall |
be given or medication
dispensed pursuant to such original |
prescription.
|
|
(3) In the event that, after the information set forth in |
subparagraph
(d) of paragraph (1) of this Section has been |
provided, a prescription
is not dispensed by the requesting |
pharmacist, then such pharmacist
shall provide notice of this |
fact to the pharmacy from which such information
was obtained; |
such notice shall then cancel the prescription in the
same |
manner as set forth in subparagraph (c) of paragraph (2) of |
this
Section.
|
(4) When filling or refilling a valid prescription on file |
in another
state, the dispensing pharmacist shall be required |
to follow all the
requirements of Illinois law which apply to |
the dispensing of prescription
drugs. If anything in Illinois |
law prevents the filling or refilling of
the original |
prescription it shall be unlawful to dispense pursuant to this
|
Section.
|
(5) Prescriptions for drugs in Schedules III, IV, and V of |
the Illinois
Controlled Substances Act may be transferred only |
once and may not be further
transferred. However, pharmacies |
electronically sharing a real-time, online database may |
transfer up to the maximum refills permitted by the law and the |
prescriber's authorization.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-689, eff. 10-29-07.)
|
(225 ILCS 85/20) (from Ch. 111, par. 4140)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2018)
|
Sec. 20. Dispensing systems. |
|
(a) Two or more pharmacies may establish and use a common
|
electronic file to maintain required dispensing information.
|
(b) Pharmacies using such a common electronic file are not |
required to
physically transfer prescriptions or information |
for dispensing purposes
between or among pharmacies |
participating in the same common prescription
file; provided, |
however any such common file must contain complete
and adequate |
records of such prescription and refill dispensed as stated
in |
Section 18.
|
(c) The Department and Board may formulate such rules and |
regulations ,
not inconsistent with law, as may be necessary to |
carry out the purposes
of and to enforce the provisions of this |
Section within the following
exception: The Department and |
Board shall not impose greater requirements
on either common |
electronic files or a hard copy record system.
|
(d) Drugs shall in no event be dispensed more frequently or |
in larger amounts
than the prescriber ordered without direct |
prescriber authorization
by way of a new prescription order.
|
(e) The dispensing by a pharmacist licensed in this State |
or another state of a prescription contained in a common |
database shall not constitute a transfer, provided that (1) (i) |
all pharmacies involved in the transactions pursuant to which |
the prescription is dispensed and all pharmacists engaging in |
dispensing functions are properly licensed, permitted, or |
registered in this State or another jurisdiction, (2) (ii) a |
policy and procedures manual that governs all participating |
|
pharmacies and pharmacists is available to the Department upon |
request and includes the procedure for maintaining appropriate |
records for regulatory oversight for tracking a prescription |
during each stage of the filling and dispensing process, and |
(3) (iii) the pharmacists involved in filling and dispensing |
the prescription and counseling the patient are identified. A |
pharmacist shall be accountable only for the specific tasks |
performed. |
(f) Nothing in this Section shall prohibit a pharmacist who |
is exercising his or her professional judgment from dispensing |
additional quantities of medication up to the total number of |
dosage units authorized by the prescriber on the original |
prescription and any refills. |
(Source: P.A. 95-689, eff. 10-29-07.)
|
(225 ILCS 85/22) (from Ch. 111, par. 4142)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2018)
|
Sec. 22. Except only in the case of a drug, medicine or |
poison
which is lawfully sold or dispensed, at retail, in the |
original and
unbroken package of the manufacturer, packer, or |
distributor thereof,
and which package bears the original label |
thereon showing the name
and address of the manufacturer, |
packer, or distributor thereof, and
the name of the drug, |
medicine, or poison therein contained, and the
directions for |
its use, no person shall sell or dispense, at retail,
any drug, |
medicine, or poison, without affixing to the box, bottle,
|
|
vessel, or package containing the same, a label bearing the |
name of
the article distinctly shown, and the directions for |
its use, with
the name and address of the pharmacy wherein the |
same is sold or dispensed.
However, in the case of a drug, |
medicine, or poison which is sold or
dispensed pursuant to a |
prescription of a physician licensed to practice
medicine in |
all of its branches, a physician assistant in accordance with |
subsection (f) of Section 4 of this Act, an advanced practice |
registered nurse in accordance with subsection (g) of Section 4 |
of this Act, a licensed dentist, a licensed veterinarian, a
|
licensed podiatric physician, or a licensed therapeutically or |
diagnostically certified
optometrist authorized by law to |
prescribe drugs or medicines or poisons ,
the label affixed to |
the box, bottle, vessel, or package containing the
same shall |
show: (a) the name and address of the pharmacy
wherein the same |
is sold or dispensed; (b) the name or initials of
the person, |
authorized to practice pharmacy under the provisions of
this |
Act, selling or dispensing the same, (c) the date on which such
|
prescription was filled; (d) the name of the patient; (e) the |
serial
number of such prescription as filed in the prescription |
files; (f)
the last name of the practitioner who prescribed |
such prescriptions;
(g) the directions for use thereof as |
contained in such prescription;
and (h) the proprietary name or |
names or the established name or
names of the drugs, the dosage |
and quantity, except as otherwise authorized
by rule regulation |
of the Department.
|
|
(Source: P.A. 98-214, eff. 8-9-13.)
|
(225 ILCS 85/25.10) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2018)
|
Sec. 25.10. Remote prescription processing. |
(a) In this Section, "remote prescription processing" |
means and includes the outsourcing of certain prescription |
functions to another pharmacy or licensed non-resident |
pharmacy , including the dispensing of drugs . "Remote |
prescription processing" includes any of the following |
activities related to the dispensing process: |
(1) Receiving, interpreting, evaluating, or clarifying |
prescriptions. |
(2) Entering prescription and patient data into a data |
processing system. |
(3) Transferring prescription information. |
(4) Performing a drug regimen review. |
(5) Obtaining refill or substitution authorizations or |
otherwise communicating with the prescriber concerning a |
patient's prescription. |
(6) Evaluating clinical data for prior authorization |
for dispensing. |
(7) Discussing therapeutic interventions with |
prescribers. |
(8) Providing drug information or counseling |
concerning a patient's prescription to the patient or |
|
patient's agent, as defined in this Act. |
(b) A pharmacy may engage in remote prescription processing |
under the following conditions: |
(1) The pharmacies shall either have the same owner or |
have a written contract describing the scope of services to |
be provided and the responsibilities and accountabilities |
of each pharmacy in compliance with all federal and State |
laws and regulations related to the practice of pharmacy. |
(2) The pharmacies shall share a common electronic file |
or have technology that allows sufficient information |
necessary to process a non-dispensing function. |
(3) The records may be maintained separately by each |
pharmacy or in common electronic file shared by both |
pharmacies, provided that the system can produce a record |
at either location that shows showing each processing task, |
the identity of the person performing each task, and the |
location where each task was performed. |
(c) Nothing in this Section shall prohibit an individual |
employee licensed as a pharmacist from accessing the employer |
pharmacy's database from a pharmacist's home or other remote |
location or home verification for the purpose of performing |
certain prescription processing functions, provided that the |
pharmacy establishes controls to protect the privacy and |
security of confidential records.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-689, eff. 10-29-07.) |
|
(225 ILCS 85/25.15) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2018)
|
Sec. 25.15. Telepharmacy.
|
(a) In this Section, "telepharmacy" means the provision of |
pharmacist care by a pharmacist that is accomplished through
|
the use of telecommunications or other technologies to patients
|
or their agents who are at a distance and are located within |
the
United States, and which follows all federal and State |
laws, rules,
and regulations with regard to privacy and |
security. |
(b) Any pharmacy engaged in the practice of telepharmacy |
must meet all of the following conditions:
|
(1) All events involving the contents of an
automated |
pharmacy system must be stored in a secure location
and may |
be recorded electronically. |
(2) An automated pharmacy or prescription dispensing |
machine system may be used in
conjunction with the |
pharmacy's practice of telepharmacy after inspection and |
approval by the Department. |
(3) The pharmacist in charge shall: |
(A) be responsible for the practice of |
telepharmacy
performed at a remote pharmacy, including |
the supervision of any
prescription dispensing machine |
or automated medication system; |
(B) ensure that the home pharmacy has
sufficient |
pharmacists on duty for the safe operation and
|
|
supervision of all remote pharmacies; |
(C) ensure, through the use of a video and auditory
|
communication system, that a registered certified |
pharmacy technician at the remote
pharmacy has |
accurately and correctly prepared any prescription for
|
dispensing according to the prescription; |
(D) be responsible for the supervision and |
training of registered
certified pharmacy technicians |
at remote pharmacies who shall be subject to
all rules |
and regulations; and |
(E) ensure that patient counseling at the remote |
pharmacy is
performed by a pharmacist or student |
pharmacist.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-689, eff. 10-29-07; 96-673, eff. 1-1-10.)
|
(225 ILCS 85/27) (from Ch. 111, par. 4147)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2018)
|
Sec. 27. Fees. |
(a) The Department shall, by rule, provide for a schedule |
of fees to be paid for licenses and certificates. These fees |
shall be for the administration and enforcement of this Act, |
including without limitation original licensure and renewal |
and restoration of licensure. All fees are nonrefundable. |
(b) Applicants
for any examination as a pharmacist
shall be |
required to pay, either to the Department or to the designated
|
testing service, a fee covering the cost of determining an |
|
applicant's
eligibility and providing the examination. Failure |
to appear for the
examination on the scheduled date, at the |
time and place specified,
after the applicant's application for |
examination has been received
and acknowledged by the |
Department or the designated testing service,
shall result in |
the forfeiture of the examination fee.
|
(c)
Applicants for the preliminary diagnostic examination |
shall be
required to pay, either to the Department or to the |
designated testing
service, a fee covering the cost of |
determining an applicant's eligibility
and providing the |
examination. Failure to appear for the examination
on the |
scheduled date, at the time and place specified, after the |
application
for examination has been received and acknowledged |
by the Department
or the designated testing service, shall |
result in the forfeiture of
the examination fee.
|
(d) All fees, fines, or penalties
received by the
|
Department under this Act shall be deposited in the Illinois |
State Pharmacy
Disciplinary Fund hereby created in the State |
Treasury and shall be used
by the Department in the exercise of |
its powers and performance of its duties under this Act, |
including, but not limited to, the provision for evidence in |
pharmacy investigations.
|
Moneys in the Fund may be transferred to the Professions |
Indirect Cost Fund
as authorized under Section 2105-300 of the |
Department of
Professional Regulation Law (20 ILCS |
2105/2105-300).
|
|
The moneys deposited in the Illinois State Pharmacy
|
Disciplinary Fund shall be invested to earn interest which |
shall accrue to
the Fund.
|
(e)
From the money received for license renewal fees, $5 |
from each
pharmacist fee, and $2.50 from each pharmacy |
technician fee, shall be set aside
within the Illinois State |
Pharmacy Disciplinary
Fund for the purpose of supporting a |
substance abuse program for
pharmacists and pharmacy |
technicians. |
(f) A pharmacy, manufacturer of controlled substances, or |
wholesale distributor of controlled substances that is |
licensed under this Act and owned and operated by the State is |
exempt from licensure, registration, renewal, and other fees |
required under this Act. |
Pharmacists and pharmacy technicians working in facilities |
owned and operated by the State are not exempt from the payment |
of fees required by this Act and any rules adopted under this |
Act. |
Nothing in this subsection (f) shall be construed to |
prohibit the Department from imposing any fine or other penalty |
allowed under this Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-689, eff. 10-29-07.)
|
(225 ILCS 85/28) (from Ch. 111, par. 4148)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2018)
|
Sec. 28. Returned checks; fines. Any person who delivers a |
|
check or other payment to the Department that
is returned to |
the Department unpaid by the financial institution upon
which |
it is drawn shall pay to the Department, in addition to the |
amount
already owed to the Department, a fine of $50. The fines |
imposed by this Section are in addition
to any other discipline |
provided under this Act for unlicensed
practice or practice on |
a nonrenewed license. The Department shall notify
the person |
that payment of fees and fines shall be paid to the Department
|
by certified check or money order within 30 calendar days of |
the
notification. If, after the expiration of 30 days from the |
date of the
notification, the person has failed to submit the |
necessary remittance, the
Department shall automatically |
terminate the license or certificate or deny
the application, |
without hearing. If, after termination or denial, the
person |
seeks a license or certificate , he or she shall apply to the
|
Department for restoration or issuance of the license or |
certificate and
pay all fees and fines due to the Department. |
The Department may establish
a fee for the processing of an |
application for restoration of a license or
certificate to pay |
all expenses of processing this application. The Secretary |
Director
may waive the fines due under this Section in |
individual cases where the Secretary
Director finds that the |
fines would be unreasonable or unnecessarily
burdensome.
|
(Source: P.A. 92-146, eff. 1-1-02 .)
|
(225 ILCS 85/30) (from Ch. 111, par. 4150)
|
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2018)
|
Sec. 30. Refusal, revocation, or suspension , or other |
discipline . |
(a) The Department may refuse to issue or renew, or may |
revoke a license or registration , or may suspend, place on |
probation, fine, or take any disciplinary or non-disciplinary |
action as the Department may deem proper, including fines not |
to exceed $10,000 for each violation, with regard to any |
licensee or registrant for any one or combination of the |
following causes:
|
1. Material misstatement in furnishing information to |
the Department.
|
2. Violations of this Act, or the rules promulgated |
hereunder.
|
3. Making any misrepresentation for the purpose of |
obtaining licenses.
|
4. A pattern of conduct which demonstrates |
incompetence or unfitness
to practice.
|
5. Aiding or assisting another person in violating any |
provision of
this Act or rules.
|
6. Failing, within 60 days, to respond to a written |
request made by
the Department for information.
|
7. Engaging in unprofessional, dishonorable, or |
unethical conduct of
a character likely to deceive, defraud |
or harm the public.
|
8. Adverse action taken by another state or |
|
jurisdiction against a license or other authorization to |
practice as a pharmacy, pharmacist, registered certified |
pharmacy technician, or registered pharmacy technician |
that is the same or substantially equivalent to those set |
forth in this Section, a certified copy of the record of |
the action taken by the other state or jurisdiction being |
prima facie evidence thereof. Discipline by another U.S. |
jurisdiction or foreign nation, if at
least one of the |
grounds for the discipline is the same or substantially
|
equivalent to those set forth herein.
|
9. Directly or indirectly giving to or receiving from |
any person, firm,
corporation, partnership, or association |
any fee, commission, rebate
or other form of compensation |
for any professional services not actually
or personally |
rendered. Nothing in this item 9 affects any bona fide |
independent contractor or employment arrangements among |
health care professionals, health facilities, health care |
providers, or other entities, except as otherwise |
prohibited by law. Any employment arrangements may include |
provisions for compensation, health insurance, pension, or |
other employment benefits for the provision of services |
within the scope of the licensee's practice under this Act. |
Nothing in this item 9 shall be construed to require an |
employment arrangement to receive professional fees for |
services rendered.
|
10. A finding by the Department that the licensee, |
|
after having his
license placed on probationary status has |
violated the terms of probation.
|
11. Selling or engaging in the sale of drug samples |
provided at no
cost by drug manufacturers.
|
12. Physical illness, including but not limited to, |
deterioration through
the aging process, or loss of motor |
skill which results in the inability
to practice the |
profession with reasonable judgment, skill or safety.
|
13. A finding that licensure or registration has been |
applied for or
obtained by fraudulent means.
|
14. Conviction by plea of guilty or nolo contendere, |
finding of guilt, jury verdict, or entry of judgment or |
sentencing, including, but not limited to, convictions, |
preceding sentences of supervision, conditional discharge, |
or first offender probation, under the laws of any |
jurisdiction of the United States that is (i) a felony or |
(ii) a misdemeanor, an essential element of which is |
dishonesty, or that is directly related to the practice of |
pharmacy. The applicant or licensee has been convicted in |
state or federal
court of or entered a plea of guilty, nolo |
contendere, or the equivalent in a state or federal court |
to any crime which is a felony or any misdemeanor related |
to
the practice of pharmacy or which an essential element |
is dishonesty.
|
15. Habitual or excessive use or addiction to alcohol, |
narcotics, stimulants
or any other chemical agent or drug |
|
which results in the inability
to practice with reasonable |
judgment, skill or safety.
|
16. Willfully making or filing false records or reports |
in the practice
of pharmacy, including, but not limited to |
false records to support
claims against the medical |
assistance program of the Department of Healthcare and |
Family Services (formerly Department of
Public Aid) under |
the Public Aid Code.
|
17. Gross and willful overcharging for professional |
services including
filing false statements for collection |
of fees for which services are
not rendered, including, but |
not limited to, filing false statements
for collection of |
monies for services not rendered from the medical
|
assistance program of the Department of Healthcare and |
Family Services (formerly Department of Public Aid) under |
the Public Aid Code.
|
18. Dispensing prescription drugs without receiving a
|
written or oral prescription in violation of law.
|
19. Upon a finding of a substantial discrepancy in a |
Department audit
of a prescription drug, including |
controlled substances, as that term
is defined in this Act |
or in the Illinois Controlled Substances Act.
|
20. Physical or mental illness or any other impairment |
or disability, including , without limitation : (A) |
deterioration through the aging process or loss of motor |
skills that
results in the inability to practice with
|
|
reasonable judgment, skill or safety ; , or (B) mental |
incompetence,
as declared
by a court of competent |
jurisdiction.
|
21. Violation of the Health Care Worker Self-Referral |
Act.
|
22. Failing to sell or dispense any drug, medicine, or |
poison in good
faith. "Good faith", for the purposes of |
this Section, has the meaning
ascribed
to it in subsection |
(u) of Section 102 of the Illinois Controlled Substances
|
Act. "Good faith", as used in this item (22), shall not be |
limited to the sale or dispensing of controlled substances, |
but shall apply to all prescription drugs.
|
23. Interfering with the professional judgment of a |
pharmacist by
any licensee registrant under this Act, or |
the licensee's his or her agents or employees.
|
24. Failing to report within 60 days to the Department
|
any adverse final action taken against a pharmacy, |
pharmacist, registered pharmacy pharmacist technician, or |
registered certified pharmacy pharmacist technician by |
another licensing jurisdiction in any other state or any |
territory of the United States or any foreign jurisdiction, |
any governmental agency, any law enforcement agency, or any |
court for acts or conduct similar to acts or conduct that |
would constitute grounds for discipline as defined in this |
Section. |
25. Failing to comply with a subpoena issued in |
|
accordance with Section 35.5 of this Act.
|
26. Disclosing protected health information in |
violation of any State or federal law. |
27. Willfully failing to report an instance of |
suspected abuse, neglect, financial exploitation, or |
self-neglect of an eligible adult as defined in and |
required by the Adult Protective Services Act. |
28. Being named as an abuser in a verified report by |
the Department on Aging under the Adult Protective Services |
Act, and upon proof by clear and convincing evidence that |
the licensee abused, neglected, or financially exploited |
an eligible adult as defined in the Adult Protective |
Services Act. |
(b) The Department may refuse to issue or may suspend the |
license or
registration of any person who fails to file a |
return, or to pay the tax,
penalty or interest shown in a filed |
return, or to pay any final assessment
of tax, penalty or |
interest, as required by any tax Act administered by the
|
Illinois Department of Revenue, until such time as the |
requirements of any
such tax Act are satisfied.
|
(c) The Department shall revoke any the license or |
certificate of
registration issued under the provisions of this |
Act or any prior Act of
this State of any person who has been |
convicted a second time of committing
any felony under the |
Illinois Controlled Substances Act, or who
has been convicted a |
second time of committing a Class 1 felony under
Sections 8A-3 |
|
and 8A-6 of the Illinois Public Aid Code. A
person whose |
license or certificate of registration issued under the
|
provisions of this Act or any prior Act of this State is |
revoked under this
subsection (c) shall be prohibited from |
engaging in the practice of
pharmacy in this State.
|
(d) Fines may be imposed in conjunction with other forms of |
disciplinary action, but shall not be the exclusive disposition |
of any disciplinary action arising out of conduct resulting in |
death or injury to a patient. Fines shall be paid within 60 |
days or as otherwise agreed to by the Department. Any funds |
collected from such fines shall be deposited in the Illinois |
State Pharmacy Disciplinary Fund.
|
(e) The entry of an order or judgment by any circuit court |
establishing that any person holding a license or certificate |
under this Act is a person in need of mental treatment operates |
as a suspension of that license. A licensee may resume his or |
her practice only upon the entry of an order of the Department |
based upon a finding by the Board that he or she has been |
determined to be recovered from mental illness by the court and |
upon the Board's recommendation that the licensee be permitted |
to resume his or her practice.
|
(f) The Department shall issue quarterly to the Board a |
status of all
complaints related to the profession received by |
the Department.
|
(g) In enforcing this Section, the Board or the Department, |
upon a showing of a possible violation, may compel any licensee |
|
or applicant for licensure under this Act to submit to a mental |
or physical examination or both, as required by and at the |
expense of the Department. The examining physician, or |
multidisciplinary team involved in providing physical and |
mental examinations led by a physician consisting of one or a |
combination of licensed physicians, licensed clinical |
psychologists, licensed clinical social workers, licensed |
clinical professional counselors, and other professional and |
administrative staff, shall be those specifically designated |
by the Department. The Board or the Department may order the |
examining physician or any member of the multidisciplinary team |
to present testimony concerning this mental or physical |
examination of the licensee or applicant. No information, |
report, or other documents in any way related to the |
examination shall be excluded by reason of any common law or |
statutory privilege relating to communication between the |
licensee or applicant and the examining physician or any member |
of the multidisciplinary team. The individual to be examined |
may have, at his or her own expense, another physician of his |
or her choice present during all aspects of the examination. |
Failure of any individual to submit to a mental or physical |
examination when directed shall result in the automatic |
suspension be grounds for suspension of his or her license |
until such time as the individual submits to the examination if |
the Board finds, after notice and hearing, that the refusal to |
submit to the examination was without reasonable cause . If the |
|
Board or Department finds a pharmacist, registered certified |
pharmacy technician, or registered pharmacy technician unable |
to practice because of the reasons set forth in this Section, |
the Board or Department shall require such pharmacist, |
registered certified pharmacy technician, or registered |
pharmacy technician to submit to care, counseling, or treatment |
by physicians or other appropriate health care providers |
approved or designated by the Department Board as a condition |
for continued, reinstated, or renewed licensure to practice. |
Any pharmacist, registered certified pharmacy technician, or |
registered pharmacy technician whose license was granted, |
continued, reinstated, renewed, disciplined, or supervised, |
subject to such terms, conditions, or restrictions, and who |
fails to comply with such terms, conditions, or restrictions or |
to complete a required program of care, counseling, or |
treatment, as determined by the chief pharmacy coordinator or a |
deputy pharmacy coordinator , shall be referred to the Secretary |
for a determination as to whether the licensee shall have his |
or her license suspended immediately, pending a hearing by the |
Board. In instances in which the Secretary immediately suspends |
a license under this subsection (g), a hearing upon such |
person's license must be convened by the Board within 15 days |
after such suspension and completed without appreciable delay. |
The Department and Board Board shall have the authority to |
review the subject pharmacist's, registered certified pharmacy |
technician's, or registered pharmacy technician's record of |
|
treatment and counseling regarding the impairment.
|
(h) An individual or organization acting in good faith, and |
not in a willful and wanton manner, in complying with this |
Section by providing a report or other information to the |
Board, by assisting in the investigation or preparation of a |
report or information, by participating in proceedings of the |
Board, or by serving as a member of the Board shall not, as a |
result of such actions, be subject to criminal prosecution or |
civil damages. |
(i) Members of the Board shall be indemnified by the State |
for any actions occurring within the scope of services on the |
Board, done in good faith, and not willful and wanton in |
nature. The Attorney General shall defend all such actions |
unless he or she determines either that there would be a |
conflict of interest in such representation or that the actions |
complained of were not in good faith or were willful and |
wanton. |
If the Attorney General declines representation, the |
member shall have the right to employ counsel of his or her |
choice, whose fees shall be provided by the State, after |
approval by the Attorney General, unless there is a |
determination by a court that the member's actions were not in |
good faith or were willful and wanton. |
The member must notify the Attorney General within 7 days |
of receipt of notice of the initiation of any action involving |
services of the Board. Failure to so notify the Attorney |
|
General shall constitute an absolute waiver of the right to a |
defense and indemnification. |
The Attorney General shall determine, within 7 days after |
receiving such notice, whether he or she will undertake to |
represent the member. |
(Source: P.A. 95-331, eff. 8-21-07; 95-689, eff. 10-29-07; |
96-673, eff. 1-1-10; 96-1482, eff. 11-29-10.)
|
(225 ILCS 85/30.5) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2018) |
Sec. 30.5. Suspension of license or certificate for failure |
to pay restitution. The Department, without further process or |
hearing, shall suspend the license issued under this Act or |
other authorization to practice of any person issued under this |
Act who has been certified by court order as not having paid |
restitution to a person under Section 8A-3.5 of the Illinois |
Public Aid Code or under Section 17-10.5 or 46-1 of the |
Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012. A person |
whose license or other authorization to practice is suspended |
under this Section is prohibited from practicing until the |
restitution is made in full.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-1551, eff. 7-1-11; 97-1150, eff. 1-25-13.)
|
(225 ILCS 85/32) (from Ch. 111, par. 4152)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2018)
|
Sec. 32.
The Department shall render no final |
|
administrative decision
relative to any application for a |
license or certificate of registration
under this Act if the |
applicant for such license or certificate of registration
is |
the subject of a pending disciplinary proceeding under this Act
|
or another Act administered by the Department. For purposes of |
this
Section "applicant" means an individual or sole |
proprietor, or an individual
who is an officer, director or |
owner of a 5 percent or more beneficial
interest of the |
applicant.
|
(Source: P.A. 85-796 .)
|
(225 ILCS 85/33) (from Ch. 111, par. 4153)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2018)
|
Sec. 33. The Secretary Director of the Department may, upon |
receipt of a
written communication from the Secretary of Human |
Services, the Director of Healthcare and Family Services |
(formerly Director of
Public Aid), or the Director of Public |
Health
that continuation of practice of a person
licensed or |
registered under this Act constitutes an immediate danger
to |
the public, immediately suspend the license or registration of |
such
person without a hearing. In instances in which the |
Secretary Director immediately
suspends a license or |
registration under this Act, a hearing
upon such person's |
license must be convened by the Board within 15 days
after such |
suspension and completed without appreciable delay, such
|
hearing held to determine whether to recommend to the Secretary |
|
Director that
the person's license be revoked, suspended, |
placed on probationary
status or reinstated, or such person be |
subject to other disciplinary
action. In such hearing, the |
written communication and any other evidence
submitted |
therewith may be introduced as evidence against such person;
|
provided however, the person, or his counsel, shall have the |
opportunity
to discredit or impeach such evidence and submit |
evidence rebutting
same.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-331, eff. 8-21-07.)
|
(225 ILCS 85/34) (from Ch. 111, par. 4154)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2018)
|
Sec. 34.
The determination by a circuit court that a |
licensee is
subject to involuntary admission or judicial |
admission as provided
in the "Mental Health and Developmental |
Disabilities Code", approved
September 5, 1978, as now or |
hereafter amended operates as an automatic
suspension. Such |
suspension will end only upon a finding by a court
that the |
patient is no longer subject to involuntary admission or |
judicial
admission and issues an order so finding and |
discharging the patient;
and upon the recommendation of the |
Board to the Department Director that the licensee
be allowed |
to resume his practice.
|
(Source: P.A. 85-796 .)
|
(225 ILCS 85/35.1) (from Ch. 111, par. 4155.1)
|
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2018)
|
Sec. 35.1. (a) If any person violates the provision of this |
Act,
the Secretary
Director may, in the name of the People of |
the State of Illinois, through the
Attorney General of the |
State of Illinois, or the State's Attorney
of any county in |
which the action is brought, petition, for an order
enjoining |
such violation or for an order enforcing compliance with
this |
Act. Upon the filing of a verified petition in such court, the
|
court may issue a temporary restraining order, without notice |
or bond,
and may preliminarily and permanently enjoin such |
violation, and if
it is established that such person has |
violated or is violating the
injunction, the Court may punish |
the offender for contempt of court.
Proceedings under this |
Section shall be in addition to, and not in
lieu of, all other |
remedies and penalties provided by this Act.
|
(b) If any person shall practice as a pharmacist or hold |
himself
out
as a pharmacist or operate a pharmacy or drugstore, |
including a nonresident
pharmacy under Section 16a, without |
being licensed under the provisions of
this
Act, then any |
licensed pharmacist, any interested party or any person
injured |
thereby may, in addition to the Secretary Director , petition |
for relief
as provided in subsection (a) of this Section.
|
Whoever knowingly practices or offers to practice in this |
State without
being appropriately licensed or registered under |
this Act shall be guilty
of a Class A misdemeanor and for each |
subsequent conviction, shall
be guilty of a Class 4 felony.
|
|
(c) Whenever in the opinion of the Department any person |
not
licensed
in good standing under this Act violates any |
provision of this Act,
the Department may issue a rule to show |
cause why an order to cease
and desist should not be entered |
against him. The rule shall clearly
set forth the grounds |
relied upon by the Department and shall provide
a period of 7 |
days from the date of the rule to file an answer to the
|
satisfaction of the Department. Failure to answer to the |
satisfaction
of the Department shall cause an order to cease |
and desist to be issued
forthwith.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-689, eff. 10-29-07.)
|
(225 ILCS 85/35.2) (from Ch. 111, par. 4155.2)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2018)
|
Sec. 35.2. The Department's pharmacy investigators
may |
investigate the actions of any applicant or of any person or |
persons
holding or claiming to hold a license or registration . |
The Department
shall, before suspending, revoking, placing on |
probationary status,
or taking any other disciplinary or |
non-disciplinary action as the Department may deem
proper with |
regard to any license or certificate , at least 30 days
prior to |
the date set for the hearing, notify the accused in writing
of |
any charges made and the time and place for a hearing of the |
charges
before the Board, direct him or her to file his or her |
written answer thereto to
the Board under oath within 20 days |
after the service on him or her of such
notice and inform him |
|
or her that if he or she fails to file such answer default
will |
be taken against him or her and his or her license or |
certificate may be suspended,
revoked, placed on probationary |
status, or have other disciplinary
action, including limiting |
the scope, nature or extent of his or her practice,
provided |
for herein. Such written notice may be served by personal
|
delivery , email to the respondent's email address of record, or |
certified or registered mail to the respondent at his or her
|
address
of record. At the time and place
fixed in the notice, |
the Board shall proceed to hear the charges and
the parties or |
their counsel shall be accorded ample opportunity to
present |
such statements, testimony, evidence and argument as may be
|
pertinent to the charges or to the defense thereto. Such |
hearing may
be continued from time to time. In case the accused |
person, after
receiving notice, fails to file an answer, his or |
her license or certificate
may , in the discretion of the |
Secretary Director , having received first the recommendation
|
of the Board, be suspended, revoked, placed on probationary |
status,
or the Secretary Director may take whatever |
disciplinary action as he or she may deem
proper as provided |
herein, including limiting the scope, nature, or
extent of said |
person's practice, without a hearing, if the act or
acts |
charged constitute sufficient grounds for such action under |
this
Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-689, eff. 10-29-07 .)
|
|
(225 ILCS 85/35.5) (from Ch. 111, par. 4155.5)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2018)
|
Sec. 35.5. The Department shall have power to subpoena
and |
bring before it any person in this State and to take testimony,
|
either orally or by deposition or both, with the same fees and |
mileage
and in the same manner as prescribed by law in judicial |
proceedings
in civil cases in circuit courts of this State. The |
Department may subpoena and compel the production of documents, |
papers, files, books, and records in connection with any |
hearing or investigation.
|
The Secretary Director , and any member of the Board, shall |
each have power to
administer oaths to witnesses at any hearing |
which the Department is
authorized to conduct under this Act, |
and any other oaths required
or authorized to be administered |
by the Department hereunder.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-689, eff. 10-29-07.)
|
(225 ILCS 85/35.6) (from Ch. 111, par. 4155.6)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2018)
|
Sec. 35.6.
At the conclusion of the hearing, the Board
|
shall present to the Secretary Director a written report of its |
findings of fact,
conclusions of law, and recommendations. The |
report shall contain
a finding whether or not the accused |
person violated this Act or failed
to comply with the |
conditions required in this Act. The Board shall
specify the |
nature of the violation or failure to comply, and shall
make |
|
its recommendations to the Secretary Director .
|
The report of findings of fact, conclusions of law, and |
recommendations
of the Board shall be the basis for the |
Department's order or refusal
or for the granting of a license |
or registration . The finding is not
admissible in evidence |
against the person in a criminal prosecution
brought for the |
violation of this Act, but the hearing and finding
are not a |
bar to a criminal prosecution brought for the violation of
this |
Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 85-796 .)
|
(225 ILCS 85/35.7) (from Ch. 111, par. 4155.7)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2018)
|
Sec. 35.7. Notwithstanding
the provisions of Section 35.6 |
of this Act, the Secretary Director shall have
the authority to |
appoint any attorney duly licensed to practice law
in the State |
of Illinois to serve as the hearing officer in any action
|
before the Board for refusal to issue, renew, or discipline of |
a license
or certificate. The Director shall notify the Board |
of any such appointment .
The hearing officer shall have full |
authority to conduct the hearing.
There may shall be present at |
least one or more members member of the Board at any such
|
hearing. The hearing officer shall report his findings of fact, |
conclusions
of law and recommendations to the Board and the |
Secretary Director . The Board
shall have 60 days from receipt |
of the report to review the report
of the hearing officer and |
|
present their findings of fact, conclusions
of law, and |
recommendations to the Secretary Director . If the Board fails |
to
present its report within the 60-day 60 day period, the |
respondent may request in writing a direct appeal to the |
Secretary, in which case the Secretary may shall, within 7 |
calendar days after the request, issue an order directing the |
Board to issue its findings of fact, conclusions of law, and |
recommendations to the Secretary within 30 calendar days after |
such order. If the Board fails to issue its findings of fact, |
conclusions of law, and recommendations within that time frame |
to the Secretary after the entry of such order, the Secretary |
shall, within 30 calendar days thereafter, issue an order based |
upon the report of the hearing officer and the record of the |
proceedings or issue an order remanding the matter back to the |
hearing officer for additional proceedings in accordance with |
the order. If (i) a direct appeal is requested, (ii) the Board |
fails to issue its findings of fact, conclusions of law, and |
recommendations within the 30-day mandate from the Secretary or |
the Secretary fails to order the Board to do so, and (iii) the |
Secretary fails to issue an order within 30 calendar days |
thereafter, then the hearing officer's report is deemed |
accepted and a final decision of the Secretary. Notwithstanding |
any other provision of this Section, if the Secretary, upon |
review, determines that substantial justice has not been done |
in the revocation, suspension, or refusal to issue or renew a |
license or other disciplinary action taken as the result of the |
|
entry of the hearing officer's report, the Secretary may order |
a rehearing by the same or other examiners. If the Secretary |
disagrees with the recommendation of the Board or the hearing |
officer, the Secretary may issue an order in contravention of |
the recommendation.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-689, eff. 10-29-07.)
|
(225 ILCS 85/35.8) (from Ch. 111, par. 4155.8)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2018)
|
Sec. 35.8.
In any case involving the refusal to issue,
|
renew or discipline of a license or registration , a copy of the |
Board's
report shall be served upon the respondent by the |
Department, either
personally or as provided in this Act for |
the service of the notice
of hearing. Within 20 days after such |
service, the respondent may
present to the Department a motion |
in writing for a rehearing, which
motion shall specify the |
particular grounds therefor. If no motion for
rehearing is |
filed, then upon the expiration
of the time specified for |
filing such a motion, or if a motion for
rehearing is denied, |
then upon such denial the Secretary Director may enter an
order |
in accordance with recommendations of the Board except as |
provided
in Section 35.6 or 35.7 of this Act. If the respondent |
shall order
from the reporting service, and pay for a |
transcript of the record
within the time for filing a motion |
for rehearing, the 20-day 20 day period
within which such a |
motion may be filed shall commence upon the delivery
of the |
|
transcript to the respondent.
|
(Source: P.A. 85-796 .)
|
(225 ILCS 85/35.12) (from Ch. 111, par. 4155.12)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2018)
|
Sec. 35.12. Notwithstanding the provisions herein |
concerning the
conduct of hearings and recommendations for |
disciplinary actions, the Secretary
Director shall have the |
authority to negotiate agreements with licensees
and |
registrants resulting in disciplinary consent orders provided |
a Board
member is present and the discipline is recommended by |
a the Board member.
Such consent orders may provide for any of |
the forms of discipline otherwise
provided herein or any other |
disciplinary or non-disciplinary action the parties agree to . |
Such consent orders shall provide that they were not entered
|
into as a result of any coercion by the Department.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-689, eff. 10-29-07.)
|
(225 ILCS 85/35.13) (from Ch. 111, par. 4155.13)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2018)
|
Sec. 35.13. Order or certified copy; prima facie proof. An |
order or a
certified copy thereof, over the seal of the |
Department and purporting to be
signed by the Secretary |
Director , shall be prima facie proof that:
|
(a) the signature is the genuine signature of the |
Secretary
Director ;
|
|
(b) the Secretary Director is duly appointed and |
qualified;
and
|
(c) the Board and the members thereof are qualified to |
act.
|
(Source: P.A. 91-357, eff. 7-29-99 .)
|
(225 ILCS 85/35.14) (from Ch. 111, par. 4155.14)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2018)
|
Sec. 35.14.
At any time after the successful completion of |
a term of probation, suspension , or revocation of any license
|
certificate , the Department may restore it to the accused |
person without
examination, upon the written recommendation of |
the Board. A license that has been suspended or revoked shall |
be considered nonrenewed for purposes of restoration and a |
person restoring his or her license from suspension or |
revocation must comply with the requirements for restoration of |
a nonrenewed license as set forth in Section 12 of this Act and |
any related rules adopted.
|
(Source: P.A. 85-796 .)
|
(225 ILCS 85/35.15) (from Ch. 111, par. 4155.15)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2018)
|
Sec. 35.15.
Upon the revocation or suspension
of any |
license or registration , the holder shall forthwith surrender
|
the license license(s) or registration(s) to the Department and |
if the licensee
fails to do so, the Department shall have the |
|
right to seize the license license(s)
or certificate(s) .
|
(Source: P.A. 85-796 .)
|
(225 ILCS 85/35.16) (from Ch. 111, par. 4155.16)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2018)
|
Sec. 35.16. The Secretary may
temporarily suspend the |
license of a pharmacist , or pharmacy, registered or the |
registration of a pharmacy technician ,
or registered certified |
pharmacy technician, without a hearing, simultaneously
with |
the institution of proceedings for a hearing provided for in |
Section
35.2 of this Act, if the Secretary finds that evidence |
in his possession
indicates that a continuation in practice |
would constitute an imminent
danger to the public. In the event |
that the Secretary suspends, temporarily,
this license or |
registration without a hearing, a hearing by the Department
|
must be held within 15
days after such suspension has occurred, |
and
be concluded without appreciable delay.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-689, eff. 10-29-07; 96-673, eff. 1-1-10.)
|
(225 ILCS 85/35.18) (from Ch. 111, par. 4155.18)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2018)
|
Sec. 35.18. Certification of record. The Department
shall |
not be required to certify any record to the court , or to file |
an any
answer in court , or to otherwise appear in any court in |
a judicial review
proceeding , unless and until the Department |
has received from the plaintiff there is filed in the court, |
|
with the complaint,
a receipt from the Department acknowledging |
payment of the costs of
furnishing and certifying the record , |
which costs shall be determined by the Department . Exhibits |
shall be certified without cost. Failure on the part
of the |
plaintiff to file a receipt in court shall be grounds for
|
dismissal of the action. During the pendency and hearing of any |
and all judicial proceedings incident to the disciplinary |
action the sanctions imposed upon the accused by the Department |
because of acts or omissions related to the delivery of direct |
patient care as specified in the Department's final |
administrative decision, shall, as a matter of public policy, |
remain in full force and effect in order to protect the public |
pending final resolution of any of the proceedings.
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(Source: P.A. 87-1031 .)
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(225 ILCS 85/35.20 new) |
Sec. 35.20. Confidentiality. All information collected by |
the Department in the course of an examination or investigation |
of a licensee or applicant, including, but not limited to, any |
complaint against a licensee filed with the Department and |
information collected to investigate any such complaint, shall |
be maintained for the confidential use of the Department and |
shall not be disclosed. The Department may not disclose the |
information to anyone other than law enforcement officials, |
other regulatory agencies that have an appropriate regulatory |
interest as determined by the Secretary, or to a party |
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presenting a lawful subpoena to the Department. Information and |
documents disclosed to a federal, State, county, or local law |
enforcement agency shall not be disclosed by the agency for any |
purpose to any other agency or person. A formal complaint filed |
against a licensee by the Department or any order issued by the |
Department against a licensee or applicant shall be a public |
record, except as otherwise prohibited by law. |
(225 ILCS 85/35.21 new) |
Sec. 35.21. Citations. |
(a) The Department shall adopt rules to permit the issuance |
of citations to any licensee for any violation of this Act or |
the rules. The citation shall be issued to the licensee or |
other person alleged to have committed one or more violations |
and shall contain the licensee's or other person's name and |
address, the licensee's license number, if any, a brief factual |
statement, the Sections of this Act or the rules allegedly |
violated, and the penalty imposed, which shall not exceed |
$1,000. The citation must clearly state that if the cited |
person wishes to dispute the citation, he or she may request in |
writing, within 30 days after the citation is served, a hearing |
before the Department. If the cited person does not request a |
hearing within 30 days after the citation is served, then the |
citation shall become a final, non-disciplinary order and any |
fine imposed is due and payable. If the cited person requests a |
hearing within 30 days after the citation is served, the |
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Department shall afford the cited person a hearing conducted in |
the same manner as a hearing provided in this Act for any |
violation of this Act and shall determine whether the cited |
person committed the violation as charged and whether the fine |
as levied is warranted. If the violation is found, any fine |
shall constitute discipline and be due and payable within 30 |
days of the order of the Secretary. Failure to comply with any |
final order may subject the licensed person to further |
discipline or other action by the Department or a referral to |
the State's Attorney. |
(b) A citation must be issued within 6 months after the |
reporting of a violation that is the basis for the citation. |
(c) Service of a citation shall be made in person, |
electronically, or by mail to the licensee at the licensee's |
address of record or email address of record. |
(d) Nothing in this Section shall prohibit or limit the |
Department from taking further action pursuant to this Act and |
rules for additional, repeated, or continuing violations.
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(225 ILCS 85/36) (from Ch. 111, par. 4156)
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(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2018)
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Sec. 36. Illinois Administrative Procedure Act. The |
Illinois Administrative
Procedure Act is hereby expressly |
adopted and incorporated herein as if all of
the provisions of |
that Act were included in this Act, except that the provision
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of subsection (d) of Section 10-65 of the Illinois |
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Administrative Procedure Act
that provides that at hearings the |
licensee has the right to show compliance
with all lawful |
requirements for retention, continuation or renewal of the
|
license is specifically excluded. For the purpose of this Act , |
the notice
required under Section 10-25 of the Illinois |
Administrative Procedure Act is deemed
sufficient when |
personally served, mailed to the address of record of the |
applicant or licensee, or emailed to the email address of |
record of the applicant or licensee last known address of a |
party .
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(Source: P.A. 88-45 .)
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Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon |
becoming law.
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