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Public Act 102-0581 |
SB1840 Enrolled | LRB102 15013 CPF 20368 b |
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AN ACT concerning regulation.
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Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
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represented in the General Assembly:
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Section 5. The Community Benefits Act is amended by |
changing Sections 10, 15, and 20 and by adding Section 22 as |
follows:
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(210 ILCS 76/10)
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Sec. 10. Definitions. As used in this Act:
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"Bad debt" means the current period charge for actual or |
expected doubtful accounting resulting from the extension of |
credit. |
"Charity care" means care provided by a health care |
provider for which the
provider does not expect to receive |
payment from the patient or a third party
payer. "Charity |
care" includes the actual cost of services provided based upon |
the total cost to charge ratio derived from a nonprofit |
hospital's most recently filed Medicare cost report Worksheet |
C and not based upon the charges for the services. "Charity |
care" does not include bad debt.
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"Community benefits" means the unreimbursed cost to a |
hospital or health
system of providing charity care, language |
assistant services,
government-sponsored indigent health care, |
donations, volunteer services,
education, |
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government-sponsored program services, research, and |
subsidized
health services and collecting bad debts.
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"Community benefits" does not include the cost of paying any |
taxes or other
governmental assessments. |
"Financial assistance" means a discount provided to a |
patient under the terms and conditions the hospital offers to |
qualified patients or as required by law.
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" Government-sponsored Government sponsored indigent |
health care" means the unreimbursed cost to a
hospital or |
health system of Medicare, providing health care services to
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recipients of Medicaid,
and other
federal, State, or local |
indigent health care programs, eligibility for which
is based |
on
financial need.
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"Health system" means an entity that owns or operates at |
least one hospital. |
"Net patient revenue" means gross service revenue less |
provisions for contractual adjustments with third-party |
payors, courtesy and policy discounts, or other adjustments |
and deductions, excluding charity care.
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"Nonprofit hospital" means a hospital that is organized as |
a nonprofit
corporation,
including religious organizations, or |
a charitable trust under Illinois law or
the laws of
any other |
state or country.
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"Subsidized health services" means those services provided |
by a hospital in
response to community needs for which the |
reimbursement is less than the
hospital's cost of providing |
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the services that must be subsidized by other
hospital or |
nonprofit supporting entity revenue sources. "Subsidized |
health
services" includes, but is not limited to, emergency |
and trauma care,
neonatal intensive care, community health |
clinics, and collaborative efforts
with local government or |
private agencies to prevent illness and improve
wellness, such |
as immunization programs.
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(Source: P.A. 93-480, eff. 8-8-03.)
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(210 ILCS 76/15)
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Sec. 15. Organizational mission statement; community |
benefits plan. A
nonprofit hospital shall develop:
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(1) an organizational mission statement that |
identifies the hospital's
commitment to serving the health |
care needs of the community; and
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(2) a community benefits plan defined as an |
operational plan for serving
the community's health care |
needs that:
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(A) sets out goals and objectives for providing |
community benefits
that include charity care and |
government-sponsored government sponsored indigent |
health care;
and
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(B) identifies the populations and communities |
served by the
hospital ; and . |
(C) describes activities the hospital is |
undertaking to address health equity, reduce health |
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disparities, and improve community health. This may |
include, but is not limited to: |
(i) efforts to recruit and promote a racially |
and culturally diverse and representative |
workforce; |
(ii) efforts to procure goods and services |
locally and from historically underrepresented |
communities; |
(iii) training that addresses cultural |
competency and implicit bias; and |
(iv) partnerships and investments to address |
social needs such as food, housing, and community |
safety.
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(Source: P.A. 93-480, eff. 8-8-03.)
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(210 ILCS 76/20)
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Sec. 20. Annual report for community benefits plan.
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(a) Each nonprofit hospital shall prepare an annual report |
of the community
benefits plan. The report must include, in |
addition to the community benefits
plan itself,
all of the |
following background information:
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(1) The hospital's mission statement.
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(2) A disclosure of the health care needs of the |
community that were
considered in developing the |
hospital's community benefits plan.
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(3) A disclosure of the amount and types of community |
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benefits actually
provided, including charity care , and |
details about financial assistance applications received |
and processed by the hospital as specified in paragraph |
(5) of subsection (a) of Section 22 . Charity care must be |
reported separate from
other community benefits. In |
reporting charity care,
the hospital must report the |
actual cost of services provided, based on the
total cost |
to charge ratio derived from the hospital's Medicare cost |
report
(CMS 2552-96 Worksheet C, Part 1, PPS Inpatient |
Ratios), not the charges
for
the services. For a health |
system that includes more than one hospital, charity care |
spending and financial assistance application data must be |
reported separately for each individual hospital within |
the health system.
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(4) Audited annual financial reports for its most |
recently completed
fiscal year.
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(b) Each nonprofit hospital shall annually file a report |
of the community
benefits
plan with the Attorney General. The |
report must be filed not later than the
last day of the sixth |
month after the close of the hospital's fiscal year,
beginning |
with the hospital fiscal year that ends in 2004.
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(c) Each nonprofit hospital shall prepare a statement that |
notifies the
public
that
the annual report of the community |
benefits plan is:
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(1) public information;
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(2) filed with the Attorney General; and
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(3) available to the public on request from the |
Attorney General.
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This statement shall be made available to the public.
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(d) The obligations of a hospital under this Act, except |
for the filing of
its audited financial report, shall take |
effect beginning with the hospital's
fiscal year that begins |
after the effective date of this Act. Within 60 days
of the |
effective date of this Act, a hospital shall file the audited |
annual
financial report that has been completed for its most |
recently completed fiscal
year. Thereafter, a hospital shall |
include its audited annual financial report
for its most |
recently completed fiscal year in its annual report of its
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community benefits plan.
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(Source: P.A. 93-480, eff. 8-8-03.)
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(210 ILCS 76/22 new) |
Sec. 22. Public reports. |
(a) In order to increase transparency and accessibility of |
charity care and financial assistance data, a hospital shall |
make the annual hospital community benefits plan report |
submitted to the Attorney General under Section 20 available |
to the public by publishing the information on the hospital's |
website in the same location where annual reports are posted |
or on a prominent location on the homepage of the hospital's |
website. A hospital is not required to post its audited |
financial statements. Information made available to the public |
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shall include, but shall not be limited to, the following: |
(1) The reporting period. |
(2) Charity care costs consistent with the reporting |
requirements in paragraph (3) of subsection (a) of Section |
20. Charity care costs associated with services provided |
in a hospital's emergency department shall be reported as |
a subset of total charity care costs. |
(3) Total net patient revenue, reported separately by |
hospital if the reporting health system includes more than |
one hospital. |
(4) Total community benefits spending. If a hospital |
is owned or operated by a health system, total community |
benefits spending may be reported as a health system. |
(5) Data on financial assistance applications |
consistent with the reporting requirements in paragraph |
(3) of subsection (a) of Section 20, including: |
(A) the number of applications submitted to the |
hospital, both complete and incomplete; |
(B) the number of applications approved; and |
(C) the number of applications denied and the 5 |
most frequent reasons for denial. |
(6) To the extent that race, ethnicity, sex, or |
preferred language is collected and available for |
financial assistance applications, the data outlined in |
paragraph (5) shall be reported by race, ethnicity, sex, |
and preferred language. If this data is not provided by |
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the patient, the hospital shall indicate this in its |
reports. Public reporting of this information shall begin |
with the community benefit report filed on or after July |
1, 2022. A hospital that files a report without having a |
full year of demographic data as required by this Act may |
indicate this in its report. |
(b) The Attorney General shall provide notice on the |
Attorney General's website informing the public that, upon |
request, the Attorney General will provide the annual reports |
filed with the Attorney General under Section 20. The notice |
shall include the contact information to submit a request. |
Section 10. The Hospital Uninsured Patient Discount Act is |
amended by changing Sections 5, 10, 15, and 25 as follows: |
(210 ILCS 89/5)
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Sec. 5. Definitions. As used in this Act: |
"Community health center" means a federally qualified |
health center as defined in Section 1905(l)(2)(B) of the |
federal Social Security Act or a federally qualified health |
center look-alike. |
"Cost to charge ratio" means the ratio of a hospital's |
costs to its charges taken from its most recently filed |
Medicare cost report (CMS 2552-96 Worksheet C, Part I, PPS |
Inpatient Ratios). |
"Critical Access Hospital" means a hospital that is |
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designated as such under the federal Medicare Rural Hospital |
Flexibility Program. |
"Family income" means the sum of a family's annual |
earnings and cash benefits from all sources before taxes, less |
payments made for child support. |
"Federal poverty income guidelines" means the poverty |
guidelines updated periodically in the Federal Register by the |
United States Department of Health and Human Services under |
authority of 42 U.S.C. 9902(2). |
"Financial assistance" means a discount provided to a |
patient under the terms and conditions a hospital offers to |
qualified patients or as required by law. |
"Free and charitable clinic" means a 501(c)(3) tax-exempt |
health care organization providing health services to |
low-income uninsured or underinsured individuals that is |
recognized by either the Illinois Association of Free and |
Charitable Clinics or the National Association of Free and |
Charitable Clinics. |
"Health care services" means any medically necessary |
inpatient or outpatient hospital service, including |
pharmaceuticals or supplies provided by a hospital to a |
patient. |
"Hospital" means any facility or institution required to |
be licensed pursuant to the Hospital Licensing Act or operated |
under the University of Illinois Hospital Act. |
"Illinois resident" means any a person who lives in |
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Illinois and who intends to remain living in Illinois |
indefinitely. Relocation to Illinois for the sole purpose of |
receiving health care benefits does not satisfy the residency |
requirement under this Act. |
"Medically necessary" means any inpatient or outpatient |
hospital service, including pharmaceuticals or supplies |
provided by a hospital to a patient, covered under Title XVIII |
of the federal Social Security Act for beneficiaries with the |
same clinical presentation as the uninsured patient. A |
"medically necessary" service does not include any of the |
following: |
(1) Non-medical services such as social and vocational |
services. |
(2) Elective cosmetic surgery, but not plastic surgery |
designed to correct disfigurement caused by injury, |
illness, or congenital defect or deformity. |
"Rural hospital" means a hospital that is located outside |
a metropolitan statistical area. |
"Uninsured discount" means a hospital's charges multiplied |
by the uninsured discount factor. |
"Uninsured discount factor" means 1.0 less the product of |
a hospital's cost to charge ratio multiplied by 1.35. |
"Uninsured patient" means an Illinois resident who is a |
patient of a hospital and is not covered under a policy of |
health insurance and is not a beneficiary under a public or |
private health insurance, health benefit, or other health |
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coverage program, including high deductible health insurance |
plans, workers' compensation, accident liability insurance, or |
other third party liability.
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(Source: P.A. 95-965, eff. 12-22-08.) |
(210 ILCS 89/10)
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Sec. 10. Uninsured patient discounts. |
(a) Eligibility. |
(1) A hospital, other than a rural hospital or |
Critical Access Hospital, shall provide a discount from |
its charges to any uninsured patient who applies for a |
discount and has family income of not more than 600% of the |
federal poverty income guidelines for all medically |
necessary health care services exceeding $150 $300 in any |
one inpatient admission or outpatient encounter. |
(2) A hospital, other than a rural hospital or |
Critical Access Hospital, shall provide a charitable |
discount of 100% of its charges for all medically |
necessary health care services exceeding $150 $300 in any |
one inpatient admission or outpatient encounter to any |
uninsured patient who applies for a discount and has |
family income of not more than 200% of the federal poverty |
income guidelines. |
(3) A rural hospital or Critical Access Hospital shall |
provide a discount from its charges to any uninsured |
patient who applies for a discount and has annual family |
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income of not more than 300% of the federal poverty income |
guidelines for all medically necessary health care |
services exceeding $300 in any one inpatient admission or |
outpatient encounter. |
(4) A rural hospital or Critical Access Hospital shall |
provide a charitable discount of 100% of its charges for |
all medically necessary health care services exceeding |
$300 in any one inpatient admission or outpatient |
encounter to any uninsured patient who applies for a |
discount and has family income of not more than 125% of the |
federal poverty income guidelines. |
(b) Discount. For all health care services exceeding $300 |
in any one inpatient admission or outpatient encounter, a |
hospital shall not collect from an uninsured patient, deemed |
eligible under subsection (a), more than its charges less the |
amount of the uninsured discount. |
(c) Maximum Collectible Amount. |
(1) The maximum amount that may be collected in a |
12-month 12 month period for health care services provided |
by the hospital from a patient determined by that hospital |
to be eligible under subsection (a) is 20% 25% of the |
patient's family income, and is subject to the patient's |
continued eligibility under this Act. |
(2) The 12-month 12 month period to which the maximum |
amount applies shall begin on the first date, after the |
effective date of this Act, an uninsured patient receives |
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health care services that are determined to be eligible |
for the uninsured discount at that hospital. |
(3) To be eligible to have this maximum amount applied |
to subsequent charges, the uninsured patient shall inform |
the hospital in subsequent inpatient admissions or |
outpatient encounters that the patient has previously |
received health care services from that hospital and was |
determined to be entitled to the uninsured discount. The |
availability of the maximum collectible amount shall be |
included in the hospital's financial assistance |
information provided to uninsured patients. |
(4) Hospitals may adopt policies to exclude an |
uninsured patient from the application of subdivision |
(c)(1) when the patient owns assets having a value in |
excess of 600% of the federal poverty level for hospitals |
in a metropolitan statistical area or owns assets having a |
value in excess of 300% of the federal poverty level for |
Critical Access Hospitals or hospitals outside a |
metropolitan statistical area, not counting the following |
assets: the uninsured patient's primary residence; |
personal property exempt from judgment under Section |
12-1001 of the Code of Civil Procedure; or any amounts |
held in a pension or retirement plan, provided, however, |
that distributions and payments from pension or retirement |
plans may be included as income for the purposes of this |
Act. |
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(d) Each hospital bill, invoice, or other summary of |
charges to an uninsured patient shall include with it, or on |
it, a prominent statement that an uninsured patient who meets |
certain income requirements may qualify for an uninsured |
discount and information regarding how an uninsured patient |
may apply for consideration under the hospital's financial |
assistance policy. The hospital's financial assistance |
application shall include language that directs the uninsured |
patient to contact the hospital's financial counseling |
department with questions or concerns, along with contact |
information for the financial counseling department, and shall |
state: "Complaints or concerns with the uninsured patient |
discount application process or hospital financial assistance |
process may be reported to the Health Care Bureau of the |
Illinois Attorney General.". A website, phone number, or both |
provided by the Attorney General shall be included with this |
statement.
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(Source: P.A. 97-690, eff. 6-14-12.) |
(210 ILCS 89/15)
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Sec. 15. Patient responsibility. |
(a) Hospitals may make the availability of a discount and |
the maximum collectible amount under this Act contingent upon |
the uninsured patient first applying for coverage under public |
health insurance programs, such as Medicare, Medicaid, |
AllKids, the State Children's Health Insurance Program, or any |
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other program, if there is a reasonable basis to believe that |
the uninsured patient may be eligible for such program. |
(b) Hospitals shall permit an uninsured patient to apply |
for a discount within 90 60 days of the date of discharge or |
date of service. |
Hospitals shall offer uninsured patients who receive |
community-based primary care provided by a community health |
center or a free and charitable clinic, are referred by such an |
entity to the hospital, and seek access to nonemergency |
hospital-based health care services with an opportunity to be |
screened for and assistance with applying for public health |
insurance programs if there is a reasonable basis to believe |
that the uninsured patient may be eligible for a public health |
insurance program. An uninsured patient who receives |
community-based primary care provided by a community health |
center or free and charitable clinic and is referred by such an |
entity to the hospital for whom there is not a reasonable basis |
to believe that the uninsured patient may be eligible for a |
public health insurance program shall be given the opportunity |
to apply for hospital financial assistance when hospital |
services are scheduled. |
(1) Income verification. Hospitals may require an |
uninsured patient who is requesting an uninsured discount |
to provide documentation of family income. Acceptable |
family income documentation shall include any one of the |
following: |
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(A) a copy of the most recent tax return; |
(B) a copy of the most recent W-2 form and 1099 |
forms; |
(C) copies of the 2 most recent pay stubs; |
(D) written income verification from an employer |
if paid in cash; or |
(E) one other reasonable form of third party |
income verification
deemed acceptable to the hospital. |
(2) Asset verification. Hospitals may require an |
uninsured patient who is requesting an uninsured discount |
to certify the existence or absence of assets owned by the |
patient and to provide documentation of the value of such |
assets , except for those assets referenced in paragraph |
(4) of subsection (c) of Section 10 . Acceptable |
documentation may include statements from financial |
institutions or some other third party verification of an |
asset's value. If no third party verification exists, then |
the patient shall certify as to the estimated value of the |
asset. |
(3) Illinois resident verification. Hospitals may |
require an uninsured patient who is requesting an |
uninsured discount to verify Illinois residency. |
Acceptable verification of Illinois residency shall |
include any one of the following: |
(A) any of the documents listed in paragraph (1); |
(B) a valid state-issued identification card; |
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(C) a recent residential utility bill; |
(D) a lease agreement; |
(E) a vehicle registration card; |
(F) a voter registration card; |
(G) mail addressed to the uninsured patient at an |
Illinois address from a government or other credible |
source; |
(H) a statement from a family member of the |
uninsured patient who resides at the same address and |
presents verification of residency; or |
(I) a letter from a homeless shelter, transitional |
house or other similar facility verifying that the |
uninsured patient resides at the facility ; or . |
(J) a temporary visitor's drivers license. |
(c) Hospital obligations toward an individual uninsured |
patient under this Act shall cease if that patient |
unreasonably fails or refuses to provide the hospital with |
information or documentation requested under subsection (b) or |
to apply for coverage under public programs when requested |
under subsection (a) within 30 days of the hospital's request. |
(d) In order for a hospital to determine the 12 month |
maximum amount that can be collected from a patient deemed |
eligible under Section 10, an uninsured patient shall inform |
the hospital in subsequent inpatient admissions or outpatient |
encounters that the patient has previously received health |
care services from that hospital and was determined to be |
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entitled to the uninsured discount. |
(e) Hospitals may require patients to certify that all of |
the information provided in the application is true. The |
application may state that if any of the information is |
untrue, any discount granted to the patient is forfeited and |
the patient is responsible for payment of the hospital's full |
charges. |
(f) Hospitals shall ask for an applicant's race, |
ethnicity, sex, and preferred language on the financial |
assistance application. However, the questions shall be |
clearly marked as optional responses for the patient and shall |
note that responses or nonresponses by the patient will not |
have any impact on the outcome of the application.
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(Source: P.A. 95-965, eff. 12-22-08.) |
(210 ILCS 89/25)
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Sec. 25. Enforcement. |
(a) The Attorney General is responsible for administering |
and ensuring compliance with this Act, including the |
development of any rules necessary for the implementation and |
enforcement of this Act. |
(b) The Attorney General shall develop and implement a |
process for receiving and handling complaints from individuals |
or hospitals regarding possible violations of this Act. |
(c) The Attorney General may conduct any investigation |
deemed necessary regarding possible violations of this Act by |
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any hospital including, without limitation, the issuance of |
subpoenas to: |
(1) require the hospital to file a statement or report |
or answer interrogatories in writing as to all information |
relevant to the alleged violations; |
(2) examine under oath any person who possesses |
knowledge or information directly related to the alleged |
violations; and |
(3) examine any record, book, document, account, or |
paper necessary to investigate the alleged violation. |
(d) If the Attorney General determines that there is a |
reason to believe that any hospital has violated this Act, the |
Attorney General may bring an action in the name of the People |
of the State against the hospital to obtain temporary, |
preliminary, or permanent injunctive relief for any act, |
policy, or practice by the hospital that violates this Act. |
Before bringing such an action, the Attorney General may |
permit the hospital to submit a Correction Plan for the |
Attorney General's approval. |
(e) This Section applies if: |
(1) A court orders a party to make payments to the |
Attorney General and the payments are to be used for the |
operations of the Office of the Attorney General; or |
(2) A party agrees in a Correction Plan under this Act |
to make payments to the Attorney General for the |
operations of the Office of the Attorney General. |
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(f) Moneys paid under any of the conditions described in |
subsection (e) shall be deposited into the Attorney General |
Court Ordered and Voluntary Compliance Payment Projects Fund. |
Moneys in the Fund shall be used, subject to appropriation, |
for the performance of any function, pertaining to the |
exercise of the duties, to the Attorney General including, but |
not limited to, enforcement of any law of this State and |
conducting public education programs; however, any moneys in |
the Fund that are required by the court to be used for a |
particular purpose shall be used for that purpose.
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(g) The Attorney General may seek the assessment of a |
civil monetary penalty not to exceed $500 per violation in any |
action filed under this Act where a hospital, by pattern or |
practice, knowingly violates Section 10 of this Act. |
(h) In the event a court grants a final order of relief |
against any hospital for a violation of this Act, the Attorney |
General may, after all appeal rights have been exhausted, |
refer the hospital to the Illinois Department of Public Health |
for possible adverse licensure action under the Hospital |
Licensing Act. |
(i) Each hospital shall file Worksheet C Part I from its |
most recently filed Medicare Cost Report with the Attorney |
General within 60 days after the effective date of this Act and |
thereafter shall file each subsequent Worksheet C Part I with |
the Attorney General within 30 days of filing its Medicare |
Cost Report with the hospital's fiscal intermediary. |
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(j) No later than September 1, 2022, the Attorney General |
shall provide data on the Attorney General's website regarding |
enforcement efforts performed under this Act from July 1, 2021 |
through June 30, 2022. Thereafter, no later than September 1 |
of each year through September 1, 2027, the Attorney General |
shall annually provide data on the Attorney General's website |
regarding enforcement efforts performed under this Act from |
July 1 through June 30 of each year. The data shall include the |
following: |
(1) The total number of complaints received. |
(2) The total number of open investigations. |
(3) The number of complaints for which assistance in |
resolving complaints was provided to constituents |
throughout the State by the Attorney General without |
resorting to investigations or actions filed. |
(4) The total number of resolved complaints. |
(5) The total number of actions filed. |
(6) A list of the names of facilities found by a |
pattern or practice to knowingly violate Section 10, along |
with any civil penalties assessed against a listed |
facility.
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(Source: P.A. 95-965, eff. 12-22-08.)
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Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect January |
1, 2022.
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