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Public Act 103-0329 |
HB2858 Enrolled | LRB103 26814 KTG 53178 b |
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AN ACT concerning aging.
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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 Illinois Act on the Aging is amended by |
changing Section 4.04 as follows:
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(20 ILCS 105/4.04) (from Ch. 23, par. 6104.04)
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Sec. 4.04. Long Term Care Ombudsman Program. The purpose |
of the Long Term Care Ombudsman Program is to ensure that older |
persons and persons with disabilities receive quality |
services. This is accomplished by providing advocacy services |
for residents of long term care facilities and participants |
receiving home care and community-based care. Managed care is |
increasingly becoming the vehicle for delivering health and |
long-term services and supports to seniors and persons with |
disabilities, including dual eligible participants. The |
additional ombudsman authority will allow advocacy services to |
be provided to Illinois participants for the first time and |
will produce a cost savings for the State of Illinois by |
supporting the rebalancing efforts of the Patient Protection |
and Affordable Care Act.
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(a) Long Term Care Ombudsman Program. The Department shall
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establish a Long Term Care Ombudsman Program, through the |
Office of State
Long Term Care Ombudsman ("the Office"), in |
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accordance with the provisions of
the Older Americans Act of |
1965, as now or hereafter amended. The Long Term Care |
Ombudsman Program is authorized, subject to sufficient |
appropriations, to advocate on behalf of older persons and |
persons with disabilities residing in their own homes or |
community-based settings, relating to matters which may |
adversely affect the health, safety, welfare, or rights of |
such individuals.
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(b) Definitions. As used in this Section, unless the |
context requires
otherwise:
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(1) "Access" means the right to:
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(i) Enter any long term care facility or assisted |
living or shared
housing establishment or supportive |
living facility;
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(ii) Communicate privately and without restriction |
with any resident, regardless of age,
who consents to |
the communication;
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(iii) Seek consent to communicate privately and |
without restriction
with any participant or resident, |
regardless of age;
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(iv) Inspect and copy the clinical and other |
records of a participant or resident, regardless of |
age, with the
express written consent of the |
participant or resident;
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(v) Observe all areas of the long term care |
facility or supportive
living facilities, assisted |
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living or shared housing establishment except the
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living area of any resident who protests the |
observation; and
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(vi) Subject to permission of the participant or |
resident requesting services or his or her |
representative, enter a home or community-based |
setting. |
(2) "Long Term Care Facility" means (i) any facility |
as defined by Section
1-113 of the Nursing Home Care Act, |
as now or hereafter amended; (ii) any
skilled nursing |
facility or a nursing facility which meets the
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requirements of Section 1819(a), (b), (c), and (d) or |
Section 1919(a), (b),
(c), and (d) of the Social Security |
Act, as now or hereafter amended (42
U.S.C. 1395i-3(a), |
(b), (c), and (d) and 42 U.S.C. 1396r(a), (b), (c), and
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(d)); (iii) any facility as defined by Section 1-113 of |
the ID/DD Community Care Act, as now or hereafter amended; |
(iv) any facility as defined by Section 1-113 of MC/DD |
Act, as now or hereafter amended; and (v) any facility |
licensed under Section 4-105 or 4-201 of the Specialized |
Mental Health Rehabilitation Act of 2013, as now or |
hereafter amended.
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(2.5) "Assisted living establishment" and "shared |
housing establishment"
have the meanings given those terms |
in Section 10 of the Assisted Living and
Shared Housing |
Act.
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(2.7) "Supportive living facility" means a facility |
established under
Section 5-5.01a of the Illinois Public |
Aid Code.
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(2.8) "Community-based setting" means any place of |
abode other than an individual's private home. |
(3) "State Long Term Care Ombudsman" means any person |
employed by the
Department to fulfill
the requirements of |
the Office of State Long Term Care Ombudsman as
required |
under the Older Americans Act of 1965, as now or hereafter |
amended,
and Departmental policy.
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(3.1) "Ombudsman" means any designated representative |
of the State Long Term Care Ombudsman Program; provided |
that the representative, whether he is
paid for or |
volunteers his ombudsman services, shall be qualified and
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designated by the Office to perform the duties of an |
ombudsman as specified by
the Department in rules and in |
accordance with the provisions of
the Older Americans Act |
of 1965, as now or hereafter amended.
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(4) "Participant" means an older person aged 60 or |
over or an adult with a disability aged 18 through 59 who |
is eligible for services under any of the following: |
(i) A medical assistance waiver administered by |
the State. |
(ii) A managed care organization providing care |
coordination and other services to seniors and persons |
with disabilities. |
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(5) "Resident" means an older person aged 60 or over |
or an adult with a disability aged 18 through 59 who |
resides in a long-term care facility. |
(c) Ombudsman; rules. The Office of State Long Term Care |
Ombudsman shall
be composed of at least one full-time |
ombudsman and shall include a system of
designated regional |
long term care ombudsman programs. Each regional program
shall |
be designated by the State Long Term Care Ombudsman as a |
subdivision of
the Office and any representative of a regional |
program shall be treated as a
representative of the Office.
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The Department, in consultation with the Office, shall |
promulgate
administrative rules in accordance with the |
provisions of the Older Americans
Act of 1965, as now or |
hereafter amended, to establish the responsibilities of
the |
Department and the Office of State Long Term Care Ombudsman |
and the
designated regional Ombudsman programs. The |
administrative rules shall include
the responsibility of the |
Office and designated regional programs to
investigate and |
resolve complaints made by or on behalf of residents of long
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term care facilities, supportive living facilities, and |
assisted living and
shared housing establishments, and |
participants residing in their own homes or community-based |
settings, including the option to serve residents and |
participants under the age of 60, relating to actions, |
inaction, or
decisions of providers, or their representatives, |
of such
facilities and establishments, of public agencies, or |
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of social services agencies,
which may adversely affect the |
health, safety, welfare, or rights of such
residents and |
participants. The Office and designated regional programs may |
represent all residents and participants, but are not required |
by this Act to represent persons under 60 years of age, except |
to the extent required by federal law.
When necessary and |
appropriate, representatives of the Office shall refer
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complaints to the appropriate regulatory State agency.
The |
Department, in consultation with the Office, shall cooperate |
with the
Department of Human Services and other State agencies |
in providing information and training to
designated regional |
long term care ombudsman programs about the appropriate
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assessment and treatment (including information about |
appropriate supportive
services, treatment options, and |
assessment of rehabilitation potential) of the participants |
they serve. |
The State Long Term Care Ombudsman and all other |
ombudsmen, as defined in paragraph (3.1) of subsection (b) |
must submit to background checks under the Health Care Worker |
Background Check Act and receive training, as prescribed by |
the Illinois Department on Aging, before visiting facilities, |
private homes, or community-based settings. The training must |
include information specific to assisted living |
establishments, supportive living facilities, shared housing |
establishments, private homes, and community-based settings |
and to the rights of residents and participants guaranteed |
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under the corresponding Acts and administrative rules.
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(c-5) Consumer Choice Information Reports. The Office |
shall: |
(1) In collaboration with the Attorney General, create |
a Consumer Choice Information Report form to be completed |
by all licensed long term care facilities to aid |
Illinoisans and their families in making informed choices |
about long term care. The Office shall create a Consumer |
Choice Information Report for each type of licensed long |
term care facility. The Office shall collaborate with the |
Attorney General and the Department of Human Services to |
create a Consumer Choice Information Report form for |
facilities licensed under the ID/DD Community Care Act or |
the MC/DD Act. |
(2) Develop a database of Consumer Choice Information |
Reports completed by licensed long term care facilities |
that includes information in the following consumer |
categories: |
(A) Medical Care, Services, and Treatment. |
(B) Special Services and Amenities. |
(C) Staffing. |
(D) Facility Statistics and Resident Demographics. |
(E) Ownership and Administration. |
(F) Safety and Security. |
(G) Meals and Nutrition. |
(H) Rooms, Furnishings, and Equipment. |
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(I) Family, Volunteer, and Visitation Provisions. |
(3) Make this information accessible to the public, |
including on the Internet by means of a hyperlink on the |
Office's World Wide Web home page. Information about |
facilities licensed under the ID/DD Community Care Act or |
the MC/DD Act shall be made accessible to the public by the |
Department of Human Services, including on the Internet by |
means of a hyperlink on the Department of Human Services' |
"For Customers" website. |
(4) Have the authority, with the Attorney General, to |
verify that information provided by a facility is |
accurate. |
(5) Request a new report from any licensed facility |
whenever it deems necessary.
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(6) Include in the Office's Consumer Choice
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Information Report for each type of licensed long term |
care
facility additional information on each licensed long |
term
care facility in the State of Illinois, including
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information regarding each facility's compliance with the
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relevant State and federal statutes, rules, and standards;
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customer satisfaction surveys; and information generated
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from quality measures developed by the Centers for |
Medicare
and Medicaid Services. |
(d) Access and visitation rights.
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(1) In accordance with subparagraphs (A) and (E) of |
paragraph (3) of
subsection (c) of Section 1819
and |
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subparagraphs (A) and (E) of paragraph (3) of subsection |
(c) of Section
1919 of the Social Security Act, as now or |
hereafter amended (42 U.S.C.
1395i-3 (c)(3)(A) and (E) and |
42 U.S.C. 1396r (c)(3)(A) and (E)), and
Section
712 of the |
Older Americans Act of 1965, as now or hereafter
amended |
(42 U.S.C. 3058f), a long term care facility, supportive |
living
facility, assisted living
establishment, and shared |
housing establishment must:
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(i) permit immediate access to any resident, |
regardless of age, by a designated
ombudsman;
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(ii) permit representatives of the Office, with |
the permission of the resident, the
resident's legal |
representative , or the resident's legal guardian, to |
examine and copy a resident's
clinical and other |
records, regardless of the age of the resident, and if |
a resident is unable to consent to such
review, and has |
no legal guardian, permit representatives of the |
Office
appropriate access, as defined by the |
Department, in consultation with the
Office, in |
administrative rules, to the resident's records; and
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(iii) permit a representative of the Program to |
communicate privately and without restriction with any |
participant who consents to the communication |
regardless of the consent of, or withholding of |
consent by, a legal guardian or an agent named in a |
power of attorney executed by the participant. |
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(2) Each long term care facility, supportive living |
facility, assisted
living establishment, and
shared |
housing establishment shall display, in multiple, |
conspicuous
public places within the facility accessible |
to both visitors and residents and
in an easily readable |
format, the address and phone number of the Office of the
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Long Term Care Ombudsman, in a manner prescribed by the |
Office.
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(e) Immunity. An ombudsman or any representative of the |
Office participating
in the good faith performance of his or |
her official duties
shall have immunity from any liability |
(civil, criminal or otherwise) in
any proceedings (civil, |
criminal or otherwise) brought as a consequence of
the |
performance of his official duties.
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(f) Business offenses.
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(1) No person shall:
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(i) Intentionally prevent, interfere with, or |
attempt to impede in any
way any representative of the |
Office in the performance of his
official
duties under |
this Act and the Older Americans Act of 1965; or
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(ii) Intentionally retaliate, discriminate |
against, or effect reprisals
against any long term |
care facility resident or employee for contacting or
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providing information to any representative of the |
Office.
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(2) A violation of this Section is a business offense, |
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punishable by a
fine not to exceed $501.
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(3) The State Long Term Care Ombudsman shall
notify |
the State's Attorney of the
county in which the long term |
care facility, supportive living facility, or
assisted |
living or shared housing establishment is located,
or the |
Attorney General, of any violations of this Section.
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(g) Confidentiality of records and identities. The |
Department shall
establish procedures for the disclosure by |
the State Ombudsman or the regional
ombudsmen
entities of |
files maintained by the program. The procedures shall provide |
that
the files and records may be disclosed only at the |
discretion of the State Long
Term Care
Ombudsman or the person |
designated by the State Ombudsman to disclose the files
and |
records, and the procedures shall prohibit the disclosure of |
the identity
of any complainant, resident, participant, |
witness, or employee of a long term care provider
unless:
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(1) the complainant, resident, participant, witness, |
or employee of a long term care
provider or his or her |
legal representative consents to the disclosure and the
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consent is in writing;
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(2) the complainant, resident, participant, witness, |
or employee of a long term care
provider gives consent |
orally; and the consent is documented contemporaneously
in |
writing in
accordance with such requirements as the |
Department shall establish; or
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(3) the disclosure is required by court order.
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(h) Legal representation. The Attorney General shall
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provide legal representation to any representative of the |
Office
against
whom suit or other legal action is brought in |
connection with the
performance of the representative's |
official duties, in accordance with the
State Employee |
Indemnification Act.
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(i) Treatment by prayer and spiritual means. Nothing in |
this Act shall
be construed to authorize or require the |
medical supervision, regulation
or control of remedial care or |
treatment of any resident in a long term
care facility |
operated exclusively by and for members or adherents of any
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church or religious denomination the tenets and practices of |
which include
reliance solely upon spiritual means through |
prayer for healing.
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(j) The Long Term Care Ombudsman Fund is created as a |
special fund in the State treasury to receive moneys for the |
express purposes of this Section. All interest earned on |
moneys in the fund shall be credited to the fund. Moneys |
contained in the fund shall be used to support the purposes of |
this Section. |
(k) Each Regional Ombudsman may, in accordance with rules |
promulgated by the Office, establish a multi-disciplinary team |
to act in an advisory role for the purpose of providing |
professional knowledge and expertise in handling complex |
abuse, neglect, and advocacy issues involving participants. |
Each multi-disciplinary team may consist of one or more |
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volunteer representatives from any combination of at least 7 |
members from the following professions: banking or finance; |
disability care; health care; pharmacology; law; law |
enforcement; emergency responder; mental health care; clergy; |
coroner or medical examiner; substance abuse; domestic |
violence; sexual assault; or other related fields. To support |
multi-disciplinary teams in this role, law enforcement |
agencies and coroners or medical examiners shall supply |
records as may be requested in particular cases. The Regional |
Ombudsman, or his or her designee, of the area in which the |
multi-disciplinary team is created shall be the facilitator of |
the multi-disciplinary team. |
(Source: P.A. 102-1033, eff. 1-1-23 .)
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Section 10. The Adult Protective Services Act is amended |
by changing Sections 2, 4, 4.1, 4.2, 5, and 8 as follows:
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(320 ILCS 20/2) (from Ch. 23, par. 6602)
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Sec. 2. Definitions. As used in this Act, unless the |
context
requires otherwise:
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(a) "Abandonment" means the desertion or willful forsaking |
of an eligible adult by an individual responsible for the care |
and custody of that eligible adult under circumstances in |
which a reasonable person would continue to provide care and |
custody. Nothing in this Act shall be construed to mean that an |
eligible adult is a victim of abandonment because of health |
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care services provided or not provided by licensed health care |
professionals. |
(a-1) "Abuse" means causing any physical, mental or sexual |
injury to an
eligible adult, including exploitation of such |
adult's financial resources, and abandonment.
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Nothing in this Act shall be construed to mean that an |
eligible adult is a
victim of abuse, abandonment, neglect, or |
self-neglect for the sole reason that he or she is being
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furnished with or relies upon treatment by spiritual means |
through prayer
alone, in accordance with the tenets and |
practices of a recognized church
or religious denomination.
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Nothing in this Act shall be construed to mean that an |
eligible adult is a
victim of abuse because of health care |
services provided or not provided by
licensed health care |
professionals.
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Nothing in this Act shall be construed to mean that an
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eligible adult is a victim of abuse in cases of criminal
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activity by strangers, telemarketing scams, consumer fraud,
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internet fraud, home repair disputes, complaints against a
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homeowners' association, or complaints between landlords and
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tenants. |
(a-5) "Abuser" means a person who is a family member,
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caregiver, or another person who has a continuing relationship
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with the eligible adult and abuses, abandons, neglects, or |
financially
exploits an eligible adult.
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(a-6) "Adult with disabilities" means a person aged 18 |
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through 59 who resides in a domestic living situation and |
whose disability as defined in subsection (c-5) impairs his or |
her ability to seek or obtain protection from abuse, |
abandonment, neglect, or exploitation. |
(a-7) "Caregiver" means a person who either as a result of |
a family
relationship, voluntarily, or in exchange for |
compensation has assumed
responsibility for all or a portion |
of the care of an eligible adult who needs
assistance with |
activities of daily
living or instrumental activities of daily |
living.
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(b) "Department" means the Department on Aging of the |
State of Illinois.
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(c) "Director" means the Director of the Department.
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(c-5) "Disability" means a physical or mental disability, |
including, but not limited to, a developmental disability, an |
intellectual disability, a mental illness as defined under the |
Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities Code, or dementia |
as defined under the Alzheimer's Disease Assistance Act. |
(d) "Domestic living situation" means a residence where |
the eligible
adult at the time of the report lives alone or |
with his or her family or a caregiver, or others,
or other |
community-based unlicensed facility, but
is not:
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(1) A licensed facility as defined in Section 1-113 of |
the Nursing Home
Care Act;
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(1.5) A facility licensed under the ID/DD Community |
Care Act; |
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(1.6) A facility licensed under the MC/DD Act; |
(1.7) A facility licensed under the Specialized Mental |
Health Rehabilitation Act of 2013; |
(2) A "life care facility" as defined in the Life Care |
Facilities Act;
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(3) A home, institution, or other place operated by |
the federal
government or agency thereof or by the State |
of Illinois;
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(4) A hospital, sanitarium, or other institution, the |
principal activity
or business of which is the diagnosis, |
care, and treatment of human illness
through the |
maintenance and operation of organized facilities |
therefor,
which is required to be licensed under the |
Hospital Licensing Act;
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(5) A "community living facility" as defined in the |
Community Living
Facilities Licensing Act;
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(6) (Blank);
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(7) A "community-integrated living arrangement" as |
defined in
the Community-Integrated Living Arrangements |
Licensure and Certification Act or a "community |
residential alternative" as licensed under that Act;
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(8) An assisted living or shared housing establishment |
as defined in the Assisted Living and Shared Housing Act; |
or
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(9) A supportive living facility as described in |
Section 5-5.01a of the Illinois Public Aid Code.
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(e) "Eligible adult" means either an adult with |
disabilities aged 18 through 59 or a person aged 60 or older |
who
resides in a domestic living situation and is, or is |
alleged
to be, abused, abandoned, neglected, or financially |
exploited by another individual or who neglects himself or |
herself. "Eligible adult" also includes an adult who resides |
in any of the facilities that are excluded from the definition |
of "domestic living situation" under paragraphs (1) through |
(9) of subsection (d), if either: (i) the alleged abuse, |
abandonment, or neglect occurs outside of the facility and not |
under facility supervision and the alleged abuser is a family |
member, caregiver, or another person who has a continuing |
relationship with the adult; or (ii) the alleged financial |
exploitation is perpetrated by a family member, caregiver, or |
another person who has a continuing relationship with the |
adult, but who is not an employee of the facility where the |
adult resides.
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(f) "Emergency" means a situation in which an eligible |
adult is living
in conditions presenting a risk of death or |
physical, mental or sexual
injury and the provider agency has |
reason to believe the eligible adult is
unable to
consent to |
services which would alleviate that risk.
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(f-1) "Financial exploitation" means the use of an |
eligible adult's resources by another to the disadvantage of |
that adult or the profit or advantage of a person other than |
that adult. |
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(f-3) "Investment advisor" means any person required to
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register as an investment adviser or investment adviser
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representative under Section 8 of the Illinois Securities Law
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of 1953, which for purposes of this Act excludes any bank,
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trust company, savings bank, or credit union, or their
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respective employees. |
(f-5) "Mandated reporter" means any of the following |
persons
while engaged in carrying out their professional |
duties:
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(1) a professional or professional's delegate while |
engaged in: (i) social
services, (ii) law enforcement, |
(iii) education, (iv) the care of an eligible
adult or |
eligible adults, or (v) any of the occupations required to |
be licensed
under the Behavior Analyst Licensing Act,
the |
Clinical Psychologist Licensing Act, the Clinical Social |
Work and Social
Work Practice Act, the Illinois Dental |
Practice Act, the Dietitian Nutritionist Practice Act, the |
Marriage and Family Therapy Licensing Act, the
Medical |
Practice Act of 1987, the Naprapathic Practice Act, the
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Nurse Practice Act, the Nursing Home
Administrators |
Licensing and
Disciplinary Act, the Illinois Occupational |
Therapy Practice Act, the Illinois
Optometric Practice Act |
of 1987, the Pharmacy Practice Act, the
Illinois Physical |
Therapy Act, the Physician Assistant Practice Act of 1987,
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the Podiatric Medical Practice Act of 1987, the |
Respiratory Care Practice
Act,
the Professional Counselor |
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and
Clinical Professional Counselor Licensing and Practice |
Act, the Illinois Speech-Language
Pathology and Audiology |
Practice Act, the Veterinary Medicine and Surgery
Practice |
Act of 2004, and the Illinois Public Accounting Act;
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(1.5) an employee of an entity providing developmental |
disabilities services or service coordination funded by |
the Department of Human Services; |
(2) an employee of a vocational rehabilitation |
facility prescribed or
supervised by the Department of |
Human Services;
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(3) an administrator, employee, or person providing |
services in or through
an unlicensed community based |
facility;
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(4) any religious practitioner who provides treatment |
by prayer or spiritual means alone in accordance with the |
tenets and practices of a recognized church or religious |
denomination, except as to information received in any |
confession or sacred communication enjoined by the |
discipline of the religious denomination to be held |
confidential;
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(5) field personnel of the Department of Healthcare |
and Family Services, Department of Public
Health, and |
Department of Human Services, and any county or
municipal |
health department;
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(6) personnel of the Department of Human Services, the |
Guardianship and
Advocacy Commission, the State Fire |
|
Marshal, local fire departments, the
Department on Aging |
and its subsidiary Area Agencies on Aging and provider
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agencies, except the State Long Term Care Ombudsman and |
any of his or her representatives or volunteers where |
prohibited from making such a report pursuant to 45 CFR |
1324.11(e)(3)(iv); and the Office of State Long Term Care |
Ombudsman;
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(7) any employee of the State of Illinois not |
otherwise specified herein
who is involved in providing |
services to eligible adults, including
professionals |
providing medical or rehabilitation services and all
other |
persons having direct contact with eligible adults;
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(8) a person who performs the duties of a coroner
or |
medical examiner; or
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(9) a person who performs the duties of a paramedic or |
an emergency
medical
technician ; or .
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(10) a person who performs the duties of an investment
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advisor. |
(g) "Neglect" means
another individual's failure to |
provide an eligible
adult with or willful withholding from an |
eligible adult the necessities of
life including, but not |
limited to, food, clothing, shelter or health care.
This |
subsection does not create any new affirmative duty to provide |
support to
eligible adults. Nothing in this Act shall be |
construed to mean that an
eligible adult is a victim of neglect |
because of health care services provided
or not provided by |
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licensed health care professionals.
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(h) "Provider agency" means any public or nonprofit agency |
in a planning
and service area that is selected by the |
Department or appointed by the regional administrative agency |
with prior
approval by the Department on Aging to receive and |
assess reports of
alleged or suspected abuse, abandonment, |
neglect, or financial exploitation. A provider agency is also |
referenced as a "designated agency" in this Act.
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(i) "Regional administrative agency" means any public or |
nonprofit
agency in a planning and service area that provides |
regional oversight and performs functions as set forth in |
subsection (b) of Section 3 of this Act. The Department shall |
designate an Area Agency on Aging as the regional |
administrative agency or, in the event the Area Agency on |
Aging in that planning and service area is deemed by the |
Department to be unwilling or unable to provide those |
functions, the Department may serve as the regional |
administrative agency or designate another qualified entity to |
serve as the regional administrative agency; any such |
designation shall be subject to terms set forth by the |
Department.
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(i-5) "Self-neglect" means a condition that is the result |
of an eligible adult's inability, due to physical or mental |
impairments, or both, or a diminished capacity, to perform |
essential self-care tasks that substantially threaten his or |
her own health, including: providing essential food, clothing, |
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shelter, and health care; and obtaining goods and services |
necessary to maintain physical health, mental health, |
emotional well-being, and general safety. The term includes |
compulsive hoarding, which is characterized by the acquisition |
and retention of large quantities of items and materials that |
produce an extensively cluttered living space, which |
significantly impairs the performance of essential self-care |
tasks or otherwise substantially threatens life or safety.
|
(j) "Substantiated case" means a reported case of alleged |
or suspected
abuse, abandonment, neglect, financial |
exploitation, or self-neglect in which a provider agency,
|
after assessment, determines that there is reason to believe |
abuse,
abandonment, neglect, or financial exploitation has |
occurred.
|
(k) "Verified" means a determination that there is "clear |
and convincing evidence" that the specific injury or harm |
alleged was the result of abuse, abandonment, neglect, or |
financial exploitation. |
(Source: P.A. 102-244, eff. 1-1-22; 102-953, eff. 5-27-22.)
|
(320 ILCS 20/4) (from Ch. 23, par. 6604)
|
Sec. 4. Reports of abuse, abandonment, or neglect.
|
(a) Any person who suspects the abuse,
abandonment, |
neglect,
financial exploitation, or self-neglect of an |
eligible adult may
report
this suspicion or information about
|
the suspicious death of an eligible adult to an agency |
|
designated to receive such
reports under this Act or to the |
Department.
|
(a-5) If any mandated reporter has reason to believe that |
an eligible
adult,
who because of a disability or other |
condition or impairment is unable to seek assistance for |
himself or herself,
has, within the previous 12 months, been |
subjected to abuse, abandonment, neglect, or
financial |
exploitation, the mandated reporter shall, within 24 hours |
after
developing
such belief, report this suspicion to an |
agency designated to receive such
reports under this Act or
to |
the Department. The agency designated to receive such reports |
under this Act or the Department may establish a manner in |
which a mandated reporter can make the required report through |
an Internet reporting tool. Information sent and received |
through the Internet reporting tool is subject to the same |
rules in this Act as other types of confidential reporting |
established by the designated agency or the Department. |
Whenever a mandated reporter
is required to report under this |
Act in his or her capacity as a member of
the staff of a |
medical or other public or private institution, facility,
or |
agency, he or she shall make a report
to an agency designated |
to receive such
reports under this Act or
to the Department in |
accordance
with the provisions of this Act and may also notify |
the person in charge of
the institution, facility, or agency |
or his or her
designated agent that the
report has been made. |
Under no circumstances shall any person in charge of
such |
|
institution, facility, or agency, or his or her
designated |
agent to whom
the notification has been made, exercise any |
control, restraint,
modification, or other change in the |
report or the forwarding of the report
to an agency designated |
to receive such
reports under this Act or
to the Department. |
The privileged quality of communication between any
|
professional
person required to report
and his or her patient |
or client shall not apply to situations involving
abused, |
abandoned, neglected, or financially exploited eligible adults |
and shall not
constitute
grounds for failure to
report
as |
required by this Act.
|
(a-6) If a mandated reporter has reason to believe that
|
the death of an eligible adult may be the result of abuse or
|
neglect, the matter shall be reported to an agency designated
|
to receive such reports under this Act or to the Department for
|
subsequent referral to the appropriate law enforcement agency
|
and the coroner or medical examiner in accordance with
|
subsection (c-5) of Section 3 of this Act. |
(a-7) A person making a report
under this Act in the belief |
that it is in the alleged victim's best
interest shall be |
immune from criminal or civil liability or professional
|
disciplinary action on account of making the report, |
notwithstanding any
requirements concerning the |
confidentiality of information with respect to
such eligible |
adult which might otherwise be applicable.
|
(a-9) Law enforcement officers
shall continue to report |
|
incidents of alleged abuse pursuant to the
Illinois Domestic |
Violence Act of 1986, notwithstanding any requirements
under |
this Act.
|
(b) Any person, institution or agency participating in the |
making of
a report, providing
information or records related |
to a report, assessment, or services, or
participating in the |
investigation of a report under
this Act in good faith, or |
taking photographs or x-rays as a result of an
authorized |
assessment, shall have immunity from any civil, criminal or
|
other liability in any civil, criminal or other proceeding |
brought in
consequence of making such report or assessment or |
on account of submitting
or otherwise disclosing such |
photographs or x-rays to any agency designated
to receive |
reports of alleged or suspected abuse, abandonment, or |
neglect. Any person,
institution or agency authorized by the |
Department to provide assessment,
intervention, or |
administrative services under this Act shall, in the good
|
faith performance of those services, have immunity from any |
civil, criminal
or other liability in any civil, criminal, or |
other proceeding brought as a
consequence of the performance |
of those services.
For the purposes of any civil, criminal, or |
other proceeding, the good faith
of any person required to |
report, permitted to report, or participating in an
|
investigation of a report of alleged or suspected abuse, |
abandonment, neglect,
financial exploitation, or self-neglect |
shall be
presumed.
|
|
(c) The identity of a person making a report of alleged or |
suspected
abuse, abandonment, neglect, financial exploitation, |
or self-neglect or a report concerning information about the
|
suspicious death of an eligible adult under this Act may be |
disclosed by the Department
or other agency provided for in |
this Act only with such person's written
consent or by court |
order, but is otherwise confidential.
|
(d) The Department shall by rule establish a system for |
filing and
compiling reports made under this Act.
|
(e) Any physician who willfully fails to report as |
required by this Act
shall be referred to the Illinois State |
Medical Disciplinary Board for action
in accordance with |
subdivision (A)(22) of Section 22 of the Medical Practice
Act |
of 1987. Any dentist or dental hygienist who willfully fails |
to report as
required by this Act shall be referred to the |
Department of Professional
Regulation for action in accordance |
with paragraph 19 of Section 23 of the
Illinois Dental |
Practice Act. Any optometrist who willfully fails to report as |
required by this Act shall be referred to the Department of |
Financial and Professional Regulation for action in accordance |
with paragraph (15) of subsection (a) of Section 24 of the |
Illinois Optometric Practice Act of 1987. Any other mandated |
reporter required by
this Act to report suspected abuse, |
abandonment, neglect, or financial exploitation who
willfully |
fails to report the same is guilty of a Class A misdemeanor.
|
(Source: P.A. 102-244, eff. 1-1-22 .)
|
|
(320 ILCS 20/4.1)
|
Sec. 4.1. Employer discrimination. No employer shall |
discharge,
demote or suspend, or threaten to discharge, demote |
or suspend, or in any
manner discriminate against any |
employee : (i) who makes any good faith oral or
written report |
of suspected abuse, abandonment, neglect, or financial |
exploitation ; (ii) who makes any good faith oral or written |
report concerning information about the suspicious death of an |
eligible adult; or
(iii) who is or will be a
witness or testify |
in any investigation or proceeding concerning a report
of |
suspected abuse, abandonment, neglect, or financial |
exploitation.
|
(Source: P.A. 102-244, eff. 1-1-22 .)
|
(320 ILCS 20/4.2)
|
Sec. 4.2. Testimony by mandated reporter and investigator. |
Any mandated
reporter who makes a report or any person who
|
investigates a report under
this Act shall testify fully in |
any judicial proceeding resulting from such
report, as to any |
evidence of abuse, abandonment, neglect, or financial |
exploitation or the
cause thereof. Any
mandated reporter who |
is required to report a suspected case of or a suspicious death |
due to abuse, abandonment, neglect,
or
financial exploitation |
under
Section 4 of this Act shall testify fully in any |
administrative hearing
resulting from such report, as to any |
|
evidence of abuse, abandonment, neglect, or financial
|
exploitation or the
cause thereof. No evidence shall be |
excluded by reason of any common law
or statutory privilege |
relating to communications between the alleged
abuser or the |
eligible adult subject of the report
under
this Act and the |
person making or investigating the report.
|
(Source: P.A. 102-244, eff. 1-1-22 .)
|
(320 ILCS 20/5) (from Ch. 23, par. 6605)
|
Sec. 5. Procedure.
|
(a) A provider agency designated to receive reports
of |
alleged or suspected abuse, abandonment, neglect, financial
|
exploitation, or self-neglect under
this Act shall, upon
|
receiving such a report, conduct a face-to-face assessment |
with respect to
such report, in accord with established law |
and Department protocols, procedures, and policies. |
Face-to-face assessments, casework, and follow-up of reports |
of self-neglect by the provider agencies designated to receive |
reports of self-neglect shall be subject to sufficient |
appropriation for statewide implementation of assessments, |
casework, and follow-up of reports of self-neglect. In the |
absence of sufficient appropriation for statewide |
implementation of assessments, casework, and follow-up of |
reports of self-neglect, the designated adult protective |
services provider agency shall refer all reports of |
self-neglect to the appropriate agency or agencies as |
|
designated by the Department for any follow-up. The assessment |
shall include, but not be limited to, a visit
to the residence |
of the eligible adult who is the subject of the report and
|
shall include interviews or consultations regarding the |
allegations with service agencies, immediate family members, |
and
individuals who may have knowledge of the eligible adult's |
circumstances based on the consent of the eligible adult in |
all instances, except where the provider agency is acting in |
the best interest of an eligible adult who is unable to seek |
assistance for himself or herself and where there are |
allegations against a caregiver who has assumed |
responsibilities in exchange for compensation.
If, after the |
assessment, the provider agency determines that the case is
|
substantiated it shall develop a service care plan for the |
eligible adult and may report its findings at any time during |
the case to the appropriate law enforcement agency in accord |
with established law and Department protocols, procedures, and |
policies.
In developing a case plan, the provider agency may |
consult with any other
appropriate provider of services, and |
such providers shall be immune from
civil or criminal |
liability on account of such acts. The plan shall
include |
alternative suggested or recommended
services which are |
appropriate to the needs of the eligible adult and which
|
involve the least restriction of the eligible adult's |
activities
commensurate with his or her needs. Only those |
services to which consent
is
provided in accordance with |
|
Section 9 of this Act shall be provided,
contingent upon the |
availability of such services.
|
(b) A provider agency shall refer evidence of crimes |
against an eligible
adult to the appropriate law enforcement |
agency according to Department
policies. A referral to law |
enforcement may be made at intake , at or any time
during the |
case , or after a report of a suspicious death, depending upon |
the circumstances . Where a provider agency has reason to |
believe the death of an
eligible adult may be the result of |
abuse, abandonment, or neglect, the agency shall
immediately |
report the matter to the coroner or medical examiner and shall
|
cooperate fully with any subsequent investigation. |
(c) If any person other than the alleged victim refuses to |
allow the provider agency to begin
an investigation, |
interferes with the provider agency's ability to
conduct an |
investigation, or refuses to give access to an eligible
adult, |
the appropriate law enforcement agency must be consulted |
regarding the investigation.
|
(Source: P.A. 101-496, eff. 1-1-20; 102-244, eff. 1-1-22 .)
|
(320 ILCS 20/8) (from Ch. 23, par. 6608)
|
Sec. 8. Access to records. All records concerning reports |
of abuse,
abandonment, neglect, financial exploitation, or |
self-neglect or reports of suspicious deaths due to abuse, |
neglect, or financial exploitation and all records generated |
as a result of
such reports shall be confidential and shall not |
|
be disclosed except as
specifically authorized by this Act or |
other applicable law. In accord with established law and |
Department protocols, procedures, and policies, access to such
|
records, but not access to the identity of the person or |
persons making a
report of alleged abuse, abandonment, |
neglect,
financial exploitation, or self-neglect as contained |
in
such records, shall be provided, upon request, to the |
following persons and for the following
persons:
|
(1) Department staff, provider agency staff, other |
aging network staff, and
regional administrative agency |
staff, including staff of the Chicago Department on Aging |
while that agency is designated as a regional |
administrative agency, in the furtherance of their
|
responsibilities under this Act;
|
(1.5) A representative of the public guardian acting |
in the course of investigating the appropriateness of |
guardianship for the eligible adult or while pursuing a |
petition for guardianship of the eligible adult pursuant |
to the Probate Act of 1975; |
(2) A law enforcement agency or State's Attorney's |
office investigating known or suspected
abuse, |
abandonment, neglect, financial exploitation, or |
self-neglect. Where a provider
agency has reason to |
believe that the
death of an eligible adult may be the |
result of abuse, abandonment, or neglect, including any |
reports made after death, the agency
shall immediately |
|
provide the appropriate law enforcement agency with all
|
records pertaining to the eligible adult;
|
(2.5) A law enforcement agency, fire department |
agency, or fire protection district having proper |
jurisdiction pursuant to a written agreement between a |
provider agency and the law enforcement agency, fire |
department agency, or fire protection district under which |
the provider agency may furnish to the law enforcement |
agency, fire department agency, or fire protection |
district a list of all eligible adults who may be at |
imminent risk of abuse, abandonment, neglect, financial |
exploitation, or self-neglect; |
(3) A physician who has before him or her or who is |
involved
in the treatment of an eligible adult whom he or |
she reasonably suspects
may be abused, abandoned, |
neglected, financially exploited, or self-neglected or who |
has been
referred to the Adult Protective Services |
Program;
|
(4) An eligible adult reported to be abused,
|
abandoned, neglected,
financially exploited, or |
self-neglected, or such adult's authorized guardian or |
agent, unless such
guardian or agent is the abuser or the |
alleged abuser; |
(4.5) An executor or administrator of the estate of an |
eligible adult who is deceased;
|
(5) A probate court with jurisdiction over the |
|
guardianship of an alleged victim for an in camera |
inspection In cases regarding abuse, abandonment, neglect, |
or financial exploitation, a court or a guardian ad litem, |
upon its or his or
her finding that access to such records |
may be
necessary for the determination of an issue before |
the court.
However,
such access shall be limited to an in |
camera inspection of the records,
unless the court |
determines that disclosure of the information contained
|
therein is necessary for the resolution of an issue then |
pending before it ;
|
(5.5) A In cases regarding self-neglect, a guardian ad |
litem , unless such guardian ad litem is the abuser or |
alleged abuser ;
|
(6) A grand jury, upon its determination that access |
to such
records is necessary in the conduct of its |
official business;
|
(7) Any person authorized by the Director, in writing, |
for
audit or bona fide research purposes;
|
(8) A coroner or medical examiner who has reason to |
believe
that an eligible adult has died as the result of |
abuse, abandonment, neglect,
financial exploitation, or |
self-neglect. The provider agency shall immediately |
provide the
coroner
or medical examiner with all records |
pertaining to the eligible adult;
|
(8.5) A coroner or medical examiner having proper |
jurisdiction, pursuant to a written agreement between a |
|
provider agency and the coroner or medical examiner, under |
which the provider agency may furnish to the office of the |
coroner or medical examiner a list of all eligible adults |
who may be at imminent risk of death as a result of abuse, |
abandonment, neglect, financial exploitation, or |
self-neglect; |
(9) Department of Financial and Professional |
Regulation staff
and members of the Illinois Medical |
Disciplinary Board or the Social Work Examining and |
Disciplinary Board in the course
of investigating alleged |
violations of the Clinical Social Work and Social Work
|
Practice Act by provider agency staff or other licensing |
bodies at the discretion of the Director of the Department |
on Aging; |
(9-a) Department of Healthcare and Family Services |
staff and provider agency staff when that Department is |
funding services to the eligible adult, including access |
to the identity of the eligible adult; |
(9-b) Department of Human Services staff and provider |
agency staff when that Department is funding services to |
the eligible adult or is providing reimbursement for |
services provided by the abuser or alleged abuser, |
including access to the identity of the eligible adult; |
(10) Hearing officers in the course of conducting an |
administrative hearing under this Act; parties to such |
hearing shall be entitled to discovery as established by |
|
rule;
|
(11) A caregiver who challenges placement on the |
Registry shall be given the statement of allegations in |
the abuse report and the substantiation decision in the |
final investigative report; and |
(12) The Illinois Guardianship and Advocacy Commission |
and the agency designated by the Governor under Section 1 |
of the Protection and Advocacy for Persons with |
Developmental Disabilities Act shall have access, through |
the Department, to records, including the findings, |
pertaining to a completed or closed investigation of a |
report of suspected abuse, abandonment, neglect, financial |
exploitation, or self-neglect of an eligible adult. |
(Source: P.A. 102-244, eff. 1-1-22 .)
|
Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect January |
1, 2024.
|