Public Act 094-0242
 
SB0157 Enrolled LRB094 07276 DRJ 37433 b

    AN ACT concerning hospitals.
 
    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
represented in the General Assembly:
 
ARTICLE 5.

 
    Section 5-1. Short title. This Article may be cited as the
Public Health Program Beneficiary Employer Disclosure Law.
References in this Article to "this Law" mean this Article.
 
    Section 5-5. Definition. In this Law, "public health
program" means either of the following:
        (1) The medical assistance program under Article V of
    the Illinois Public Aid Code.
        (2) The children's health insurance program under the
    Children's Health Insurance Program Act.
 
    Section 5-10. Disclosure of employer required. An
applicant for health care benefits under a public health
program, or a person requesting uncompensated care in a
hospital, may identify the employer or employers of the
proposed beneficiary of the health care benefits. If the
proposed public health program beneficiary is not employed, the
applicant may identify the employer or employers of any adult
who is responsible for providing all or some of the proposed
beneficiary's support.
 
    Section 5-15. Reporting of employer-provided health
insurance information.
    (a) Hospitals required to report information on the
uncompensated care they provide pursuant to federal Medicare
cost reporting shall determine, from information that may be
provided by a person receiving uncompensated or charity care,
whether that person is employed, and if the person is employed
the identity of the employer. The hospital shall annually
submit to the Department a summary report of the employment
status information obtained from persons receiving
uncompensated or charity care, including available information
regarding the cost of the care provided and the number of
persons employed by each identified employer.
    (b) Notwithstanding any other law to the contrary, the
Department of Public Aid or its successor agency, in
collaboration with the Department of Human Services and the
Department of Financial and Professional Regulation, shall
annually prepare a public health access program beneficiary
employer report to be submitted to the General Assembly. For
the purposes of this Section, a "public health access program
beneficiary" means a person who receives medical assistance
under Title XIX or XXI of the federal Social Security Act.
    Subject to federal approval, the report shall provide the
following information for each employer who has more than 100
employees and 25 or more public health access program
beneficiaries:
        (1) The name and address of the qualified employer.
        (2) The number of public health access program
    beneficiaries.
        (3) The number of persons requesting uncompensated or
    charity care from the hospitals required to report under
    this Section and the cost of that care.
        (4) The number of public health access program
    beneficiaries who are spouses or dependents of employees of
    the employer.
        (5) Information on whether the employer offers health
    insurance benefits to employees and their dependents.
        (6) Information on whether the employer receives
    health insurance benefits through the company.
        (7) Whether an employer offers health insurance
    benefits, and, if so, information on the level of premium
    subsidies for such health insurance.
        (8) The cost to the State of Illinois of providing
    public health access program benefits for the employer's
    employees and enrolled dependents.
    (c) The report shall include a description of the
methodology used in the collection of the data and an analysis
regarding the effect of employment and health coverage on the
assistance programs provided by the State. The Department shall
include available data regarding: the numbers of employees and
dependents of employees; the identity of employers by type of
industry and by public, private, profit, or non-profit status;
the employees' full-time or part-time status; and other
variables that the Department determines essential.
    (d) The report shall not include the names of any
individual public health access program beneficiary and shall
be subject to privacy standards both in the Health Insurance
Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 and in Title XIX of
the federal Social Security Act.
    (e) The first report shall be submitted on or before
October 1, 2006, and subsequent reports shall be submitted on
or before that date each year thereafter.
 
    Section 5-90. Repeal. This Law is repealed on January 1,
2009.
 
ARTICLE 10.

 
    Section 10-1. Short title. This Article may be cited as the
Illinois Adverse Health Care Events Reporting Law of 2005.
References in this Article to "this Law" mean this Article.
 
    Section 10-5. Purpose. The sole purpose of this Law is to
establish an adverse health care event reporting system
designed to facilitate quality improvement in the health care
system through communication and collaboration between the
Department and health care facilities. The reporting system
established under this Law shall not be designed or, except as
provided in this Law, used to punish errors or to investigate
or take disciplinary action against health care facilities,
health care practitioners, or health care facility employees.
 
    Section 10-10. Definitions. As used in this Law, the
following terms have the following meanings:
    "Adverse health care event" means any event described in
subsections (b) through (g) of Section 10-15.
    "Department" means the Illinois Department of Public
Health.
    "Health care facility" means a hospital maintained by the
State or any department or agency thereof where such department
or agency has authority under law to establish and enforce
standards for the hospital under its management and control, a
hospital maintained by any university or college established
under the laws of this State and supported principally by
public funds raised by taxation, a hospital licensed under the
Hospital Licensing Act, a hospital organized under the
University of Illinois Hospital Act, and an ambulatory surgical
treatment center licensed under the Ambulatory Surgical
Treatment Center Act.
 
    Section 10-15. Health care facility requirements to
report, analyze, and correct.
    (a) Reports of adverse health care events required. Each
health care facility shall report to the Department the
occurrence of any of the adverse health care events described
in subsections (b) through (g) no later than 30 days after
discovery of the event. The report shall be filed in a format
specified by the Department and shall identify the health care
facility, but shall not include any information identifying or
that tends to identify any of the health care professionals,
employees, or patients involved.
    (b) Surgical events. Events reportable under this
subsection are:
        (1) Surgery performed on a wrong body part that is not
    consistent with the documented informed consent for that
    patient. Reportable events under this clause do not include
    situations requiring prompt action that occur in the course
    of surgery or situations whose urgency precludes obtaining
    informed consent.
        (2) Surgery performed on the wrong patient.
        (3) The wrong surgical procedure performed on a patient
    that is not consistent with the documented informed consent
    for that patient. Reportable events under this clause do
    not include situations requiring prompt action that occur
    in the course of surgery or situations whose urgency
    precludes obtaining informed consent.
        (4) Retention of a foreign object in a patient after
    surgery or other procedure, excluding objects
    intentionally implanted as part of a planned intervention
    and objects present prior to surgery that are intentionally
    retained.
        (5) Death during or immediately after surgery of a
    normal, healthy patient who has no organic, physiologic,
    biochemical, or psychiatric disturbance and for whom the
    pathologic processes for which the operation is to be
    performed are localized and do not entail a systemic
    disturbance.
    (c) Product or device events. Events reportable under this
subsection are:
        (1) Patient death or serious disability associated
    with the use of contaminated drugs, devices, or biologics
    provided by the health care facility when the contamination
    is the result of generally detectable contaminants in
    drugs, devices, or biologics regardless of the source of
    the contamination or the product.
        (2) Patient death or serious disability associated
    with the use or function of a device in patient care in
    which the device is used or functions other than as
    intended. "Device" includes, but is not limited to,
    catheters, drains, and other specialized tubes, infusion
    pumps, and ventilators.
        (3) Patient death or serious disability associated
    with intravascular air embolism that occurs while being
    cared for in a health care facility, excluding deaths
    associated with neurosurgical procedures known to present
    a high risk of intravascular air embolism.
    (d) Patient protection events. Events reportable under
this subsection are:
        (1) An infant discharged to the wrong person.
        (2) Patient death or serious disability associated
    with patient disappearance for more than 4 hours, excluding
    events involving adults who have decision-making capacity.
        (3) Patient suicide or attempted suicide resulting in
    serious disability while being cared for in a health care
    facility due to patient actions after admission to the
    health care facility, excluding deaths resulting from
    self-inflicted injuries that were the reason for admission
    to the health care facility.
    (e) Care management events. Events reportable under this
subsection are:
        (1) Patient death or serious disability associated
    with a medication error, including, but not limited to,
    errors involving the wrong drug, the wrong dose, the wrong
    patient, the wrong time, the wrong rate, the wrong
    preparation, or the wrong route of administration,
    excluding reasonable differences in clinical judgment on
    drug selection and dose.
        (2) Patient death or serious disability associated
    with a hemolytic reaction due to the administration of
    ABO-incompatible blood or blood products.
        (3) Maternal death or serious disability associated
    with labor or delivery in a low-risk pregnancy while being
    cared for in a health care facility, excluding deaths from
    pulmonary or amniotic fluid embolism, acute fatty liver of
    pregnancy, or cardiomyopathy.
        (4) Patient death or serious disability directly
    related to hypoglycemia, the onset of which occurs while
    the patient is being cared for in a health care facility
    for a condition unrelated to hypoglycemia.
    (f) Environmental events. Events reportable under this
subsection are:
        (1) Patient death or serious disability associated
    with an electric shock while being cared for in a health
    care facility, excluding events involving planned
    treatments such as electric countershock.
        (2) Any incident in which a line designated for oxygen
    or other gas to be delivered to a patient contains the
    wrong gas or is contaminated by toxic substances.
        (3) Patient death or serious disability associated
    with a burn incurred from any source while being cared for
    in a health care facility that is not consistent with the
    documented informed consent for that patient. Reportable
    events under this clause do not include situations
    requiring prompt action that occur in the course of surgery
    or situations whose urgency precludes obtaining informed
    consent.
        (4) Patient death associated with a fall while being
    cared for in a health care facility.
        (5) Patient death or serious disability associated
    with the use of restraints or bedrails while being cared
    for in a health care facility.
    (g) Physical security events. Events reportable under this
subsection are:
        (1) Any instance of care ordered by or provided by
    someone impersonating a physician, nurse, pharmacist, or
    other licensed health care provider.
        (2) Abduction of a patient of any age.
        (3) Sexual assault on a patient within or on the
    grounds of a health care facility.
        (4) Death or significant injury of a patient or staff
    member resulting from a physical assault that occurs within
    or on the grounds of a health care facility.
    (h) Definitions. As used in this Section 10-15:
     "Death" means patient death related to an adverse event
and not related solely to the natural course of the patient's
illness or underlying condition. Events otherwise reportable
under this Section 10-15 shall be reported even if the death
might have otherwise occurred as the natural course of the
patient's illness or underlying condition.
    "Serious disability" means a physical or mental
impairment, including loss of a body part, related to an
adverse event and not related solely to the natural course of
the patient's illness or underlying condition, that
substantially limits one or more of the major life activities
of an individual or a loss of bodily function, if the
impairment or loss lasts more than 7 days prior to discharge or
is still present at the time of discharge from an inpatient
health care facility.
 
    Section 10-20. Root cause analysis; corrective action
plan. Following the occurrence of an adverse health care event,
the health care facility must conduct a root cause analysis of
the event. Following the analysis, the health care facility
must (i) implement a corrective action plan to address the
findings of the analysis or (ii) report to the Department any
reasons for not taking corrective action. A copy of the
findings of the root cause analysis and a copy of the
corrective action plan must be filed with the Department within
90 days after the submission of the report to the Department
under Section 10-15.
 
    Section 10-25. Confidentiality. Other than the annual
report required under paragraph (4) of Section 10-35 of this
Law, adverse health care event reports, findings of root cause
analyses, and corrective action plans filed by a health care
facility under this Law and records created or obtained by the
Department in reviewing or investigating these reports,
findings, and plans shall not be available to the public and
shall not be discoverable or admissible in any civil, criminal,
or administrative proceeding against a health care facility or
health care professional. No report or Department disclosure
under this Law may contain information identifying a patient,
employee, or licensed professional. Notwithstanding any other
provision of law, under no circumstances shall the Department
disclose information obtained from a health care facility that
is confidential under Part 21 of Article VIII of the Code of
Civil Procedure. Nothing in this Law shall preclude or alter
the reporting responsibilities of hospitals or ambulatory
surgical treatment centers under existing federal or State law.
 
    Section 10-30. Establishment of reporting system.
    (a) The Department shall establish an adverse health event
reporting system that will be fully operational by January 1,
2008 and designed to facilitate quality improvement in the
health care system through communication and collaboration
among the Department and health care facilities. The reporting
system shall not be designed or used to punish errors or,
except to enforce this Law, investigate or take disciplinary
action against health care facilities, health care
practitioners, or health care facility employees. The
Department may not use the adverse health care event reports,
findings of the root cause analyses, and corrective action
plans filed under this Law for any purpose not stated in this
Law, including, but not limited to, using such information for
investigating possible violations of the reporting health care
facility's licensing act or its regulations. The Department is
not authorized to select from or between competing alternate
health care treatments, services, or practices.
    (b) The reporting system shall consist of:
        (1) Mandatory reporting by health care facilities of
    adverse health care events.
        (2) Mandatory completion of a root cause analysis and a
    corrective action plan by the health care facility and
    reporting of the findings of the analysis and the plan to
    the Department or reporting of reasons for not taking
    corrective action.
        (3) Analysis of reported information by the Department
    to determine patterns of systemic failure in the health
    care system and successful methods to correct these
    failures.
        (4) Sanctions against health care facilities for
    failure to comply with reporting system requirements.
        (5) Communication from the Department to health care
    facilities, to maximize the use of the reporting system to
    improve health care quality.
    (c) In establishing the adverse health event reporting
system, including the design of the reporting format and annual
report, the Department must consult with and seek input from
experts and organizations specializing in patient safety.
    (d) The Department must design the reporting system so that
a health care facility may file by electronic means the reports
required under this Law. The Department shall encourage a
health care facility to use the electronic filing option when
that option is feasible for the health care facility.
    (e) Nothing in this Section prohibits a health care
facility from taking any remedial action in response to the
occurrence of an adverse health care event.
 
    Section 10-35. Analysis of reports; communication of
findings. The Department shall do the following:
        (1) Analyze adverse event reports, corrective action
    plans, and findings of the root cause analyses to determine
    patterns of systemic failure in the health care system and
    successful methods to correct these failures.
        (2) Communicate to individual health care facilities
    the Department's conclusions, if any, regarding an adverse
    event reported by the health care facility.
        (3) Communicate to relevant health care facilities any
    recommendations for corrective action resulting from the
    Department's analysis of submissions from facilities.
        (4) Publish an annual report that does the following:
            (i) Describes, by institution, adverse health care
        events reported.
            (ii) Summarizes, in aggregate form, the corrective
        action plans and findings of root cause analyses
        submitted by health care facilities.
            (iii) Describes adopted recommendations for
    quality improvement practices.
 
    Section 10-40. Health Care Event Reporting Advisory
Committee. The Department shall appoint a 9-person Health Care
Event Reporting Advisory Committee with at least one member
from each of the following statewide organizations: one
representing hospitals; one representing ambulatory surgical
treatment centers; and one representing physicians licensed to
practice medicine in all its branches. The committee shall also
include other individuals who have expertise and experience in
system-based quality improvement and safety and shall include
one public member. At least 3 of the 9 members shall be
individuals who do not have a financial interest in, or a
business relationship with, hospitals or ambulatory surgical
treatment centers. The Health Care Event Reporting Advisory
Committee shall review the Department's recommendations for
potential quality improvement practices and modifications to
the list of reportable adverse health care events consistent
with national standards. In connection with its review of the
Department's recommendations, the committee shall conduct a
public hearing seeking input from health care facilities,
health care professionals, and the public.
 
    Section 10-45. Testing period.
    (a) Prior to the testing period in subsection (b), the
Department shall adopt rules for implementing this Law in
consultation with the Health Care Event Reporting Advisory
Committee and individuals who have experience and expertise in
devising and implementing adverse health care event or other
heath care quality reporting systems. The rules shall establish
the methodology and format for health care facilities reporting
information under this Law to the Department and shall be
finalized before the beginning of the testing period under
subsection (b).
    (b) The Department shall conduct a testing period of at
least 6 months to test the reporting process to identify any
problems or deficiencies with the planned reporting process.
    (c) None of the information reported and analyzed during
the testing period shall be used in any public report under
this Law.
    (d) The Department must substantially address the problems
or deficiencies identified during the testing period before
fully implementing the reporting system.
    (e) After the testing period, and after any corrections,
adjustments, or modifications are finalized, the Department
must give at least 30 days written notice to health care
facilities prior to full implementation of the reporting system
and collection of adverse event data that will be used in
public reports.
    (f) Following the testing period, 4 calendar quarters of
data must be collected prior to the Department's publishing the
annual report of adverse events to the public under paragraph
(4) of Section 10-35.
    (g) The process described in subsections (a) through (e)
must be completed by the Department no later than July 1, 2007.
    (h) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the
Department may contract with an entity for receiving all
adverse health care event reports, root cause analysis
findings, and corrective action plans that must be reported to
the Department under this Law and for the compilation of the
information and the provision of quarterly and annual reports
to the Department describing such information according to the
rules adopted by the Department under this Law.
 
    Section 10-50. Validity of public reports. None of the
information the Department discloses to the public may be made
available in any form or fashion unless such information is
shared with the health care facilities under review prior to
public dissemination of such information. Those health care
facilities shall have 30 days to make corrections and to add
helpful explanatory comments about the information before the
publication.
 
ARTICLE 90.

 
    Section 90-5. The Ambulatory Surgical Treatment Center Act
is amended by changing Section 10d as follows:
 
    (210 ILCS 5/10d)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 157-8.10d)
    Sec. 10d. Fines and penalties.
    (a) When the Director determines that a facility has failed
to comply with this Act or the Illinois Adverse Health Care
Events Reporting Law of 2005 or any rule adopted under either
of those Acts hereunder, the Department may issue a notice of
fine assessment which shall specify the violations for which
the fine is assessed. The Department may assess a fine of up to
$500 per violation per day commencing on the date the violation
was identified and ending on the date the violation is
corrected, or action is taken to suspend, revoke or deny
renewal of the license, whichever comes first.
    (b) In determining whether a fine is to be assessed or the
amount of such fine, the Director shall consider the following
factors:
        (1) The gravity of the violation, including the
    probability that death or serious physical or mental harm
    to a patient will result or has resulted, the severity of
    the actual or potential harm, and the extent to which the
    provisions of the applicable statutes or rules were
    violated;
        (2) The reasonable diligence exercised by the licensee
    and efforts to correct violations;
        (3) Any previous violations committed by the licensee;
    and
        (4) The financial benefit to the facility of committing
    or continuing the violation.
(Source: P.A. 86-1292.)
 
    Section 90-10. The Hospital Licensing Act is amended by
changing Section 7 as follows:
 
    (210 ILCS 85/7)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 148)
    Sec. 7. (a) The Director after notice and opportunity for
hearing to the applicant or licensee may deny, suspend, or
revoke a permit to establish a hospital or deny, suspend, or
revoke a license to open, conduct, operate, and maintain a
hospital in any case in which he finds that there has been a
substantial failure to comply with the provisions of this Act,
or the Hospital Report Card Act, or the Illinois Adverse Health
Care Events Reporting Law of 2005 or the standards, rules, and
regulations established by virtue of any either of those Acts.
    (b) Such notice shall be effected by registered mail or by
personal service setting forth the particular reasons for the
proposed action and fixing a date, not less than 15 days from
the date of such mailing or service, at which time the
applicant or licensee shall be given an opportunity for a
hearing. Such hearing shall be conducted by the Director or by
an employee of the Department designated in writing by the
Director as Hearing Officer to conduct the hearing. On the
basis of any such hearing, or upon default of the applicant or
licensee, the Director shall make a determination specifying
his findings and conclusions. In case of a denial to an
applicant of a permit to establish a hospital, such
determination shall specify the subsection of Section 6 under
which the permit was denied and shall contain findings of fact
forming the basis of such denial. A copy of such determination
shall be sent by registered mail or served personally upon the
applicant or licensee. The decision denying, suspending, or
revoking a permit or a license shall become final 35 days after
it is so mailed or served, unless the applicant or licensee,
within such 35 day period, petitions for review pursuant to
Section 13.
    (c) The procedure governing hearings authorized by this
Section shall be in accordance with rules promulgated by the
Department and approved by the Hospital Licensing Board. A full
and complete record shall be kept of all proceedings, including
the notice of hearing, complaint, and all other documents in
the nature of pleadings, written motions filed in the
proceedings, and the report and orders of the Director and
Hearing Officer. All testimony shall be reported but need not
be transcribed unless the decision is appealed pursuant to
Section 13. A copy or copies of the transcript may be obtained
by any interested party on payment of the cost of preparing
such copy or copies.
    (d) The Director or Hearing Officer shall upon his own
motion, or on the written request of any party to the
proceeding, issue subpoenas requiring the attendance and the
giving of testimony by witnesses, and subpoenas duces tecum
requiring the production of books, papers, records, or
memoranda. All subpoenas and subpoenas duces tecum issued under
the terms of this Act may be served by any person of full age.
The fees of witnesses for attendance and travel shall be the
same as the fees of witnesses before the Circuit Court of this
State, such fees to be paid when the witness is excused from
further attendance. When the witness is subpoenaed at the
instance of the Director, or Hearing Officer, such fees shall
be paid in the same manner as other expenses of the Department,
and when the witness is subpoenaed at the instance of any other
party to any such proceeding the Department may require that
the cost of service of the subpoena or subpoena duces tecum and
the fee of the witness be borne by the party at whose instance
the witness is summoned. In such case, the Department in its
discretion, may require a deposit to cover the cost of such
service and witness fees. A subpoena or subpoena duces tecum
issued as aforesaid shall be served in the same manner as a
subpoena issued out of a court.
    (e) Any Circuit Court of this State upon the application of
the Director, or upon the application of any other party to the
proceeding, may, in its discretion, compel the attendance of
witnesses, the production of books, papers, records, or
memoranda and the giving of testimony before the Director or
Hearing Officer conducting an investigation or holding a
hearing authorized by this Act, by an attachment for contempt,
or otherwise, in the same manner as production of evidence may
be compelled before the court.
    (f) The Director or Hearing Officer, or any party in an
investigation or hearing before the Department, may cause the
depositions of witnesses within the State to be taken in the
manner prescribed by law for like depositions in civil actions
in courts of this State, and to that end compel the attendance
of witnesses and the production of books, papers, records, or
memoranda.
(Source: P.A. 93-563, eff. 1-1-04.)
 
    Section 90-15. The Illinois Public Aid Code is amended by
changing Sections 5A-1, 5A-2, 5A-3, 5A-4, 5A-5, 5A-7, 5A-8,
5A-10, 5A-13, and 5A-14 and by adding Section 5A-12.1 as
follows:
 
    (305 ILCS 5/5A-1)  (from Ch. 23, par. 5A-1)
    Sec. 5A-1. Definitions. As used in this Article, unless
the context requires otherwise:
    "Adjusted gross hospital revenue" shall be determined
separately for inpatient and outpatient services for each
hospital conducted, operated or maintained by a hospital
provider, and means the hospital provider's total gross
revenues less: (i) gross revenue attributable to non-hospital
based services including home dialysis services, durable
medical equipment, ambulance services, outpatient clinics and
any other non-hospital based services as determined by the
Illinois Department by rule; and (ii) gross revenues
attributable to the routine services provided to persons
receiving skilled or intermediate long-term care services
within the meaning of Title XVIII or XIX of the Social Security
Act; and (iii) Medicare gross revenue (excluding the Medicare
gross revenue attributable to clauses (i) and (ii) of this
paragraph and the Medicare gross revenue attributable to the
routine services provided to patients in a psychiatric
hospital, a rehabilitation hospital, a distinct part
psychiatric unit, a distinct part rehabilitation unit, or swing
beds). Adjusted gross hospital revenue shall be determined
using the most recent data available from each hospital's 2003
Medicare cost report as contained in the Healthcare Cost Report
Information System file, for the quarter ending on December 31,
2004, without regard to any subsequent adjustments or changes
to such data. If a hospital's 2003 Medicare cost report is not
contained in the Healthcare Cost Report Information System, the
hospital provider shall furnish such cost report or the data
necessary to determine its adjusted gross hospital revenue as
required by rule by the Illinois Department.
    "Fund" means the Hospital Provider Fund.
    "Hospital" means an institution, place, building, or
agency located in this State that is subject to licensure by
the Illinois Department of Public Health under the Hospital
Licensing Act, whether public or private and whether organized
for profit or not-for-profit.
    "Hospital provider" means a person licensed by the
Department of Public Health to conduct, operate, or maintain a
hospital, regardless of whether the person is a Medicaid
provider. For purposes of this paragraph, "person" means any
political subdivision of the State, municipal corporation,
individual, firm, partnership, corporation, company, limited
liability company, association, joint stock association, or
trust, or a receiver, executor, trustee, guardian, or other
representative appointed by order of any court.
    "Occupied bed days" means the sum of the number of days
that each bed was occupied by a patient for all beds during
calendar year 2001. Occupied bed days shall be computed
separately for each hospital operated or maintained by a
hospital provider.
    "Proration factor" means a fraction, the numerator of which
is 53 and the denominator of which is 365.
(Source: P.A. 93-659, eff. 2-3-04; 93-1066, eff. 1-15-05.)
 
    (305 ILCS 5/5A-2)  (from Ch. 23, par. 5A-2)
    (Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2005)
    Sec. 5A-2. Assessment; no local authorization to tax.
    (a) Subject to Sections 5A-3 and 5A-10, an annual
assessment on inpatient services is imposed on each hospital
provider in an amount equal to the hospital's occupied bed days
multiplied by $84.19 multiplied by the proration factor for
State fiscal year 2004 and the hospital's occupied bed days
multiplied by $84.19 for State fiscal year 2005.
    The Department of Public Aid shall use the number of
occupied bed days as reported by each hospital on the Annual
Survey of Hospitals conducted by the Department of Public
Health to calculate the hospital's annual assessment. If the
sum of a hospital's occupied bed days is not reported on the
Annual Survey of Hospitals or if there are data errors in the
reported sum of a hospital's occupied bed days as determined by
the Department of Public Aid, then the Department of Public Aid
may obtain the sum of occupied bed days from any source
available, including, but not limited to, records maintained by
the hospital provider, which may be inspected at all times
during business hours of the day by the Department of Public
Aid or its duly authorized agents and employees.
    Subject to Sections 5A-3 and 5A-10, for the privilege of
engaging in the occupation of hospital provider, beginning
August 1, 2005, an annual assessment is imposed on each
hospital provider for State fiscal years 2006, 2007, and 2008,
in an amount equal to 2.5835% of the hospital provider's
adjusted gross hospital revenue for inpatient services and
2.5835% of the hospital provider's adjusted gross hospital
revenue for outpatient services. If the hospital provider's
adjusted gross hospital revenue is not available, then the
Illinois Department may obtain the hospital provider's
adjusted gross hospital revenue from any source available,
including, but not limited to, records maintained by the
hospital provider, which may be inspected at all times during
business hours of the day by the Illinois Department or its
duly authorized agents and employees.
    (b) Nothing in this Article amendatory Act of the 93rd
General Assembly shall be construed to authorize any home rule
unit or other unit of local government to license for revenue
or to impose a tax or assessment upon hospital providers or the
occupation of hospital provider, or a tax or assessment
measured by the income or earnings of a hospital provider.
    (c) As provided in Section 5A-14, this Section is repealed
on July 1, 2008 2005.
(Source: P.A. 93-659, eff. 2-3-04; 93-841, eff. 7-30-04;
93-1066, eff. 1-15-05.)
 
    (305 ILCS 5/5A-3)  (from Ch. 23, par. 5A-3)
    Sec. 5A-3. Exemptions.
    (a) (Blank).
    (b) A hospital provider that is a State agency, a State
university, or a county with a population of 3,000,000 or more
is exempt from the assessment imposed by Section 5A-2.
    (b-2) A hospital provider that is a county with a
population of less than 3,000,000 or a township, municipality,
hospital district, or any other local governmental unit is
exempt from the assessment imposed by Section 5A-2.
    (b-5) (Blank).
    (b-10) For State fiscal years 2004 and 2005, a A hospital
provider whose hospital does not charge for its services is
exempt from the assessment imposed by Section 5A-2, unless the
exemption is adjudged to be unconstitutional or otherwise
invalid, in which case the hospital provider shall pay the
assessment imposed by Section 5A-2.
    (b-15) For State fiscal years 2004 and 2005, a A hospital
provider whose hospital is licensed by the Department of Public
Health as a psychiatric hospital is exempt from the assessment
imposed by Section 5A-2, unless the exemption is adjudged to be
unconstitutional or otherwise invalid, in which case the
hospital provider shall pay the assessment imposed by Section
5A-2.
    (b-20) For State fiscal years 2004 and 2005, a A hospital
provider whose hospital is licensed by the Department of Public
Health as a rehabilitation hospital is exempt from the
assessment imposed by Section 5A-2, unless the exemption is
adjudged to be unconstitutional or otherwise invalid, in which
case the hospital provider shall pay the assessment imposed by
Section 5A-2.
    (b-25) For State fiscal years 2004 and 2005, a A hospital
provider whose hospital (i) is not a psychiatric hospital,
rehabilitation hospital, or children's hospital and (ii) has an
average length of inpatient stay greater than 25 days is exempt
from the assessment imposed by Section 5A-2, unless the
exemption is adjudged to be unconstitutional or otherwise
invalid, in which case the hospital provider shall pay the
assessment imposed by Section 5A-2.
    (c) (Blank).
(Source: P.A. 93-659, eff. 2-3-04.)
 
    (305 ILCS 5/5A-4)  (from Ch. 23, par. 5A-4)
    Sec. 5A-4. Payment of assessment; penalty.
    (a) The annual assessment imposed by Section 5A-2 for State
fiscal year 2004 shall be due and payable on June 18 of the
year. The assessment imposed by Section 5A-2 for State fiscal
year 2005 shall be due and payable in quarterly installments,
each equalling one-fourth of the assessment for the year, on
July 19, October 19, January 18, and April 19 of the year. The
assessment imposed by Section 5A-2 for State fiscal year 2006
and each subsequent State fiscal year shall be due and payable
in quarterly installments, each equaling one-fourth of the
assessment for the year, on the fourteenth State business day
of September, December, March, and May. No installment payment
of an assessment imposed by Section 5A-2 shall be due and
payable, however, until after: (i) the hospital provider
receives written notice from the Department of Public Aid that
the payment methodologies to hospitals required under Section
5A-12 or Section 5A-12.1, whichever is applicable for that
fiscal year, have been approved by the Centers for Medicare and
Medicaid Services of the U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services and the waiver under 42 CFR 433.68 for the assessment
imposed by Section 5A-2, if necessary, has been granted by the
Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services of the U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services; and (ii) the hospital
has received the payments required under Section 5A-12 or
Section 5A-12.1, whichever is applicable for that fiscal year.
Upon notification to the Department of approval of the payment
methodologies required under Section 5A-12 or Section 5A-12.1,
whichever is applicable for that fiscal year, and the waiver
granted under 42 CFR 433.68, all quarterly installments
otherwise due under Section 5A-2 prior to the date of
notification shall be due and payable to the Department upon
written direction from the Department and receipt of the
payments required under Section 5A-12.1.
    (b) The Illinois Department is authorized to establish
delayed payment schedules for hospital providers that are
unable to make installment payments when due under this Section
due to financial difficulties, as determined by the Illinois
Department.
    (c) If a hospital provider fails to pay the full amount of
an installment when due (including any extensions granted under
subsection (b)), there shall, unless waived by the Illinois
Department for reasonable cause, be added to the assessment
imposed by Section 5A-2 a penalty assessment equal to the
lesser of (i) 5% of the amount of the installment not paid on
or before the due date plus 5% of the portion thereof remaining
unpaid on the last day of each 30-day period thereafter or (ii)
100% of the installment amount not paid on or before the due
date. For purposes of this subsection, payments will be
credited first to unpaid installment amounts (rather than to
penalty or interest), beginning with the most delinquent
installments.
(Source: P.A. 93-659, eff. 2-3-04; 93-841, eff. 7-30-04;
93-1066, eff. 1-15-05.)
 
    (305 ILCS 5/5A-5)  (from Ch. 23, par. 5A-5)
    Sec. 5A-5. Notice; penalty; maintenance of records.
    (a) The Department of Public Aid shall send a notice of
assessment to every hospital provider subject to assessment
under this Article. The notice of assessment shall notify the
hospital of its assessment and shall be sent after within 14
days of receipt by the Department of notification from the
Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services of the U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services that the payment
methodologies required under Section 5A-12 or Section 5A-12.1,
whichever is applicable for that fiscal year, and, if
necessary, the waiver granted under 42 CFR 433.68 have been
approved. The notice shall be on a form prepared by the
Illinois Department and shall state the following:
        (1) The name of the hospital provider.
        (2) The address of the hospital provider's principal
    place of business from which the provider engages in the
    occupation of hospital provider in this State, and the name
    and address of each hospital operated, conducted, or
    maintained by the provider in this State.
        (3) The occupied bed days or adjusted gross hospital
    revenue of the hospital provider (whichever is
    applicable), the amount of assessment imposed under
    Section 5A-2 for the State fiscal year for which the notice
    is sent, and the amount of each quarterly installment to be
    paid during the State fiscal year.
        (4) (Blank).
        (5) Other reasonable information as determined by the
    Illinois Department.
    (b) If a hospital provider conducts, operates, or maintains
more than one hospital licensed by the Illinois Department of
Public Health, the provider shall pay the assessment for each
hospital separately.
    (c) Notwithstanding any other provision in this Article, in
the case of a person who ceases to conduct, operate, or
maintain a hospital in respect of which the person is subject
to assessment under this Article as a hospital provider, the
assessment for the State fiscal year in which the cessation
occurs shall be adjusted by multiplying the assessment computed
under Section 5A-2 by a fraction, the numerator of which is the
number of days in the year during which the provider conducts,
operates, or maintains the hospital and the denominator of
which is 365. Immediately upon ceasing to conduct, operate, or
maintain a hospital, the person shall pay the assessment for
the year as so adjusted (to the extent not previously paid).
    (d) Notwithstanding any other provision in this Article, a
provider who commences conducting, operating, or maintaining a
hospital, upon notice by the Illinois Department, shall pay the
assessment computed under Section 5A-2 and subsection (e) in
installments on the due dates stated in the notice and on the
regular installment due dates for the State fiscal year
occurring after the due dates of the initial notice.
    (e) Notwithstanding any other provision in this Article,
for State fiscal years 2004 and 2005, in the case of a hospital
provider that did not conduct, operate, or maintain a hospital
throughout calendar year 2001, the assessment for that State
fiscal year shall be computed on the basis of hypothetical
occupied bed days for the full calendar year as determined by
the Illinois Department. Notwithstanding any other provision
in this Article, for State fiscal years after 2005, in the case
of a hospital provider that did not conduct, operate, or
maintain a hospital in 2003, the assessment for that State
fiscal year shall be computed on the basis of hypothetical
adjusted gross hospital revenue for the hospital's first full
fiscal year as determined by the Illinois Department (which may
be based on annualization of the provider's actual revenues for
a portion of the year, or revenues of a comparable hospital for
the year, including revenues realized by a prior provider of
the same hospital during the year).
    (f) Every hospital provider subject to assessment under
this Article shall keep sufficient records to permit the
determination of adjusted gross hospital revenue for the
hospital's fiscal year. All such records shall be kept in the
English language and shall, at all times during regular
business hours of the day, be subject to inspection by the
Illinois Department or its duly authorized agents and
employees. (Blank).
    (g) The Illinois Department may, by rule, provide a
hospital provider a reasonable opportunity to request a
clarification or correction of any clerical or computational
errors contained in the calculation of its assessment, but such
corrections shall not extend to updating the cost report
information used to calculate the assessment. (Blank).
    (h) (Blank).
(Source: P.A. 93-659, eff. 2-3-04; 93-841, eff. 7-30-04.)
 
    (305 ILCS 5/5A-7)  (from Ch. 23, par. 5A-7)
    Sec. 5A-7. Administration; enforcement provisions.
    (a) The Illinois Department shall establish and maintain a
listing of all hospital providers appearing in the licensing
records of the Illinois Department of Public Health, which
shall show each provider's name and principal place of business
and the name and address of each hospital operated, conducted,
or maintained by the provider in this State. The Illinois
Department shall administer and enforce this Article and
collect the assessments and penalty assessments imposed under
this Article using procedures employed in its administration of
this Code generally. The Illinois Department, its Director, and
every hospital provider subject to assessment under this
Article measured by occupied bed days shall have the following
powers, duties, and rights:
        (1) The Illinois Department may initiate either
    administrative or judicial proceedings, or both, to
    enforce provisions of this Article. Administrative
    enforcement proceedings initiated hereunder shall be
    governed by the Illinois Department's administrative
    rules. Judicial enforcement proceedings initiated
    hereunder shall be governed by the rules of procedure
    applicable in the courts of this State.
        (2) No proceedings for collection, refund, credit, or
    other adjustment of an assessment amount shall be issued
    more than 3 years after the due date of the assessment,
    except in the case of an extended period agreed to in
    writing by the Illinois Department and the hospital
    provider before the expiration of this limitation period.
        (3) Any unpaid assessment under this Article shall
    become a lien upon the assets of the hospital upon which it
    was assessed. If any hospital provider, outside the usual
    course of its business, sells or transfers the major part
    of any one or more of (A) the real property and
    improvements, (B) the machinery and equipment, or (C) the
    furniture or fixtures, of any hospital that is subject to
    the provisions of this Article, the seller or transferor
    shall pay the Illinois Department the amount of any
    assessment, assessment penalty, and interest (if any) due
    from it under this Article up to the date of the sale or
    transfer. If the seller or transferor fails to pay any
    assessment, assessment penalty, and interest (if any) due,
    the purchaser or transferee of such asset shall be liable
    for the amount of the assessment, penalties, and interest
    (if any) up to the amount of the reasonable value of the
    property acquired by the purchaser or transferee. The
    purchaser or transferee shall continue to be liable until
    the purchaser or transferee pays the full amount of the
    assessment, penalties, and interest (if any) up to the
    amount of the reasonable value of the property acquired by
    the purchaser or transferee or until the purchaser or
    transferee receives from the Illinois Department a
    certificate showing that such assessment, penalty, and
    interest have been paid or a certificate from the Illinois
    Department showing that no assessment, penalty, or
    interest is due from the seller or transferor under this
    Article.
        (4) Payments under this Article are not subject to the
    Illinois Prompt Payment Act. Credits or refunds shall not
    bear interest.
    (b) In addition to any other remedy provided for and
without sending a notice of assessment liability, the Illinois
Department may collect an unpaid assessment by withholding, as
payment of the assessment, reimbursements or other amounts
otherwise payable by the Illinois Department to the hospital
provider.
(Source: P.A. 93-659, eff. 2-3-04; 93-841, eff. 7-30-04.)
 
    (305 ILCS 5/5A-8)  (from Ch. 23, par. 5A-8)
    Sec. 5A-8. Hospital Provider Fund.
    (a) There is created in the State Treasury the Hospital
Provider Fund. Interest earned by the Fund shall be credited to
the Fund. The Fund shall not be used to replace any moneys
appropriated to the Medicaid program by the General Assembly.
    (b) The Fund is created for the purpose of receiving moneys
in accordance with Section 5A-6 and disbursing moneys only for
the following purposes, notwithstanding any other provision of
law:
        (1) For making payments to hospitals as required under
    Articles V, VI, and XIV of this Code and under the
    Children's Health Insurance Program Act.
        (2) For the reimbursement of moneys collected by the
    Illinois Department from hospitals or hospital providers
    through error or mistake in performing the activities
    authorized under this Article and Article V of this Code.
        (3) For payment of administrative expenses incurred by
    the Illinois Department or its agent in performing the
    activities authorized by this Article.
        (4) For payments of any amounts which are reimbursable
    to the federal government for payments from this Fund which
    are required to be paid by State warrant.
        (5) For making transfers, as those transfers are
    authorized in the proceedings authorizing debt under the
    Short Term Borrowing Act, but transfers made under this
    paragraph (5) shall not exceed the principal amount of debt
    issued in anticipation of the receipt by the State of
    moneys to be deposited into the Fund.
        (6) For making transfers to any other fund in the State
    treasury, but transfers made under this paragraph (6) shall
    not exceed the amount transferred previously from that
    other fund into the Hospital Provider Fund.
        (7) For State fiscal years 2004 and 2005 for making
    transfers to the Health and Human Services Medicaid Trust
    Fund, including 20% of the moneys received from hospital
    providers under Section 5A-4 and transferred into the
    Hospital Provider Fund under Section 5A-6. For State fiscal
    years 2006, 2007 and 2008 for making transfers to the
    Health and Human Services Medicaid Trust Fund of up to
    $130,000,000 per year of the moneys received from hospital
    providers under Section 5A-4 and transferred into the
    Hospital Provider Fund under Section 5A-6. Transfers under
    this paragraph shall be made within 7 days after the
    payments have been received pursuant to the schedule of
    payments provided in subsection (a) of Section 5A-4.
        (8) For making refunds to hospital providers pursuant
    to Section 5A-10.
    Disbursements from the Fund, other than transfers
authorized under paragraphs (5) and (6) of this subsection,
shall be by warrants drawn by the State Comptroller upon
receipt of vouchers duly executed and certified by the Illinois
Department.
    (c) The Fund shall consist of the following:
        (1) All moneys collected or received by the Illinois
    Department from the hospital provider assessment imposed
    by this Article.
        (2) All federal matching funds received by the Illinois
    Department as a result of expenditures made by the Illinois
    Department that are attributable to moneys deposited in the
    Fund.
        (3) Any interest or penalty levied in conjunction with
    the administration of this Article.
        (4) Moneys transferred from another fund in the State
    treasury.
        (5) All other moneys received for the Fund from any
    other source, including interest earned thereon.
    (d) (Blank).
(Source: P.A. 93-659, eff. 2-3-04.)
 
    (305 ILCS 5/5A-10)  (from Ch. 23, par. 5A-10)
    Sec. 5A-10. Applicability.
    (a) The assessment imposed by Section 5A-2 shall not take
effect or shall cease to be imposed, and any moneys remaining
in the Fund shall be refunded to hospital providers in
proportion to the amounts paid by them, if:
        (1) the sum of the appropriations for State fiscal
    years 2004 and 2005 from the General Revenue Fund for
    hospital payments under the medical assistance program is
    less than $4,500,000,000 or the appropriation for each of
    State fiscal years 2006, 2007 and 2008 from the General
    Revenue Fund for hospital payments under the medical
    assistance program is less than $2,500,000,000 increased
    annually to reflect any increase in the number of
    recipients; or
        (2) the Department of Public Aid makes changes in its
    rules that reduce the hospital inpatient or outpatient
    payment rates, including adjustment payment rates, in
    effect on October 1, 2004 2003, except for hospitals
    described in subsection (b) of Section 5A-3 and except for
    changes in the methodology for calculating outlier
    payments to hospitals for exceptionally costly stays and
    except for changes in outpatient payment rates made to
    comply with the federal Health Insurance Portability and
    Accountability Act, so long as those changes do not reduce
    aggregate expenditures below the amount expended in State
    fiscal year 2005 2003 for such services; or
        (3) the payments to hospitals required under Section
    5A-12 are changed or are not eligible for federal matching
    funds under Title XIX or XXI of the Social Security Act.
    (b) The assessment imposed by Section 5A-2 shall not take
effect or shall cease to be imposed if the assessment is
determined to be an impermissible tax under Title XIX of the
Social Security Act. Moneys in the Hospital Provider Fund
derived from assessments imposed prior thereto shall be
disbursed in accordance with Section 5A-8 to the extent federal
matching is not reduced due to the impermissibility of the
assessments, and any remaining moneys shall be refunded to
hospital providers in proportion to the amounts paid by them.
(Source: P.A. 93-659, eff. 2-3-04.)
 
    (305 ILCS 5/5A-12.1 new)
    Sec. 5A-12.1. Hospital access improvement payments.
    (a) To preserve and improve access to hospital services,
for hospital services rendered on or after August 1, 2005, the
Department of Public Aid shall make payments to hospitals as
set forth in this Section, except for hospitals described in
subsection (b) of Section 5A-3. These payments shall be paid on
a quarterly basis. For State fiscal year 2006, once the
approval of the payment methodology required under this Section
and any waiver required under 42 CFR 433.68 by the Centers for
Medicare and Medicaid Services of the U.S. Department of Health
and Human Services is received, the Department shall pay the
total amounts required for fiscal year 2006 under this Section
within 100 days of the latest notification. In State fiscal
years 2007 and 2008, the total amounts required under this
Section shall be paid in 4 equal installments on or before the
seventh State business day of September, December, March, and
May, except that if the date of notification of the approval of
the payment methodologies required under this Section and any
waiver required under 42 CFR 433.68 is on or after July 1,
2006, the sum of amounts required under this Section prior to
the date of notification shall be paid within 100 days of the
date of the last notification. Payments under this Section are
not due and payable, however, until (i) the methodologies
described in this Section are approved by the federal
government in an appropriate State Plan amendment, (ii) the
assessment imposed under this Article is determined to be a
permissible tax under Title XIX of the Social Security Act, and
(iii) the assessment is in effect.
    (b) Medicaid eligibility payment. In addition to amounts
paid for inpatient hospital services, the Department shall pay
each Illinois hospital (except for hospitals described in
Section 5A-3) for each inpatient Medicaid admission in State
fiscal year 2003, $430 multiplied by the percentage by which
the number of Medicaid recipients in the county in which the
hospital is located increased from State fiscal year 1998 to
State fiscal year 2003.
    (c) Medicaid high volume adjustment.
        (1) In addition to rates paid for inpatient hospital
    services, the Department shall pay to each Illinois
    hospital (except for hospitals that qualify for Medicaid
    Percentage Adjustment payments under 89 Ill. Adm. Code
    148.122 for the 12-month period beginning on October 1,
    2004) that provided more than 10,000 Medicaid inpatient
    days of care (determined using the hospital's fiscal year
    2002 Medicaid cost report on file with the Department on
    July 1, 2004) amounts as follows:
            (i) for hospitals that provided more than 10,000
        Medicaid inpatient days of care but less than or equal
        to 14,500 Medicaid inpatient days of care, $90 for each
        Medicaid inpatient day of care provided during that
        period; and
            (ii) for hospitals that provided more than 14,500
        Medicaid inpatient days of care but less than or equal
        to 18,500 Medicaid inpatient days of care, $135 for
        each Medicaid inpatient day of care provided during
        that period; and
            (iii) for hospitals that provided more than 18,500
        Medicaid inpatient days of care but less than or equal
        to 20,000 Medicaid inpatient days of care, $225 for
        each Medicaid inpatient day of care provided during
        that period; and
            (iv) for hospitals that provided more than 20,000
        Medicaid inpatient days of care, $900 for each Medicaid
        inpatient day of care provided during that period.
        Provided, however, that no hospital shall receive more
    than $19,000,000 per year in such payments under
    subparagraphs (i), (ii), (iii), and (iv).
        (2) In addition to rates paid for inpatient hospital
    services, the Department shall pay to each Illinois general
    acute care hospital that as of October 1, 2004, qualified
    for Medicaid percentage adjustment payments under 89 Ill.
    Adm. Code 148.122 and provided more than 21,000 Medicaid
    inpatient days of care (determined using the hospital's
    fiscal year 2002 Medicaid cost report on file with the
    Department on July 1, 2004) $35 for each Medicaid inpatient
    day of care provided during that period. Provided, however,
    that no hospital shall receive more than $1,200,000 per
    year in such payments.
    (d) Intensive care adjustment. In addition to rates paid
for inpatient services, the Department shall pay an adjustment
payment to each Illinois general acute care hospital located in
a large urban area that, based on the hospital's fiscal year
2002 Medicaid cost report, had a ratio of Medicaid intensive
care unit days to total Medicaid days greater than 19%. If such
ratio for the hospital is less than 30%, the hospital shall be
paid an adjustment payment for each Medicaid inpatient day of
care provided equal to $1,000 multiplied by the hospital's
ratio of Medicaid intensive care days to total Medicaid days.
If such ratio for the hospital is equal to or greater than 30%,
the hospital shall be paid an adjustment payment for each
Medicaid inpatient day of care provided equal to $2,800
multiplied by the hospital's ratio of Medicaid intensive care
days to total Medicaid days.
    (e) Trauma center adjustments.
        (1) In addition to rates paid for inpatient hospital
    services, the Department shall pay to each Illinois general
    acute care hospital that as of January 1, 2005, was
    designated as a Level I trauma center and is either located
    in a large urban area or is located in an other urban area
    and as of October 1, 2004 qualified for Medicaid percentage
    adjustment payments under 89 Ill. Adm. Code 148.122, a
    payment equal to $800 multiplied by the hospital's Medicaid
    intensive care unit days (excluding Medicare crossover
    days). This payment shall be calculated based on data from
    the hospital's 2002 cost report on file with the Department
    on July 1, 2004. For hospitals located in large urban areas
    outside of a city with a population in excess of 1,000,000
    people, the payment required under this subsection shall be
    multiplied by 4.5. For hospitals located in other urban
    areas, the payment required under this subsection shall be
    multiplied by 8.5.
        (2) In addition to rates paid for inpatient hospital
    services, the Department shall pay an additional payment to
    each Illinois general acute care hospital that as of
    January 1, 2005, was designated as a Level II trauma center
    and is located in a county with a population in excess of
    3,000,000 people. The payment shall equal $4,000 per day
    for the first 500 Medicaid inpatient days, $2,000 per day
    for the Medicaid inpatient days between 501 and 1,500, and
    $100 per day for any Medicaid inpatient day in excess of
    1,500. This payment shall be calculated based on data from
    the hospital's 2002 cost report on file with the Department
    on July 1, 2004.
        (3) In addition to rates paid for inpatient hospital
    services, the Department shall pay an additional payment to
    each Illinois general acute care hospital that as of
    January 1, 2005, was designated as a Level II trauma
    center, is located in a large urban area outside of a
    county with a population in excess of 3,000,000 people, and
    as of January 1, 2005, was designated a Level III perinatal
    center or designated a Level II or II+ prenatal center that
    has a ratio of Medicaid intensive care unit days to total
    Medicaid days greater than 5%. The payment shall equal
    $4,000 per day for the first 500 Medicaid inpatient days,
    $2,000 per day for the Medicaid inpatient days between 501
    and 1,500, and $100 per day for any Medicaid inpatient day
    in excess of 1,500. This payment shall be calculated based
    on data from the hospital's 2002 cost report on file with
    the Department on July 1, 2004.
        (4) In addition to rates paid for inpatient hospital
    services, the Department shall pay an additional payment to
    each Illinois children's hospital that as of January 1,
    2005, was designated a Level I pediatric trauma center that
    had more than 30,000 Medicaid days in State fiscal year
    2003 and to each Level I pediatric trauma center located
    outside of Illinois and that had more than 700 Illinois
    Medicaid cases in State fiscal year 2003. The amount of
    such payment shall equal $325 multiplied by the hospital's
    Medicaid intensive care unit days, and this payment shall
    be multiplied by 2.25 for hospitals located outside of
    Illinois. This payment shall be calculated based on data
    from the hospital's 2002 cost report on file with the
    Department on July 1, 2004.
        (5) Notwithstanding any other provision of this
    subsection, a children's hospital, as defined in 89 Ill.
    Adm. Code 149.50(c)(3)(B), is not eligible for the payments
    described in paragraphs (1), (2), and (3) of this
    subsection.
    (f) Psychiatric rate adjustment.
        (1) In addition to rates paid for inpatient psychiatric
    services, the Department shall pay each Illinois
    psychiatric hospital and general acute care hospital with a
    distinct part psychiatric unit, for each Medicaid
    inpatient psychiatric day of care provided in State fiscal
    year 2003, an amount equal to $420 less the hospital's per
    diem rate for Medicaid inpatient psychiatric services as in
    effect on July 1, 2002. In no event, however, shall that
    amount be less than zero.
        (2) For Illinois psychiatric hospitals and distinct
    part psychiatric units of Illinois general acute care
    hospitals whose inpatient per diem rate as in effect on
    July 1, 2002 is greater than $420, the Department shall
    pay, in addition to any other amounts authorized under this
    Code, $40 for each Medicaid inpatient psychiatric day of
    care provided in State fiscal year 2003.
        (3) In addition to rates paid for inpatient psychiatric
    services, for Illinois psychiatric hospitals located in a
    county with a population in excess of 3,000,000 people that
    did not qualify for Medicaid percentage adjustment
    payments under 89 Ill. Adm. Code 148.122 for the 12-month
    period beginning on October 1, 2004, the Illinois
    Department shall make an adjustment payment of $150 for
    each Medicaid inpatient psychiatric day of care provided by
    the hospital in State fiscal year 2003. In addition to
    rates paid for inpatient psychiatric services, for
    Illinois psychiatric hospitals located in a county with a
    population in excess of 3,000,000 people, but outside of a
    city with a population in excess of 1,000,000 people, that
    did qualify for Medicaid percentage adjustment payments
    under 89 Ill. Adm. Code 148.122 for the 12-month period
    beginning on October 1, 2004, the Illinois Department shall
    make an adjustment payment of $20 for each Medicaid
    inpatient psychiatric day of care provided by the hospital
    in State fiscal year 2003.
    (g) Rehabilitation adjustment.
        (1) In addition to rates paid for inpatient
    rehabilitation services, the Department shall pay each
    Illinois general acute care hospital with a distinct part
    rehabilitation unit that had at least 40 beds as reported
    on the hospital's 2003 Medicaid cost report on file with
    the Department as of March 31, 2005, for each Medicaid
    inpatient day of care provided during State fiscal year
    2003, an amount equal to $230.
        (2) In addition to rates paid for inpatient
    rehabilitation services, for Illinois rehabilitation
    hospitals that did not qualify for Medicaid percentage
    adjustment payments under 89 Ill. Adm. Code 148.122 for the
    12-month period beginning on October 1, 2004, the Illinois
    Department shall make an adjustment payment of $200 for
    each Medicaid inpatient day of care provided during State
    fiscal year 2003.
    (h) Supplemental tertiary care adjustment. In addition to
rates paid for inpatient services, the Department shall pay to
each Illinois hospital eligible for tertiary care adjustment
payments under 89 Ill. Adm. Code 148.296, as in effect for
State fiscal year 2005, a supplemental tertiary care adjustment
payment equal to 2.5 multiplied by the tertiary care adjustment
payment required under 89 Ill. Adm. Code 148.296, as in effect
for State fiscal year 2005.
    (i) Crossover percentage adjustment. In addition to rates
paid for inpatient services, the Department shall pay each
Illinois general acute care hospital, excluding any hospital
defined as a cancer center hospital in rules by the Department,
located in an urban area that provided over 500 days of
inpatient care to Medicaid recipients, that had a ratio of
crossover days to total Medicaid days, utilizing information
used for the Medicaid percentage adjustment determination
described in 84 Ill. Adm. Code 148.122, effective October 1,
2004, of greater than 40%, and that does not qualify for
Medicaid percentage adjustment payments under 89 Ill. Adm. Code
148.122, on October 1, 2004, an amount as follows:
        (1) for hospitals located in an other urban area, $140
    per Medicaid inpatient day (including crossover days);
        (2) for hospitals located in a large urban area whose
    ratio of crossover days to total Medicaid days is less than
    55%, $350 per Medicaid inpatient day (including crossover
    days);
        (3) for hospitals located in a large urban area whose
    ratio of crossover days to total Medicaid days is equal to
    or greater than 55%, $1,400 per Medicaid inpatient day
    (including crossover days).
    The term "Medicaid days" in paragraphs (1), (2), and (3) of
this subsection (i) means the Medicaid days utilized for the
Medicaid percentage adjustment determination described in 89
Ill. Adm. Code 148.122 for the October 1, 2004 determination.
    (j) Long term acute care hospital adjustment. In addition
to rates paid for inpatient services, the Department shall pay
each Illinois long term acute care hospital that, as of October
1, 2004, qualified for a Medicaid percentage adjustment under
89 Ill. Adm. Code 148.122, $125 for each Medicaid inpatient day
of care provided in State fiscal year 2003. In addition to
rates paid for inpatient services, the Department shall pay
each long term acute care hospital that, as of October 1, 2004,
did not qualify for a Medicaid percentage adjustment under 89
Ill. Adm. Code 148.122, $1,250 for each Medicaid inpatient day
of care provided in State fiscal year 2003. For purposes of
this subsection, "long term acute care hospital" means a
hospital that (i) is not a psychiatric hospital, rehabilitation
hospital, or children's hospital and (ii) has an average length
of inpatient stay greater than 25 days.
    (k) Obstetrical care adjustments.
        (1) In addition to rates paid for inpatient services,
    the Department shall pay each Illinois hospital an amount
    equal to $550 multiplied by each Medicaid obstetrical day
    of care provided by the hospital in State fiscal year 2003.
        (2) In addition to rates paid for inpatient services,
    the Department shall pay each Illinois hospital that
    qualified as a Medicaid disproportionate share hospital
    under 89 Ill. Adm. Code 148.120 as of October 1, 2004, and
    that had a Medicaid obstetrical percentage greater than 10%
    and a Medicaid emergency care percentage greater than 40%,
    an amount equal to $650 multiplied by each Medicaid
    obstetrical day of care provided by the hospital in State
    fiscal year 2003.
        (3) In addition to rates paid for inpatient services,
    the Department shall pay each Illinois hospital that is
    located in the St. Louis metropolitan statistical area and
    that provided more than 500 Medicaid obstetrical days of
    care in State fiscal year 2003, an amount equal to $1,800
    multiplied by each Medicaid obstetrical day of care
    provided by the hospital in State fiscal year 2003.
        (4) In addition to rates paid for inpatient services,
    the Department shall pay $600 for each Medicaid obstetrical
    day of care provided in State fiscal year 2003 by each
    Illinois hospital that (i) is located in a large urban
    area, (ii) is located in a county whose number of Medicaid
    recipients increased from State fiscal year 1998 to State
    fiscal year 2003 by more than 60%, and (iii) that had a
    Medicaid obstetrical percentage used for the October 1,
    2004, Medicaid percentage adjustment determination
    described in 89 Ill. Adm. Code 148.122 greater than 25%.
        (5) In addition to rates paid for inpatient services,
    the Department shall pay $400 for each Medicaid obstetrical
    day of care provided in State fiscal year 2003 by each
    Illinois rural hospital that (i) was designated a Level II
    perinatal center as of January 1, 2005, (ii) had a Medicaid
    inpatient utilization rate greater than 34% in State fiscal
    year 2002, and (iii) had a Medicaid obstetrical percentage
    used for the October 1, 2004, Medicaid percentage
    adjustment determination described in 89 Ill. Adm. Code
    148.122 greater than 15%.
    (l) Outpatient access payments. In addition to the rates
paid for outpatient hospital services, the Department shall pay
each Illinois hospital (except for hospitals described in
Section 5A-3), an amount equal to 2.38 multiplied by the
hospital's outpatient ambulatory procedure listing payments
for services provided during State fiscal year 2003 multiplied
by the percentage by which the number of Medicaid recipients in
the county in which the hospital is located increased from
State fiscal year 1998 to State fiscal year 2003.
    (m) Outpatient utilization payment.
        (1) In addition to the rates paid for outpatient
    hospital services, the Department shall pay each Illinois
    rural hospital, an amount equal to 1.7 multiplied by the
    hospital's outpatient ambulatory procedure listing
    payments for services provided during State fiscal year
    2003.
        (2) In addition to the rates paid for outpatient
    hospital services, the Department shall pay each Illinois
    hospital located in an urban area, an amount equal to 0.45
    multiplied by the hospital's outpatient ambulatory
    procedure listing payments received for services provided
    during State fiscal year 2003.
    (n) Outpatient complexity of care adjustment. In addition
to the rates paid for outpatient hospital services, the
Department shall pay each Illinois hospital located in an urban
area an amount equal to 2.55 multiplied by the hospital's
emergency care percentage multiplied by the hospital's
outpatient ambulatory procedure listing payments received for
services provided during State fiscal year 2003. For children's
hospitals with an inpatient utilization rate used for the
October 1, 2004, Medicaid percentage adjustment determination
described in 89 Ill. Adm. Code 148.122 greater than 90%, this
adjustment shall be multiplied by 2. For cancer center
hospitals, this adjustment shall be multiplied by 3.
    (o) Rehabilitation hospital adjustment. In addition to the
rates paid for outpatient hospital services, the Department
shall pay each Illinois freestanding rehabilitation hospital
that does not qualify for a Medicaid percentage adjustment
under 89 Ill. Adm. Code 148.122 as of October 1, 2004, an
amount equal to 3 multiplied by the hospital's outpatient
ambulatory procedure listing payments for Group 6A services
provided during State fiscal year 2003.
    (p) Perinatal outpatient adjustment. In addition to the
rates paid for outpatient hospital services, the Department
shall pay an adjustment payment to each large urban general
acute care hospital that is designated as a perinatal center as
of January 1, 2005, has a Medicaid obstetrical percentage of at
least 10% used for the October 1, 2004, Medicaid percentage
adjustment determination described in 89 Ill. Adm. Code
148.122, has a Medicaid intensive care unit percentage of at
least 3%, and has a ratio of ambulatory procedure listing Level
3 services to total ambulatory procedure listing services of at
least 50%. The amount of the adjustment payment under this
subsection shall be $550 multiplied by the hospital's
outpatient ambulatory procedure listing Level 3A services
provided in State fiscal year 2003. If the hospital, as of
January 1, 2005, was designated a Level III or II+ perinatal
center, the adjustment payments required by this subsection
shall be multiplied by 4.
    (q) Supplemental psychiatric adjustment payments. In
addition to rates paid for inpatient services, the Department
shall pay to each Illinois hospital that does not qualify for
Medicaid percentage adjustments described in 89 Ill. Adm. Code
148.122 but is eligible for psychiatric adjustment payments
under 89 Ill. Adm. Code 148.105 for State fiscal year 2005, a
supplemental psychiatric adjustment payment equal to 0.7
multiplied by the psychiatric adjustment payment required
under 89 Ill. Adm. Code 148.105, as in effect for State fiscal
year 2005.
    (r) Outpatient community access adjustment. In addition to
the rates paid for outpatient hospital services, the Department
shall pay an adjustment payment to each general acute care
hospital that is designated as a perinatal center as of January
1, 2005, that had a Medicaid obstetrical percentage used for
the October 1, 2004, Medicaid percentage adjustment
determination described in 89 Ill. Adm. Code 148.122 of at
least 12.5%, that had a ratio of crossover days to total
Medicaid days utilizing information used for the Medicaid
percentage adjustment described in 89 Ill. Adm. Code 148.122
determination effective October 1, 2004, of greater than or
equal to 25%, and that qualified for the Medicaid percentage
adjustment payments under 89 Ill. Adm. Code 148.122 on October
1, 2004, an amount equal to $100 multiplied by the hospital's
outpatient ambulatory procedure listing services provided
during State fiscal year 2003.
    (s) Definitions. Unless the context requires otherwise or
unless provided otherwise in this Section, the terms used in
this Section for qualifying criteria and payment calculations
shall have the same meanings as those terms have been given in
the Illinois Department's administrative rules as in effect on
May 1, 2005. Other terms shall be defined by the Illinois
Department by rule.
    As used in this Section, unless the context requires
otherwise:
    "Emergency care percentage" means a fraction, the
numerator of which is the total Group 3 ambulatory procedure
listing services provided by the hospital in State fiscal year
2003, and the denominator of which is the total ambulatory
procedure listing services provided by the hospital in State
fiscal year 2003.
    "Large urban area" means an area located within a
metropolitan statistical area, as defined by the U.S. Office of
Management and Budget in OMB Bulletin 04-03, dated February 18,
2004, with a population in excess of 1,000,000.
    "Medicaid intensive care unit days" means the number of
hospital inpatient days during which Medicaid recipients
received intensive care services from the hospital, as
determined from the hospital's 2002 Medicaid cost report that
was on file with the Department as of July 1, 2004.
    "Other urban area" means an area located within a
metropolitan statistical area, as defined by the U.S. Office of
Management and Budget in OMB Bulletin 04-03, dated February 18,
2004, with a city with a population in excess of 50,000 or a
total population in excess of 100,000.
    (t) For purposes of this Section, a hospital that enrolled
to provide Medicaid services during State fiscal year 2003
shall have its utilization and associated reimbursements
annualized prior to the payment calculations being performed
under this Section.
    (u) For purposes of this Section, the terms "Medicaid
days", "ambulatory procedure listing services", and
"ambulatory procedure listing payments" do not include any
days, charges, or services for which Medicare was liable for
payment, except where explicitly stated otherwise in this
Section.
    (v) As provided in Section 5A-14, this Section is repealed
on July 1, 2008.
 
    (305 ILCS 5/5A-13)
    Sec. 5A-13. Emergency rulemaking. The Department of Public
Aid may adopt rules necessary to implement this amendatory Act
of the 94th 93rd General Assembly through the use of emergency
rulemaking in accordance with Section 5-45 of the Illinois
Administrative Procedure Act. For purposes of that Act, the
General Assembly finds that the adoption of rules to implement
this amendatory Act of the 94th 93rd General Assembly is deemed
an emergency and necessary for the public interest, safety, and
welfare.
(Source: P.A. 93-659, eff. 2-3-04.)
 
    (305 ILCS 5/5A-14)
    Sec. 5A-14. Repeal of assessments and disbursements.
    (a) Section 5A-2 is repealed on July 1, 2008 2005.
    (b) Section 5A-12 is repealed on July 1, 2005.
    (c) Section 5A-12.1 is repealed on July 1, 2008.
(Source: P.A. 93-659, eff. 2-3-04.)
 
    Section 90-97. Severability. The provisions of this Act are
severable under Section 1.31 of the Statute on Statutes.
 
    Section 90-99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon
becoming law.