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Public Act 099-0492 |
HB0500 Enrolled | LRB099 05874 HAF 25922 b |
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AN ACT concerning regulation.
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Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
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represented in the General Assembly:
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Section 5. The Regulatory Sunset Act is amended by changing |
Section 4.26 and by adding Section 4.36 as follows: |
(5 ILCS 80/4.26)
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Sec. 4.26. Acts repealed on January 1, 2016. The following |
Acts are repealed on January 1, 2016: |
The Illinois Athletic Trainers Practice Act.
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The Illinois Roofing Industry Licensing Act.
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The Illinois Dental Practice Act.
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The Collection Agency Act.
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The Barber, Cosmetology, Esthetics, Hair Braiding, and |
Nail Technology Act of 1985.
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The Respiratory Care Practice Act.
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The Hearing Instrument Consumer Protection Act.
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The Illinois Physical Therapy Act.
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The Professional Geologist Licensing Act. |
(Source: P.A. 95-331, eff. 8-21-07; 95-876, eff. 8-21-08; |
96-1246, eff. 1-1-11.) |
(5 ILCS 80/4.36 new) |
Sec. 4.36. Act repealed on January 1, 2026. The following |
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Act is repealed on January 1, 2026: |
The Illinois Dental Practice Act. |
Section 10. The Illinois Dental Practice Act is amended by |
changing Sections 4, 6, 8.5, 16.1, 17, 18, 23, 24, 25, 26, 29, |
30, 41, and 50 and by adding Section 18.1 as follows:
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(225 ILCS 25/4)
(from Ch. 111, par. 2304)
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(Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 99-25 )
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(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2016)
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Sec. 4. Definitions. As used in this Act:
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"Address of record" means the designated address recorded |
by the Department in the applicant's or licensee's application |
file or license file as maintained by the Department's |
licensure maintenance unit. It is the duty of the applicant or |
licensee to inform the Department of any change of address and |
those changes must be made either through the Department's |
website or by contacting the Department. |
"Department" means the Department of Financial and |
Professional Regulation.
|
"Secretary" means the Secretary of Financial and |
Professional Regulation.
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"Board" means the Board of Dentistry.
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"Dentist" means a person who has received a general license |
pursuant
to paragraph (a) of Section 11 of this Act and who may |
perform any intraoral
and extraoral procedure required in the |
|
practice of dentistry and to whom is
reserved the |
responsibilities specified in Section 17.
|
"Dental hygienist" means a person who holds a license under |
this Act to
perform dental services as authorized by Section |
18.
|
"Dental assistant" means an appropriately trained person
|
who, under the supervision of a dentist, provides dental |
services
as authorized by Section 17.
|
"Dental laboratory" means a person, firm or corporation |
which:
|
(i) engages in making, providing, repairing or |
altering dental
prosthetic appliances and other artificial |
materials and devices which are
returned to a dentist for |
insertion into the human oral cavity or which
come in |
contact with its adjacent structures and tissues; and
|
(ii) utilizes or employs a dental technician to provide |
such services; and
|
(iii) performs such functions only for a dentist or |
dentists.
|
"Supervision" means supervision of a dental hygienist or a |
dental
assistant requiring that a dentist authorize the |
procedure, remain in the
dental facility while the procedure is |
performed, and approve the work
performed by the dental |
hygienist or dental assistant before dismissal of
the patient, |
but does not mean that the dentist must be present at all
times |
in the treatment room.
|
|
"General supervision" means supervision of a dental |
hygienist
requiring that the patient be a patient of record,
|
that the dentist
examine the patient in accordance with Section |
18 prior to treatment by the
dental hygienist, and that the
|
dentist authorize the procedures which
are being carried
out by |
a notation in the patient's record, but not requiring that a |
dentist
be present when the authorized
procedures are being |
performed. The
issuance of a prescription to a dental |
laboratory by a
dentist does not constitute general |
supervision.
|
"Public member" means a person who is not a health |
professional.
For purposes of board membership, any person with |
a significant financial
interest in a health service or |
profession is not a public member.
|
"Dentistry" means the healing art which is concerned with |
the
examination, diagnosis, treatment planning and care of |
conditions within
the human oral cavity and its adjacent |
tissues and structures, as further
specified in Section 17.
|
"Branches of dentistry" means the various specialties of |
dentistry
which, for purposes of this Act, shall be limited to |
the following:
endodontics, oral and maxillofacial surgery, |
orthodontics and dentofacial
orthopedics, pediatric dentistry,
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periodontics, prosthodontics, and oral and maxillofacial
|
radiology.
|
"Specialist" means a dentist who has received a specialty |
license
pursuant to Section 11(b).
|
|
"Dental technician" means a person who owns, operates or is
|
employed by a dental laboratory and engages in making, |
providing, repairing
or altering dental prosthetic appliances |
and other artificial materials and
devices which are returned |
to a dentist for insertion into the human oral
cavity or which |
come in contact with its adjacent structures and tissues.
|
"Impaired dentist" or "impaired dental hygienist" means a |
dentist
or dental hygienist who is unable to practice with
|
reasonable skill and safety because of a physical or mental |
disability as
evidenced by a written determination or written |
consent based on clinical
evidence, including deterioration |
through the aging process, loss of motor
skills, abuse of drugs |
or alcohol, or a psychiatric disorder, of sufficient
degree to |
diminish the person's ability to deliver competent patient |
care.
|
"Nurse" means a registered professional nurse, a certified |
registered
nurse anesthetist licensed as an advanced practice
|
nurse, or a licensed practical nurse licensed under the Nurse |
Practice Act.
|
"Patient of record" means a patient for whom the patient's |
most recent
dentist has obtained
a
relevant medical and dental |
history and on whom the dentist has performed an
examination |
and evaluated the condition to be treated.
|
"Dental emergency responder" means a dentist or dental |
hygienist who is appropriately certified in emergency medical |
response, as defined by the Department of Public Health.
|
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"Mobile dental van or portable dental unit" means any |
self-contained or portable dental unit in which dentistry is |
practiced that can be moved, towed, or transported from one |
location to another in order to establish a location where |
dental services can be provided. |
"Public health dental hygienist" means a hygienist who |
holds a valid license to practice in the State, has 2 years of |
full-time clinical experience or an equivalent of 4,000 hours |
of clinical experience and has completed 72 hours of additional |
course work in areas specific to public health dentistry, |
including, but not limited to, emergency procedures for |
medically compromised patients, pharmacology, medical |
recordkeeping procedures, geriatric dentistry, pediatric |
dentistry, and pathology, and works in a public health setting |
pursuant to a written public health supervision agreement as |
defined by rule by the Department with a dentist working in or |
contracted with a local or State government agency or |
institution or who is providing services as part of a certified |
school-based program or school-based oral health program. |
"Public health setting" means a federally qualified health |
center; a federal, State, or local public health facility; Head |
Start; a special supplemental nutrition program for Women, |
Infants, and Children (WIC) facility; or a certified |
school-based health center or school-based oral health |
program. |
"Public health supervision" means the supervision of a |
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public health dental hygienist by a licensed dentist who has a |
written public health supervision agreement with that public |
health dental hygienist while working in an approved facility |
or program that allows the public health dental hygienist to |
treat patients, without a dentist first examining the patient |
and being present in the facility during treatment, (1) who are |
eligible for Medicaid or (2) who are uninsured and whose |
household income is not greater than 200% of the federal |
poverty level. |
(Source: P.A. 97-526, eff. 1-1-12; 97-1013, eff. 8-17-12.)
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(Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 99-25 )
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(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2016)
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Sec. 4. Definitions. As used in this Act:
|
"Address of record" means the designated address recorded |
by the Department in the applicant's or licensee's application |
file or license file as maintained by the Department's |
licensure maintenance unit. It is the duty of the applicant or |
licensee to inform the Department of any change of address and |
those changes must be made either through the Department's |
website or by contacting the Department. |
"Department" means the Department of Financial and |
Professional Regulation.
|
"Secretary" means the Secretary of Financial and |
Professional Regulation.
|
"Board" means the Board of Dentistry.
|
|
"Dentist" means a person who has received a general license |
pursuant
to paragraph (a) of Section 11 of this Act and who may |
perform any intraoral
and extraoral procedure required in the |
practice of dentistry and to whom is
reserved the |
responsibilities specified in Section 17.
|
"Dental hygienist" means a person who holds a license under |
this Act to
perform dental services as authorized by Section |
18.
|
"Dental assistant" means an appropriately trained person
|
who, under the supervision of a dentist, provides dental |
services
as authorized by Section 17.
|
"Dental laboratory" means a person, firm or corporation |
which:
|
(i) engages in making, providing, repairing or |
altering dental
prosthetic appliances and other artificial |
materials and devices which are
returned to a dentist for |
insertion into the human oral cavity or which
come in |
contact with its adjacent structures and tissues; and
|
(ii) utilizes or employs a dental technician to provide |
such services; and
|
(iii) performs such functions only for a dentist or |
dentists.
|
"Supervision" means supervision of a dental hygienist or a |
dental
assistant requiring that a dentist authorize the |
procedure, remain in the
dental facility while the procedure is |
performed, and approve the work
performed by the dental |
|
hygienist or dental assistant before dismissal of
the patient, |
but does not mean that the dentist must be present at all
times |
in the treatment room.
|
"General supervision" means supervision of a dental |
hygienist
requiring that the patient be a patient of record,
|
that the dentist
examine the patient in accordance with Section |
18 prior to treatment by the
dental hygienist, and that the
|
dentist authorize the procedures which
are being carried
out by |
a notation in the patient's record, but not requiring that a |
dentist
be present when the authorized
procedures are being |
performed. The
issuance of a prescription to a dental |
laboratory by a
dentist does not constitute general |
supervision.
|
"Public member" means a person who is not a health |
professional.
For purposes of board membership, any person with |
a significant financial
interest in a health service or |
profession is not a public member.
|
"Dentistry" means the healing art which is concerned with |
the
examination, diagnosis, treatment planning and care of |
conditions within
the human oral cavity and its adjacent |
tissues and structures, as further
specified in Section 17.
|
"Branches of dentistry" means the various specialties of |
dentistry
which, for purposes of this Act, shall be limited to |
the following:
endodontics, oral and maxillofacial surgery, |
orthodontics and dentofacial
orthopedics, pediatric dentistry,
|
periodontics, prosthodontics, and oral and maxillofacial
|
|
radiology.
|
"Specialist" means a dentist who has received a specialty |
license
pursuant to Section 11(b).
|
"Dental technician" means a person who owns, operates or is
|
employed by a dental laboratory and engages in making, |
providing, repairing
or altering dental prosthetic appliances |
and other artificial materials and
devices which are returned |
to a dentist for insertion into the human oral
cavity or which |
come in contact with its adjacent structures and tissues.
|
"Impaired dentist" or "impaired dental hygienist" means a |
dentist
or dental hygienist who is unable to practice with
|
reasonable skill and safety because of a physical or mental |
disability as
evidenced by a written determination or written |
consent based on clinical
evidence, including deterioration |
through the aging process, loss of motor
skills, abuse of drugs |
or alcohol, or a psychiatric disorder, of sufficient
degree to |
diminish the person's ability to deliver competent patient |
care.
|
"Nurse" means a registered professional nurse, a certified |
registered
nurse anesthetist licensed as an advanced practice
|
nurse, or a licensed practical nurse licensed under the Nurse |
Practice Act.
|
"Patient of record" means a patient for whom the patient's |
most recent
dentist has obtained
a
relevant medical and dental |
history and on whom the dentist has performed an
examination |
and evaluated the condition to be treated.
|
|
"Dental responder" means a dentist or dental hygienist who |
is appropriately certified in disaster preparedness, |
immunizations, and dental humanitarian medical response |
consistent with the Society of Disaster Medicine and Public |
Health and training certified by the National Incident |
Management System or the National Disaster Life Support |
Foundation.
|
"Mobile dental van or portable dental unit" means any |
self-contained or portable dental unit in which dentistry is |
practiced that can be moved, towed, or transported from one |
location to another in order to establish a location where |
dental services can be provided. |
"Public health dental hygienist" means a hygienist who |
holds a valid license to practice in the State, has 2 years of |
full-time clinical experience or an equivalent of 4,000 hours |
of clinical experience and has completed 72 hours of additional |
course work in areas specific to public health dentistry, |
including, but not limited to, emergency procedures for |
medically compromised patients, pharmacology, medical |
recordkeeping procedures, geriatric dentistry, pediatric |
dentistry, and pathology, and works in a public health setting |
pursuant to a written public health supervision agreement as |
defined by rule by the Department with a dentist working in or |
contracted with a local or State government agency or |
institution or who is providing services as part of a certified |
school-based program or school-based oral health program. |
|
"Public health setting" means a federally qualified health |
center; a federal, State, or local public health facility; Head |
Start; a special supplemental nutrition program for Women, |
Infants, and Children (WIC) facility; or a certified |
school-based health center or school-based oral health |
program. |
"Public health supervision" means the supervision of a |
public health dental hygienist by a licensed dentist who has a |
written public health supervision agreement with that public |
health dental hygienist while working in an approved facility |
or program that allows the public health dental hygienist to |
treat patients, without a dentist first examining the patient |
and being present in the facility during treatment, (1) who are |
eligible for Medicaid or (2) who are uninsured and whose |
household income is not greater than 200% of the federal |
poverty level. |
(Source: P.A. 99-25, eff. 1-1-16.)
|
(225 ILCS 25/6)
(from Ch. 111, par. 2306)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2016)
|
Sec. 6. Board of Dentistry - Report By Majority Required. |
There
is created a Board of Dentistry, to be composed of |
persons designated from
time to time by the Secretary, as |
follows:
|
Eleven persons, 8 of whom have been dentists for a period |
of 5
years or
more; 2 of whom have been dental hygienists
for a |
|
period of 5 years or more, and one public member.
None of the |
members shall be an officer, dean, assistant dean, or associate
|
dean of a
dental college or dental department of an institute |
of learning, nor shall any
member be
the program director of |
any dental hygiene program. A board member who holds a
faculty |
position in a dental school or dental hygiene program shall not
|
participate in the
examination of applicants for licenses from |
that school or program. The
dental
hygienists shall not |
participate in the examination of
applicants for licenses
to |
practice dentistry. The public member shall not participate in |
the
examination of applicants for licenses to
practice |
dentistry or dental
hygiene. The board shall annually elect a |
chairman and vice-chairman who shall be dentists a dentist .
|
Terms for all members shall be for 4 years. Partial terms |
over 2 years
in length shall be considered as full terms. A |
member may be reappointed
for a successive term, but no member |
shall serve more than 2 full terms in
his or her lifetime.
|
The membership of the Board shall include only residents |
from various
geographic areas of this State and shall include |
at least some graduates
from various institutions of dental |
education in this State.
|
In making appointments to the Board the Secretary shall |
give due
consideration to recommendations by organizations of |
the dental profession
in Illinois, including the Illinois State |
Dental Society and Illinois
Dental Hygienists Association, and |
shall promptly give due notice to
such organizations of any |
|
vacancy in the membership of the Board.
The Secretary may |
terminate the appointment of any member for cause which in
the |
opinion of the Secretary reasonably justifies such |
termination.
|
A vacancy in the membership of the Board
shall not impair |
the right of a quorum to exercise all the rights
and perform |
all the duties of the Board.
Any action to be taken by the |
Board under this Act may be authorized
by resolution at any |
regular or special meeting, and each such resolution
shall take |
effect immediately. The Board shall meet at least quarterly.
|
The Board may adopt all rules and regulations necessary and |
incident
to its powers and duties under this Act.
|
The members of the Board shall each receive as compensation |
a reasonable
sum as determined by the Secretary for each day |
actually engaged in the
duties of the office, and all |
legitimate and necessary expense incurred in
attending the |
meetings of the Board.
|
Members of the Board shall be immune from suit in any |
action based
upon any disciplinary proceedings or other |
activities performed in good
faith as members of the Board.
|
(Source: P.A. 97-1013, eff. 8-17-12.)
|
(225 ILCS 25/8.5)
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(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2016)
|
Sec. 8.5. Unlicensed practice; violation; civil penalty.
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(a) Any person who practices, offers to practice, attempts |
|
to practice, or
holds oneself out to practice dentistry or |
dental hygiene without being licensed under this Act
shall, in
|
addition to any other penalty provided by law, pay a civil |
penalty to the
Department in an amount not to exceed $10,000 |
for each offense
as determined by
the Department. The civil |
penalty shall be assessed by the Department after a
hearing is |
held in accordance with the provisions set forth in this Act
|
regarding the provision of a hearing for the discipline of a |
licensee.
|
(b) The Department has the authority and power to |
investigate any and all
unlicensed activity.
|
(c) The civil penalty shall be paid within 60 days after |
the effective date
of the order imposing the civil penalty. The |
order shall constitute a judgment
and may be filed and |
execution had thereon in the same manner as any judgment
from |
any court of record.
|
(Source: P.A. 88-223; 89-80, eff. 6-30-95 .)
|
(225 ILCS 25/16.1) (from Ch. 111, par. 2316.1)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2016)
|
Sec. 16.1. Continuing education. The Department shall |
promulgate
rules of continuing education for persons licensed |
under
this Act. In establishing rules, the Department shall |
require a minimum of
48 hours of study in approved courses for |
dentists during each 3-year
licensing period and a minimum of |
36 hours of study in approved courses for
dental hygienists |
|
during each 3-year licensing period.
|
The Department shall approve only courses that are relevant |
to the
treatment and care of patients, including, but not |
limited to, clinical
courses in dentistry and dental hygiene |
and nonclinical courses such as
patient management, legal and |
ethical responsibilities, and stress
management. The |
Department shall allow up to 4 hours of continuing education |
credit hours per license renewal period for volunteer hours |
spent providing clinical services at, or sponsored by, a |
nonprofit community clinic, local or state health department, |
or a charity event. Courses shall not be approved in such |
subjects as estate and
financial planning, investments, or |
personal health. Approved courses may
include, but shall not be |
limited to, courses that are offered or sponsored
by approved |
colleges, universities, and hospitals and by recognized
|
national, State, and local dental and dental hygiene |
organizations.
|
No license shall be renewed unless the
renewal application |
is accompanied by an affidavit indicating that the
applicant |
has completed the required minimum number of hours of |
continuing
education in approved courses as required by this |
Section.
The affidavit shall not require a listing of courses. |
The affidavit
shall be a prima facie evidence that the |
applicant has obtained the minimum
number of required |
continuing education hours in approved courses. The
Department |
shall not be obligated to conduct random
audits or otherwise |
|
independently verify that an applicant has met the
continuing |
education requirement.
The Department, however, may not |
conduct random audits
of more than 10% of the licensed
dentists |
and dental hygienists in any one licensing cycle
to verify |
compliance
with continuing education requirements.
If the |
Department, however, receives a
complaint that a licensee has |
not completed the required continuing
education or if the |
Department is investigating another alleged violation
of this |
Act by a licensee, the Department may demand and shall be |
entitled
to receive evidence from any licensee of completion of |
required
continuing education courses for the most recently |
completed 3-year
licensing period.
Evidence of continuing |
education may include, but is not limited to, canceled
checks, |
official verification forms of attendance, and continuing |
education
recording forms, that demonstrate a reasonable |
record of attendance. The
Board shall determine, in accordance |
with rules adopted by the
Department,
whether a licensee or |
applicant has met the continuing education
requirements.
Any |
dentist who holds more than one license under this
Act shall be |
required to complete
only the minimum number of hours of |
continuing education required for
renewal of a single license. |
The Department may provide exemptions from
continuing |
education requirements. The exemptions shall include, but |
shall
not be limited to, dentists and dental hygienists who |
agree not to practice
within the State during the licensing |
period because they are retired from
practice.
|
|
(Source: P.A. 97-526, eff. 1-1-12; 97-1013, eff. 8-17-12.)
|
(225 ILCS 25/17) (from Ch. 111, par. 2317)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2016)
|
Sec. 17. Acts Constituting the Practice of Dentistry. A |
person
practices dentistry, within the meaning of this Act:
|
(1) Who represents himself or herself as being able to |
diagnose or diagnoses,
treats, prescribes, or operates for |
any disease, pain, deformity, deficiency,
injury, or |
physical condition of the human tooth, teeth, alveolar |
process,
gums or jaw; or
|
(2) Who is a manager, proprietor, operator or conductor |
of a
business where
dental operations are performed; or
|
(3) Who performs dental operations of any kind; or
|
(4) Who uses an X-Ray machine or X-Ray films for
dental |
diagnostic purposes; or
|
(5) Who extracts a human tooth or teeth, or corrects or |
attempts to
correct
malpositions of the human teeth or |
jaws; or
|
(6) Who offers or undertakes, by any means or method, |
to diagnose, treat
or remove stains, calculus, and bonding |
materials from human teeth or jaws; or
|
(7) Who uses or administers local or general |
anesthetics in the treatment
of dental or oral diseases or |
in any preparation incident to a dental operation
of any |
kind or character; or
|
|
(8) Who takes impressions of the human tooth, teeth, or |
jaws or performs
any phase of any operation incident to the |
replacement of a part of a tooth,
a tooth, teeth or |
associated tissues by means of a filling, crown, a bridge,
|
a denture or other appliance; or
|
(9) Who offers to furnish, supply, construct, |
reproduce or repair, or
who furnishes, supplies, |
constructs, reproduces or repairs, prosthetic
dentures, |
bridges or other substitutes for natural teeth, to the user |
or
prospective user thereof; or
|
(10) Who instructs students on clinical matters or |
performs any clinical
operation included in the curricula |
of recognized dental schools and colleges; or
|
(11) Who takes impressions of human teeth or places his |
or her hands in the mouth of any person for the purpose of |
applying teeth whitening materials, or who takes |
impressions of human teeth or places his or her hands in |
the mouth of any person for the purpose of assisting in the |
application of teeth whitening materials. A person does not |
practice dentistry when he or she discloses to the consumer |
that he or she is not licensed as a dentist under this Act |
and (i) discusses the use of teeth whitening materials with |
a consumer purchasing these materials; (ii) provides |
instruction on the use of teeth whitening materials with a |
consumer purchasing these materials; or (iii) provides |
appropriate equipment on-site to the consumer for the |
|
consumer to self-apply teeth whitening materials. |
The fact that any person engages in or performs, or offers |
to engage in
or perform, any of the practices, acts, or |
operations set forth in this
Section, shall be prima facie |
evidence that such person is engaged in the
practice of |
dentistry.
|
The following practices, acts, and operations, however, |
are exempt from
the operation of this Act:
|
(a) The rendering of dental relief in emergency cases |
in the practice
of his or her profession by a physician or |
surgeon, licensed as such
under the laws of this State, |
unless he or she undertakes to reproduce or reproduces
lost |
parts of the human teeth in the mouth or to restore or |
replace lost
or missing teeth in the mouth; or
|
(b) The practice of dentistry in the discharge of their |
official duties
by dentists in any branch of the Armed |
Services of the United States, the
United States Public |
Health Service, or the United States Veterans
|
Administration; or
|
(c) The practice of dentistry by students in their |
course of study
in dental schools or colleges approved by |
the Department, when acting under the
direction and |
supervision of dentists acting as instructors; or
|
(d) The practice of dentistry by clinical instructors |
in the course of
their teaching duties in dental schools or |
colleges approved by the
Department:
|
|
(i) when acting under the direction and |
supervision of dentists,
provided that such clinical |
instructors have instructed continuously in
this State |
since January 1, 1986; or
|
(ii) when holding the rank of full professor at |
such approved dental
school or college and possessing a |
current valid license or authorization
to practice |
dentistry in another country; or
|
(e) The practice of dentistry by licensed dentists of |
other states or
countries at meetings of the Illinois State |
Dental Society or component
parts thereof, alumni meetings |
of dental colleges, or any other like dental
organizations, |
while appearing as clinicians; or
|
(f) The use of X-Ray machines for exposing X-Ray films |
of dental or oral
tissues by dental hygienists or dental |
assistants; or
|
(g) The performance of any dental service by a dental |
assistant, if such
service is performed under the |
supervision and full responsibility of a
dentist.
|
For purposes of this paragraph (g), "dental service" is |
defined to mean
any intraoral procedure or act which shall |
be prescribed by rule or
regulation of the Department. |
Dental service, however, shall not include:
|
(1) Any and all diagnosis of or prescription for |
treatment of disease,
pain, deformity, deficiency, |
injury or physical condition of the human teeth
or |
|
jaws, or adjacent structures.
|
(2) Removal of, or restoration of, or addition
to |
the hard or soft tissues of the oral cavity, except for |
the placing, carving, and finishing of amalgam |
restorations by dental assistants who have had |
additional formal education and certification as |
determined by the Department. A dentist utilizing |
dental assistants shall not supervise more than 4 |
dental assistants at any one time for placing, carving, |
and finishing of amalgam restorations.
|
(3) Any and all correction of malformation of teeth |
or of the jaws.
|
(4) Administration of anesthetics, except for |
monitoring of
nitrous oxide, conscious sedation, deep |
sedation, and general anesthetic as provided in |
Section 8.1 of this Act, that may be performed only |
after successful completion of a training
program |
approved by the Department. A dentist utilizing dental |
assistants shall not supervise more than 4 dental |
assistants at any one time for the monitoring of |
nitrous oxide.
|
(5) Removal of calculus from human teeth.
|
(6) Taking of impressions for the fabrication of |
prosthetic
appliances,
crowns,
bridges, inlays, |
onlays, or other restorative or replacement
dentistry.
|
(7) The operative procedure of dental hygiene |
|
consisting of oral
prophylactic procedures, except for |
coronal polishing and pit and fissure sealants,
which |
may be
performed by a
dental assistant who has |
successfully completed a training program approved by
|
the Department. Dental assistants may perform coronal |
polishing under the
following circumstances: (i) the |
coronal polishing shall be limited to
polishing the
|
clinical crown of the tooth and existing restorations, |
supragingivally; (ii)
the
dental assistant performing |
the coronal polishing shall be limited to the use
of
|
rotary instruments using a rubber cup or brush |
polishing method (air polishing
is
not permitted); and |
(iii) the supervising dentist shall not supervise more
|
than 4
dental assistants at any one time for the task |
of coronal polishing or pit and fissure sealants.
|
In addition to coronal polishing and pit and |
fissure sealants as described in this item (7), a |
dental assistant who has at least 2,000 hours of |
clinical experience and who has successfully completed |
a training program approved by rule by the Department |
may perform: (A) coronal scaling above the gum line, |
supragingivally, on the clinical crown of the tooth |
only on patients 12 years of age or younger who have an |
absence of periodontal disease and who are not |
medically compromised or individuals with special |
needs and (B) intracoronal temporization of a tooth. |
|
The training program approved by the Department must: |
(I) include a minimum of 16 hours of instruction in |
both didactic and clinical manikin or human subject |
instruction; all training programs shall include |
courses in dental anatomy, public health dentistry, |
medical history, dental emergencies, and managing the |
pediatric patient; (II) include an outcome assessment |
examination that demonstrates competency; (III) |
require the supervising dentist to observe and approve |
the completion of 6 full mouth supragingival scaling |
procedures; and (IV) issue a certificate of completion |
of the training program, which must be kept on file at |
the dental office. A dental assistant must have |
successfully completed an approved coronal polishing |
course prior to taking the coronal scaling course. A |
dental assistant performing these functions shall be |
limited to the use of hand instruments only. In |
addition, coronal scaling as described in this |
paragraph shall only be utilized on patients who are |
eligible for Medicaid or who are uninsured and whose |
household income is not greater than 200% of the |
federal poverty level. A dentist may not supervise more |
than 2 dental assistants at any one time for the task |
of coronal scaling. This paragraph is inoperative on |
and after January 1, 2021. |
The limitations on the number of dental assistants a |
|
dentist may supervise contained in items (2), (4), and (7) |
of this paragraph (g) mean a limit of 4 total dental |
assistants or dental hygienists doing expanded functions |
covered by these Sections being supervised by one dentist. |
(h) The practice of dentistry by an individual who:
|
(i) has applied in writing to the Department, in |
form and substance
satisfactory to the Department, for |
a general dental license and has
complied with all |
provisions of Section 9 of this Act, except for the
|
passage of the examination specified in subsection (e) |
of Section 9 of this
Act; or
|
(ii) has applied in writing to the Department, in |
form and substance
satisfactory to the Department, for |
a temporary dental license and has
complied with all |
provisions of subsection (c) of Section 11 of this Act; |
and
|
(iii) has been accepted or appointed for specialty |
or residency training
by a hospital situated in this |
State; or
|
(iv) has been accepted or appointed for specialty |
training in an
approved dental program situated in this |
State; or
|
(v) has been accepted or appointed for specialty |
training in a dental
public health agency situated in |
this State.
|
The applicant shall be permitted to practice dentistry |
|
for a period of 3
months from the starting date of the |
program, unless authorized in writing
by the Department to |
continue such practice for a period specified in
writing by |
the Department.
|
The applicant shall only be entitled to perform such |
acts as may be
prescribed by and incidental to his or her |
program of residency or specialty
training and shall not |
otherwise engage in the practice of dentistry in this
|
State.
|
The authority to practice shall terminate immediately |
upon:
|
(1) the decision of the Department that the |
applicant has failed the
examination; or
|
(2) denial of licensure by the Department; or
|
(3) withdrawal of the application.
|
(Source: P.A. 97-526, eff. 1-1-12; 97-886, eff. 8-2-12; |
97-1013, eff. 8-17-12; 98-147, eff. 1-1-14; 98-463, eff. |
8-16-13; 98-756, eff. 7-16-14.)
|
(225 ILCS 25/18)
(from Ch. 111, par. 2318)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2016)
|
Sec. 18. Acts constituting the practice of dental hygiene;
|
limitations. |
(a) A person practices dental hygiene within the meaning of |
this Act when
he or she performs the following acts under the |
supervision of a dentist:
|
|
(i) the operative procedure of dental hygiene, |
consisting of oral
prophylactic procedures;
|
(ii) the exposure and processing of X-Ray films of |
the teeth and
surrounding structures;
|
(iii) the application to the surfaces of the teeth |
or gums of chemical
compounds designed to be |
desensitizing agents or effective agents in the
|
prevention of dental caries or periodontal disease;
|
(iv) all services which may be performed by a
|
dental assistant as specified by rule pursuant to |
Section 17, and a dental hygienist may engage in the |
placing, carving, and finishing of amalgam |
restorations only after obtaining formal education and |
certification as determined by the Department;
|
(v) administration and monitoring of nitrous oxide |
upon successful
completion of a
training program |
approved by the Department;
|
(vi) administration of local anesthetics upon |
successful completion of
a
training program approved |
by the Department; and
|
(vii) such other procedures and acts as shall be |
prescribed
by
rule or regulation of the Department.
|
(b) A dental hygienist may be employed or engaged only:
|
(1) by a dentist;
|
(2) by a federal, State, county, or municipal agency or |
institution;
|
|
(3) by a public or private school; or
|
(4) by a public clinic operating under the direction of |
a hospital or
federal,
State, county, municipal, or other |
public agency or institution.
|
(c) When employed or engaged in the office of a dentist, a |
dental hygienist
may
perform, under general supervision, those |
procedures found in items (i) through
(iv) of
subsection (a) of |
this Section, provided the patient has been examined by the
|
dentist
within one year of the provision of dental hygiene |
services, the dentist has
approved the
dental hygiene services |
by a notation in the patient's record and the patient
has been
|
notified that the dentist may be out of the office during the |
provision of
dental hygiene
services.
|
(d) If a patient of record is unable to travel to a dental |
office because of
illness,
infirmity, or
imprisonment, a dental |
hygienist may perform, under the general supervision of
a |
dentist,
those procedures found in items (i) through (iv) of |
subsection (a) of this
Section,
provided the patient is located |
in a long-term care facility licensed by the
State of Illinois,
|
a mental health or developmental disability facility, or a |
State or federal
prison. The dentist
shall personally examine |
and diagnose the patient and determine which
services are |
necessary to be performed, which shall be contained in an order |
to the hygienist and a notation in the patient's record.
Such |
order must be implemented within 120 days
of its issuance, and |
an updated medical history and observation of oral
conditions
|
|
must be performed by the hygienist immediately prior to |
beginning the
procedures to ensure that the patient's health |
has not changed in any
manner to warrant a reexamination by the |
dentist.
|
(e) School-based oral health care,
consisting of and |
limited to oral prophylactic
procedures, sealants, and |
fluoride treatments,
may be provided by a dental hygienist
|
under the general supervision of a dentist. A dental hygienist |
may not provide
other dental hygiene treatment in a |
school-based setting, including but not
limited to |
administration or monitoring of nitrous oxide or |
administration of
local anesthetics. The school-based |
procedures may be performed provided the
patient is located at |
a public or private school and the program is being
conducted |
by a State, county or local public health department initiative |
or in
conjunction with a dental school or dental hygiene |
program.
The dentist shall personally examine and diagnose the |
patient and
determine
which services are necessary to be |
performed, which shall be contained in an
order to the
|
hygienist and a notation in the patient's record. Any such |
order for sealants must be implemented within 120 days after |
its issuance. Any such order for oral prophylactic procedures |
or fluoride treatments must be implemented within 180 days |
after its issuance. An updated medical history and observation |
of
oral conditions
must be
performed by the hygienist |
immediately prior to beginning the procedures to
ensure that
|
|
the patient's health has not changed in any manner to warrant a |
reexamination
by the
dentist.
|
(f) Without the supervision of a dentist, a dental |
hygienist
may perform
dental health education functions and may |
record case histories and oral
conditions observed.
|
(g) The number of dental hygienists practicing in a dental |
office shall
not
exceed, at any one time, 4 times the number of |
dentists practicing in the
office at the time.
|
(h) A dental hygienist who is certified as a public health |
dental hygienist may provide services to patients: (1) who are |
eligible for Medicaid or (2) who are uninsured and whose |
household income is not greater than 200% of the federal |
poverty level. A public health dental hygienist may perform |
oral assessments, perform screenings, and provide educational |
and preventative services as provided in subsection (b) of |
Section 18.1 of this Act. The public health dental hygienist |
may not administer local anesthesia or nitrous oxide, or place, |
carve, or finish amalgam restorations or provide periodontal |
therapy under this exception. Each patient must sign a consent |
form that acknowledges that the care received does not take the |
place of a regular dental examination. The public health dental |
hygienist must provide the patient or guardian a written |
referral to a dentist for assessment of the need for further |
dental care at the time of treatment. Any indication or |
observation of a condition that could warrant the need for |
urgent attention must be reported immediately to the |
|
supervising dentist for appropriate assessment and treatment. |
This subsection (h) is inoperative on and after January 1, |
2021. |
(Source: P.A. 97-526, eff. 1-1-12.)
|
(225 ILCS 25/18.1 new) |
Sec. 18.1. Public health dental supervision |
responsibilities. |
(a) When working together in a public health supervision |
relationship, dentists and public health dental hygienists |
shall enter into a public health supervision agreement. The |
dentist providing public health supervision must: |
(1) be available to provide an appropriate level of |
contact, communication, collaboration, and consultation |
with the public health dental hygienist and must meet |
in-person with the public health dental hygienist at least |
quarterly for review and consultation; |
(2) have specific standing orders or policy guidelines |
for procedures that are to be carried out for each location |
or program, although the dentist need not be present when |
the procedures are being performed; |
(3) provide for the patient's additional necessary |
care in consultation with the public health dental |
hygienist; |
(4) file agreements and notifications as required; and |
(5) include procedures for creating and maintaining |
|
dental records, including protocols for transmission of |
all records between the public health dental hygienist and |
the dentist following each treatment, which shall include a |
notation regarding procedures authorized by the dentist |
and performed by the public health dental hygienist and the |
location where those records are to be kept. |
Each dentist and hygienist who enters into a public health |
supervision agreement must document and maintain a copy of any |
change or termination of that agreement. |
Dental records shall be owned and maintained by the |
supervising dentist for all patients treated under public |
health supervision, unless the supervising dentist is an |
employee of a public health clinic or federally qualified |
health center, in which case the public health clinic or |
federally qualified health center shall maintain the records. |
If a dentist ceases to be employed or contracted by the |
facility, the dentist shall notify the facility administrator |
that the public health supervision agreement is no longer in |
effect. A new public health supervision agreement is required |
for the public health dental hygienist to continue treating |
patients under public health supervision. |
A dentist entering into an agreement under this Section may |
supervise and enter into agreements for public health |
supervision with 2 public health dental hygienists. This shall |
be in addition to the limit of 4 dental hygienists per dentist |
set forth in subsection (g) of Section 18 of this Act. |
|
(b) A public health dental hygienist providing services |
under public health supervision may perform only those duties |
within the accepted scope of practice of dental hygiene, as |
follows: |
(1) the operative procedures of dental hygiene, |
consisting of oral prophylactic procedures, including |
prophylactic cleanings, application of fluoride, and |
placement of sealants; |
(2) the exposure and processing of x-ray films of the |
teeth and surrounding structures; and |
(3) such other procedures and acts as shall be |
prescribed by rule of the Department. |
Any patient treated under this subsection (b) must be |
examined by a dentist before additional services can be |
provided by a public health dental hygienist. |
(c) A public health dental hygienist providing services |
under public health supervision must: |
(1) provide to the patient, parent, or guardian a |
written plan for referral or an agreement for follow-up |
that records all conditions observed that should be called |
to the attention of a dentist for proper diagnosis; |
(2) have each patient sign a permission slip or consent |
form that informs them that the service to be received does |
not take the place of regular dental checkups at a dental |
office and is meant for people who otherwise would not have |
access to the service; |
|
(3) inform each patient who may require further dental |
services of that need; |
(4) maintain an appropriate level of contact and |
communication with the dentist providing public health |
supervision; and |
(5) complete an additional 4 hours of continuing |
education in areas specific to public health dentistry |
yearly. |
(d) Each public health dental hygienist who has rendered |
services under subsections (c), (d), and (e) of this Section |
must complete a summary report at the completion of a program |
or, in the case of an ongoing program, at least annually. The |
report must be completed in the manner specified by the |
Division of Oral Health in the Department of Public Health |
including information about each location where the public |
health dental hygienist has rendered these services. The public |
health dental hygienist must submit the form to the dentist |
providing supervision for his or her signature before sending |
it to the Division. |
(e) Public health dental hygienists providing services |
under public health supervision may be compensated for their |
work by salary, honoraria, and other mechanisms by the |
employing or sponsoring entity. Nothing in this Act shall |
preclude the entity that employs or sponsors a public health |
dental hygienist from seeking payment, reimbursement, or other |
source of funding for the services provided. |
|
(f) This Section is repealed on January 1, 2021.
|
(225 ILCS 25/23) (from Ch. 111, par. 2323)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2016)
|
Sec. 23. Refusal, revocation or suspension of dental |
licenses. The
Department may refuse to issue or renew, or may |
revoke, suspend, place on
probation, reprimand or take other |
disciplinary or non-disciplinary action as the Department
may |
deem proper, including imposing fines not to exceed $10,000 per |
violation, with
regard to any license for any one or any |
combination of
the following causes:
|
1. Fraud or misrepresentation in applying for or |
procuring a license under this Act, or in connection with |
applying for renewal of a license under this Act.
|
2. Inability to practice with reasonable judgment, |
skill, or safety as a result of habitual or excessive use |
or addiction to alcohol, narcotics, stimulants, or any |
other chemical agent or drug.
|
3. Willful or repeated violations of the rules of the |
Department of
Public Health or Department of Nuclear |
Safety.
|
4. Acceptance of a fee for service as a witness, |
without the
knowledge of the court, in addition to the fee |
allowed by the court.
|
5. Division of fees or agreeing to split or divide the |
fees received
for dental services with any person for |
|
bringing or referring a patient,
except in regard to |
referral services as provided for under Section 45,
or |
assisting in the care or treatment of a patient,
without |
the
knowledge of the patient or his or her legal |
representative. Nothing in this item 5 affects any bona |
fide independent contractor or employment arrangements |
among health care professionals, health facilities, health |
care providers, or other entities, except as otherwise |
prohibited by law. Any employment arrangements may include |
provisions for compensation, health insurance, pension, or |
other employment benefits for the provision of services |
within the scope of the licensee's practice under this Act. |
Nothing in this item 5 shall be construed to require an |
employment arrangement to receive professional fees for |
services rendered.
|
6. Employing, procuring, inducing, aiding or abetting |
a person not
licensed or registered as a dentist or dental |
hygienist to engage in the practice of
dentistry or dental |
hygiene . The person practiced upon is not an accomplice, |
employer,
procurer, inducer, aider, or abetter within the |
meaning of this Act.
|
7. Making any misrepresentations or false promises, |
directly or
indirectly, to influence, persuade or induce |
dental patronage.
|
8. Professional connection or association with or |
lending his or her name
to another for the illegal practice |
|
of dentistry by another, or
professional connection or |
association with any person, firm or
corporation holding |
himself, herself, themselves, or itself out in any manner
|
contrary to this Act.
|
9. Obtaining or seeking to obtain practice, money, or |
any other
things of value by false or fraudulent |
representations, but
not limited to, engaging in such |
fraudulent practice to defraud the
medical assistance |
program of the Department of Healthcare and Family Services |
(formerly Department of Public Aid) under the Illinois |
Public Aid Code.
|
10. Practicing under a false or, except as provided by |
law, an assumed name.
|
11. Engaging in dishonorable,
unethical, or |
unprofessional conduct of a character likely to deceive,
|
defraud, or harm the public.
|
12. Conviction by plea of guilty or nolo contendere, |
finding of guilt, jury verdict, or entry of judgment or by |
sentencing for any crime, including, but not limited to, |
convictions, preceding sentences of supervision, |
conditional discharge, or first offender probation, under |
the laws of any jurisdiction of the United States that (i) |
is a felony under the laws of this State or (ii) is a |
misdemeanor, an essential element of which is dishonesty, |
or that is directly related to the practice of dentistry.
|
13. Permitting a dental hygienist, dental assistant or |
|
other person
under his or her supervision to perform
any |
operation not authorized by this Act.
|
14. Permitting more than 4 dental hygienists to be |
employed under
his or her supervision at any one time.
|
15. A violation of any provision of this
Act or any |
rules promulgated under this Act.
|
16. Taking impressions for or using the services of any |
person, firm
or corporation violating this Act.
|
17. Violating any provision of Section 45 relating to |
advertising.
|
18. Discipline by another U.S. jurisdiction or foreign |
nation,
if at least one of the grounds for the discipline |
is the
same or substantially equivalent to those set forth |
within this Act.
|
19. Willfully failing to report an instance of |
suspected child abuse or
neglect as required by the Abused |
and Neglected Child Reporting
Act.
|
20. Gross negligence in practice under this Act.
|
21. The use or prescription for use of narcotics or |
controlled substances
or designated products as listed in |
the Illinois Controlled Substances
Act, in any way other |
than for therapeutic purposes.
|
22. Willfully making or filing false records or reports |
in his or her practice
as a dentist, including, but not |
limited to, false records to support claims
against the |
dental assistance program of the Department of Healthcare |
|
and Family Services (formerly
Illinois Department of |
Public
Aid).
|
23. Professional incompetence as manifested by poor |
standards of care.
|
24. Physical or mental illness, including, but not |
limited to,
deterioration
through
the aging process, or |
loss of motor skills which results in a dentist's
inability |
to practice dentistry with reasonable judgment, skill or |
safety. In
enforcing this paragraph, the Department may |
compel a person licensed to
practice under this Act to |
submit to a mental or physical examination pursuant
to the |
terms and conditions of Section 23b.
|
25. Gross or repeated irregularities in billing for |
services rendered
to a patient. For purposes of this |
paragraph 25, "irregularities in billing"
shall include:
|
(a) Reporting excessive charges for the purpose of |
obtaining a total
payment
in excess of that usually |
received by the dentist for the services rendered.
|
(b) Reporting charges for services not rendered.
|
(c) Incorrectly reporting services rendered for |
the purpose of obtaining
payment not earned.
|
26. Continuing the active practice of dentistry while |
knowingly having
any infectious, communicable, or |
contagious disease proscribed by rule or
regulation of the |
Department.
|
27. Being named as a perpetrator in an indicated report |
|
by the
Department of Children and Family Services pursuant |
to the Abused and
Neglected Child Reporting Act, and upon
|
proof by clear and convincing evidence that the licensee |
has
caused a child to be an abused child or neglected child |
as defined in the
Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act.
|
28. Violating the Health Care Worker Self-Referral |
Act.
|
29. Abandonment of a patient.
|
30. Mental incompetency as declared by a court of |
competent
jurisdiction.
|
31. A finding by the Department that the licensee, |
after having his or her license placed on probationary |
status, has violated the terms of probation. |
32. Material misstatement in furnishing information to |
the Department. |
33. Failing, within 60 days, to provide information in |
response to a written request by the Department in the |
course of an investigation. |
34. Immoral conduct in the commission of any act, |
including, but not limited to, commission of an act of |
sexual misconduct related to the licensee's practice. |
35. Cheating on or attempting to subvert the licensing |
examination administered under this Act. |
36. A pattern of practice or other behavior that |
demonstrates incapacity or incompetence to practice under |
this Act. |
|
37. Failure to establish and maintain records of |
patient care and treatment as required under this Act. |
38. Failure to provide copies of dental records as |
required by law. |
All proceedings to suspend, revoke, place on probationary |
status, or
take any other disciplinary action as the Department |
may deem proper, with
regard to a license on any of the |
foregoing grounds, must be commenced
within 5 3 years after |
receipt by the Department of a complaint alleging the
|
commission of or notice of the conviction order for any of the |
acts
described herein. Except for fraud in procuring a license, |
no
action shall be commenced more than 7 5 years after the date |
of the incident
or act alleged to have violated this Section. |
The time during which the
holder of the license was outside the |
State of Illinois shall not be
included within any period of |
time limiting the commencement of
disciplinary action by the |
Department.
|
All fines imposed under this Section shall be paid within |
60 days after the effective date of the order imposing the fine |
or in accordance with the terms set forth in the order imposing |
the fine. |
The Department may refuse to issue or may suspend the |
license of any
person who fails to file a return, or to pay the |
tax, penalty or interest
shown in a filed return, or to pay any |
final assessment of tax, penalty or
interest, as required by |
any tax Act administered by the Illinois
Department of Revenue, |
|
until such time as the requirements of
any such tax Act are |
satisfied.
|
Any dentist who has had his or her license suspended or |
revoked for more than 5 years must comply with the requirements |
for restoration set forth in Section 16 prior to being eligible |
for reinstatement from the suspension or revocation. |
(Source: P.A. 96-1482, eff. 11-29-10; 97-102, eff. 7-14-11; |
97-813, eff. 7-13-12; 97-1013, eff. 8-17-12.)
|
(225 ILCS 25/24) (from Ch. 111, par. 2324)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2016)
|
Sec. 24. Refusal, Suspension or Revocation of Dental |
Hygienist License. The
Department may refuse to issue or renew |
or
may revoke, suspend, place on probation, reprimand or take |
other
disciplinary or non-disciplinary action as the |
Department may deem proper, including imposing fines not
to |
exceed $10,000 per violation, with regard to any dental |
hygienist license
for any one or any combination of the |
following causes:
|
1. Fraud or misrepresentation in applying for or |
procuring a license under this Act, or in connection with |
applying for renewal of a license under this Act.
|
2. Performing any operation not authorized by this Act.
|
3. Practicing dental hygiene other than under the |
supervision of a
licensed dentist as provided by this Act.
|
4. The wilful violation of, or the wilful procuring of, |
|
or knowingly
assisting in the violation of, any Act which |
is now or which hereafter may
be in force in this State |
relating to the use of habit-forming drugs.
|
5. The obtaining of, or an attempt to obtain a license, |
or practice in the profession, or money, or any other thing
|
of value by fraudulent representation.
|
6. Gross negligence in performing the operative |
procedure of dental
hygiene.
|
7. Active practice of dental hygiene while knowingly |
having any
infectious, communicable, or contagious disease |
proscribed by rule
or regulation of the Department.
|
8. Inability to practice with reasonable judgment, |
skill, or safety as a result of habitual or excessive use |
or addiction to alcohol, narcotics, stimulants, or any |
other chemical agent or drug.
|
9. Conviction by plea of guilty or nolo contendere, |
finding of guilt, jury verdict, or entry of judgment or by |
sentencing of any crime, including, but not limited to, |
convictions, preceding sentences of supervision, |
conditional discharge, or first offender probation, under |
the laws of any jurisdiction of the United States that (i) |
is a felony or (ii) is a misdemeanor, an essential element |
of which is dishonesty, or that is directly related to the |
practice of dental hygiene.
|
10. Aiding or abetting the unlicensed practice of |
dentistry or
dental hygiene.
|
|
11. Discipline by another U.S. jurisdiction or a |
foreign nation, if at
least one of the grounds for the |
discipline is the same or substantially
equivalent to those |
set forth in this Act.
|
12. Violating the Health Care Worker Self-Referral |
Act.
|
13. Violating the prohibitions of Section 38.1 of this |
Act. |
14. Engaging in dishonorable, unethical, or |
unprofessional conduct of a character likely to deceive, |
defraud, or harm the public. |
15. A finding by the Department that the licensee, |
after having his or her license placed on probationary |
status, has violated the terms of probation.
|
16. Material misstatement in furnishing information to |
the Department. |
17. Failing, within 60 days, to provide information in |
response to a written request by the Department in the |
course of an investigation. |
18. Immoral conduct in the commission of any act, |
including, but not limited to, commission of an act of |
sexual misconduct related to the licensee's practice. |
19. Cheating on or attempting to subvert the licensing |
examination administered under this Act. |
20. Violations of this Act or of the rules promulgated |
under this Act. |
|
21. Practicing under a false or, except as provided by |
law, an assumed name. |
The provisions of this Act relating to proceedings for the |
suspension
and revocation of a license to practice dentistry |
shall apply to
proceedings for the suspension or revocation of |
a license as a dental
hygienist.
|
All proceedings to suspend, revoke, place on probationary |
status, or take any other disciplinary action as the Department |
may deem proper with regard to a license on any of the grounds |
contained in this Section, must be commenced within 5 years |
after receipt by the Department of a complaint alleging the |
commission of or notice of the conviction order for any of the |
acts described in this Section. Except for fraud in procuring a |
license, no action shall be commenced more than 7 years after |
the date of the incident or act alleged to have violated this |
Section. The time during which the holder of the license was |
outside the State of Illinois shall not be included within any |
period of time limiting the commencement of disciplinary action |
by the Department. |
All fines imposed under this Section shall be paid within |
60 days after the effective date of the order imposing the fine |
or in accordance with the terms set forth in the order imposing |
the fine. |
Any dental hygienist who has had his or her license |
suspended or revoked for more than 5 years must comply with the |
requirements for restoration set forth in Section 16 prior to |
|
being eligible for reinstatement from the suspension or |
revocation. |
(Source: P.A. 97-102, eff. 7-14-11; 97-1013, eff. 8-17-12.)
|
(225 ILCS 25/25) (from Ch. 111, par. 2325)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2016)
|
Sec. 25. Notice of hearing; investigations and informal
|
conferences. |
(a) Upon the motion of
either the Department or the Board |
or upon the verified complaint
in writing of any person setting |
forth facts which
if proven would constitute grounds for |
refusal, suspension or revocation
of license under this Act, |
the Board shall
investigate the actions of any
person, |
hereinafter called the respondent, who holds or
represents that |
he
or she holds a license. All such motions or complaints shall |
be brought to the Board.
|
(b) Prior to taking an in-person statement from a dentist |
or
dental hygienist who is the subject of a complaint, the |
investigator shall
inform the dentist or the dental hygienist |
in writing:
|
(1) that the dentist or dental hygienist is the subject |
of a complaint;
|
(2) that the dentist or dental hygienist
need not |
immediately proceed with the interview and may seek |
appropriate
consultation prior to consenting to the |
interview; and
|
|
(3) that failure of the dentist or dental hygienist to |
proceed with the interview shall not prohibit the |
Department from conducting a visual inspection of the |
facility.
|
A Department investigator's failure to comply with this |
subsection may not
be the sole ground for dismissal of any |
order of the Department filed upon a
finding of a violation or |
for dismissal of a pending investigation.
|
(b-5) The duly authorized dental investigators of the |
Department shall have the right to enter and inspect, during |
business hours, the business premises of a dentist licensed |
under this Act or of a person who holds himself or herself out |
as practicing dentistry, with due consideration for patient |
care of the subject of the investigation, so as to inspect the |
physical premises and equipment and furnishings therein. This |
right of inspection shall not include inspection of business, |
medical, or personnel records located on the premises without a |
Department subpoena issued in accordance with Section 25.1 of |
this Act or Section 2105-105 of the Department of Professional |
Regulation Law of the Civil Administrative Code of Illinois. |
For the purposes of this Section, "business premises" means the |
office or offices where the dentist conducts the practice of |
dentistry. |
(c) If the Department concludes on the basis of a complaint |
or its initial
investigation that there is a possible violation |
of the Act,
the
Department may:
|
|
(1) schedule a hearing pursuant to this Act; or
|
(2) request
in writing that the dentist or dental |
hygienist being investigated attend an
informal
conference |
with representatives of the Department.
|
The request for an informal conference shall contain the |
nature of the
alleged actions or
inactions that constitute the |
possible violations.
|
A dentist or dental hygienist shall be allowed to have |
legal counsel at the
informal conference. If the informal |
conference results in a consent order
between the accused |
dentist or dental hygienist and the Department, the
consent |
order
must be approved by the Secretary. However, if the |
consent order would result in a fine exceeding $10,000 or the |
suspension or revocation of the dentist or dental hygienist |
license, the consent order must be approved by the Board and |
the Secretary. Participation in
the informal conference by a |
dentist, a dental hygienist, or the Department and
any |
admissions or
stipulations made by a dentist, a dental |
hygienist, or the Department at the
informal conference,
|
including any agreements in a consent order that is |
subsequently disapproved
by either the Board or the Secretary, |
shall not be used against the dentist,
dental hygienist, or |
Department at any subsequent hearing and shall not become
a |
part of the
record of the hearing.
|
(d) The Secretary shall, before suspending, revoking, |
placing on
probationary
status, or taking any other |
|
disciplinary action as the Secretary may deem
proper with |
regard to any license, at least 30 days prior
to the date set |
for the hearing, notify the respondent in
writing of any |
charges
made and the time and place for a hearing of the |
charges before the Board,
direct him or her to file his or her |
written answer thereto to the Board
under oath within 20 days |
after the service on him or her of such notice
and inform him |
or her that if he or she fails to file such answer default
will |
be taken against him or her and his or her license may be |
suspended,
revoked, placed on probationary status,
or other |
disciplinary action may be taken with regard thereto, including
|
limiting the scope, nature or extent of his or her practice, as |
the Secretary
may deem proper.
|
(e) Such written notice and any notice in such proceedings |
thereafter
may be
served by delivery personally to the |
respondent, or by
registered or
certified mail to the address |
last theretofore specified by the respondent
in his or her last |
notification to the Secretary.
|
(Source: P.A. 97-1013, eff. 8-17-12.)
|
(225 ILCS 25/26) (from Ch. 111, par. 2326)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2016)
|
Sec. 26. Disciplinary actions.
|
(a) In case the respondent, after
receiving notice, fails |
to file an answer, his or her license may, in the discretion of |
the Secretary, having first received
the recommendation of the |
|
Board, be suspended, revoked, placed on
probationary status, or |
the Secretary may take whatever disciplinary or |
non-disciplinary action
he or she may deem proper, including |
limiting the scope, nature, or extent of the
person's practice |
or the imposition of a fine, without a hearing, if the
act or |
acts charged constitute sufficient grounds for such action |
under this
Act.
|
(b) The Secretary may temporarily suspend the license of a |
dentist or dental hygienist without a hearing,
simultaneous to |
the institution of proceedings for a hearing under this
Act, if |
the Secretary finds that evidence in his or her possession |
indicates that a
dentist's or dental hygienist's continuation |
in practice would constitute
an immediate danger to the public. |
In the event that the Secretary
temporarily suspends the |
license of a dentist or a dental hygienist without a hearing, a |
hearing by the
Board must be held within 15 days after such |
suspension has occurred.
|
(c) The entry of a judgment by any circuit court |
establishing that any
person holding a license under this Act |
is a
person subject to involuntary admission under the Mental |
Health and
Developmental Disabilities Code shall operate as a |
suspension of that
license. That person may resume his or her
|
practice only upon a finding by the Board that he or she has |
been
determined to be no longer subject to involuntary |
admission by the court
and upon the Board's recommendation to |
the Secretary that he or she be
permitted to resume his or her |
|
practice.
|
(Source: P.A. 97-1013, eff. 8-17-12.)
|
(225 ILCS 25/29) (from Ch. 111, par. 2329)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2016)
|
Sec. 29. Recommendations for disciplinary action - Action |
by Secretary. The Board may advise the Secretary that probation |
be granted or
that other disciplinary action, including the |
limitation of the scope,
nature or extent of a person's |
practice, be taken, as it deems proper. If
disciplinary action |
other than suspension or revocation is taken, the Board
may |
advise that the Secretary impose reasonable limitations and |
requirements
upon the respondent to insure compliance with the |
terms of the
probation or
other disciplinary action, including, |
but not limited to, regular reporting
by the respondent to the |
Secretary of his or her actions, or the
respondent's
placing |
himself or herself under the care of a qualified physician for
|
treatment or limiting his or her practice in such manner as the |
Secretary
may require.
|
The Board shall present to the Secretary a written report |
of its findings
and recommendations. A copy of such report |
shall be served upon the
respondent,
either personally or by |
registered or certified mail. Within 20 days after
such |
service, the respondent may present to the Department his
or |
her motion
in writing for a rehearing, specifying the |
particular ground therefor. If
the respondent orders from the |
|
reporting service and pays for a transcript of the record,
the |
time
elapsing thereafter and before such transcript is ready |
for delivery to him
or her shall not be counted as part of such |
20 days.
|
At the expiration of the time allowed for filing a motion |
for rehearing
the Secretary may take the action recommended by |
the Board. Upon suspension,
revocation, placement on |
probationary status, or the taking of any other
disciplinary |
action, including the limiting of the scope, nature, or extent
|
of one's practice, deemed proper by the Secretary, with regard |
to the
license, the respondent
shall surrender his or
her |
license to the Department, if ordered to
do so by the |
Department, and upon his or her failure or refusal to do so,
|
the Department may seize the same.
|
In all instances under this Act in which the Board has |
rendered a
recommendation to the Secretary with respect to a |
particular person, the Secretary
shall, to the extent that he |
or she disagrees with or takes action
contrary to the |
recommendation of the Board, file with the Board his or her |
specific written reasons of disagreement. Such
reasons shall be |
filed within 30 days after the Secretary has taken the
contrary |
position.
|
Each order of revocation, suspension, or other |
disciplinary action shall
contain a brief, concise statement of |
the ground or grounds upon which the
Department's action is |
based, as well as the specific terms and conditions
of such |
|
action. The original of this document shall be retained as a
|
permanent record by the Board and the Department. In those |
instances where
an order of revocation, suspension, or other |
disciplinary action has been
rendered by virtue of a dentist's |
or dental hygienist's physical illness,
including, but not |
limited to, deterioration through the aging process, or
loss of |
motor skill which results in an inability to practice with
|
reasonable judgment, skill, or safety, the Department shall |
permit only
this document and the record of the hearing |
incident thereto to be
observed, inspected, viewed, or copied |
pursuant to court order.
|
(Source: P.A. 97-1013, eff. 8-17-12.)
|
(225 ILCS 25/30) (from Ch. 111, par. 2330)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2016)
|
Sec. 30. Appointment of a Hearing Officer. The Secretary |
shall have
the authority to appoint any attorney duly licensed |
to practice law in the
State of Illinois to serve as the |
hearing officer if any action for refusal
to issue, renew or |
discipline of a license.
The hearing officer shall have full |
authority to conduct the hearing. The
hearing officer shall |
report his or her findings and recommendations to the Board
and |
the Secretary. The Board shall have 60 days from receipt of the |
report
to review the report of the hearing officer and present |
its findings of
fact, conclusions of law and recommendations to |
the Secretary. If the Board
fails to present its report within |
|
the 60 day period, the Secretary shall
issue an order based on |
the report of the hearing officer. If the Secretary
determines |
that the Board's report is contrary to the manifest weight of
|
the evidence, he or she may issue an order in contravention of |
the Board's report.
|
Whenever the Secretary is satisfied that substantial |
justice has not been done in a formal disciplinary action or |
refusal to restore a license, he or she may order a |
reexamination or rehearing by the same or other hearing |
officer. |
(Source: P.A. 97-1013, eff. 8-17-12.)
|
(225 ILCS 25/41) (from Ch. 111, par. 2341)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2016)
|
Sec. 41. Dental Coordinator. The Department shall select a |
dental
coordinator, who shall not be a member of the Board. The |
dental
coordinator shall be a dentist. The dental coordinator |
shall be the chief
enforcement officer of the disciplinary |
provisions of this Act.
|
The Department shall employ, in conformity with the |
" Personnel Code " , such investigators as it deems necessary to |
investigate violations of this Act not
less than one full-time |
investigator for every 3,000 dentists and dental
hygienists in |
the State . Each investigator shall be a college graduate
with |
at least 2 years' investigative experience or one year of |
advanced
dental or medical education. The Department shall |
|
employ, in conformity
with the " Personnel Code " , such other |
professional, technical, investigative
and clerical assistance |
on either a full or part-time basis, as the
Department deems |
necessary for the proper performance of its duties. The
|
Department shall retain and use such hearing officers as it |
deems
necessary. All employees of the Department shall be |
directed by, and
answerable to, the Department, with respect to |
their duties and functions.
|
(Source: P.A. 84-365 .)
|
(225 ILCS 25/50) (from Ch. 111, par. 2350)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2016)
|
Sec. 50. Patient Records. Every dentist shall make
a record |
of all dental work performed for each patient. The record shall
|
be made in a manner and in sufficient detail that it may be |
used for
identification purposes.
|
Dental records required by this Section shall be maintained |
for 10 years.
Dental records required to be maintained under |
this Section, or copies
of those dental records, shall be made |
available upon request to the
patient or the patient's |
guardian. A dentist shall be entitled to reasonable |
reimbursement for the cost of reproducing these records, which |
shall not exceed the cost allowed under Section 8-2001 8-2003 |
of the Code of Civil Procedure. A dentist providing services |
through a mobile dental van or portable dental unit shall |
provide to the patient or the patient's parent or guardian, in |
|
writing, the dentist's name, license number, address, and |
information on how the patient or the patient's parent or |
guardian may obtain the patient's dental records, as provided |
by law.
|
(Source: P.A. 97-526, eff. 1-1-12.)
|
(225 ILCS 25/35 rep.)
|
Section 15. The Illinois Dental Practice Act is amended by |
repealing Section 35. |
Section 95. No acceleration or delay. Where this Act makes |
changes in a statute that is represented in this Act by text |
that is not yet or no longer in effect (for example, a Section |
represented by multiple versions), the use of that text does |
not accelerate or delay the taking effect of (i) the changes |
made by this Act or (ii) provisions derived from any other |
Public Act.
|
Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect December |
31, 2015.
|