Rep. Laura Faver Dias

Filed: 3/13/2026

 

 


 

 


 
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1
AMENDMENT TO HOUSE BILL 4606

2    AMENDMENT NO. ______. Amend House Bill 4606 by replacing
3everything after the enacting clause with the following:
 
4    "Section 5. The Department of Human Services Act is
5amended by adding Section 10-85 as follows:
 
6    (20 ILCS 1305/10-85 new)
7    Sec. 10-85. Short-term Universal Newborn Home Visiting
8Services.
9    (a) The General Assembly finds all of the following:
10        (1) The weeks following birth are a critical period
11    for the person who has given birth, the newborn infant,
12    and the entire family, setting the stage for long-term
13    health and well-being.
14        (2) Families may struggle to navigate and access early
15    childhood, health and mental health, and other support
16    service networks in the early postpartum period, and

 

 

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1    targeted services and supports may fail to identify
2    families who do not present with risk factors.
3        (3) Research also indicates that postpartum education
4    and care leads to lower rates of morbidity and mortality
5    in persons who have given birth, as many of the risk
6    factors for post-delivery complications, such as
7    hemorrhaging or a pulmonary embolism, may not be
8    identifiable before a person who has given birth is
9    discharged following the birth. Research also indicates
10    that parenting education on health risks for newborns,
11    including substance use, lactation, safe sleep, and other
12    topics, leads to lower infant mortality and morbidity.
13        (4) Illinois communities have invested in and are
14    already implementing short-term universal newborn home
15    visiting services, including Stephenson, Peoria,
16    Winnebago, and Macon counties, and the city of Chicago,
17    and have demonstrated positive outcomes for the physical,
18    mental, and social well-being of newborns and the parents
19    or caregivers of newborns.
20        (5) The 2018 Illinois Maternal Morbidity and Mortality
21    Report from the Department of Public Health recommended
22    that the State expand efforts to provide short-term
23    universal home visiting to all mothers within 3 weeks of
24    giving birth.
25        (6) In October 2021, the Department of Human Services
26    received an Early Childhood Comprehensive Services grant

 

 

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1    from the federal Health Resources and Services
2    Administration to investigate ways to enhance the
3    prenatal-to-age 3 statewide maternal and early childhood
4    system of care by establishing a Universal Newborn Support
5    System that better connects families to programs and
6    services.
7        (7) Short-term universal newborn home visiting
8    services are a covered Medicaid benefit under the approved
9    State Plan Amendment.
10        (8) While no unified State system exists, local
11    communities are already implementing universal newborn
12    home visiting services with some combination of local,
13    State, federal, and philanthropic funding, and current
14    programs, future programs, and the State would benefit
15    from the cohesion and guidance generated by a statewide
16    vision and supported by a permanent agency administrative
17    home and related infrastructure.
18    (b) The purpose of this Section is to authorize the
19Department of Human Services to identify, develop, and manage
20the administrative infrastructure needed to support existing
21and future short-term universal newborn home visiting
22services. In carrying out this work, the Department may
23consider the recommendations contained in the Early Childhood
24Comprehensive Services grant report when adopting rules to
25support implementation.
26    (c) By January 1, 2028, the Department may do the

 

 

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1following:
2        (1) Create and maintain a list of the voluntary
3    universal newborn home visiting models that align with the
4    State's priorities for approach and outcomes and that may
5    inform future local implementation or support existing
6    State grants. Any universal newborn home visiting model
7    included on the list must:
8            (A) Be validated by evidence demonstrating
9        effectiveness in promoting the physical, mental, and
10        social well-being of newborn infants and the parents
11        or caregivers of newborn infants.
12            (B) Include an evidence-based assessment of the
13        physical, social, and emotional factors affecting the
14        family and newborn infant, including a health and
15        wellness check of the newborn infant, an assessment of
16        the physical and mental health of a person who has
17        given birth, lactation support as needed, and
18        screening for social determinants or drivers of health
19        and perinatal mood and anxiety disorders using
20        validated tools.
21            (C) Provide information, referrals, and
22        connections to community resources, early childhood
23        services, family supports, community-based
24        organizations, social service agencies, and medically
25        necessary follow-up health care.
26            (D) Offer at least one visit within the first 3

 

 

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1        weeks after the newborn's discharge from the birth
2        hospital with up to 2 follow-up visits as determined
3        by clinical judgment.
4            (E) Be voluntary and offered at no cost to each
5        family with a newborn infant that resides in the
6        participating community. For purposes of this Section,
7        the family of a newborn infant includes biological
8        parents, foster and adoptive parents, kinship
9        caregivers, and parents who have recently experienced
10        a stillbirth.
11            (F) Impose no adverse consequences on families who
12        decline to receive services or participate in the
13        program.
14        (2) Coordinate with relevant State agencies to support
15    implementation of State-administered funding for local
16    programs; request, collect, and report available data from
17    universal newborn home visiting implementers and develop
18    recommendations for future data collection and data
19    infrastructure; and develop criteria for prioritizing
20    future State funding, including the identification of
21    communities for potential implementation.
22        (3) Consult, coordinate, and collaborate with relevant
23    stakeholders when designing the infrastructure to support
24    universal newborn home visiting services, including early
25    childhood home visiting programs, community-based
26    organizations, social service providers, maternal and

 

 

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1    child health stakeholders, hospitals, birth centers, local
2    public health authorities, insurance carriers, and other
3    State agencies.
4    (d) Funds received under this Section shall supplement,
5and not supplant, existing or new federal, State, or local
6funding for these services.
7    (e) The Department may adopt any rules necessary to
8implement this Section.
 
9    Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect July 1,
102027.".