Rep. Nicolle Grasse

Filed: 5/9/2025

 

 


 

 


 
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1
AMENDMENT TO SENATE BILL 1524

2    AMENDMENT NO. ______. Amend Senate Bill 1524 by replacing
3everything after the enacting clause with the following:
 
4    "Section 1. This Act may be referred to as the Eddie Thomas
5Act.
 
6    Section 5. The Unified Code of Corrections is amended by
7adding Section 3-2-15 as follows:
 
8    (730 ILCS 5/3-2-15 new)
9    Sec. 3-2-15. Department of Corrections; report of hospice
10and palliative care for committed persons.
11    (a) Purposes. The General Assembly finds that:
12        (1) The United States prison population is aging
13    rapidly.
14        (2) Illinois' prison population is similarly aging
15    rapidly, with over 1,000 prisoners aged 65 or older.

 

 

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1        (3) As a result of the aging prison population more
2    committed persons are in need of end-of-life care and
3    support services.
4        (4) The Department of Corrections has a policy on
5    end-of-life care, which provides, in part, that the goals
6    are: "safe, dignified and comfortable dying,
7    self-determined life closure and effective grieving".
8        (5) The Department of Corrections does not have a
9    formal hospice program; rather, end-of-life care is
10    provided on a prison-by-prison basis which results in
11    inconsistent care for committed persons who have been
12    diagnosed with terminal illnesses or who are expected to
13    reach the end of their life.
14        (6) At some prisons, end-of-life care is at times
15    provided, in part, by other committed persons assigned as
16    aides.
17        (7) The Department of Corrections does not have
18    centralized or consistent data on the number of committed
19    persons receiving end-of-life care.
20        (8) The Department of Corrections does not have
21    centralized or consistent data on the number of prisoner
22    aides who are assigned to assist in providing end-of-life
23    care.
24        (9) The Department of Corrections does not currently
25    have a system for tracking patient outcomes or grievances
26    related to the quality of end-of-life care provided.

 

 

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1        (10) Data on the end-of-life care provided in the
2    Department of Corrections is needed to give the General
3    Assembly and the public an understanding of the
4    Department's approach to end-of-life care for terminally
5    ill committed persons in its custody.
6        (11) Eddie Thomas was a committed person of the
7    Department of Corrections who died alone in the back of a
8    prison infirmary without any end-of-life care just 5
9    months after being diagnosed with late stage lung cancer.
10    (b) Definitions. In this Section:
11    "Advance directive for health care" means written
12instructions of the patient's wishes as to how future care
13should be delivered or declined, including decisions that must
14be made when the patient is not capable of expressing those
15wishes. Advance directives may also appoint an agent with
16power of attorney for health care.
17    "Department" means the Department of Corrections.
18    "Hospice and palliative care" means physical, social,
19emotional, and spiritual support care for committed persons
20who have been diagnosed with a known terminal condition with a
21life expectancy of 6 months or less. This includes, but is not
22limited to, assistance with activities of daily living and
23comfort care.
24    "Peer support" refers to assistance and companionship
25provided by committed persons who have been trained to offer
26emotional, social, and practical support to fellow committed

 

 

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1persons receiving hospice and palliative care.
2    "Terminal condition" means an incurable or irreversible
3condition that, without the administration of life-sustaining
4procedures, will, according to reasonable medical judgment,
5result in death within a relatively short period of time; or a
6state of permanent unconsciousness from which, to a reasonable
7degree of medical certainty, there can be no recovery.
8    (c) Reporting requirement. No later than December 1 of
9each year, the Department shall prepare a report to be
10published on its website that contains, at a minimum, the
11following information about hospice and palliative care in its
12institutions and facilities during the prior fiscal year:
13        (1) demographic data of committed persons who received
14    hospice and palliative care, separated by the following
15    categories:
16            (A) race or ethnicity;
17            (B) gender;
18            (C) age;
19            (D) primary cause of terminal illness or
20        condition; and
21            (E) length of incarceration prior to receiving
22        end-of-life care;
23        (2) data on the number of committed persons in the
24    Department's hospice and palliative care programs,
25    including the following:
26            (A) the total number of committed persons enrolled

 

 

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1        in the Department's hospice and palliative care
2        programs;
3            (B) the total number of admissions into and
4        discharges from the Department's hospice and
5        palliative care programs, including the number of
6        committed persons who died while in the program and
7        the number of committed persons who were removed from
8        the program for other reasons; and
9            (C) the number of committed persons denied entry
10        into the Department's hospice and palliative care
11        programs, including any reasons that they were denied;
12        (3) data on the timing of hospice and palliative care
13    programming, including the following:
14            (A) the average length of time that committed
15        persons receive hospice and palliative care; and
16            (B) the average length of time between the
17        diagnosis of a terminal condition and admission into a
18        hospice and palliative care program;
19        (4) the number of committed persons in the custody of
20    the Department who died, separated by the following
21    categories:
22            (A) committed persons who died while receiving
23        hospice and palliative care; and
24            (B) committed persons who died without receiving
25        hospice and palliative care, and the number of such
26        committed persons who died as a result of natural,

 

 

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1        accidental, suicidal, or homicidal causes;
2        (5) policies and administrative directives of each
3    Department institution and facility regarding the
4    institution of hospice and palliative care. This data
5    shall include the following information:
6            (A) the name of each institution and facility that
7        offers hospice and palliative care services;
8            (B) criteria to be eligible for hospice and
9        palliative care services, both Department-wide and at
10        each institution and facility;
11            (C) a list of the types of hospice and palliative
12        care services that are offered in each institution and
13        facility. This list shall include, but is not limited
14        to, pain management, psychological counseling, peer
15        support, and chaplain services. If available, this
16        list shall also include supportive services offered to
17        family members of committed persons;
18            (D) the accreditation status of the Department's
19        hospice and palliative care programs, if available;
20            (E) the procedures for committed persons in the
21        Department's custody to request an advance directive
22        for health care in each institution and facility;
23            (F) the procedures for health care or legal staff
24        to assist committed persons in completing advance
25        directive instruments; and
26            (G) the procedures for health care providers to

 

 

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1        implement advance directives for health care in each
2        institution and facility;
3        (6) the staff available for hospice and palliative
4    care. This data shall include the following:
5            (A) the number of specialized staff at each
6        institution and facility, including palliative care
7        physicians, nurses, and social workers;
8            (B) the number of volunteers dedicated to hospice
9        and palliative care, separated by the following
10        categories:
11                (i) volunteers who are committed persons of
12            the Department;
13                (ii) volunteers who are not committed persons
14            of the Department; and
15                (iii) the ratio between the number of staff
16            and the number of patients in the Department's
17            hospice and palliative care programs;
18        (7) the cost of the Department's hospice and
19    palliative care programs, including the following:
20            (A) the annual costs associated with hospice and
21        palliative care across the Department;
22            (B) the sources of funding for hospice and
23        palliative care services; and
24            (C) the annual costs associated with hospice and
25        palliative care at each Department institution and
26        facility; and

 

 

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1        (8) the cost of the Department's end-of-life care for
2    committed persons who died of natural causes and were not
3    in hospice or palliative care programs.
4    All such data shall be anonymized to protect the privacy
5of the committed persons involved in the hospice and
6palliative care programs.".