104TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY
State of Illinois
2025 and 2026
SB2873

 

Introduced 1/16/2026, by Sen. Mike Simmons

 

SYNOPSIS AS INTRODUCED:
 
New Act

    Creates the Health Care for All Illinois Act. Provides that all individuals residing in this State are covered under the Illinois Health Services Program for health insurance. Sets forth requirements and qualifications of participating health care providers. Sets forth the specific standards for provider reimbursement. Provides that it is unlawful for private health insurers to sell health insurance coverage that duplicates the coverage of the program. Requires the State to establish the Illinois Health Services Trust to provide financing for the program. Sets forth the specific requirements for claims billed under the program. Provides that the program shall include funding for long-term care services and mental health services. Creates the Pharmaceutical and Durable Medical Goods Committee to negotiate the prices of pharmaceuticals and durable medical goods with suppliers or manufacturers on an open bid competitive basis. Provides that patients in the program shall have the same rights and privacy as they are entitled to under current State and federal law. Establishes the Illinois Health Services Governing Board to administer the program. Provides that the Commissioner, the Chief Medical Officer, the public board members, and employees of the program shall be compensated in accordance with the current pay scale for State employees and as deemed professionally appropriate by the General Assembly. Effective January 1, 2027.


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A BILL FOR

 

SB2873LRB104 17901 BAB 31337 b

1    AN ACT concerning health.
 
2    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
3represented in the General Assembly:
 
4    Section 1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the Health
5Care for All Illinois Act.
 
6    Section 5. Purposes. It is the purpose of this Act to
7provide universal access to health care for all individuals
8within the State, to promote and improve the health of all its
9citizens, to stress the importance of good public health
10through treatment and prevention of diseases, and to contain
11costs to make the delivery of this care affordable. Should
12legislation of this kind be enacted on a federal level, it is
13the intent of this Act to become a part of a nationwide system.
 
14    Section 10. Definitions. In this Act:
15    "Board" means the Illinois Health Services Governing Board
16created under this Act.
17    "IHST" means the Illinois Health Services Trust created
18under this Act.
19    "Program" means the Illinois Health Services Program
20created under this Act.
 
21    Section 15. Eligibility; registration. All individuals

 

 

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1residing in this State are covered under the Illinois Health
2Services Program for health insurance and shall receive a card
3with a unique number in the mail. An individual's social
4security number shall not be used for purposes of registration
5under this Section. Individuals and families shall receive an
6Illinois Health Services Insurance Card in the mail after
7filling out a program application form at a health care
8provider. Such application form shall be no more than 2 pages
9long. Individuals who present themselves for covered services
10from a participating provider shall be presumed to be eligible
11for benefits under this Act, but shall complete an application
12for benefits in order to receive an Illinois Health Services
13Insurance Card and have payment made for such benefits.
 
14    Section 20. Benefits and portability.
15    (a) The health coverage benefits under this Act cover all
16medically necessary services, including:
17        (1) primary care and prevention;
18        (2) specialty care, other than what is deemed elective
19    cosmetic;
20        (3) inpatient care;
21        (4) outpatient care;
22        (5) emergency care;
23        (6) prescription drugs;
24        (7) durable medical equipment;
25        (8) long-term care;

 

 

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1        (9) mental health services;
2        (10) the full scope of dental services, other than
3    elective cosmetic dentistry;
4        (11) substance abuse treatment services;
5        (12) chiropractic services; and
6        (13) basic vision care and vision correction.
7    (b) Health coverage benefits under this Act are available
8through any licensed health care provider anywhere in the
9State that is legally qualified to provide such benefits and
10for emergency care anywhere in the United States.
11    (c) No deductibles, copayments, coinsurance, or other cost
12sharing shall be imposed with respect to covered benefits,
13except for those goods or services that exceed basic covered
14benefits, as defined by the Board.
 
15    Section 25. Qualification of participating providers.
16    (a) Health care delivery facilities must meet regional and
17State quality and licensing guidelines as a condition of
18participation under the program, including guidelines
19regarding safe staffing and quality of care.
20    (b) A participating health care provider must be licensed
21by the State. No health care provider whose license is under
22suspension or has been revoked may participate in the program.
23    (c) Only nonprofit health maintenance organizations that
24actually deliver care in their own facilities and directly
25employ clinicians may participate in the program.

 

 

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1    (d) Patients shall have free choice of participating
2eligible providers, hospitals, and inpatient care facilities.
 
3    Section 30. Provider reimbursement.
4    (a) The program shall pay all health care providers
5according to the following standards:
6        (1) Physicians and other practitioners can choose to
7    be paid fee-for-service, salaried by institutions
8    receiving global budgets, or salaried by group practices
9    or health maintenance organizations receiving capitation
10    payments. Investor-owned health maintenance organizations
11    and group practices shall be converted to not-for-profit
12    status. Only institutions that deliver care shall be
13    eligible for program payments.
14        (2) The program shall pay each hospital and providing
15    institution a monthly lump sum (global budget) to cover
16    all operating expenses. The hospital and program shall
17    negotiate the amount of this payment annually based on
18    past budgets, clinical performance, projected changes in
19    demand for services and input costs, and proposed new
20    programs. Hospitals shall not bill patients for services
21    covered by the program and cannot use any of their
22    operating budgets for expansion, profit, excessive
23    executive income, marketing, or major capital purchases or
24    leases.
25        (3) The program budget shall fund major capital

 

 

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1    expenditures, including the construction of new health
2    facilities and the purchase of expensive equipment. The
3    regional health planning districts shall allocate these
4    capital funds and oversee capital projects funded from
5    private donations.
6    (b) The program shall reimburse physicians choosing to be
7paid fee-for-service according to a fee schedule negotiated
8between physician representatives and the program on at least
9an annual basis.
10    (c) Hospitals, nursing homes, community health centers,
11nonprofit staff model health maintenance organizations, and
12home health care agencies shall receive a global budget to
13cover operating expenses, negotiated annually with the program
14based on past expenditures, past budgets, clinical
15performance, projected changes in demand for services and
16input costs, and proposed new programs. Expansions and other
17substantive capital investments shall be funded separately.
18    (d) All covered prescription drugs and durable medical
19supplies shall be paid for according to a fee schedule
20negotiated between manufacturers and the program on at least
21an annual basis. Price reductions shall be achieved by bulk
22purchasing whenever possible. Where therapeutically equivalent
23drugs are available, the formulary shall specify the use of
24the lowest-cost medication, with exceptions available in the
25case of medical necessity.
 

 

 

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1    Section 35. Prohibition against duplicating coverage;
2investor-ownership of health delivery facilities.
3    (a) It is unlawful for a private health insurer to sell
4health insurance coverage that duplicates the benefits
5provided under this Act. Nothing in this Act shall be
6construed as prohibiting the sale of health insurance coverage
7for any additional benefits not covered by this Act.
8    (b) Investor-ownership of health delivery facilities,
9including hospitals, health maintenance organizations, nursing
10homes, and clinics is unlawful. Investor-owners of health
11delivery facilities at the time of the effective date of this
12Act shall be compensated for the loss of their facilities, but
13not for the loss of business opportunities or for
14administrative capacity not used by the program.
 
15    Section 40. Illinois Health Services Trust.
16    (a) The State shall establish the Illinois Health Services
17Trust (IHST), the sole purpose of which shall be to provide the
18financing reserve for the purposes outlined in this Act.
19Specifically, the IHST shall provide all of the following:
20        (1) The funds for the general operating budget of the
21    program.
22        (2) Reimbursement for those benefits outlined in
23    Section 20 of this Act.
24        (3) Public health services.
25        (4) Capital expenditures for construction or

 

 

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1    renovation of health care facilities or major equipment
2    purchases deemed necessary throughout the State and
3    approved by the Board.
4        (5) Re-education and job placement of persons who have
5    lost their jobs as a result of this transition, limited to
6    the first 5 years after the effective date of this Act.
7    (b) The General Assembly or the Governor may provide funds
8to the IHST, but may not remove or borrow funds from the IHST.
9    (c) The IHST shall be administered by the Board, under the
10oversight of the General Assembly.
11    (d) Funding of the IHST shall include, but is not limited
12to, all of the following:
13        (1) Funds appropriated as outlined by the General
14    Assembly on a yearly basis.
15        (2) A progressive set of graduated income
16    contributions; 20% paid by individuals, 20% paid by
17    businesses, and 60% paid by the government.
18        (3) All federal moneys that are designated for health
19    care, including, but not limited to, all moneys designated
20    for Medicaid. The Secretary of Human Services shall be
21    authorized to negotiate with the federal government for
22    funding of Medicare recipients.
23        (4) Grants and contributions, both public and private.
24        (5) Any other tax revenues designated by the General
25    Assembly.
26        (6) Any other funds specifically earmarked for health

 

 

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1    care or health care education, such as settlements from
2    litigation.
3    (e) The total overhead and administrative portion of the
4program budget may not exceed 12% of the total operating
5budget of the program for the first 2 years that the program is
6in operation; 8% for the following 2 years; and 5% for each
7year thereafter.
8    (f) The program may be divided into regional districts for
9the purposes of local administration and oversight of programs
10that are specific to each region's needs.
11    (g) Claims billing from all providers must be submitted
12electronically and in compliance with current State and
13federal privacy laws within 5 years after the effective date
14of this Act. Electronic claims and billing must be uniform
15across the State. The Board shall create and implement a
16statewide uniform system of electronic medical records that is
17in compliance with current State and federal privacy laws
18within 7 years after the effective date of this Act. Payments
19to providers must be made in a timely fashion as outlined under
20current State and federal law. Providers who accept payment
21from the program for services rendered may not bill any
22patient for covered services. Providers may elect either to
23participate fully, or not at all, in the program.
 
24    Section 45. Long-term care payment. The Board shall
25establish funding for long-term care services, including

 

 

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1in-home, nursing home, and community-based care. A local
2public agency shall be established in each community to
3determine eligibility and coordinate home and nursing home
4long-term care. This agency may contract with long-term care
5providers for the full range of needed long-term care
6services.
 
7    Section 50. Mental health services. The program shall
8provide coverage for all medically necessary mental health
9care on the same basis as the coverage for other conditions.
10The program shall cover supportive residences, occupational
11therapy, and ongoing mental health and counseling services
12outside the hospital for patients with serious mental illness.
13In all cases the highest quality and most effective care shall
14be delivered, including institutional care.
 
15    Section 55. Payment for prescription medications, medical
16supplies, and medically necessary assistive equipment.
17    (a) The program shall establish a single prescription drug
18formulary and list of approved durable medical goods and
19supplies. The Board shall, by itself or by a committee of
20health professionals and related individuals appointed by the
21Board and called the Pharmaceutical and Durable Medical Goods
22Committee, meet on a quarterly basis to discuss, reverse, add
23to, or remove items from the formulary according to sound
24medical practice.

 

 

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1    (b) The Pharmaceutical and Durable Medical Goods Committee
2shall negotiate the prices of pharmaceuticals and durable
3medical goods with suppliers or manufacturers on an open bid
4competitive basis. Prices shall be reviewed, negotiated, or
5renegotiated on no less than an annual basis. The
6Pharmaceutical and Durable Medical Goods Committee shall
7establish a process of open forum to the public for the
8purposes of grievance and petition from suppliers, provider
9groups, and the public regarding the formulary no less than 2
10times a year.
11    (c) All pharmacy and durable medical goods vendors must be
12licensed to distribute medical goods through the regulations
13outlined by the Board.
14    (d) All decisions and determinations of the Pharmaceutical
15and Durable Medical Goods Committee must be presented to and
16approved by the Board on an annual basis.
 
17    Section 60. Illinois Health Services Governing Board.
18    (a) The program shall be administered by an independent
19agency known as the Illinois Health Services Governing Board.
20The Board shall consist of a Commissioner, a Chief Medical
21Officer, and 15 other public board members as follows:
22        (1) five members appointed by the Governor, two being
23    consumer representatives, one being the Commissioner of
24    the Board, and one being the Chief Medical Officer;
25        (2) five members appointed by the Lieutenant Governor,

 

 

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1    two of which shall be consumer representatives;
2        (3) five members elected in statewide elections by the
3    People of Illinois, one of which shall be a consumer
4    representative;
5        (4) one member appointed by the Speaker of the House;
6    and
7        (5) one member appointed by the President of the
8    Senate.
9    (b) The Board is responsible for administration of the
10program, including:
11        (1) implementation of eligibility standards and
12    program enrollment;
13        (2) adoption of the benefits package;
14        (3) establishing formulas for setting health
15    expenditure budgets;
16        (4) administration of global budgets, capital
17    expenditure budgets, and prompt reimbursement of
18    providers;
19        (5) negotiations of service fee schedules and prices
20    for prescription drugs and durable medical supplies;
21        (6) recommending evidence-based changes to benefits;
22    and
23        (7) quality and planning functions, including criteria
24    for capital expansion and infrastructure development,
25    measurement and evaluation of health quality indicators,
26    and the establishment of regions for long-term care

 

 

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1    integration.
 
2    Section 65. Patients' rights. The program shall protect
3the rights and privacy of the patients that it serves in
4accordance with all current State and federal statutes. With
5the development of the electronic medical records, patients
6shall be afforded the right and option of keeping any portion
7of their medical records separate from the electronic medical
8records. Patients have the right to access their medical
9records upon demand.
 
10    Section 70. Compensation. The Commissioner, the Chief
11Medical Officer, public board members, and employees of the
12program shall be compensated in accordance with the current
13pay scale for State employees and as deemed professionally
14appropriate by the General Assembly and reviewed in accordance
15with all other State employees.
 
16    Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect January
171, 2027.