Public Act 101-0084 Public Act 0084 101ST GENERAL ASSEMBLY |
Public Act 101-0084 | SB1135 Enrolled | LRB101 00178 KTG 49641 b |
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| AN ACT concerning regulation.
| Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
| represented in the General Assembly:
| Section 5. The Clinical Psychologist Licensing Act is | amended by changing Sections 4.2 and 4.3 as follows: | (225 ILCS 15/4.2) | (Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2027) | Sec. 4.2. Prescribing psychologist license. | (a) A psychologist may apply to the Department for a | prescribing psychologist license. The application shall be | made on a form approved by the Department, include the payment | of any required fees, and be accompanied by evidence | satisfactory to the Department that the applicant: | (1) holds a current license to practice clinical | psychology in Illinois; | (2) has successfully completed the following minimum | educational and training requirements either during the | doctoral program required for licensure under this Section | or in an accredited undergraduate or master level program | prior to or subsequent to the doctoral program required | under this Section: | (A) specific minimum undergraduate biomedical | prerequisite coursework, including, but not limited |
| to: Medical Terminology (class or proficiency); | Chemistry or Biochemistry with lab (2 semesters); | Human Physiology (one semester); Human Anatomy (one | semester); Anatomy and Physiology; Microbiology with | lab (one semester); and General Biology for science | majors or Cell and Molecular Biology (one semester); | (B) a minimum of 60 credit hours of didactic | coursework, including, but not limited to: | Pharmacology; Clinical Psychopharmacology; Clinical | Anatomy and Integrated Science; Patient Evaluation; | Advanced Physical Assessment; Research Methods; | Advanced Pathophysiology; Diagnostic Methods; Problem | Based Learning; and Clinical and Procedural Skills; | and | (C) a full-time practicum of 14 months' months | supervised clinical training of at least 36 credit | hours , including a research project; during the | clinical rotation phase, students complete rotations | in Emergency Medicine, Family Medicine, Geriatrics, | Internal Medicine, Obstetrics and Gynecology, | Pediatrics, Psychiatrics, Surgery, and one elective of | the students' choice; program approval standards | addressing faculty qualifications, regular competency | evaluation and length of clinical rotations, and | instructional settings, including , but not limited to, | hospitals, medical centers, health care facilities |
| located at federal and State prisons, hospital | outpatient clinics, community mental health clinics, | patient-centered medical homes or family-centered | medical homes, women's medical health centers, and | Federally Qualified Health Centers; the clinical | training must meet the standards for: and correctional | facilities, in accordance with those of the | Accreditation Review Commission on Education for the | Physician Assistant shall be set by Department by rule; | (i) physician assistant education as defined | by the Accreditation Review Commission on | Education for the Physician Assistant; | (ii) advanced practice nurse education as | defined by the Commission on Collegiate Nursing | Education for the Advanced Nurse Practitioner or | the Accreditation Commission for Education in | Nursing for the Advanced Nurse Practitioner; or | (iii) medical education as defined by the | Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical | Education and shall be set by the Department by | rule; | (3) has completed a National Certifying Exam, as | determined by rule; and | (4) meets all other requirements for obtaining a | prescribing psychologist license, as determined by rule. | (b) The Department may issue a prescribing psychologist |
| license if it finds that the applicant has met the requirements | of subsection (a) of this Section. | (c) A prescribing psychologist may only prescribe | medication pursuant to the provisions of this Act if the | prescribing psychologist: | (1) continues to hold a current license to practice | psychology in Illinois; | (2) satisfies the continuing education requirements | for prescribing psychologists, including 10 hours of | continuing education annually in pharmacology from | accredited providers; and | (3) maintains a written collaborative agreement with a | collaborating physician pursuant to Section 4.3 of this | Act.
| (Source: P.A. 98-668, eff. 6-25-14 .) | (225 ILCS 15/4.3) | (Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2027) | Sec. 4.3. Written collaborative agreements. | (a) A written collaborative agreement is required for all | prescribing psychologists practicing under a prescribing | psychologist license issued pursuant to Section 4.2 of this | Act. | (b) A written delegation of prescriptive authority by a | collaborating physician may only include medications for the | treatment of mental health disease or illness the collaborating |
| physician generally provides to his or her patients in the | normal course of his or her clinical practice with the | exception of the following: | (1) patients who are less than 17 years of age or over | 65 years of age; | (2) patients during pregnancy; | (3) patients with serious medical conditions, such as | heart disease, cancer, stroke, or seizures, and with | developmental disabilities and intellectual disabilities; | and | (4) prescriptive authority for benzodiazepine Schedule | III controlled substances. | (c) The collaborating physician shall file with the | Department notice of delegation of prescriptive authority and | termination of the delegation, in accordance with rules of the | Department. Upon receipt of this notice delegating authority to | prescribe any nonnarcotic Schedule III through V controlled | substances, the licensed clinical psychologist shall be | eligible to register for a mid-level practitioner controlled | substance license under Section 303.05 of the Illinois | Controlled Substances Act. | (d) All of the following shall apply to delegation of | prescriptive authority: | (1) Any delegation of Schedule III through V controlled | substances shall identify the specific controlled | substance by brand name or generic name. No controlled |
| substance to be delivered by injection may be delegated. No | Schedule II controlled substance shall be delegated. | (2) A prescribing psychologist shall not prescribe | narcotic drugs, as defined in Section 102 of the Illinois | Controlled Substances Act. | Any prescribing psychologist who writes a prescription for | a controlled substance without having valid and appropriate | authority may be fined by the Department not more than $50 per | prescription and the Department may take any other disciplinary | action provided for in this Act. | All prescriptions written by a prescribing psychologist | must contain the name of the prescribing psychologist and his | or her signature. The prescribing psychologist shall sign his | or her own name. | (e) The written collaborative agreement shall describe the | working relationship of the prescribing psychologist with the | collaborating physician and shall delegate prescriptive | authority as provided in this Act. Collaboration does not | require an employment relationship between the collaborating | physician and prescribing psychologist. Absent an employment | relationship, an agreement may not restrict third-party | payment sources accepted by the prescribing psychologist. For | the purposes of this Section, "collaboration" means the | relationship between a prescribing psychologist and a | collaborating physician with respect to the delivery of | prescribing services in accordance with (1) the prescribing |
| psychologist's training, education, and experience and (2) | collaboration and consultation as documented in a jointly | developed written collaborative agreement. | (f) The agreement shall promote the exercise of | professional judgment by the prescribing psychologist | corresponding to his or her education and experience. | (g) The collaborative agreement shall not be construed to | require the personal presence of a physician at the place where | services are rendered. Methods of communication shall be | available for consultation with the collaborating physician in | person or by telecommunications in accordance with established | written guidelines as set forth in the written agreement. | (h) Collaboration and consultation pursuant to all | collaboration agreements shall be adequate if a collaborating | physician does each of the following: | (1) participates in the joint formulation and joint | approval of orders or guidelines with the prescribing | psychologist and he or she periodically reviews the | prescribing psychologist's orders and the services | provided patients under the orders in accordance with | accepted standards of medical practice and prescribing | psychologist practice; | (2) provides collaboration and consultation with the | prescribing psychologist in person at least once a month | for review of safety and quality clinical care or | treatment; |
| (3) is available through telecommunications for | consultation on medical problems, complications, | emergencies, or patient referral; and | (4) reviews medication orders of the prescribing | psychologist no less than monthly, including review of | laboratory tests and other tests as available. | (i) The written collaborative agreement shall contain | provisions detailing notice for termination or change of status | involving a written collaborative agreement, except when the | notice is given for just cause. | (j) A copy of the signed written collaborative agreement | shall be available to the Department upon request to either the | prescribing psychologist or the collaborating physician. | (k) Nothing in this Section shall be construed to limit the | authority of a prescribing psychologist to perform all duties | authorized under this Act. | (l) A prescribing psychologist shall inform each | collaborating physician of all collaborative agreements he or | she has signed and provide a copy of these to any collaborating | physician. | (m) No collaborating physician shall enter into more than 3 | collaborative agreements with prescribing psychologists.
| (Source: P.A. 98-668, eff. 6-25-14 .) | Section 10. The Telehealth Act is amended by changing | Section 5 as follows: |
| (225 ILCS 150/5)
| Sec. 5. Definitions. As used in this Act: | "Health care professional" includes physicians, physician | assistants, dentists, optometrists, advanced practice | registered nurses, clinical psychologists licensed in | Illinois, prescribing psychologists licensed in Illinois, | dentists, occupational therapists, pharmacists, physical | therapists, clinical social workers, speech-language | pathologists, audiologists, hearing instrument dispensers, and | mental health professionals and clinicians authorized by | Illinois law to provide mental health services.
| "Telehealth" means the evaluation, diagnosis, or | interpretation of electronically transmitted patient-specific | data between a remote location and a licensed health care | professional that generates interaction or treatment | recommendations. "Telehealth" includes telemedicine and the | delivery of health care services provided by way of an | interactive telecommunications system, as defined in | subsection (a) of Section 356z.22 of the Illinois Insurance | Code.
| (Source: P.A. 100-317, eff. 1-1-18; 100-644, eff. 1-1-19; | 100-930, eff. 1-1-19; revised 10-22-18.)
| Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon | becoming law.
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Effective Date: 7/19/2019
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