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Public Act 097-0866 |
SB0680 Enrolled | LRB097 04946 ASK 44986 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 Nursing Home Care Act is amended by changing |
Section 3-206.05 as follows: |
(210 ILCS 45/3-206.05) |
Sec. 3-206.05. Safe resident handling policy. |
(a) In this Section: |
"Health care worker" means an individual providing direct |
resident care services who may be required to lift, transfer, |
reposition, or move a resident. |
"Nurse" means an advanced practice nurse, a registered |
nurse, or a licensed practical nurse licensed under the Nurse |
Practice Act. |
"Safe lifting equipment and accessories" means mechanical
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equipment designed to lift, move, reposition, and transfer
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residents, including, but not limited to, fixed and portable
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ceiling lifts, sit-to-stand lifts, slide sheets and boards,
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slings, and repositioning and turning sheets. |
"Safe lifting team" means at least 2 individuals who are
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trained and proficient in the use of both safe lifting |
techniques and safe
lifting equipment and accessories. |
"Adjustable equipment" means products and devices that may |
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be adapted for use by individuals with physical and other |
disabilities in order to optimize accessibility. Adjustable |
equipment includes, but is not limited to, the following: |
(1) Wheelchairs with adjustable footrest height and |
seat width and depth. |
(2) Height-adjustable, drop-arm commode chairs and |
height-adjustable shower gurneys or shower benches to |
enable individuals with mobility disabilities to use a |
toilet and to shower safely and with increased comfort. |
(3) Accessible weight scales that accommodate |
wheelchair users. |
(4) Height-adjustable beds that can be lowered to |
accommodate individuals with mobility disabilities in |
getting in and out of bed and that utilize drop-down side |
railings for stability and positioning support. |
(5) Universally designed or adaptable call buttons and |
motorized bed position and height controls that can be |
operated by persons with limited or no reach range, fine |
motor ability, or vision. |
(6) Height-adjustable platform tables for physical |
therapy with drop-down side railings for stability and |
positioning support. |
(7) Therapeutic rehabilitation and exercise machines |
with foot straps to secure the user's feet to the pedals |
and with cuffs or splints to augment the user's grip |
strength on handles. |
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(b) A facility must adopt and ensure implementation of a |
policy to identify, assess, and develop strategies to control |
risk of injury to residents and nurses and other health care |
workers associated with the lifting, transferring, |
repositioning, or movement of a resident. The policy shall |
establish a process that, at a minimum, includes all of the |
following: |
(1) Analysis of the risk of injury to residents and |
nurses and other health care workers taking into account |
the resident handling needs of the resident populations |
served by the facility and the physical environment in |
which the resident handling and movement occurs. |
(2) Education and training of nurses and other direct
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resident care providers in the identification, assessment, |
and control of risks of injury to residents and nurses and |
other health care workers during resident handling and on
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safe lifting policies and techniques and current lifting
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equipment . |
(3) Evaluation of alternative ways to reduce risks |
associated with resident handling, including evaluation of |
equipment and the environment. |
(4) Restriction, to the extent feasible with existing |
equipment and aids, of manual resident handling or movement |
of all or most of a resident's weight except for emergency, |
life-threatening, or otherwise exceptional circumstances. |
(5) Procedures for a nurse to refuse to perform or be |
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involved in resident handling or movement that the nurse in |
good faith believes will expose a resident or nurse or |
other health care worker to an unacceptable risk of injury. |
(6) Development of strategies to control risk of injury |
to residents and nurses and other health care workers |
associated with the lifting, transferring, repositioning, |
or movement of a resident. |
(7) In developing architectural plans for construction |
or remodeling of a facility or unit of a facility in which |
resident handling and movement occurs, consideration of |
the feasibility of incorporating resident handling |
equipment or the physical space and construction design |
needed to incorporate that equipment.
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(8) Fostering and maintaining resident safety, |
dignity, self-determination, and choice, including the |
following policies, strategies, and procedures: |
(A) The existence and availability of a trained |
safe lifting team. |
(B) A policy of advising residents of a range of |
transfer and lift options, including adjustable |
diagnostic and treatment equipment, mechanical lifts, |
and provision of a trained safe lifting team. |
(C) The right of a competent resident, or the |
guardian of a resident adjudicated incompetent, to |
choose among the range of transfer and lift options |
consistent with the procedures set forth under |
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subdivision (b)(5) and the policies set forth under |
this paragraph (8), subject to the provisions of |
subparagraph (E) of this paragraph (8). |
(D) Procedures for documenting, upon admission and |
as status changes, a mobility assessment and plan for |
lifting, transferring, repositioning, or movement of a |
resident, including the choice of the resident or the |
resident's guardian among the range of transfer and |
lift options. |
(E) Incorporation of such safe lifting procedures, |
techniques, and equipment as are consistent with |
applicable federal law. |
(c) Safe lifting teams must receive specialized, in-depth |
training that includes, but need not be limited to, the |
following: |
(1) Types and operation of equipment. |
(2) Safe manual lifting and moving techniques. |
(3) Ergonomic principles in the assessment of risk both |
to nurses and other workers and to residents. |
(4) The selection, safe use, location, and condition of |
appropriate pieces of equipment individualized to each |
resident's medical and physical conditions and |
preferences. |
(5) Procedures for advising residents of the full range |
of transfer and lift options and for documenting |
individualized lifting plans that include resident choice. |
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Specialized, in-depth training may rely on federal |
standards and guidelines such as the United States Department |
of Labor Guidelines for Nursing Homes, supplemented by federal |
requirements for barrier removal, independent access, and |
means of accommodation optimizing independent movement and |
transfer. |
(Source: P.A. 96-389, eff. 1-1-10.)
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