Public Act 102-0623 Public Act 0623 102ND GENERAL ASSEMBLY |
Public Act 102-0623 | SB0693 Enrolled | LRB102 04346 CPF 14364 b |
|
| AN ACT concerning regulation.
| Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
| represented in the General Assembly:
| Section 5. The Emergency Medical Services (EMS) Systems | Act is amended by changing Sections 3.10, 3.50, 3.85, and | 3.155 as follows:
| (210 ILCS 50/3.10)
| Sec. 3.10. Scope of services.
| (a) "Advanced Life Support (ALS) Services" means
an | advanced level of pre-hospital and inter-hospital emergency
| care and non-emergency medical services that includes basic | life
support care, cardiac monitoring, cardiac defibrillation,
| electrocardiography, intravenous therapy, administration of
| medications, drugs and solutions, use of adjunctive medical
| devices, trauma care, and other authorized techniques and
| procedures, as outlined in the provisions of the National EMS | Education Standards relating to Advanced Life Support and any | modifications to that curriculum
specified in rules adopted by | the Department pursuant to
this Act.
| That care shall be initiated as authorized by the EMS
| Medical Director in a Department approved advanced life
| support EMS System, under the written or verbal direction of
a | physician licensed to practice medicine in all of its
branches |
| or under the verbal direction of an Emergency
Communications | Registered Nurse.
| (b) "Intermediate Life Support (ILS) Services"
means an | intermediate level of pre-hospital and inter-hospital
| emergency care and non-emergency medical services that | includes
basic life support care plus intravenous cannulation | and
fluid therapy, invasive airway management, trauma care, | and
other authorized techniques and procedures, as outlined in
| the Intermediate Life Support national curriculum of the
| United States Department of Transportation and any
| modifications to that curriculum specified in rules adopted
by | the Department pursuant to this Act.
| That care shall be initiated as authorized by the EMS
| Medical Director in a Department approved intermediate or
| advanced life support EMS System, under the written or
verbal | direction of a physician licensed to practice
medicine in all | of its branches or under the verbal
direction of an Emergency | Communications Registered Nurse.
| (c) "Basic Life Support (BLS) Services" means a
basic | level of pre-hospital and inter-hospital emergency care and
| non-emergency medical services that includes medical | monitoring, clinical observation, airway management,
| cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR), control of shock and
| bleeding and splinting of fractures, as outlined in the | provisions of the National EMS Education Standards relating to | Basic Life Support and any modifications to that
curriculum |
| specified in rules adopted by the Department
pursuant to this | Act.
| That care shall be initiated, where authorized by the
EMS | Medical Director in a Department approved EMS System,
under | the written or verbal direction of a physician
licensed to | practice medicine in all of its branches or
under the verbal | direction of an Emergency Communications
Registered Nurse.
| (d) "Emergency Medical Responder Services" means a | preliminary
level of pre-hospital emergency care that includes
| cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR), monitoring vital signs
| and control of bleeding, as outlined in the Emergency Medical | Responder (EMR) curriculum of the National EMS Education | Standards
and any modifications to that curriculum specified | in rules
adopted by the Department pursuant to this Act.
| (e) "Pre-hospital care" means those
medical services | rendered to patients for analytic,
resuscitative, stabilizing, | or preventive purposes,
precedent to and during transportation | of such patients to
health care facilities.
| (f) "Inter-hospital care" means those
medical services | rendered to patients for
analytic, resuscitative, stabilizing, | or preventive
purposes, during transportation of such patients | from one
hospital to another hospital.
| (f-5) "Critical care transport" means the pre-hospital or | inter-hospital transportation of a critically injured or ill | patient by a vehicle service provider, including the provision | of medically necessary supplies and services, at a level of |
| service beyond the scope of the Paramedic. When medically | indicated for a patient, as determined by a physician licensed | to practice medicine in all of its branches, an advanced | practice registered nurse, or a physician's assistant, in | compliance with subsections (b) and (c) of Section 3.155 of | this Act, critical care transport may be provided by: | (1) Department-approved critical care transport | providers, not owned or operated by a hospital, utilizing | Paramedics with additional training, nurses, or other | qualified health professionals; or | (2) Hospitals, when utilizing any vehicle service | provider or any hospital-owned or operated vehicle service | provider. Nothing in Public Act 96-1469 requires a | hospital to use, or to be, a Department-approved critical | care transport provider when transporting patients, | including those critically injured or ill. Nothing in this | Act shall restrict or prohibit a hospital from providing, | or arranging for, the medically appropriate transport of | any patient, as determined by a physician licensed to | practice in all of its branches, an advanced practice | registered nurse, or a physician's assistant. | (g) "Non-emergency medical services" means the provision | of, and all actions necessary before and after the provision | of, Basic Life Support (BLS) Services, Advanced Life Support | (ALS) Services, and critical care transport medical care, | clinical observation, or medical monitoring rendered to
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| patients whose conditions do not meet this Act's definition of | emergency, before , after, or
during transportation of such | patients to or from health care facilities visited for the
| purpose of obtaining medical or health care services which are | not emergency in
nature, using a vehicle regulated by this Act | and personnel licensed under this Act .
| (g-5) The Department shall have the authority to | promulgate minimum standards for critical care transport | providers through rules adopted pursuant to this Act. All | critical care transport providers must function within a | Department-approved EMS System. Nothing in Department rules | shall restrict a hospital's ability to furnish personnel, | equipment, and medical supplies to any vehicle service | provider, including a critical care transport provider. | Minimum critical care transport provider standards shall | include, but are not limited to: | (1) Personnel staffing and licensure. | (2) Education, certification, and experience. | (3) Medical equipment and supplies. | (4) Vehicular standards. | (5) Treatment and transport protocols. | (6) Quality assurance and data collection. | (h)
The provisions of this Act shall not apply to
the use | of an ambulance or SEMSV, unless and until
emergency or | non-emergency medical services are needed
during the use of | the ambulance or SEMSV.
|
| (Source: P.A. 99-661, eff. 1-1-17; 100-513, eff. 1-1-18 .)
| (210 ILCS 50/3.50)
| Sec. 3.50. Emergency Medical Services personnel licensure | levels.
| (a) "Emergency Medical Technician" or
"EMT" means a person | who has successfully completed a course in basic life support
| as approved by the
Department, is currently licensed by the | Department in
accordance with standards prescribed by this Act | and rules
adopted by the Department pursuant to this Act, and | practices within an EMS
System. A valid Emergency Medical | Technician-Basic (EMT-B) license issued under this Act shall | continue to be valid and shall be recognized as an Emergency | Medical Technician (EMT) license until the Emergency Medical | Technician-Basic (EMT-B) license expires.
| (b) "Emergency Medical Technician-Intermediate"
or "EMT-I" | means a person who has successfully completed a
course in | intermediate life support
as approved
by the Department, is | currently licensed by the
Department in accordance with | standards prescribed by this
Act and rules adopted by the | Department pursuant to this
Act, and practices within an | Intermediate or Advanced
Life Support EMS System.
| (b-5) "Advanced Emergency Medical Technician" or "A-EMT" | means a person who has successfully completed a course in | basic and limited advanced emergency medical care as approved | by the Department, is currently licensed by the Department in |
| accordance with standards prescribed by this Act and rules | adopted by the Department pursuant to this Act, and practices | within an Intermediate or Advanced Life Support EMS System. | (c) "Paramedic (EMT-P)" means a person who
has | successfully completed a
course in advanced life support care
| as approved
by the Department, is licensed by the Department
| in accordance with standards prescribed by this Act and
rules | adopted by the Department pursuant to this Act, and
practices | within an Advanced Life Support EMS System. A valid Emergency | Medical Technician-Paramedic (EMT-P) license issued under this | Act shall continue to be valid and shall be recognized as a | Paramedic license until the Emergency Medical | Technician-Paramedic (EMT-P) license expires.
| (c-5) "Emergency Medical Responder" or "EMR (First | Responder)" means a person who has successfully completed a | course in emergency medical response as approved by the | Department and provides emergency medical response services | prior to the arrival of an ambulance or specialized emergency | medical services vehicle, in accordance with the level of care | established by the National EMS Educational Standards | Emergency Medical Responder course as modified by the | Department , or who . An Emergency Medical Responder who | provides services as part of an EMS System response plan shall | comply with the applicable sections of the Program Plan , as | approved by the Department, of that EMS System. The Department | shall have the authority to adopt rules governing the |
| curriculum, practice, and necessary equipment applicable to | Emergency Medical Responders. | On August 15, 2014 (the effective date of Public Act | 98-973), a person who is licensed by the Department as a First | Responder and has completed a Department-approved course in | first responder defibrillator training based on, or equivalent | to, the National EMS Educational Standards or other standards | previously recognized by the Department shall be eligible for | licensure as an Emergency Medical Responder upon meeting the | licensure requirements and submitting an application to the | Department. A valid First Responder license issued under this | Act shall continue to be valid and shall be recognized as an | Emergency Medical Responder license until the First Responder | license expires. | (c-10) All EMS Systems and licensees shall be fully | compliant with the National EMS Education Standards, as | modified by the Department in administrative rules, within 24 | months after the adoption of the administrative rules. | (d) The Department shall have the authority and
| responsibility to:
| (1) Prescribe education and training requirements, | which
includes training in the use of epinephrine,
for all | levels of EMS personnel except for EMRs, based on the | National EMS Educational Standards
and any modifications | to those curricula specified by the
Department through | rules adopted pursuant to this Act.
|
| (2) Prescribe licensure testing requirements
for all | levels of EMS personnel, which shall include a requirement | that
all phases of instruction, training, and field | experience be
completed before taking the appropriate | licensure examination.
Candidates may elect to take the | appropriate National Registry examination in lieu of the
| Department's examination, but are responsible for making
| their own arrangements for taking the National Registry
| examination. In prescribing licensure testing requirements | for honorably discharged members of the armed forces of | the United States under this paragraph (2), the Department | shall ensure that a candidate's military emergency medical | training, emergency medical curriculum completed, and | clinical experience, as described in paragraph (2.5), are | recognized.
| (2.5) Review applications for EMS personnel licensure | from
honorably discharged members of the armed forces of | the United States with military emergency medical | training. Applications shall be filed with the Department | within one year after military discharge and shall | contain: (i) proof of successful completion of military | emergency medical training; (ii) a detailed description of | the emergency medical curriculum completed; and (iii) a | detailed description of the applicant's clinical | experience. The Department may request additional and | clarifying information. The Department shall evaluate the |
| application, including the applicant's training and | experience, consistent with the standards set forth under | subsections (a), (b), (c), and (d) of Section 3.10. If the | application clearly demonstrates that the training and | experience meet such standards, the Department shall offer | the applicant the opportunity to successfully complete a | Department-approved EMS personnel examination for the | level of license for which the applicant is qualified. | Upon passage of an examination, the Department shall issue | a license, which shall be subject to all provisions of | this Act that are otherwise applicable to the level of EMS | personnel
license issued. | (3) License individuals as an EMR, EMT, EMT-I, A-EMT,
| or Paramedic who have met the Department's education, | training and
examination requirements.
| (4) Prescribe annual continuing education and
| relicensure requirements for all EMS personnel licensure
| levels.
| (5) Relicense individuals as an EMD, EMR, EMT, EMT-I, | A-EMT, PHRN, PHAPRN, PHPA,
or Paramedic every 4 years, | based on their compliance with
continuing education and | relicensure requirements as required by the Department | pursuant to this Act. Every 4 years, a Paramedic shall | have 100 hours of approved continuing education, an EMT-I | and an advanced EMT shall have 80 hours of approved | continuing education, and an EMT shall have 60 hours of |
| approved continuing education. An Illinois licensed EMR, | EMD, EMT, EMT-I, A-EMT, Paramedic, ECRN, PHPA, PHAPRN, or | PHRN whose license has been expired for less than 36 | months may apply for reinstatement by the Department. | Reinstatement shall require that the applicant (i) submit | satisfactory proof of completion of continuing medical | education and clinical requirements to be prescribed by | the Department in an administrative rule; (ii) submit a | positive recommendation from an Illinois EMS Medical | Director attesting to the applicant's qualifications for | retesting; and (iii) pass a Department approved test for | the level of EMS personnel license sought to be | reinstated.
| (6) Grant inactive status to any EMR, EMD, EMT, EMT-I, | A-EMT, Paramedic, ECRN, PHAPRN, PHPA, or PHRN who
| qualifies, based on standards and procedures established | by
the Department in rules adopted pursuant to this Act.
| (7) Charge a fee for EMS personnel examination, | licensure, and license renewal.
| (8) Suspend, revoke, or refuse to issue or renew the
| license of any licensee, after an opportunity for an | impartial hearing before a neutral administrative law | judge appointed by the Director, where the preponderance | of the evidence shows one or more of the following:
| (A) The licensee has not met continuing
education | or relicensure requirements as prescribed by the |
| Department;
| (B) The licensee has failed to maintain
| proficiency in the level of skills for which he or she | is licensed;
| (C) The licensee, during the provision of
medical | services, engaged in dishonorable, unethical, or
| unprofessional conduct of a character likely to | deceive,
defraud, or harm the public;
| (D) The licensee has failed to maintain or
has | violated standards of performance and conduct as | prescribed
by the Department in rules adopted pursuant | to this Act or
his or her EMS System's Program Plan;
| (E) The licensee is physically impaired to
the | extent that he or she cannot physically perform the | skills and
functions for which he or she is licensed, | as verified by a
physician, unless the person is on | inactive status pursuant
to Department regulations;
| (F) The licensee is mentally impaired to the
| extent that he or she cannot exercise the appropriate | judgment,
skill and safety for performing the | functions for which he
or she is licensed, as verified | by a physician, unless the person
is on inactive | status pursuant to Department regulations;
| (G) The licensee has violated this Act or any
rule | adopted by the Department pursuant to this Act; or | (H) The licensee has been convicted (or entered a |
| plea of guilty or nolo contendere nolo-contendere ) by | a court of competent jurisdiction of a Class X, Class | 1, or Class 2 felony in this State or an out-of-state | equivalent offense. | (9) Prescribe education and training requirements in | the administration and use of opioid antagonists for all | levels of EMS personnel based on the National EMS | Educational Standards and any modifications to those | curricula specified by the Department through rules | adopted pursuant to this Act. | (d-5) An EMR, EMD, EMT, EMT-I, A-EMT, Paramedic, ECRN, | PHAPRN, PHPA, or PHRN who is a member of the Illinois National | Guard or an Illinois State Trooper or who exclusively serves | as a volunteer for units of local government with a population | base of less than 5,000 or as a volunteer
for a not-for-profit | organization that serves a service area
with a population base | of less than 5,000 may submit an application to the Department | for a waiver of the fees described under paragraph (7) of | subsection (d) of this Section on a form prescribed by the | Department. | The education requirements prescribed by the Department | under this Section must allow for the suspension of those | requirements in the case of a member of the armed services or | reserve forces of the United States or a member of the Illinois | National Guard who is on active duty pursuant to an executive | order of the President of the United States, an act of the |
| Congress of the United States, or an order of the Governor at | the time that the member would otherwise be required to | fulfill a particular education requirement. Such a person must | fulfill the education requirement within 6 months after his or | her release from active duty.
| (e) In the event that any rule of the
Department or an EMS | Medical Director that requires testing for drug
use as a | condition of the applicable EMS personnel license conflicts | with or
duplicates a provision of a collective bargaining | agreement
that requires testing for drug use, that rule shall | not
apply to any person covered by the collective bargaining
| agreement.
| (f) At the time of applying for or renewing his or her | license, an applicant for a license or license renewal may | submit an email address to the Department. The Department | shall keep the email address on file as a form of contact for | the individual. The Department shall send license renewal | notices electronically and by mail to a licensee all licensees | who provides provide the Department with his or her email | address. The notices shall be sent at least 60 days prior to | the expiration date of the license. | (Source: P.A. 100-1082, eff. 8-24-19; 101-81, eff. 7-12-19; | 101-153, eff. 1-1-20; revised 12-3-19.)
| (210 ILCS 50/3.85)
| Sec. 3.85. Vehicle Service Providers.
|
| (a) "Vehicle Service Provider" means an entity
licensed by | the Department to provide emergency or
non-emergency medical | services in compliance with this Act,
the rules promulgated by | the Department pursuant to this
Act, and an operational plan | approved by its EMS System(s),
utilizing at least ambulances | or specialized emergency
medical service vehicles (SEMSV).
| (1) "Ambulance" means any publicly or
privately owned | on-road vehicle that is specifically designed,
constructed | or modified and equipped, and is intended to be
used for, | and is maintained or operated for the emergency
| transportation of persons who are sick, injured, wounded | or
otherwise incapacitated or helpless, or the | non-emergency
medical transportation of persons who | require the presence
of medical personnel to monitor the | individual's condition
or medical apparatus being used on | such individuals.
| (2) "Specialized Emergency Medical Services
Vehicle" | or "SEMSV" means a vehicle or conveyance, other
than those | owned or operated by the federal government, that
is | primarily intended for use in transporting the sick or
| injured by means of air, water, or ground transportation,
| that is not an ambulance as defined in this Act. The term
| includes watercraft, aircraft and special purpose ground
| transport vehicles or conveyances not intended for use on
| public roads.
| (3) An ambulance or SEMSV may also be
designated as a |
| Limited Operation Vehicle or Special-Use Vehicle:
| (A) "Limited Operation Vehicle" means a
vehicle | which is licensed by the Department to provide
basic, | intermediate or advanced life support emergency or
| non-emergency medical services that are exclusively | limited
to specific events or locales.
| (B) "Special-Use Vehicle" means any
publicly or | privately owned vehicle that is specifically designed,
| constructed or modified and equipped, and is intended | to be
used for, and is maintained or operated solely | for the
emergency or non-emergency transportation of a | specific
medical class or category of persons who are | sick, injured,
wounded or otherwise incapacitated or | helpless (e.g.
high-risk obstetrical patients, | neonatal patients).
| (C) "Reserve Ambulance" means a vehicle that meets | all criteria set forth in this Section and all | Department rules, except for the required inventory of | medical supplies and durable medical equipment, which | may be rapidly transferred from a fully functional | ambulance to a reserve ambulance without the use of | tools or special mechanical expertise. | (b) The Department shall have the authority and
| responsibility to:
| (1) Require all Vehicle Service Providers, both
| publicly and privately owned, to function within an EMS
|
| System.
| (2) Require a Vehicle Service Provider
utilizing | ambulances to have a primary affiliation with an EMS | System
within the EMS Region in which its Primary Service | Area is
located, which is the geographic areas in which | the provider
renders the majority of its emergency | responses. This
requirement shall not apply to Vehicle | Service Providers
which exclusively utilize Limited | Operation Vehicles.
| (3) Establish licensing standards and
requirements for | Vehicle Service Providers, through rules
adopted pursuant | to this Act, including but not limited to:
| (A) Vehicle design, specification,
operation and | maintenance standards, including standards for the use | of reserve ambulances;
| (B) Equipment requirements;
| (C) Staffing requirements; and
| (D) License renewal at intervals determined by the | Department, which shall be not less than every 4 | years. | The Department's standards and requirements with | respect to vehicle staffing for private, nonpublic local | government employers must allow for an alternative rural | staffing models that include an EMR who
drives an | ambulance with a licensed EMT, EMT-I, A-EMT,
Paramedic, or | PHRN, as appropriate, in the patient
compartment providing |
| care to the patient pursuant to the approval of the EMS | System Program Plan developed and approved by the EMS | Medical Director for an EMS System. The Department shall | monitor the implementation and performance of alternative | staffing models and may issue a notice of termination of | an alternative staffing model only upon evidence that an | EMS System Program Plan is not being adhered to. | An EMS System Program Plan for a Basic Life Support | transport
utilizing an EMR and an EMT shall include the
| following: | (A) Alternative staffing models for a Basic Life | Support transport utilizing an EMR and an EMT shall | only be utilized for interfacility Basic Life Support | transports and medical appointments, excluding any | transport to or from a dialysis center. | (B) Protocols that shall include dispatch | procedures to properly screen and assess patients for | EMR-staffed and EMT-staffed Basic Life Support | transport. | (C) A requirement that a provider shall implement | a quality assurance plan with mechanisms outlined to | audit dispatch screening and the outcome of transports | performed. | (D) The EMT shall have at least one year of | experience in performance of pre-hospital emergency | care. |
| (E) The licensed EMR must complete a defensive | driving course prior to participation in the | Department's alternative staffing model. | (F) The length of the EMS System Program Plan for a | Basic Life Support transport
utilizing an EMR and an | EMT shall be for one year, and must be renewed annually | if proof of the criteria being met is submitted, | validated, and approved by the EMS Medical Director | for the EMS System and the Department. | The Department must allow for an alternative rural | staffing model for those vehicle service providers that | serve a rural or semi-rural population of 10,000 or fewer | inhabitants and exclusively uses volunteers, paid-on-call, | or a combination thereof.
| (4) License all Vehicle Service Providers
that have | met the Department's requirements for licensure, unless
| such Provider is owned or licensed by the federal
| government. All Provider licenses issued by the Department
| shall specify the level and type of each vehicle covered | by
the license (BLS, ILS, ALS, ambulance, SEMSV, limited
| operation vehicle, special use vehicle, reserve | ambulance).
| (5) Annually inspect all licensed vehicles operated by | Vehicle
Service Providers.
| (6) Suspend, revoke, refuse to issue or refuse to
| renew the license of any Vehicle Service Provider, or that
|
| portion of a license pertaining to a specific vehicle
| operated by the Provider, after an opportunity for a
| hearing, when findings show that the Provider or one or | more
of its vehicles has failed to comply with the | standards and
requirements of this Act or rules adopted by | the Department
pursuant to this Act.
| (7) Issue an Emergency Suspension Order for
any | Provider or vehicle licensed under this Act, when the
| Director or his designee has determined that an immediate
| and serious danger to the public health, safety and | welfare
exists. Suspension or revocation proceedings which | offer an
opportunity for hearing shall be promptly | initiated after
the Emergency Suspension Order has been | issued.
| (8) Exempt any licensed vehicle from
subsequent | vehicle design standards or specifications required by the
| Department, as long as said vehicle is continuously in
| compliance with the vehicle design standards and
| specifications originally applicable to that vehicle, or
| until said vehicle's title of ownership is transferred.
| (9) Exempt any vehicle (except an SEMSV)
which was | being used as an ambulance on or before December 15,
1980, | from vehicle design standards and specifications
required | by the Department, until said vehicle's title of
ownership | is transferred. Such vehicles shall not be exempt
from all | other licensing standards and requirements
prescribed by |
| the Department.
| (10) Prohibit any Vehicle Service Provider
from | advertising, identifying its vehicles, or disseminating
| information in a false or misleading manner concerning the
| Provider's type and level of vehicles, location, primary
| service area, response times, level of personnel, | licensure
status or System participation.
| (10.5) Prohibit any Vehicle Service Provider, whether | municipal, private, or hospital-owned, from advertising | itself as a critical care transport provider unless it | participates in a Department-approved EMS System critical | care transport plan.
| (11) Charge each Vehicle Service Provider a
fee per | transport vehicle, due annually at time of inspection. The | fee per transport vehicle shall be set by administrative | rule by the Department and shall not exceed 100 vehicles | per provider.
| (Source: P.A. 97-333, eff. 8-12-11; 97-1014, eff. 1-1-13; | 98-452, eff. 1-1-14.)
| (210 ILCS 50/3.155)
| Sec. 3.155. General Provisions.
| (a) Authority and responsibility for the EMS System
shall | be vested in the EMS Resource Hospital, through the
EMS | Medical Director or his designee.
| (b) For an inter-hospital emergency or
non-emergency |
| medical transport, in which the physician from the sending
| hospital provides the EMS personnel with written medical
| orders, such written medical orders cannot exceed the scope
of | care which the EMS personnel are authorized to render
pursuant | to this Act.
| (c) For an inter-hospital emergency or
non-emergency | medical transport of a patient who requires medical care
| beyond the scope of care which the EMS personnel are
| authorized to render pursuant to this Act, a qualified
| physician, nurse, perfusionist, or respiratory therapist
| familiar with the scope of care needed must accompany the
| patient and the transferring hospital and physician shall
| assume medical responsibility for that portion of the
medical | care.
| (d) No emergency medical services vehicles or
personnel | from another State or nation may be utilized on a
regular basis | to pick up and transport patients within this
State without | first complying with this Act and all rules
adopted by the | Department pursuant to this Act.
| (e) This Act shall not prevent emergency medical
services | vehicles or personnel from another State or nation
from | rendering requested assistance in this State in a
disaster | situation, or operating from a location outside the
State and | occasionally transporting patients into this State
for needed | medical care. Except as provided in Section 31
of this Act, | this Act shall not provide immunity from
liability for such |
| activities.
| (f) Except as provided in subsection (e) of this
Section, | no person or entity shall transport emergency or
non-emergency | patients by ambulance, SEMSV, or medical
carrier without first | complying with the provisions of this
Act and all rules | adopted pursuant to this Act.
| (g) Nothing in this Act or the rules adopted by the | Department under this
Act shall be construed to authorize any | medical treatment to or transportation
of any person who | objects on religious grounds.
| (h) Patients, individuals who accompany a patient, and | emergency medical
services personnel may not smoke while | inside an ambulance or SEMSV. The
Department of Public Health | may impose a civil penalty on an individual who
violates
this
| subsection in the amount of $100.
| (i) When a patient has been determined by EMS personnel to | (1) have no immediate life-threatening injuries or illness, | (2) not be under the influence of drugs or alcohol, (3) have no | immediate or obvious need for transport to an emergency | department, and (4) have an immediate need for transport to an | EMS System-approved mental health facility, the EMS personnel | may contact Online Medical Control or his or her EMS Medical | Director or Emergency Communications Registered Nurse to | request bypass or diversion of the closest emergency | department, as outlined in paragraph (5) of subsection (c) of | Section 3.20, and request transport to the closest or |
| appropriate EMS System-approved mental health facility. In | addition, EMS personnel may transport a patient to an EMS | System-approved urgent care or immediate care facility that | meets the proper criteria and is approved by Online Medical | Control or his or her EMS Medical Director or Emergency | Communications Registered Nurse. | (Source: P.A. 92-376, eff. 8-15-01.)
| Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon | becoming law. |
Effective Date: 8/27/2021
|