(210 ILCS 86/1)
Sec. 1. Short title. This
Act may be cited as the Hospital Report Card Act.
(Source: P.A. 93-563, eff.
1-1-04.)
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(210 ILCS 86/5)
Sec. 5. Findings. The General
Assembly finds that Illinois consumers
have a right to access information about the quality of health
care provided in Illinois hospitals in order to make better decisions about their choice
of health care provider.
(Source: P.A. 93-563, eff.
1-1-04.)
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(210 ILCS 86/10)
Sec. 10. Definitions. For
the purpose of this Act:
"Average daily census" means
the average number of inpatients receiving service on any given
24-hour period beginning at midnight in each clinical
service area of the hospital.
"Clinical service area" means
a grouping of clinical services by a generic class of various
types or levels of support functions, equipment, care, or treatment
provided to inpatients. Hospitals may have, but are not required
to have, the following categories of service: behavioral health,
critical care, maternal-child care, medical-surgical,
pediatrics, perioperative services,
and telemetry.
"Department" means
the Department of Public Health.
"Direct-care
nurse" and "direct-care nursing staff" includes
any registered nurse, licensed practical nurse, or assistive
nursing personnel with direct responsibility to oversee or carry
out medical regimens or nursing care for one or more patient.
"Hospital" means
a health care facility licensed under the Hospital Licensing
Act.
"Nursing care" means
care that falls within the scope of practice set forth in the
Nursing and Advanced Practice Nursing Act or is otherwise encompassed
within recognized professional standards of nursing practice,
including assessment, nursing diagnosis, planning, intervention,
evaluation, and patient advocacy.
"Retaliate" means
to discipline, discharge, suspend, demote, harass, deny employment
or promotion, lay off, or take any other
adverse action against direct-care nursing staff as a result
of that nursing staff taking any action described in this Act.
"Skill mix" means
the differences in licensing, specialty, and experiences among
direct-care nurses.
"Staffing levels" means
the numerical nurse to patient ratio by licensed nurse classification
within a nursing department or unit.
"Unit" means a
functional division or area of a hospital in which nursing care
is provided.
(Source: P.A. 93-563, eff.
1-1-04.)
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(210 ILCS 86/15)
Sec. 15. Staffing levels.
(a) The number of registered
professional nurses, licensed practical nurses, and other nursing
personnel assigned to each patient care unit shall be consistent
with the types of nursing care needed by the patients and the
capabilities of the staff. Patients on each unit shall be evaluated
near the end of each change of shift by criteria developed by
the nursing service. There shall be staffing schedules reflecting
actual nursing personnel required for the hospital and for each
patient unit. Staffing patterns shall reflect consideration of
nursing goals, standards of nursing practice, and the needs of
the patients.
(b) Current nursing staff
schedules shall be available upon request at each patient care
unit. Each schedule shall list the daily assigned nursing personnel
and average daily census for the unit. The actual nurse staffing
assignment roster for each patient care unit shall be available
upon request at the patient care unit for the effective date
of that roster. Upon the roster's expiration, the hospital shall
retain the roster for 5 years from the date of its expiration.
(c) All records required
under this Section, including anticipated staffing schedules
and the methods to determine and adjust staffing levels shall
be made available to the public upon request.
(d) All records required
under this Section shall be maintained by the facility for no
less than 5 years.
(Source: P.A. 93-563, eff.
1-1-04.)
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(210 ILCS 86/20)
Sec. 20. Orientation and
training.
(a) All health care facilities
shall have established an orientation process that provides initial
job training and information and assesses the direct care nursing
staff's ability to fulfill specified responsibilities.
(b) Personnel not competent
for a given unit shall not be assigned to work there without
direct supervision until appropriately trained.
(c) Staff training information
will be available upon request, without any information identifying
a patient, employee, or licensed professional at the hospital.
(Source: P.A. 93-563, eff.
1-1-04.)
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(210 ILCS 86/25)
Sec. 25. Hospital reports.
(a) Individual hospitals
shall prepare a quarterly report including all of the following:
(1)
Nursing hours per patient day, average daily
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census, and average daily hours worked for each clinical service area.
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(2)
Infection-related measures for the facility
for
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the specific clinical procedures and
devices determined by the Department by rule
under 2 or more of the following categories:
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(A)
Surgical procedure outcome measures.
(B)
Surgical procedure infection control process
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(C)
Outcome or process measures related to
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ventilator-associated pneumonia.
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(D)
Central vascular catheter-related
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bloodstream infection rates in designated critical care units.
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The infection-related
measures developed by the Department shall be based
upon measures and methods developed by the Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention, the Centers for
Medicare and Medicaid Services, the Agency for Healthcare
Research and Quality, the Joint Commission on Accreditation
of Healthcare Organizations, or the National Quality
Forum.
The Department shall include
interpretive guidelines for infection-related indicators
and, when available, shall include relevant benchmark information
published by national organizations.
(b) Individual hospitals
shall prepare annual reports including vacancy and turnover rates
for licensed nurses per clinical service area.
(c) None of the information
the Department discloses to the public may be made available in
any form or fashion unless the information has been reviewed, adjusted,
and validated according to the following process:
(1)
The Department shall organize an advisory
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committee, including representatives
from the Department, public and private hospitals,
direct care nursing staff, physicians, academic
researchers, consumers, health insurance
companies, organized labor, and organizations
representing hospitals and physicians. The
advisory committee must be meaningfully involved
in the development of all aspects of the
Department's methodology for collecting,
analyzing, and disclosing the information
collected under this Act, including collection
methods, formatting, and methods and means
for release and dissemination.
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(2)
The entire methodology for collecting and
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analyzing the data shall be disclosed to all relevant organizations and
to all hospitals that are the subject of
any information to be made available to the
public before any public disclosure of such
information.
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(3)
Data collection and analytical methodologies
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shall be used that meet accepted standards of validity and reliability
before any information is made available
to the public.
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(4)
The limitations of the data sources and analytic
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methodologies used to develop comparative hospital information shall be clearly
identified and acknowledged, including but
not limited to the appropriate and inappropriate
uses of the data.
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(5)
To the greatest extent possible, comparative
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hospital information initiatives shall use standard-based norms
derived from widely accepted provider-developed
practice guidelines.
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(6)
Comparative hospital information and other
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information that the Department has compiled regarding hospitals shall
be shared with the hospitals under review
prior to public dissemination of such information
and these hospitals have 30 days to make
corrections and to add helpful explanatory
comments about the information before the
publication.
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(7)
Comparisons among hospitals shall adjust for
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patient case mix and other relevant risk factors and control for provider
peer groups, when appropriate.
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(8)
Effective safeguards to protect against the
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unauthorized use or disclosure of hospital information shall be developed
and implemented.
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(9)
Effective safeguards to protect against the
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dissemination of inconsistent, incomplete, invalid, inaccurate, or subjective
hospital data shall be developed and implemented.
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(10)
The quality and accuracy of hospital
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information reported under this Act and its data collection, analysis,
and dissemination methodologies shall be
evaluated regularly.
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(11)
Only the most basic identifying information
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from mandatory reports shall be used, and information identifying
a patient, employee, or licensed professional
shall not be released. None of the information
the Department discloses to the public under
this Act may be used to establish a standard
of care in a private civil action.
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(d) Quarterly
reports shall be submitted, in a format set forth
in rules adopted by the
Department, to the Department by April 30, July 31,
October 31, and January 31 each year for the previous
quarter. Data in quarterly reports must cover a period
ending not earlier than one month prior to submission
of the report. Annual reports shall be submitted
by December 31 in a format set forth in rules adopted
by the Department to the Department. All reports
shall be made available to the public on-site
and through the Department.
(e) If the hospital is a
division or subsidiary of another entity that owns or operates
other hospitals or related organizations, the annual public disclosure
report shall be for the specific division or subsidiary and not
for the other entity.
(f) The Department shall
disclose information under this Section in accordance with provisions
for inspection and copying of public records required by the Freedom
of Information Act provided that such information satisfies the
provisions of subsection (c) of this Section.
(g) Notwithstanding any
other provision of law, under no circumstances shall the Department
disclose information obtained from a hospital that is confidential
under Part 21 of Article 8 of the Code of Civil Procedure.
(h) No hospital report or
Department disclosure may contain information identifying a patient,
employee, or licensed professional.
(Source: P.A. 93-563, eff.
1-1-04; 94-275, eff.
7-19-05.)
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(210 ILCS 86/30)
Sec. 30. Department reports.
The Department of Public Health shall annually submit to the
General Assembly a report summarizing the quarterly reports by
health service area and shall publish that report on its website.
The Department of Public Health may issue quarterly informational
bulletins at its discretion, summarizing all or part of the information
submitted in these quarterly reports. The Department shall also
publish risk-adjusted mortality rates for each hospital
based upon information hospitals have already submitted to the
Department pursuant to their obligations to report health care
information under other public health reporting laws and regulations
outside of this Act. The published mortality rates must comply
with the hospital data publication process contained in subsection
(c) of Section 25 of this Act.
(Source: P.A. 93-563, eff.
1-1-04.)
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(210 ILCS 86/35)
Sec. 35. Whistleblower protections.
(a) A hospital covered by
this Act shall not penalize, discriminate, or retaliate in any
manner against an employee with respect to compensation or the
terms, conditions, or privileges of employment who in good faith,
individually or in conjunction with another person or persons,
does any of the following or intimidate, threaten, or punish
an employee to prevent him or her from doing any of the following:
(1)
Discloses to the nursing staff supervisor or
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manager, a private accreditation organization,
the nurse's collective bargaining agent,
or a regulatory agency any activity, policy,
or practice of a hospital that violates this
Act or any other law or rule or that the
employee reasonably believes poses a risk
to the health, safety, or welfare of a patient
or the public.
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(2)
Initiates, cooperates, or otherwise participates
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in an investigation or proceeding
brought by a regulatory agency or private
accreditation body concerning matters covered
by this Act or any other law or rule or that
the employee reasonably believes poses a
risk to the health, safety, or welfare of
a patient or the public.
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(3)
Objects to or refuses to participate in any
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activity, policy, or practice of a hospital that violates this Act or
any law or rule of the Department or that
a reasonable person would believe poses a
risk to the health, safety, or welfare of
a patient or the public.
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(4)
Participates in a committee or peer review
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process or files a report or complaint that discusses allegation of
unsafe, dangerous, or potentially dangerous
care within the hospital.
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(b) For the
purposes of this Section, an employee is presumed
to act in good faith if the employee reasonably believes
that (i) the information
reported or disclosed is true and (ii) a violation
has occurred or may occur. An employee is not acting
in good faith under this Section if the employee's
report or action was based on information that the
employee should reasonably know is false or misleading.
The protection of this Section shall also not apply
to an employee unless the employee gives written
notice to a hospital manager of the activity, policy,
practice, or violation that the employee believes
poses a risk to the health of a patient or the public
and provides the manager a reasonable opportunity
to correct the problem. The manager shall respond
in writing to the employee within 7 days acknowledging
that the notice was received and provide written
notice of any action taken within a reasonable time
of receiving the employee's notice. This notice requirement
shall not apply if the employee is reasonably certain
that the activity, policy, practice, or violation:
(i) is known by one or
more hospital managers who have had an opportunity
to correct the problem and have not done so; (ii)
involves the commission of a crime; or (iii) places
patient health or safety in severe and immediate
danger. The notice requirement shall not apply if
the employee is participating in a survey, investigation,
or other activity of a regulatory agency, law enforcement
agency, or private accreditation body that was not
initiated by the employee. Nothing in this Section
prohibits a hospital from training, educating, correcting,
or otherwise taking action to improve the performance
of employees who report that they are unable or unwilling
to perform an assigned task.
(Source: P.A. 93-563, eff.
1-1-04.)
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(210 ILCS 86/40)
Sec. 40. Private right of
action. Any health care facility that violates the provisions
of Section 35 may be held liable to the employee affected in
an action brought in a court of competent jurisdiction for such
legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to effectuate
the purposes of this Act.
(Source: P.A. 93-563, eff.
1-1-04.)
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(210 ILCS 86/45)
Sec. 45. Regulatory oversight.
The Department shall be responsible for ensuring compliance with
this Act as a condition of licensure under the Hospital Licensing
Act and shall enforce such compliance according to the provisions
of the Hospital Licensing Act.
(Source: P.A. 93-563, eff.
1-1-04.)
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(210 ILCS 86/90)
Sec. 90. (Amendatory provisions;
text omitted).
(Source: P.A. 93-563, eff.
1-1-04; text omitted.)
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(210 ILCS 86/99)
Sec. 99. Effective date.
This Act takes effect on January 1, 2004.
(Source: P.A. 93-563, eff.
1-1-04.)
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