Ambulance Accident Claims The Life Of A Nursing Home Patient After Dialysis Treatment

Picture-245I was recently emailed a news story involving a 78-year-old patient at Lakeshore Nursing Home in Nashville, TN who died when the ambulance in which she was a passenger, collided with a truck parked on the shoulder of the road.

The victim identified as Sue Bly, was being transported back to her nursing home in the back of a Rural / Metro ambulance from dialysis treatment.

In addition to the death of Ms. Bly, the ambulance driver also died in the accident.  Apparently, the ambulance driver drove into a Tennessee Department of Transportation (TDOT) truck that was parked on the should of the road.

As a personal injury lawyer, it would certainly appear that Ms. Bly’s family is entitled to bring a wrongful death lawsuit against the ambulance company and/or the TDOT due to keeping an improper lookout or negligently parking the truck.  If evidence proves that both parties were at fault, a jury could apportion damages based on the degree of culpability.

Ambulance Responsibility

Due to the fact that many nursing home patients suffer physical impairments, they are frequently reliant upon ambulance services to transport them to and from appointments outside of their facilities.  These patients should expect that these services with provide them with safe transportation.

Many nursing homes have contracts with private ambulance services that may not adequately train their staff to assist with medical complications encountered by the elderly.  In addition to inadequate training, some private ambulance services use off-duty public fire-fighters or paramedics.  Many times these people are simply over-worked to safely do their jobs.

In addition to driving safely and avoiding accidents, ambulance companies my also be responsible for the following situations commonly involving nursing home patients:

  • Dropping patients
  • Improperly securing patients in beds and wheelchairs
  • Providing wrong medications
  • Sex / physical abuse
  • Failing to provide assistance during transfers to and from bed
  • Failing to monitor patients’ vital signs
  • Failing to follow physician orders

If you believe that a family member or friend died or suffered an injury due to negligent care of an ambulance driver or attendant, we would be honored to discuss the matter with you.  All attorney consultations are free kept in the strictest confidence. (800) 926-7565

For more information on nursing homes in Tennessee look here. For laws related to Tennessee nursing homes, look here.

Related:

Ambulance Stolen From Chicago Nursing Home Results In Multiple Injuries

Transportation In & Out Of Nursing Homes: Ambulance Responsibility.

HEALTH FACILITIES

(210 ILCS 50/) Emergency Medical Services (EMS) Systems Act.

(210 ILCS 50/1) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 5501)

Sec. 1. Short title.) This Act shall be known and may be cited as the “Emergency Medical Services (EMS) Systems Act”.

(Source: P.A. 81‑1518; 88‑1.)

(210 ILCS 50/2) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 5502)

Sec. 2. The Legislature finds and declares that it is the intent of this legislation to provide the State with systems for emergency medical services by establishing within the State Department of Public Health a central authority responsible for the coordination and integration of all activities within the State concerning pre‑hospital and inter‑hospital emergency medical services, as well as non‑emergency medical transports, and the overall planning, evaluation, and regulation of pre‑hospital emergency medical services systems.

The provisions of this Act shall not be construed to deny emergency medical services to persons outside the boundaries of this State nor to limit, restrict, or prevent any cooperative agreement for the provision of emergency medical services between this State, or any of its political subdivisions, and any other State or its political subdivisions or a federal agency.

The provisions of this Act shall not be construed to regulate the emergency transportation of persons by friends or family members, in personal vehicles that are not ambulances, specialized emergency medical service vehicles, first response vehicles or medical carriers.

This legislation is intended to provide minimum standards for the statewide delivery of EMS services. It is recognized, however, that diversities exist between different areas of the State, based on geography, location of health care facilities, availability of personnel, and financial resources. The Legislature therefore intends that the implementation and enforcement of this Act by the Illinois Department of Public Health accommodate those varying needs and interests to the greatest extent possible without jeopardizing appropriate standards of medical care, through the Department’s exercise of the waiver provision of this Act and its adoption of rules pursuant to this Act.

(Source: P.A. 88‑1; 89‑177, eff. 7‑19‑95.)

(210 ILCS 50/3) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 5503)

Sec. 3. Applicability.) This Act is not a limitation on the powers of home rule units.

(Source: P.A. 81‑1518; 88‑1.)

(210 ILCS 50/3.5)

Sec. 3.5. Definitions. As used in this Act:

“Department” means the Illinois Department of Public Health.

“Director” means the Director of the Illinois Department of Public Health.

“Emergency” means a medical condition of recent onset and severity that would lead a prudent layperson, possessing an average knowledge of medicine and health, to believe that urgent or unscheduled medical care is required.

“Health Care Facility” means a hospital, nursing home, physician’s office or other fixed location at which medical and health care services are performed. It does not include “pre‑hospital emergency care settings” which utilize EMTs to render pre‑hospital emergency care prior to the arrival of a transport vehicle, as defined in this Act.

“Hospital” has the meaning ascribed to that term in the Hospital Licensing Act.

“Trauma” means any significant injury which involves single or multiple organ systems.

(Source: P.A. 89‑177, eff. 7‑19‑95.)

(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 Advanced 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 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 airway management, cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR), control of shock and bleeding and splinting of fractures, as outlined in the Basic 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, 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) “First Response 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 First Responder 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.

(e) “Pre‑hospital care” means those emergency medical services rendered to emergency patients for analytic, resuscitative, stabilizing, or preventive purposes, precedent to and during transportation of such patients to hospitals.

(f) “Inter‑hospital care” means those emergency medical services rendered to emergency patients for analytic, resuscitative, stabilizing, or preventive purposes, during transportation of such patients from one hospital to another hospital.

(g) “Non‑emergency medical services” means medical care or monitoring rendered to patients whose conditions do not meet this Act’s definition of emergency, before 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.

(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. 94‑568, eff. 1‑1‑06.)

(210 ILCS 50/3.15)

Sec. 3.15. Emergency Medical Services (EMS) Regions. Beginning September 1, 1995, the Department shall designate Emergency Medical Services (EMS) Regions within the State, consisting of specific geographic areas encompassing EMS Systems and trauma centers, in which emergency medical services, trauma services, and non‑emergency medical services are coordinated under an EMS Region Plan.

In designating EMS Regions, the Department shall take into consideration, but not be limited to, the location of existing EMS Systems, Trauma Regions and trauma centers, existing patterns of inter‑System transports, population locations and density, transportation modalities, and geographical distance from available trauma and emergency department care.

Use of the term Trauma Region to identify a specific geographic area shall be discontinued upon designation of areas as EMS Regions.

(Source: P.A. 89‑177, eff. 7‑19‑95.)

(210 ILCS 50/3.20)

Sec. 3.20. Emergency Medical Services (EMS) Systems.

(a) “Emergency Medical Services (EMS) System” means an organization of hospitals, vehicle service providers and personnel approved by the Department in a specific geographic area, which coordinates and provides pre‑hospital and inter‑hospital emergency care and non‑emergency medical transports at a BLS, ILS and/or ALS level pursuant to a System program plan submitted to and approved by the Department, and pursuant to the EMS Region Plan adopted for the EMS Region in which the System is located.

(b) One hospital in each System program plan must be designated as the Resource Hospital. All other hospitals which are located within the geographic boundaries of a System and which have standby, basic or comprehensive level emergency departments must function in that EMS System as either an Associate Hospital or Participating Hospital and follow all System policies specified in the System Program Plan, including but not limited to the replacement of drugs and equipment used by providers who have delivered patients to their emergency departments. All hospitals and vehicle service providers participating in an EMS System must specify their level of participation in the System Program Plan.

(c) The Department shall have the authority and responsibility to:

(1) Approve BLS, ILS and ALS level EMS Systems which

meet minimum standards and criteria established in rules adopted by the Department pursuant to this Act, including the submission of a Program Plan for Department approval. Beginning September 1, 1997, the Department shall approve the development of a new EMS System only when a local or regional need for establishing such System has been identified. This shall not be construed as a needs assessment for health planning or other purposes outside of this Act. Following Department approval, EMS Systems must be fully operational within one year from the date of approval.

(2) Monitor EMS Systems, based on minimum standards

for continuing operation as prescribed in rules adopted by the Department pursuant to this Act, which shall include requirements for submitting Program Plan amendments to the Department for approval.

(3) Renew EMS System approvals every 4 years, after

an inspection, based on compliance with the standards for continuing operation prescribed in rules adopted by the Department pursuant to this Act.

(4) Suspend, revoke, or refuse to renew approval of

any EMS System, after providing an opportunity for a hearing, when findings show that it does not meet the minimum standards for continuing operation as prescribed by the Department, or is found to be in violation of its previously approved Program Plan.

(5) Require each EMS System to adopt written

protocols for the bypassing of or diversion to any hospital, trauma center or regional trauma center, which provide that a person shall not be transported to a facility other than the nearest hospital, regional trauma center or trauma center unless the medical benefits to the patient reasonably expected from the provision of appropriate medical treatment at a more distant facility outweigh the increased risks to the patient from transport to the more distant facility, or the transport is in accordance with the System’s protocols for patient choice or refusal.

(6) Require that the EMS Medical Director of an ILS

or ALS level EMS System be a physician licensed to practice medicine in all of its branches in Illinois, and certified by the American Board of Emergency Medicine or the American Board of Osteopathic Emergency Medicine, and that the EMS Medical Director of a BLS level EMS System be a physician licensed to practice medicine in all of its branches in Illinois, with regular and frequent involvement in pre‑hospital emergency medical services. In addition, all EMS Medical Directors shall:

(A) Have experience on an EMS vehicle at the

highest level available within the System, or make provision to gain such experience within 12 months prior to the date responsibility for the System is assumed or within 90 days after assuming the position;

(B) Be thoroughly knowledgeable of all skills

included in the scope of practices of all levels of EMS personnel within the System;

(C) Have or make provision to gain experience

instructing students at a level similar to that of the levels of EMS personnel within the System; and

(D) For ILS and ALS EMS Medical Directors,

successfully complete a Department‑approved EMS Medical Director’s Course.

(7) Prescribe statewide EMS data elements to be

collected and documented by providers in all EMS Systems for all emergency and non‑emergency medical services, with a one‑year phase‑in for commencing collection of such data elements.

(8) Define, through rules adopted pursuant to this

Act, the terms “Resource Hospital”, “Associate Hospital”, “Participating Hospital”, “Basic Emergency Department”, “Standby Emergency Department”, “Comprehensive Emergency Department”, “EMS Medical Director”, “EMS Administrative Director”, and “EMS System Coordinator”.

(A) Upon the effective date of this amendatory

Act of 1995, all existing Project Medical Directors shall be considered EMS Medical Directors, and all persons serving in such capacities on the effective date of this amendatory Act of 1995 shall be exempt from the requirements of paragraph (7) of this subsection;

(B) Upon the effective date of this amendatory

Act of 1995, all existing EMS System Project Directors shall be considered EMS Administrative Directors.

(9) Investigate the circumstances that caused a

hospital in an EMS system to go on bypass status to determine whether that hospital’s decision to go on bypass status was reasonable. The Department may impose sanctions, as set forth in Section 3.140 of the Act, upon a Department determination that the hospital unreasonably went on bypass status in violation of the Act.

(10) Evaluate the capacity and performance of any

freestanding emergency center established under Section 32.5 of this Act in meeting emergency medical service needs of the public, including compliance with applicable emergency medical standards and assurance of the availability of and immediate access to the highest quality of medical care possible.

(Source: P.A. 95‑584, eff. 8‑31‑07.)

(210 ILCS 50/3.21)

Sec. 3.21. Hospital first responders. The General Assembly finds that in the event of terrorist acts, especially those involving the release of biological agents, bacteria, viruses, or other agents intended to cause illness or injury, hospitals serve as first responders in diagnosing and treating the victims of those acts. As first responders, hospitals are on the front lines of the State’s emergency management efforts. Given the increased demands for equipment, materials, and training associated with their responsibility as first responders in the event of terrorist acts, hospitals would benefit from additional resources to enable them to be better prepared to protect and aid the residents of the State. In awarding funds to support disaster preparedness by first responders, the Department and any other State agencies shall take into account the role of hospitals in being prepared to respond to emergencies or disasters.

(Source: P.A. 93‑249, eff. 7‑22‑03.)

(210 ILCS 50/3.25)

Sec. 3.25. EMS Region Plan; Development.

(a) Within 6 months after designation of an EMS Region, an EMS Region Plan addressing at least the information prescribed in Section 3.30 shall be submitted to the Department for approval. The Plan shall be developed by the Region’s EMS Medical Directors Committee with advice from the Regional EMS Advisory Committee; portions of the plan concerning trauma shall be developed jointly with the Region’s Trauma Center Medical Directors or Trauma Center Medical Directors Committee, whichever is applicable, with advice from the Regional Trauma Advisory Committee, if such Advisory Committee has been established in the Region. Portions of the Plan concerning stroke shall be developed jointly with the Regional Stroke Advisory Subcommittee.

(1) A Region’s EMS Medical Directors Committee shall

be comprised of the Region’s EMS Medical Directors, along with the medical advisor to a fire department vehicle service provider. For regions which include a municipal fire department serving a population of over 2,000,000 people, that fire department’s medical advisor shall serve on the Committee. For other regions, the fire department vehicle service providers shall select which medical advisor to serve on the Committee on an annual basis.

(2) A Region’s Trauma Center Medical Directors

Committee shall be comprised of the Region’s Trauma Center Medical Directors.

(b) A Region’s Trauma Center Medical Directors may choose to participate in the development of the EMS Region Plan through membership on the Regional EMS Advisory Committee, rather than through a separate Trauma Center Medical Directors Committee. If that option is selected, the Region’s Trauma Center Medical Director shall also determine whether a separate Regional Trauma Advisory Committee is necessary for the Region.

(c) In the event of disputes over content of the Plan between the Region’s EMS Medical Directors Committee and the Region’s Trauma Center Medical Directors or Trauma Center Medical Directors Committee, whichever is applicable, the Director of the Illinois Department of Public Health shall intervene through a mechanism established by the Department through rules adopted pursuant to this Act.

(d) “Regional EMS Advisory Committee” means a committee formed within an Emergency Medical Services (EMS) Region to advise the Region’s EMS Medical Directors Committee and to select the Region’s representative to the State Emergency Medical Services Advisory Council, consisting of at least the members of the Region’s EMS Medical Directors Committee, the Chair of the Regional Trauma Committee, the EMS System Coordinators from each Resource Hospital within the Region, one administrative representative from an Associate Hospital within the Region, one administrative representative from a Participating Hospital within the Region, one administrative representative from the vehicle service provider which responds to the highest number of calls for emergency service within the Region, one administrative representative of a vehicle service provider from each System within the Region, one Emergency Medical Technician (EMT)/Pre‑Hospital RN from each level of EMT/Pre‑Hospital RN practicing within the Region, and one registered professional nurse currently practicing in an emergency department within the Region. Of the 2 administrative representatives of vehicle service providers, at least one shall be an administrative representative of a private vehicle service provider. The Department’s Regional EMS Coordinator for each Region shall serve as a non‑voting member of that Region’s EMS Advisory Committee.

Every 2 years, the members of the Region’s EMS Medical Directors Committee shall rotate serving as Committee Chair, and select the Associate Hospital, Participating Hospital and vehicle service providers which shall send representatives to the Advisory Committee, and the EMTs/Pre‑Hospital RN and nurse who shall serve on the Advisory Committee.

(e) “Regional Trauma Advisory Committee” means a committee formed within an Emergency Medical Services (EMS) Region, to advise the Region’s Trauma Center Medical Directors Committee, consisting of at least the Trauma Center Medical Directors and Trauma Coordinators from each Trauma Center within the Region, one EMS Medical Director from a resource hospital within the Region, one EMS System Coordinator from another resource hospital within the Region, one representative each from a public and private vehicle service provider which transports trauma patients within the Region, an administrative representative from each trauma center within the Region, one EMT representing the highest level of EMT practicing within the Region, one emergency physician and one Trauma Nurse Specialist (TNS) currently practicing in a trauma center. The Department’s Regional EMS Coordinator for each Region shall serve as a non‑voting member of that Region’s Trauma Advisory Committee.

Every 2 years, the members of the Trauma Center Medical Directors Committee shall rotate serving as Committee Chair, and select the vehicle service providers, EMT, emergency physician, EMS System Coordinator and TNS who shall serve on the Advisory Committee.

(Source: P.A. 96‑514, eff. 1‑1‑10.)

(210 ILCS 50/3.30)

Sec. 3.30. EMS Region Plan; Content.

(a) The EMS Medical Directors Committee shall address at least the following:

(1) Protocols for inter‑System/inter‑Region patient

transports, including identifying the conditions of emergency patients which may not be transported to the different levels of emergency department, based on their Department classifications and relevant Regional considerations (e.g. transport times and distances);

(2) Regional standing medical orders;

(3) Patient transfer patterns, including criteria

for determining whether a patient needs the specialized services of a trauma center, along with protocols for the bypassing of or diversion to any hospital, trauma center or regional trauma center which are consistent with individual System bypass or diversion protocols and protocols for patient choice or refusal;

(4) Protocols for resolving Regional or Inter‑System

conflict;

(5) An EMS disaster preparedness plan which includes

the actions and responsibilities of all EMS participants within the Region. Within 90 days of the effective date of this amendatory Act of 1996, an EMS System shall submit to the Department for review an internal disaster plan. At a minimum, the plan shall include contingency plans for the transfer of patients to other facilities if an evacuation of the hospital becomes necessary due to a catastrophe, including but not limited to, a power failure;

(6) Regional standardization of continuing education

requirements;

(7) Regional standardization of Do Not Resuscitate

(DNR) policies, and protocols for power of attorney for health care;

(8) Protocols for disbursement of Department grants;

and

(9) Protocols for the triage, treatment, and

transport of possible acute stroke patients.

(b) The Trauma Center Medical Directors or Trauma Center Medical Directors Committee shall address at least the following:

(1) The identification of Regional Trauma Centers;

(2) Protocols for inter‑System and inter‑Region

trauma patient transports, including identifying the conditions of emergency patients which may not be transported to the different levels of emergency department, based on their Department classifications and relevant Regional considerations (e.g. transport times and distances);

(3) Regional trauma standing medical orders;

(4) Trauma patient transfer patterns, including

criteria for determining whether a patient needs the specialized services of a trauma center, along with protocols for the bypassing of or diversion to any hospital, trauma center or regional trauma center which are consistent with individual System bypass or diversion protocols and protocols for patient choice or refusal;

(5) The identification of which types of patients

can be cared for by Level I and Level II Trauma Centers;

(6) Criteria for inter‑hospital transfer of trauma

patients;

(7) The treatment of trauma patients in each trauma

center within the Region;

(8) A program for conducting a quarterly conference

which shall include at a minimum a discussion of morbidity and mortality between all professional staff involved in the care of trauma patients;

(9) The establishment of a Regional trauma quality

assurance and improvement subcommittee, consisting of trauma surgeons, which shall perform periodic medical audits of each trauma center’s trauma services, and forward tabulated data from such reviews to the Department; and

(10) The establishment, within 90 days of the

effective date of this amendatory Act of 1996, of an internal disaster plan, which shall include, at a minimum, contingency plans for the transfer of patients to other facilities if an evacuation of the hospital becomes necessary due to a catastrophe, including but not limited to, a power failure.

(c) The Region’s EMS Medical Directors and Trauma Center Medical Directors Committees shall appoint any subcommittees which they deem necessary to address specific issues concerning Region activities.

(Source: P.A. 96‑514, eff. 1‑1‑10.)

(210 ILCS 50/3.35)

Sec. 3.35. Emergency Medical Services (EMS) Resource Hospital; Functions. The Resource Hospital of an EMS System shall:

(a) Prepare a Program Plan in accordance with the provisions of this Act and minimum standards and criteria established in rules adopted by the Department pursuant to this Act, and submit such Program Plan to the Department for approval.

(b) Appoint an EMS Medical Director, who will continually monitor and supervise the System and who will have the responsibility and authority for total management of the System as delegated by the EMS Resource Hospital.

The Program Plan shall require the EMS Medical Director to appoint an alternate EMS Medical Director and establish a written protocol addressing the functions to be carried out in his or her absence.

(c) Appoint an EMS System Coordinator and EMS Administrative Director in consultation with the EMS Medical Director and in accordance with rules adopted by the Department pursuant to this Act.

(d) Identify potential EMS System participants and obtain commitments from them for the provision of services.

(e) Educate or coordinate the education of EMT personnel in accordance with the requirements of this Act, rules adopted by the Department pursuant to this Act, and the EMS System Program Plan.

(f) Notify the Department of EMT provider personnel who have successfully completed requirements for licensure testing and relicensure by the Department, except that an ILS or ALS level System may require its EMT‑B personnel to apply directly to the Department for determination of successful completion of relicensure requirements.

(g) Educate or coordinate the education of Emergency Medical Dispatcher candidates, in accordance with the requirements of this Act, rules adopted by the Department pursuant to this Act, and the EMS System Program Plan.

(h) Establish or approve protocols for prearrival medical instructions to callers by System Emergency Medical Dispatchers who provide such instructions.

(i) Educate or coordinate the education of Pre‑Hospital RN and ECRN candidates, in accordance with the requirements of this Act, rules adopted by the Department pursuant to this Act, and the EMS System Program Plan.

(j) Approve Pre‑Hospital RN and ECRN candidates to practice within the System, and reapprove Pre‑Hospital RNs and ECRNs every 4 years in accordance with the requirements of the Department and the System Program Plan.

(k) Establish protocols for the use of Pre‑Hospital RNs within the System.

(l) Establish protocols for utilizing ECRNs and physicians licensed to practice medicine in all of its branches to monitor telecommunications from, and give voice orders to, EMS personnel, under the authority of the EMS Medical Director.

(m) Monitor emergency and non‑emergency medical transports within the System, in accordance with rules adopted by the Department pursuant to this Act.

(n) Utilize levels of personnel required by the Department to provide emergency care to the sick and injured at the scene of an emergency, during transport to a hospital or during inter‑hospital transport and within the hospital emergency department until the responsibility for the care of the patient is assumed by the medical personnel of a hospital emergency department or other facility within the hospital to which the patient is first delivered by System personnel.

(o) Utilize levels of personnel required by the Department to provide non‑emergency medical services during transport to a health care facility and within the health care facility until the responsibility for the care of the patient is assumed by the medical personnel of the health care facility to which the patient is delivered by System personnel.

(p) Establish and implement a program for System participant information and education, in accordance with rules adopted by the Department pursuant to this Act.

(q) Establish and implement a program for public information and education, in accordance with rules adopted by the Department pursuant to this Act.

(r) Operate in compliance with the EMS Region Plan.

(Source: P.A. 89‑177, eff. 7‑19‑95.)

(210 ILCS 50/3.40)

Sec. 3.40. EMS System Participation Suspensions and Due Process.

(a) An EMS Medical Director may suspend from participation within the System any individual, individual provider or other participant considered not to be meeting the requirements of the Program Plan of that approved EMS System.

(b) Prior to suspending an EMT or other provider, an EMS Medical Director shall provide the EMT or provider with the opportunity for a hearing before the local System review board in accordance with subsection (f) and the rules promulgated by the Department.

(1) If the local System review board affirms or

modifies the EMS Medical Director’s suspension order, the EMT or provider shall have the opportunity for a review of the local board’s decision by the State EMS Disciplinary Review Board, pursuant to Section 3.45 of this Act.

(2) If the local System review board reverses or

modifies the EMS Medical Director’s suspension order, the EMS Medical Director shall have the opportunity for a review of the local board’s decision by the State EMS Disciplinary Review Board, pursuant to Section 3.45 of this Act.

(3) The suspension shall commence only upon the

occurrence of one of the following:

(A) the EMT or provider has waived the

opportunity for a hearing before the local System review board; or

(B) the suspension order has been affirmed or

modified by the local board and the EMT or provider has waived the opportunity for review by the State Board; or

(C) the suspension order has been affirmed or

modified by the local board, and the local board’s decision has been affirmed or modified by the State Board.

(c) An EMS Medical Director may immediately suspend an EMT or other provider if he or she finds that the information in his or her possession indicates that the continuation in practice by an EMT or other provider would constitute an imminent danger to the public. The suspended EMT or other provider shall be issued an immediate verbal notification followed by a written suspension order to the EMT or other provider by the EMS Medical Director which states the length, terms and basis for the suspension.

(1) Within 24 hours following the commencement of

the suspension, the EMS Medical Director shall deliver to the Department, by messenger or telefax, a copy of the suspension order and copies of any written materials which relate to the EMS Medical Director’s decision to suspend the EMT or provider.

(2) Within 24 hours following the commencement of

the suspension, the suspended EMT or provider may deliver to the Department, by messenger or telefax, a written response to the suspension order and copies of any written materials which the EMT or provider feels relate to that response.

(3) Within 24 hours following receipt of the EMS

Medical Director’s suspension order or the EMT or provider’s written response, whichever is later, the Director or the Director’s designee shall determine whether the suspension should be stayed pending the EMT’s or provider’s opportunity for hearing or review in accordance with this Act, or whether the suspension should continue during the course of that hearing or review. The Director or the Director’s designee shall issue this determination to the EMS Medical Director, who shall immediately notify the suspended EMT or provider. The suspension shall remain in effect during this period of review by the Director or the Director’s designee.

(d) Upon issuance of a suspension order for reasons directly related to medical care, the EMS Medical Director shall also provide the EMT or provider with the opportunity for a hearing before the local System review board, in accordance with subsection (f) and the rules promulgated by the Department.

(1) If the local System review board affirms or

modifies the EMS Medical Director’s suspension order, the EMT or provider shall have the opportunity for a review of the local board’s decision by the State EMS Disciplinary Review Board, pursuant to Section 3.45 of this Act.

(2) If the local System review board reverses or

modifies the EMS Medical Director’s suspension order, the EMS Medical Director shall have the opportunity for a review of the local board’s decision by the State EMS Disciplinary Review Board, pursuant to Section 3.45 of this Act.

(3) The EMT or provider may elect to bypass the

local System review board and seek direct review of the EMS Medical Director’s suspension order by the State EMS Disciplinary Review Board.

(e) The Resource Hospital shall designate a local System review board in accordance with the rules of the Department, for the purpose of providing a hearing to any individual or individual provider participating within the System who is suspended from participation by the EMS Medical Director. The EMS Medical Director shall arrange for a certified shorthand reporter to make a stenographic record of that hearing and thereafter prepare a transcript of the proceedings. The transcript, all documents or materials received as evidence during the hearing and the local System review board’s written decision shall be retained in the custody of the EMS system. The System shall implement a decision of the local System review board unless that decision has been appealed to the State Emergency Medical Services Disciplinary Review Board in accordance with this Act and the rules of the Department.

(f) The Resource Hospital shall implement a decision of the State Emergency Medical Services Disciplinary Review Board which has been rendered in accordance with this Act and the rules of the Department.

(Source: P.A. 89‑177, eff. 7‑19‑95.)

(210 ILCS 50/3.45)

Sec. 3.45. State Emergency Medical Services Disciplinary Review Board.

(a) The Governor shall appoint a State Emergency Medical Services Disciplinary Review Board, composed of an EMS Medical Director, an EMS System Coordinator, an Emergency Medical Technician‑Paramedic (EMT‑P), an Emergency Medical Technician‑Basic (EMT‑B), and the following members, who shall only review cases in which a party is from the same professional category: a Pre‑Hospital RN, an ECRN, a Trauma Nurse Specialist, an Emergency Medical Technician‑Intermediate (EMT‑I), a representative from a private vehicle service provider, a representative from a public vehicle service provider, and an emergency physician who monitors telecommunications from and gives voice orders to EMS personnel. The Governor shall also appoint one alternate for each member of the Board, from the same professional category as the member of the Board.

(b) Of the members first appointed, 2 members shall be appointed for a term of one year, 2 members shall be appointed for a term of 2 years and the remaining members shall be appointed for a term of 3 years. The terms of subsequent appointments shall be 3 years. All appointees shall serve until their successors are appointed. The alternate members shall be appointed and serve in the same fashion as the members of the Board. If a member resigns his or her appointment, the corresponding alternate shall serve the remainder of that member’s term until a subsequent member is appointed by the Governor.

(c) The function of the Board is to review and affirm, reverse or modify orders to suspend an EMT or other individual provider from participating within an EMS System.

(d) An individual, individual provider or other participant who received an immediate suspension from an EMS Medical Director may request the Board to reverse or modify the suspension order. If the suspension had been affirmed or modified by a local System review board, the suspended participant may request the Board to reverse or modify the local board’s decision.

(e) An individual, individual provider or other participant who received a non‑immediate suspension order from an EMS Medical Director which was affirmed or modified by a local System review board may request the Board to reverse or modify the local board’s decision.

(f) An EMS Medical Director whose suspension order was reversed or modified by a local System review board may request the Board to reverse or modify the local board’s decision.

(g) The Board shall regularly meet on the first Tuesday of every month, unless no requests for review have been submitted. Additional meetings of the Board shall be scheduled as necessary to insure that a request for direct review of an immediate suspension order is scheduled within 14 days after the Department receives the request for review or as soon thereafter as a quorum is available. The Board shall meet in Springfield or Chicago, whichever location is closer to the majority of the members or alternates attending the meeting. The Department shall reimburse the members and alternates of the Board for reasonable travel expenses incurred in attending meetings of the Board.

(h) A request for review shall be submitted in writing to the Chief of the Department’s Division of Emergency Medical Services and Highway Safety, within 10 days after receiving the local board’s decision or the EMS Medical Director’s suspension order, whichever is applicable, a copy of which shall be enclosed.

(i) At its regularly scheduled meetings, the Board shall review requests which have been received by the Department at least 10 working days prior to the Board’s meeting date. Requests for review which are received less than 10 working days prior to a scheduled meeting shall be considered at the Board’s next scheduled meeting, except that requests for direct review of an immediate suspension order may be scheduled up to 3 working days prior to the Board’s meeting date.

(j) A quorum shall be required for the Board to meet, which shall consist of 3 members or alternates, including the EMS Medical Director or alternate and the member or alternate from the same professional category as the subject of the suspension order. At each meeting of the Board, the members or alternates present shall select a Chairperson to conduct the meeting.

(k) Deliberations for decisions of the State EMS Disciplinary Review Board shall be conducted in closed session. Department staff may attend for the purpose of providing clerical assistance, but no other persons may be in attendance except for the parties to the dispute being reviewed by the Board and their attorneys, unless by request of the Board.

(l) The Board shall review the transcript, evidence and written decision of the local review board or the written decision and supporting documentation of the EMS Medical Director, whichever is applicable, along with any additional written or verbal testimony or argument offered by the parties to the dispute.

(m) At the conclusion of its review, the Board shall issue its decision and the basis for its decision on a form provided by the Department, and shall submit to the Department its written decision together with the record of the local System review board. The Department shall promptly issue a copy of the Board’s decision to all affected parties. The Board’s decision shall be binding on all parties.

(Source: P.A. 89‑177, eff. 7‑19‑95; 90‑144, eff. 7‑23‑97.)

(210 ILCS 50/3.50)

Sec. 3.50. Emergency Medical Technician (EMT) Licensure.

(a) “Emergency Medical Technician‑Basic” or “EMT‑B” means a person who has successfully completed a course of instruction in basic life support as prescribed 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.

(b) “Emergency Medical Technician‑Intermediate” or “EMT‑I” means a person who has successfully completed a course of instruction in intermediate life support as prescribed 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) “Emergency Medical Technician‑Paramedic” or “EMT‑P” means a person who has successfully completed a course of instruction in advanced life support care as prescribed 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.

(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 EMT, based on the respective national curricula of the United States Department of Transportation and any modifications to such curricula specified by the Department through rules adopted pursuant to this Act.

(2) Prescribe licensure testing requirements for all

levels of EMT, which shall include a requirement that all phases of instruction, training, and field experience be completed before taking the EMT licensure examination. Candidates may elect to take the National Registry of Emergency Medical Technicians examination in lieu of the Department’s examination, but are responsible for making their own arrangements for taking the National Registry examination.

(2.5) Review applications for EMT 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 meets such standards, the Department shall offer the applicant the opportunity to successfully complete a Department‑approved EMT examination 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 class of EMT license issued.

(3) License individuals as an EMT‑B, EMT‑I, or EMT‑P

who have met the Department’s education, training and testing requirements.

(4) Prescribe annual continuing education and

relicensure requirements for all levels of EMT.

(5) Relicense individuals as an EMT‑B, EMT‑I, or

EMT‑P every 4 years, based on their compliance with continuing education and relicensure requirements.

(6) Grant inactive status to any EMT who qualifies,

based on standards and procedures established by the Department in rules adopted pursuant to this Act.

(7) Charge each candidate for EMT a fee to be

submitted with an application for a licensure examination.

(8) Suspend, revoke, or refuse to renew the license

of an EMT, after an opportunity for a hearing, when findings show one or more of the following:

(A) The EMT has not met continuing education or

relicensure requirements as prescribed by the Department;

(B) The EMT has failed to maintain proficiency

in the level of skills for which he or she is licensed;

(C) The EMT, 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 EMT 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 EMT 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 EMT 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; or

(G) The EMT has violated this Act or any rule

adopted by the Department pursuant to this Act.

The education requirements prescribed by the Department

under this subsection 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 for EMT licensure 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.

(Source: P.A. 96‑540, eff. 8‑17‑09.)

(210 ILCS 50/3.55)

Sec. 3.55. Scope of practice.

(a) Any person currently licensed as an EMT‑B, EMT‑I, or EMT‑P may perform emergency and non‑emergency medical services as defined in this Act, in accordance with his or her level of education, training and licensure, the standards of performance and conduct prescribed by the Department in rules adopted pursuant to this Act, and the requirements of the EMS System in which he or she practices, as contained in the approved Program Plan for that System.

(a‑5) A person currently approved as a First Responder or licensed as an EMT‑B, EMT‑I, or EMT‑P who has successfully completed a Department approved course in automated defibrillator operation and who is functioning within a Department approved EMS System may utilize such automated defibrillator according to the standards of performance and conduct prescribed by the Department in rules adopted pursuant to this Act and the requirements of the EMS System in which he or she practices, as contained in the approved Program Plan for that System.

(a‑7) A person currently licensed as an EMT‑B, EMT‑I, or EMT‑P who has successfully completed a Department approved course in the administration of epinephrine, shall be required to carry epinephrine with him or her as part of the EMT medical supplies whenever he or she is performing the duties of an emergency medical technician.

(b) A person currently licensed as an EMT‑B, EMT‑I, or EMT‑P may only practice as an EMT or utilize his or her EMT license in pre‑hospital or inter‑hospital emergency care settings or non‑emergency medical transport situations, under the written or verbal direction of the EMS Medical Director. For purposes of this Section, a “pre‑hospital emergency care setting” may include a location, that is not a health care facility, which utilizes EMTs to render pre‑hospital emergency care prior to the arrival of a transport vehicle. The location shall include communication equipment and all of the portable equipment and drugs appropriate for the EMT’s level of care, as required by this Act, rules adopted by the Department pursuant to this Act, and the protocols of the EMS Systems, and shall operate only with the approval and under the direction of the EMS Medical Director.

This Section shall not prohibit an EMT‑B, EMT‑I, or EMT‑P from practicing within an emergency department or other health care setting for the purpose of receiving continuing education or training approved by the EMS Medical Director. This Section shall also not prohibit an EMT‑B, EMT‑I, or EMT‑P from seeking credentials other than his or her EMT license and utilizing such credentials to work in emergency departments or other health care settings under the jurisdiction of that employer.

(c) A person currently licensed as an EMT‑B, EMT‑I, or EMT‑P may honor Do Not Resuscitate (DNR) orders and powers of attorney for health care only in accordance with rules adopted by the Department pursuant to this Act and protocols of the EMS System in which he or she practices.

(d) A student enrolled in a Department approved emergency medical technician program, while fulfilling the clinical training and in‑field supervised experience requirements mandated for licensure or approval by the System and the Department, may perform prescribed procedures under the direct supervision of a physician licensed to practice medicine in all of its branches, a qualified registered professional nurse or a qualified EMT, only when authorized by the EMS Medical Director.

(Source: P.A. 92‑376, eff. 8‑15‑01.)

(210 ILCS 50/3.57)

Sec. 3.57. Physician do‑not‑resuscitate orders. The Department of Public Health Uniform DNR Advance Directive or a copy of that Advance Directive shall be honored under this Act.

(Source: P.A. 94‑865, eff. 6‑16‑06.)

(210 ILCS 50/3.60)

Sec. 3.60. First Responder.

(a) “First Responder” means a person who has successfully completed a course of instruction in emergency first response as prescribed by the Department, who provides first response services prior to the arrival of an ambulance or specialized emergency medical services vehicle, in accordance with the level of care established in the emergency first response course. A First Responder who provides such services as part of an EMS System response plan which utilizes First Responders as the personnel dispatched to the scene of an emergency to provide initial emergency medical care shall comply with the applicable sections of the Program Plan of that EMS System.

Persons who have already completed a course of instruction in emergency first response based on or equivalent to the national curriculum of the United States Department of Transportation, or as otherwise previously recognized by the Department, shall be considered First Responders on the effective date of this amendatory Act of 1995.

(b) The Department shall have the authority and responsibility to:

(1) Prescribe education requirements for the First

Responder, which meet or exceed the national curriculum of the United States Department of Transportation, through rules adopted pursuant to this Act.

(2) Prescribe a standard set of equipment for use

during first response services. An individual First Responder shall not be required to maintain his or her own set of such equipment, provided he or she has access to such equipment during a first response call.

(3) Require the First Responder to notify the

Department of any EMS System in which he or she participates as dispatched personnel as described in subsection (a).

(4) Require the First Responder to comply with the

applicable sections of the Program Plans for those Systems.

(5) Require the First Responder to keep the

Department currently informed as to who employs him or her and who supervises his or her activities as a First Responder.

(6) Establish a mechanism for phasing in the First

Responder requirements over a 5‑year period.

(Source: P.A. 89‑177, eff. 7‑19‑95.)

(210 ILCS 50/3.65)

Sec. 3.65. EMS Lead Instructor.

(a) “EMS Lead Instructor” means a person who has successfully completed a course of education as prescribed by the Department, and who is currently approved by the Department to coordinate or teach education, training and continuing education courses, in accordance with standards prescribed by this Act and rules adopted by the Department pursuant to this Act.

(b) The Department shall have the authority and responsibility to:

(1) Prescribe education requirements for EMS Lead

Instructor candidates through rules adopted pursuant to this Act.

(2) Prescribe testing requirements for EMS Lead

Instructor candidates through rules adopted pursuant to this Act.

(3) Charge each candidate for EMS Lead Instructor a

fee to be submitted with an application for an examination.

(4) Approve individuals as EMS Lead Instructors who

have met the Department’s education and testing requirements.

(5) Require that all education, training and

continuing education courses for EMT‑B, EMT‑I, EMT‑P, Pre‑Hospital RN, ECRN, First Responder and Emergency Medical Dispatcher be coordinated by at least one approved EMS Lead Instructor. A program which includes education, training or continuing education for more than one type of personnel may use one EMS Lead Instructor to coordinate the program, and a single EMS Lead Instructor may simultaneously coordinate more than one program or course.

(6) Provide standards and procedures for awarding

EMS Lead Instructor approval to persons previously approved by the Department to coordinate such courses, based on qualifications prescribed by the Department through rules adopted pursuant to this Act.

(7) Suspend or revoke the approval of an EMS Lead

Instructor, after an opportunity for a hearing, when findings show one or more of the following:

(A) The EMS Lead Instructor has failed to

conduct a course in accordance with the curriculum prescribed by this Act and rules adopted by the Department pursuant to this Act; or

(B) The EMS Lead Instructor has failed to comply

with protocols prescribed by the Department through rules adopted pursuant to this Act.

(Source: P.A. 89‑177, eff. 7‑19‑95.)

(210 ILCS 50/3.70)

Sec. 3.70. Emergency Medical Dispatcher.

(a) “Emergency Medical Dispatcher” means a person who has successfully completed a training course in emergency medical dispatching meeting or exceeding the national curriculum of the United States Department of Transportation in accordance with rules adopted by the Department pursuant to this Act, who accepts calls from the public for emergency medical services and dispatches designated emergency medical services personnel and vehicles. The Emergency Medical Dispatcher must use the Department‑approved emergency medical dispatch priority reference system (EMDPRS) protocol selected for use by its agency and approved by its EMS medical director. This protocol must be used by an emergency medical dispatcher in an emergency medical dispatch agency to dispatch aid to medical emergencies which includes systematized caller interrogation questions; systematized prearrival support instructions; and systematized coding protocols that match the dispatcher’s evaluation of the injury or illness severity with the vehicle response mode and vehicle response configuration and includes an appropriate training curriculum and testing process consistent with the specific EMDPRS protocol used by the emergency medical dispatch agency. Prearrival support instructions shall be provided in a non‑discriminatory manner and shall be provided in accordance with the EMDPRS established by the EMS medical director of the EMS system in which the EMD operates. If the dispatcher operates under the authority of an Emergency Telephone System Board established under the Emergency Telephone System Act, the protocols shall be established by such Board in consultation with the EMS Medical Director. Persons who have already completed a course of instruction in emergency medical dispatch based on, equivalent to or exceeding the national curriculum of the United States Department of Transportation, or as otherwise approved by the Department, shall be considered Emergency Medical Dispatchers on the effective date of this amendatory Act.

(b) The Department shall have the authority and responsibility to:

(1) Require certification and recertification of a

person who meets the training and other requirements as an emergency medical dispatcher pursuant to this Act.

(2) Require certification and recertification of a

person, organization, or government agency that operates an emergency medical dispatch agency that meets the minimum standards prescribed by the Department for an emergency medical dispatch agency pursuant to this Act.

(3) Prescribe minimum education and continuing

education requirements for the Emergency Medical Dispatcher, which meet the national curriculum of the United States Department of Transportation, through rules adopted pursuant to this Act.

(4) Require each EMS Medical Director to report to

the Department whenever an action has taken place that may require the revocation or suspension of a certificate issued by the Department.

(5) Require each EMD to provide prearrival

instructions in compliance with protocols selected and approved by the system’s EMS medical director and approved by the Department.

(6) Require the Emergency Medical Dispatcher to keep

the Department currently informed as to the entity or agency that employs or supervises his activities as an Emergency Medical Dispatcher.

(7) Establish an annual recertification requirement

that requires at least 12 hours of medical dispatch‑specific continuing education each year.

(8) Approve all EMDPRS protocols used by emergency

medical dispatch agencies to assure compliance with national standards.

(9) Require that Department‑approved emergency

medical dispatch training programs are conducted in accordance with national standards.

(10) Require that the emergency medical dispatch

agency be operated in accordance with national standards, including, but not limited to, (i) the use on every request for medical assistance of an emergency medical dispatch priority reference system (EMDPRS) in accordance with Department‑approved policies and procedures and (ii) under the approval and supervision of the EMS medical director, the establishment of a continuous quality improvement program.

(11) Require that a person may not represent himself

or herself, nor may an agency or business represent an agent or employee of that agency or business, as an emergency medical dispatcher unless certified by the Department as an emergency medical dispatcher.

(12) Require that a person, organization, or

government agency not represent itself as an emergency medical dispatch agency unless the person, organization, or government agency is certified by the Department as an emergency medical dispatch agency.

(13) Require that a person, organization, or

government agency may not offer or conduct a training course that is represented as a course for an emergency medical dispatcher unless the person, organization, or agency is approved by the Department to offer or conduct that course.

(14) Require that Department‑approved emergency

medical dispatcher training programs are conducted by instructors licensed by the Department who:

(i) are, at a minimum, certified as emergency

medical dispatchers;

(ii) have completed a Department‑approved course

on methods of instruction;

(iii) have previous experience in a medical

dispatch agency; and

(iv) have demonstrated experience as an EMS

instructor.

(15) Establish criteria for modifying or waiving

Emergency Medical Dispatcher requirements based on (i) the scope and frequency of dispatch activities and the dispatcher’s access to training or (ii) whether the previously‑attended dispatcher training program merits automatic recertification for the dispatcher.

(Source: P.A. 92‑506, eff. 1‑1‑02.)

(210 ILCS 50/3.75)

Sec. 3.75. Trauma Nurse Specialist (TNS) Certification.

(a) “Trauma Nurse Specialist” or “TNS” means a registered professional nurse who has successfully completed education and testing requirements as prescribed by the Department, and is certified by the Department in accordance with rules adopted by the Department pursuant to this Act.

(b) The Department shall have the authority and responsibility to:

(1) Establish criteria for TNS training sites,

through rules adopted pursuant to this Act;

(2) Prescribe education and testing requirements for

TNS candidates, which shall include an opportunity for certification based on examination only, through rules adopted pursuant to this Act;

(3) Charge each candidate for TNS certification a

fee to be submitted with an application for a certification examination;

(4) Certify an individual as a TNS who has met the

Department’s education and testing requirements;

(5) Prescribe recertification requirements through

rules adopted to this Act;

(6) Recertify an individual as a TNS every 4 years,

based on compliance with recertification requirements;

(7) Grant inactive status to any TNS who qualifies,

based on standards and procedures established by the Department in rules adopted pursuant to this Act; and

(8) Suspend, revoke or deny renewal of the

certification of a TNS, after an opportunity for hearing by the Department, if findings show that the TNS has failed to maintain proficiency in the level of skills for which the TNS is certified or has failed to comply with recertification requirements.

(Source: P.A. 89‑177, eff. 7‑19‑95.)

(210 ILCS 50/3.80)

Sec. 3.80. Pre‑Hospital RN and Emergency Communications Registered Nurse.

(a) Emergency Communications Registered Nurse or “ECRN” means a registered professional nurse licensed under the Nurse Practice Act who has successfully completed supplemental education in accordance with rules adopted by the Department, and who is approved by an EMS Medical Director to monitor telecommunications from and give voice orders to EMS System personnel, under the authority of the EMS Medical Director and in accordance with System protocols.

Upon the effective date of this amendatory Act of 1995, all existing Registered Professional Nurse/MICNs shall be considered ECRNs.

(b) “Pre‑Hospital Registered Nurse” or “Pre‑Hospital RN” means a registered professional nurse licensed under the Nurse Practice Act who has successfully completed supplemental education in accordance with rules adopted by the Department pursuant to this Act, and who is approved by an EMS Medical Director to practice within an EMS System as emergency medical services personnel for pre‑hospital and inter‑hospital emergency care and non‑emergency medical transports.

Upon the effective date of this amendatory Act of 1995, all existing Registered Professional Nurse/Field RNs shall be considered Pre‑Hospital RNs.

(c) The Department shall have the authority and responsibility to:

(1) Prescribe education and continuing education

requirements for Pre‑Hospital RN and ECRN candidates through rules adopted pursuant to this Act:

(A) Education for Pre‑Hospital RN shall include

extrication, telecommunications, and pre‑hospital cardiac and trauma care;

(B) Education for ECRN shall include

telecommunications, System standing medical orders and the procedures and protocols established by the EMS Medical Director;

(C) A Pre‑Hospital RN candidate who is

fulfilling clinical training and in‑field supervised experience requirements may perform prescribed procedures under the direct supervision of a physician licensed to practice medicine in all of its branches, a qualified registered professional nurse or a qualified EMT, only when authorized by the EMS Medical Director;

(D) An EMS Medical Director may impose in‑field

supervised field experience requirements on System ECRNs as part of their training or continuing education, in which they perform prescribed procedures under the direct supervision of a physician licensed to practice medicine in all of its branches, a qualified registered professional nurse or qualified EMT, only when authorized by the EMS Medical Director;

(2) Require EMS Medical Directors to reapprove

Pre‑Hospital RNs and ECRNs every 4 years, based on compliance with continuing education requirements prescribed by the Department through rules adopted pursuant to this Act;

(3) Allow EMS Medical Directors to grant inactive

status to any Pre‑Hospital RN or ECRN who qualifies, based on standards and procedures established by the Department in rules adopted pursuant to this Act;

(4) Require a Pre‑Hospital RN to honor Do Not

Resuscitate (DNR) orders and powers of attorney for health care only in accordance with rules adopted by the Department pursuant to this Act and protocols of the EMS System in which he or she practices.

(Source: P.A. 95‑639, eff. 10‑5‑07.)

(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).

(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;

(B) Equipment requirements;

(C) Staffing requirements; and

(D) Annual license renewal.

(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);

(5) Annually inspect all licensed Vehicle Service

Providers, and relicense such Providers that have met the Department’s requirements for license renewal;

(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; and

(11) Charge each Vehicle Service Provider a fee, to

be submitted with each application for licensure and license renewal, which shall not exceed $25.00 per vehicle, up to $500.00 per Provider.

(Source: P.A. 89‑177, eff. 7‑19‑95.)

(210 ILCS 50/3.86)

Sec. 3.86. Stretcher van providers.

(a) In this Section, “stretcher van provider” means an entity licensed by the Department to provide non‑emergency transportation of passengers on a stretcher in compliance with this Act or the rules adopted by the Department pursuant to this Act, utilizing stretcher vans.

(b) The Department has the authority and responsibility to do the following:

(1) Require all stretcher van providers, both

publicly and privately owned, to be licensed by the Department.

(2) Establish licensing and safety standards and

requirements for stretcher van providers, through rules adopted pursuant to this Act, including but not limited to:

(A) Vehicle design, specification, operation, and

maintenance standards.

(B) Safety equipment requirements and standards.

(C) Staffing requirements.

(D) Annual license renewal.

(3) License all stretcher van providers that have met

the Department’s requirements for licensure.

(4) Annually inspect all licensed stretcher van

providers, and relicense providers that have met the Department’s requirements for license renewal.

(5) Suspend, revoke, refuse to issue, or refuse to

renew the license of any stretcher van provider, or that portion of a license pertaining to a specific vehicle operated by a 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 the rules adopted by the Department pursuant to this Act.

(6) Issue an emergency suspension order for any

provider or vehicle licensed under this Act when the Director or his or her designee has determined that an immediate or serious danger to the public health, safety, and welfare exists. Suspension or revocation proceedings that offer an opportunity for a hearing shall be promptly initiated after the emergency suspension order has been issued.

(7) Prohibit any stretcher van 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, response times, level of personnel, licensure status, or EMS System participation.

(8) Charge each stretcher van provider a fee, to be

submitted with each application for licensure and license renewal, which shall not exceed $25 per vehicle, up to $500 per provider.

(c) A stretcher van provider may provide transport of a passenger on a stretcher, provided the passenger meets all of the following requirements:

(1) He or she needs no medical equipment, except

self‑administered medications.

(2) He or she needs no medical monitoring or medical

observation.

(3) He or she needs routine transportation to or from

a medical appointment or service if the passenger is convalescent or otherwise bed‑confined and does not require medical monitoring, aid, care, or treatment during transport.

(d) A stretcher van provider may not transport a passenger who meets any of the following conditions:

(1) He or she is currently admitted to a hospital or

is being transported to a hospital for admission or emergency treatment.

(2) He or she is acutely ill, wounded, or medically

unstable as determined by a licensed physician.

(3) He or she is experiencing an emergency medical

condition, an acute medical condition, an exacerbation of a chronic medical condition, or a sudden illness or injury.

(4) He or she was administered a medication that

might prevent the passenger from caring for himself or herself.

(5) He or she was moved from one environment where

24‑hour medical monitoring or medical observation will take place by certified or licensed nursing personnel to another such environment. Such environments shall include, but not be limited to, hospitals licensed under the Hospital Licensing Act or operated under the University of Illinois Hospital Act, and nursing facilities licensed under the Nursing Home Care Act.

(e) The Stretcher Van Licensure Fund is created as a

special fund within the State treasury. All fees received by the Department in connection with the licensure of stretcher van providers under this Section shall be deposited into the fund. Moneys in the fund shall be subject to appropriation to the Department for use in implementing this Section.

(Source: P.A. 96‑702, eff. 8‑25‑09.)

(210 ILCS 50/3.90)

Sec. 3.90. Trauma Center Designations.

(a) “Trauma Center” means a hospital which: (1) within designated capabilities provides optimal care to trauma patients; (2) participates in an approved EMS System; and (3) is duly designated pursuant to the provisions of this Act. Level I Trauma Centers shall provide all essential services in‑house, 24 hours per day, in accordance with rules adopted by the Department pursuant to this Act. Level II Trauma Centers shall have some essential services available in‑house, 24 hours per day, and other essential services readily available, 24 hours per day, in accordance with rules adopted by the Department pursuant to this Act.

(b) The Department shall have the authority and responsibility to:

(1) Establish minimum standards for designation as a

Level I or Level II Trauma Center, consistent with Sections 22 and 23 of this Act, through rules adopted pursuant to this Act;

(2) Require hospitals applying for trauma center

designation to submit a plan for designation in a manner and form prescribed by the Department through rules adopted pursuant to this Act;

(3) Upon receipt of a completed plan for

designation, conduct a site visit to inspect the hospital for compliance with the Department’s minimum standards. Such visit shall be conducted by specially qualified personnel with experience in the delivery of emergency medical and/or trauma care. A report of the inspection shall be provided to the Director within 30 days of the completion of the site visit. The report shall note compliance or lack of compliance with the individual standards for designation, but shall not offer a recommendation on granting or denying designation;

(4) Designate applicant hospitals as Level I or

Level II Trauma Centers which meet the minimum standards established by this Act and the Department. Beginning September 1, 1997 the Department shall designate a new trauma center only when a local or regional need for such trauma center has been identified. The Department shall request an assessment of local or regional need from the applicable EMS Region’s Trauma Center Medical Directors Committee, with advice from the Regional Trauma Advisory Committee. This shall not be construed as a needs assessment for health planning or other purposes outside of this Act;

(5) Attempt to designate trauma centers in all areas

of the State. There shall be at least one Level I Trauma Center serving each EMS Region, unless waived by the Department. This subsection shall not be construed to require a Level I Trauma Center to be located in each EMS Region. Level I Trauma Centers shall serve as resources for the Level II Trauma Centers in the EMS Regions. The extent of such relationships shall be defined in the EMS Region Plan;

(6) Inspect designated trauma centers to assure

compliance with the provisions of this Act and the rules adopted pursuant to this Act. Information received by the Department through filed reports, inspection, or as otherwise authorized under this Act shall not be disclosed publicly in such a manner as to identify individuals or hospitals, except in proceedings involving the denial, suspension or revocation of a trauma center designation or imposition of a fine on a trauma center;

(7) Renew trauma center designations every 2 years,

after an on‑site inspection, based on compliance with renewal requirements and standards for continuing operation, as prescribed by the Department through rules adopted pursuant to this Act;

(8) Refuse to issue or renew a trauma center

designation, after providing an opportunity for a hearing, when findings show that it does not meet the standards and criteria prescribed by the Department;

(9) Review and determine whether a trauma center’s

annual morbidity and mortality rates for trauma patients significantly exceed the State average for such rates, using a uniform recording methodology based on nationally recognized standards. Such determination shall be considered as a factor in any decision by the Department to renew or refuse to renew a trauma center designation under this Act, but shall not constitute the sole basis for refusing to renew a trauma center designation;

(10) Take the following action, as appropriate,

after determining that a trauma center is in violation of this Act or any rule adopted pursuant to this Act:

(A) If the Director determines that the

violation presents a substantial probability that death or serious physical harm will result and if the trauma center fails to eliminate the violation immediately or within a fixed period of time, not exceeding 10 days, as determined by the Director, the Director may immediately revoke the trauma center designation. The trauma center may appeal the revocation within 15 days after receiving the Director’s revocation order, by requesting a hearing as provided by Section 29 of this Act. The Director shall notify the chair of the Region’s Trauma Center Medical Directors Committee and EMS Medical Directors for appropriate EMS Systems of such trauma center designation revocation;

(B) If the Director determines that the

violation does not present a substantial probability that death or serious physical harm will result, the Director shall issue a notice of violation and request a plan of correction which shall be subject to the Department’s approval. The trauma center shall have 10 days after receipt of the notice of violation in which to submit a plan of correction. The Department may extend this period for up to 30 days. The plan shall include a fixed time period not in excess of 90 days within which violations are to be corrected. The plan of correction and the status of its implementation by the trauma center shall be provided, as appropriate, to the EMS Medical Directors for appropriate EMS Systems. If the Department rejects a plan of correction, it shall send notice of the rejection and the reason for the rejection to the trauma center. The trauma center shall have 10 days after receipt of the notice of rejection in which to submit a modified plan. If the modified plan is not timely submitted, or if the modified plan is rejected, the trauma center shall follow an approved plan of correction imposed by the Department. If, after notice and opportunity for hearing, the Director determines that a trauma center has failed to comply with an approved plan of correction, the Director may revoke the trauma center designation. The trauma center shall have 15 days after receiving the Director’s notice in which to request a hearing. Such hearing shall conform to the provisions of Section 30 of this Act;

(11) The Department may delegate authority to local

health departments in jurisdictions which include a substantial number of trauma centers. The delegated authority to those local health departments shall include, but is not limited to, the authority to designate trauma centers with final approval by the Department, maintain a regional data base with concomitant reporting of trauma registry data, and monitor, inspect and investigate trauma centers within their jurisdiction, in accordance with the requirements of this Act and the rules promulgated by the Department;

(A) The Department shall monitor the performance

of local health departments with authority delegated pursuant to this Section, based upon performance criteria established in rules promulgated by the Department;

(B) Delegated authority may be revoked for

substantial non‑compliance with the Department’s rules. Notice of an intent to revoke shall be served upon the local health department by certified mail, stating the reasons for revocation and offering an opportunity for an administrative hearing to contest the proposed revocation. The request for a hearing must be received by the Department within 10 working days of the local health department’s receipt of notification;

(C) The director of a local health department

may relinquish its delegated authority upon 60 days written notification to the Director of Public Health.

(Source: P.A. 89‑177, eff. 7‑19‑95.)

(210 ILCS 50/3.95)

Sec. 3.95. Level I Trauma Center Minimum Standards. The Department shall establish, through rules adopted pursuant to this Act, standards for Level I Trauma Centers which shall include, but need not be limited to:

(a) The designation by the trauma center of a Trauma Center Medical Director and specification of his qualifications;

(b) The types of surgical services the trauma center must have available for trauma patients, including but not limited to a twenty‑four hour in‑house surgeon with operating privileges and ancillary staff necessary for immediate surgical intervention;

(c) The types of nonsurgical services the trauma center must have available for trauma patients;

(d) The numbers and qualifications of emergency medical personnel;

(e) The types of equipment that must be available to trauma patients;

(f) Requiring the trauma center to be affiliated with an EMS System;

(g) Requiring the trauma center to have a communications system that is fully integrated with all Level II Trauma Centers and EMS Systems with which it is affiliated;

(h) The types of data the trauma center must collect and submit to the Department relating to the trauma services it provides. Such data may include information on post‑trauma care directly related to the initial traumatic injury provided to trauma patients until their discharge from the facility and information on discharge plans;

(i) Requiring the trauma center to have helicopter landing capabilities approved by appropriate State and federal authorities, if the trauma center is located within a municipality having a population of less than two million people; and

(j) Requiring written agreements with Level II Trauma Centers in the EMS Regions it serves, executed within a reasonable time designated by the Department.

(Source: P.A. 89‑177, eff. 7‑19‑95.)

(210 ILCS 50/3.100)

Sec. 3.100. Level II Trauma Center Minimum Standards. The Department shall establish, through rules adopted pursuant to this Act, standards for Level II Trauma Centers which shall include, but need not be limited to:

(a) The designation by the trauma center of a Trauma Center Medical Director and specification of his qualifications;

(b) The types of surgical services the trauma center must have available for trauma patients. The Department shall not require the availability of all surgical services required of Level I Trauma Centers;

(c) The types of nonsurgical services the trauma center must have available for trauma patients;

(d) The numbers and qualifications of emergency medical personnel, taking into consideration the more limited trauma services available in a Level II Trauma Center;

(e) The types of equipment that must be available for trauma patients;

(f) Requiring the trauma center to have a written agreement with a Level I Trauma Center serving the EMS Region outlining their respective responsibilities in providing trauma services, executed within a reasonable time designated by the Department, unless the requirement for a Level I Trauma Center to serve that EMS Region has been waived by the Department;

(g) Requiring the trauma center to be affiliated with an EMS System;

(h) Requiring the trauma center to have a communications system that is fully integrated with the Level I Trauma Centers and the EMS Systems with which it is affiliated;

(i) The types of data the trauma center must collect and submit to the Department relating to the trauma services it provides. Such data may include information on post‑trauma care directly related to the initial traumatic injury provided to trauma patients until their discharge from the facility and information on discharge plans;

(j) Requiring the trauma center to have helicopter landing capabilities approved by appropriate State and federal authorities, if the trauma center is located within a municipality having a population of less than two million people.

(Source: P.A. 89‑177, eff. 7‑19‑95.)

(210 ILCS 50/3.105)

Sec. 3.105. Trauma Center Misrepresentation. After the effective date of this amendatory Act of 1995, no facility shall use the phrase “trauma center” or words of similar meaning in relation to itself or hold itself out as a trauma center without first obtaining designation pursuant to this Act.

(Source: P.A. 89‑177, eff. 7‑19‑95.)

(210 ILCS 50/3.110)

Sec. 3.110. EMS system and trauma center confidentiality and immunity.

(a) All information contained in or relating to any medical audit performed of a trauma center’s trauma services pursuant to this Act or by an EMS Medical Director or his designee of medical care rendered by System personnel, shall be afforded the same status as is provided information concerning medical studies in Article VIII, Part 21 of the Code of Civil Procedure. Disclosure of such information to the Department pursuant to this Act shall not be considered a violation of Article VIII, Part 21 of the Code of Civil Procedure.

(b) Hospitals, trauma centers and individuals that perform or participate in medical audits pursuant to this Act shall be immune from civil liability to the same extent as provided in Section 10.2 of the Hospital Licensing Act.

(c) All information relating to the State Emergency Medical Services Disciplinary Review Board or a local review board, except final decisions, shall be afforded the same status as is provided information concerning medical studies in Article VIII, Part 21 of the Code of Civil Procedure. Disclosure of such information to the Department pursuant to this Act shall not be considered a violation of Article VIII, Part 21 of the Code of Civil Procedure.

(Source: P.A. 92‑651, eff. 7‑11‑02.)

(210 ILCS 50/3.115)

Sec. 3.115. Pediatric Trauma. Upon the availability of federal funds for pediatric care demonstration projects, the Department shall:

(a) Convene a work group which will be charged with conducting a needs assessment of pediatric trauma care and with developing strategies to correct areas of need;

(b) Contract with the University of Illinois School of Public Health to develop a secondary prevention program for parents;

(c) Contract with an Illinois medical school to develop training and continuing medical education programs for physicians and nurses in treatment of pediatric trauma;

(d) Contract with an Illinois medical school to develop and test triage and field scoring for pediatric trauma if the needs assessment by the work group indicates that current scoring is inadequate;

(e) Support existing pediatric trauma programs and assist in establishing new pediatric trauma programs throughout the State;

(f) Provide grants to EMS systems for special pediatric equipment for prehospital care based on needs identified by the work group; and

(g) Provide grants to EMS systems and trauma centers for specialized training in pediatric trauma based on needs identified by the work group.

(Source: P.A. 89‑177, eff. 7‑19‑95.)

(210 ILCS 50/3.116)

Sec. 3.116. Hospital Stroke Care; definitions. As used in Sections 3.116 through 3.119, 3.130, 3.200, and 3.226 of this Act:

“Certification” or “certified” means certification, using evidence‑based standards, from a nationally‑recognized certifying body approved by the Department.

“Designation” or “designated” means the Department’s recognition of a hospital as a Primary Stroke Center or Emergent Stroke Ready Hospital.

“Emergent stroke care” is emergency medical care that includes diagnosis and emergency medical treatment of acute stroke patients.

“Emergent Stroke Ready Hospital” means a hospital that has been designated by the Department as meeting the criteria for providing emergent stroke care.

“Primary Stroke Center” means a hospital that has been certified by a Department‑approved, nationally‑recognized certifying body and designated as such by the Department.

“Regional Stroke Advisory Subcommittee” means a subcommittee formed within each Regional EMS Advisory Committee to advise the Director and the Region’s EMS Medical Directors Committee on the triage, treatment, and transport of possible acute stroke patients and to select the Region’s representative to the State Stroke Advisory Subcommittee. The Regional Stroke Advisory Subcommittee shall consist of one representative from the EMS Medical Directors Committee; equal numbers of administrative representatives, or their designees, from Primary Stroke Centers within the Region, if any, and from hospitals that are capable of providing emergent stroke care that are not Primary Stroke Centers within the Region; one neurologist from a Primary Stroke Center in the Region, if any; one nurse practicing in a Primary Stroke Center and one nurse from a hospital capable of providing emergent stroke care that is not a Primary Stroke Center; one representative from both a public and a private vehicle service provider which transports possible acute stroke patients within the Region; the State designated regional EMS Coordinator; and in regions that serve a population of over 2,000,000, a fire chief, or designee, from the EMS Region.

“State Stroke Advisory Subcommittee” means a standing advisory body within the State Emergency Medical Services Advisory Council.

(Source: P.A. 96‑514, eff. 1‑1‑10.)

(210 ILCS 50/3.117)

Sec. 3.117. Hospital Designations.

(a) The Department shall attempt to designate Primary Stroke Centers in all areas of the State.

(1) The Department shall designate as many certified

Primary Stroke Centers as apply for that designation provided they are certified by a nationally‑recognized certifying body, approved by the Department, and certification criteria are consistent with the most current nationally‑recognized, evidence‑based stroke guidelines related to reducing the occurrence, disabilities, and death associated with stroke.

(2) A hospital certified as a Primary Stroke Center

by a nationally‑recognized certifying body approved by the Department, shall send a copy of the Certificate to the Department and shall be deemed, within 30 days of its receipt by the Department, to be a State‑designated Primary Stroke Center.

(3) With respect to a hospital that is a designated

Primary Stroke Center, the Department shall have the authority and responsibility to do the following:

(A) Suspend or revoke a hospital’s Primary Stroke

Center designation upon receiving notice that the hospital’s Primary Stroke Center certification has lapsed or has been revoked by the State recognized certifying body.

(B) Suspend a hospital’s Primary Stroke Center

designation, in extreme circumstances where patients may be at risk for immediate harm or death, until such time as the certifying body investigates and makes a final determination regarding certification.

(C) Restore any previously suspended or revoked

Department designation upon notice to the Department that the certifying body has confirmed or restored the Primary Stroke Center certification of that previously designated hospital.

(D) Suspend a hospital’s Primary Stroke Center

designation at the request of a hospital seeking to suspend its own Department designation.

(4) Primary Stroke Center designation shall remain

valid at all times while the hospital maintains its certification as a Primary Stroke Center, in good standing, with the certifying body. The duration of a Primary Stroke Center designation shall coincide with the duration of its Primary Stroke Center certification. Each designated Primary Stroke Center shall have its designation automatically renewed upon the Department’s receipt of a copy of the accrediting body’s certification renewal.

(5) A hospital that no longer meets

nationally‑recognized, evidence‑based standards for Primary Stroke Centers, or loses its Primary Stroke Center certification, shall immediately notify the Department and the Regional EMS Advisory Committee.

(b) The Department shall attempt to designate hospitals

as Emergent Stroke Ready Hospitals capable of providing emergent stroke care in all areas of the State.

(1) The Department shall designate as many

Emergent Stroke Ready Hospitals as apply for that designation as long as they meet the criteria in this Act.

(2) Hospitals may apply for, and receive, Emergent

Stroke Ready Hospital designation from the Department, provided that the hospital attests, on a form developed by the Department in consultation with the State Stroke Advisory Subcommittee, that it meets, and will continue to meet, the criteria for Emergent Stroke Ready Hospital designation.

(3) Hospitals seeking Emergent Stroke Ready Hospital

designation shall develop policies and procedures that consider nationally‑recognized, evidence‑based protocols for the provision of emergent stroke care. Hospital policies relating to emergent stroke care and stroke patient outcomes shall be reviewed at least annually, or more often as needed, by a hospital committee that oversees quality improvement. Adjustments shall be made as necessary to advance the quality of stroke care delivered. Criteria for Emergent Stroke Ready Hospital designation of hospitals shall be limited to the ability of a hospital to:

(A) create written acute care protocols related

to emergent stroke care;

(B) maintain a written transfer agreement with

one or more hospitals that have neurosurgical expertise;

(C) designate a director of stroke care, which

may be a clinical member of the hospital staff or the designee of the hospital administrator, to oversee the hospital’s stroke care policies and procedures;

(D) administer thrombolytic therapy, or

subsequently developed medical therapies that meet nationally‑recognized, evidence‑based stroke guidelines;

(E) conduct brain image tests at all times;

(F) conduct blood coagulation studies at all

times; and

(G) maintain a log of stroke patients, which

shall be available for review upon request by the Department or any hospital that has a written transfer agreement with the Emergent Stroke Ready Hospital.

(4) With respect to Emergent Stroke Ready Hospital

designation, the Department shall have the authority and responsibility to do the following:

(A) Require hospitals applying for Emergent

Stroke Ready Hospital designation to attest, on a form developed by the Department in consultation with the State Stroke Advisory Subcommittee, that the hospital meets, and will continue to meet, the criteria for a Emergent Stroke Ready Hospital.

(B) Designate a hospital as an Emergent Stroke

Ready Hospital no more than 20 business days after receipt of an attestation that meets the requirements for attestation.

(C) Require annual written attestation, on a form

developed by the Department in consultation with the State Stroke Advisory Subcommittee, by Emergent Stroke Ready Hospitals to indicate compliance with Emergent Stroke Ready Hospital criteria, as described in this Section, and automatically renew Emergent Stroke Ready Hospital designation of the hospital.

(D) Issue an Emergency Suspension of Emergent

Stroke Ready Hospital designation when the Director, or his or her designee, has determined that the hospital no longer meets the Emergent Stroke Ready Hospital criteria and an immediate and serious danger to the public health, safety, and welfare exists. If the Emergent Stroke Ready Hospital fails to eliminate the violation immediately or within a fixed period of time, not exceeding 10 days, as determined by the Director, the Director may immediately revoke the Emergent Stroke Ready Hospital designation. The Emergent Stroke Ready Hospital may appeal the revocation within 15 days after receiving the Director’s revocation order, by requesting an administrative hearing.

(E) After notice and an opportunity for an

administrative hearing, suspend, revoke, or refuse to renew an Emergent Stroke Ready Hospital designation, when the Department finds the hospital is not in substantial compliance with current Emergent Stroke Ready Hospital criteria.

(c) The Department shall consult with the State Stroke

Advisory Subcommittee for developing the designation and de‑designation processes for Primary Stroke Centers and Emergent Stroke Ready Hospitals.

(Source: P.A. 96‑514, eff. 1‑1‑10.)

(210 ILCS 50/3.117.5)

Sec. 3.117.5. Hospital Stroke Care; grants.

(a) In order to encourage the establishment and retention of Primary Stroke Centers and Emergent Stroke Ready Hospitals throughout the State, the Director may award, subject to appropriation, matching grants to hospitals to be used for the acquisition and maintenance of necessary infrastructure, including personnel, equipment, and pharmaceuticals for the diagnosis and treatment of acute stroke patients. Grants may be used to pay the fee for certifications by Department approved nationally‑recognized certifying bodies or to provide additional training for directors of stroke care or for hospital staff.

(b) The Director may award grant moneys to Primary Stroke Centers and Emergent Stroke Ready Hospitals for developing or enlarging stroke networks, for stroke education, and to enhance the ability of the EMS System to respond to possible acute stroke patients.

(c) A Primary Stroke Center, Emergent Stroke Ready Hospital, or hospital seeking certification as a Primary Stroke Center or designation as an Emergent Stroke Ready Hospital may apply to the Director for a matching grant in a manner and form specified by the Director and shall provide information as the Director deems necessary to determine whether the hospital is eligible for the grant.

(d) Matching grant awards shall be made to Primary Stroke Centers, Emergent Stroke Ready Hospitals, or hospitals seeking certification or designation as a Primary Stroke Center or designation as an Emergent Stroke Ready Hospital. The Department may consider prioritizing grant awards to hospitals in areas with the highest incidence of stroke, taking into account geographic diversity, where possible.

(Source: P.A. 96‑514, eff. 1‑1‑10.)

(210 ILCS 50/3.118)

Sec. 3.118. Reporting.

(a) The Director shall, not later than July 1, 2012, prepare and submit to the Governor and the General Assembly a report indicating the total number of hospitals that have applied for grants, the project for which the application was submitted, the number of those applicants that have been found eligible for the grants, the total number of grants awarded, the name and address of each grantee, and the amount of the award issued to each grantee.

(b) By July 1, 2010, the Director shall send the list of designated Primary Stroke Centers and designated Emergent Stroke Ready Hospitals to all Resource Hospital EMS Medical Directors in this State and shall post a list of designated Primary Stroke Centers and Emergent Stroke Ready Hospitals on the Department’s website, which shall be continuously updated.

(c) The Department shall add the names of designated Primary Stroke Centers and Emergent Stroke Ready Hospitals to the website listing immediately upon designation and shall immediately remove the name when a hospital loses its designation after notice and a hearing.

(d) Stroke data collection systems and all stroke‑related data collected from hospitals shall comply with the following requirements:

(1) The confidentiality of patient records shall be

maintained in accordance with State and federal laws.

(2) Hospital proprietary information and the names of

any hospital administrator, health care professional, or employee shall not be subject to disclosure.

(3) Information submitted to the Department shall be

privileged and strictly confidential and shall be used only for the evaluation and improvement of hospital stroke care. Stroke data collected by the Department shall not be directly available to the public and shall not be subject to civil subpoena, nor discoverable or admissible in any civil, criminal, or administrative proceeding against a health care facility or health care professional.

(e) The Department may administer a data collection

system to collect data that is already reported by designated Primary Stroke Centers to their certifying body, to fulfill Primary Stroke Center certification requirements. Primary Stroke Centers may provide complete copies of the same reports that are submitted to their certifying body, to satisfy any Department reporting requirements. In the event the Department establishes reporting requirements for designated Primary Stroke Centers, the Department shall permit each designated Primary Stroke Center to capture information using existing electronic reporting tools used for certification purposes. Nothing in this Section shall be construed to empower the Department to specify the form of internal recordkeeping. Three years from the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly, the Department may post stroke data submitted by Primary Stroke Centers on its website, subject to the following:

(1) Data collection and analytical methodologies

shall be used that meet accepted standards of validity and reliability before any information is made available to the public.

(2) The limitations of the data sources and analytic

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.

(3) To the greatest extent possible, comparative

hospital information initiatives shall use standard‑based norms derived from widely accepted provider‑developed practice guidelines.

(4) Comparative hospital information and other

information that the Department has compiled regarding hospitals shall be shared with the hospitals under review prior to public dissemination of the information. Hospitals have 30 days to make corrections and to add helpful explanatory comments about the information before the publication.

(5) Comparisons among hospitals shall adjust for

patient case mix and other relevant risk factors and control for provider peer groups, when appropriate.

(6) Effective safeguards to protect against the

unauthorized use or disclosure of hospital information shall be developed and implemented.

(7) Effective safeguards to protect against the

dissemination of inconsistent, incomplete, invalid, inaccurate, or subjective hospital data shall be developed and implemented.

(8) The quality and accuracy of hospital information

reported under this Act and its data collection, analysis, and dissemination methodologies shall be evaluated regularly.

(9) 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.

(10) 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 the information satisfies the provisions of this Section.

(11) 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 VIII of the Code of Civil Procedure.

(12) No hospital report or Department disclosure may

contain information identifying a patient, employee, or licensed professional.

(Source: P.A. 96‑514, eff. 1‑1‑10.)

(210 ILCS 50/3.118.5)

Sec. 3.118.5. State Stroke Advisory Subcommittee; triage and transport of possible acute stroke patients.

(a) There shall be established within the State Emergency Medical Services Advisory Council, or other statewide body responsible for emergency health care, a standing State Stroke Advisory Subcommittee, which shall serve as an advisory body to the Council and the Department on matters related to the triage, treatment, and transport of possible acute stroke patients. Membership on the Committee shall be as geographically diverse as possible and include one representative from each Regional Stroke Advisory Subcommittee, to be chosen by each Regional Stroke Advisory Subcommittee. The Director shall appoint additional members, as needed, to ensure there is adequate representation from the following:

(1) an EMS Medical Director;

(2) a hospital administrator, or designee, from a

Primary Stroke Center;

(3) a hospital administrator, or designee, from a

hospital capable of providing emergent stroke care that is not a Primary Stroke Center;

(4) a registered nurse from a Primary Stroke Center;

(5) a registered nurse from a hospital capable of

providing emergent stroke care that is not a Primary Stroke Center;

(6) a neurologist from a Primary Stroke Center;

(7) an emergency department physician from a

hospital, capable of providing emergent stroke care, that is not a Primary Stroke Center;

(8) an EMS Coordinator;

(9) an acute stroke patient advocate;

(10) a fire chief, or designee, from an EMS Region

that serves a population of over 2,000,000 people;

(11) a fire chief, or designee, from a rural EMS

Region;

(12) a representative from a private ambulance

provider; and

(13) a representative from the State Emergency

Medical Services Advisory Council.

(b) Of the members first appointed, 7 members shall be

appointed for a term of one year, 7 members shall be appointed for a term of 2 years, and the remaining members shall be appointed for a term of 3 years. The terms of subsequent appointees shall be 3 years.

(c) The State Stroke Advisory Subcommittee shall be

provided a 90‑day period in which to review and comment upon all rules proposed by the Department pursuant to this Act concerning stroke care, except for emergency rules adopted pursuant to Section 5‑45 of the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act. The 90‑day review and comment period shall commence prior to publication of the proposed rules and upon the Department’s submission of the proposed rules to the individual Committee members, if the Committee is not meeting at the time the proposed rules are ready for Committee review.

(d) The State Stroke Advisory Subcommittee shall

develop and submit an evidence‑based statewide stroke assessment tool to clinically evaluate potential stroke patients to the Department for final approval. Upon approval, the Department shall disseminate the tool to all EMS Systems for adoption. The Director shall post the Department‑approved stroke assessment tool on the Department’s website. The State Stroke Advisory Subcommittee shall review the Department‑approved stroke assessment tool at least annually to ensure its clinical relevancy and to make changes when clinically warranted.

(e) Nothing in this Section shall preclude the State

Stroke Advisory Subcommittee from reviewing and commenting on proposed rules which fall under the purview of the State Emergency Medical Services Advisory Council. Nothing in this Section shall preclude the Emergency Medical Services Advisory Council from reviewing and commenting on proposed rules which fall under the purview of the State Stroke Advisory Subcommittee.

(f) The Director shall coordinate with and assist the EMS

System Medical Directors and Regional Stroke Advisory Subcommittee within each EMS Region to establish protocols related to the assessment, treatment, and transport of possible acute stroke patients by licensed emergency medical services providers. These protocols shall include regional transport plans for the triage and transport of possible acute stroke patients to the most appropriate Primary Stroke Center or Emergent Stroke Ready Hospital, unless circumstances warrant otherwise.

(Source: P.A. 96‑514, eff. 1‑1‑10.)

(210 ILCS 50/3.119)

Sec. 3.119. Stroke Care; restricted practices. Sections in this Act pertaining to Primary Stroke Centers and Emergent Stroke Ready Hospitals are not medical practice guidelines and shall not be used to restrict the authority of a hospital to provide services for which it has received a license under State law.

(Source: P.A. 96‑514, eff. 1‑1‑10.)

(210 ILCS 50/3.120)

Sec. 3.120. Helicopter Plan. The Department shall cooperate with the Illinois Department of Transportation to develop a statewide use plan for helicopters operated by the Illinois Department of Transportation.

(Source: P.A. 89‑177, eff. 7‑19‑95.)

(210 ILCS 50/3.125)

Sec. 3.125. Complaint Investigations.

(a) The Department shall promptly investigate complaints which it receives concerning any person or entity which the Department licenses, certifies, approves, permits or designates pursuant to this Act.

(b) The Department shall notify an EMS Medical Director of any complaints it receives involving System personnel or participants.

(c) The Department shall conduct any inspections, interviews and reviews of records which it deems necessary in order to investigate complaints.

(d) All persons and entities which are licensed, certified, approved, permitted or designated pursuant to this Act shall fully cooperate with any Department complaint investigation, including providing patient medical records requested by the Department. Any patient medical record received or reviewed by the Department shall not be disclosed publicly in such a manner as to identify individual patients, without the consent of such patient or his or her legally authorized representative. Patient medical records may be disclosed to a party in administrative proceedings brought by the Department pursuant to this Act, but such patient’s identity shall be masked before disclosure of such record during any public hearing unless otherwise authorized by the patient or his or her legally authorized representative.

(Source: P.A. 89‑177, eff. 7‑19‑95.)

(210 ILCS 50/3.130)

Sec. 3.130. Violations; Plans of Correction. Except for emergency suspension orders, or actions initiated pursuant to Sections 3.117(a), 3.117(b), and 3.90(b)(10) of this Act, prior to initiating an action for suspension, revocation, denial, nonrenewal, or imposition of a fine pursuant to this Act, the Department shall:

(a) Issue a Notice of Violation which specifies the Department’s allegations of noncompliance and requests a plan of correction to be submitted within 10 days after receipt of the Notice of Violation;

(b) Review and approve or reject the plan of correction. If the Department rejects the plan of correction, it shall send notice of the rejection and the reason for the rejection. The party shall have 10 days after receipt of the notice of rejection in which to submit a modified plan;

(c) Impose a plan of correction if a modified plan is not submitted in a timely manner or if the modified plan is rejected by the Department;

(d) Issue a Notice of Intent to fine, suspend, revoke, nonrenew or deny if the party has failed to comply with the imposed plan of correction, and provide the party with an opportunity to request an administrative hearing. The Notice of Intent shall be effected by certified mail or by personal service, shall set forth the particular reasons for the proposed action, and shall provide the party with 15 days in which to request a hearing.

(Source: P.A. 96‑514, eff. 1‑1‑10.)

(210 ILCS 50/3.133)

Sec. 3.133. Suspension of license for failure to pay restitution. The Department, without further process or hearing, shall suspend the license or other authorization to practice of any person issued under this Act who has been certified by court order as not having paid restitution to a person under Section 8A‑3.5 of the Illinois Public Aid Code or under Section 46‑1 of the Criminal Code of 1961. A person whose license or other authorization to practice is suspended under this Section is prohibited from practicing until the restitution is made in full.

(Source: P.A. 94‑577, eff. 1‑1‑06.)

(210 ILCS 50/3.135)

Sec. 3.135. Administrative Hearings.

(a) Administrative hearings shall be conducted by the Director or by an individual designated by the Director as Administrative Law Judge to conduct the hearing. On the basis of any such hearing, or upon default of the Respondent, the Director shall issue a Final Order specifying his findings, conclusions and decision. A copy of the Final Order shall be sent to the Respondent by certified mail or served personally upon the Respondent.

(b) The procedure governing hearings authorized by this Act shall be in accordance with the Department’s rules governing administrative hearings.

(Source: P.A. 89‑177, eff. 7‑19‑95.)

(210 ILCS 50/3.140)

Sec. 3.140. Violations; Fines.

(a) The Department shall have the authority to impose fines on any licensed vehicle service provider, designated trauma center, resource hospital, associate hospital, or participating hospital.

(b) The Department shall adopt rules pursuant to this Act which establish a system of fines related to the type and level of violation or repeat violation, including but not limited to:

(1) A fine not exceeding $10,000 for a violation

which created a condition or occurrence presenting a substantial probability that death or serious harm to an individual will or did result therefrom; and

(2) A fine not exceeding $5,000 for a violation

which creates or created a condition or occurrence which threatens the health, safety or welfare of an individual.

(c) A Notice of Intent to Impose Fine may be issued in conjunction with or in lieu of a Notice of Intent to Suspend, Revoke, Nonrenew or Deny, and shall conform to the requirements specified in Section 3.130(d) of this Act. All Hearings conducted pursuant to a Notice of Intent to Impose Fine shall conform to the requirements specified in Section 3.135 of this Act.

(d) All fines collected pursuant to this Section shall be deposited into the EMS Assistance Fund.

(Source: P.A. 89‑177, eff. 7‑19‑95.)

(210 ILCS 50/3.145)

Sec. 3.145. Administrative Review Law. All final administrative decisions of the Department hereunder shall be subject to judicial review pursuant to the provisions of the Administrative Review Law and the rules adopted pursuant thereto. The term “administrative decision” is defined as in Section 3‑101 of the Code of Civil Procedure.

Decisions of the State EMS Disciplinary Review Board are not final administrative decisions of the Department, and are not subject to judicial review under the Administrative Review Law.

(Source: P.A. 89‑177, eff. 7‑19‑95.)

(210 ILCS 50/3.150)

Sec. 3.150. Immunity from civil liability.

(a) Any person, agency or governmental body certified, licensed or authorized pursuant to this Act or rules thereunder, who in good faith provides emergency or non‑emergency medical services during a Department approved training course, in the normal course of conducting their duties, or in an emergency, shall not be civilly liable as a result of their acts or omissions in providing such services unless such acts or omissions, including the bypassing of nearby hospitals or medical facilities in accordance with the protocols developed pursuant to this Act, constitute willful and wanton misconduct.

(b) No person, including any private or governmental organization or institution that administers, sponsors, authorizes, supports, finances, educates or supervises the functions of emergency medical services personnel certified, licensed or authorized pursuant to this Act, including persons participating in a Department approved training program, shall be liable for any civil damages for any act or omission in connection with administration, sponsorship, authorization, support, finance, education or supervision of such emergency medical services personnel, where the act or omission occurs in connection with activities within the scope of this Act, unless the act or omission was the result of willful and wanton misconduct.

(c) Exemption from civil liability for emergency care is as provided in the Good Samaritan Act.

(d) No local agency, entity of State or local government, or other public or private organization, nor any officer, director, trustee, employee, consultant or agent of any such entity, which sponsors, authorizes, supports, finances, or supervises the training of persons in the use of cardiopulmonary resuscitation, automated external defibrillators, or first aid in a course which complies with generally recognized standards shall be liable for damages in any civil action based on the training of such persons unless an act or omission during the course of instruction constitutes willful and wanton misconduct.

(e) No person who is certified to teach the use of cardiopulmonary resuscitation, automated external defibrillators, or first aid and who teaches a course of instruction which complies with generally recognized standards for the use of cardiopulmonary resuscitation, automated external defibrillators, or first aid shall be liable for damages in any civil action based on the acts or omissions of a person who received such instruction, unless an act or omission during the course of such instruction constitutes willful and wanton misconduct.

(f) No member or alternate of the State Emergency Medical Services Disciplinary Review Board or a local System review board who in good faith exercises his responsibilities under this Act shall be liable for damages in any civil action based on such activities unless an act or omission during the course of such activities constitutes willful and wanton misconduct.

(g) No EMS Medical Director who in good faith exercises his responsibilities under this Act shall be liable for damages in any civil action based on such activities unless an act or omission during the course of such activities constitutes willful and wanton misconduct.

(h) Nothing in this Act shall be construed to create a cause of action or any civil liabilities.

(Source: P.A. 95‑447, eff. 8‑27‑07.)

(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.

(Source: P.A. 92‑376, eff. 8‑15‑01.)

(210 ILCS 50/3.160)

Sec. 3.160. Employer Responsibility.

(a) No employer shall employ or permit any employee to perform any services for which a license, certificate or other authorization is required by this Act, or by rules adopted pursuant to this Act, unless and until the person so employed possesses all licenses, certificates or authorizations that are so required.

(b) Any person or entity that employs or supervises a person’s activities as a First Responder or Emergency Medical Dispatcher shall cooperate with the Department’s efforts to monitor and enforce compliance by those individuals with the requirements of this Act.

(Source: P.A. 89‑177, eff. 7‑19‑95.)

(210 ILCS 50/3.165)

Sec. 3.165. Misrepresentation.

(a) No person shall hold himself or herself out to be or engage in the practice of an EMS Medical Director, EMS Administrative Director, EMS System Coordinator, EMT, Trauma Nurse Specialist, Pre‑Hospital RN, Emergency Communications Registered Nurse, EMS Lead Instructor, Emergency Medical Dispatcher or First Responder without being licensed, certified, approved or otherwise authorized pursuant to this Act.

(b) A hospital or other entity which employs or utilizes an EMT in a manner which is outside the scope of his or her EMT license shall not use the words “emergency medical technician”, “EMT” or “paramedic” in that person’s job description or title, or in any other manner hold that person out to be an emergency medical technician.

(c) No provider or participant within an EMS System shall hold itself out as providing a type or level of service that has not been approved by that System’s EMS Medical Director.

(Source: P.A. 89‑177, eff. 7‑19‑95.)

(210 ILCS 50/3.170)

Sec. 3.170. Falsification of Documents. No person shall knowingly enter any false information on any application form, run sheet, record or other document required to be completed or submitted pursuant to this Act or any rule adopted pursuant to this Act, or knowingly submit any application form, run sheet, record or other document which contains false information.

(Source: P.A. 89‑177, eff. 7‑19‑95.)

(210 ILCS 50/3.175)

Sec. 3.175. Criminal Penalties. Any person who violates Sections 3.155(d) or (f), 3.160, 3.165 or 3.170 of this Act or any rule promulgated thereto, is guilty of a Class C misdemeanor.

(Source: P.A. 89‑177, eff. 7‑19‑95.)

(210 ILCS 50/3.180)

Sec. 3.180. Injunctions. Notwithstanding the existence or pursuit of any other remedy, the Director may, through the Attorney General, seek an injunction:

(a) To restrain or prevent any person or entity from functioning, practicing or operating without a license, certification, classification, approval, permit, designation or authorization required by this Act;

(b) To restrain or prevent any person, institution or governmental unit from representing itself to be a trauma center after the effective date of this amendatory Act of 1995 without designation as such pursuant to this Act;

(c) To restrain or prevent any hospital or other entity which employs or utilizes an EMT in a manner which is outside the scope of his EMT license from representing that person to be an EMT.

(Source: P.A. 89‑177, eff. 7‑19‑95.)

(210 ILCS 50/3.185)

Sec. 3.185. Waiver of Standards. In accordance with protocols and procedures which it established by rules adopted pursuant to this Act, the Department may grant a waiver to any provision of this Act or rule adopted pursuant to this Act for a specified period of time determined appropriate by the Department.

Any entity may apply in writing to the Department for a waiver to specific requirements or standards for which it considers compliance to be a hardship. The Department may grant a waiver on such applications when it can be demonstrated that there will be no reduction in standards of medical care as determined by the EMS Medical Director or the Department.

The Department shall establish a specific mechanism for granting hardship waivers to the Act’s licensure fee requirements.

(Source: P.A. 89‑177, eff. 7‑19‑95.)

(210 ILCS 50/3.190)

Sec. 3.190. Emergency Department Classifications. The Department shall have the authority and responsibility to:

(a) Establish criteria for classifying the emergency departments of all hospitals within the State as Comprehensive, Basic, or Standby. In establishing such criteria, the Department may consult with the Illinois Hospital Licensing Board and incorporate by reference all or part of existing standards adopted as rules pursuant to the Hospital Licensing Act or Emergency Medical Treatment Act;

(b) Classify the emergency departments of all hospitals within the State in accordance with this Section;

(c) Annually publish, and distribute to all EMS Systems, a list reflecting the classification of all emergency departments.

(Source: P.A. 89‑177, eff. 7‑19‑95.)

(210 ILCS 50/3.195)

Sec. 3.195. Data Collection and Evaluation.

(a) The Department shall develop and administer an emergency medical services data collection system. Nothing in this Section shall be construed to empower the Department to specify the form of internal recordkeeping.

(b) The confidentiality of patient records shall be maintained in accordance with State and federal regulations on confidentiality of records.

(c) The Department shall develop parameters by which the availability and quality of emergency medical care can be evaluated to assure a reasonable standard of performance by individuals and organizations providing such services.

(d) EMS Medical Directors shall have the authority to require System participants to provide data to the System in addition to that required by the Department. Participants shall not be required to submit financial information that is proprietary in nature and unrelated to the scope or purposes of this Act.

(Source: P.A. 89‑177, eff. 7‑19‑95.)

(210 ILCS 50/3.200)

Sec. 3.200. State Emergency Medical Services Advisory Council.

(a) There shall be established within the Department of Public Health a State Emergency Medical Services Advisory Council, which shall serve as an advisory body to the Department on matters related to this Act.

(b) Membership of the Council shall include one representative from each EMS Region, to be appointed by each region’s EMS Regional Advisory Committee. The Governor shall appoint additional members to the Council as necessary to insure that the Council includes one representative from each of the following categories:

(1) EMS Medical Director,

(2) Trauma Center Medical Director,

(3) Licensed, practicing physician with regular and

frequent involvement in the provision of emergency care,

(4) Licensed, practicing physician with special

expertise in the surgical care of the trauma patient,

(5) EMS System Coordinator,

(6) TNS,

(7) EMT‑P,

(8) EMT‑I,

(9) EMT‑B,

(10) Private vehicle service provider,

(11) Law enforcement officer,

(12) Chief of a public vehicle service provider,

(13) Statewide firefighters’ union member affiliated

with a vehicle service provider,

(14) Administrative representative from a fire

department vehicle service provider in a municipality with a population of over 2 million people;

(15) Administrative representative from a Resource

Hospital or EMS System Administrative Director.

(c) Of the members first appointed, 5 members shall be appointed for a term of one year, 5 members shall be appointed for a term of 2 years, and the remaining members shall be appointed for a term of 3 years. The terms of subsequent appointees shall be 3 years. All appointees shall serve until their successors are appointed and qualified.

(d) The Council shall be provided a 90‑day period in which to review and comment, in consultation with the subcommittee to which the rules are relevant, upon all rules proposed by the Department pursuant to this Act, except for rules adopted pursuant to Section 3.190(a) of this Act, rules submitted to the State Trauma Advisory Council and emergency rules adopted pursuant to Section 5‑45 of the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act. The 90‑day review and comment period may commence upon the Department’s submission of the proposed rules to the individual Council members, if the Council is not meeting at the time the proposed rules are ready for Council review. Any non‑emergency rules adopted prior to the Council’s 90‑day review and comment period shall be null and void. If the Council fails to advise the Department within its 90‑day review and comment period, the rule shall be considered acted upon.

(e) Council members shall be reimbursed for reasonable travel expenses incurred during the performance of their duties under this Section.

(f) The Department shall provide administrative support to the Council for the preparation of the agenda and minutes for Council meetings and distribution of proposed rules to Council members.

(g) The Council shall act pursuant to bylaws which it adopts, which shall include the annual election of a Chair and Vice‑Chair.

(h) The Director or his designee shall be present at all Council meetings.

(i) Nothing in this Section shall preclude the Council from reviewing and commenting on proposed rules which fall under the purview of the State Trauma Advisory Council.

(Source: P.A. 96‑514, eff. 1‑1‑10.)

(210 ILCS 50/3.205)

Sec. 3.205. State Trauma Advisory Council.

(a) There shall be established within the Department of Public Health a State Trauma Advisory Council, which shall serve as an advisory body to the Department on matters related to trauma care and trauma centers.

(b) Membership of the Council shall include one representative from each Regional Trauma Advisory Committee, to be appointed by each Committee. The Governor shall appoint the following additional members:

(1) An EMS Medical Director,

(2) A trauma center medical director,

(3) A trauma surgeon,

(4) A trauma nurse coordinator,

(5) A representative from a private vehicle service

provider,

(6) A representative from a public vehicle service

provider,

(7) A member of the State EMS Advisory Council, and

(8) A neurosurgeon.

(c) Of the members first appointed, 5 members shall be appointed for a term of one year, 5 members shall be appointed for a term of 2 years, and the remaining members shall be appointed for a term of 3 years. The terms of subsequent appointees shall be 3 years. All appointees shall serve until their successors are appointed and qualified.

(d) The Council shall be provided a 90‑day period in which to review and comment upon all rules proposed by the Department pursuant to this Act concerning trauma care, except for emergency rules adopted pursuant to Section 5‑45 of the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act. The 90‑day review and comment period may commence upon the Department’s submission of the proposed rules to the individual Council members, if the Council is not meeting at the time the proposed rules are ready for Council review. Any non‑emergency rules adopted prior to the Council’s 90‑day review and comment period shall be null and void. If the Council fails to advise the Department within its 90‑day review and comment period, the rule shall be considered acted upon;

(e) Council members shall be reimbursed for reasonable travel expenses incurred during the performance of their duties under this Section.

(f) The Department shall provide administrative support to the Council for the preparation of the agenda and minutes for Council meetings and distribution of proposed rules to Council members.

(g) The Council shall act pursuant to bylaws which it adopts, which shall include the annual election of a Chair and Vice‑Chair.

(h) The Director or his designee shall be present at all Council meetings.

(i) Nothing in this Section shall preclude the Council from reviewing and commenting on proposed rules which fall under the purview of the State EMS Advisory Council.

(Source: P.A. 90‑655, eff. 7‑30‑98; 91‑743, eff. 6‑2‑00.)

(210 ILCS 50/3.210)

Sec. 3.210. EMS Medical Consultant. If the Chief of the Department’s Division of Emergency Medical Services and Highway Safety is not a physician licensed to practice medicine in all of its branches, with extensive emergency medical services experience, and certified by the American Board of Emergency Medicine or the American Board of Osteopathic Emergency Medicine, then the Director shall appoint such a physician to serve as EMS Medical Consultant to the Division Chief.

(Source: P.A. 89‑177, eff. 7‑19‑95.)

(210 ILCS 50/3.215)

Sec. 3.215. Grants. The Department has the power to make grants to EMS Regions, for disbursement in accordance with protocols established in the EMS Region Plans, from moneys deposited into the EMS Assistance Fund and funds appropriated or otherwise made available to the Department, other than funds appropriated to the Illinois Department of Transportation for implementation of the Highway Safety Program.

(Source: P.A. 89‑177, eff. 7‑19‑95.)

(210 ILCS 50/3.220)

Sec. 3.220. EMS Assistance Fund.

(a) There is hereby created an “EMS Assistance Fund” within the State treasury, for the purpose of receiving fines and fees collected by the Illinois Department of Health pursuant to this Act.

(b) EMT licensure examination fees collected shall be distributed by the Department to the Resource Hospital of the EMS System in which the EMT candidate was educated, to be used for educational and related expenses incurred by the System’s hospitals, as identified in the EMS System Program Plan.

(c) All other moneys within this fund shall be distributed by the Department to the EMS Regions for disbursement in accordance with protocols established in the EMS Region Plans, for the purposes of organization, development and improvement of Emergency Medical Services Systems, including but not limited to training of personnel and acquisition, modification and maintenance of necessary supplies, equipment and vehicles.

(d) All fees and fines collected pursuant to this Act shall be deposited into the EMS Assistance Fund, except that all fees collected under Section 3.86 in connection with the licensure of stretcher van providers shall be deposited into the Stretcher Van Licensure Fund.

(Source: P.A. 96‑702, eff. 8‑25‑09.)

(210 ILCS 50/3.225)

Sec. 3.225. Trauma Center Fund.

(a) The Department shall distribute 97.5% of 50% of the moneys deposited into the Trauma Center Fund, a special fund in the State Treasury, to Illinois hospitals that are designated as trauma centers. The payments to those hospitals shall be in addition to any other payments paid and shall be in an amount calculated under paragraph (b) of this Section.

(b) Trauma payment calculation.

(1) The Department shall implement an accounting

system to ensure that the moneys in the fund are distributed.

(2) The moneys in the fund shall be allocated

proportionately to each EMS region so that the EMS region receives the moneys collected from within its region for violations of laws or ordinances regulating the movement of traffic.

(3) The formula for distribution to individual

hospitals shall be based on factors identified in rules adopted by the Department pursuant to this Act. No moneys may be distributed to a trauma center located outside of the State.

(c) The Department may retain 2.5% of 50% of the moneys in the Trauma Center Fund to defray the cost of administering the distributions.

(Source: P.A. 89‑177, eff. 7‑19‑95.)

(210 ILCS 50/3.226)

Sec. 3.226. Hospital Stroke Care Fund.

(a) The Hospital Stroke Care Fund is created as a special fund in the State treasury for the purpose of receiving appropriations, donations, and grants collected by the Illinois Department of Public Health pursuant to Department designation of Primary Stroke Centers and Emergent Stroke Ready Hospitals. All moneys collected by the Department pursuant to its authority to designate Primary Stroke Centers and Emergent Stroke Ready Hospitals shall be deposited into the Fund, to be used for the purposes in subsection (b).

(b) The purpose of the Fund is to allow the Director of the Department to award matching grants to hospitals that have been certified Primary Stroke Centers, that seek certification or designation or both as Primary Stroke Centers, that have been designated Emergent Stroke Ready Hospitals, that seek designation as Emergent Stroke Ready Hospitals, and for the development of stroke networks. Hospitals may use grant funds to work with the EMS System to improve outcomes of possible acute stroke patients.

(c) Moneys deposited in the Hospital Stroke Care Fund shall be allocated according to the hospital needs within each EMS region and used solely for the purposes described in this Act.

(d) Interfund transfers from the Hospital Stroke Care Fund shall be prohibited.

(Source: P.A. 96‑514, eff. 1‑1‑10.)

(210 ILCS 50/3.230)

Sec. 3.230. Abuse and Neglect Reporting; Domestic Violence Referrals.

(a) All persons licensed, certified or approved under this Act shall report suspected cases of child abuse or neglect in accordance with the requirements of the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act.

(b) All persons licensed, certified or approved under this Act shall offer to a person suspected to be a victim of abuse immediate and adequate information regarding services available to victims of abuse, in accordance with Section 401 of the Illinois Domestic Violence Act of 1986.

(Source: P.A. 89‑177, eff. 7‑19‑95.)

(210 ILCS 50/3.235)

Sec. 3.235. Choke‑Saving Methods Act; Effect. Nothing in this Act shall impair or diminish any right, privilege or duty established in the Choke‑Saving Methods Act.

(Source: P.A. 89‑177, eff. 7‑19‑95.)

(210 ILCS 50/3.240)

Sec. 3.240. Coal Mine Medical Emergencies Act; Conflicts. In the event of conflict between this Act and the Coal Mine Medical Emergencies Act, the provisions of the Coal Mine Medical Emergencies Act shall govern.

(Source: P.A. 89‑177, eff. 7‑19‑95.)

(210 ILCS 50/3.245)

Sec. 3.245. Adoption of Rules by the Department. The Department shall adopt rules to implement the provisions of this Act, in accordance with the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act.

With the exception of emergency rules adopted pursuant to the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act or Section 3.190 of this Act, the Department shall submit all proposed rules to the State Emergency Medical Services Council or State Trauma Advisory Council for a 90‑day review and comment period prior to adoption, as specified in this Act.

(Source: P.A. 91‑357, eff. 7‑29‑99.)

(210 ILCS 50/3.250)

Sec. 3.250. Application of Administrative Procedure Act. The provisions of the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act are hereby expressly adopted and shall apply to all administrative rules and procedures of the Department of Public Health under this Act, except that in case of conflict between the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act and this Act the provisions of this Act shall control, and except that Section 5‑35 of the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act relating to procedures for rule‑making does not apply to the adoption of any rule required by federal law in connection with which the Department is precluded by law from exercising any discretion.

(Source: P.A. 92‑651, eff. 7‑11‑02.)

(210 ILCS 50/3.255)

Sec. 3.255. Emergency Medical Disaster Plan. The Department shall develop and implement an Emergency Medical Disaster Plan to assist emergency medical services personnel and health care facilities in working together in a collaborative way and to provide support in situations where local medical resources are overwhelmed, including but not limited to public health emergencies, as that term is defined in Section 4 of the Illinois Emergency Management Agency Act. As part of the plan, the Department may designate lead hospitals in each Emergency Medical Services region established under this Act and may foster the creation and coordination of volunteer medical response teams that can be deployed to assist when a locality’s capacity is overwhelmed. In developing an Emergency Medical Disaster Plan, the Department shall collaborate with the entities listed in Sections 2310‑50.5 and 2310‑620 of the Department of Public Health Powers and Duties Law of the Civil Administrative Code of Illinois.

(Source: P.A. 93‑829, eff. 7‑28‑04.)

Contact Information
Segment Pixel