Rep. Mary E. Flowers

Filed: 3/7/2017

 

 


 

 


 
10000HB2800ham001LRB100 08550 MJP 23117 a

1
AMENDMENT TO HOUSE BILL 2800

2    AMENDMENT NO. ______. Amend House Bill 2800 by replacing
3everything after the enacting clause with the following:
 
4    "Section 5. The Perinatal HIV Prevention Act is amended by
5changing Sections 5, 10, 15, 30, and 35 as follows:
 
6    (410 ILCS 335/5)
7    Sec. 5. Definitions. In this Act:
8    "Birthing center" means a designated site that is away from
9the pregnant women usual place of residence in which births are
10planned to occur following a normal, uncomplicated, and
11low-risk pregnancy.
12    "Department" means the Department of Public Health.
13    "Health care professional" means a physician licensed to
14practice medicine in all its branches, a licensed physician
15assistant, or a licensed advanced practice nurse.
16    "Health care facility" or "facility" means any hospital,

 

 

10000HB2800ham001- 2 -LRB100 08550 MJP 23117 a

1birthing center, or other institution that is licensed or
2otherwise authorized to deliver health care services.
3    "Health care services" means any prenatal medical care,
4emergency care, or labor or delivery services to a pregnant
5woman and her newborn infant, including hospitalization.
6    "Opt-out testing" means an approach in which an HIV test is
7offered to the patient, such that the patient is notified that
8HIV testing may occur unless the patient opts out by declining
9the test.
10    "Third trimester" means the 27th week of pregnancy through
11delivery.
12(Source: P.A. 99-173, eff. 7-29-15.)
 
13    (410 ILCS 335/10)
14    Sec. 10. HIV counseling and offer of HIV testing required.
15    (a) Every health care professional who provides health care
16services to a pregnant woman including women identified as
17pregnant and being treated for other health conditions in an
18emergency setting, shall, unless the pregnant woman already has
19a documented negative HIV status she has already been tested
20during the third trimester of the current pregnancy, or is
21already documented to be HIV-positive, provide the pregnant
22woman with HIV counseling, as described in subpart (d) of this
23Section, and shall test the pregnant woman her for HIV on an
24opt-out basis unless she refuses. The counseling and testing or
25refusal of testing shall be documented in the pregnant woman's

 

 

10000HB2800ham001- 3 -LRB100 08550 MJP 23117 a

1medical record. A refusal may be verbal or in writing.
2     A health care professional shall provide the first opt-out
3HIV testing counseling and recommend the testing as early in
4the woman's pregnancy as possible. The health care professional
5providing health care services to a pregnant woman in the third
6trimester shall perform a second round of opt-out HIV testing,
7ideally by the 36th week of pregnancy, unless the pregnant
8woman already has a documented negative HIV status from the
9third trimester of the current pregnancy, or is already
10documented to be HIV-positive. For women at continued risk of
11exposure to HIV infection in the judgment of the health care
12professional, a repeat test should be recommended late in
13pregnancy or at the time of labor and delivery. The counseling
14and testing or refusal of testing shall be documented in the
15woman's medical record.
16    (b) Every health care professional or facility that cares
17for a pregnant woman during labor or delivery shall, unless the
18pregnant woman she has already has a documented negative HIV
19status from been tested during the third trimester of the
20current pregnancy, or is already documented to be HIV-positive,
21provide the pregnant woman with HIV counseling, as described in
22subpart (d) of this Section, and rapid opt-out HIV testing
23unless she refuses. The woman in labor or delivery may refuse
24the HIV test verbally or in writing. A refusal may be verbal or
25in writing. The counseling and testing or refusal of testing
26shall be documented in the laboring or delivering woman's

 

 

10000HB2800ham001- 4 -LRB100 08550 MJP 23117 a

1medical record. The health care facility shall adopt a policy
2that provides that as soon as possible within medical standards
3after the infant's birth, the delivering woman's mother's HIV
4test result, if available, shall be noted in the newborn
5infant's medical record. It shall also be noted in the newborn
6infant's medical record if the woman's third trimester mother's
7HIV test result is not available because the woman was not
8tested in the third trimester she has not been tested or has
9declined testing. Any testing or test results shall be
10documented in accordance with the AIDS Confidentiality Act.
11    (c) Every health care professional or facility caring for a
12newborn infant shall, upon delivery or as soon as possible
13within medical standards after the infant's birth, provide
14counseling as described in subsection (d) of this Section to
15the parent or guardian of the infant and perform rapid HIV
16testing on the infant, when the HIV status of the infant's
17mother is unknown, or if the woman did not undergo HIV testing
18in the third trimester of the current pregnancy.
19    (d) The counseling required under this Section must be
20provided in accordance with the AIDS Confidentiality Act and
21must include the following:
22        (1) For the health of the pregnant woman, the voluntary
23    nature of the testing, the benefits of HIV testing,
24    including the prevention of transmission, and the
25    requirement that HIV testing be performed unless the
26    pregnant woman she refuses and the methods by which the

 

 

10000HB2800ham001- 5 -LRB100 08550 MJP 23117 a

1    pregnant woman she can refuse.
2        (2) The benefit of HIV testing for the pregnant woman
3    herself and the newborn infant, including interventions to
4    prevent HIV transmission.
5        (3) The side effects of interventions to prevent HIV
6    transmission.
7        (4) The statutory confidentiality provisions that
8    relate to HIV and acquired immune deficiency syndrome
9    ("AIDS") testing.
10        (5) The requirement for mandatory testing of the
11    newborn if the pregnant woman's mother's HIV status during
12    the third trimester of pregnancy is not documented and the
13    pregnant woman was not rapidly tested for HIV at delivery
14    unknown at the time of delivery.
15        (6) An explanation of the test, including its purpose,
16    limitations, and the meaning of its results.
17        (7) An explanation of the procedures to be followed.
18        (8) The availability of additional or confirmatory
19    testing, if appropriate. Counseling may be provided in
20    writing, verbally, or by video, electronic, or other means.
21    The pregnant woman must be offered an opportunity to ask
22    questions about testing and to decline testing for herself.
23    (e) All counseling and testing must be performed in
24accordance with the standards set forth in the AIDS
25Confidentiality Act, including the informed consent provisions
26of Sections 4, 7, and 8 of that Act, with the exception of the

 

 

10000HB2800ham001- 6 -LRB100 08550 MJP 23117 a

1requirement of consent for testing of newborn infants.
2     Consent for testing of a newborn infant shall be presumed
3when a health care professional or health care facility seeks
4to perform a test on a newborn infant when the whose mother's
5HIV status of the woman who gave birth to the infant was is not
6documented either in the third trimester of pregnancy or at
7delivery known, provided that the counseling required under
8subsection (d) of this Section and the AIDS Confidentiality Act
9has taken place.
10    (f) The Illinois Department of Public Health shall adopt
11necessary rules to implement this Act by July 1, 2008.
12(Source: P.A. 94-910, eff. 6-23-06; 95-702, eff. 6-1-08.)
 
13    (410 ILCS 335/15)
14    Sec. 15. Reporting.
15    (a) Health A health care facilities facility shall adopt a
16policy that provides that a report of a preliminarily
17HIV-positive pregnant or post-partum woman identified by a
18rapid HIV test or woman and a report of a preliminarily
19HIV-exposed newborn infant identified by a rapid HIV test
20conducted during labor and delivery or after delivery shall be
21made to the Department's Perinatal HIV Hotline within 12 hours
22but not later than 24 hours of the test result after birth.
23Section 15 of the AIDS Confidentiality Act applies to reporting
24under this Act, except that the immunities set forth in that
25Section do not apply in cases of willful or wanton misconduct.

 

 

10000HB2800ham001- 7 -LRB100 08550 MJP 23117 a

1    (b) The Department shall adopt rules specifying the
2information required in reporting the preliminarily
3HIV-positive pregnant or post-partum woman and preliminarily
4HIV-exposed newborn infant and the method of reporting. In
5adopting the rules, the Department shall consider the need for
6information, protections for the privacy and confidentiality
7of the infant and parents, the need to provide access to care
8and follow-up services to the infant, and procedures for
9destruction of records maintained by the Department if, through
10subsequent HIV testing, the pregnant or post-partum woman or
11newborn infant is found to be HIV-negative.
12    (c) The confidentiality provisions of the AIDS
13Confidentiality Act shall apply to the reports of cases of
14perinatal HIV made pursuant to this Section.
15    (d) Health care facilities shall monthly report aggregate
16statistics to the Department that include the number of
17pregnant or delivering women infected women who presented with
18known HIV status; , the number of pregnant women rapidly tested
19for HIV in labor and delivery as either a first HIV test or a
20repeat third trimester HIV test; , the number of newborn infants
21rapidly tested for HIV-exposure because the HIV status of the
22woman was unknown in the third trimester, or the woman refused
23testing; , the number of preliminarily HIV-positive pregnant or
24women and preliminarily HIV-exposed newborn infants
25identified; , the number of families referred to case
26management; , and other information the Department determines

 

 

10000HB2800ham001- 8 -LRB100 08550 MJP 23117 a

1is necessary to measure progress under the provisions of this
2Act. Health care facilities must report the confirmatory test
3result when it becomes available for each preliminarily
4positive rapid HIV test performed on the pregnant woman and on
5a newborn.
6    (e) The Department or its authorized representative shall
7provide case management services to the preliminarily positive
8pregnant or post-partum woman or the parent or guardian of the
9preliminarily positive newborn infant to ensure access to
10treatment and care and other services where the pregnant or
11post-partum woman or the as appropriate if the parent or
12guardian of the newborn infant has consented to the services.
13    (f) Every health care facility caring for a newborn infant
14whose mother had been diagnosed HIV positive prior to labor and
15delivery shall report a case of perinatal HIV exposure in
16accordance with the HIV/AIDS Registry Act, the Illinois
17Sexually Transmissible Disease Control Act, and rules to be
18developed by the Department. If after 18 months from the date
19that the report was submitted, a newborn infant is determined
20to not have HIV or AIDS, the Department shall remove the
21newborn infant's name from all reports, records, and files
22collected or created under this subsection (f).
23(Source: P.A. 94-910, eff. 6-23-06; 95-702, eff. 6-1-08.)
 
24    (410 ILCS 335/30)
25    Sec. 30. Objections of parent or guardian to test. The

 

 

10000HB2800ham001- 9 -LRB100 08550 MJP 23117 a

1provisions of this Act requiring testing for HIV shall not
2apply when a parent or guardian of a child objects to HIV
3testing thereto on the grounds that the test conflicts with the
4parent's his or her religious tenets and practices. A written
5statement of the objection shall be presented to the physician
6or other person whose duty it is to administer and report the
7tests under the provisions of this Act.
8(Source: P.A. 94-910, eff. 6-23-06.)
 
9    (410 ILCS 335/35)
10    Sec. 35. Department report. The Department of Public Health
11shall prepare an annual report for the Governor and the General
12Assembly on the implementation of this Act that includes
13information on the number of HIV-positive pregnant women who
14presented with known HIV status, the number of pregnant women
15rapidly tested for HIV in labor and delivery, the number of
16newborn infants rapidly tested for HIV exposure, the number of
17preliminarily HIV-positive pregnant women and preliminarily
18HIV-exposed newborn infants identified, the confirmatory test
19result for each preliminarily positive rapid HIV test performed
20on the woman and newborn, the number of families referred to
21case management, and other information the Department
22determines is necessary to measure progress under the
23provisions of this Act. The Department shall assess the needs
24of health care professionals and facilities for ongoing
25training in implementation of the provisions of this Act and

 

 

10000HB2800ham001- 10 -LRB100 08550 MJP 23117 a

1make recommendations to improve the program.
2(Source: P.A. 94-910, eff. 6-23-06.)
 
3    Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon
4becoming law.".