Public Act 097-0358
 
SB2255 EnrolledLRB097 09159 CEL 49294 b

    AN ACT concerning regulation.
 
    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
represented in the General Assembly:
 
    Section 5. The Medical Practice Act of 1987 is amended by
changing Section 54.5 as follows:
 
    (225 ILCS 60/54.5)
    (Section scheduled to be repealed on November 30, 2011)
    Sec. 54.5. Physician delegation of authority to physician
assistants and advanced practice nurses.
    (a) Physicians licensed to practice medicine in all its
branches may delegate care and treatment responsibilities to a
physician assistant under guidelines in accordance with the
requirements of the Physician Assistant Practice Act of 1987. A
physician licensed to practice medicine in all its branches may
enter into supervising physician agreements with no more than 2
physician assistants.
    (b) A physician licensed to practice medicine in all its
branches in active clinical practice may collaborate with an
advanced practice nurse in accordance with the requirements of
the Nurse Practice Act. Collaboration is for the purpose of
providing medical consultation, and no employment relationship
is required. A written collaborative agreement shall conform to
the requirements of Section 65-35 of the Nurse Practice Act.
The written collaborative agreement shall be for services the
collaborating physician generally provides to his or her
patients in the normal course of clinical medical practice. A
written collaborative agreement shall be adequate with respect
to collaboration with advanced practice nurses if all of the
following apply:
        (1) The agreement is written to promote the exercise of
    professional judgment by the advanced practice nurse
    commensurate with his or her education and experience. The
    agreement need not describe the exact steps that an
    advanced practice nurse must take with respect to each
    specific condition, disease, or symptom, but must specify
    those procedures that require a physician's presence as the
    procedures are being performed.
        (2) Practice guidelines and orders are developed and
    approved jointly by the advanced practice nurse and
    collaborating physician, as needed, based on the practice
    of the practitioners. Such guidelines and orders and the
    patient services provided thereunder are periodically
    reviewed by the collaborating physician.
        (3) The advance practice nurse provides services the
    collaborating physician generally provides to his or her
    patients in the normal course of clinical practice, except
    as set forth in subsection (b-5) of this Section. With
    respect to labor and delivery, the collaborating physician
    must provide delivery services in order to participate with
    a certified nurse midwife.
        (4) The collaborating physician and advanced practice
    nurse consult meet in person at least once a month to
    provide collaboration and consultation.
        (5) Methods of communication are available with the
    collaborating physician in person or through
    telecommunications for consultation, collaboration, and
    referral as needed to address patient care needs.
        (6) The agreement contains provisions detailing notice
    for termination or change of status involving a written
    collaborative agreement, except when such notice is given
    for just cause.
    (b-5) An anesthesiologist or physician licensed to
practice medicine in all its branches may collaborate with a
certified registered nurse anesthetist in accordance with
Section 65-35 of the Nurse Practice Act for the provision of
anesthesia services. With respect to the provision of
anesthesia services, the collaborating anesthesiologist or
physician shall have training and experience in the delivery of
anesthesia services consistent with Department rules.
Collaboration shall be adequate if:
        (1) an anesthesiologist or a physician participates in
    the joint formulation and joint approval of orders or
    guidelines and periodically reviews such orders and the
    services provided patients under such orders; and
        (2) for anesthesia services, the anesthesiologist or
    physician participates through discussion of and agreement
    with the anesthesia plan and is physically present and
    available on the premises during the delivery of anesthesia
    services for diagnosis, consultation, and treatment of
    emergency medical conditions. Anesthesia services in a
    hospital shall be conducted in accordance with Section 10.7
    of the Hospital Licensing Act and in an ambulatory surgical
    treatment center in accordance with Section 6.5 of the
    Ambulatory Surgical Treatment Center Act.
    (b-10) The anesthesiologist or operating physician must
agree with the anesthesia plan prior to the delivery of
services.
    (c) The supervising physician shall have access to the
medical records of all patients attended by a physician
assistant. The collaborating physician shall have access to the
medical records of all patients attended to by an advanced
practice nurse.
    (d) (Blank).
    (e) A physician shall not be liable for the acts or
omissions of a physician assistant or advanced practice nurse
solely on the basis of having signed a supervision agreement or
guidelines or a collaborative agreement, an order, a standing
medical order, a standing delegation order, or other order or
guideline authorizing a physician assistant or advanced
practice nurse to perform acts, unless the physician has reason
to believe the physician assistant or advanced practice nurse
lacked the competency to perform the act or acts or commits
willful and wanton misconduct.
    (f) A collaborating physician may, but is not required to,
delegate prescriptive authority to an advanced practice nurse
as part of a written collaborative agreement, and the
delegation of prescriptive authority shall conform to the
requirements of Section 65-40 of the Nurse Practice Act.
    (g) A supervising physician may, but is not required to,
delegate prescriptive authority to a physician assistant as
part of a written supervision agreement, and the delegation of
prescriptive authority shall conform to the requirements of
Section 7.5 of the Physician Assistant Practice Act of 1987.
(Source: P.A. 95-639, eff. 10-5-07; 96-618, eff. 1-1-10.)
 
    Section 10. The Nurse Practice Act is amended by changing
Sections 65-35, 65-40, and 65-45 as follows:
 
    (225 ILCS 65/65-35)   (was 225 ILCS 65/15-15)
    (Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2018)
    Sec. 65-35. Written collaborative agreements.
    (a) A written collaborative agreement is required for all
advanced practice nurses engaged in clinical practice, except
for advanced practice nurses who are authorized to practice in
a hospital or ambulatory surgical treatment center.
    (a-5) If an advanced practice nurse engages in clinical
practice outside of a hospital or ambulatory surgical treatment
center in which he or she is authorized to practice, the
advanced practice nurse must have a written collaborative
agreement.
    (b) A written collaborative agreement shall describe the
working relationship of the advanced practice nurse with the
collaborating physician or podiatrist and shall authorize the
categories of care, treatment, or procedures to be performed by
the advanced practice nurse. A collaborative agreement with a
dentist must be in accordance with subsection (c-10) of this
Section. Collaboration does not require an employment
relationship between the collaborating physician and advanced
practice nurse. Absent an employment relationship, an
agreement may not restrict the categories of patients or
third-party payment sources accepted by the advanced practice
nurse. Collaboration means the relationship under which an
advanced practice nurse works with a collaborating physician or
podiatrist in an active clinical practice to deliver health
care services in accordance with (i) the advanced practice
nurse's training, education, and experience and (ii)
collaboration and consultation as documented in a jointly
developed written collaborative agreement.
    The agreement shall be defined to promote the exercise of
professional judgment by the advanced practice nurse
commensurate with his or her education and experience. The
services to be provided by the advanced practice nurse shall be
services that the collaborating physician or podiatrist is
authorized to and generally provides to his or her patients in
the normal course of his or her clinical medical practice,
except as set forth in subsection (c-5) of this Section. The
agreement need not describe the exact steps that an advanced
practice nurse must take with respect to each specific
condition, disease, or symptom but must specify which
authorized procedures require the presence of the
collaborating physician or podiatrist as the procedures are
being performed. The collaborative relationship under an
agreement shall not be construed to require the personal
presence of a physician or podiatrist at all times at the place
where services are rendered. Methods of communication shall be
available for consultation with the collaborating physician or
podiatrist in person or by telecommunications in accordance
with established written guidelines as set forth in the written
agreement.
    (c) Collaboration and consultation under all collaboration
agreements shall be adequate if a collaborating physician or
podiatrist does each of the following:
        (1) Participates in the joint formulation and joint
    approval of orders or guidelines with the advanced practice
    nurse and he or she periodically reviews such orders and
    the services provided patients under such orders in
    accordance with accepted standards of medical practice or
    podiatric practice and advanced practice nursing practice.
        (2) Provides collaboration and consultation Meets in
    person with the advanced practice nurse at least once a
    month to provide collaboration and consultation. In the
    case of anesthesia services provided by a certified
    registered nurse anesthetist, an anesthesiologist,
    physician, dentist, or podiatrist must participate through
    discussion of and agreement with the anesthesia plan and
    remain physically present and available on the premises
    during the delivery of anesthesia services for diagnosis,
    consultation, and treatment of emergency medical
    conditions.
        (3) Is available through telecommunications for
    consultation on medical problems, complications, or
    emergencies or patient referral. In the case of anesthesia
    services provided by a certified registered nurse
    anesthetist, an anesthesiologist, physician, dentist, or
    podiatrist must participate through discussion of and
    agreement with the anesthesia plan and remain physically
    present and available on the premises during the delivery
    of anesthesia services for diagnosis, consultation, and
    treatment of emergency medical conditions.
    The agreement must contain provisions detailing notice for
termination or change of status involving a written
collaborative agreement, except when such notice is given for
just cause.
    (c-5) A certified registered nurse anesthetist, who
provides anesthesia services outside of a hospital or
ambulatory surgical treatment center shall enter into a written
collaborative agreement with an anesthesiologist or the
physician licensed to practice medicine in all its branches or
the podiatrist performing the procedure. Outside of a hospital
or ambulatory surgical treatment center, the certified
registered nurse anesthetist may provide only those services
that the collaborating podiatrist is authorized to provide
pursuant to the Podiatric Medical Practice Act of 1987 and
rules adopted thereunder. A certified registered nurse
anesthetist may select, order, and administer medication,
including controlled substances, and apply appropriate medical
devices for delivery of anesthesia services under the
anesthesia plan agreed with by the anesthesiologist or the
operating physician or operating podiatrist.
    (c-10) A certified registered nurse anesthetist who
provides anesthesia services in a dental office shall enter
into a written collaborative agreement with an
anesthesiologist or the physician licensed to practice
medicine in all its branches or the operating dentist
performing the procedure. The agreement shall describe the
working relationship of the certified registered nurse
anesthetist and dentist and shall authorize the categories of
care, treatment, or procedures to be performed by the certified
registered nurse anesthetist. In a collaborating dentist's
office, the certified registered nurse anesthetist may only
provide those services that the operating dentist with the
appropriate permit is authorized to provide pursuant to the
Illinois Dental Practice Act and rules adopted thereunder. For
anesthesia services, an anesthesiologist, physician, or
operating dentist shall participate through discussion of and
agreement with the anesthesia plan and shall remain physically
present and be available on the premises during the delivery of
anesthesia services for diagnosis, consultation, and treatment
of emergency medical conditions. A certified registered nurse
anesthetist may select, order, and administer medication,
including controlled substances, and apply appropriate medical
devices for delivery of anesthesia services under the
anesthesia plan agreed with by the operating dentist.
    (d) A copy of the signed, written collaborative agreement
must be available to the Department upon request from both the
advanced practice nurse and the collaborating physician or
podiatrist.
    (e) Nothing in this Act shall be construed to limit the
delegation of tasks or duties by a physician to a licensed
practical nurse, a registered professional nurse, or other
persons in accordance with Section 54.2 of the Medical Practice
Act of 1987. Nothing in this Act shall be construed to limit
the method of delegation that may be authorized by any means,
including, but not limited to, oral, written, electronic,
standing orders, protocols, guidelines, or verbal orders.
    (f) An advanced practice nurse shall inform each
collaborating physician, dentist, or podiatrist of all
collaborative agreements he or she has signed and provide a
copy of these to any collaborating physician, dentist, or
podiatrist upon request.
    (g) For the purposes of this Act, "generally provides to
his or her patients in the normal course of his or her clinical
medical practice" means services, not specific tasks or duties,
the physician or podiatrist routinely provides individually or
through delegation to other persons so that the physician or
podiatrist has the experience and ability to provide
collaboration and consultation.
(Source: P.A. 95-639, eff. 10-5-07; 96-618, eff. 1-1-10.)
 
    (225 ILCS 65/65-40)   (was 225 ILCS 65/15-20)
    (Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2018)
    Sec. 65-40. Written collaborative agreement; prescriptive
Prescriptive authority.
    (a) A collaborating physician or podiatrist may, but is not
required to, delegate prescriptive authority to an advanced
practice nurse as part of a written collaborative agreement.
This authority may, but is not required to, include
prescription of, selection of, orders for, administration of,
storage of, acceptance of samples of, and dispensing over the
counter medications, legend drugs, medical gases, and
controlled substances categorized as any Schedule III through V
controlled substances, as defined in Article II of the Illinois
Controlled Substances Act, and other preparations, including,
but not limited to, botanical and herbal remedies. The
collaborating physician or podiatrist must have a valid current
Illinois controlled substance license and federal registration
to delegate authority to prescribe delegated controlled
substances.
    (b) To prescribe controlled substances under this Section,
an advanced practice nurse must obtain a mid-level practitioner
controlled substance license. Medication orders shall be
reviewed periodically by the collaborating physician or
podiatrist.
    (c) The collaborating physician or podiatrist shall file
with the Department notice of delegation of prescriptive
authority and termination of such delegation, in accordance
with rules of the Department. Upon receipt of this notice
delegating authority to prescribe any Schedule III through V
controlled substances, the licensed advanced practice nurse
shall be eligible to register for a mid-level practitioner
controlled substance license under Section 303.05 of the
Illinois Controlled Substances Act.
    (d) In addition to the requirements of subsections (a),
(b), and (c) of this Section, a collaborating physician or
podiatrist may, but is not required to, delegate authority to
an advanced practice nurse to prescribe any Schedule II
controlled substances, if all of the following conditions
apply:
        (1) Specific No more than 5 Schedule II controlled
    substances by oral dosage or topical or transdermal
    application may be delegated, provided that the delegated
    Schedule II controlled substances are routinely prescribed
    by the collaborating physician or podiatrist. This
    delegation must identify the specific Schedule II
    controlled substances by either brand name or generic name.
    Schedule II controlled substances to be delivered by
    injection or other route of administration may not be
    delegated.
        (2) Any delegation must be controlled substances that
    the collaborating physician or podiatrist prescribes.
        (3) Any prescription must be limited to no more than a
    30-day supply oral dosage, with any continuation
    authorized only after prior approval of the collaborating
    physician or podiatrist.
        (4) The advanced practice nurse must discuss the
    condition of any patients for whom a controlled substance
    is prescribed monthly with the delegating physician.
        (5) The advanced practice nurse meets the education
    requirements of Section 303.05 of the Illinois Controlled
    Substances Act.
    (e) Nothing in this Act shall be construed to limit the
delegation of tasks or duties by a physician to a licensed
practical nurse, a registered professional nurse, or other
persons. Nothing in this Act shall be construed to limit the
method of delegation that may be authorized by any means,
including, but not limited to, oral, written, electronic,
standing orders, protocols, guidelines, or verbal orders.
    (f) Nothing in this Section shall be construed to apply to
any medication authority including Schedule II controlled
substances of an advanced practice nurse for care provided in a
hospital, hospital affiliate, or ambulatory surgical treatment
center pursuant to Section 65-45.
    (g) Any advanced practice nurse who writes a prescription
for a controlled substance without having a valid appropriate
authority may be fined by the Department not more than $50 per
prescription, and the Department may take any other
disciplinary action provided for in this Act.
    (h) Nothing in this Section shall be construed to prohibit
generic substitution.
(Source: P.A. 95-639, eff. 10-5-07; 96-189, eff. 8-10-09.)
 
    (225 ILCS 65/65-45)   (was 225 ILCS 65/15-25)
    (Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2018)
    Sec. 65-45. Advanced practice nursing in hospitals,
hospital affiliates, or ambulatory surgical treatment centers.
    (a) An advanced practice nurse may provide services in a
licensed hospital or a hospital affiliate as those terms are
defined in the Hospital Licensing Act or the University of
Illinois Hospital Act or a licensed ambulatory surgical
treatment center without prescriptive authority or a written
collaborative agreement pursuant to Section 65-35 of this Act.
An advanced practice nurse must possess clinical privileges
recommended by the hospital medical staff and granted by the
hospital or the consulting medical staff committee and
ambulatory surgical treatment center in order to provide
services. The medical staff or consulting medical staff
committee shall periodically review the services of advanced
practice nurses granted clinical privileges, including any
care provided in a hospital affiliate. Authority may also be
granted when recommended by the hospital medical staff and
granted by the hospital or recommended by the consulting
medical staff committee and ambulatory surgical treatment
center to individual advanced practice nurses to select, order,
and administer medications, including controlled substances,
to provide delineated care. In a hospital, hospital affiliate,
or ambulatory surgical treatment center, the The attending
physician shall determine an advanced practice nurse's role in
providing care for his or her patients, except as otherwise
provided in the medical staff bylaws or consulting committee
policies.
    (a-2) An advanced practice nurse granted authority to order
medications including controlled substances may complete
discharge prescriptions provided the prescription is in the
name of the advanced practice nurse and the attending or
discharging physician.
    (a-3) Advanced practice nurses practicing in a hospital or
an ambulatory surgical treatment center are not required to
obtain a mid-level controlled substance license to order
controlled substances under Section 303.05 of the Illinois
Controlled Substances Act.
    (a-5) For anesthesia services provided by a certified
registered nurse anesthetist, an anesthesiologist, physician,
dentist, or podiatrist shall participate through discussion of
and agreement with the anesthesia plan and shall remain
physically present and be available on the premises during the
delivery of anesthesia services for diagnosis, consultation,
and treatment of emergency medical conditions, unless hospital
policy adopted pursuant to clause (B) of subdivision (3) of
Section 10.7 of the Hospital Licensing Act or ambulatory
surgical treatment center policy adopted pursuant to clause (B)
of subdivision (3) of Section 6.5 of the Ambulatory Surgical
Treatment Center Act provides otherwise. A certified
registered nurse anesthetist may select, order, and administer
medication for anesthesia services under the anesthesia plan
agreed to by the anesthesiologist or the physician, in
accordance with hospital alternative policy or the medical
staff consulting committee policies of a licensed ambulatory
surgical treatment center.
    (b) An advanced practice nurse who provides services in a
hospital shall do so in accordance with Section 10.7 of the
Hospital Licensing Act and, in an ambulatory surgical treatment
center, in accordance with Section 6.5 of the Ambulatory
Surgical Treatment Center Act.
(Source: P.A. 95-639, eff. 10-5-07.)
 
    Section 15. The Physician Assistant Practice Act of 1987 is
amended by changing Section 7.5 as follows:
 
    (225 ILCS 95/7.5)
    (Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2018)
    Sec. 7.5. Prescriptions; written supervision agreements;
prescriptive authority.
    (a) A written supervision agreement is required for all
physician assistants to practice in the State.
        (1) A written supervision agreement shall describe the
    working relationship of the physician assistant with the
    supervising physician and shall authorize the categories
    of care, treatment, or procedures to be performed by the
    physician assistant. The written supervision agreement
    shall be defined to promote the exercise of professional
    judgment by the physician assistant commensurate with his
    or her education and experience. The services to be
    provided by the physician assistant shall be services that
    the supervising physician is authorized to and generally
    provides to his or her patients in the normal course of his
    or her clinical medical practice. The written supervision
    agreement need not describe the exact steps that a
    physician assistant must take with respect to each specific
    condition, disease, or symptom but must specify which
    authorized procedures require the presence of the
    supervising physician as the procedures are being
    performed. The supervision relationship under a written
    supervision agreement shall not be construed to require the
    personal presence of a physician at all times at the place
    where services are rendered. Methods of communication
    shall be available for consultation with the supervising
    physician in person or by telecommunications in accordance
    with established written guidelines as set forth in the
    written supervision agreement. For the purposes of this
    Act, "generally provides to his or her patients in the
    normal course of his or her clinical medical practice"
    means services, not specific tasks or duties, the
    supervising physician routinely provides individually or
    through delegation to other persons so that the physician
    has the experience and ability to provide supervision and
    consultation.
        (2) The written supervision agreement shall be
    adequate if a physician does each of the following:
            (A) Participates in the joint formulation and
        joint approval of orders or guidelines with the
        physician assistant and he or she periodically reviews
        such orders and the services provided patients under
        such orders in accordance with accepted standards of
        medical practice and physician assistant practice.
            (B) Provides supervision and consultation Meets in
        person with the physician assistant at least once a
        month to provide supervision.
        (3) A copy of the signed, written supervision agreement
    must be available to the Department upon request from both
    the physician assistant and the supervising physician.
        (4) A physician assistant shall inform each
    supervising physician of all written supervision
    agreements he or she has signed and provide a copy of these
    to any supervising physician upon request.
    (b) A supervising physician may, but is not required to,
delegate prescriptive authority to a physician assistant as
part of a written supervision agreement. This authority may,
but is not required to, include prescription of, selection of,
orders for, administration of, storage of, acceptance of
samples of, and dispensing over the counter medications, legend
drugs, medical gases, and controlled substances categorized as
Schedule III through V controlled substances, as defined in
Article II of the Illinois Controlled Substances Act, and other
preparations, including, but not limited to, botanical and
herbal remedies. The supervising physician must have a valid,
current Illinois controlled substance license and federal
registration with the Drug Enforcement Agency to delegate the
authority to prescribe controlled substances.
        (1) To prescribe Schedule III, IV, or V controlled
    substances under this Section, a physician assistant must
    obtain a mid-level practitioner controlled substances
    license. Medication orders issued by a physician assistant
    shall be reviewed periodically by the supervising
    physician.
        (2) The supervising physician shall file with the
    Department notice of delegation of prescriptive authority
    to a physician assistant and termination of delegation,
    specifying the authority delegated or terminated. Upon
    receipt of this notice delegating authority to prescribe
    Schedule III, IV, or V controlled substances, the physician
    assistant shall be eligible to register for a mid-level
    practitioner controlled substances license under Section
    303.05 of the Illinois Controlled Substances Act. Nothing
    in this Act shall be construed to limit the delegation of
    tasks or duties by the supervising physician to a nurse or
    other appropriately trained persons in accordance with
    Section 54.2 of the Medical Practice Act of 1987.
        (3) In addition to the requirements of subsection (b)
    of this Section, a supervising physician may, but is not
    required to, delegate authority to a physician assistant to
    prescribe Schedule II controlled substances, if all of the
    following conditions apply:
            (A) Specific No more than 5 Schedule II controlled
        substances by oral dosage or topical or transdermal
        application may be delegated, provided that the
        delegated Schedule II controlled substances are
        routinely prescribed by the supervising physician.
        This delegation must identify the specific Schedule II
        controlled substances by either brand name or generic
        name. Schedule II controlled substances to be
        delivered by injection or other route of
        administration may not be delegated.
            (B) Any delegation must be controlled substances
        that the supervising physician prescribes.
            (C) Any prescription must be limited to no more
        than a 30-day supply oral dosage, with any continuation
        authorized only after prior approval of the
        supervising physician.
            (D) The physician assistant must discuss the
        condition of any patients for whom a controlled
        substance is prescribed monthly with the supervising
        physician.
            (E) The physician assistant meets the education
        requirements of Section 303.05 of the Illinois
        Controlled Substances Act.
    (c) Nothing in this Act shall be construed to limit the
delegation of tasks or duties by a physician to a licensed
practical nurse, a registered professional nurse, or other
persons. Nothing in this Act shall be construed to limit the
method of delegation that may be authorized by any means,
including, but not limited to, oral, written, electronic,
standing orders, protocols, guidelines, or verbal orders.
    (d) Any physician assistant who writes a prescription for a
controlled substance without having a valid appropriate
authority may be fined by the Department not more than $50 per
prescription, and the Department may take any other
disciplinary action provided for in this Act.
    (e) Nothing in this Section shall be construed to prohibit
generic substitution.
(Source: P.A. 96-268, eff. 8-11-09; 96-618, eff. 1-1-10;
96-1000, eff. 7-2-10.)
 
    Section 20. The Podiatric Medical Practice Act of 1987 is
amended by changing Section 20.5 as follows:
 
    (225 ILCS 100/20.5)
    (Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2018)
    Sec. 20.5. Delegation of authority to advanced practice
nurses.
    (a) A podiatrist in active clinical practice may
collaborate with an advanced practice nurse in accordance with
the requirements of the Nurse Practice Act. Collaboration shall
be for the purpose of providing podiatric consultation and no
employment relationship shall be required. A written
collaborative agreement shall conform to the requirements of
Section 65-35 of the Nurse Practice Act. The written
collaborative agreement shall be for services the
collaborating podiatrist generally provides to his or her
patients in the normal course of clinical podiatric practice,
except as set forth in item (3) of this subsection (a). A
written collaborative agreement and podiatric collaboration
and consultation shall be adequate with respect to advanced
practice nurses if all of the following apply:
        (1) The agreement is written to promote the exercise of
    professional judgment by the advanced practice nurse
    commensurate with his or her education and experience. The
    agreement need not describe the exact steps that an
    advanced practice nurse must take with respect to each
    specific condition, disease, or symptom, but must specify
    which procedures require a podiatrist's presence as the
    procedures are being performed.
        (2) Practice guidelines and orders are developed and
    approved jointly by the advanced practice nurse and
    collaborating podiatrist, as needed, based on the practice
    of the practitioners. Such guidelines and orders and the
    patient services provided thereunder are periodically
    reviewed by the collaborating podiatrist.
        (3) The advance practice nurse provides services that
    the collaborating podiatrist generally provides to his or
    her patients in the normal course of clinical practice.
    With respect to the provision of anesthesia services by a
    certified registered nurse anesthetist, the collaborating
    podiatrist must have training and experience in the
    delivery of anesthesia consistent with Department rules.
        (4) The collaborating podiatrist and the advanced
    practice nurse consult meet in person at least once a month
    to provide collaboration and consultation.
        (5) Methods of communication are available with the
    collaborating podiatrist in person or through
    telecommunications for consultation, collaboration, and
    referral as needed to address patient care needs.
        (6) With respect to the provision of anesthesia
    services by a certified registered nurse anesthetist, an
    anesthesiologist, physician, or podiatrist shall
    participate through discussion of and agreement with the
    anesthesia plan and shall remain physically present and be
    available on the premises during the delivery of anesthesia
    services for diagnosis, consultation, and treatment of
    emergency medical conditions. The anesthesiologist or
    operating podiatrist must agree with the anesthesia plan
    prior to the delivery of services.
        (7) The agreement contains provisions detailing notice
    for termination or change of status involving a written
    collaborative agreement, except when such notice is given
    for just cause.
    (b) The collaborating podiatrist shall have access to the
records of all patients attended to by an advanced practice
nurse.
    (c) Nothing in this Section shall be construed to limit the
delegation of tasks or duties by a podiatrist to a licensed
practical nurse, a registered professional nurse, or other
appropriately trained persons.
    (d) A podiatrist shall not be liable for the acts or
omissions of an advanced practice nurse solely on the basis of
having signed guidelines or a collaborative agreement, an
order, a standing order, a standing delegation order, or other
order or guideline authorizing an advanced practice nurse to
perform acts, unless the podiatrist has reason to believe the
advanced practice nurse lacked the competency to perform the
act or acts or commits willful or wanton misconduct.
    (f) A podiatrist, may, but is not required to delegate
prescriptive authority to an advanced practice nurse as part of
a written collaborative agreement and the delegation of
prescriptive authority shall conform to the requirements of
Section 65-40 of the Nurse Practice Act.
(Source: P.A. 95-639, eff. 10-5-07; 96-618, eff. 1-1-10.)
 
    Section 25. The Illinois Controlled Substances Act is
amended by changing Section 303.05 as follows:
 
    (720 ILCS 570/303.05)
    Sec. 303.05. Mid-level practitioner registration.
    (a) The Department of Financial and Professional
Regulation shall register licensed physician assistants and
licensed advanced practice nurses to prescribe and dispense
controlled substances under Section 303 and euthanasia
agencies to purchase, store, or administer animal euthanasia
drugs under the following circumstances:
        (1) with respect to physician assistants,
            (A) the physician assistant has been delegated
        authority to prescribe any Schedule III through V
        controlled substances by a physician licensed to
        practice medicine in all its branches in accordance
        with Section 7.5 of the Physician Assistant Practice
        Act of 1987; and the physician assistant has completed
        the appropriate application forms and has paid the
        required fees as set by rule; or
            (B) the physician assistant has been delegated
        authority by a supervising physician licensed to
        practice medicine in all its branches to prescribe or
        dispense Schedule II controlled substances through a
        written delegation of authority and under the
        following conditions:
                (i) Specific no more than 5 Schedule II
            controlled substances by oral dosage or topical or
            transdermal application may be delegated, provided
            that the delegated Schedule II controlled
            substances are routinely prescribed by the
            supervising physician. This delegation must
            identify the specific Schedule II controlled
            substances by either brand name or generic name.
            Schedule II controlled substances to be delivered
            by injection or other route of administration may
            not be delegated;
                (ii) any delegation must be of controlled
            substances prescribed by the supervising
            physician;
                (iii) all prescriptions must be limited to no
            more than a 30-day supply oral dosage, with any
            continuation authorized only after prior approval
            of the supervising physician;
                (iv) the physician assistant must discuss the
            condition of any patients for whom a controlled
            substance is prescribed monthly with the
            delegating physician; and
                (v) the physician assistant must have
            completed the appropriate application forms and
            paid the required fees as set by rule;
                (vi) the physician assistant must provide
            evidence of satisfactory completion of 45 contact
            hours in pharmacology from any physician assistant
            program accredited by the Accreditation Review
            Commission on Education for the Physician
            Assistant (ARC-PA), or its predecessor agency, for
            any new license issued with Schedule II authority
            after the effective date of this amendatory Act of
            the 97th General Assembly; and
                (vii) the physician assistant must annually
            complete at least 5 hours of continuing education
            in pharmacology.
        (2) with respect to advanced practice nurses,
            (A) the advanced practice nurse has been delegated
        authority to prescribe any Schedule III through V
        controlled substances by a collaborating physician
        licensed to practice medicine in all its branches or a
        collaborating podiatrist in accordance with Section
        65-40 of the Nurse Practice Act. The advanced practice
        nurse has completed the appropriate application forms
        and has paid the required fees as set by rule; or
            (B) the advanced practice nurse has been delegated
        authority by a collaborating physician licensed to
        practice medicine in all its branches or collaborating
        podiatrist to prescribe or dispense Schedule II
        controlled substances through a written delegation of
        authority and under the following conditions:
                (i) specific no more than 5 Schedule II
            controlled substances by oral dosage or topical or
            transdermal application may be delegated, provided
            that the delegated Schedule II controlled
            substances are routinely prescribed by the
            collaborating physician or podiatrist. This
            delegation must identify the specific Schedule II
            controlled substances by either brand name or
            generic name. Schedule II controlled substances to
            be delivered by injection or other route of
            administration may not be delegated;
                (ii) any delegation must be of controlled
            substances prescribed by the collaborating
            physician or podiatrist;
                (iii) all prescriptions must be limited to no
            more than a 30-day supply oral dosage, with any
            continuation authorized only after prior approval
            of the collaborating physician or podiatrist;
                (iv) the advanced practice nurse must discuss
            the condition of any patients for whom a controlled
            substance is prescribed monthly with the
            delegating physician or podiatrist; and
                (v) the advanced practice nurse must have
            completed the appropriate application forms and
            paid the required fees as set by rule; or
                (vi) the advanced practice nurse must provide
            evidence of satisfactory completion of at least 45
            graduate contact hours in pharmacology for any new
            license issued with Schedule II authority after
            the effective date of this amendatory Act of the
            97th General Assembly; and
                (vii) the advanced practice nurse must
            annually complete 5 hours of continuing education
            in pharmacology; or
        (3) with respect to animal euthanasia agencies, the
    euthanasia agency has obtained a license from the
    Department of Professional Regulation and obtained a
    registration number from the Department.
    (b) The mid-level practitioner shall only be licensed to
prescribe those schedules of controlled substances for which a
licensed physician or licensed podiatrist has delegated
prescriptive authority, except that an animal euthanasia
agency does not have any prescriptive authority. A physician
assistant and an advanced practice nurse are prohibited from
prescribing medications and controlled substances not set
forth in the required written delegation of authority.
    (c) Upon completion of all registration requirements,
physician assistants, advanced practice nurses, and animal
euthanasia agencies shall be issued a mid-level practitioner
controlled substances license for Illinois.
    (d) A collaborating physician or podiatrist may, but is not
required to, delegate prescriptive authority to an advanced
practice nurse as part of a written collaborative agreement,
and the delegation of prescriptive authority shall conform to
the requirements of Section 65-40 of the Nurse Practice Act.
    (e) A supervising physician may, but is not required to,
delegate prescriptive authority to a physician assistant as
part of a written supervision agreement, and the delegation of
prescriptive authority shall conform to the requirements of
Section 7.5 of the Physician Assistant Practice Act of 1987.
    (f) Nothing in this Section shall be construed to prohibit
generic substitution.
(Source: P.A. 95-639, eff. 10-5-07; 96-189, eff. 8-10-09;
96-268, eff. 8-11-09; 96-1000, eff. 7-2-10.)
 
    Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect July 1,
2011.