100TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY
State of Illinois
2017 and 2018
HB2800

 

Introduced , by Rep. Mary E. Flowers

 

SYNOPSIS AS INTRODUCED:
 
410 ILCS 335/5
410 ILCS 335/10
410 ILCS 335/15
410 ILCS 335/30
410 ILCS 335/35

    Amends the Perinatal HIV Prevention Act. Provides that every health care professional who provides health care services to a pregnant person, unless a pregnant person already has a documented negative HIV status (currently, already been tested) during the third trimester of the current pregnancy (currently, during the current pregnancy) or is already documented to be HIV-positive, shall provide specified HIV counseling and shall test the person for HIV on an opt-out basis (currently, unless she refuses). Adds provisions concerning when opt-out HIV testing and rapid opt-out HIV testing shall occur. Makes changes to provisions concerning specified HIV counseling requirements. Makes changes to provisions concerning reporting, including requiring that a specified report concerning a HIV-positive pregnant or post-partum person or HIV-exposed newborn shall be made by a health care facility to the Department of Public Health's Perinatal HIV Hotline within 12 hours but not later than 24 hours of test results (currently, a health facility shall report within 24 hours after birth if a woman is HIV-positive and the newborn is HIV-exposed). Provides that the provisions of the Act requiring testing for HIV (currently, provisions of the Act) shall not apply when a parent or guardian objects to HIV testing on certain grounds. Defines "birthing center", "opt-out testing", and "third trimester". Changes references from "pregnant woman" to "pregnant person" and makes other similar changes. Makes other changes. Effective immediately.


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FISCAL NOTE ACT MAY APPLY

 

 

A BILL FOR

 

HB2800LRB100 08550 MJP 18675 b

1    AN ACT concerning health.
 
2    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
3represented in the General Assembly:
 
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 person's usual place of residence in which births
10are planned 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,
17birthing center, or other institution that is licensed or
18otherwise authorized to deliver health care services.
19    "Health care services" means any prenatal medical care,
20emergency care, or labor or delivery services to a pregnant
21person or a woman and her newborn infant, including
22hospitalization.
23    "Opt-out testing" means an approach in which an HIV test is

 

 

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

 

 

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

 

 

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

 

 

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

 

 

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

 

 

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

 

 

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

 

 

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1apply when a parent or guardian of a child objects to HIV
2testing thereto on the grounds that the test conflicts with the
3parent's his or her religious tenets and practices. A written
4statement of the objection shall be presented to the physician
5or other person whose duty it is to administer and report the
6tests under the provisions of this Act.
7(Source: P.A. 94-910, eff. 6-23-06.)
 
8    (410 ILCS 335/35)
9    Sec. 35. Department report. The Department of Public Health
10shall prepare an annual report for the Governor and the General
11Assembly on the implementation of this Act that includes
12information on the number of HIV-positive pregnant persons
13women who presented with known HIV status, the number of
14pregnant persons women rapidly tested for HIV in labor and
15delivery, the number of newborn infants rapidly tested for HIV
16exposure, the number of preliminarily HIV-positive pregnant
17persons women and preliminarily HIV-exposed newborn infants
18identified, the confirmatory test result for each
19preliminarily positive rapid HIV test performed on the person
20woman and newborn, the number of families referred to case
21management, and other information the Department determines is
22necessary to measure progress under the provisions of this Act.
23The Department shall assess the needs of health care
24professionals and facilities for ongoing training in
25implementation of the provisions of this Act and make

 

 

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1recommendations 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.