Illinois General Assembly - Full Text of HB3845
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Full Text of HB3845  98th General Assembly

HB3845ham001 98TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY

Rep. Charles E. Jefferson

Filed: 4/8/2014

 

 


 

 


 
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1
AMENDMENT TO HOUSE BILL 3845

2    AMENDMENT NO. ______. Amend House Bill 3845 by replacing
3everything after the enacting clause with the following:
 
4    "Section 5. The Department of Public Health Powers and
5Duties Law of the Civil Administrative Code of Illinois is
6amended by renumbering and changing Section 2310-665 as added
7by Public Act 98-493 as follows:
 
8    (20 ILCS 2310/2310-675)
9    (Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2016)
10    Sec. 2310-675 2310-665. Hepatitis C Task Force.
11    (a) The General Assembly finds and declares the following:
12        (1) Viral hepatitis is a contagious and
13    life-threatening disease that has a substantial and
14    increasing effect upon the lifespans and quality of life of
15    at least 5,000,000 persons living in the United States and
16    as many as 180,000,000 worldwide. According to the U.S.

 

 

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1    Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), the chronic
2    form of the hepatitis C virus (HCV) and hepatitis B virus
3    (HBV) account for the vast majority of hepatitis-related
4    mortalities in the U.S., yet as many as 65% to 75% of
5    infected Americans remain unaware that they are infected
6    with the virus, prompting the U.S. Centers for Disease
7    Control and Prevention (CDC) to label these viruses as the
8    silent epidemic. HCV and HBV are major public health
9    problems that cause chronic liver diseases, such as
10    cirrhosis, liver failure, and liver cancer. The 5-year
11    survival rate for primary liver cancer is less than 5%.
12    These viruses are also the leading cause of liver
13    transplantation in the United States. While there is a
14    vaccine for HBV, no vaccine exists for HCV. However, there
15    are anti-viral treatments for HCV that can improve the
16    prognosis or actually clear the virus from the patient's
17    system. Unfortunately, the vast majority of infected
18    patients remain unaware that they have the virus since
19    there are generally no symptoms. Therefore, there is a dire
20    need to aid the public in identifying certain risk factors
21    that would warrant testing for these viruses. Millions of
22    infected patients remain undiagnosed and continue to be at
23    elevated risks for developing more serious complications.
24    More needs to be done to educate the public about this
25    disease and the risk factors that warrant testing. In some
26    cases, infected patients play an unknowing role in further

 

 

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1    spreading this infectious disease.
2        (2) The existence of HCV was definitively published and
3    discovered by medical researchers in 1989. Prior to this
4    date, HCV is believed to have spread unchecked. The
5    American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases
6    (AASLD) recommends that primary care physicians screen all
7    patients for a history of any viral hepatitis risk factor
8    and test those individuals with at least one identifiable
9    risk factor for the virus. Some of the most common risk
10    factors have been identified by AASLD, HHS, and the U.S.
11    Department of Veterans Affairs, as well as other public
12    health and medical research organizations, and include the
13    following:
14            (A) anyone who has received a blood transfusion
15        prior to 1992;
16            (B) anyone who is a Vietnam-era veteran;
17            (C) anyone who has abnormal liver function tests;
18            (D) anyone infected with the HIV virus;
19            (E) anyone who has used a needle to inject drugs;
20            (F) any health care, emergency medical, or public
21        safety worker who has been stuck by a needle or exposed
22        to any mucosal fluids of an HCV-infected person; and
23            (G) any children born to HCV-infected mothers.
24        A 1994 study determined that Caucasian Americans
25    statistically accounted for the most number of infected
26    persons in the United States, while the highest incidence

 

 

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1    rates were among African and Hispanic Americans.
2        (3) In January of 2010, the Institute of Medicine
3    (IOM), commissioned by the CDC, issued a comprehensive
4    report entitled Hepatitis and Liver Cancer: A National
5    Strategy for Prevention and Control of Hepatitis B and C.
6    The key findings and recommendations from the IOM's report
7    are (A) there is a lack of knowledge and awareness about
8    chronic viral hepatitis on the part of health care and
9    social service providers, (B) there is a lack of knowledge
10    and awareness about chronic viral hepatitis among at-risk
11    populations, members of the public, and policy makers, and
12    (C) there is insufficient understanding about the extent
13    and seriousness of the public health problem, so inadequate
14    public resources are being allocated to prevention,
15    control, and surveillance programs.
16        (4) In this same 2010 IOM report, researchers compared
17    the prevalence and incidences of HCV, HBV, and HIV and
18    found that, although there are only 1,100,000 HIV/AIDS
19    infected persons in the United States and over 4,000,000
20    Americans infected with viral hepatitis, the percentage of
21    those with HIV that are unaware they have HIV is only 21%
22    as opposed to approximately 70% of those with viral
23    hepatitis being unaware that they have viral hepatitis. It
24    appears that public awareness of risk factors associated
25    with each of these diseases could be a major factor in the
26    alarming disparity between the percentage of the

 

 

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1    population that is infected with one of these blood
2    viruses, but unaware that they are infected.
3        (5) In light of the widely varied nature of the risk
4    factors mentioned in this subsection (a), the previous
5    findings by the Institute of Medicine, and the clear
6    evidence of the disproportional public awareness between
7    HIV and viral hepatitis, it is clearly in the public
8    interest for this State to establish a task force to gather
9    testimony and develop an action plan to (A) increase public
10    awareness of the risk factors for these viruses, (B)
11    improve access to screening for these viruses, and (C)
12    provide those infected with information about the
13    prognosis, treatment options, and elevated risk of
14    developing cirrhosis and liver cancer. There is clear and
15    increasing evidence that many adults in Illinois and in the
16    United States have at least one of the risk factors
17    mentioned in this subsection (a).
18        (6) The General Assembly also finds that it is in the
19    public interest to bring communities of Illinois-based
20    veterans of American military service into familiarity
21    with the issues created by this disease, because many
22    veterans, especially Vietnam-era veterans, have at least
23    one of the previously enumerated risk factors and are
24    especially prone to being affected by this disease; and
25    because veterans of American military service should enjoy
26    in all cases, and do enjoy in most cases, adequate access

 

 

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1    to health care services that include medical management and
2    care for preexisting and long-term medical conditions,
3    such as infection with the hepatitis virus.
4    (b) There is established the Hepatitis C Task Force within
5the Department of Public Health. The purpose of the Task Force
6shall be to:
7        (1) develop strategies to identify and address the
8    unmet needs of persons with hepatitis C in order to enhance
9    the quality of life of persons with hepatitis C by
10    maximizing productivity and independence and addressing
11    emotional, social, financial, and vocational challenges of
12    persons with hepatitis C;
13        (2) develop strategies to provide persons with
14    hepatitis C greater access to various treatments and other
15    therapeutic options that may be available; and
16        (3) develop strategies to improve hepatitis C
17    education and awareness; and .
18        (4) develop strategies to track the occurrence of
19    hepatitis C within the this State with regard to race and
20    ethnicity.
21    (c) The Task Force shall consist of 17 members as follows:
22        (1) the Director of Public Health, the Director of
23    Veterans' Affairs, and the Director of Human Services, or
24    their designees, who shall serve ex officio;
25        (2) ten public members who shall be appointed by the
26    Director of Public Health from the medical, patient, and

 

 

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1    service provider communities, including, but not limited
2    to, HCV Support, Inc.; and
3        (3) four members of the General Assembly, appointed one
4    each by the President of the Senate, the Minority Leader of
5    the Senate, the Speaker of the House of Representatives,
6    and the Minority Leader of the House of Representatives.
7    Vacancies in the membership of the Task Force shall be
8filled in the same manner provided for in the original
9appointments.
10    (d) The Task Force shall organize within 120 days following
11the appointment of a majority of its members and shall select a
12chairperson and vice-chairperson from among the members. The
13chairperson shall appoint a secretary, who need not be a member
14of the Task Force.
15    (e) The public members shall serve without compensation and
16shall not be reimbursed for necessary expenses incurred in the
17performance of their duties, unless funds become available to
18the Task Force.
19    (f) The Task Force shall be entitled to call to its
20assistance and avail itself of the services of the employees of
21any State, county, or municipal department, board, bureau,
22commission, or agency as it may require and as may be available
23to it for its purposes.
24    (g) The Task Force may meet and hold hearings as it deems
25appropriate.
26    (h) The Department of Public Health shall provide staff

 

 

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1support to the Task Force.
2    (i) The Task Force shall report its findings and
3recommendations to the Governor and to the General Assembly,
4along with any legislative bills that it desires to recommend
5for adoption by the General Assembly, no later than December
631, 2015.
7    (j) The Task Force is abolished and this Section is
8repealed on January 1, 2016.
9(Source: P.A. 98-493, eff. 8-16-13; revised 9-12-13.)".