State of Illinois
92nd General Assembly
Legislation

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92_HB0446sam001

 










                                           LRB9200928DHmbam05

 1                     AMENDMENT TO HOUSE BILL 446

 2        AMENDMENT NO.     .  Amend House Bill 446 as follows:

 3    by replacing everything after the enacting  clause  with  the
 4    following:

 5        "Section  3.   The Department of Public Health Powers and
 6    Duties Law of the Civil Administrative Code  of  Illinois  is
 7    amended by adding Section 2310-396 as follows:

 8        (20 ILCS 2310/2310-396 new)
 9        Sec.   2310-396.    Organ   Donation   Task  Force.   The
10    Department shall establish an Organ Donation  Task  Force  to
11    study  the various laws and rules regarding organ donation to
12    determine whether consolidation or other changes in the  laws
13    or rules are needed to facilitate organ donation in Illinois.
14    The  Director shall appoint the members of the Task Force and
15    shall determine the number of members to be  appointed.   The
16    members  of  the  Task Force shall include representatives of
17    the Illinois  Hospital  and  HealthSystems  Association,  the
18    Illinois  State  Medical Society, organ procurement agencies,
19    the  Illinois  Eye  Bank,  and  any  other  entities   deemed
20    appropriate by the Director.
 
                            -2-            LRB9200928DHmbam05
 1        Section 5.  The Uniform Anatomical Gift Act is amended by
 2    changing Section 3 as follows:

 3        (755 ILCS 50/3) (from Ch. 110 1/2, par. 303)
 4        Sec. 3. Persons who may execute an anatomical gift.
 5        (a)  Any  individual  of  sound mind who has attained the
 6    age of 18 may give all or any part of his or her body for any
 7    purpose specified in Section 4.  Such a gift may be  executed
 8    in  any  of  the  ways  set  out in Section 5, and shall take
 9    effect upon the individual's death without the need to obtain
10    the consent of any survivor.  An anatomical gift made  by  an
11    agent of an individual, as authorized by the individual under
12    the  Powers  of  Attorney  for  Health  Care  Law,  as now or
13    hereafter amended, is deemed to be a gift by that  individual
14    and  takes  effect  without the need to obtain the consent of
15    any other person.
16        (b)  If no gift has been executed under  subsection  (a),
17    any of the following persons, in the order of priority stated
18    in  items  (1)  through  (9) (6) below, when persons in prior
19    classes are not available and in the absence  of  (i)  actual
20    notice of contrary intentions by the decedent and (ii) actual
21    notice  of  opposition by any member within the same priority
22    class, may give all or any part of the decedent's body  after
23    or  immediately  before  death  for  any purpose specified in
24    Section 4:
25             (1)  the decedent's agent under a power of  attorney
26        for   health   care  which  provides  specific  direction
27        regarding organ donation,
28             (2) (1)  the decedent's spouse,
29             (3) (2)  the decedent's adult sons or daughters,
30             (4) (3)  either of the decedent's parents,
31             (5) (4)  any of the  decedent's  adult  brothers  or
32        sisters,
33             (6)  any adult grandchild of the decedent,
 
                            -3-            LRB9200928DHmbam05
 1             (7)  (5)  the  guardian  of  the  decedent's  estate
 2        decedent at the time of his or her death,
 3             (8)  the  decedent's  surrogate decision maker under
 4        the Health Care Surrogate Act,
 5             (9) (6)  any person authorized or  under  obligation
 6        to dispose of the body.
 7        If  the donee has actual notice of opposition to the gift
 8    by the decedent or any person in the highest  priority  class
 9    in  which  an  available person can be found, then no gift of
10    all or any part of the decedent's body shall be accepted.
11        (c)  For the purposes of this Act, a person will  not  be
12    considered  "available"  for the giving of consent or refusal
13    if:
14             (1)  the existence of the person is unknown  to  the
15        donee  and  is  not  readily  ascertainable  through  the
16        examination  of  the  decedent's hospital records and the
17        questioning of any persons who are available  for  giving
18        consent;
19             (2)  the   donee  has  unsuccessfully  attempted  to
20        contact  the  person  by  telephone  or  in   any   other
21        reasonable manner;
22             (3)  the person is unable or unwilling to respond in
23        a manner which indicates the person's refusal or consent.
24        (d)  A  gift  of  all  or  part  of a body authorizes any
25    examination necessary to assure medical acceptability of  the
26    gift for the purposes intended.
27        (e)  The  rights  of  the  donee  created by the gift are
28    paramount to the rights  of  others  except  as  provided  by
29    Section 8 (d).
30        (f)  If  no  gift  has  been executed under this Section,
31    then no part of the decedent's  body  may  be  used  for  any
32    purpose  specified  in  Section  4  of  this  Act,  except in
33    accordance with the Organ Donation Request Act or the Corneal
34    Transplant Act.
 
                            -4-            LRB9200928DHmbam05
 1    (Source: P.A. 86-736.)

 2        Section 10.   The  Illinois  Corneal  Transplant  Act  is
 3    amended by changing Section 2 as follows:

 4        (755 ILCS 55/2) (from Ch. 110 1/2, par. 352)
 5        Sec.  2.   (a) Objection to the removal of corneal tissue
 6    may be made known to the coroner or county  medical  examiner
 7    or  authorized  individual  acting  for the coroner or county
 8    medical examiner by the individual during his lifetime or  by
 9    the following persons, in the order of priority stated, after
10    the decedent's death:
11             (1)  The  decedent's agent under a power of attorney
12        for  health  care  which  provides   specific   direction
13        regarding organ donation;
14             (2) (1)  The decedent's spouse;
15             (3)   (2)  If   there  is  no  spouse,  any  of  The
16        decedent's adult sons or daughters;
17             (4) (3)  If there is no spouse and no adult sons  or
18        daughters, Either of the decedent's parents;
19             (5)  (4)  If  there  is  no spouse, no adult sons or
20        daughters, and no parents, Any of  the  decedent's  adult
21        brothers or sisters;
22             (6)  Any adult grandchild of the decedent;
23             (7)  (5)  If  there  is  no spouse, no adult sons or
24        daughters, no parents, and no adult brothers or  sisters,
25        The  guardian  of  the decedent's estate; decedent at the
26        time of his or her death.
27             (8)  The decedent's surrogate decision  maker  under
28        the Health Care Surrogate Act;
29             (9)  Any  person  authorized  or under obligation to
30        dispose of the body.
31        (b)  If the coroner or county  medical  examiner  or  any
32    authorized  individual  acting  for  the  coroner  or  county
 
                            -5-            LRB9200928DHmbam05
 1    medical   examiner   has   actual   notice  of  any  contrary
 2    indications by the decedent or actual notice that any  member
 3    within the same class specified in subsection (a), paragraphs
 4    (1)  through  (9)  (5)  of this Section, in the same order of
 5    priority, objects to  the  removal,  the  coroner  or  county
 6    medical  examiner  shall  not  approve the removal of corneal
 7    tissue.
 8    (Source: P.A. 87-633.)

 9        Section 15.  The Organ Donation Request Act is amended by
10    changing Section 2 as follows:

11        (755 ILCS 60/2) (from Ch. 110 1/2, par. 752)
12        Sec. 2. Notification; consent; definitions.
13        (a)  When,  based   upon   generally   accepted   medical
14    standards, an inpatient in a general acute care hospital with
15    more  than  100  beds  is  a  suitable candidate for organ or
16    tissue donation and such patient has not made  an  anatomical
17    gift  of  all  or  any  part  of  his or her body pursuant to
18    Section 5 of the Uniform Anatomical Gift  Act,  the  hospital
19    administrator,  or  his  or  her  designated  representative,
20    shall,  if  the  candidate  is  suitable  for the donation of
21    organs at the time of or after notification of death,  notify
22    the hospital's federally designated organ procurement agency.
23    The  organ  procurement  agency  shall  request a consent for
24    organ donation  according  to  the  priority  and  conditions
25    established  in  subsection  (b).  In the case of a candidate
26    suitable  for  donation  of   tissue   only,   the   hospital
27    administrator  or  his  or  her  designated representative or
28    tissue  bank  shall,  at  the  time  of  or   shortly   after
29    notification  of death, request a consent for tissue donation
30    according to the  priority  need  conditions  established  in
31    subsection   (b).    Alternative  procedures  for  requesting
32    consent may be implemented  by  mutual  agreement  between  a
 
                            -6-            LRB9200928DHmbam05
 1    hospital  and a federally designated organ procurement agency
 2    or tissue bank.
 3        (b)  In making a request for organ  or  tissue  donation,
 4    the   hospital   administrator   or  his  or  her  designated
 5    representative or the hospital's federally  designated  organ
 6    procurement  agency  or  tissue bank shall request any of the
 7    following persons, in the order of priority stated  in  items
 8    (1)  through (9) (7) below, when persons in prior classes are
 9    not available and in the absence  of  (i)  actual  notice  of
10    contrary  intentions  by  the decedent, (ii) actual notice of
11    opposition by any member within the same priority class,  and
12    (iii)  reason  to believe that an anatomical gift is contrary
13    to the decedent's religious beliefs, to consent to  the  gift
14    of  all  or  any  part of the decedent's body for any purpose
15    specified in Section 4 of the Uniform Anatomical Gift Act:
16             (1)  the decedent's agent under a power of  attorney
17        for   health   care  which  provides  specific  direction
18        regarding organ  donation  the  Powers  of  Attorney  for
19        Health Care Law;
20             (2)  the  decedent's  surrogate decision maker under
21        the Health Care Surrogate Act;
22             (2) (3)  the decedent's spouse;
23             (3) (4)  the decedent's adult sons or daughters;
24             (4) (5)  either of the decedent's parents;
25             (5) (6)  any of the  decedent's  adult  brothers  or
26        sisters;
27             (6)  any adult grandchild of the decedent;
28             (7)  the guardian of the decedent's estate; decedent
29        at the time of his or her death.
30             (8)  the  decedent's  surrogate decision maker under
31        the Health Care Surrogate Act;
32             (9)  any person authorized or  under  obligation  to
33        dispose of the body.
34        (c)  If  (1)  the  hospital  administrator, or his or her
 
                            -7-            LRB9200928DHmbam05
 1    designated representative, the organ procurement  agency,  or
 2    the  tissue  bank has actual notice of opposition to the gift
 3    by the decedent or any person in the highest  priority  class
 4    in  which  an  available person can be found, or (2) there is
 5    reason to believe that an anatomical gift is contrary to  the
 6    decedent's  religious  beliefs, or (3) the Director of Public
 7    Health has adopted a rule signifying his  determination  that
 8    the  need  for  organs  and  tissues  for  donation  has been
 9    adequately met, then such gift of all  or  any  part  of  the
10    decedent's  body  shall  not  be requested.  If a donation is
11    requested, consent or refusal may only be obtained  from  the
12    person  or  persons  in the highest priority class available.
13    If the hospital  administrator,  or  his  or  her  designated
14    representative,  the  designated organ procurement agency, or
15    the tissue bank is unable to obtain consent from any  of  the
16    persons  named in items (1) through (9) (7) of subsection (b)
17    (a) of this Section, the decedent's body shall  not  be  used
18    for  an  anatomical  gift  unless  a  valid  anatomical  gift
19    document  was  executed under the Uniform Anatomical Gift Act
20    or the Corneal Transplant Act.
21        (d)  For the purposes of this Act, a person will  not  be
22    considered  "available"  for the giving of consent or refusal
23    if:
24             (1)  the existence of the person is unknown  to  the
25        hospital  administrator  or  designee,  organ procurement
26        agency, or tissue bank and is not  readily  ascertainable
27        through   the  examination  of  the  decedent's  hospital
28        records and  the  questioning  of  any  persons  who  are
29        available for giving consent;
30             (2)  the    administrator    or    designee,   organ
31        procurement agency, or  tissue  bank  has  unsuccessfully
32        attempted  to  contact  the person by telephone or in any
33        other reasonable manner;
34             (3)  the person is unable or unwilling to respond in
 
                            -8-            LRB9200928DHmbam05
 1        a manner which indicates the person's refusal or consent.
 2        (e)  For the purposes of this Act, "federally  designated
 3    organ  procurement agency" means the organ procurement agency
 4    designated by the Secretary of the U.S. Department of  Health
 5    and  Human  Services for the service area in which a hospital
 6    is located; except that in the case of a hospital located  in
 7    a county adjacent to Wisconsin which currently contracts with
 8    an  organ procurement agency located in Wisconsin that is not
 9    the organ procurement agency designated by the U.S. Secretary
10    of Health and Human Services for the service  area  in  which
11    the hospital is located, if the hospital applies for a waiver
12    pursuant  to  42  USC  1320b-8(a),  it may designate an organ
13    procurement agency located  in  Wisconsin  to  be  thereafter
14    deemed  its federally designated organ procurement agency for
15    the purposes of this Act.
16        (f)  For the purposes of this Act,  "tissue  bank"  means
17    any  facility  or  program  operating  in  Illinois  that  is
18    certified  by the American Association of Tissue Banks or the
19    Eye Bank Association of America and is involved in procuring,
20    furnishing, donating,  or  distributing  corneas,  bones,  or
21    other human tissue for the purpose of injecting, transfusing,
22    or  transplanting  any  of them into the human body.  "Tissue
23    bank" does not include a licensed blood bank.
24        For the purposes of this Act, "tissue" does  not  include
25    organs.
26        (g)  Nothing  in Public Act 89-393 this amendatory Act of
27    1995 alters any agreements  or  affiliations  between  tissue
28    banks and hospitals.
29    (Source: P.A. 89-393, eff. 8-20-95; revised 2-23-00.)".

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