(225 ILCS 20/4) (from Ch. 111, par. 6354)
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2018)
Sec. 4. Exemptions.
1. This Act does not prohibit any of the following:
(a) Any persons legally regulated in this State
| under any other Act from engaging in the practice for which they are authorized, provided that they do not represent themselves by any title as being engaged in the independent practice of clinical social work or the practice of social work as defined in this Act, nor does it prohibit the practice of nonregulated professions whose practitioners are engaged in the delivery of human services, provided such practitioners do not represent themselves as or use the title of clinical social worker or social worker. | |
(b) The practice of clinical social work or social |
| work by a person who is employed by the United States government or by the State of Illinois, unit of local government or any bureau, division or agency thereof while in the discharge of the employee's official duties. Clinical social workers employed by the State of Illinois who are hired after the effective date of this amendatory Act of 1994 shall hold a valid license, issued by this State, to practice as a licensed clinical social worker, except for those clinical social workers employed by the State who obtain their positions through promotion. | |
(c) The practice of a student pursuing a course of |
| professional education under the terms of this Act, if these activities and services constitute a part of such student's supervised course of study. | |
2. Nothing in this Act shall be construed to apply to any person engaged in the bona fide practice of religious ministry provided the person does not hold himself out to be engaged in the independent practice of clinical social work or the practice of social work.
3. This Act does not prohibit a person serving as a volunteer so long as no representation prohibited by this Section is made.
4. Nothing contained in this Act shall be construed to require any hospital, clinic, home health agency, hospice, or other entity which provides health care to employ or to contract with a licensed clinical social worker to provide clinical social work practice or the independent practice of clinical social work as described in this Act.
(Source: P.A. 88‑620, eff. 1‑1‑95.) |
(225 ILCS 20/5) (from Ch. 111, par. 6355)
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2018)
Sec. 5. Powers and duties of the Department.
1. The Department shall exercise the powers and duties as set forth in this Act.
2. The Secretary shall promulgate rules consistent with the provisions of this Act for the administration and enforcement thereof, and shall prescribe forms which shall be issued in connection therewith.
3. In addition, the Department shall:
(a) Establish rules for determining approved
| undergraduate and graduate social work degree programs and prepare and maintain a list of colleges and universities offering such approved programs whose graduates, if they otherwise meet the requirements of this Act, are eligible to apply for a license. | |
(b) Promulgate rules, as may be necessary, for the |
| administration of this Act and to carry out the purposes thereof and to adopt the methods of examination of candidates and to provide for the issuance of licenses authorizing the independent practice of clinical social work or the practice of social work. | |
(c) Authorize examinations to ascertain the |
| qualifications and fitness of candidates for a license to engage in the independent practice of clinical social work and in the practice of social work, and to determine the qualifications of applicants from other jurisdictions to practice in Illinois. | |
(d) Maintain rosters of the names and addresses of |
| all licensees, and all persons whose licenses have been suspended, revoked or denied renewal for cause within the previous calendar year. These rosters shall be available upon written request and payment of the required fee. | |
(Source: P.A. 95‑687, eff. 10‑23‑07.) |
(225 ILCS 20/16) (from Ch. 111, par. 6366)
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2018)
Sec. 16. Privileged Communications and Exceptions.
1. No licensed clinical social worker or licensed social worker shall disclose any information acquired from persons consulting the social worker in a professional capacity, except that which may be voluntarily disclosed under the following circumstances:
(a) In the course of formally reporting, conferring
| or consulting with administrative superiors, colleagues or consultants who share professional responsibility, including a professional responsibility to maintain confidentiality, in which instance all recipients of such information are similarly bound to regard the communication as privileged; | |
(b) With the written consent of the person who |
| provided the information; | |
(c) In case of death or disability, with the written |
| consent of a personal representative, other person authorized to sue, or the beneficiary of an insurance policy on the person's life, health or physical condition; | |
(d) When a communication reveals the intended |
| commission of a crime or harmful act and such disclosure is judged necessary by the licensed clinical social worker or licensed social worker to protect any person from a clear, imminent risk of serious mental or physical harm or injury, or to forestall a serious threat to the public safety; | |
(e) When the person waives the privilege by bringing |
| any public charges against the licensee; or | |
(f) When the information is acquired during the |
| course of investigating a report or working on a case of elder abuse, neglect, or financial exploitation by a designated Elder Abuse Provider Agency and disclosure of the information is in accordance with the provisions of Section 8 of the Elder Abuse and Neglect Act. | |
2. When the person is a minor under the laws of the State of Illinois and the information acquired by the licensed clinical social worker or licensed social worker indicates the minor was the victim or subject of a crime, the licensed clinical social worker or licensed social worker may be required to testify in any judicial proceedings in which the commission of that crime is the subject of inquiry and when, after in camera review of the information that the licensed clinical social worker or licensed social worker acquired, the court determines that the interests of the minor in having the information held privileged are outweighed by the requirements of justice, the need to protect the public safety or the need to protect the minor, except as provided under the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act.
3. Any person having access to records or any one who participates in providing social work services or who, in providing any human services, is supervised by a licensed clinical social worker or licensed social worker, is similarly bound to regard all information and communications as privileged in accord with this Section.
4. Nothing shall be construed to prohibit a licensed clinical social worker or licensed social worker from voluntarily testifying in court hearings concerning matters of adoption, child abuse, child neglect or other matters pertaining to children, except as provided under the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act.
5. The Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities Confidentiality Act, as now or hereafter amended, is incorporated herein as if all of its provisions were included in this Act.
(Source: P.A. 96‑71, eff. 7‑23‑09.) |
(225 ILCS 20/19) (from Ch. 111, par. 6369)
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2018)
Sec. 19. Grounds for disciplinary action.
(1) The Department may refuse to issue, refuse to renew, suspend, or revoke any license, or may place on probation, censure, reprimand, or take other disciplinary or non‑disciplinary action deemed appropriate by the Department, including the imposition of fines not to exceed $10,000 for each violation, with regard to any license issued under the provisions of this Act for any one or a combination of the following reasons:
(a) material misstatements of fact in furnishing
| information to the Department or to any other State agency or in furnishing information to any insurance company with respect to a claim on behalf of a licensee or a patient; | |
(b) violations or negligent or intentional disregard |
| of this Act, or any of the rules promulgated hereunder; | |
(c) conviction of or entry of a plea of guilty or |
| nolo contendere to any crime that is a felony under the laws of the United States or any state or territory thereof or that is a misdemeanor, of which an essential element is dishonesty, or any crime that is directly related to the practice of the clinical social work or social work professions; | |
(d) making any misrepresentation for the purpose of |
| obtaining licenses, or violating any provision of this Act or any of the rules promulgated hereunder; | |
(e) professional incompetence;
(f) malpractice;
(g) aiding or assisting another person in violating |
| any provision or this Act or any rules; | |
(h) failing to provide information within 30 days in |
| response to a written request made by the Department; | |
(i) engaging in dishonorable, unethical or |
| unprofessional conduct of a character likely to deceive, defraud or harm the public as defined by the rules of the Department, or violating the rules of professional conduct adopted by the Board and published by the Department; | |
(j) habitual or excessive use or addiction to |
| alcohol, narcotics, stimulants, or any other chemical agent or drug that results in a clinical social worker's or social worker's inability to practice with reasonable judgment, skill, or safety; | |
(k) discipline by another jurisdiction, if at least |
| one of the grounds for the discipline is the same or substantially equivalent to those set forth in this Section; | |
(l) directly or indirectly giving to or receiving |
| from any person, firm, corporation, partnership or association any fee, commission, rebate or other form of compensation for any professional service not actually rendered; | |
(m) a finding by the Board that the licensee, after |
| having the license placed on probationary status, has violated the terms of probation; | |
(n) abandonment, without cause, of a client;
(o) wilfully filing false reports relating to a |
| licensee's practice, including but not limited to false records filed with Federal or State agencies or departments; | |
(p) wilfully failing to report an instance of |
| suspected child abuse or neglect as required by the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act; | |
(q) being named as a perpetrator in an indicated |
| report by the Department of Children and Family Services under the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act, and upon proof by clear and convincing evidence that the licensee has caused a child to be or failed to take reasonable steps to prevent a child from being an abused child or neglected child as defined in the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act; | |
(r) physical illness, mental illness, or any other |
| impairment or disability, including, but not limited to, deterioration through the aging process, or loss of motor skills that results in the inability to practice the profession with reasonable judgment, skill or safety; | |
(s) solicitation of professional services by using |
| false or misleading advertising; or | |
(t) violation of the Health Care Worker |
| |
(2) (Blank).
(3) The determination by a court that a licensee is subject to involuntary admission or judicial admission as provided in the Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities Code, will result in an automatic suspension of his license. Such suspension will end upon a finding by a court that the licensee is no longer subject to involuntary admission or judicial admission and issues an order so finding and discharging the patient, and upon the recommendation of the Board to the Secretary that the licensee be allowed to resume professional practice.
(4) The Department may refuse to issue or renew or may suspend the license of a person who (i) fails to file a return, pay the tax, penalty, or interest shown in a filed return, or pay any final assessment of tax, penalty, or interest, as required by any tax Act administered by the Department of Revenue, until the requirements of the tax Act are satisfied or (ii) has failed to pay any court‑ordered child support as determined by a court order or by referral from the Department of Healthcare and Family Services.
(5) In enforcing this Section, the Board upon a showing of a possible violation may compel a person licensed to practice under this Act, or who has applied for licensure or certification pursuant to this Act, to submit to a mental or physical examination, or both, as required by and at the expense of the Department. The examining physicians shall be those specifically designated by the Board. The Board or the Department may order the examining physician to present testimony concerning this mental or physical examination of the licensee or applicant. No information shall be excluded by reason of any common law or statutory privilege relating to communications between the licensee or applicant and the examining physician. The person to be examined may have, at his or her own expense, another physician of his or her choice present during all aspects of the examination. Failure of any person to submit to a mental or physical examination, when directed, shall be grounds for suspension of a license until the person submits to the examination if the Board finds, after notice and hearing, that the refusal to submit to the examination was without reasonable cause.
If the Board finds a person unable to practice because of the reasons set forth in this Section, the Board may require that person to submit to care, counseling, or treatment by physicians approved or designated by the Board, as a condition, term, or restriction for continued, reinstated, or renewed licensure to practice; or, in lieu of care, counseling or treatment, the Board may recommend to the Department to file a complaint to immediately suspend, revoke or otherwise discipline the license of the person. Any person whose license was granted, continued, reinstated, renewed, disciplined or supervised subject to such terms, conditions or restrictions, and who fails to comply with such terms, conditions, or restrictions, shall be referred to the Secretary for a determination as to whether the person shall have his or her license suspended immediately, pending a hearing by the Board.
In instances in which the Secretary immediately suspends a person's license under this Section, a hearing on that person's license must be convened by the Board within 30 days after the suspension and completed without appreciable delay. The Board shall have the authority to review the subject person's record of treatment and counseling regarding the impairment, to the extent permitted by applicable federal statutes and regulations safeguarding the confidentiality of medical records.
A person licensed under this Act and affected under this Section shall be afforded an opportunity to demonstrate to the Board that he or she can resume practice in compliance with acceptable and prevailing standards under the provisions of his or her license.
(Source: P.A. 95‑687, eff. 10‑23‑07.) |