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			Illinois health facilities required 
			to allow support persons for person with disabilities  Send a link to a friend
 
            
            [September 11, 2020]  
             The Illinois Department of Public Health (IDPH) 
			released new guidance to help families support their loved ones with 
			developmental disabilities. Persons with disabilities can rely on 
			reasonable accommodations in Illinois hospitals during their 
			treatment, which is more important than ever during the COVID-19 
			pandemic. | 
        
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			 Friday’s announcement from IDPH clarifies and 
			strengthens a previously issued bulletin on non-discrimination in 
			health care. 
 Hospitals and health facilities should allow individuals with 
			intellectual and developmental disabilities (I/DD) to be accompanied 
			by a support person, such as a guardian, family member, caregiver, 
			or paid support worker during their time in the hospital.
 
 “It’s critical that individuals with intellectual and developmental 
			disabilities can effectively communicate with healthcare workers 
			when they are in hospital settings,” said IDHS Secretary Grace Hou. 
			“Although serious social distancing and other COVID-19 related 
			precautions are still in effect, people with disabilities deserve 
			access to excellent health care, which often requires a support 
			person.”
 
			
			 
			“This guidance brings protection for patients with disabilities and 
			their families during this critical time,” said Allison Stark, 
			Director of the Division of Developmental Disabilities at IDHS. “I 
			hope many people can now sleep a little bit easier knowing they have 
			this support in these uncertain times.” 
			Without effective communication between medical providers and people 
			with intellectual and developmental disabilities, medical providers 
			risk substituting misplaced assumptions and potential biases about 
			the person with a disability for verifiable information and medical 
			history. 
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            In addition, effective communication leads to better 
			transparency in process and protocols, which helps to ensure that 
			the medical provider and the person with a disability understand 
			each other and agree.
 The IDPH guidance asks hospitals to establish a protocol that allows 
			at least one support person to be present with any individual with 
			I/DD in a hospital emergency room and to accompany individuals 
			admitted to the hospital.
 
 For hospitalized patients, especially those with prolonged 
			hospitalizations, the individual or legal guardian should be allowed 
			to designate two different support people.
 
 The support person should always adhere to hospital policies and 
			wear a designated identification tag provided by the hospital. 
			Specifically, support persons must wear hospital-provided Personal 
			Protective Equipment, as directed, and comply with all hospital 
			infection control procedures.
 
            [Text from file received from
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