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IL HB4495

IL HB4495
MEDICAID-MENTAL HEALTH CRISIS


summary

Introduced
01/20/2026
In Committee
02/11/2026
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead

Introduced Session

104th General Assembly

Bill Summary

Provides that the amendatory Act may be referred to as the Strengthen Linkage to Follow-Up Care after a Behavioral Health Crisis Act. Amends the Medical Assistance Article of the Illinois Public Aid Code. Provides that for purposes of timely linking an individual to follow-up mental health care immediately after a behavioral health crisis, when mobile crisis response services are provided to someone in a behavioral health crisis, the Illinois Medicaid-Crisis Assessment Tool approved by the Department of Healthcare and Family Services shall enable the delivery of community support services, medication monitoring, and other specified services when delivered by the same provider, for up to 30 days without beginning, performing, or completing an integrated assessment and treatment plan. Provides that such services shall be billed separate from mobile crisis response services. Prohibits the Department from imposing more stringent requirements on its Illinois Medicaid-Crisis Assessment Tool than those requirements that exist on the effective date of the amendatory Act, as long as the services provided are delivered under the supervision of a licensed practitioner of the healing arts. Requires the Department to file any rules necessary to implement the amendatory Act. Effective immediately.

AI Summary

This bill, also known as the Strengthen Linkage to Follow-Up Care after a Behavioral Health Crisis Act, aims to improve access to mental health services for individuals experiencing a crisis. It modifies the Illinois Public Aid Code to allow for a 30-day period where certain community support services, medication monitoring, and other specified treatments can be provided by the same provider immediately following a behavioral health crisis, without requiring a full integrated assessment and treatment plan to be completed first. This is intended to bridge the gap between immediate crisis response and ongoing care. These services will be billed separately from the initial mobile crisis response. The bill also prevents the Department of Healthcare and Family Services (DHFS) from imposing stricter requirements on its Illinois Medicaid-Crisis Assessment Tool than currently exist, as long as the services are supervised by a licensed healthcare professional. The DHFS is required to enact any necessary rules to implement these changes.

Committee Categories

Health and Social Services

Sponsors (4)

Last Action

Added Co-Sponsor Rep. Anna Moeller (on 03/02/2026)

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