Ill. Admin. Code tit. 77, § 245.40
a) Home Health Administrator or Agency Manager. The administrator or agency manager shall have the following responsibilities:
12) Provide and maintain an office with a working telephone that is staffed during the agency's business hours.
b) Home Health Aide
2) Duties of the home health aide may include:
3) For home health agencies, the supervising RN or appropriate therapist shall make a supervisory visit to the patient's residence at least every two weeks either when the home health aide is present to observe and assist, or when the home health aide is absent.
4) For home nursing agencies, the supervising RN shall make a supervisory visit to the client's residence at least every 60 days when the home health aide is present to observe and assist, or when the home health aide is absent.
c) Home Services or In-Home Services Worker
3) Duties of home services or in-home services workers may include the following:
4) To delineate the types of services that can be provided by a home services worker, the following are examples of acceptable tasks and also limitations when a more medical model of assistance would be needed to meet the higher needs of the client.
A) Skin Care. A home services worker may perform general skin care assistance. Except for the application of simple bandages as first aid, skin care may be performed by a home services worker only when skin is unbroken, and when any chronic skin problems are not active. The skin care provided by a home services worker shall be preventative rather than therapeutic in nature, and may include the application of non-medicated lotions and solutions, or of lotions and solutions not requiring a prescription from a health care professional. Skilled skin care shall be provided only by an agency licensed as a home health or home nursing services agency. Skilled skin care includes wound care, dressing changes, application of prescription medications, skilled observation and reporting.
B) Ambulation. A home services worker may assist clients with ambulation. Clients in the process of being trained to use adaptive equipment for ambulation, such as walkers, canes or wheelchairs, require supervision by an agency licensed to provide home health or home nursing services during the period of training. Once the prescribing health care professional or the health care provider responsible for training the client and/or home services worker is comfortable with releasing the client to work on the client's own with the adaptive equipment, a home services worker may assist with ambulation.
C) Bathing. A home services worker may assist clients with bathing. When a client has skilled skin care needs or skilled dressings that will need attention before, during, or after bathing, the client shall be in the care of an agency licensed as a home health agency or a home nursing agency to meet those specific needs. Home services workers may assist individuals in all types of bathing (e.g. tub, shower, sponge, bed) only when the following requirements are met:
D) Dressing. A home services worker may assist a client with dressing. This may include assistance with ordinary clothing and application of support stockings of the type that can be purchased without a prescription from a health care professional. A home services worker may not assist with applying an elastic bandage that can be purchased only with a prescription from a health care professional (the application of which involves wrapping a part of the client's body) or with applying a sequential compression device that can be purchased only with a prescription from a health care professional unless the following requirements are met:
F) Feeding. A home services worker may provide assistance with feeding. Home services workers can assist clients with feeding when the client can independently swallow and be positioned upright. Assistance by a home services worker does not include syringe, tube feedings, and intravenous nutrition. Whenever there is a high risk that the client may choke as a result of the feeding, the client shall be in the care of an agency licensed as a home health or home nursing agency to fulfill this function. The home services worker can assist the client by opening a pre-measured thickening product to be added to liquids as per client request and under direct client observation when the following requirements are met:
G) Hair Care. As a part of the broader set of services provided to clients who are receiving home services, home services workers may assist clients with the maintenance and appearance of their hair, including shampooing with a non-medicated shampoo, drying, combing, and styling. Home services workers may use a shampoo prescribed by the client's health care professional only if the following requirements are met:
I) Nail Care. A home services worker may assist with nail care. This assistance may include soaking of nails, pushing back cuticles without utensils, and filing nails. Assistance by a home services worker shall not include nail trimming. If a client has a medical condition that might involve peripheral circulatory problems or loss of sensation, a home services worker may file the client's nails only if the following requirements are met:
J) Positioning. A home services worker may assist a client with positioning when the client is able to identify to the personal care staff, either verbally, non-verbally or through others, when the position needs to be changed. For clients that are unable to identify when their position needs to be changed, a home services worker may assist with client position per subsection 245.210(d)(2) and as instructed by the service plan, only when skilled skin care, as previously described, is not required in conjunction with the positioning. Positioning may include simple alignment in a bed, wheelchair, or other furniture. A home services worker may assist a client with positioning only if the following requirements are met:
L) Toileting. A home services worker may assist a client to and from the bathroom; provide assistance with bed pans, urinals, and commodes; provide pericare; or change clothing and pads of any kind used for the care of incontinence.
M) Transfers. A home services worker may assist with transfers, transfers using adaptive equipment (e.g., wheelchairs, tub seats, and grab bars), transfers using safety equipment (e.g., gait belts), and transfers using a mechanical or electrical transfer device only when the client has sufficient balance and strength to reliably stand and pivot and assist with the transfer either directly or by providing ongoing feedback, including indications of potential harm or discomfort, to the home services worker through either verbal or non-verbal indications and cues, and the following conditions are met:
O) Respiratory Care. A home services worker shall not provide respiratory care except within the limitations as enumerated in this Section. Respiratory care is skilled personal care and includes postural drainage; cupping; adjusting oxygen flow within established parameters; nasal, endotracheal and tracheal suctioning; and turning off or changing tanks. However, a home services worker may temporarily remove and replace a cannula or mask from the client's face for the purposes of shaving or washing a client's face and may provide oral suctioning. A home services worker may assist the client with changing the oxygen delivery system from a stationary system to a portable system as directed by the client and the client's health care professional to enable client transport, or in emergency situations such as loss of electrical power in the client's home (stationary systems are electrically powered devices). For the purposes of this Section, a "stationary system" refers to an oxygen concentrator used for at-home oxygen therapy and is not intended to be fully mobile. For those home services workers that are assigned to clients who require continuous supplemental oxygen therapy, the home services worker may assist the client with changing of the delivery system from stationary to portable only when the following conditions are met:
5) In addition to the exclusions prescribed in subsection (c)(4), home services workers shall not act in the following capacities:
6) Supervision of a home services worker shall include the following (these provisions do not apply to placement agencies):
B) On-site supervision shall take place at a minimum of every 90 days or more often if the plan of service requires it. The supervisory visits may be made when the home services worker is present so that the supervisor may observe, or when the home services worker is absent so that the supervisor may assess relationships and determine whether the service plan is being met.
d) Licensed Practical Nurse
e) Social Worker. When medical social services are provided, the social worker or social work assistant under the supervision of a social worker shall provide the services in accordance with the plan of treatment. These services shall include the following:
8) Supervise the social work assistant, which shall include the following:
f) Occupational Therapist and Occupational Therapy Assistant. When occupational therapy services are required, an occupational therapist or an occupational therapy assistant under the supervision of an occupational therapist shall provide the services in accordance with the plan of treatment and within the licensee's scope of practice as established by the Illinois Occupational Therapy Practice Act. These services shall include the following:
3) Supervise the occupational therapy assistant, which shall include the following:
g) Physical Therapist and Physical Therapist Assistant
1) When physical therapy services are provided, a physical therapist or a physical therapist assistant under the supervision of a physical therapist shall provide the services in accordance with the plan of treatment and within the licensee's scope of practice as established by the Illinois Physical Therapy Act. These services shall include the following:
2) Supervision of the physical therapist assistant shall include the following:
3) The physical therapist assistant shall:
h) Registered Professional Nurse. The RN may perform selected acts in accordance with the Nurse Practice Act. Skilled nursing services shall be provided by an RN in accordance with the plan of treatment. The RN shall:
i) Speech-Language Pathologist. The speech-language pathologist may perform selected acts in accordance with the Illinois Speech-Language Pathology and Audiology Practice Act. When required, speech therapy services shall be provided by a speech-language pathologist in accordance with the plan of treatment. The speech-language pathologist shall:
j) Audiologist. The audiologist may perform selected acts in accordance with the Illinois Speech-Language Pathology and Audiology Practice Act. When audiology services are required, an audiologist shall provide the services in accordance with the plan of treatment. The audiologist shall:
k) Student Training Program. When an agency elects to participate with an educational institution to provide clinical experience for students as part of their health-related professional training, a written agreement between the agency and each educational institution shall specify the responsibilities of the agency and the educational institution. The agreement shall include, at a minimum, the following provisions:
(Source: Amended at 50 Ill. Reg. 2147, effective January 30, 2026)