Ill. Admin. Code tit. 89, § 146.1025
a) Definitions
1) Sensory Disabilities
A) Visual Disabilities. The individual requires and receives specialized services due to a visual disability as defined in Section 146.1035(c)(2)(B)(i). Aids and appliances for individuals having such disabilities are limited to the following items with which facility staff can assist the individual:
B) Auditory Disabilities. The individual requires and receives specialized care due to an auditory disability as defined in Section 146.1035(c)(2)(B)(ii). Aids and appliances for individuals having such disabilities are limited to the following items with which facility staff can assist the individual:
iii) A hearing dog.
AGENCY NOTE: An individual's treatment might need to include being desensitized to tolerate the use of a hearing aid or assistive listening device to prevent the device from being rejected or destroyed.
2) Physical Disabilities. The individual requires and receives specialized care and training related to a physical disability which prevents or limits mobility. The individual becomes mobile when employing certain adaptive equipment. Aids, appliances and other adaptive equipment which promote mobility for individuals with physical disabilities are limited to the following devices which individuals can be taught to apply, or can be applied with assistance from facility staff:
G) Walker.
AGENCY NOTE: A physical disability is defined as a physical impairment which results in a functional disability, such as spasticity, poor muscle tone, paralysis, and absence of limbs. Eligibility under Physical Disabilities requires that the individual needs training in the use of a device or devices in order to achieve some level of independent mobility. An individual who is already independent in mobility and requires adaptive equipment does not qualify. This includes some individuals who are in training programs for deficits in gross or fine motor functioning, and some individuals who are not in such training programs.
c) Specialized Care, Level II. The individual is nonmobile, or mobile nonambulatory, requires mobility assistance, and requires services to meet high personal care needs. The individual may also have significant daily medical needs, and may have dual sensory disabilities (visual and auditory).
2) Medical Need
d) Specialized Care, Level III. The individual is typically nonmobile or mobile nonambulatory, but may be ambulatory, and requires services to meet high medical needs. High medical needs means one or more of the following:
1) The individual requires and receives intermittent catheterization more than twice a day.
2) The individual requires and receives respiratory care which includes: tracheostomy care, positive pressure breathing treatments, aerosol therapy, postural drainage with percussion, vibration or suctioning.
4) The individual requires and receives wound care, having been admitted to the facility with a stage III or IV decubitus ulcer, or has deep wounds, infected wounds, extensive burns or extensive lesions requiring treatment in the form of medications, dressings, whirlpool, ultraviolet light or irrigations.
5) The individual requires and receives intensive physical habilitation due to a functional deficit (as determined by physical or psychological causes).
C) When staff is meeting functional and service needs of an individual, that time should be used for priority objective/goal attainment. For example, when the individual has been repositioned, staff stimulation should occur, or the individual is ambulated with assistance to the bathroom or the dining room rather than taken in a wheelchair.
AGENCY NOTE: Range of motion to all extremities as indicated in the IPP should be incorporated into the individual's daily routine/programs (dressing, bathing, feeding, etc.).
These specialized services refer to three categories (Levels) of care which some individuals must receive, fully or in part, in order to attain physical health and development. The delivery of specialized care in accordance with an individual's needs, as determined by the IDT's assessment, enables the individual to participate in the individual program plan (IPP) and be supported toward greater independence. Additional reimbursement is paid for an individual who needs and receives services for health and sensory disabilities (Section 146.1035(c)(2)), when those services meet the criteria under subsections (b), (c) or (d).
(Source: Added at 47 Ill. Reg. 18051, effective November 21, 2023)