Illinois Code § 225 ILCS 15/4.2

Prescribing psychologist license.
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(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2027)
 
Sec. 4.2. 
Prescribing psychologist license.
 
 
(a) A psychologist may apply to the Department for a prescribing psychologist license. The application shall be made on a form approved by the Department, include the payment of any required fees, and be accompanied by evidence satisfactory to the Department that the applicant:
 
 
(1) holds a current license to practice clinical 
 
psychology in Illinois;
 
 
(2) has successfully completed the following minimum 
 
educational and training requirements either during the doctoral program required for licensure under this Section or in an accredited undergraduate or master level program prior to or subsequent to the doctoral program required under this Section:
 
 
 
(A) specific minimum undergraduate biomedical 
 
 
prerequisite coursework, including, but not limited to: Medical Terminology (class or proficiency); Chemistry or Biochemistry with lab (2 semesters); Human Physiology (one semester); Human Anatomy (one semester); Anatomy and Physiology; Microbiology with lab (one semester); and General Biology for science majors or Cell and Molecular Biology (one semester);
 
 
 
(B) a minimum of 60 credit hours of didactic 
 
 
coursework, including, but not limited to: Pharmacology; Clinical Psychopharmacology; Clinical Anatomy and Integrated Science; Patient Evaluation; Advanced Physical Assessment; Research Methods; Advanced Pathophysiology; Diagnostic Methods; Problem Based Learning; and Clinical and Procedural Skills; and
 
 
 
(C) a full-time practicum of 14 months' 
 
 
supervised clinical training, including a research project; during the clinical rotation phase, students complete rotations in Emergency Medicine, Family Medicine, Geriatrics, Internal Medicine, Obstetrics and Gynecology, Pediatrics, Psychiatrics, Surgery, and one elective of the students' choice; program approval standards addressing faculty qualifications, regular competency evaluation and length of clinical rotations, and instructional settings, including, but not limited to, hospitals, medical centers, health care facilities located at federal and State prisons, hospital outpatient clinics, community mental health clinics, patient-centered medical homes or family-centered medical homes, women's medical health centers, and Federally Qualified Health Centers; the clinical training must meet the standards for:
 
 
 
 
(i) physician assistant education as defined 
 
 
 
by the Accreditation Review Commission on Education for the Physician Assistant;
 
 
 
 
(ii) advanced practice nurse education as 
 
 
 
defined by the Commission on Collegiate Nursing Education for the Advanced Nurse Practitioner or the Accreditation Commission for Education in Nursing for the Advanced Nurse Practitioner; or
 
 
 
 
(iii) medical education as defined by the 
 
 
 
Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education and shall be set by the Department by rule;
 
 
(3) has completed a National Certifying Exam, as 
 
determined by rule; and
 
 
(4) meets all other requirements for obtaining a 
 
prescribing psychologist license, as determined by rule.
 
(b) The Department may issue a prescribing psychologist license if it finds that the applicant has met the requirements of subsection (a) of this Section.
 
(c) A prescribing psychologist may only prescribe medication pursuant to the provisions of this Act if the prescribing psychologist:
 
 
(1) continues to hold a current license to practice 
 
psychology in Illinois;
 
 
(2) satisfies the continuing education requirements 
 
for prescribing psychologists, including 10 hours of continuing education annually in pharmacology from accredited providers; and
 
 
(3) maintains a written collaborative agreement with 
 
a collaborating physician pursuant to Section 4.3 of this Act. 

psychology in Illinois;
educational and training requirements either during the doctoral program required for licensure under this Section or in an accredited undergraduate or master level program prior to or subsequent to the doctoral program required under this Section:
prerequisite coursework, including, but not limited to: Medical Terminology (class or proficiency); Chemistry or Biochemistry with lab (2 semesters); Human Physiology (one semester); Human Anatomy (one semester); Anatomy and Physiology; Microbiology with lab (one semester); and General Biology for science majors or Cell and Molecular Biology (one semester);
coursework, including, but not limited to: Pharmacology; Clinical Psychopharmacology; Clinical Anatomy and Integrated Science; Patient Evaluation; Advanced Physical Assessment; Research Methods; Advanced Pathophysiology; Diagnostic Methods; Problem Based Learning; and Clinical and Procedural Skills; and
supervised clinical training, including a research project; during the clinical rotation phase, students complete rotations in Emergency Medicine, Family Medicine, Geriatrics, Internal Medicine, Obstetrics and Gynecology, Pediatrics, Psychiatrics, Surgery, and one elective of the students' choice; program approval standards addressing faculty qualifications, regular competency evaluation and length of clinical rotations, and instructional settings, including, but not limited to, hospitals, medical centers, health care facilities located at federal and State prisons, hospital outpatient clinics, community mental health clinics, patient-centered medical homes or family-centered medical homes, women's medical health centers, and Federally Qualified Health Centers; the clinical training must meet the standards for:
by the Accreditation Review Commission on Education for the Physician Assistant;
defined by the Commission on Collegiate Nursing Education for the Advanced Nurse Practitioner or the Accreditation Commission for Education in Nursing for the Advanced Nurse Practitioner; or
Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education and shall be set by the Department by rule;
determined by rule; and
prescribing psychologist license, as determined by rule.
psychology in Illinois;
for prescribing psychologists, including 10 hours of continuing education annually in pharmacology from accredited providers; and
a collaborating physician pursuant to Section 4.3 of this Act.

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