Ill. Admin. Code tit. 77, § 797.400 - Operational Requirements
a) It
shall be unlawful for any person to perform body art procedures unless such
procedures are performed in a body art establishment with a current certificate
of registration.
b) A body
artist/apprentice shall be a minimum of 18 years of age.
c) Eating or drinking by anyone other than a
client is prohibited in the area where body art is performed.
d) Smoking is prohibited in the body art
establishment.
e) Body art
procedures must not be performed, without medical clearance, on skin surfaces
where sunburn, rash, acne, infection, open lesions, or other questionable skin
lesions exist and must not be performed on any person who is impaired by drugs
or alcohol. (Section 27 of Act) Medical clearance must be in the form of a
written and signed statement by a physician.
f) The body artists/apprentice shall maintain
a high degree of personal cleanliness, conform to good hygienic practices, and
wear clean clothes when performing body art procedures. Before performing body
art procedures, body artists/apprentices shall thoroughly wash their hands for
a minimum of 20 seconds in tempered running water with liquid soap, then rinse
hands and dry with disposable paper towels. This shall be done as often as
necessary to remove contaminants.
g) In performing body art procedures, the
body artist/apprentice shall wear single-use medical grade gloves. Gloves shall
be changed if they become contaminated by contact with any non-clean surfaces
or objects or by contact with a third person. The gloves shall be discarded, at
a minimum, after the completion of each procedure on an individual client, and
hands shall be washed before the next pair of gloves is donned. Under no
circumstances shall a single pair of gloves be used on more than one person.
The use of single-use, medical grade gloves does not preclude or substitute for
hand-washing procedures as part of a good personal hygiene program.
h) If, while performing a body art procedure,
the body artist's/apprentice's glove is pierced, torn or otherwise compromised,
the procedure in subsection (f) shall be repeated immediately. The contaminated
gloves shall be immediately discarded, and the hands washed thoroughly (see
subsection (e)) before a fresh pair of gloves is applied. Any item or
instrument used for body art that is contaminated during the procedure shall be
replaced immediately with a new disposable item or a new sterilized instrument
or item before the procedure resumes.
i) Regulated waste that may release liquid
blood or body fluids when compressed, or may release dried blood or body fluids
when handled, shall be placed in an approved bag marked with the international
biohazard symbol. The regulated waste shall then be disposed of in compliance
with
29 CFR
1910.1030. Sharps ready for disposal shall be
disposed of in approved sharps disposal containers. Storage of regulated waste
on site shall comply with the regulations in
29 CFR
1910.1030, and storage of regulated waste
awaiting pick-up shall not exceed 30 days.
j) Waste that does not release liquid blood
or body fluids when compressed or does not release dried blood or body fluids
when handled may be placed in a covered receptacle and disposed of through
normal disposal methods.
k) No
person shall perform any tattoo procedure upon a person under the age of 18
years that is prohibited by Sections 12-10 through 12-10.2(c) of the Criminal
Code of 1961. Age verification shall be obtained by government issued
identification containing a birth date and photograph. In any procedure other
than tattooing, the parent or legal guardian shall sign a consent form in the
presence of an operator/body artist. The consent form shall indicate that the
parent or legal guardian has read and understood the disclosure warning
statement required under Section
797.600(c).
l) Before the oral cavity of a person under
18 years of age may be pierced, the written consent form signed by the parent
or legal guardian must contain a provision in substantially the following form:
I understand that the oral piercing of the tongue, lips, cheeks, or any other area of the oral cavity carries serious risk of infection or damage to the mouth and teeth, or both infection and damage to those areas, that could result in but is not limited to nerve damage, numbness, and life threatening blood clots. (Section 12-10.1 of the Criminal Code of 1961)
m) Any skin or mucosal surface
that is to receive a body art procedure shall be free of rash, irritation or
any visible infection.
n) No body
artist/apprentice affected with boils, infected wounds, open sores, abrasions,
weeping dermatological lesions or acute respiratory infection, possibly
manifested by fever, chills and/or a chronic productive cough, shall work in
any area of a body art establishment in any capacity in which that person could
contaminate body art equipment, supplies or working surfaces with body
substances or pathogenic organisms.
o) Any body artist can refuse service to any
individual, at any time, and for any reason.
Notes
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