Per Diem Paid to States for Care of Eligible Veterans in State Homes, 61250-61286 [2018-25115]
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Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 229 / Wednesday, November 28, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS
AFFAIRS
38 CFR Parts 17, 51, and 52
RIN 2900–AO88
Per Diem Paid to States for Care of
Eligible Veterans in State Homes
Department of Veterans Affairs.
Final rule.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
This rulemaking adopts as
final, with changes, proposed
amendments to VA’s regulations
governing payment of per diem to States
for nursing home care, domiciliary care,
and adult day health care for eligible
veterans in State homes. This
rulemaking reorganizes, updates, and
clarifies State home regulations,
authorizes greater flexibility in adult
day health care programs, and
establishes regulations regarding
domiciliary care, with clarifications
regarding the care that State homes must
provide to veterans in domiciliaries.
DATES: This rule is effective on
December 28, 2018.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Dr. George F. Fuller, Chief Consultant,
Geriatrics and Extended Care Services
(10NC4), Veterans Health
Administration, 810 Vermont Avenue
NW, Washington, DC 20420, (202) 461–
6750. (This is not a toll-free number.)
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: On June
17, 2015, VA proposed changes to parts
17, 51, and 52 of title 38 Code of Federal
Regulations. 80 FR 34794. VA published
technical corrections to the proposed
rulemaking on June 24, 2015, 80 FR
36305. This final rule amends part 17 by
deleting provisions that applied to State
home hospitals, because there no longer
are any, and moving to part 51 the other
provisions that apply to State homes,
including State home domiciliary care
programs. It revises part 51 subparts A,
B, and C to eliminate redundancy in the
regulations governing the payment of
per diem to State home nursing home,
domiciliary, and adult day health care
programs by combining similar
regulations from part 17 and part 52. It
amends several sections of the nursing
home regulations in part 51 subpart D,
and adds subparts E and F on
domiciliary care and adult day health
care, respectively, to part 51. Because of
that, this rule eliminates the State home
regulations from part 17 and part 52,
and combines in part 51 all the
regulations for a State home to establish
and maintain qualification for receipt of
VA per diem payments.
We invited interested parties to
submit written comments on the
SUMMARY:
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proposed rule on or before August 17,
2015, and we received 32 public
comments. Several commenters
commended and supported revisions
that reorganize, update, and clarify the
regulations, particularly those that
increase the State homes’ ability to
emphasize the independence of adult
day health care participants. VA thanks
these commenters for their support of
the rule. We have responded to the rest
of the comments recommending
changes to the proposed rule under the
heading of the sections with which the
commenters expressed concern.
Technical Correction
The notice of proposed rulemaking
proposed to amend 38 CFR part 51
under the part heading, ‘‘PART 51—PER
DIEM FOR NURSING HOME,
DOMICILIARY, OR ADULT DAY
HEALTH CARE OF VETERANS IN
STATE HOMES.’’ The correct heading
of part 51 until this rulemaking becomes
final is, ‘‘PER DIEM FOR NURSING
HOME CARE OF VETERANS IN STATE
HOMES.’’ The notice of proposed
rulemaking neglected to include
amendatory language proposing to
change the heading of part 51. We are
correcting this omission by adding that
amendatory language and the revised
heading of part 51 below as amendatory
action 3. We have renumbered all
subsequent amendatory instructions
accordingly.
Subpart A—General
51.1
Purpose and Scope of Part 51
We have changed ‘‘rules’’ to
‘‘requirements’’ in the sentence of § 51.1
beginning, ‘‘Subpart C sets forth
requirements governing . . . .’’ The
term ‘‘rule’’ is commonly used as a
synonym for ‘‘regulation’’ in federal
rulemaking, as in the ACTION heading
of this rulemaking. Avoiding its use in
the text of a regulation eliminates a
possible point of confusion. The term
‘‘requirements’’ better describes the
function and scope of the regulations in
subpart C of part 51.
51.2
Definitions
VA received comments related to the
definition of domiciliary care, and
concerns that the proposed definition,
in addition to the standards in subpart
E of the proposed regulations imposing
the entire nursing home program
regulations on the domiciliary care
program, would impose unnecessary
and costly burdens on domiciliary
programs that are inconsistent with
their purpose and that would replicate
nursing home care. Several commenters
stated some States may have to close
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their domiciliary programs because of
these costs. A commenter said that VA’s
proposed definition of ‘‘domiciliary
care’’ needs to be clearer for the State
homes to tell whether their programs fit
the definition. Similarly, others said
that States need a clearer definition of
what domiciliary care is to know
whether the per diem rate for that care
will sustain their programs.
VA agrees that the application of
whole regulations governing the nursing
home care program to the domiciliary
care program, as proposed §§ 51.300 and
51.350 would have done, would be
excessively burdensome. We have
revised those sections to eliminate the
application of multiple nursing home
provisions to the domiciliary care
program. We discuss each change from
the proposed rule in the discussion of
§§ 51.300 and 51.350 below.
VA agrees that the definition of
domiciliary care in proposed § 51.2
requires clarification. We have,
therefore, added to it a description of
what constitutes ‘‘necessary medical
services’’ for purposes of State home
domiciliary care, which are the services
described in subpart E of this
rulemaking. This updated definition,
along with the revisions to the proposed
domiciliary care requirements under
subpart E of this rule, described in
detail below, allows a user to tell
whether a State home program fits the
definition of domiciliary care.
A commenter said VA may need to
clarify the definition of domiciliary care
regarding whether domiciliary care is a
temporary or permanent living
arrangement so State homes could
assess whether their programs meet the
definition. The commenter said that
State home domiciliaries offer different
types of programs, including retirement,
independent living, transitional care, or
permanent care programs. VA received
other comments raising similar concerns
about State homes’ abilities to provide
transitional care in domiciliaries under
the proposed rules.
VA declines to change the definition
of domiciliary care to differentiate
between temporary and permanent
services. We believe the revised
definition provides necessary guidance,
and also provides flexibility so that
State homes can operate many
variations of domiciliary care within the
definition, including transitional
services, as long as the State home
meets VA’s standards for per diem
payment while the resident resides in
the home. The changes to the definition
of domiciliary care in § 51.2 and to the
domiciliary requirements in subpart E of
this rulemaking should resolve the
issues raised by this comment. We
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therefore make no changes based on
these comments.
Although not defined in this section,
we noticed the terms ‘‘treatment plan,’’
‘‘care plan,’’ and ‘‘plan of care’’ are used
inconsistently throughout the proposed
regulations to refer to the same thing:
The regimen of care based on a
comprehensive assessment that is
offered in all State home programs of
care. We changed all instances of these
terms to ‘‘comprehensive care plan,’’
which is also consistent with the
regulations in part 51 that are not
changed by this final rule.
We are also removing ‘‘primary
physician’’ from the definition proposed
as ‘‘primary physician or primary care
physician,’’ and changing all references
to ‘‘primary physician’’ to ‘‘primary care
physician’’ throughout part 51.
Proposed part 51 had used each about
the same number of times. Though they
mean the same thing, we think this part
would be clearer if the definition
defines a single term and uses that term
consistently.
Subpart B—Obtaining Recognition and
Certification for per Diem Payments
51.20
Recognition of a State Home
In §§ 51.20 and 51.30 of the proposed
rule, we used some terms that make
sense applied to residential programs—
nursing home and domiciliary—that do
not make sense applied to adult day
health care programs. For example,
‘‘beds’’ is a useful term when referring
to the number of residents in a nursing
home care program or a domiciliary care
program, but not when referring to the
number of participants in an adult day
health care program, which has no
overnight operations. We have, therefore
revised §§ 51.20 and 51.30 to speak of
‘‘capacity’’ of a program or facility,
rather than of ‘‘beds.’’
We are changing proposed § 51.20(b)
to explicitly include applicable
requirements in subpart C in the list of
requirements and standards that VA
may evaluate in a survey of the State
home. Subpart C contains requirements
regarding eligibility, payment rates, and
payment procedures that apply to State
home programs of care. We do not
consider this a substantive change,
because State homes would clearly need
to comply with subpart C under the
proposed rule. This change makes
§ 51.20(b) complete regarding the scope
of surveys.
We are clarifying proposed
§ 51.20(b)(3)(ii). As proposed, the
paragraph provided for the State home
to respond to a medical center director’s
recommendation to the Under Secretary
for Health to not recognize a state home
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and to submit additional evidence with
that response. The paragraph neglected
to identify to whom the State home is
to submit the response or additional
evidence. We are adding language to the
end of § 51.20(b)(3)(ii) providing that
the State’s submission of a response to
a recommendation to not recognize a
State home is to the Under Secretary for
Health. This is consistent with current
§ 51.30(d), which provides for appeal
from a recommendation against
recognition, and inclusion of additional
material with that appeal. This is not a
change from the current regulation; it
merely fills a gap in the proposed
regulation.
We are further clarifying paragraph
(b)(3)(ii) and multiple other proposed
provisions of part 51 that measure time
by qualifying the 30 days as ‘‘calendar’’
days. As proposed, part 51
inconsistently qualified the measure of
time. We believe this inconsistency
invites confusion. Qualifying time in
calendar days generally provides
certainty to the time allowed in
provisions that prescribe deadlines.
There are three exceptions in part 51
that measure time in ‘‘working’’ days.
These codify long-standing practice
with which VA and the State homes are
accustomed. These are
§§ 51.30(d)(1)(iii), time to provide a
corrective action plan; 51.320(a)(4), time
for a domiciliary care program to report
a sentinel event; and 51.430(a)(3), time
for an adult day health care program to
report a sentinel event.
We are clarifying proposed § 51.20(c).
As proposed, the paragraph provided,
‘‘After receipt of a recommendation
from the Director, the Undersecretary
for Health will award or deny
recognition based on all available
evidence.’’ Though it seems implicit,
the proposed regulation does not
explicitly say that ‘‘all available
evidence’’ included any evidence the
State home submits during the 30
calendar days the preceding paragraph
allows for submission of a response or
additional evidence. To make the
regulation explicit, we are adding to
paragraph (c), following ‘‘Director,’’ the
following: ‘‘and allowing 30 calendar
days for the state to respond to the
recommendation and to submit
evidence . . .’’ As revised, the sentence
reads, ‘‘After receipt of a
recommendation from the Director, and
allowing 30 calendar days for the state
to respond to the recommendation and
to submit evidence, the Under Secretary
for Health will award or deny
recognition based on all available
evidence.’’ We are also adding ‘‘in
writing’’ at the end of the second
sentence of paragraph (c) because the
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current regulation, § 51.30(e), requires
the Under Secretary’s decision to be
written. We omitted this requirement
from the proposed regulation.
We are removing the second sentence
of proposed § 51.20(d)(2), which
provided that changes in the use of
particular beds between recognized
programs of care and increases in
capacity that are not the result of the
expansion of the size of a home or
relocation to a new facility will not
require recognition. Those changes are
the subject of § 51.30. We are adding ‘‘or
capacity’’ following ‘‘size’’ in the
remaining sentence of this paragraph to
be clear that a recognized state home
only needs a new recognition if there is
an expansion in the physical size of the
home, increased in the number of
persons served, or relocation to a new
facility. So, we do not need to explain
in § 51.20 that the section on
certification, § 51.30, addresses any
changes that do not involve such an
expansion or relocation. This is not a
substantive change.
51.30 Certification of a State Home
In § 51.30(a) and throughout part 51
wherever proposed, we are changing
‘‘within’’ as it pertains to numbers of
days to ‘‘no later than.’’ We believe one
can be unsure whether ‘‘within’’
includes or excludes the last day of the
period. ‘‘No later than’’ more clearly
includes the last day of the period. If the
regulation provides, as in § 51.30(a) for
example, that something be done no
later than 450 days after an event one
can be sure on day 451 the deadline has
been missed.
VA is eliminating from proposed
§ 51.30(c) the provisions that would
have allowed precertification when
State homes switch capacity between
programs of care or increase capacity in
a program of care. On further
consideration, we have determined that
the regular surveys described in
paragraph (b) of this section are frequent
enough, and the provisional
certification process holds the State
homes accountable enough, that the
precertification process adds complexity
with little benefit. Deleting it eliminates
an administrative burden on the State
homes and on VA. We are, therefore,
deleting the precertification provisions
in proposed § 51.30(c)(1).
One commenter applauded proposed
§ 51.30(c)(2), which eliminated the
requirement that VA perform a new
survey of a program upon reduction of
the capacity of that program. We have
retained this provision, but have
redesignated it as § 51.30(c). For
administrative convenience, in this final
rule we have changed the destination to
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which the State home must send its
report regarding decreases in capacity to
the Office of Geriatrics and Extended
Care in VA Central Office, from the
Director of the VAMC of jurisdiction, as
proposed, which will keep the
regulations consistent with longstanding
practice.
VA is clarifying the function and
purpose of the provisional certification
provisions of proposed paragraph (d)(1).
The paragraph serves two purposes: (1)
To allow the State home to receive per
diem payments while correcting
deficiencies a survey reveals, and (2) to
ensure VA does not pay per diem if a
survey reveals a deficiency that is an
immediate hazard to health or safety so
great, and the need to remediate so
urgent, it is unreasonable to continue
per diem payments during the time
until the next survey.
Specifically, VA is amending
proposed § 51.30(d)(1)(ii), which would
not allow VA to grant a provisional
certification if the State home is
deficient in a standard that would
jeopardize the health or safety of any
resident or participant. Because almost
all of the standards in these regulations
are aimed at promoting the health and
safety of State home residents and
participants, the regulation as proposed
would prevent VA from issuing most
provisional certifications, frustrating the
purpose of provisional certifications.
Though some commenters favored
imposing the strictest possible State
home compliance with all regulations,
VA believes a provisional certification
scheme resulting in frequent denial of
provisional certification is not in the
best interest of State home residents.
Consequently, we clarify that the
deficiencies for which VA will grant
provisional certification are only those
that will not jeopardize the health and
safety of Veterans before the State home
can remedy them. We are, therefore,
adding the word ‘‘immediately’’ so that
this provision reads, ‘‘None of these
deficiencies immediately jeopardize the
health or safety of any resident or
participant.’’
VA is eliminating the provisions that
were proposed as § 51.30(d)(3), which
detailed how VA would issue additional
provisional certifications to a State
home that already received a
provisional certification. VA has
determined that the proposed procedure
is inconsistent with VA’s practices of
working with State homes on corrective
action plans to ensure the programs are
brought into compliance with these
regulations under one provisional
certification. The provisional
certification procedures in this final rule
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are complete without that proposed
provision.
51.31 Surveys for Recognition and/or
Certification
We have changed proposed
§ 51.31(b)(1). We proposed, as a
requirement for VA to conduct a
recognition survey, that a State home
nursing home care program or
domiciliary care program must have at
least 21 residents or have a number of
residents consisting of at least 50
percent of the resident capacity of the
home. We have reduced the residency
number requirement from 21 to 20,
while keeping the 50 percent
alternative. We are making this change
to facilitate recognition of homes using
the small house model which is based
on facilities of 20 beds.
We have removed ‘‘the Assistant
Deputy Under Secretary for Health
(10N);’’ from the list in paragraph (c) of
persons the director of the VA medical
center of jurisdiction must notify upon
finding an immediate threat to safety in
a State home. Through reorganization,
Veterans Health Administration no
longer has an officer with exactly that
title. The other listed VA offices are
sufficient to accomplish the necessary
oversight of State homes. Consequently,
we remove the named VA officer
without substitution of another.
Subpart C—Requirements Applicable to
Eligibility, Rates, and Payments
We are revising the proposed heading
of subpart C by inserting ‘‘Requirements
Applicable to’’ before ‘‘Eligibility, Rates,
and Payments’’, to read, ‘‘Subpart C—
Requirements Applicable to Eligibility,
Rates, and Payments’’. As revised, the
heading describes the function and
scope of subpart C better than the
proposed heading.
51.40 Basic per Diem Rates
In proposed subpart F, VA proposed
changes to requirements for State home
adult day health care to reduce the
requirements for medical supervision in
the programs. VA received comments
that VA should establish a two-tier per
diem payment system for adult day
healthcare programs under § 51.40(a)
because of the higher cost of providing
medical supervision and the lower cost
of programs that do not. The
commenters said that failure to provide
separate rates for programs that offer
medical supervision and for those that
do not will negatively affect State homes
providing adult day health care services
with medical supervision and the
veterans these programs serve. They
noted the current medical supervision
style of programs has a significant track
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record of keeping veterans out of
hospital emergency rooms and
hospitalizations; they care for veterans
who would otherwise be
institutionalized in a nursing home.
We explained in the proposed rule
that VA would not pay different rates of
per diem to State home adult day health
care programs that provide medical
supervision than to those that do not.
We proposed to expand the definition of
adult day health care, which had
previously allowed only for the medical
model of care, to afford State homes the
flexibility to offer a social model of care,
and thereby expand availability of adult
day health care to more Veterans
throughout the country. Though a State
home may still choose to provide
medical supervision, and must meet the
standards in § 51.445 if it does, the
method for calculating per diem
payments will remain the same
regardless of the type of care provided.
If the veteran needs more medical care
than the adult day health care program
can provide, the State home must
transfer the veteran to another
appropriate care program. Even if VA
were to implement, under 38 U.S.C.
1741, different rates for adult day health
care programs that provide the medical
model of care, the payment would still
be subject to the statutory limit of no
more than one half of the cost of the
veteran’s care. 38 U.S.C. 1741(b). We
point this out on the assumption that
the commenter is seeking a payment tier
that provides higher payments for
medical model participants than the
current per diem payment, and not a
lower payment tier for social model
adult day health care participants.
Because the statute describes the
maximum basic per diem payment as a
percentage of the cost of care, and
because we see no value in tiered
payments merely for the sake of tiering,
we make no change based on this
comment.
We note that since the publication of
VA’s proposed rule in June 2015, the
President signed into law the State
Veterans Home Adult Day Health Care
Improvement Act of 2017. VA is
working to implement this new
authority; if any further revisions in
these regulations are needed because of
this recently enacted legislation, VA
will make them through subsequent
rulemaking.
Another commenter addressed the
cost of providing ‘‘primary care, medical
services, and preventative care to
domiciliary residents while restricting
the payments to ‘less than one half of
the cost of care’ ’’ as inequitable and
unrealistic. The commenter asserted the
current reimbursement structure does
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not always cover the cost of the required
care, and that the proposed new
regulations would introduce more
bureaucracy and ‘‘paper work’’ costs
and shift the cost and much of the
responsibility for the health care of
domiciliary veterans from VA to the
State homes.
By law, the basic per diem rate cannot
exceed one-half the cost of the veteran’s
care in the State home. As such, per
diem payments are not intended to
serve as a reimbursement for all the
costs of the care provided to veterans.
We make no change based on this
comment.
The per diem program does not shift
costs of care or the responsibility for
providing health care from VA to the
State homes. Domiciliary care has long
included all ‘‘necessary medical
services’’ which essentially includes all
outpatient care. See § 17.30(b). So, by
limiting the care that State home
domiciliaries are required to provide,
this rule could be seen as shifting the
cost and responsibility for most medical
services to VA. Regarding additional
bureaucratic paper-work costs due to
this rulemaking, the commenter did not
identify any specific provisions that
would have that effect. We refer the
commenter to the discussions
throughout this supplementary
information describing multiple changes
from the proposed rules this final rule
makes to reduce administrative and
other costs. For example, see the
discussion of changes from proposed
§ 51.300. We make no change based on
this comment.
The same commenter expressed
difficulty keeping track of the services
covered by the different per diem
payments. The commenter expressed
the desire that VA publish a
comprehensive list of services covered
by the nursing home, domiciliary, and
adult day care per diem payments for
veterans with service-connected
disabilities rated 70 percent or 100
percent disabling.
Per diem under 38 U.S.C. 1741 is paid
under a VA grant program. VA makes
the payments to the States to support
the care of veterans in State homes; it is
not ‘‘coverage’’ for specific services, like
insurance. The States must meet certain
standards as a condition of receiving VA
per diem to ensure the State home
provides for the health, safety, and wellbeing of veterans in its care. The rate of
per diem paid for the nursing home care
of veterans with service-connected
disabilities rated 70 percent or more is
the subject of § 51.41, Contracts and
provider agreements for certain veterans
with service-connected disabilities. VA
published a notice of proposed rule;
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correction and clarification, 80 FR
36305 (June 24, 2015), acknowledging
that VA omitted § 51.41 from the initial
notice of proposed rulemaking
proposing the rules this rulemaking
finalizes. The notice of correction stated
VA is not amending § 51.41 in this
rulemaking, consequently comments
based on it are beyond the scope of this
rulemaking. We make no changes based
on this comment.
Commenters objected that VA
proposed to apply the same rule to
payment of per diem for veterans absent
from State home domiciliaries as it
applies to payment of per diem for
veterans absent from State home nursing
homes. As proposed, § 51.40(c) would
allow VA to pay per diem for a day
without an overnight stay if the State
home domiciliary had an occupancy of
rate of 90 percent or greater on that day.
The per diem payments would be
limited to the first 10 consecutive days
the veteran was admitted to any hospital
and the first 12 days in a calendar year
for absences other than for the purpose
of receiving hospital care. Specifically,
the commenters objected to the
requirement that the State home
domiciliary care program be filled to 90
percent of capacity before VA will pay
per diem for a veteran’s absence. One
comment said the requirement would
have a major financial impact on State
home domiciliaries, and that the limit
for payments of 12 days in a calendar
year for absences other than for hospital
care would adversely affect the
residents’ quality of life. One
commenter requested VA allow 24 days
of leave other than for hospital care,
arguing this would be good for the
resident and consistent with the
capacity for independence of
domiciliary residents. Another asserted
the regulation was vague as proposed
and needed clarification. The
commenter noted the proposed
regulation omitted the ‘‘original’’
requirement that a resident not be
absent from a State Home for more than
96 consecutive hours for the Home to
receive per diem for that veteran, but
the proposed section now states that per
diem will be paid only for a veteran
who has an overnight stay, or if the
State Home has an occupancy rate of 90
percent or greater on that day. This
commenter pointed out that domiciliary
residents are independent and may
choose to spend time away from the
State home, which needs to guarantee
their accommodations will be available
when they return and should be
reimbursed for that. These commenters
said VA should continue the ‘‘96-hour’’
rule for payment of per diem during
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absences from the domiciliary for
reasons other than hospitalization.
VA agrees that domiciliary residents
require a different level of care and have
more independence than nursing home
residents, and imposing the same
requirements for absences would
impose an unfair burden on
domiciliaries. State home domiciliary
care programs are typically below 90
percent of capacity, but VA nonetheless
believes that it is important to pay per
diem during short absences to ensure
that veterans who choose to take brief
absences do not lose their spaces in
State home domiciliaries. We agree that
the 12-day cumulative absence rule is
impracticable and overly burdensome
for domiciliary care programs for the
same reasons. In fact, even a 24-day
rule, as one commenter requested,
would allow less time away per year
than the 96-hour rule some commenters
recommended. Consequently, we are
removing both the 90 percent and the
12-day requirements from the final rule.
We are instead codifying the 96-hour
rule for absences from domiciliaries in
§ 51.40(c), as it is currently in VHA
Directive 1601SH.01. Under this rule,
VA will pay per diem for any absence
from the domiciliary of 96 or fewer
consecutive hours, unless the absence is
for hospital care at VA expense. VA will
not pay per diem for any absence that
lasts longer than 96 hours.
To effect these changes, we are
revising the paragraph into two
paragraphs: (c)(1), ‘‘Nursing homes’’ and
(c)(2), ‘‘Domiciliaries.’’
51.41 Contracts and Provider
Agreements for Certain Veterans With
Service-Connected Disabilities
As published in a notice of correction
and clarification, 80 CFR 36305 (June
24, 2015), this rulemaking as proposed
inadvertently omitted instructions for
§ 51.41. VA did not intend to propose
any changes to that section, and we
make none in this rulemaking. We have
provided amendatory language for
subpart C to ensure inclusion of § 51.41
in 38 CFR part 51, and have added
§ 51.41 to the table of contents.
51.42 Payment Procedures
As proposed, § 51.42(a) read as a 147word sentence. We have revised it to
read as three sentences for clarity. We
have also revised the proposed note to
paragraph (a)(1)(i), redesignated ‘‘Note
1,’’ to clarify who must complete the
financial disclosure and that adult day
health care participants are not to
complete the financial disclosure, but
they must sign the form to acknowledge
financial responsibility. As revised, the
note also makes clear that VA will reject
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the form as incomplete if submitted
without the required signature.
VA had proposed expanding the
deadline for VA to receive the forms
from the State home identified in this
section from 10 days to 12 days. The
statute only allows 10 days, and we
have no authority to allow a longer time.
38 U.S.C. 1743. VA will therefore
maintain the 10-day deadline in this
final rule by changing 12 to 10 in
paragraph (b)(3) of this section. As
discussed above, we are qualifying the
time as 10 ‘‘calendar’’ days and defining
the time limit as ‘‘no later than,’’ rather
than ‘‘within’’ as proposed, and adding
‘‘after care began’’, consistent with the
statute. We have also made minor
technical edits to this section. We have
changed the heading of paragraph (b)(2)
of this section by deleting ‘‘or
precertified,’’ because, as described
above, § 51.30(c) will not establish a
precertification procedure. We have
deleted the first sentence of paragraph
(b)(2) of this section for the same reason.
51.51 Eligible Veterans—Domiciliary
Care
One commenter said that proposed
§ 51.51(b)(7) is ambiguous in requiring
that a veteran must be able to ‘‘[s]hare
in some measure, however slight, in the
maintenance and operation of the State
home’’ to be eligible for VA per diem
payments, and this provision could
violate the protection from involuntary
servitude of the thirteenth amendment
of the U.S. Constitution.
We disagree with the assertion that
paragraph (b)(7) compels involuntary
servitude. Residency in the State home
domiciliary care program is itself
voluntary. Any resident may leave.
Paragraph (b)(7) describes an ability
that, with the other eligibility criteria,
ensures the enrollees on whose behalf
VA pays per diem are appropriately in
a domiciliary care program, and that VA
pays the State home domiciliary care
per diem only for such residents.
Moreover, under revised § 51.310(c), the
veteran is consulted and must agree to
the work arrangement described in his
or her comprehensive care plan, and
§ 51.300(b) requires that the resident be
paid for work that the State home would
need to pay others to perform. Together
these provisions protect residents from
involuntary servitude and from a State
home otherwise taking unfair advantage
of the resident through its work
program.
Based on this comment, however, we
are revising paragraph (b)(7) to read,
‘‘Participate in some measure, however
slight, in work assignments that support
the maintenance and operation of the
State home.’’ This makes clear the
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eligibility criteria include the ability to
personally participate in the
maintenance and operation of the State
home. The addition also harmonizes
this eligibility criterion with the role of
resident work in the domiciliary care
program as prescribed in §§ 51.300 and
51.310. The specific work the resident
chooses will be by agreement with the
interdisciplinary team that develops the
resident’s comprehensive care plan, and
the resident will be paid a competitive
wage if the facility would otherwise pay
a non-resident for such work. There is
flexibility in how this may be
implemented, as reflected in
§§ 51.300(b) on residents’ rights and
behavior and 51.310(c) on
comprehensive care plans, respectively.
Multiple commenters commented the
State home should pay residents for
work. Another objected to application
through proposed § 51.300 of the
nursing home regulation, § 51.70(h)(1),
permitting a resident to refuse to work.
This commenter asserted the State home
should require each resident to work. In
consideration of these comments we are
revising proposed § 51.300 to require
each resident’s comprehensive care plan
to specify whether a resident’s work for
the domiciliary is paid or unpaid.
51.52 Eligible Veterans—Adult Day
Health Care
We have made non-substantive
technical revisions to paragraph
§ 51.52(d)(3)(ii). As proposed, this
provision may have been interpreted as
requiring a minimum of 24 visits, 12
outpatient and 12 emergency, to be
considered as a high user of medical
services and thereby establish eligibility
for adult day health care per diem
payments. We intended 12 visits total,
whether outpatient, emergency, or some
combination, and have changed the
provision in this final rulemaking to
clarify that.
51.58 Requirements and Standards
Applicable for Payment of per Diem
We are changing the heading of
§ 51.58, as shown, consistent with the
changed heading of subpart C, discussed
above, and other references to subpart C
in this part. Similar to the change
described above in § 51.20(b), we are
changing proposed § 51.58 to make
explicit in the introduction that State
homes must meet the requirements of
subpart C to receive per diem payments.
Subpart C contains the eligibility
requirements, payment rates, and
payment procedures that apply to all
State home programs of care. Although
we do not consider this a substantive
change, because the provisions of
subpart C clearly apply to State homes
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receiving per diem, § 51.58 would be
incomplete without it.
51.140 Dietary Services
This rulemaking makes a technical
amendment to § 51.140(a)(2) that was
not in the proposed rule. The paragraph
refers to the ‘‘American Dietetic
Association,’’ which changed its name
to the ‘‘Academy of Nutrition and
Dietetics.’’ This rulemaking updates that
name.
Subpart E—Standards Applicable to the
Payment of per Diem for Domiciliary
Care
VA received comments asking VA to
collaborate with national associations
representing State homes to revise the
proposed regulations regarding
domiciliary care and to retain the prior
domiciliary rules in the interim, rather
than implement the proposed rules.
VA is grateful to the State homes, and
to all parties who submitted comments
on this rulemaking. The rulemaking
process we have followed allows all
members of the public to have a fair
opportunity to participate in the
rulemaking process, as the
Administrative Procedure Act requires.
5 U.S.C. 553. VA has considered all
comments it received, including the
comments about the effects of the
proposed domiciliary regulations
submitted by national associations and
individual State homes, and is making
substantial changes to the domiciliary
regulations in this final rulemaking. We
therefore decline to retain the prior
rules on per diem payments to
domiciliaries while developing new
regulations, but we welcome continuing
feedback and opportunities to work
with the State homes to improve
services to veterans.
§ 51.300 Residential Rights and
Behavior; State Home Practices; Quality
of Life
VA received a number of comments
about § 51.300, which, as proposed,
would have applied to State home
domiciliaries the requirements of
§§ 51.70, 51.80, 51.90, and 51.100.
These regulations provide standards
that apply to State home nursing home
resident rights; admission, transfer and
discharge rights; resident behavior and
facility practices; and quality of life. In
response to these comments and for
other reasons, we have revised proposed
51.300 so it does not apply to the
domiciliary care program all of the
nursing home regulations we proposed
to apply. We have changed the
introduction to § 51.300 to specify
which provisions of the nursing home
sections will not apply to the
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domiciliary care program. Discussion of
the specific comments and changes to
§ 51.300 follow.
Five commenters opined that
compliance with §§ 51.70, 51.80, 51.90,
and 51.100 may seem reasonable as they
pertain to veterans’ treatment and rights.
They asserted, however, that
compliance with these sections also
imposes additional, extensive ‘‘nursing
home’’ standards on the domiciliary
programs, creating new requirements
that are not feasible under current
operation and staffing models. The
commenters noted, for example, that
§ 51.70 contains 14 major sections and
multiple subsections of requirements,
whereas the existing domiciliary care
program regulations have only one
standard ‘‘(13 Quality of Life).’’ The
commenters asserted the other sections
to which § 51.300 refers are similarly
burdensome, citing as another example
the § 51.100 requirement that social
workers meet specific qualifications and
that the domiciliary meet specific
staffing requirements.
We deduce that the commenters’
citations of various ‘‘existing
regulations,’’ e.g., ‘‘13 Quality of Life,’’
refer to provisions of the VA Guide for
Inspection of State Veterans Homes:
Domiciliary Care Standards (Nov. 26,
1986) [hereafter 1986 Guide], because
the citations are, verbatim, to headings
of standards in the 1986 Guide. We
disagree with assertions that the
proposed regulations have many more
provisions than the 1986 Guide, and
with the implicit argument that more
provisions means a greater burden of
compliance. First, the commenters
comparison of § 51.70 with the 1986
Guide, which incidentally does not
comprise regulations, misstated the
differences. Section 51.70 is one section
comprising 14 paragraphs, (a)–(n),
which each have multiple provisions.
Section 13 of the 1986 Guide, ‘‘Quality
of Life,’’ comprises one section with six
standards, each with one to four
indicators of compliance, which in turn
each has as many as 13 elements, and
each standard one through six has a
corresponding guideline paragraph. We
further disagree that the number of
provisions defines the burden of
compliance. The number of provisions,
as the commenters identify them, is an
organizational device to aid readability.
It does not inherently correlate with the
burden of compliance.
The commenters also expressed
particular concern about the cost of
applying these sections to domiciliary
care programs that offer primarily
transition services. Commenters said the
proposed rules would have an adverse
financial effect on the domiciliary
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programs, including potential closures,
which would have an especially
negative effect on the homeless
population that some domiciliary care
programs widely serve. Commenters
said the proposed rules would treat
otherwise homeless residents as patients
and would medically institutionalize
them, whereas the traditional
domiciliary model encourages selfreliance. Some commented that nursing
home standards would increase the
nursing requirements for assisted-living
domiciliaries. Some said that these
requirements amounted to an unfunded
mandate. Some said VA should either
increase the per diem payment for
domiciliary care, or eliminate or reduce
the requirements.
We disagree that any requirement in
this rulemaking is an unfunded
mandate, even if compliance with some
provisions increases a State’s costs to
run its program. An unfunded mandate,
or a ‘‘Federal intergovernmental
mandate’’ as defined in the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995, is, in
pertinent part, ‘‘any provision in
legislation, statute, or regulation that (i)
would impose an enforceable duty upon
State, local, or tribal governments—
except (I) a condition of Federal
assistance; or (II) a duty arising from
participation in a voluntary Federal
program.’’ 2 U.S.C. 658(5). No Federal
law imposes an enforceable duty on any
the States to have a State home. VA’s
per diem program is a benefit the United
States affords veterans through the
States. This rulemaking provides
conditions of this VA assistance. Each
State participates voluntarily. The cost
of qualifying for VA per diem payments
to State homes is not an unfunded
mandate; it is simply a condition of
Federal assistance or a duty arising from
participation in a voluntary Federal
program. We make no change based on
this comment.
VA agrees that certain of the
requirements we proposed in § 51.300
should not be applied to State home
domiciliaries, and we have made a
number of changes to that section in
response to the commenters’
recommendations. The standards VA
will require State home domiciliary care
programs to meet under this final rule
are those we have determined are
essential to the health, safety, and wellbeing of the residents and that will
enable the State homes to continue
providing services that foster veterans’
independence. To that end, VA will
apply some provisions of §§ 51.70,
51.80, 51.90, and 51.100 to
domiciliaries, but we are excluding
some and establishing more suitable
standards in the place of certain
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paragraphs of each. From § 51.70, we are
excluding § 51.70(b)(9), (h)(1), and (m);
from § 51.80 we are excluding
§ 51.80(a)(2), (a)(4), and (b); and from
§ 51.100 we are excluding § 51.100(g)(2),
(h), and (i)(5)–(i)(7). We have added
provisions using the same or
substantially similar headings as the
excluded paragraphs and added
provisions in language similar to the
excluded provision, adapted and
tailored to the needs of the domiciliary
care program. For the most part, these
changes implement changes
commenters recommended or eliminate
burdens commenters identified.
Some commenters approved of the
proposed application of nursing home
regulations to domiciliary care
programs. They urged VA to apply all
nursing home regulations to domiciliary
care programs. Some suggested specific
changes to various provisions of
§§ 51.70 and 51.100 as we proposed to
apply them to domiciliary care
programs. The suggested amendments
are addressed under the headings for
those provisions. One suggested a
substantial rewrite of §§ 51.70 and
51.100, which we discuss under the
Other Issues heading below.
A description of changes from the
proposed regulations follows.
51.300(a) Notice of Rights and
Services—Notification of Changes
VA received comments that
§ 51.70(b)(9), Notification of changes,
should not apply to domiciliary care
program residents. The comments said
that State homes do not currently notify
families or legal representatives of
changes to the domiciliary residents’
medical status or room assignments.
They noted that the State home often
asks the residents to move from rooms
with multiple residents to single rooms
based on availability and seniority, and
there is no need to inform family
members in writing of such a change.
One commenter further noted, ‘‘[T]here
is no need to notify family members of
changes in their medical conditions
against their will in violation of their
Health Insurance Portability and
Accountability Act rights,’’ and
domiciliary residents are independent
enough to oversee their own affairs. We
interpret the comment referencing
HIPAA to mean, if a State home were to
notify family members of changes in the
resident’s medical condition over the
resident’s objection, that notice would
violate the resident’s rights under
HIPAA, and therefore the proposed
notice requirement violates HIPPA.
We agree that the requirement to
notify a resident’s legal representative or
interested family member of changes to
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the resident’s medical status or room
assignment as § 51.70(b)(9) requires is
not necessary for domiciliary care
program residents for the reasons the
commenters stated. We do not address
whether the proposed notice
requirement would violate HIPAA
because we are eliminating the
requirement to notify certain people.
Instead, we have added a right to notice
provision in § 51.300(a). In
consideration of the comments for and
against notice of certain outside
persons, we are making changes
intended to balance these conflicting
concerns. Paragraph (a) of this section
will provide that the domiciliary
resident will have the right to decide
whether to have the State home notify
other people of changes to the resident’s
medical status or room assignment.
51.300(b) Work
VA received comments objecting to
applying to domiciliaries via proposed
§ 51.300 the nursing home rule that
allows residents to refuse to work in
§ 51.70(h)(1). A commenter said that
work programs allow residents to
participate in their independent living
communities and provide valuable
therapy and skills for residents who will
leave the facility. In contrast, VA also
received comments that supported the
proposed right to refuse to work for
domiciliary residents.
We agree that sharing in some portion
of the work to maintain the domiciliary
is an essential part of domiciliary care
programs. By longstanding practice, in
the absence of comprehensive State
home domiciliary regulations, State
home domiciliary care programs have
followed the same work requirement
that applies to eligibility for VA’s
domiciliary care program in § 17.46(b).
As described above, VA has adopted a
requirement in § 51.51(b)(7) that to be
eligible for per diem payments for State
home domiciliary care the veteran must
be able to participate in some measure,
however slight, in work assignments
that support the maintenance and
operation of the State home. We have,
therefore, also changed § 51.300 to
eliminate the nursing home rule
regarding the right to refuse work that
VA had proposed to apply to State home
domiciliary residents. As revised,
§ 51.300(b) now states explicitly, in part,
‘‘The resident must participate, based
on his or her ability, in some measure,
however slight, in work assignments
that support the maintenance and
operation of the State home.’’ To ensure
that the work has therapeutic value,
§ 51.300(b) also requires that the State
home have a written policy to
implement the work requirement, that
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each resident’s comprehensive care plan
describe the work the resident will
perform, that the facility consulted with
and the resident agrees to the work
arrangement described in the
comprehensive care plan, and that, if
the resident is paid for the work he or
she performs, payment will be at wages
that meet or exceed the prevailing wages
for similar work in the area. We have
also included a provision to encourage
the resident’s participation in vocational
and employment services, in addition to
performing work.
VA received a comment saying that
prevailing wages are not currently paid
for participation in work therapy or
volunteer programs. It’s unclear whether
the commenter means that State home
domiciliaries should have authority to
pay residents some other wage, or
whether they should have authority to
not pay residents for their work. VA
believes a resident may perform
volunteer work designed for its
therapeutic value, even if the nature of
the work is not one that an outside
worker would typically be contracted to
perform. VA also believes, however, that
domiciliary residents are entitled to fair
payment for the work they perform for
the maintenance and operation of the
State home if the home would otherwise
hire non-residents to do the work. This
distinction protects the residents from
being used under the guise of therapy to
reduce the State homes’ operating costs
by substituting residents’ labor for labor
it would ordinarily hire at the prevailing
wage in the local labor market. VA
applies similar rules regarding work
therapy to its own domiciliary and
nursing home residents, and we see no
difference between VA and State home
programs to suggest residents should be
paid different wages when doing work
for which the State homes must pay. To
make clear that State homes must pay
residents the prevailing wage to perform
work the State home would have
otherwise hired non-residents to
perform, we revised paragraph (b)(3) to
read as follows: ‘‘Compensation for
work for which the facility would pay
a prevailing wage if done by nonresidents is paid at or above prevailing
wages for similar work in the area where
the facility is located’’.
VA received comments saying the
domiciliary residents should be
compensated for all work they perform.
VA disagrees; the work requirement
does not preclude unpaid volunteer
work, such as keeping one’s room
orderly or other housekeeping chores
ordinarily to be expected of persons
sharing a residence.
One commenter asserted VA’s State
home per diem regulations amount to a
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contract between State homes and VA
requiring that State homes pay veterans
Federal contract wages. The commenter
cites an invalid World Wide Web
address, https://www.dol.gov/ofccp/
OFCCPRecoveryActPlan.htm,
apparently referring to the Department
of Labor Office of Federal Contract
Compliance Programs (OFCCP). State
home compliance with VA per diem
regulations are not subject to the
oversight of the Department of Labor
OFCCP. VA regulations on State home
domiciliary residents’ work
requirements are not Federal contracts,
either between VA and the State homes
or between VA and the residents, and
they do not subject the States to Federal
contract law. We make no change based
on this comment.
51.300(c) Married Couples
We received comments objecting to
the proposed application to the
domiciliaries of the nursing home
requirement from § 51.70(m), which
provides married couples have the right
to share a room if they live in the same
facility and both agree. One commenter
noted that it operates one of the oldest
State homes in the country and lacks the
space or proper facilities to provide
married living quarters in the
domiciliary, and to do so would need
renovations and the possible
displacement of some unmarried
residents. In contrast, one commenter
supported the requirement that State
home domiciliary care programs
receiving VA per diem payments must
provide shared living quarters for
married veteran residents who wish
them and who each meet the eligibility
criteria for the program.
We agree that buildings might not
always be able to accommodate married
living quarters; however, there are ways
that the State Home can make
accommodations for married couples to
have private space, even if temporarily.
To accommodate the physical space
limitations of certain State homes, but
establish responsibility for programs to
honor such requests to the extent
possible, we have added § 51.300(c).
This paragraph restates § 51.70(m),
inserting ‘‘if space is available within
the existing facility’’ after ‘‘has the
right’’ and adding the following
sentence: ‘‘If the State home determines
existing space is not available to allow
married residents to share rooms, the
State home will make accommodations
for the privacy of married residents.’’
51.300(d) Transfer and Discharge
We received comments that State
homes should have a concise procedure
for discharge of residents to prevent
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arbitrary discharge at the whim of
management. One commenter stated
there needs to be reasons for discharge
and a right to contest the discharge in
a speedy way. The commenter was
particularly concerned about immediate
discharges without any mechanism for
immediate review, resulting in the
resident having to abandon property
and even personal effects. The
commenters said a VA representative as
well as a resident should be part of the
process to ensure that residents’ rights
are not being violated. This comment
pertains to the application of § 51.80,
Admissions, transfer and discharge
rights, to domiciliary care programs,
under proposed § 51.300.
We agree that State home
domiciliaries must have a clearly
identified process for admissions,
transfers, and discharges, and we have
amended the introductory paragraph of
§ 51.300 to require the State home
domiciliary have a written policy on the
topic. Additionally, we have created
§ 51.300(a) to require the facility
management to immediately inform the
resident when there is a decision to
transfer or discharge the resident, and a
new paragraph (d)(6) to require the
notice to include the resident’s right to
appeal and the contact information for
the State long-term care ombudsman.
These changes to the final rule give the
residents a more defined process for
discharge. We understand the
commenter’s reference to a VA
representative to mean a VA employee.
Involving a VA employee in this process
would impose an unnecessary burden
on State homes. We therefore make only
the changes described based on that
comment.
We received a comment objecting to
the application to domiciliary care
programs of the transfer and discharge
requirements from § 51.80(a)(2)(ii).
Section 51.80(a)(2) requires the facility
management to permit each resident to
remain in the facility, and not transfer
or discharge the resident from the
facility unless [circumstances meet one
or more of a list of conditions]. Among
the circumstances permitting transfer or
discharge, § 51.80(a)(2)(ii) provides,
‘‘The transfer or discharge is appropriate
because the resident’s health has
improved sufficiently so the resident no
longer needs the services provided by
the nursing home.’’. The commenter
distinguished domiciliary residents
from nursing home patients, in that it is
clear when nursing home patients no
longer need nursing home services, but
not clear when domiciliary residents no
longer need domiciliary care, and
domiciliary residents are not discharged
just because of improved health. For
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that reason, it would be inappropriate to
apply the nursing home requirements
for discharge or transfer of a resident to
the circumstances of most domiciliary
residents.
We disagree with part of this
comment. The structured, residential
environment of domiciliary programs
can foster personal and financial growth
and accountability that allows residents
to leave domiciliary care programs
because of their improved
circumstances. We believe therefore that
it is appropriate to retain this provision
with respect to discharges due to
improved circumstances. The comment
revealed a gap in the proposed rule,
however. Focusing on transfer or
discharge because of improvement
revealed the possibility transfer or
discharge could be appropriate because
the residents may have ceased to meet
one or more of the eligibility criteria of
§ 51.51. For example, the veteran’s
annual income may have exceeded the
maximum annual rate of pension. To fill
this gap, we have added paragraph
(d)(2)(vii) to the criteria for transfer or
discharge in § 51.300 to read, ‘‘The
resident ceases to meet any of the
eligibility criteria of § 51.51.’’ Section
51.51 provides eligibility criteria, but it
does not address whether those criteria
apply only to the applicant, or also to
the resident. It is inconsistent with the
function of the eligibility requirements,
to ascertain whether someone is suitable
for the domiciliary care program, to
apply them at entrance and not during
residency. A resident who ceases to
meet an eligibility criterion would
certainly meet a criterion for transfer or
discharge.
We agree with the commenter that it
is also important to include a
requirement for when a resident needs
to be moved to a higher level of care. We
have, therefore, excluded domiciliaries
from complying with § 51.80(a)(2), and
instead establish domiciliary transfer
and discharge requirements in
§ 51.300(d)(2), including the
requirement in § 51.300(d)(2)(ii) that
residents be discharged if they need a
higher level of long term or acute care.
VA received comments objecting to
the application in proposed § 51.300 of
the requirement of § 51.80(a)(4) to notify
a legal representative or family member
of a transfer or discharge, and of the
requirement of § 51.80(a)(5) to provide
that notice 30 days in advance of the
transfer or discharge. The commenters
said these provisions eliminate
flexibility necessary for managing an
independent living environment and are
inconsistent with the independence of
the residents.
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We have added § 51.300(d) in
response to these comments. Regarding
the requirement to notify a legal
representative or family member, in
§ 51.300(d)(4) we have changed the
regulation by eliminating the State
home’s requirement to notify and giving
the resident the right to decide whether
the state home notifies a legal
representative or family member. This is
similar to the changes we made in
§ 51.300(a) regarding notifications about
medical status and room assignment
changes. Regarding the 30-day advance
notice of transfer or discharge, we
disagree that the requirement is overly
burdensome. New paragraph
§ 51.300(d)(5)(i) provides ample
exceptions to the 30-day requirement to
afford reasonable flexibility. The 30-day
notice requirement, with the exceptions
to make it practicable, affords the
residents a reasonable safeguard against
transfer or discharge without warning.
51.300(e) Notice of Bed-Hold Policy
and Readmission—Notice Before
Transfer
As proposed, § 51.300 would have
applied the nursing home regulation on
notice of bed-hold policy and
readmission, § 51.80(b), to domiciliary
care programs. Based on comments
asserting this to be overly burdensome
in the domiciliary care context, we have
determined there is no need to apply the
detailed notice of policy requirements to
domiciliary care programs that
§ 51.80(b) applies to nursing home care
programs. Domiciliary residents still
need information about the availability
of a bed if they return to the home from
a period of hospital care. To achieve
this, we have added paragraph (e) to
proposed § 51.300, which provides,
‘‘The facility management must provide
written information to the resident
about the State home bed-hold policy
upon enrollment, annually thereafter,
and before a State home transfers a
resident to a hospital.’’ Additionally, we
have added as the first sentence of the
paragraph, ‘‘The State home must have
a written bed-hold policy, including
criteria for return to the facility.’’ While
we agree with the commenters that the
domiciliary care program bed-hold
policy does not need the degree of detail
§ 51.80(b) applies to the nursing home
care program, we believe there must be
a policy. This is a logical corollary to
the requirement to provide a resident
the bed-hold policy. While it may seem
obvious that the State home must have
a bed-hold policy to notify a resident of
it, we believe the paragraph is clearer to
explicitly require the State home to have
a bed-hold policy. We also added a
provision regarding a resident’s right to
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decide whether to have the State home
notify others of the change.
51.300(f) Resident Activities, and (g)
Social Services
Several commenters addressed social
worker credentialing for domiciliary
care programs, which we discuss below.
In reviewing those comments, we
concluded the commenters’ reasoning
about social workers’ credentials applies
as well to credentialing of therapeutic
recreation specialists in domiciliary care
programs. Unlike the nursing homes,
the domiciliaries do not require a
credentialed or licensed professional to
oversee the residents’ activities. We will
not apply the credentials provisions of
§ 51.100(g) to the domiciliary care
program as proposed. To effect that
change, we have amended the
introductory paragraph of § 51.300 to
exclude § 51.100(g) and have added
§ 51.300(f), Resident activities, to adapt
§ 51.100(g) to the domiciliary care
program. As adapted, § 51.300(f)(1)
restates § 51.100(g)(1), and § 51.300(f)(2)
provides, ‘‘The activities must be
directed by a qualified coordinator.’’
Section 51.300 applies no other
provisions of § 51.100(g) to the
domiciliary care programs.
VA received comments objecting to
the proposed application of nursing
home standards for social services from
§ 51.100(h), Social services, to
domiciliary care programs under
proposed § 51.300. One commenter
objected only to the requirement of
licensed social workers, another
objected on the grounds that the
proposed regulations mandate specific
qualifications and staffing requirements
that are not imposed upon domiciliary
programs currently. Another noted that
the State homes employ licensed and
unlicensed social workers, with the
latter providing only case management
for domiciliary residents that do not
require in-depth treatment, in keeping
with a transitional model where the
social worker’s job is to assist the
resident with transitioning out of the
domiciliary.
We agree the specific credential
requirements of § 51.100(h) are not
necessary for State home domiciliary
care programs. We have added
§ 51.300(g) to provide more flexibility in
social worker staffing for domiciliaries.
Paragraph (g) provides that ‘‘[t]he State
home must provide social work services
to meet the social and emotional needs
of residents to attain or maintain the
highest practicable mental and
psychosocial well-being of each
resident;’’ that ‘‘[t]he State home must
have a sufficient number of social
workers to meet the residents’ needs’’;
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and that ‘‘[t]he State home must have a
written policy on how it determines
qualifications of social workers.’’
Paragraph (g)(3) provides that ‘‘[i]t is
highly recommended, but not required,
that a qualified social worker is an
individual with’’ the same qualifications
as those required for nursing home
social services providers.
One commenter noted the proposed
regulation applying 51.100 to
domiciliary care programs ‘‘references
the number of required licensed social
workers for the state veterans’ home,’’
and that ‘‘clarity needs to be given as it
relates to requirements for Social
Workers assigned to the State Home
Domiciliary.’’
The regulation on the number of
social workers, § 51.300(g)(2), provides,
‘‘The State home must have a sufficient
number of social workers to meet
residents’ needs.’’ We interpret the
comment to be asking how the required
number of social workers specified for
nursing homes in § 51.100(h), Social
services, applies to the domiciliary care
program. As the introduction to final
§ 51.300 states, 51.100(h) is among the
nursing home provisions this final rule
does not apply to domiciliary care
programs. Rather, § 51.300(g)(2) affords
State homes flexibility in determining
the number of social workers
‘‘sufficient’’ to meet the object of
paragraph (g)(1). Additionally, though
§ 51.300(g)(3) strongly suggests the State
home use licensed social workers,
licensure is not required.
51.300(h) Environment
VA received comments objecting to
the application of § 51.100(i),
Environment, to the domiciliary care
program. These objected to the proposed
closet space requirement and to
maintaining temperatures at 71–81
degrees Fahrenheit. They commented
that environmental requirements of
§ 51.100(i) that have not previously
applied to domiciliary care facilities
would pose extraordinary challenges to
States operating older facilities that
were not designed to meet these
requirements. One commenter reported
it would face significant and costly
upgrades, especially to a 130 year old
facility, if VA finalizes the proposed
rule. The commenter requested VA
‘‘grandfather in’’ older facilities,
permitting them not to make upgrades
to meet the § 51.300 environment
requirements. Another objected it could
not provide private closet space without
‘‘massive renovations.’’
We agree that the temperature, sound,
and lighting requirements VA proposed
are unnecessary for the health and wellbeing of domiciliary residents, and we
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have eliminated them. We will not,
however, remove the closet space
requirement, or waive it for older
facilities. VA has demonstrated its view
of the importance of this requirement by
including it among the requirements of
its construction grant regulations. 38
CFR 59.140, 59.150. A State may seek a
part 59 grant to assist it to bring older
facilities into compliance with these
essential standards, or to replace
facilities that cannot come into
compliance, but VA will not
‘‘grandfather in,’’ i.e., waive the
requirement for, older facilities that
currently lack the required closet space.
To effect these changes, we have
restated the provisions of § 51.100(i)(1)–
(4) in § 51.300(h), and omitted the
provisions of § 51.100(i)(5)–(7) from
§ 51.300(h).
51.300 Other Comments
VA received comments saying we
should not apply State home nursing
home requirements to State home
domiciliaries that would require the
domiciliary care programs to provide
services they do not now provide. The
commenters specifically mentioned
access to an ombudsman. The
commenters distinguished between the
needs of nursing home residents, whom
they described as an elder, very
vulnerable population, and the
domiciliary residents, who do not have
the same vulnerabilities. They said the
domiciliary care program residents are
able to tend to their own affairs, and an
ombudsman is therefore not necessary.
VA also received comments asking
VA to retain the proposed requirement
that State home domiciliary residents
have access to an ombudsman. The
commenters asked VA to appoint or
require the State to appoint an
ombudsman or patient advocate. One
commenter said that decisions would be
less ad hoc, more thoughtful, and more
considerate of residents’ welfare if an
ombudsman were available.
We agree with the commenters who
asked VA to require domiciliary care
program residents to have access to an
ombudsman. We disagree with the
commenters who argue the relative
soundness of the domiciliary residents
compared to nursing home residents
means the domiciliary residents do not
need an ombudsman. VA makes no
change to the proposed application of
the ombudsman requirement of
§ 51.70(j) to domiciliary programs. As
some commenters pointed out, and VA
believes, domiciliary residents face
vulnerabilities and are entitled to have
an advocate outside the facility who is
able to advocate on their behalf or
mediate situations between State home
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leadership and residents when
necessary. State homes are already
required to ensure that nursing home
residents have access to the State long
term care ombudsman. Extending that
protection to domiciliary residents does
not require the State to create any new
position; it need only provide
domiciliary residents with access to an
existing State long term care
ombudsman and information how to
contact that ombudsman. Consistent
with the application of the § 51.70(j)
ombudsman rule to domiciliary
residents, we are also adding paragraph
51.300(d)(6)(v) to require any notice of
transfer or discharge to include the
name, address, and telephone number of
the State long term care ombudsman.
One commenter requested that out of
sensitivity to the unique needs of
veterans, VA add to the quality of life
regulations under 51.300 a requirement
that State homes recruit and hire
veterans for all positions in the State
homes, and where veterans are
unavailable, require special training of
non-veterans in ‘‘veteranology’’ [sic],
‘‘or the study of veterans.’’
We decline to add the suggested
requirement to the quality of life
provisions of part 51. Though the
commenter’s ideas about the value of
veteran employees or of special
education for non-veteran employees at
State homes have merit, the requirement
sought would impose a substantial new
personnel burden on the state homes,
which may conflict with employment
laws of these States. Rather than impose
this requirement on the States, we
would prefer to give the States
discretion to hire the best employees for
their Veterans. Further, the commenter’s
suggestion is beyond the scope of this
final rulemaking. Consequently, we
make no change based on this comment.
Nevertheless, we call upon the States to
consider the ideas of the commenter.
The same commenter urged VA to
require the States, as a condition of
receipt of VA per diem payments, to
permit residents for whom VA pays per
diem to apply for career professional
employment at State homes as a ‘‘civil
right.’’ The commenter requested
regulations providing specific
employment practices. The commenter
further requested VA to establish by
regulation ‘‘a rating and employment
system whereby residents of US VA Per
Diemed [sic] State Veterans Home
Domiciliary Programs [sic] who are
working professionals living in an SVH
Domiciliary Program while seeking
employment are registered as members
of a new Federally protected class of
veteran—‘the SVH Domiciliary VeteranResident Career Professional.’ ’’
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The employment regulation the
commenter seeks would conflict with 38
U.S.C. 1742(b), which prohibits VA
from having any authority over the
management or control of any State
home. While a resident is free to apply
to any job, it is beyond the scope of this
rulemaking to create ‘‘a new Federally
protected class of veteran[s].’’ Further,
as noted above, we would prefer to give
the States discretion to hire whom they
consider the best qualified employees
for their Veterans.
Regarding creation of protected
classes under Federal civil rights law,
VA lacks authority to create protected
classes of citizens under Federal civil
rights laws. Creation of the protected
class the commenter advocates would
require legislation. Current statute
prohibits VA authority over ‘‘the
management or control of any State
home,’’ 38 U.S.C. 1742(b), and the
establishment of a ‘‘rating and
employment system,’’ as the commenter
described it, seems very likely to
amount to management contrary to that
statute. Even if VA had the authority to
regulate as the commenter seeks, the
commenter’s suggestions are beyond the
scope of this final rulemaking. We make
no changes based on this comment.
One commenter noted a State home
provides transitional domiciliary care to
Veterans who are medically able to live
fully independently, but who lack the
financial means for subsistence. The
commenter said that the proposed
application of nursing home
requirements for State home
domiciliaries would threaten the State
home’s ability to maintain this practice
‘‘because the Veterans would not meet
the new requirements of domiciliary
care,’’ potentially resulting in some
residents being without a housing
alternative.
Though we are not making any
changes in response to this comment,
we should clarify that the new
regulations do not change eligibility
requirements for residents to require
that they be in need of nursing home
care, nor will the rule change eligibility
requirements for any veterans receiving
domiciliary care. Furthermore, as
discussed above regarding specific
nursing home requirements, we are
easing the proposed application of
multiple nursing home requirements on
State home domiciliaries. This final rule
will not require Veterans to be displaced
in the manner the commenter described.
Another commenter asserted that VA
should have regulations requiring all
cash donations to a State home be made
known to the residents, and that legacy
accounts (accounts of deceased
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61259
residents) be made known to the
residents and to the public.
We disagree with this suggestion.
Donations to the State home, and any
disclosure, would be the subject of State
law. All States have laws governing
access to public records like this. If the
commenter believes that State laws need
to be changed, we recommend that the
commenter seek action at the State
level. Requiring States to change their
laws governing such access is beyond
the scope of this rulemaking. Regarding
the commenters concern about legacy
accounts, current regulations governing
residents’ funds are sufficient to
regulate the State home’s handling of
those funds. Current regulation, 38 CFR
51.70(c) Protection of resident funds,
applies to domiciliary care programs
through final § 51.300. It provides for
the handling and accounting for a
resident’s funds on deposit with a State
home, including their final accounting
and conveyance upon a resident’s death.
The regulation also provides that each
resident is to have personal control of
the resident’s funds, that the State home
cannot require the resident to deposit
the funds with the State home, that the
State home account for the funds to the
resident or to a resident’s legal
representative, and that the state make
a final accounting and conveyance of
funds to the individual or probate
jurisdiction administering the resident’s
estate or other appropriate entity. These
rules together are consistent with
treating the residents’ finances as a
private matter, even after death. We
make no change based on this comment.
51.310 Resident Admission,
Assessment, Care Plan, and Discharge
We have made multiple changes to
§ 51.310. Some are in direct response to
comments, and some simply improve
organization, clarity, and readability.
We have revised the heading to read,
‘‘Resident admission, assessment, care
plan, and discharge’’, to be more
descriptive of the scope of the section.
We have rearranged provisions,
grouping related provisions together and
putting them in the sequence the State
homes will generally apply them. This
reduces the number of paragraphs in the
section from the proposed introduction
plus five paragraphs, (a) through (e), to
introduction plus four paragraphs, (a)
through (d). We have inserted the words
‘‘medical and comprehensive’’ before
‘‘assessments’’ in the introduction, and
inserted ‘‘comprehensive’’ before
‘‘assessment’’ throughout the section, to
indicate they are different. The medical
assessment informs the State home of
the new resident’s medical status and
immediate needs on admission. The
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comprehensive assessment incorporates
the result of the medical assessment and
builds on it by bringing together
multiple health professionals’
assessments of the resident’s physical,
mental, and social needs. The
comprehensive assessment, in turn,
informs the comprehensive care plan.
We discuss these assessments below.
The introductory paragraph of § 51.310
introduces each of these assessments.
We have also added a last sentence to
the introduction, ‘‘The State home must
review comprehensive assessments
annually, and promptly after every
significant change in the resident’s
physical, mental, or social condition.’’
This sentence adds no new requirement
to the proposed admission, assessment,
and comprehensive care plan process.
Rather it clarifies the ongoing
relationship between the comprehensive
assessment and the comprehensive care
plan.
Three commenters asserted that the
unknown cost of having physician’s
orders for each resident’s immediate
care and an assessment including
medical history and physical
examination within 72 hours of
admission, as proposed § 51.310(a)
required, would be excessive. The
commenters compared the proposed
requirements with the 1986 Guide,
which required that the domiciliary
provide and maintain a treatment plan
for each domiciliary patient.
We partly agree and partly disagree.
We agree that 72 hours is not always
enough time to perform the assessment
with medical history and examination.
We have changed proposed § 51.310(a)
to allow 7 calendar days for the medical
assessment, which is consistent with
VA practice for its domiciliary care
program and will provide the State
homes with ample time to perform an
assessment of the resident. We have
clarified that the assessment upon
admission is a medical assessment,
adding ‘‘and medical assessment’’ to the
paragraph (a) heading, to read, ‘‘(a)
Admission orders and medical
assessment.’’ This will distinguish this
assessment from the comprehensive
assessment identified in the
introductory paragraph and in
paragraph (b). We have also added a last
sentence to paragraph (a), ‘‘The medical
assessment will be part of the
comprehensive assessment.’’ This
makes clear that a medical assessment is
part of the comprehensive assessment,
consistent with the inclusion of a
physician among the practitioners listed
among those to do the comprehensive
assessment described in paragraph (b) of
this section.
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Further, for clarity and certainty, we
redesignated paragraph (b) to allow the
State home 14 calendar days after
admission to complete the
comprehensive assessment and
redesignated paragraph (c) to allow 21
calendar days after admission to
develop the comprehensive care plan.
As proposed, § 51.310(d)(2)(i) required a
treatment plan be ‘‘Developed within 7
calendar days after completion of the
comprehensive assessment,’’ but there
was no deadline for the comprehensive
assessment. Without a deadline for the
comprehensive assessment, the
proposed rule was uninformative and
afforded poor guidance and no certainty
about when the treatment plan might be
done. Compared to the proposed
process from admission to care
planning, these changes afford more
overall flexibility while also providing
more useful guidance to the State homes
and more certainty for the State homes
and for VA. Also, we have added
‘‘annually, and as required by a change
in the resident’s condition’’ at the end
of paragraph (b)(1). Though this restates
a phrase of the introduction to § 51.310,
we feel it is necessary to avoid any
impression that the paragraph (b)(1)
requirement to do a comprehensive
assessment on admission contradicts the
requirement of annual and as needed
comprehensive assessments in the
introduction. Paragraph (b)(2) describes
the purpose of the comprehensive
assessment to distinguish it from the
medical assessment.
We disagree with the comment that
physician orders for immediate
treatment should not be required upon
admission. Admitting a resident into a
residential program with unknown
current health needs is an unreasonable
risk, both for the patient and for other
residents of the domiciliary, although
we recognize that this recommendation
was made under the assumption that
VA would require doctor orders and the
complete assessment no later than 72
hours of admission. We have revised the
section to distinguish between the
medical assessment required shortly
before or soon after admission and the
subsequent comprehensive assessment,
of which the medical assessment is part.
As changed, the paragraph allows 7
calendar days after admission to
complete the medical assessment. This
clarification and other changes to this
section provides the State homes with
more flexibility in completing the
medical assessment and makes the
physician orders requirement perfectly
reasonable in light of its importance.
Consequently, we decline to eliminate
the physician orders requirement. We
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have eliminated the proposed provision
that ‘‘physician orders may be
submitted when available’’ from
§ 51.310(a), because it is essential to
know of immediate medical needs at the
time of admission, and it is inconsistent
with the changes in this final rule.
VA received comments saying the
requirement that the medical
assessment be performed by a physician
rather than a nurse is overly
burdensome and unnecessary because
domiciliary residents are generally in
better health and have fewer medical
needs than nursing home residents. We
agree that a physician need not perform
the resident’s medical assessment upon
entering a domiciliary care program. We
have therefore changed proposed
paragraph (a), Admission orders and
medical assessment, to provide that ‘‘a
physician, or other health care provider
qualified under State law’’ must perform
the assessment.
We have removed proposed paragraph
(b), which provided, ‘‘The State home
must use the results of the assessment
to develop, review, and revise the
resident’s treatment plan.’’ Initially
proposed paragraph (c), ‘‘coordination
of assessments,’’ is redesignated
paragraph (b) and renamed to place this
provision in the context of
comprehensive assessments. As
restructured, the section now flows
functionally from (a), admission and
medical assessment, through (b),
comprehensive assessment, to (c)
comprehensive care plan, and finally (d)
discharge report.
VA received comments saying that the
proposed global nursing home
assessment tool is inappropriate for
domiciliary care programs. One
commenter noted we based proposed
§ 51.310 on § 51.110, which requires
nursing home care programs to use the
Centers for Medicare and Medicaid
Services Resident Assessment
Instrument Minimum Data Set (MDS),
Version 3.0. The commenter asserted
the MDS 3.0 does not allow for
assessing domiciliary residents.
We did not propose using a global
nursing home assessment tool. It
appears the commenters misread the
notice of proposed rulemaking, which
specifically explained there is no
national tool for assessment of
domiciliary residents as there is for
nursing homes. Our intent was to
provide State homes with reasonable
flexibility in conducting the assessment,
which is why proposed § 51.310 stated
the assessment objectives and process
without specifying an assessment tool.
VA received a comment that in a State
with a State-established required
assessment tool for domiciliary care,
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VA’s assessment requirements would be
duplicative, resulting in additional,
unreimbursed costs. The commenter
recommended VA allow each State to
use its State required assessment tool
and for VA to provide a tool for the use
of States without a state-required tool.
VA disagrees. Section 51.310(a) does
not require duplicative assessments,
though it could require the State to
augment its assessment procedure. The
introduction to this section requires the
State home to establish in a written
policy how it will complete, implement,
review, and revise comprehensive
assessments. This allows the State home
sufficient flexibility to use its existing
assessment tool if it produces an
assessment with sufficient information
about the resident’s emotional,
behavioral, social, and physical needs to
inform a comprehensive care plan
targeted as meeting those needs. We will
not change the regulation to explicitly
provide that States may use any
assessment tool it may have because
there would be no assurance that the
assessments would be comprehensive
enough. Nor is it practicable for VA to
review States’ assessment tools for
sufficiency, and then monitor them for
continued sufficiency subsequent to any
revision. We do not require the State
homes to use an assessment tool
specifically designed for nursing homes.
We require the assessment to be
adequate to inform the comprehensive
care plan. We believe this section is
flexible enough to enable the State to
avoid the cost of duplicative
assessments, while providing for the
health and wellness of State home
domiciliary residents. We make no
change based on this comment.
In response to comments on § 51.51
about residents’ work in the State home
as part of a comprehensive care plan,
discussed above, we have added
paragraph (c)(1)(ii) to this section,
providing that a comprehensive plan
must describe: ‘‘The specific work the
resident agrees to do to share in the
maintenance and operation of the State
home upon consultation with the
interdisciplinary team, and whether that
work is paid or unpaid’’. This identifies
with whom the resident agrees to
perform certain work, and also that the
agreement is about which work the
resident will do to share in the
maintenance and operation of the State
home, not whether the veteran agrees to
do some work.
We have changed the proposed
description of the purpose of the
comprehensive care plan. Proposed
paragraph (d)(1) provided the
comprehensive care plan is ‘‘to address
the resident’s physical, mental, and
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psychosocial needs’’. In light of
comments received and described above
about the role of mental health and
other specialty care services in
domiciliary care, we feel a change in
terminology would allow State homes to
better understand and implement this
provision. As changed, redesignated
paragraph (c)(1) says the comprehensive
care plan is ‘‘to address a resident’s
emotional, behavioral, social, and
physical needs.’’ To allow care
providers the flexibility to ensure the
comprehensive care plan best reflects
each resident’s needs, we have also
added to the last sentence of paragraph
(c)(1) a provision that the
comprehensive care plan must describe
the items listed, ‘‘as appropriate to the
resident’s circumstances.’’
We have deleted the reference to
§ 51.350 in proposed paragraph (d)(1)(i),
‘‘as required under § 51.350;’’. The
reference made sense as proposed,
because § 51.350 would have applied all
of multiple nursing home regulations to
domiciliary care programs. As revised,
§ 51.350 does not apply most of those
nursing home regulations to domiciliary
care programs, and removing the
reference is consistent with the
flexibility we intend final rule
§ 51.310(c)(1)(i) to allow.
We have also changed the reference to
‘‘the resident’s exercise of rights under
§ 51.300, including the right to refuse
treatment’’ in proposed paragraph
(d)(1)(ii). As revised and redesignated
paragraph (c)(1)(iii), the paragraph
reads, ‘‘Any services that would
otherwise be required under § 51.350
but are not provided due to the
resident’s exercise of rights under
§ 51.70, including the right in
§ 51.70(b)(4) to refuse treatment. This
change provides the reader a more
direct reference to the substantive
provisions concerned. Though the
proposed reference to § 51.300 is
correct, it is indirect. Reference to
§ 51.300 requires the reader to ascertain
that § 51.300 applies § 51.70, so the
reader must then look to § 51.70 for the
substantive provisions. This change of
cross reference simplifies finding the
provisions to which the paragraph
refers.
In § 51.310, we changed proposed
paragraph (d)(2)(i), which would have
required the State home to complete a
comprehensive care plan within 7
calendar days of completion of the
assessment. As revised, redesignated
paragraph (c)(2)(i) requires the State
home to develop a comprehensive care
plan no later than 21 calendar days after
admission. This lets the State home
manage time and resources better,
potentially allowing more than 7
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61261
calendar days to complete the
comprehensive care plan if the
comprehensive assessment is completed
in less than the time allowed. It also
affords certainty about when the State
home will have a comprehensive care
plan for each resident.
Proposed paragraph (d)(2)(iii),
redesignated paragraph (c)(2)(iii),
provided for periodic review and
revision of the comprehensive treatment
plan. We determined that final
paragraph (c)(2)(iii) would provide
clearer guidance if it tied in with the
introduction of paragraph (c)(1).
Towards that end, we have changed the
periodic review and revision to be
‘‘consistent with the most recent
comprehensive assessment’’. With this
change, paragraph (c)(2)(iii) reads,
‘‘Reviewed periodically and revised
consistent with the most recent
comprehensive assessment by a team of
qualified persons no less often than
semi-annually’’.
We also determined that redesignated
paragraph (c)(2) did not complete the
logical progression of the paragraph.
The point of periodic review is to
change the treatment plan if the review
reveals it needs to change. We believe
it is implicit in the § 51.310
introductory requirement to reassess a
resident promptly after every significant
change in condition that the
comprehensive care plan must also
change promptly in response to a
significant change in the resident’s
condition. Consequently, we have
added ‘‘; and’’ at the end of final
paragraph (c)(2)(iii), followed by new
paragraph (c)(2)(iv), which reads,
‘‘Revised promptly after a
comprehensive assessment reveals a
significant change in the resident’s
condition.’’
Proposed paragraph (e)(3) did not
state as well as we intended the
resident’s right to control whether to
include a legal representative or
interested family member in discharge
planning. We have restated that point in
redesignated paragraph (d)(2) as an
affirmative right.
51.330 Nursing Care
One commenter requested
clarification of the statement in the
supplemental information of the
proposed rule that the nursing care
required in domiciliary care programs
‘‘would be similar to what is required in
nursing homes, except that we would
not require the same level of skilled
nursing supervision.’’ VA received
comments that, as proposed, § 51.330
would require State homes to staff
domiciliary care programs with the
same amount of nursing staff VA
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requires State homes to provide for
nursing home care programs. They
commented that currently, State home
domiciliary care programs require a
licensed nurse as needed to meet the
nursing care needs of the patient, citing
section 5E of the 1986 Guide, whereas
the proposed rule would require a
licensed nurse for each shift, every day,
around the clock. The commenters said
that requirement could increase their
costs for nursing supervision.
We agree the discussion was not clear
about what ‘‘similar to’’ and ‘‘level of
supervision’’ meant. We also agree that
the proposed requirement could result
in increased costs and that domiciliary
care program residents may not require
a licensed nurse on each shift, if the
nursing care needs of the residents are
met. We have, therefore, eliminated the
proposed requirement that the director
of the nursing service designate a
licensed nurse as the supervising nurse
for each tour of duty. Otherwise, the
staffing requirements in this final rule
are similar to the existing nursing care
requirements for domiciliary care
programs in section 5A of the 1986
Guide, which requires an organized
nursing service of personnel qualified to
meet the nursing care needs of the
domiciliary patient. The final rule,
however, clarifies that the residents’
individual comprehensive assessments
and comprehensive care plans
determine their need for nursing
services, and that need must be met 24
hours a day, 7 days a week. We continue
to believe this is a reasonable and
necessary requirement for availability of
nursing care.
One commenter said that some states
have regulations prescribing staffing
levels for State homes. The commenter
described the staffing level required by
its Residential Care Home Licensing
Regulation. The commenter
recommended VA permit states with
regulatory staffing levels to follow those
regulations and that VA provide a
regulation for states without a State
regulated staffing level.
We decline to make the commenter’s
recommended change. Section 51.330,
as revised, articulates VA’s view of the
minimum safe staffing for nursing care
in State home domiciliary care
programs. VA would not be comfortable
relying on staffing levels set by the State
because they might not meet that
minimum. So, to allow the exemption
from § 51.330 the commenter seeks, VA
would have to review each State’s
regulation to assure it requires staffing
equivalent to the minimum level VA
considers acceptable. Such a plan
would require a way for VA to know if
any State’s regulation changed, to again
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review the regulation, and to maintain
a procedure for disallowing states from
the exemption if a change permitted an
unacceptable level of nurse staffing.
This is not a practicable scheme for VA.
We believe that if a state’s regulations
require nurse staffing equivalent to the
level VA considers minimally
acceptable, the cost cannot be
significantly different from the cost of
compliance with § 51.330, and the state
would not realize any cost savings from
the exemption. Consequently, we make
no change based on this comment.
One commenter asked whether
facilities with ‘‘co-located’’ domiciliary
care and nursing home care programs on
the same property or in the same
building must have a director of nursing
for each or if they may share a director
of nursing. The commenter also asked
whether the two programs can share the
supervising nurse for each tour of duty,
and whether a ‘‘tour of duty’’ is the
same as a shift.
We intend the State homes to have the
flexibility to staff their programs to
ensure that all residents get the nursing
care each resident’s comprehensive
assessment indicates each resident
needs. The regulation does not preclude
sharing a nursing director. A shared
nursing director would comply with the
regulation only, however, if the State
home can ensure it meets the total
nursing care needs of all residents in the
facility. This final rule eliminates
proposed § 51.330(b), which required a
licensed supervising nurse for each tour
of duty, so the questions about a shared
nursing supervisor and whether a tour
of duty is the same as a ‘‘shift’’ are moot.
51.340 Physician and Other Licensed
Medical Practitioner Services
VA received comments about the
requirement in proposed § 51.340 that
State homes provide necessary primary
care to domiciliary residents.
Commenters objected to the proposed
requirement in this rule, and raised
concerns about the definition of
‘‘primary care’’ in the VA General
Counsel Precedent opinion ruling that
State home domiciliary care programs
must provide primary care to be entitled
to per diem payments. VAOPGCPREC
1–2014 (Mar. 21, 2014). Some
commenters objected to the General
Counsel’s inclusion of surgical services
in primary care, and some objected to its
inclusion of mental health services in
primary care. The commenters said
surgical services and mental health
services are generally considered
specialty care, and VA should define
primary care in the same manner as
Medicare.
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We recognize the confusion about
what is included in primary care, which
has resulted from the General Counsel
opinion and the proposed rule, and
therefore clarify that we do not consider
primary care as including
comprehensive mental health or
surgical services. We thus do not
consider § 51.340 as requiring a State
home to provide domiciliary residents
either surgical or comprehensive mental
health services—only to assist residents
with obtaining these services. See also
section 51.2 of this rulemaking, which
defines domiciliary care as including
‘‘necessary medical services’’ that are
described in subpart E. Nothing in
subpart E requires State domiciliaries to
provide either surgical or
comprehensive mental health services.
We note, however that under this
subpart (§§ 51.300(f)–(g), 51.320(d),
51.340), the State home is required to
provide basic mental health screening.
We acknowledge that proposed § 51.340
was unclear about what mental health
services the State home domiciliaries
would be required to provide without
many of the clarifications in this final
rule. The final rule requires the State
home to provide ‘‘its residents the
primary care necessary to enable them
to attain or maintain the highest
practicable . . . mental, and
psychosocial well-being.’’ Though this
could be misread to mean the
domiciliary must provide all care
necessary to attain or maintain mental
health, we believe it is clear that it
requires the domiciliary to provide only
the necessary primary care. The State
home discharges its obligation to enable
its residents to attain or maintain mental
and psychosocial well-being when it
provides primary care. It further
requires the State home to assist its
residents to obtain other care when a
resident needs care other than care the
State home must provide. So, if the
veteran needs mental health care other
than that required by subpart E, the
State home must assist the resident to
obtain that care.
One commenter objected to the
primary care requirement because it
would substantially increase state
expenses and undermine a resident’s
ability to obtain care from a physician
of his or her choice. The commenter
said the primary care requirement
would require residents to abandon
their existing physicians and mental
health specialists, significantly reducing
State home admissions and negatively
affecting current residents.
One commenter stated medical care
should be the veteran’s choice when the
veteran is capable of making the choice.
The commenter did not address the
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comment to a specific provision, so it is
not clear whether the commenter was
addressing a right to choose among
health care practitioners or a right to
choose to refuse care.
This regulation will not prevent State
home domiciliary residents from seeing
the private health care providers they
choose to see. The § 51.340
requirements do not mean a resident
may not see a private physician of his
or her choice or must abandon an
existing relationship with a private
healthcare provider. Further,
domiciliary residents retain the right to
receive care from their private
physicians in the State home
domiciliary, provided the physician is
credentialed and privileged in the State
home. If the commenter means the
veteran should have the choice whether
to receive medical care, the veteran may
refuse treatment under § 51.300, which
applies to domiciliary residents the
right to refuse treatment as prescribed in
§ 51.70(b)(4). We make no change based
on these comments.
Furthermore, it is unclear why the
commenter believes costs would
increase; it may be because of the
assumption that VA intended to include
mental health and surgical services in
primary care. The guidelines under
which the State home domiciliary care
programs have long operated required
each resident to have a primary care
physician responsible for the resident’s
medical care, and required that primary
care medical services be provided for
residents as needed. Section 51.340
imposes no additional primary care
burdens or costs. Further, these
regulations would not preclude States
from charging the veteran’s insurance
for providing primary care. We make no
changes based on this comment.
VA received a comment requesting a
‘‘thorough and explicit definition of
what primary care entails.’’ The
commenter was ‘‘concerned that the
proposed rules would transfer all
medical costs associated with resident
care to the state and nullify existing
sharing agreements’’ with the local VA
facility. Another commenter also raised
essentially the same points about the
extent of health care the proposed
regulations require and about
transferring costs and sharing
agreements, asserting the burden of
shifting primary care costs could make
operating domiciliary care
unsustainable.
The regulation, as proposed, does not
specifically define primary care, and we
believe the common dictionary
definition VA General Counsel quoted
in the precedent opinion cited above is
sufficient and widely used. VA declines
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to define primary care with a list of
specific medical services. We disagree
that lack of definition of primary care
could affect the commenter’s primary
care sharing agreement with a local VA
medical facility. Under the final
regulation, this arrangement may
continue. The State currently pays for
the primary care VA provides through a
sharing agreement, so there is no cost to
transfer to the State. We make no change
based on this comment.
VA received a comment saying that
providing additional medical services
would be especially burdensome to
some State homes that were built in
remote locations to care for veterans in
underserved communities. Those
homes, the commenter stated, currently
experience hiring challenges and
staffing shortages, and the new
requirements would pose challenges
and costs associated with hiring
additional staff or contracting with
outside providers.
We understand that staffing or
otherwise obtaining the required
services can be more difficult in some
areas than others, whether because of
remote location and a small labor pool,
or because of a central, densely served
market with stiff labor competition
among employers. The primary care VA
requires State homes provide is
essential to the health, safety, and wellbeing of the domiciliary care residents.
We will not eliminate or reduce the
requirements in response to the vagaries
of the local labor market. We make no
change based on this comment.
VA received comments that the State
home domiciliary care standards in the
1986 Guide, required that a resident be
seen annually and as needed by the
primary care physician or other licensed
medical practitioner. The proposed rule,
however, specified that the resident
must be seen by the primary care
physician or licensed medical
practitioner at least every 30 days for
the first 90 days after admission, and at
least once annually thereafter, or more
frequently based on the condition of the
resident. The commenter said this
requirement would result in a cost
burden to the domiciliary, potentially a
100% increase in physician visit costs.
We agree with the commenter that
more frequent primary care physician’s
visits than the State homes have been
accustomed to providing will increase
the State homes’ costs. We also agree a
domiciliary resident need not be seen
every 30 days for the first 90 days of
residency. The typical domiciliary
resident’s health does not require the
frequency of medical monitoring we
proposed. We have changed the
requirement in § 51.340(d) to require an
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annual medical assessment, restating
the provision in the active voice to read,
‘‘The primary care physician or other
licensed medical practitioner must
conduct an in-person medical
assessment of the resident at least once
a calendar year, or more frequently
based on the resident’s condition.’’
Though redundant of the annual
medical assessment § 51.310 requires, it
is useful also to restate here to
consolidate the requirements regarding
physicians and other medical
practitioner services. This change also
eliminates the colloquial expression ‘‘be
seen’’ in favor of the more precise term
‘‘assessment.’’
One commenter interpreted proposed
paragraph (e) to mean the domiciliary
must provide or arrange for physician or
other licensed medical practitioner
services 24 hours a day, 7 days a week,
in case of an emergency. The
commenter also asked for clarification
whether the provider must be on site or
may be on call.
We did not intend the commenter’s
interpretation of the provision, which
states, ‘‘The State home must assist
residents in obtaining emergency care.’’
Though a State home certainly may staff
its facility at all times, the provision
does not require it. It requires only that
the facility management be able assist
the resident in obtaining emergency
care. For example, a telephone call to
local 911, if available, could comply
with § 51.340(e). We make no change
based on this comment.
51.350 Provision of Certain
Specialized Services and Environmental
Requirements
Proposed § 51.350 would have
applied all of the standards applicable
to State home nursing homes at
§§ 51.140, 51.170, 51.180, 51.190, and
51.200 to State home domiciliary care
programs. We are making multiple
changes to this section. These correct
errors in the proposed rule, respond to
comments, and will serve the needs of
State home domiciliary care programs
and their residents better than would
the proposed application of the whole of
the sections we proposed to apply.
We are removing the phrase ‘‘nursing
home and nursing facility’’ from the last
sentence of the introduction to proposed
§ 51.350. Its use was an error. The cited
regulations use the term ‘‘the facility,’’
but not, ‘‘nursing home’’ or ‘‘nursing
facility.’’ As revised, the sentence reads,
‘‘For purposes of this section, the
references to ‘facility’ in the cited
sections also refer to a domiciliary.’’
VA received comments opposing the
imposition of the whole of these
regulations on domiciliary care
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programs and recommending the
domiciliary program standards be more
consistent and commensurate with the
stated definition and purpose of
domiciliary care. Multiple commenters
recommended increasing per diem
payments for domiciliary care, as one
put it, ‘‘to be compensated for the
increased requirements for our
domiciliary care facility.’’ This
commenter specifically reported a
$103,000.00 loss in its domiciliary care
program in the past year, submitting a
financial analysis.
We agree that certain standards that
proposed § 51.350 would have applied
to domiciliary care programs are
impracticable or inappropriate.
Consequently, we have revised
proposed § 51.350, to exclude
§ 51.140(f)(2)–(4), § 51.180(c), and
§ 51.200(a), (b), (d)(1)(ii)–(x), (f), and
(h)(3) from application to domiciliary
care programs. In addition, we will
exclude other provisions as discussed
below. Though the mechanism for
setting the rate of per diem payment is
prescribed by statute, we anticipate
these changes will also reduce the costs
of compliance.
Section 51.140(f), Frequency of meals,
requires nursing home residents to
receive and nursing homes to provide
three meals per day at regular times
comparable to normal meal times in the
community. Paragraph (f)(4) of that
section allows an interval of 16 hours
between dinner and breakfast if a
nourishing snack ‘‘is provided’’ at
bedtime. Consistent with comments
about applying § 51.140 to domiciliaries
that asserted the generally greater
independence of domiciliary residents
than nursing home residents, we have
added § 51.350(a) to apply to
domiciliaries instead of paragraph
(f)(2)–(4). Paragraph (a)(1) requires no
more than a 14-hour interval between
the evening meal and breakfast.
Paragraph (a)(2) requires the facility
staff to offer snacks at bedtime daily, as
does § 51.140(f)(3). Paragraph (a)(3)
allows 16 hours between the evening
meal and breakfast when the bedtime
snack is nourishing. The difference
between the domiciliary regulation and
the nursing home regulation is the
difference between whether the
nourishing snack ‘‘is offered’’ or ‘‘is
provided’’ to residents. This difference
takes into account the greater
independence of domiciliary residents,
who can maintain adequate nutrition
without the monitoring the nursing
home requirement entails. It is,
however, the nutritional character of the
offered bedtime snack, not the resident’s
independence in whether to eat it, that
affords the State home the additional
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two hours between the evening meal
and breakfast.
Some commenters objected to the
proposed monthly drug regimen review
required under § 51.180(c)(1), saying
that compared to the semiannual drug
regimen review required for domiciliary
residents in the 1986 Guide, the
proposed rule would result in a
significant cost increase.
VA agrees with the commenters. The
intent of the proposal, to preserve the
health and safety of State home
domiciliary residents, can be met with
a semiannual drug review. We have
added § 51.350(b), which requires a
drug regimen review at least once every
six months and included the
requirement in § 51.180(c)(2) requiring a
report and action if any irregularities are
found.
VA received comments objecting to
the burdens of bringing State homes
providing domiciliary care into
compliance with the requirements of
§ 51.200, Physical environment.
Multiple commenters said that
transition-based programs are not
currently required or able to meet many
of the physical or plant features
included in the nursing home standards.
The commenters paraphrased or quoted
provisions of § 51.200 to illustrate
nursing home requirements they
asserted domiciliary care facilities could
not meet. Among these paraphrases or
quotations were ‘‘provide adequate
room space in most rooms,’’ apparently
based on § 51.200(d)(1)(i)–(iv); ‘‘provide
sufficient privacy (ceiling suspended
curtains extending around beds for total
visual privacy) in rooms with more than
one resident,’’ apparently based on
§ 51.200(d)(1)(vii)–(viii); ‘‘provide
prescribed storage space for residents,’’
apparently based on § 51.200(d)(2)(iv);
‘‘have a resident calling system directly
to nursing,’’ apparently based on
§ 51.200(f); and ‘‘have corridors
equipped with handrails,’’ paraphrasing
§ 51.200(h)(3). We construe these
comments as references to these
provisions because we do not interpret
the commenters to literally oppose
providing ‘‘adequate privacy,’’ or
‘‘sufficient privacy.’’
In response to the comments, we have
excluded § 51.200(a), § 51.200(b),
§ 51.200(d)(1)(ii–x), § 51.200(f), and
§ 51.200(h)(3) from application to
domiciliaries, as noted above. In place
of the privacy requirements in
§ 51.200(d), we have provided for
‘‘visual privacy’’ in § 51.350(d), which
reads, ‘‘The facility must provide the
means for visual privacy for each
resident.’’ This is based on
§ 51.200(d)(1)(vii), which requires
nursing home bedrooms ‘‘[b]e designed
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or equipped to ensure full visual
privacy for each resident.’’ Section
51.200(d)(1)(viii) further specifies that
the nursing home bedrooms (other than
private rooms) must have ‘‘ceilingsuspended curtains,’’ further specifying
their placement and specifying other
furnishings of the room to ensure
‘‘visual privacy.’’ We intend this
§ 51.350(d) to afford the State homes
reasonable flexibility in finding a way to
let the domiciliary resident sleep or
change clothes or do other ordinarily
private things without being watched or
in open view of other residents.
While many of these requirements are
essential to the health, safety, and wellbeing of the domiciliary residents, we
agree with the commenters that some
would pose an excessive burden to State
home domiciliaries and are more
appropriate for nursing home care than
domiciliaries, because domiciliary
residents remain more independent. For
those reasons, in this final rule, we will
not apply to domiciliaries the following
environmental requirements:
§ 51.200(d)(1)(ii–x) regarding resident
bedrooms; § 51.200(f) regarding resident
call systems; and § 51.200(h)(3)
regarding handrails. All of these
requirements are more aligned with
skilled nursing home care then they are
with domiciliaries, and they are not
requirements in VA domiciliaries.
VA received a comment that the cost
of renovations and upgrades to meet the
environmental requirements would total
hundreds of millions of dollars
nationwide, and the facilities would be
forced to compete for funding with the
limited resources in VA’s State home
construction grant program. We agree as
discussed above that some of the
proposed requirements were too
burdensome, and we revised the
regulation accordingly. We also agree
that applications for grants from VA to
meet the cost of complying with a
§ 51.350 requirement might compete
with applications to fund other projects
in the construction grant program, but
life and safety projects are given priority
over all other types of construction
when VA determines whether to award
construction or acquisition grants. (See
38 CFR part 59 for regulations governing
grants to States for construction or
acquisition of State homes.) We have
revised the final rule to ease the burden
of compliance with the specialized
services and physical requirements for
State home domiciliaries; the rest of the
requirements under § 51.350 are
essential to the health, safety, or wellbeing of domiciliary residents and
cannot be eased or removed.
One commenter asked VA to
‘‘grandfather in’’ (i.e., waive the
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requirements for) older facilities that
have not needed to comply with
environmental requirements of § 51.100
and 51.200 that have traditionally
applied only to nursing homes, citing
the high costs of making the needed
upgrades. Because these provisions are
essential to the health, safety, and wellbeing of domiciliary residents, we will
not waive the requirements for older
facilities. We make no changes based on
this comment.
VA received a comment that imposing
the nursing home fire safety standards
of § 51.200 would ‘‘drive many homes
out of business,’’ saying State homes
would have to reconsider providing
domiciliary care altogether and perhaps
provide only nursing home care.
We agree that some of the fire safety
rules that apply to nursing home care
programs are inappropriate for
domiciliary care programs, because of
the differences in the services they
provide. Specifically, we will not
require State home domiciliary care
programs to meet NFPA 99, Health Care
Facilities Code, as § 51.200(a) requires
of State nursing home programs. We are,
therefore, changing proposed § 51.350
by adding a new paragraph (c) that only
requires State home domiciliaries to
meet the ‘‘applicable’’ requirements of
NFPA 101. We have changed the
introduction to § 51.350 to exclude
§ 51.200(a) from application to
domiciliaries.
We have also determined it would be
inappropriate to apply the nursing home
emergency power requirements of NFPA
99 to domiciliary facilities. NFPA 99
prescribes emergency generator
specifications for nursing homes. It is
not necessary or appropriate to require
State home domiciliaries to have
emergency power generating equipment
that meets the NFPA 99 specifications of
the sort appropriate to nursing homes
and specified in § 51.200(b). The
applicable provisions of NFPA 101
regarding emergency power will apply
instead under § 51.350(c). We have thus
changed the introduction to § 51.350 to
exclude § 51.200(b) from application to
domiciliaries.
General Concerns Regarding
Domiciliary Regulations
One commenter, observing the
proposed rule appeared to require a
level of care for domiciliary residents
that mirrors nursing home care,
suggested it would have been beneficial
to review assisted living regulations
across the country because most State
home domiciliaries are also licensed by
their state’s assisted living regulatory
licensure and compliance.
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We disagree about the benefit of
reviewing State assisted living
regulations. State assisted living
regulations are not pertinent to VA’s
program of payment of per diem for
veterans in State home domiciliary care
programs. VA does not pay for assisted
living. Veterans residing in a State home
must meet the eligibility criteria either
for a nursing home care program or for
a domiciliary care program. The State
home must meet VA’s standards for
receipt of per diem for those veterans.
Moreover, VA must administer a nationwide program. Consequently, we choose
to have regulations of uniform, nationwide application. These may be like
some State assisted living regulations
and unlike others, but State assisted
living regulations are not an appropriate
model for VA per diem regulations. We
make no change based on this comment.
VA received a comment reporting
grievances about conditions at State
home domiciliary programs and asking
VA to apply all of the regulations
governing per diem payments to State
home nursing home care programs to
State home domiciliary care programs.
The commenter urged VA to afford
domiciliary care program residents the
same care provided nursing home
residents. The commenter requested
that VA effect that change by issuing a
VA General Counsel opinion. The
commenter argued for immediate
implementation of this opinion as a
‘‘regulatory instrument’’ until VA
publishes domiciliary per diem
regulations. Specifically, the commenter
recommended as the ‘‘holding’’ of the
opinion, ‘‘[I]n order for a State to receive
per diem payments from the VA for a
resident in its State home domiciliary,
the home must provide domiciliary care
to the resident (or residents) in
accordance with 38 CFR 51, the current
VA regulation outlining long-term care
of veterans in state nursing homes.’’ The
commenter requested specific VA
officers implement the suggested
General Counsel opinion.
Another commenter reported that a
specific State home conducts residents’
room inspections, threatens sanctions
for [resident] non-compliance with the
State home rules, schedules reinspections, and then fails to follow
through. The commenter stated this lack
of follow through ‘‘leaves us dangling,’’
and demonstrates the ‘‘ad hoc’’
management of the State home.
Another commenter expressed
grievances about a State’s
administration of a State home,
including concerns that the domiciliary
housed veterans unable or unwilling to
meet the personal hygiene requirements
for residency, allegations of failure to
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maintain the facility, allegations of
failure to spend VA per diem payments
on or on behalf of the residents, or of
diverting the funds into the State’s
general fund. The commenter requested
VA to regulate specific oversight,
staffing, financial accounting, and
expenditure requirements. Specifically,
the commenter requested a regulation
requiring ‘‘all monies that the VA gives
to the States for these Homes be placed
in a separate account that can only be
used for the Home.’’
We decline to add a regulation to
implement the suggestion regarding
dedicated accounts. VA monitors each
State home’s census and its
expenditures on nursing home,
domiciliary, and adult day health care
services. The State home must report
the census of each program and submit
a claim for per diem payments monthly
on VA Form 10–5588. See § 51.42 of this
rulemaking. By statute, VA ‘‘shall have
no authority over the management or
control of any State home.’’ 38 U.S.C.
1742(b). We believe establishing the
regulation the commenter seeks would
constitute management or control of
State homes, contrary to the statute, and
would violate that law. We make no
change based on this comment.
Regarding the commenters’ grievances
relating to specific State homes, VA
takes reports of grievances from
residents of State home domiciliaries
seriously; however, VA is unable to
adjudicate the grievances in this
rulemaking. The commenters are
encouraged to voice their grievances
directly with the State homes, which are
better able to address such grievances.
We note that § 51.300 now makes the
nursing home standards regarding
grievances applicable to State
domiciliary care programs and these
standards include the resident’s right to
voice grievances and have the facility
implement prompt efforts to resolve
these grievances. We further note that
State homes must satisfy these
standards to receive per diem. Again,
specific allegations are best raised
directly with the State home. VA
therefore makes no changes based on
this comment.
Regarding application of all of the
State home nursing home program
regulations to State home domiciliary
care programs, we decline to do so for
the reasons previously stated in this
preamble. To briefly reiterate, many
nursing home regulations would
provide little benefit to domiciliary
residents, or even be a detrimental
burden, while imposing excessive
operational constraints and costs on the
States. This rulemaking, however,
applies to the domiciliary care programs
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those nursing care program regulations
necessary to the health, safety, and wellbeing of domiciliary residents. See, for
example, the discussion of § 51.300,
above. VA therefore makes no changes
based on this comment.
We decline to implement the request
the commenter submitted in the form of
a suggested VA General Counsel
opinion the commenter authored
seeking to have the Secretary of
Veterans Affairs assign certain named
VA officers to implement the requested
changes. The Secretary’s statutory
authority includes delegation of certain
authority to certain subordinate VA
officers, but direct assignment of
responsibilities to specific VA officers is
beyond the scope of this rulemaking.
VA therefore makes no changes based
on this comment.
VA received comments
recommending that part 51 ‘‘further
define the sovereign powers of the
Resident Councils.’’ The commenter
proposed the creation of a National
Association of State Veterans Homes
Domiciliary Residents’ Councils under
the auspices of VA Geriatric and
Extended Care Services. The commenter
provided some details as to how the
relationship should be between council
members, residents and a VA liaison.
The commenter also requested that VA
provide whistleblower protections for
State home residents who report
unethical, illegal, or criminal conduct
by a State home or VA employee or
office, so that State homes cannot evict
residents for speaking up.
Although we decline to make the
specific changes this commenter
requested, this rulemaking does
implement protections for State home
domiciliary residents that formerly
applied only to nursing home residents.
Section 51.300 requires domiciliaries to
apply the provisions of §§ 51.70 and
51.100 not otherwise excluded from
§ 51.300. Among these are
§ 51.70(b)(6)(ii) requiring the State home
to notify residents of the right to file
complaints; § 51.70(j)(1)(iv)
guaranteeing access to the State long
term care ombudsman; § 51.100(c)
requiring the State home to document
any concerns the resident council
submits; and § 51.100(d)(6) requiring the
State home to listen to the views of any
resident or family group, including the
resident council, regarding policy and
operations decisions affecting resident
care and life in the facility. State home
domiciliary residents thus will now
have recourse for redress of grievances.
We therefore make no change based on
this comment.
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Subpart F—Standards Applicable to
the Payment of Per Diem for Adult Day
Health Care
51.410 Transfer and Discharge
We have clarified the language of
proposed § 51.410(b), which provides
the residents’ right to be informed about
the possible reasons for a transfer or
discharge from the program. We make
no substantive changes.
We have changed the proposed
heading of paragraph (c) to read,
‘‘Notice before transfer or discharge.’’, to
be more descriptive of the text of the
paragraph.
VA received comments asking to
revise paragraph (c)(1), which requires
the State home to notify the participant
or his or her legal representative prior
to a transfer or discharge. The
commenters wanted ‘‘or’’ in the first
sentence to be revised to ‘‘and/or’’. VA
believes that the intent of this
recommendation is to allow the State
homes to notify, or ensure the State
homes notify, both participants and
their legal representatives. In fact, the
requirement to notify the participant or
the representative does not preclude the
State home from notifying both if that is
the participant’s choice. The ‘‘and’’
alternative of ‘‘and/or’’ would, however,
permit the provision to be read as
requiring notice to the participant ‘‘and’’
to the representative. We intend to
afford the participant control of whether
the State home notifies a legal
representative, a family member, or
both. On further review, we see that as
written, ‘‘Notify the participant or the
legal representative of the participant,’’
could permit the State home to notify
someone other than the participant and
not notify the participant. To make clear
the participant’s right to decide who
besides the participant the State home
notifies of a transfer or discharge, we are
revising § 51.410(c)(1) to read as does
the revision to the domiciliary notice of
transfer or discharge provision,
discussed above. As revised, paragraph
(c)(1) reads, ‘‘Notify the resident of the
transfer or discharge and the reasons for
the move in writing and in a language
and manner he or she understands. The
resident has the right to decide whether
to have the State home notify his or her
legal representative or interested family
member of changes.’’.
VA received a comment requesting
changes to § 51.410(e)(5), which as
proposed read, ‘‘The name, address and
telephone number of the State long-term
care ombudsman.’’ The commenter
stated the Older Americans Act
Ombudsman program did not apply to
adult day health care programs and
recommended paragraph (e)(5) be
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revised as follows: ‘‘The name address
and telephone number of the State
home’s State Department of Health and/
or the appropriate State Department of
Social Services representative.’’
The commenter raised the prospect
that a State might not have an
ombudsman who advocates for
participants in a State home adult day
health care program. The proposed
requirement derives from
§ 52.70(h)(1)(iii), which requires State
home program management to provide
the State long-term care ombudsman
with immediate access to participants.
The object of proposed § 51.410(e)(5)
was to ensure the notice of transfer or
discharge includes information how to
seek help if the participant objects to the
transfer or discharge. We are changing
§ 51.410(e)(5) to address the possibility
that a State does not have a long-term
care ombudsman or any ombudsman
responsive to State home adult day
health care participants. We decline to
use the ‘‘and/or’’ construction the
commenter suggested, because it would
permit the State to provide the contact
information only for an impersonal state
agency possibly difficult to navigate
instead of providing the contact
information of an ombudsman or other
known advocate. We acknowledge,
however, that the proposed requirement
could be insufficient. We are changing
paragraph (e)(5) by adding ‘‘the first
listed of the following that exists in the
State:’’ following ‘‘The name, address
and telephone number of’’. We are
further revising the paragraph by adding
after the paragraph (e) introductory
language, the following: ‘‘(i) The State
long-term care ombudsman, if the longterm care ombudsman serves adult day
health care facilities; or (ii) Any State
ombudsman or advocate who serves
adult day health care participants; or
(iii) The State agency responsible for
oversight of State adult day care
facilities.’’ We intend the order of
precedence and other changes to afford
the participants the intended protection,
with little additional burden to the State
homes. These changes are a logical
outgrowth of the comment. We have
removed from proposed paragraph (g)(1)
the phrase ‘‘, and ensured of timely
admission to the hospital’’. We have
also changed ‘‘and’’ to ‘‘or’’ in both
instances of the phrase ‘‘transfer and
discharge.’’ The State home will transfer
‘‘or’’ discharge a participant, as
circumstances require. There is no
action called ‘‘transfer and discharge.’’
As revised, the paragraph reads,
‘‘Participants will be given a transfer or
discharge from the adult day health care
program to the hospital when transfer or
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discharge is medically appropriate as
determined by a physician’’. Neither VA
nor the State home can ensure timely
admission to a hospital; timeliness of
admission is beyond VA and the State
home’s control. In practice, a transfer or
discharge to a hospital will result in
admission, observation, or other action
according to the participant’s medical
condition and the usual medical and
business practice of the hospital.
51.420 Quality of Life
VA received comments objecting to
the storage requirement of
§ 51.420(g)(3), saying that in the State
homes’ experience, adult day health
care participants need lockable storage
on a very limited basis because they do
not live at the State home. They
recommended the participants be made
aware that lockable storage is available,
and that the homes provide it upon
request. They suggested a locked closet
with individual storage bins would be
sufficient to secure a participant’s
change of clothes, and that the State
home should also provide a coat closet
for daily storage of coats, etc.
We agree that the proposed
individually lockable storage is not
necessary in the adult day health care
setting. We proposed that each private
storage space be lockable to afford
security for wallets, purses, and the like,
and we agree the availability of locked
storage for those who wish to use it is
sufficient. Accordingly, we have
changed § 51.420(g)(3) to read, ‘‘Private
storage space for each participant
sufficient for a change of clothes. Upon
request of the participant, the State
home must offer storage space that can
be secured with a lock.’’
51.425 Physician Orders and
Participant Medical Assessment
As proposed, this section provided for
two types of assessments, and as a result
of the comments we received we have
changed the names of these assessments
in the final rule for clarity and to
distinguish the initial medical
assessment to determine that the veteran
is suitable for and well enough to
participate in the program and the
subsequent assessment done to inform
the comprehensive care plan. The
assessment that was proposed in
paragraph (a) is now called the ‘‘initial
medical assessment’’ and the
assessment in § 51.425(b) is now called
the ‘‘comprehensive assessment’’
throughout the paragraph.
VA received comments that the
requirement of § 51.425(a) for new adult
day health care participants to have
tuberculosis (TB) screening no sooner
than 30 days before admission to the
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program would be an undue hardship
on the participant or the participant’s
care giver because screening can take
multiple doctor’s office visits. The
commenters, referencing an
unpublished report of the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention,
acknowledged that ‘‘elderly nursing
home residents are at greater risk for
[TB] than elderly persons living in the
community.’’ They noted current VA
practice is to allow TB screening upon
admission. The commenters requested
VA also allow the TB screening to be
performed at the adult day health care
program no later than 30 days after
admission, which would reduce caregiver burden and facilitate admission by
eliminating a potential cause of delay.
We agree that allowing the TB
screening to be performed after
admission to the adult day healthcare
program could reduce the veteran and
caregiver’s burden and facilitate
admission. We disagree, however, that
30 days after admission is an
appropriate timeframe to complete
screening because of the increased risk
of TB among the participant population
that the commenter identified. We also
believe it is unsafe to have a participant
in the program any longer than that with
his or her medical history and current
condition unknown. To allow more
flexibility than the proposed rule
allowed, while also requiring the history
and physical examination with TB
testing be done expeditiously, we have
changed § 51.425(a) to allow them to be
done no later than 7 calendar days after
admission.
VA received comments regarding
proposed § 51.425(b), which describes
the State home adult day health care
program’s responsibility to conduct
comprehensive assessments for each
participant, and lists factors the program
should consider in each assessment.
The commenters recommended that
instead of the assessment guidelines in
this regulation, VA should allow each
State with an established adult day
health care program assessment tool to
use it, and that States without
assessment tools should work with a
select group of members of the National
Association of State Veterans Homes to
develop an assessment tool to adopt as
a national standard and submit to VA as
an alternative. The commenters noted
that the existing regulation requires
each adult day health care program use
the MDS–HC assessment tool, even
though it is not an ‘‘industry standard’’
among adult day healthcare programs,
and creating a new tool would solve the
existing problem of the lack of a
nationally recognized assessment tool
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61267
and better serve the programs and
veterans.
As with the assessments for
domiciliary care programs, VA will not
change the regulation to explicitly allow
State home adult day health care
programs to use State-mandated
assessment tools, though the homes may
do so if those tools meet the
requirements in paragraph § 51.425(b).
While we appreciate the offer to
collaborate on a national tool, we
believe that § 51.425(b) provides the
States with necessary flexibility to
create policies to meet their state’s
regulatory requirements or their
program’s needs, while ensuring the
health and well-being of participants.
We have added an introduction
requiring the State home to establish in
a written policy how it will complete,
implement, review, and revise
assessments. In addition to affording the
State homes flexibility in devising their
methods of assessment, the introduction
helps to distinguish between the initial
medical assessment and the subsequent
comprehensive assessment.
VA received comments
recommending that programs should
make every effort to coordinate the
participant’s comprehensive care plan
with any existing VA or community
provider’s comprehensive care plans, as
appropriate. The commenters noted
many participants seek admission to the
State home adult day health care
program without prior use of VA
services, and often prefer and plan to
continue to use their community
physician for primary care. Because the
State home is ultimately responsible for
the care and services provided to each
participant, the commenters said they
should develop a comprehensive care
plan that includes the recommendations
of other agencies, including VA.
We agree with these comments. We
believe it is consistent with the State
home’s responsibility to develop the
comprehensive care plan that those
plans include the recommendations of
others providing care to the participant.
We believe § 51.425 allows the State
home to include the use or adaptation
of existing care plans in its assessment
and comprehensive care plan policy.
We make no change based on this
comment.
Based on the comments regarding
§ 51.425(b) pointing out that some
participants enter State home adult day
health care programs without a current
care plan, we are removing the
requirement from proposed § 51.425(b)
that the participant have an
individualized comprehensive care plan
on ‘‘the participant’s first visit’’ because
the requirement is unnecessarily
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burdensome. Instead, we are requiring
that the State home complete the
comprehensive assessment no later than
14 calendar days after admission.
Consistent with the comment that
residents might not have a
comprehensive care plan upon
admission, we are revising proposed
paragraph (d) to allow up to 21 calendar
days after admission for the State to
write a comprehensive care plan for
each participant.
We changed certain word choices and
phrasing in paragraph (c), but none has
substantive effect. We pluralized the
word ‘‘assessment’’ in the section
heading, and rephrased the first
sentence of paragraph (c)(1) to clarify
that the assessments must be both
conducted and coordinated with the
appropriate health care professionals.
We changed ‘‘the assessment’’ to ‘‘an
assessment’’ in (c)(2) to ensure all
assessments are certified. We added
(c)(3), ‘‘The results of the assessments
must be used to develop, review, and
revise the participant’s individualized
comprehensive care plan.’’ This
provision makes clear the ongoing
relationships among the participant’s
assessments, changing condition, and
comprehensive care plan.
51.430 Quality of Care
We are making technical corrections
to proposed paragraph (a)(2) of this
section. We are removing ‘‘, review, and
prevent’’ from the paragraph heading to
more accurately state the topic of the
paragraph. As proposed, the heading
‘‘Duty to report, review, and prevent
sentinel events’’ commingled the topics
of paragraphs (a)(2) and (a)(3). We are
also striking from § 51.430(a)(2) the
phrase ‘‘, review, and prevent’’, because
§ 51.430(a)(2) is solely a notice
provision, as is § 51.120(a)(3) from
which it derives. We are also removing
the reference to § 51.120(a)(4) from
proposed § 51.430(a)(2) because
§ 51.120(a)(4) is the review, analysis,
and prevention provision applicable to
nursing homes. The mandate to review,
analyze and prevent sentinel events in
adult day health care programs derives
from § 52.120(a)(4) and is restated in
proposed § 51.430(a)(3). Additionally,
§ 51.120(a)(4) has a final sentence we
did not intend to apply to § 51.430(a)(3).
We referred to § 51.120(a)(4) in
proposed § 51.430 erroneously.
51.440 Dietary Services
We have changed the second sentence
of proposed § 51.440 so the references in
§ 51.140 to ‘‘resident’’ apply to a
participant ‘‘in subpart F.’’ This clarifies
the scope of the application of § 51.140
to the adult day health care program.
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Because of the other changes we are
making to this section, discussed below,
the text proposed as § 51.440 is now the
introductory paragraph of the section.
To make the per diem regulations
more concise and to eliminate repetition
between current parts 51 and 52 of title
38 Code of Federal Regulations, we
proposed that § 51.440 would apply the
nursing home dietary service provisions
of current § 51.140 to the adult day
health care program. That was partly a
mistake. The proposal inadvertently
applied nursing home requirements for
frequency of meals under § 51.140(f)
that would be inapplicable to adult day
health care programs. For example, the
nursing home bedtime snack
requirements have no application to a
daytime only program. To correct this
error, we have revised the introduction
of § 51.440 to exclude application of
§ 51.140(f), and added the mealtime
requirements of current § 52.140(e)(1)
and (2) as paragraphs (a) and (b). These
requirements are essential to ensure
every adult day health care participant
receives at least minimal nourishment
during each session. Adding these
requirements imposes no new burden
on the State homes. They merely
continue the current timing and
nutritional requirements of the adult
day health care program without
change.
51.445 Physician Services
We are revising the introduction of
§ 51.445. The proposed language
mistakenly refers to a physician’s order
for enrollment, but physicians don’t
write orders to enroll participants in the
adult day health care program; they
write orders to admit participants. We
have corrected this error in terminology.
We have also revised the next to last
sentence to be more readable. As
revised, the sentence reads, ‘‘If a
participant’s medical needs require that
the participant be placed in an adult day
health care program that offers medical
supervision, the primary care physician
must state so in the order for
admission.’’
VA received comments
recommending that VA require all State
home adult day health care programs
undertake certain practices such as:
recording the name of the participant’s
primary care physician in his or her
medical record; requiring that each
participant see a primary care physician
annually and when there is a change in
condition; providing or arranging for
acute care when a resident needs it; and
ensuring participants are able to obtain
emergency care when necessary. The
commenters believed these practices
should not be restricted only to adult
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day health care programs that offer
medical supervision.
We agree with the first of these
recommendations. As proposed, the
provision requiring the State home to
record the name of each participant’s
primary care physician is in paragraph
(a) of this section, which applies
specifically to programs that offer
medical supervision. To apply it to all
adult day health care program
participants, we have moved the
requirement from proposed paragraph
(a)(2) to the introductory paragraph of
this regulation in the final rule, where
it applies to the entire section. We
redesignated proposed paragraph (a)(3)
as (a)(2).
We decline to require that each
participant who is in a program that
does not offer medical supervision see
a primary care physician annually,
because such a requirement is
unnecessary for all adult day health care
programs. We make no change based on
this comment.
We decline to require programs that
do not offer medical supervision to
provide for acute care. State homes may
choose to make acute care available, but
those services are not by design the
intent of social model programs. We
make no change based on this comment.
Regarding the final recommendation,
proposed paragraph (d), Availability of
physicians for emergency care, does
require that the management of all adult
day health care programs ‘‘must ensure
that participants are able to obtain
necessary emergency care,’’ and the
paragraph applies to all adult day health
care programs. As with domiciliaries,
the State home can meet the
requirement by calling 911 emergency
services on behalf of the participant.
The State home may provide physicians
for emergency care, but VA will not
require it. We make no change based on
this comment.
51.455 Dental Services
For clarity, we have inserted the word
‘‘dental’’ into paragraph § 4.455(a)(1) as
proposed to read, ‘‘In making dental
appointments; and’’.
51.470 Physical Environment
We have changed § 51.470(a), Life
safety from fire, to read, ‘‘The State
home must meet the applicable
requirements of National Fire Protection
Association’s NFPA 101, Life Safety
from fire, as incorporated by reference
in § 51.200.’’ We determined that the
proposed language was confusing
regarding which NFPA codes applied to
State home adult day health care
programs. This change is for clarity
only.
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VA received comments agreeing with
the space requirements proposed in
§ 51.470(b), but only for adult day
health care programs with medical
supervision. They suggested less space
be required for programs that do not
provide intensive medical services.
Specifically, they suggested at least 70
square feet per participant, including
office space for staff, as opposed to the
100 square feet required in the proposed
rule; and 40 square feet per participant,
excluding office space for staff, as
opposed to the 60 square feet required
in the proposed rule. They said
programs that do not provide intensive
medical services do not require the
same space as those that do, because
they do not provide rehabilitative
services or require the same specialized
equipment as medical model programs.
The space requirements in proposed
§ 51.470(b)(3) are the same as the ones
in current § 52.200(b)(3). Moreover, they
are the same standards VA imposes on
VA adult day health care facilities.
Likewise, we specify these space
allotments in the standards for funding
VA construction grants. See 38 CFR part
59. We specify these space allotments
because we consider them essential to
the health, safety, and well-being of the
participants. We make no changes based
on this comment.
51.480 Transportation
We received comments requesting
that VA provide transportation
reimbursement to State homes that
provide their residents transportation to
a VA medical center for medical care,
noting VA reimburses veterans for
mileage when traveling to and from a
VA medical facility for medical services.
The commenter is correct that VA
reimburses veterans for their travel
expenses through the Beneficiary Travel
program. Veteran residents of a State
home may be eligible for Beneficiary
Travel depending on the purpose of the
travel and other factors. Similarly, VA
may make a beneficiary travel payment
to a person or organization other than
the beneficiary when certain factors are
met. 38 CFR 70.2 and 70.20 (defining
‘‘claimant’’ for beneficiary travel
payments and explaining the
application for payment process). This
is addressed more fully in 38 CFR part
70. We make no change based on this
comment.
Other Issues
One commenter commented on VA’s
definition of ‘‘State’’ in proposed § 51.2.
The commenter said that a judicial
decision requires the terms ‘‘state’’ and
‘‘federal’’ be interpreted to encompass
any medical care a veteran obtains
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under the Affordable Care Act anywhere
in the world. King v. Burwell, 576 U.S.
____(2015). By this interpretation, the
commenter argued, VA must pay per
diem to any veteran wherever in the
world the veteran resides. The
commenter advised VA to allow
Congress to draft the per diem
regulations to determine VA’s logistical,
financial, and fiduciary responsibilities.
VA was not a party to King v. Burwell,
576 U.S. ____(2015), and nothing it
decided is binding on VA’s payment of
per diem to State homes. By law, VA
cannot delegate the task of writing
regulations for the State home program
to Congress. In fact, Congress has
directed VA to prescribe regulations
which are necessary and appropriate to
carry out laws administered by VA
which would include the laws
governing the payment of state home
per diem and standards for State
programs receiving such payments. 38
U.S.C. 501. We make no changes in
response to this comment.
VA received a comment suggesting we
revise the subject heading of this
rulemaking to read, ‘‘Per Diem for
Nursing Home, Domiciliary, or Adult
Day Health Care of Veterans in State
Homes.’’ The commenter recommended
this rulemaking keep the organization
and scope of the proposed rule in
several respects. Specifically, that
subpart D continues to provide
regulations for nursing home care
programs and part E for domiciliary care
programs.
We decline to change the name of the
final rule as the current name
adequately describes the content of the
rule, and we are keeping the subpart
headings and their topics as proposed.
We make no change in response to this
comment.
The commenter commented that VA
should require each State home to
employ a regulatory compliance officer
who will be a VA employee who resides
in the State home to insure the home’s
compliance with all VA regulations.
VA uses regular surveys of the State
homes to ensure compliance with VA
regulations governing VA payment of
per diem. VA lacks authority to place
VA employees on a State home’s staff,
and adopting this recommendation
would blur the line between VA and the
State home’s independent management.
We make no change based on this
comment.
In a related comment, another
commenter asserted this rulemaking as
proposed fails to establish a firm and
effective system of legal enforcement by
the VA of regulatory compliance and
legislative oversight by State Veterans
Homes (SVH) of VA Domiciliary Care
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61269
Standards. A firm and effective VA
regulatory enforcement mechanism
must be established with respect to
State Veterans Homes for the new VA
regulation on VA-SVH Domiciliary Care
Standards to have maximum positive
force and effect.
The commenter recommended
enforcing a more visible, professional
and proactive role for the State Veterans
Home [VISN] Liaison or for the SVH VA
Medical Facility Representative as those
positions were described in VHA
Handbook 1145.01, Survey Procedures
for State Veterans Homes (SVH)
Providing Nursing Home Care and/or
Adult Day Health Care (May 17, 2010).
The commenter suggested adding
certain duties to those assigned VA
officers, including prescribing that VA
notify State home residents and resident
councils of the existence of these liaison
officers, and that those duties be
enforced by legislative directives in this
rulemaking. The commenter urged that
this rulemaking require State
Departments of Veterans Affairs to ‘‘a)
promulgate state legislation that
provides regulatory oversight of State
Veterans Homes management,
administration and operations; and b)
promulgate state legislation that
provides for the regulatory compliance
by State Veterans Homes of VA Program
Regulations.’’
VA cannot require States to legislate.
We disagree about whether this
rulemaking provides effective means to
ensure compliance with these
regulations. We believe the processes
prescribed in this rulemaking provide
an effective means of oversight and
enforcement of compliance with these
regulations. These include the surveys
for recognition and subsequent
certification, provisional certification if
needed, and potentially denial of
certification, together with the multiple
standards the State home must meet to
obtain recognition and certification
under part 51. Further, we decline to
revise the duties of the VA officers as
any such consideration would be
beyond the scope of this rulemaking.
The same commenter sought
amendments of §§ 51.70 and 51.100,
providing specific language.
Specifically, the commenter sought
amendments of § 51.70(a)(1), (a)(2),
(b)(9)(ii), (f), (j)(1)(iv), (j)(3), and (m)
(including extensive suggestions for
creation and management of married
quarters); § 51.100(c), (d), (f), and (i).
This comment is distinguishable from
the others that addressed the proposed
rule’s application of §§ 51.70 and 51.100
to the domiciliary care program because
it seeks amendment of §§ 51.70 and
51.100. This rulemaking did not
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propose to amend those sections, and
VA declines to make any such
amendments in this final rulemaking,
without providing an adequate period
for notice and comment. We will
consider these comments for possible
future amendment of §§ 51.70 and
51.100. We make no changes here based
on these comments.
VA received a comment saying that as
a resident of a State home in a remote
location, a requirement to provide
accommodations for family members to
stay on special occasions would be a
great benefit to veterans with families,
and even to those without, but who
would remember the happiness of
family life and enjoy the presence of
families. Another commenter urged VA
to require State homes to provide
private family visitation space, reporting
that family has not visited during the
resident’s 13 years of residence in a
State home for lack of a private
visitation room or space.
We appreciate the commenters’ desire
for State homes to facilitate family visits
this way and certainly encourage State
homes to do what they can to facilitate
family visits. However, providing
accommodations for visiting family
could be a significant expense for State
homes. We thus make no change based
on this comment.
VA received a comment that State
politics and corruption take precedence
over State home residents’ welfare. The
commenter proposed creation of an
oversight group to take legal action
against misuse of Federal funds, lest the
funds that States have earmarked for the
care of Veterans disappear into other
accounts in each state.
While we understand the commenter
has concerns, the solution the
commenter seeks is beyond the scope of
this rulemaking. Consequently, we make
no changes based on this comment.
One commenter asked that VA
‘‘coordinate the impact of the semantic
differential between terms,’’ i.e., define
terms the same in Veterans Health
Administration (VHA) regulations in 38
CFR part 51 and Veterans Benefits
Administration (VBA) regulations in 38
CFR parts 3 and 4. The commenter
asserted differences in the use or
definition of the same or similar terms
could affect how and to whom VBA
awards special monthly compensation
benefits or aid and attendance benefits
under part 3, or temporary total
disability evaluations under part 4. The
commenter asserts VA regulations are
unclear regarding whether a veteran’s
residency in a State home can qualify
for special monthly compensation or
pension rates that use nursing home
care as a criterion of entitlement. The
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commenter also urged VA to apply 38
U.S.C. 1151, Benefits for persons
disabled by treatment or vocational
rehabilitation, to disability incurred in
State homes receiving VA per diem
payments. The commenter inquired of
the significance of residence in a State
home to a veteran’s VA disability
compensation or pension payments. The
commenter asserted VA is creating
additional burdens for states and
confusion through lack of consistency
and clarity throughout its regulations,
like that resulting from conflict of laws
regarding pensioners getting Medicaidcovered nursing home care.
The commenter raises points worthy
of legal review and perhaps of
rulemaking. It is beyond the scope of
this rulemaking to harmonize
definitions among parts 3, 4, and 51 of
title 38, Code of Federal Regulations.
The application of definitions in this
rulemaking to claims for monetary
benefits the VBA administers, including
benefits under 38 U.S.C. 1151, and the
effect of residency in a State home on
any veteran’s monetary benefits, are
appropriately addressed in an
individual claim to VBA for those
benefits. They too are beyond the scope
of this rulemaking. Whereas the
commenter has raised no issue
regarding, or requested any change to,
the proposed regulations that are within
the scope of this rulemaking, we make
no changes based on this comment.
Based on the rationale set forth in the
supplementary information to the
proposed rule and in the preceding
discussion, VA is adopting the
provisions of the proposed rule as final,
with changes as noted.
Effect of Rulemaking
Title 38 of the Code of Federal
Regulations, as revised by this final rule,
represents VA’s implementation of its
legal authority on this subject. Other
than future amendments to this
regulation or governing statutes, no
contrary guidance or procedures are
authorized. All existing or subsequent
VA guidance must be read to conform
with this rulemaking if possible. If not
possible, this rulemaking supersedes
such guidance.
Paperwork Reduction Act
The Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(44 U.S.C. 3507) requires that VA
consider the impact of paperwork and
other information collection burdens
imposed on the public. Under 44 U.S.C.
3507(a), an agency may not collect or
sponsor the collection of information,
nor may it impose an information
collection requirement, unless it
displays a currently valid Office of
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Management and Budget (OMB) control
number. See also 5 CFR 1320.8(b)(3)(vi).
Although this action contains
provisions constituting collections of
information at 38 CFR 51.20, 51.30,
51.31, 51.42, 51.210, 51.300, 51.310,
51.320, 51.350, 51.390, 51.400, 51.405,
51.410, 51.415, 51.420, 51.425, 51.430,
51.445, 51.460, and 51.475 under the
provisions of the Paperwork Reduction
Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501–3521), no
new or proposed revised collections of
information are associated with this
final rule. The information collection
requirements for §§ 51.20, 51.30, 51.31,
51.42, 51.210, 51.300, 51.310, 51.320,
51.350, 51.390, 51.400, 51.405, 51.410,
51.415, 51.420, 51.425, 51.430, 51.445,
51.460, and 51.475 are currently
approved by the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB) and have been
assigned OMB control number 2900–
0160.
Section 51.42 also provides for
information collection. The OMB
currently approves this information
collection under control number 2900–
0091.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Secretary hereby certifies that
this final rule will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities as they are
defined in the Regulatory Flexibility
Act, 5 U.S.C. 601–612. This rule affects
veterans, State homes, and pharmacies.
The State homes that are subject to this
rulemaking are State government
entities under the control of State
governments. All State homes are
owned, operated, and managed by State
governments or nonprofit organizations
created by the State except for a small
number that are operated by entities
under contract with State governments.
These contractors are not small entities.
Also, this rulemaking will not have a
consequential effect on any pharmacies
that could be considered small entities.
Therefore, pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 605(b),
this rulemaking is exempt from the final
regulatory flexibility analysis
requirements of sections 603 and 604.
Executive Orders 12866, 13563, and
13771
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563
direct agencies to assess the costs and
benefits of available regulatory
alternatives and, when regulation is
necessary, to select regulatory
approaches that maximize net benefits
(including potential economic,
environmental, public health and safety
effects, and other advantages;
distributive impacts; and equity).
Executive Order 13563 (Improving
Regulation and Regulatory Review)
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emphasizes the importance of
quantifying both costs and benefits,
reducing costs, harmonizing rules, and
promoting flexibility. Executive Order
12866 (Regulatory Planning and
Review) defines a ‘‘significant
regulatory action,’’ requiring review by
OMB, unless OMB waives such review,
as ‘‘any regulatory action that is likely
to result in a rule that may: (1) Have an
annual effect on the economy of $100
million or more or adversely affect in a
material way the economy, a sector of
the economy, productivity, competition,
jobs, the environment, public health or
safety, or State, local, or tribal
governments or communities; (2) Create
a serious inconsistency or otherwise
interfere with an action taken or
planned by another agency; (3)
Materially alter the budgetary impact of
entitlements, grants, user fees, or loan
programs or the rights and obligations of
recipients thereof; or (4) Raise novel
legal or policy issues arising out of legal
mandates, the President’s priorities, or
the principles set forth in this Executive
Order.’’
OMB has examined the economic,
interagency, budgetary, legal, and policy
implications of this regulatory action
and it has been determined not to be a
significant regulatory action under
Executive Order 12866. VA’s regulatory
impact analysis can be found as a
supporting document at https://
www.regulations.gov, usually within 48
hours after the rulemaking document is
published. Additionally, a copy of the
rulemaking and its regulatory impact
analysis are available on VA’s website at
https://www.va.gov/orpm/, by following
the link for ‘‘VA Regulations Published
From FY 2004 Through FYTD.’’ This
rule is not an E.O. 13771 regulatory
action because this rule is not
significant under E.O. 12866.
Unfunded Mandates
The Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
of 1995 requires, at 2 U.S.C. 1532, that
agencies prepare an assessment of
anticipated costs and benefits before
issuing any rule that may result in an
expenditure by State, local, and tribal
governments, in the aggregate, or by the
private sector, of $100 million or more
(adjusted annually for inflation) in any
one year. This final rule will have no
such effect on State, local, and tribal
governments, or on the private sector.
Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance
The Catalog of Federal Domestic
Assistance numbers and titles for the
programs affected by this document are
64.005, Grants to States for Construction
of State Home Facilities; 64.007, Blind
Rehabilitation Centers; 64.008, Veterans
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Domiciliary Care; 64.009, Veterans
Medical Care Benefits; 64.010, Veterans
Nursing Home Care; 64.011, Veterans
Dental Care; 64.012, Veterans
Prescription Service; 64.013, Veterans
Prosthetic Appliances; 64.014, Veterans
State Domiciliary Care; 64.015, Veterans
State Nursing Home Care; 64.016,
Veterans State Hospital Care; 64.018,
Sharing Specialized Medical Resources;
64.019, Veterans Rehabilitation Alcohol
and Drug Dependence; 64.022, Veterans
Home Based Primary Care; 64.026,
Veterans State Adult Day Health Care;
and 64.053, Payments to States for
Programs to Promote the Hiring and
Retention of Nurses at State Veterans
Homes.
List of Subjects in 38 CFR Parts 17, 51,
and 52
Administrative practice and
procedure, Claims, Day care, Dental
health, Government contracts, Grant
programs—health, Grant programs—
veterans, Health care, Health facilities,
Health professions, Health records,
Mental health programs, Nursing
homes, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Travel and transportation
expenses, Veterans.
The Secretary of Veterans Affairs
approved this document and authorized
the undersigned to sign and submit the
document to the Office of the Federal
Register for publication electronically as
an official document of the Department
of Veterans Affairs. Robert L. Wilkie,
Secretary, Department of Veterans
Affairs, approved this document on
November 9, 2018, for publication.
Dated: November 13, 2018.
Consuela Benjamin,
Regulations Development Coordinator, Office
of Regulation Policy & Management, Office
of the Secretary, Department of Veterans
Affairs.
For the reasons stated in the preamble
and under the authority of 38 U.S.C.
1741–1743 and 38 U.S.C. 1745, the
Department of Veterans Affairs is
amending 38 CFR parts 17, 51, and 52
as follows:
PART 17—MEDICAL
1. The authority citation for part 17
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 38 U.S.C. 501, and as noted in
specific sections.
[Removed].
2. Remove the undesignated center
heading ‘‘Aid to States for Care of
Veterans in State Homes’’ and §§ 17.190
through 17.194.
■
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■
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[Removed]
3. Remove §§ 17.196 through 17.200.
PART 51—PER DIEM FOR NURSING
HOME, DOMICILIARY, OR ADULT DAY
HEALTH CARE OF VETERANS IN
STATE HOMES
4. The authority citation for part 51 is
amended to read as follows:
■
Authority: 38 U.S.C. 101, 501, 1710, 1720,
1741–1743, 1745, and as follows.
Section 51.20 and 51.30 also issued under
38 U.S.C. 511, 1742, 7104 and 7105.
Section 51.42 also issued under 38 U.S.C.
510 and 1744.
Section 51.43 also issued under 38 U.S.C.
1712.
Section 51.310 also issued under 38 U.S.C.
1720(f).
5. Revise the part heading as set forth
above.
■ 6. Revise subpart A, consisting of
§§ 51.1 and 51.2, to read as follows:
■
Subpart A—General
Sec.
51.1 Purpose and scope of this part.
51.2 Definitions.
Subpart A—General
§ 51.1
Signing Authority
§ § 17.190–17.194
§ § 17.196–17.200
61271
Purpose and scope of this part.
The purpose of this part is to establish
VA’s policies, procedures, and
standards applicable to the payment of
per diem to State homes that provide
nursing home care, domiciliary care, or
adult day health care to eligible
veterans. Subpart B of this part sets
forth the procedures for recognition and
certification of a State home. Subpart C
sets forth requirements governing the
rates of, and procedures applicable to,
the payment of per diem; the provision
of drugs and medicines; and for which
veterans VA will pay per diem. Subparts
D, E, and F set forth standards that any
State home seeking per diem payments
for nursing home care (subpart D),
domiciliary care (subpart E), or adult
day health care (subpart F) must meet.
§ 51.2
Definitions.
For the purposes of this part:
Activities of daily living (ADLs) means
the functions or tasks for self-care
usually performed in the normal course
of a day, i.e., mobility, bathing, dressing,
grooming, toileting, transferring, and
eating.
Adult day health care means a
therapeutic outpatient care program that
includes one or more of the following
services, based on patient care needs:
Medical services, rehabilitation,
therapeutic activities, socialization, and
nutrition. Services are provided in a
congregate setting.
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Clinical nurse specialist means a
licensed professional nurse with a
master’s degree in nursing and a major
in a clinical nursing specialty from an
academic program accredited by the
National League for Nursing.
Director means the Director of the VA
medical center of jurisdiction, unless
the reference is specifically to another
type of director.
Domiciliary care means the furnishing
of a home to a veteran, including the
furnishing of shelter, food, and other
comforts of home, and necessary
medical services as defined in this part.
For purposes of the definition of
‘‘domiciliary care,’’ necessary medical
services means the medical services
subpart E of this part requires the State
home to provide.
Eligible veteran means a veteran
whose care in a State home may serve
as a basis for per diem payments to the
State. The requirements that an eligible
veteran must meet are set forth in
§§ 51.50 (nursing home care), 51.51
(domiciliary care), and 51.52 (adult day
health care).
Licensed medical practitioner means a
nurse practitioner, physician, physician
assistant, or primary care physician.
Nurse practitioner means a licensed
professional nurse who is currently
licensed to practice in a State; who
meets that State’s requirements
governing the qualifications of nurse
practitioners; and who is currently
certified as an adult, family, or
gerontological nurse practitioner by a
nationally recognized body that
provides such certification for nurse
practitioners, such as the American
Nurses Credentialing Center or the
American Academy of Nurse
Practitioners.
Nursing home care means the
accommodation of convalescents or
other persons who are not acutely ill
and not in need of hospital care, but
who require nursing care and related
medical services, if such nursing care
and medical services are prescribed by,
or are performed under the general
direction of, persons duly licensed to
provide such care. The term includes
services furnished in skilled nursing
care facilities, in intermediate care
facilities, and in combined facilities. It
does not include domiciliary care.
Participant means an individual
receiving adult day health care.
Physician means a doctor of medicine
or osteopathy legally authorized to
practice medicine or surgery in the
State.
Physician assistant means a person
who meets the applicable State
requirements for a physician assistant,
is currently certified by the National
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Commission on Certification of
Physician Assistants as a physician
assistant, and has an individualized
written scope of practice that
determines the authorization to write
medical orders, to prescribe
medications, and to accomplish other
clinical tasks under appropriate
physician supervision.
Primary care physician means a
designated generalist physician
responsible for providing, directing, and
coordinating health care that is
indicated for the residents or
participants.
Program of care means any or all of
the three levels of care for which VA
may pay per diem under this part.
Resident means an individual
receiving nursing home or domiciliary
care.
State means each of the several States,
the District of Columbia, the Virgin
Islands, the Commonwealth of Puerto
Rico, Guam, the Commonwealth of the
Northern Mariana Islands, and
American Samoa.
State home means a home recognized
and, to the extent required by this part,
certified pursuant to this part that a
State established primarily for veterans
disabled by age, disease, or otherwise,
who by reason of such disability are
incapable of earning a living. A State
home must provide at least one program
of care (i.e., domiciliary care, nursing
home care, or adult day health care).
VA means the U.S. Department of
Veterans Affairs.
Veteran means a veteran under 38
U.S.C. 101.
■ 7. Revise subpart B, consisting of
§§ 51.20 and 51.30 through 51.32, to
read as follows:
Subpart B—Obtaining Recognition and
Certification for per Diem Payments
Sec.
51.20 Recognition of a State home.
51.30 Certification of a State home.
51.31 Surveys for recognition and/or
certification.
51.32 Terminating recognition.
Subpart B—Obtaining Recognition and
Certification for per Diem Payments
§ 51.20
Recognition of a State home.
(a) How to apply for recognition. To
apply for recognition of a home for
purposes of receiving per diem from
VA, a State must submit a letter
requesting recognition to the Office of
Geriatrics and Extended Care in VA
Central Office, 810 Vermont Avenue
NW, Washington, DC 20420. The letter
must be signed by the State official
authorized to make the request. The
letter will be reviewed by VA, in
accordance with this section.
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(b) Survey and recommendation by
Director. (1) After receipt of a letter
requesting recognition, VA will survey
the home in accordance with § 51.31 to
determine whether the facility and
program of care meet the applicable
requirements of subpart C and the
applicable standards in subpart D, E, or
F of this part. For purposes of the
recognition process including the
survey, references to State homes in the
standards apply to homes that are being
considered by VA for recognition as
State homes.
(2) If the Director of the VA Medical
Center of jurisdiction determines that
the applicable requirements and
standards are met, the Director will
submit a written recommendation for
recognition to the Under Secretary for
Health.
(3) If the Director does not
recommend recognition, the Director
will submit a written recommendation
against recognition to the Under
Secretary for Health and will notify in
writing the State official who signed the
letter submitted under paragraph (a) of
this section and the State official
authorized to oversee operations of the
home. The notification will state the
following:
(i) The specific standard(s) not met;
and
(ii) The State’s right to submit a
response to the Under Secretary for
Health, including any additional
evidence, no later than 30 calendar days
after the date of the notification to the
State.
(c) Decision by the Under Secretary
for Health. After receipt of a
recommendation from the Director, and
allowing 30 calendar days for the state
to respond to a negative
recommendation and to submit
evidence, the Under Secretary for
Health will award or deny recognition
based on all available evidence. The
applicant will be notified of the
decision in writing. Adverse decisions
may be appealed to the Board of
Veterans’ Appeals (see 38 CFR part 20).
(d) Effect of recognition. (1)
Recognition of a State home means that,
at the time of recognition, the facility
and its program of care meet the
applicable requirements of this part.
The State home must obtain
certification after recognition in
accordance with § 51.30.
(2) After a State home is recognized,
any new annex, new branch, or other
expansion in the size or capacity of a
home or any relocation of the home to
a new facility must be separately
recognized.
(The Office of Management and Budget has
approved the information collection
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requirements in this section under control
number 2900–0161.)
§ 51.30
Certification of a State home.
(a) General certification requirement.
To be certified, the State home must
allow VA to survey the home in
accordance with § 51.31. A State home
must be certified no later than 450
calendar days after the State home is
recognized. Certifications expire 600
calendar days after the date of their
issuance.
(b) Periodic certifications required.
The Director of the VA medical center
of jurisdiction will certify a State home
based on a survey conducted at least
once every 270–450 calendar days, at
VA’s discretion, and will notify the
State official authorized to oversee
operations of the State home of the
decision regarding certification.
(c) Decreasing capacity for a program
of care. The State must report any
decreases in the capacity for a particular
program of care to the Office of
Geriatrics and Extended Care in VA
Central Office, 810 Vermont Avenue
NW, Washington, DC 20420 no later
than 30 calendar days after such
decrease, and must provide an
explanation for the decrease.
(d) Provisional certification—(1)
When issuance is required. After a VA
survey, the Director must issue a
provisional certification for the
surveyed State home if the Director
determines that all of the following are
true:
(i) The State home does not meet one
or more of the applicable requirements
or standards in this part;
(ii) None of these deficiencies
immediately jeopardize the health or
safety of any resident or participant;
(iii) No later than 20 working days
after receipt by the State home of the
survey report, the State submitted to the
Director a written plan to remedy each
deficiency in a specified amount of
time; and
(iv) The plan is reasonable and the
Director has sent a written notice to the
appropriate person(s) at the State home
informing him or her that the Director
agrees to the plan.
(2) Surveys to continue while under
provisional certification. VA will
continue to survey the State home while
it is under a provisional certification in
accordance with this section and
§ 51.31. After such a survey, the Director
will continue the provisional
certification if the Director determines
that the four criteria listed in paragraphs
(c)(1)(i)–(iv) of this section are true.
(e) Notice and the right to appeal a
denial of certification. A State home has
the right to appeal when the Director
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determines that a State home does not
meet the requirements of this part (i.e.,
denies certification). An appeal is not
provided to a State for a State home that
receives a provisional certification
because, by providing the corrective
action plan necessary to receive a
provisional certification, a State
demonstrates its acceptance of VA’s
determination that it does not meet the
VA standards for which the corrective
action plan was submitted.
(1) Notice of decision denying
certification. The Director will issue in
writing a decision denying certification
that sets forth the specific standard(s)
not met. The Director will send a copy
of this decision to the State official
authorized to oversee operations of the
State home, and notify that official of
the State’s right to submit a written
appeal to the Under Secretary for Health
as stated in paragraph (e)(2) of this
section. If the State home does not
submit a timely written appeal, the
Director’s decision becomes final and
VA will not pay per diem for any care
provided on or after the 31st day after
the State’s receipt of the Director’s
decision.
(2) Appeal of denial of certification.
The State must submit a written appeal
no later than 30 calendar days after the
date of the notice of the denial of
certification. The appeal must explain
why the denial of certification is
inaccurate or incomplete and provide
any relevant information not considered
by the Director. Any appeal that does
not identify a reason for disagreement
will be returned to the sender without
further consideration. If the State home
submits a timely written appeal, the
Director’s decision will not take effect
and VA will continue to pay per diem
to the State home pending a decision by
the Under Secretary for Health.
(3) Decision on appeal of a denial of
certification. The Under Secretary for
Health will review the matter, including
any relevant supporting documentation,
and issue a written decision that affirms
or reverses the Director’s decision. The
State will be notified of the decision,
which may be appealed to the Board of
Veterans’ Appeals (see 38 CFR part 20)
if it results in a loss of per diem
payments to the State. VA will
terminate recognition and certification
and discontinue per diem payments for
care provided on and after the date of
the Under Secretary for Health’s
decision affirming a denial of
certification or on a later date that must
be specified by the Under Secretary for
Health.
(f) Other appeals. Appeals of matters
not addressed in this section will be
governed by 38 CFR part 20.
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61273
(The Office of Management and Budget has
approved the information collection
requirements in this section under control
number 2900–0161)
§ 51.31 Surveys for recognition and/or
certification.
(a) General. Both before and after a
home is recognized and certified, VA
may survey the home as necessary to
determine whether it complies with
applicable regulations. VA will provide
advance notice before a recognition
survey, but advance notice is not
required before other surveys. A survey,
as necessary, may cover all parts of the
home or only certain parts, and may
include review, audit, and production of
any records that have a bearing on
compliance with the requirements of
this part (including any reports from
state or local entities), as well as the
completion and submission to VA of all
required forms. The Director will
designate the VA officials and/or
contractors to survey the home.
(b) Recognition surveys. VA will not
conduct a recognition survey unless the
following minimum requirements are
met:
(1) For nursing homes and
domiciliaries, the home has at least 20
residents or has a number of residents
consisting of at least 50 percent of the
resident capacity of the home;
(2) For adult day health care programs
of care, the program has at least 10
participants or has a number of
participants consisting of at least 50
percent of participant capacity of the
program.
(c) Threats to public, resident, or
participant safety. If VA identifies a
condition at the home that poses an
immediate threat to public, resident or
participant safety, or other information
indicating the existence of such a threat,
the Director of the VA medical center of
jurisdiction will immediately report this
to the VA Network Director (10N1–22);
the Office of Geriatrics and Extended
Care in VA Central Office; and the State
official authorized to oversee operations
of the home.
(The Office of Management and Budget has
approved the information collection
requirements in this section under control
number 2900–0160.)
§ 51.32
Terminating recognition.
Once a home has achieved
recognition, the recognition will be
terminated only if the State requests that
the recognition be terminated, or if VA
makes a final decision that affirms the
Director’s decision not to certify the
State home.
■ 8. Revise the heading for subpart C to
read as follows:
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Subpart C—Requirements Applicable
to Eligibility, Rates, and Payments
*
■
*
*
*
*
9. Revise § 51.40 to read as follows:
§ 51.40
Basic per diem rates.
(a) Basic rate. Except as provided in
§ 51.41, VA will pay per diem for care
provided to an eligible veteran at a State
home at the lesser of the following rates:
(1) One-half of the daily cost of the
care for each day the veteran is in the
State home, as calculated under
paragraph (b) of this section.
(2) The basic per diem rate for each
day the veteran is in the State home.
The basic per diem rate is established by
VA for each fiscal year in accordance
with 38 U.S.C. 1741(a) and (c).
Note to paragraph (a): To determine the
number of days that a veteran was in a State
home, see paragraph (c) of this section.
(b) How to calculate the daily cost of
a veteran’s care. The daily cost of care
consists of those direct and indirect
costs attributable to care at the State
home, divided by the total number of
residents serviced by the program of
care. Cost principles are set forth in
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) regulations. 2 CFR 200.400–
200.475.
(c) Determining whether a veteran
spent a day receiving nursing home or
domiciliary care—(1) Nursing homes.
VA will pay per diem for each day that
the veteran is receiving nursing home
care and has an overnight stay at the
State home. Per diem also will be paid
for a day when there is no overnight
stay if the State home nursing home care
program has an occupancy rate of 90
percent or greater on that day. However,
these payments will be made only for
the first 10 consecutive days during
which the veteran is admitted as a
patient for any stay in a VA or other
hospital (a hospital stay could occur
more than once in a calendar year once
there is an overnight stay in the State
home between hospital stays) and only
for the first 12 days in a calendar year
during which the veteran is absent for
purposes other than receiving hospital
care. Occupancy rate is calculated by
dividing the total number of residents
(including nonveterans) in the nursing
home on that day by the total
recognized nursing home capacity in
that State home.
(2) Domiciliaries. VA will pay per
diem for each day that the veteran is
receiving domiciliary care and has an
overnight stay at the State home. VA
will also pay per diem during any
absence of 96 or fewer consecutive
hours for purposes other than receiving
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hospital care at VA expense, but VA
will not pay per diem for any part of the
absence if it continues for longer than
96 consecutive hours. Absences that are
not interrupted by at least 24 hours of
continuous residence in the State home
are considered one continuous absence.
(d) Determining whether a Veteran
spent a day receiving adult day health
care. Per diem will be paid for a day of
adult day health care. For purposes of
this section a day of adult day health
care means:
(1) Six hours or more in one calendar
day in which a veteran receives adult
day health care; or
(2) Any two periods of at least 3 hours
each but less than 6 hours each in any
2 calendar days in the same calendar
month in which the veteran receives
adult day health care.
(3) Time during which the State home
provides transportation between the
veteran’s residence and the State home
or to a health care visit, or provides staff
to accompany a veteran during
transportation or a health care visit, will
be included as time the veteran receives
adult day health care.
■ 10. Revise § 51.42 to read as follows:
§ 51.42
Payment procedures.
(a) Forms required—(1) Forms
required at time of admission or
enrollment. As a condition for receiving
payment of per diem under this part, the
State home must submit the forms
identified in paragraphs (a)(1)(i) and (ii)
of this section to the VA medical center
of jurisdiction for each veteran at the
time of the veteran’s admission to or
enrollment in a State home. If the home
is not a recognized State home, the
home must, after recognition, submit
forms for Veterans who received care on
and after the date of the completion of
the VA survey that provided the basis
for determining that the home met the
standards of this part. The State home
must also submit the appropriate form
with any request for a change in the
type of per diem paid on behalf of a
veteran as a result of a change in the
veteran’s program of care or a change in
the veteran’s service-connected
disability rating that makes the veteran’s
care eligible for payment under § 51.41.
Copies of VA Forms can be obtained
from any VA Medical Center and are
available on our website at www.va.gov/
vaforms. The required forms are:
(i) A completed VA Form 10–10EZ,
Application for Medical Benefits (or VA
Form 10–10EZR, Health Benefits
Renewal Form, if a completed Form 10–
10EZ is already on file at VA).
Note 1 to paragraph (a)(1)(i): Domiciliary
applicants and residents must complete the
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financial disclosure sections of VA Forms
10–10EZ and 10–10EZR, and adult day
health care applicants may be required to
complete the financial disclosure sections of
these forms in order to enroll with VA.
Although the nursing home applicants or
residents or adult day health care
participants do not complete the financial
disclosure sections of VA Forms 10–10EZ
and 10–10EZR, an unsigned form is
incomplete, and VA will not accept the form.
(ii) A completed VA Form 10–10SH,
State Home Program Application for
Care—Medical Certification.
(2) Form required for monthly
payments. Except as provided in
paragraphs (b)(1) and (2) of this section,
VA pays per diem on a monthly basis
for care provided during the prior
month. To receive payment, the State
must submit each month to the VA a
completed VA Form 10–5588, State
Home Report and Statement of Federal
Aid Claimed.
(b) Commencement of payments—(1)
Per diem payments for a newlyrecognized State home. No per diem
payments will be made until VA
recognizes the home and each veteran
resident for whom VA pays per diem is
verified as being eligible; however, per
diem payments will be made
retroactively for care that was provided
on and after the date of the completion
of the VA survey that provided the basis
for determining that the home met the
standards of this part.
(2) Per diem payments for capacity
certified under § 51.30(c). Per diem will
be paid for the care of veterans in
capacity certified in accordance with
§ 51.30(c) retroactive to the date of the
completion of the survey if the Director
certifies the capacity as a result of that
survey.
(3) Payments for eligible veterans.
When a State home admits or enrolls an
eligible veteran, VA will pay per diem
under this part from the date of receipt
of the completed forms required by this
section, except that VA will pay per
diem from the date care began if the
Director receives the completed forms
no later than 10 calendar days after care
began. VA will make retroactive
payments of per diem under paragraphs
(b)(1) and (2) of this section only if the
Director receives the completed forms
that must be submitted under this
section.
(The Office of Management and Budget has
approved the information collection
requirements in this section under control
numbers 2900–0091 and 2900–0160.)
■
11. Revise § 51.43 to read as follows:
§ 51.43 Drugs and medicines for certain
veterans.
(a) In addition to the per diem
payments under § 51.40 of this part, the
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Secretary will furnish drugs and
medicines to a State home as may be
ordered by prescription of a duly
licensed physician as specific therapy in
the treatment of illness or injury for a
veteran receiving nursing home care in
a State home if—
(1) The veteran:
(i) Has a singular or combined rating
of less than 50 percent based on one or
more service-connected disabilities and
needs the drugs and medicines for a
service-connected disability; and
(ii) Needs nursing home care for
reasons that do not include care for a
VA adjudicated service-connected
disability; or
(2) The veteran:
(i) Has a singular or combined rating
of 50 or 60 percent based on one or
more service-connected disabilities and
needs the drugs and medicines; and
(ii) Needs nursing home care for
reasons that do not include care for a
VA adjudicated service-connected
disability.
(b) VA will also furnish drugs and
medicines to a State home for a veteran
receiving nursing home, domiciliary, or
adult day health care in a State home
pursuant to 38 U.S.C. 1712(d), as
implemented by § 17.96 of this chapter,
subject to the limitation in § 51.41(c)(2).
(c) VA may furnish a drug or
medicine under paragraph (a) of this
section and under § 17.96 of this chapter
only if the drug or medicine is included
on VA’s National Formulary, unless VA
determines a non-Formulary drug or
medicine is medically necessary.
(d) VA may furnish a drug or
medicine under this section and under
§ 17.96 of this chapter by having the
drug or medicine delivered to the State
home in which the veteran resides by
mail or other means and packaged in a
form that is mutually acceptable to the
State home and to VA set forth in a
written agreement.
(e) As a condition for receiving drugs
or medicine under this section or under
§ 17.96 of this chapter, the State must
submit to the VA medical center of
jurisdiction a completed VA Form 10–
0460 with the corresponding
prescription(s) for each eligible veteran.
(The Office of Management and Budget has
approved the information collection
requirements in this section under control
number 2900–0160.)
■
12. Revise § 51.50 to read as follows:
§ 51.50
care.
Eligible veterans—nursing home
A veteran is an eligible veteran for the
purposes of payment of per diem for
nursing home care under this part if VA
determines that the veteran needs
nursing home care; is not barred from
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receiving care based on his or her
service (see 38 U.S.C. 5303, 5303A), is
not barred from receiving VA pension,
compensation or dependency and
indemnity compensation based on the
character of a discharge from military
service (see 38 CFR 3.12) and is within
one of the following categories:
(a) Veterans with service-connected
disabilities;
(b) Veterans who are former prisoners
of war, who were awarded the Purple
Heart, or who were awarded the medal
of honor under 10 U.S.C. 3741, 6241, or
8741 or 14 U.S.C. 491;
(c) Veterans who were discharged or
released from active military service for
a disability incurred or aggravated in the
line of duty;
(d) Veterans who receive disability
compensation under 38 U.S.C. 1151;
(e) Veterans whose entitlement to
disability compensation is suspended
because of the receipt of retired pay;
(f) Veterans whose entitlement to
disability compensation is suspended
pursuant to 38 U.S.C. 1151, but only to
the extent that such veterans’
continuing eligibility for nursing home
care is provided for in the judgment or
settlement described in 38 U.S.C. 1151;
(g) Veterans who VA determines are
unable to defray the expenses of
necessary care as specified under 38
U.S.C. 1722(a);
(h) Veterans solely seeking care for a
disorder associated with exposure to a
toxic substance or radiation, for a
disorder associated with service in the
Southwest Asia theater of operations
during the Persian Gulf War, as
provided in 38 U.S.C. 1710(e), or for any
illness associated with service in
combat in a war after the Gulf War or
during a period of hostility after
November 11, 1998, as provided and
limited in 38 U.S.C. 1710(e);
(i) Veterans who agree to pay to the
United States the applicable co-payment
determined under 38 U.S.C. 1710(f) and
1710(g).
Note 1 to paragraph (i): Neither enrollment
in the VA healthcare system nor eligibility to
enroll is required to be an eligible veteran for
the purposes of payment of per diem for
nursing home care.
■
13. Add § 51.51 to read as follows:
§ 51.51
care.
Eligible veterans—domiciliary
(a) A veteran is an eligible veteran for
the purposes of payment of per diem for
domiciliary care in a State home under
this part if VA determines that the
veteran is not barred from receiving care
based on his or her service (see 38
U.S.C. 5303, 5303A), is not barred from
receiving VA pension, compensation or
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61275
dependency and indemnity
compensation based on the character of
a discharge from military service (see 38
CFR 3.12), and the veteran is:
(1) A veteran whose annual income
does not exceed the maximum annual
rate of pension payable to a veteran in
need of regular aid and attendance; or
(2) A veteran who VA determines has
no adequate means of support. The
phrase ‘‘no adequate means of support’’
refers to an applicant for domiciliary
care whose annual income exceeds the
rate of pension described in paragraph
(a)(1) of this section, but who is able to
demonstrate to competent VA medical
authority, on the basis of objective
evidence, that deficits in health or
functional status render the applicant
incapable of pursuing substantially
gainful employment, as determined by
the Chief of Staff of the VA medical
center of jurisdiction, and who is
otherwise without the means to provide
adequately for himself or herself, or be
provided for in the community.
(b) For purposes of this section, the
eligible veteran must be able to perform
the following:
(1) Daily ablutions, such as brushing
teeth, bathing, combing hair, and body
eliminations, without assistance.
(2) Dress himself or herself with a
minimum of assistance.
(3) Proceed to and return from the
dining hall without aid.
(4) Feed himself or herself.
(5) Secure medical attention on an
ambulatory basis or by use of a
personally propelled wheelchair.
(6) Have voluntary control over body
eliminations or have control by use of
an appropriate prosthesis.
(7) Participate in some measure,
however slight, in work assignments
that support the maintenance and
operation of the State home.
(8) Make rational and competent
decisions as to his or her desire to
remain in or leave the State home.
■ 14. Add § 51.52 to read as follows:
§ 51.52
care.
Eligible veterans—adult day health
A veteran is an eligible veteran for
payment of per diem to a State for adult
day health care if VA determines that
the veteran:
(a) Is not barred from receiving VA
pension, compensation or dependency
and indemnity compensation based on
the character of a discharge from
military service (see 38 CFR 3.12);
(b) Is enrolled in the VA health care
system;
(c) Would otherwise require nursing
home care; and
(d) Needs adult day health care
because the veteran meets any one of
the following conditions:
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(1) The veteran has three or more
Activities of Daily Living (ADL)
dependencies.
(2) The veteran has significant
cognitive impairment.
(3) The veteran has two ADL
dependencies and two or more of the
following conditions:
(i) Seventy-five years old or older;
(ii) High use of medical services, i.e.,
three or more hospitalizations per
calendar year, or 12 or more visits to an
outpatient clinic or to an emergency
evaluation unit per calendar year;
(iii) Diagnosis of clinical depression;
or
(iv) Living alone in the community.
(4) The veteran does not meet the
criteria in paragraph (d)(1), (2), or (3) of
this section, but nevertheless a licensed
VA medical practitioner determines the
veteran needs adult day health care
services.
(Authority: 38 U.S.C. 501, 1720(f), 1741–
1743)
■
15. Add § 51.58 to read as follows:
§ 51.58 Requirements and Standards
applicable for payment of per diem.
A State home must meet the
requirements in subpart C and the
standards in the applicable subpart to be
recognized, certified, and receive per
diem for that program of care:
(a) For nursing home care, subpart D.
(b) For domiciliary care, subpart E.
(c) For adult day health care, subpart
F.
■ 16. Revise § 51.59 to read as follows:
§ 51.59 Authority to continue payment of
per diem when veterans are relocated due
to emergency.
(a) Definition of emergency. For the
purposes of this section, emergency
means an occasion or instance where all
of the following are true:
(1) It would be unsafe for veterans
receiving care at a State home to remain
in that home.
(2) The State is not, or believes that
it will not be, able to provide care in the
State home on a temporary or long-term
basis for any or all of its veteran
residents due to a situation involving
the State home, and not due to a
situation where a particular veteran’s
medical condition requires that the
veteran be transferred to another
facility, such as for a period of
hospitalization.
(3) The State determines that the
veterans must be evacuated to another
facility or facilities.
(b) General authority to pay per diem
during a relocation period.
Notwithstanding any other provision of
this part, VA will continue to pay per
diem for a period not to exceed 30
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calendar days for any eligible veteran
who resided in a State home, and for
whom VA was paying per diem, if such
veteran is evacuated during an
emergency into a facility other than a
VA nursing home, hospital, domiciliary,
or other VA site of care if the State is
responsible for providing or paying for
the care. VA will not pay per diem
under this section for more than 30
calendar days of care provided in the
evacuation facility, unless the official
who approved the emergency response
under paragraph (e) of this section
determines that it is not reasonably
possible to return the veteran to a State
home within the 30-calendar-day
period, in which case such official will
approve additional period(s) of no more
than 30 calendar days in accordance
with this section. VA will not pay per
diem if VA determines that a veteran is
or has been placed in a facility that does
not meet the standards set forth in
paragraph (c)(1) of this section, and VA
may recover all per diem paid for the
care of the veteran in that facility.
(c) Selection of evacuation facilities.
The following standards and procedures
in paragraphs (c)(1) through (3) apply to
the selection of an evacuation facility in
order for VA to continue to pay per
diem during an emergency. These
standards and procedures also apply to
evacuation facilities when veterans are
evacuated from a nursing home in
which care is being provided pursuant
to a contract under 38 U.S.C. 1720.
(1) Each veteran who is evacuated
must be placed in a facility that, at a
minimum, will meet the needs for food,
shelter, toileting, and essential medical
care of that veteran.
(2) For veterans evacuated from
nursing homes, the following types of
facilities may meet the standards under
paragraph (c)(1) of this section:
(i) VA Community Living Centers;
(ii) VA contract nursing homes;
(iii) Centers for Medicare and
Medicaid Services certified facilities;
and
(iv) Licensed nursing homes.
Note 1 to paragraph (c)(2): If none of the
above options are available, veterans may be
evacuated temporarily to other facilities that
meet the standards under paragraph (c)(1) of
this section.
(3) For veterans evacuated from
domiciliaries, the following types of
facilities may meet the standards in
paragraph (c)(1) of this section:
(i) Emergency evacuation facilities
identified by the city or State;
(ii) Assisted living facilities; and
(iii) Hotels.
(d) Applicability to adult day health
care programs of care. Notwithstanding
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any other provision of this part, VA will
continue to pay per diem for a period
not to exceed 30 calendar days for any
eligible veteran who was receiving adult
day health care, and for whom VA was
paying per diem, if the adult day health
care facility becomes temporarily
unavailable due to an emergency.
Approval of a temporary program of
care for such veteran is subject to
paragraph (e) of this section. If after 30
calendar days the veteran cannot return
to the adult day health care program in
the State home, VA will discontinue per
diem payments unless the official who
approved the emergency response under
paragraph (e) of this section determines
that it is not reasonably possible to
provide care in the State home or to
relocate an eligible veteran to a different
recognized or certified facility, in which
case such official will approve
additional period(s) of no more than 30
calendar days at the temporary program
of care in accordance with this section.
VA will not pay per diem if VA
determines that a veteran was provided
adult day health care in a facility that
does not meet the standards set forth in
paragraph (c)(1) of this section, and VA
may recover all per diem paid for the
care of the veteran in that facility.
(e) Approval of response. Per diem
payments will not be made under this
section unless and until the Director of
the VA medical center of jurisdiction or
the director of the VISN in which the
State home is located (if the VAMC
Director is not capable of doing so)
determines, that an emergency exists
and that the evacuation facility meets
VA standards set forth in paragraph
(c)(1) of this section.
■ 17. Revise the heading of subpart D to
read as follows:
Subpart D—Standards applicable to
the payment of per diem for nursing
home care.
*
*
*
§ 51.120
*
*
[Amended]
18. Amend § 51.120 in paragraph
(a)(3) by removing ‘‘Chief Consultant,
Office of Geriatrics and Extended Care
(114)’’ and adding in its place ‘‘Office of
Geriatrics and Extended Care in VA
Central Office’’.
■
§ 51.140
[Amended]
19. Amend § 51.140:
a. In paragraph (a)(2), by removing
‘‘American Dietetic Association’’ and
adding in its place ‘‘Academy of
Nutrition and Dietetics’’; and
■ b. In paragraph (d)(4), by removing
‘‘who refuse food served’’.
■ 20. Amend § 51.210:
■
■
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a. In paragraph (b) introductory text,
by removing ‘‘Chief Consultant, Office
of Geriatrics and Extended Care (114)’’
and adding in its place ‘‘Office of
Geriatrics and Extended Care’’; and
■ b. Revising paragraph (b)(2),
redesignating paragraph (b)(3) as (b)(4)
and revising it, and adding new
paragraph (b)(3) and paragraph (h)(3).
The revision and additions read as
follows:
■
§ 51.210
Administration.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(2) The State home administrator;
(3) The director of nursing services (or
other individual in charge of nursing
services); and
(4) The State employee responsible for
oversight of the State home if a
contractor operates the State home.
*
*
*
*
*
(h) * * *
(3) If a veteran requires health care
that the State home is not required to
provide under this part, the State home
may assist the veteran in obtaining that
care from sources outside the State
home, including the Veterans Health
Administration. If VA is contacted about
providing such care, VA will determine
the best option for obtaining the needed
services and will notify the veteran or
the authorized representative of the
veteran.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 21. Add subpart E, consisting of
§§ 51.300 through 51.390, to read as
follows:
Subpart E—Standards Applicable to the
Payment of Per Diem for Domiciliary Care
Sec.
51.300 Resident rights and behavior; State
home practices; quality of life.
51.310 Resident admission, assessment,
care plan, and discharge.
51.320 Quality of care.
51.330 Nursing care.
51.340 Physician and other licensed
medical practitioner services.
51.350 Provision of certain specialized
services and environmental
requirements.
51.390 Administration.
Subpart E—Standards Applicable to
the Payment of Per Diem for
Domiciliary Care
§ 51.300 Resident rights and behavior;
State home practices; quality of life.
The State home must protect and
promote the rights and quality of life of
each resident receiving domiciliary care,
and otherwise comply with the
requirements in § 51.70, except
§ 51.70(b)(9), (h)(1), and (m); § 51.80,
except § 51.80(a)(2) and (4) and (b);
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§ 51.90; and § 51.100, except
§ 51.100(g)(2), (h), and (i)(5) through (7).
The State Home must have a written
procedure for admissions, discharges,
and transfers. For purposes of this
section, the terms ‘‘nursing home’’ and
‘‘nursing facility’’ or ‘‘facility’’ in the
applicable provisions of the cited
sections apply to a domiciliary.
(a) Notice of rights and services—
notification of changes. (1) Facility
management must immediately inform
the resident and consult with the
primary care physician when there is
(i) An accident involving the resident
that results in injury and has the
potential for requiring physician
intervention;
(ii) A significant change in the
resident’s physical, mental, or
psychosocial status (i.e., a deterioration
in health, mental, or psychosocial status
in either life-threatening conditions or
clinical complications);
(iii) A need to alter treatment
significantly (i.e., a need to discontinue
an existing form of treatment due to
adverse consequences, or to commence
a new form of treatment); or
(iv) A decision to transfer or discharge
the resident from the facility as
specified in paragraph (d) of this
section.
(2) The facility management must also
promptly notify the resident when there
is
(i) A change in room or roommate
assignment as specified in § 51.100(f)(2);
or
(ii) A change in resident rights under
Federal or State law or regulations as
specified in § 51.70(b)(1).
(3) The facility management must
record and periodically update the
address and phone number of the
resident’s legal representative or
interested family member, but the
resident has the right to decide whether
to have the State home notify his or her
legal representative or interested family
member of changes.
(b) Work. The resident must
participate, based on his or her ability,
in some measure, however slight, in
work assignments that support the
maintenance and operation of the State
home. The State Home management
must create a written policy to
implement the work requirement. The
resident is encouraged to participate in
vocational and employment services,
which are essential to meeting the
psychosocial needs of the resident. The
resident must perform work for the
facility after the State home has
accomplished the following:
(1) The facility has documented the
resident’s need or desire to work in the
comprehensive care plan;
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(2) The comprehensive care plan
described in § 51.310 specifies the
nature of the work performed and
whether the work is unpaid or paid;
(3) Compensation for work for which
the facility would pay a prevailing wage
if done by non-residents is paid at or
above prevailing wages for similar work
in the area where the facility is located;
and
(4) The facility consulted with and the
resident agrees to the work arrangement
described in the comprehensive care
plan.
(c) Married couples. The resident has
the right, if space is available within the
existing facility, to share a room with
his or her spouse when married
residents live in the same facility and
both spouses consent to the
arrangement. If the State home
determines existing space is not
available to allow married residents to
share rooms, the State home will make
accommodations for the privacy of
married residents.
(d) Transfer and discharge—(1)
Definition: Transfer and discharge
includes movement of a resident to a
bed outside of the facility whether that
bed is in the same physical plant or not.
Transfer and discharge does not refer to
movement of a resident to a bed within
the same facility.
(2) Transfer and discharge
requirements. The facility management
must permit each resident to remain in
the facility, and not transfer or discharge
the resident from the facility unless
(i) The transfer or discharge is
necessary for the resident’s welfare,
including because the domiciliary
resident’s health has improved
sufficiently so the resident no longer
needs the services provided by the
domiciliary;
(ii) The resident is in need of a higher
level of long term or acute care;
(iii) The safety of individuals in the
facility is endangered;
(iv) The health of individuals in the
facility would otherwise be endangered;
(v) The resident has failed, after
reasonable and appropriate notice, to
pay for a stay at the facility;
(vi) The domiciliary ceases to operate;
or
(vii) The resident ceases to meet any
of the eligibility criteria of § 51.51.
(3) Documentation. When the facility
transfers or discharges a resident under
any of the circumstances specified in
paragraphs (a)(2)(i) through (vii) of this
section, the primary care physician
must document the transfer and
circumstances in the resident’s clinical
record.
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(4) Notice before transfer. Before a
facility transfers or discharges a
resident, the facility must
(i) Notify the resident of the transfer
or discharge and the reasons for the
move in writing and in a language and
manner he or she understands. The
resident has the right to decide whether
to have the State home notify his or her
legal representative or interested family
member of changes.
(ii) Record the reasons in the
resident’s clinical record; and
(iii) Include in the notice the items
described in paragraph (d)(6) of this
section.
(5) Timing of the notice. (i) The notice
of transfer or discharge required by
paragraph (d)(4) of this section must be
made by the facility at least 30 calendar
days before the resident is transferred or
discharged, except when specified in
paragraph (d)(5)(ii) of this section,
(ii) Notice may be made as soon as
practicable before transfer or discharge
when
(A) The safety of individuals in the
facility would be endangered;
(B) The health of individuals in the
facility would be otherwise endangered;
(C) The resident’s health improves
sufficiently so the resident no longer
needs the services provided by the
domiciliary; or
(D) The resident’s needs cannot be
met in the domiciliary.
(6) Contents of the notice. The written
notice specified in paragraph (d)(4) of
this section must include the following:
(i) The reason for transfer or
discharge;
(ii) The effective date of transfer or
discharge;
(iii) The location to which the
resident is transferred or discharged;
(iv) A statement that the resident has
the right to appeal the action to the State
official designated by the State; and
(v) The name, address and telephone
number of the State long term care
ombudsman.
(7) Orientation for transfer or
discharge. The facility management
must provide sufficient preparation and
orientation to residents to ensure safe
and orderly transfer or discharge from
the facility.
(e) Notice of bed-hold policy and
readmission—notice before transfer.
The State home must have a written
bed-hold policy, including criteria for
return to the facility. The facility
management must provide written
information to the resident about the
State home bed-hold policy upon
enrollment, annually thereafter, and
before a State home transfers a resident
to a hospital. A Resident has the right
to decide whether to have the State
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home notify his or her legal
representative or interested family
member of transfers.
(f) Resident activities. (1) The facility
management must provide for an
ongoing program of activities designed
to meet, in accordance with the
comprehensive assessment, the interests
and the physical, mental, and
psychosocial well-being of each
resident.
(2) The activities program must be
directed by a qualified coordinator.
(g) Social services. (1) The State home
must provide social work services to
meet the social and emotional needs of
residents to attain or maintain the
highest practicable mental and
psychosocial well-being of each
resident.
(2) The State home must have a
sufficient number of social workers to
meet residents’ needs.
(3) The State home must have a
written policy on how it determines
qualifications of social workers. It is
highly recommended, but not required,
that a qualified social worker is an
individual with
(i) A bachelor’s degree in social work
from a school accredited by the Council
of Social Work Education (Note: A
master’s degree social worker with
experience in long-term care is
preferred), and
(ii) A social work license from the
State in which the State home is
located, if offered by the State, and
(iii) A minimum of one year of
supervised social work experience in a
health care setting working directly with
individuals.
(4) The facility management must
have sufficient support staff to meet
patients’ social services needs.
(5) Facilities for social services must
ensure privacy for interviews.
(h) Environment. The facility
management must provide
(1) A safe, clean, comfortable, and
homelike environment, allowing the
resident to use his or her personal
belongings to the extent possible;
(2) Housekeeping and maintenance
services necessary to maintain a
sanitary, orderly, and comfortable
interior;
(3) Clean bed and bath linens that are
in good condition; and
(4) Private closet space in each
resident’s room, as specified in
§ 51.200(d)(2)(iv).
(The Office of Management and Budget has
approved the information collection
requirements in this section under control
number 2900–0160.)
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§ 51.310 Resident admission, assessment,
care plan, and discharge.
The State home must conduct
accurate, written, medical and
comprehensive assessments of each
resident’s medical and functional
capacity upon admission, annually, and
as required by a change in the resident’s
condition. The comprehensive
assessment will use information from
the medical assessment, and both
assessments will inform the
comprehensive care plan. The State
home must have a written policy to
determine how to coordinate and
complete the comprehensive assessment
process, including how it will review,
and revise the comprehensive
assessment in implementing the
comprehensive care plan. The State
home must review comprehensive
assessments annually, and promptly
after every significant change in the
resident’s physical, mental, or social
condition.
(a) Admission orders and medical
assessment. At the time each resident is
admitted, the State home must have
physician orders for the resident’s
immediate care. A medical assessment,
including a medical history and
physical examination, must be
performed by a physician, or other
health care provider qualified under
State law, and recorded in the medical
record no later than 7 calendar days
after admission, unless one was
performed no earlier than 5 calendar
days before admission and the findings
were recorded in the medical record.
The medical assessment will be part of
the comprehensive assessment.
(b) Comprehensive assessments. (1)
The state home must complete a
comprehensive assessment of each
resident no later than 14 calendar days
after admission, annually, and as
required by a change in the resident’s
condition.
(2) Each comprehensive assessment
must be conducted or coordinated by a
registered nurse with the participation
of appropriate healthcare professionals,
including at least one physician, the
registered nurse, and one social worker.
The registered nurse must sign and
certify the assessment. The
comprehensive assessment is to
determine the care, treatment, and
services that will meet the resident’s
initial and continuing needs. It is an
objective evaluation of a resident’s
health and functional status, describing
the resident’s capabilities and
impairments in performing activities of
daily living, strengths, and needs. The
assessment gathers information through
collection of data, observation, and
examination.
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(c) Comprehensive care plans. (1) The
State home must develop a
comprehensive care plan for each
resident based on the comprehensive
assessment, and develop, review, and
revise the comprehensive care plan
following each comprehensive
assessment. The comprehensive care
plan must include measurable
objectives and timetables to address a
resident’s emotional, behavioral, social,
and physical needs, with emphasis on
assisting each patient to achieve and
maintain an optimal level of self-care
and independence. The comprehensive
care plan must describe the following,
as appropriate to the resident’s
circumstances:
(i) The services that are to be
furnished to support the resident’s
highest practicable emotional,
behavioral, social rehabilitation, and
physical well-being;
(ii) The specific work the resident
agrees to do to share in the maintenance
and operation of the State home upon
consultation with the interdisciplinary
team, and whether that work is paid or
unpaid; and
(iii) Any services that would
otherwise be required under § 51.350
but are not provided due to the
resident’s exercise of rights under
§ 51.70, including the right in
§ 51.70(b)(4) to refuse treatment.
(2) A comprehensive care plan must
be:
(i) Developed no later than 21
calendar days after admission; and
(ii) Prepared by an interdisciplinary
team of health professionals that may
include the primary care physician or a
Licensed Independent Practitioner (or
designated Physician’s Assistant or
Nurse Practitioner), a social worker, and
a registered nurse who have
responsibility for the resident, and other
staff in appropriate disciplines as
determined by the resident’s needs, and,
to the extent practicable, the
participation of the resident and the
resident’s family (subject to the consent
of the resident) or the resident’s legal
representative, if appropriate;
(iii) Reviewed periodically and
revised consistent with the most recent
comprehensive assessment by a team of
qualified persons no less often than
semi-annually; and
(iv) Revised promptly after a
comprehensive assessment reveals a
significant change in the resident’s
condition.
(3) The services provided by the
facility must
(i) Meet professional standards of
quality; and
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(ii) Be provided by qualified persons
in accordance with each resident’s
written comprehensive care plan.
(d) Discharge summary. (1) Prior to
discharging a resident, the State home
must prepare a discharge summary that
includes
(i) A summary of the resident’s stay,
the resident’s status at the time of the
discharge, and the resident’s progress on
the comprehensive care plan in
paragraph (b)(2) of this section; and
(ii) A post-discharge comprehensive
care plan that is developed with the
participation of the resident.
(2) A resident has the right to decide
if he or she would like to involve his or
her legal representative or interested
family member in development of a
post-discharge plan.
(The Office of Management and Budget has
approved the information collection
requirements in this section under control
number 2900–0160.)
§ 51.320
Quality of care.
The State home must provide each
resident with the care described in this
subpart in accordance with the
assessment and comprehensive care
plan.
(a) Reporting of sentinel events. (1) A
sentinel event is an adverse event that
results in the loss of life or limb or
permanent loss of function.
(2) Examples of sentinel events are as
follows:
(i) Any resident death, paralysis,
coma or other major permanent loss of
function associated with a medication
error;
(ii) Any suicide of a resident;
(iii) Assault, homicide or other crime
resulting in resident death or major
permanent loss of function; or
(iv) A resident fall that results in
death or major permanent loss of
function as a direct result of the injuries
sustained in the fall.
(3) The State home must report
sentinel events to the Director no later
than 24 hours after identification. The
VA medical center of jurisdiction must
report sentinel events by notifying the
VA Network Director (10N1–10N22) and
the Director, Office of Geriatrics and
Extended Care—Operations (10NC4) no
later than 24 hours after notification.
(4) The State home must establish a
mechanism to review and analyze a
sentinel event resulting in a written
report to be submitted to the VA
Medical Center of jurisdiction no later
than 10 working days following the
event. The purpose of the review and
analysis of a sentinel event is to prevent
injuries to residents, visitors, and
personnel, and to manage those injuries
that do occur and to minimize the
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61279
negative consequences to the injured
individuals and the State home.
(b) Activities of daily living. Based on
the comprehensive assessment of a
resident, the State home must ensure
that a resident’s abilities in activities of
daily living do not diminish unless
circumstances of the individual’s
clinical condition demonstrate that
diminution was unavoidable, and the
resident is given appropriate treatment
and services to maintain or improve his
activities of daily living. This includes
the resident’s ability to:
(1) Bathe, dress, and groom;
(2) Transfer and ambulate;
(3) Toilet;
(4) Eat; and
(5) Talk or otherwise communicate.
(c) Vision and hearing. To ensure that
residents receive proper treatment and
assistive devices to maintain vision and
hearing, the State home must, if
necessary, assist the resident:
(1) In making appointments; and
(2) By arranging for transportation to
and from the office of a practitioner
specializing in the treatment of vision or
hearing impairment or the office of a
professional specializing in the
provision of vision or hearing assistive
devices.
(d) Mental and psychosocial
functioning. Based on the
comprehensive assessment of a resident,
the State home must assist a resident
who displays mental or psychosocial
adjustment difficulty obtain appropriate
treatment and services to correct the
assessed problem.
(e) Accidents. The State home must
ensure that:
(1) The resident environment remains
as free of accident hazards as possible;
and
(2) Each resident receives adequate
supervision and assistive devices to
prevent accidents.
(f) Nutrition. The State home must
follow § 51.120(j) regarding nutrition in
providing domiciliary care.
(g) Special needs. The State home
must provide residents with the
following services, if needed:
(1) Injections;
(2) Colostomy, ureterostomy, or
ileostomy care;
(3) Respiratory care;
(4) Foot care; and
(5) Non-customized or nonindividualized prosthetic devices.
(h) Unnecessary drugs. The State
home must ensure that the standards set
forth in § 51.120(m) regarding
unnecessary drugs are followed in
providing domiciliary care.
(i) Medication errors. The State home
must ensure that the standards set forth
in § 51.120(n) regarding medication
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errors are followed in providing
domiciliary care.
(The Office of Management and Budget has
approved the information collection
requirements in this section under control
number 2900–0160.)
§ 51.330
Nursing care.
The State home must provide an
organized nursing service with a
sufficient number of qualified nursing
personnel to meet the total nursing care
needs of all residents within the facility,
24 hours a day, 7 days a week, as
determined by their comprehensive
assessments and their comprehensive
care plans. The nursing service must be
under the direction of a full-time
registered nurse who is currently
licensed by the State and has, in
writing, administrative authority,
responsibility, and accountability for
the functions, activities, and training of
the nursing service’s staff.
§ 51.340 Physician and other licensed
medical practitioner services.
The State home must provide its
residents the primary care necessary to
enable them to attain or maintain the
highest practicable physical, mental,
and psychosocial well-being. When a
resident needs care other than the State
home is required to provide under this
subpart, the State home is responsible to
assist the resident to obtain that care.
The State home must ensure that a
physician personally approves in
writing a recommendation that an
individual be admitted to a domiciliary.
Each resident must remain at all times
under the care of a licensed medical
practitioner assigned by the State home.
The name of the practitioner will be
listed in the resident’s medical record.
The State home must ensure that all of
the following conditions in paragraphs
(a) through (e) of this section are met:
(a) Supervision of medical
practitioners. Any licensed medical
practitioner who is not a physician may
provide medical care to a resident
within the practitioner’s scope of
practice without physician supervision
when permitted by State law.
(b) Availability of medical
practitioners. If the resident’s assigned
licensed medical practitioner is
unavailable, another licensed medical
practitioner must be available to provide
care for that resident.
(c) Visits. The primary care physician
or other licensed medical practitioner,
for each visit required by paragraph (d)
of this section, must
(1) Review the resident’s total
program of care, including medications
and treatments;
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(2) Write, sign, and date progress
notes; and
(3) Sign and date all orders.
(d) Frequency of visits. The primary
care physician or other licensed medical
practitioner must conduct an in-person
medical assessment of the resident at
least once a calendar year, or more
frequently based on the resident’s
condition.
(e) Availability of emergency care.
The State home must assist residents in
obtaining emergency care.
§ 51.350 Provision of certain specialized
services and environmental requirements.
The State home domiciliary care
programs must comply with the
requirements of § 51.140, except
§ 51.140(f)(2) through (4) concerning
dietary services; § 51.170 concerning
dental services; § 51.180, except
§ 51.180(c) concerning pharmacy
services; § 51.190 concerning infection
control; and § 51.200, except § 51.200(a),
(b), (d)(1)(ii) through (x), (f), and (h)(3)
concerning the physical environment.
For purposes of this section, the
references to ‘‘facility’’ in the cited
sections also refer to a domiciliary.
(a) Dietary services. (1) There must be
no more than 14 hours between a
substantial evening meal and the
availability of breakfast the following
day, except as provided in (a)(3) of this
section.
(2) The facility staff must offer snacks
at bedtime daily.
(3) Sixteen hours may elapse between
a substantial evening meal and breakfast
the following day when a nourishing
snack is offered at bedtime.
(b) Pharmacy services. (1) The drug
regimen of each resident must be
reviewed at least once every six months
by a licensed pharmacist.
(2) The pharmacist must report any
irregularities to the primary care
physician and the director of nursing,
and these reports must be acted upon.
(c) Life safety from fire. The facility
must meet the applicable requirements
of the National Fire Protection
Association’s NFPA 101, Life Safety
Code, as incorporated by reference in
§ 51.200.
(d) Privacy. The facility must provide
the means for visual privacy for each
resident.
(The Office of Management and Budget has
approved the information collection
requirements in this section under control
number 2900–0160.)
§ 51.390
Administration.
The State home must follow § 51.210
regarding administration in providing
domiciliary care. For purposes of this
section, the references in the cited
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section to nursing home and nursing
home care refer to a domiciliary and
domiciliary care.
(The Office of Management and Budget has
approved the information collection
requirements in this section under control
number 2900–0160.)
22. Add subpart F, consisting of
§§ 51.400 through 51.480, to read as
follows:
■
Subpart F—Standards Applicable to the
Payment of per Diem for Adult Day Health
Care
Sec.
51.400 Participant rights.
51.405 Participant and family caregiver
responsibilities.
51.410 Transfer and discharge.
51.411 Program practices.
51.415 Restraints, abuse, and staff treatment
of participants.
51.420 Quality of life.
51.425 Physician orders and participant
medical assessment.
51.430 Quality of care.
51.435 Nursing services.
51.440 Dietary services.
51.445 Physician services.
51.450 Specialized rehabilitative services.
51.455 Dental services.
51.460 Administration of drugs.
51.465 Infection control.
51.470 Physical environment.
51.475 Administration.
51.480 Transportation.
Subpart F—Standards Applicable to
the Payment of per Diem for Adult Day
Health Care
§ 51.400
Participant rights.
The State home must protect and
promote the rights of a participant in an
adult day health care program,
including the rights set forth in § 51.70,
except for the right set forth in
§ 51.70(m). For purposes of this section,
the references to resident in the cited
section also refer to a participant in this
section.
(The Office of Management and Budget has
approved the information collection
requirements in this section under control
number 2900–0160.)
§ 51.405 Participant and family caregiver
responsibilities.
The State home must post a written
statement of participant and family
caregiver responsibilities in a place
where participants in the adult day
health care program and their families
will see it and must provide a copy to
the participant and caregiver at or before
the time of the intake screening. The
statement of responsibilities must
include the following:
(a) Treat personnel with respect and
courtesy;
(b) Communicate with staff to develop
a relationship of trust;
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(c) Make appropriate choices and seek
appropriate care;
(d) Ask questions and confirm your
understanding of instructions;
(e) Share opinions, concerns, and
complaints with the program director;
(f) Communicate any changes in the
participant’s condition;
(g) Communicate to the program
director about medications and
remedies used by the participant;
(h) Let the program director know if
the participant decides not to follow any
instructions or treatment; and
(i) Communicate with the adult day
health care staff if the participant is
unable to attend adult day health care.
(The Office of Management and Budget has
approved the information collection
requirements in this section under control
number 2900–0160.)
§ 51.410
Transfer and discharge.
(a) Definition. For purposes of this
section, the term ‘‘transfer or discharge’’
includes movement of a participant to a
program outside of the adult day health
care program whether or not the
program of care is in the same facility.
(b) Transfer and discharge
requirements. At the time of intake
screening, the State home must discuss
the possible reasons for transfer or
discharge with the participant and, to
the extent practicable and appropriate,
with family members (subject to the
consent of the participant) or the
participant’s legal representatives. In the
case of a transfer and discharge to a
hospital, the transfer and discharge
must be to the hospital closest to the
adult day health care facility that can
provide the necessary care. The State
home must permit each participant to
remain in the program of care, and not
transfer or discharge the participant
from the program of care unless:
(1) The transfer and discharge is
necessary for the participant’s welfare
and the participant’s needs cannot be
met in the adult day health care setting;
(2) The transfer and discharge is
appropriate because the participant’s
health has improved sufficiently so that
the participant no longer needs the
services provided in the adult day
health care program;
(3) The safety of individuals in the
facility is endangered;
(4) The health of individuals in the
facility would otherwise be endangered;
(5) The participant has failed, after
reasonable and appropriate notice, to
pay for participation in the adult day
health care program; or
(6) The adult day health care program
ceases to operate.
(c) Notice before transfer or discharge.
Before an adult day health care program
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undertakes the transfer or discharge of
a participant, the State home must:
(1) Notify the resident of the transfer
or discharge and the reasons for the
move in writing and in a language and
manner he or she understands. The
resident has the right to decide whether
to have the State home notify his or her
legal representative or interested family
member of changes;
(2) Record the reasons in the
participant’s clinical record; and
(3) Include in the notice the items
described in paragraph (e) of this
section.
(d) Timing of the notice. (1) The
notice of transfer or discharge required
under paragraph (c) of this section must
be made by the State home at least 30
calendar days before the participant is
given a transfer or discharge, except
when specified in paragraph (d)(2) of
this section.
(2) Notice may be made as soon as
practicable before a transfer or discharge
when
(i) The safety of individuals in the
facility would be endangered;
(ii) The health of individuals in the
facility would be otherwise endangered;
(iii) The participant’s health improves
sufficiently that the participant no
longer needs the services provided by
the adult day health care program of
care; or
(iv) The participant’s needs cannot be
met in the adult day health care
program of care.
(e) Contents of the notice. The written
notice specified in paragraph (c) of this
section must include the following:
(1) The reason for the transfer or
discharge;
(2) The effective date of the transfer or
discharge;
(3) The location to which the
participant is taken in accordance with
the transfer or discharge, if any;
(4) A statement that the participant
has the right to appeal the action to the
State official responsible for the
oversight of State home programs; and
(5) The name, address and telephone
number of the first listed of the
following that exists in the State:
(i) The State long-term care
ombudsman, if the long-term care
ombudsman serves adult day health
care facilities; or
(ii) Any State ombudsman or advocate
who serves adult day health care
participants; or
(iii) The State agency responsible for
oversight of State adult day care
facilities.
(f) Orientation for transfer and
discharge. The State home must provide
sufficient preparation and orientation to
participants to ensure safe and orderly
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transfer or discharge from the State
home.
(g) Written policy. The State home
must have in effect written transfer and
discharge procedures that reasonably
ensure that:
(1) Participants will be given a
transfer or discharge from the adult day
health care program to the hospital
when transfer or discharge is medically
appropriate as determined by a
physician; and
(2) Medical and other information
needed for care and treatment of
participants will be exchanged between
the facility and the hospital.
(The Office of Management and Budget has
approved the information collection
requirements in this section under control
number 2900–0160.)
§ 51.411
Program practices.
(a) Equal access to quality care. The
State home must establish and maintain
identical policies and practices
regarding transfer and discharge under
§ 51.410 and the provision of services
for all participants regardless of the
source of payment.
(b) Admission policy. The State home
must not require a third-party guarantee
of payment as a condition of admission
or expedited admission, or continued
admission in the program of care.
However, the State home may require a
participant or an individual who has
legal access to a participant’s income or
resources to pay for the care from the
participant’s income or resources, when
available.
(c) Hours of operation. Each adult day
health care program must provide at
least 8 hours of operation 5 days a week.
The hours of operation must be flexible
and responsive to caregiver needs.
§ 51.415 Restraints, abuse, and staff
treatment of participants.
The State home must meet the
requirements regarding the use of
restraints, abuse, and other matters
concerning staff treatment of
participants set forth in § 51.90. For
purposes of this section, the references
in the cited section to resident refer to
a participant in this section.
(The Office of Management and Budget has
approved the information collection
requirements in this section under control
number 2900–0160.)
§ 51.420
Quality of life.
The State home must provide an
environment that supports the quality of
life of each participant by maximizing
the participant’s potential strengths and
skills. (a) Dignity. The State home must
promote care for participants in a
manner and in an environment that
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maintains or enhances each
participant’s dignity and respect in full
recognition of his or her individuality.
(b) Self-determination and
participation. The State home must
ensure that the participant has the right
to:
(1) Choose activities, schedules, and
health care consistent with his or her
interests, assessments, and plans of care;
(2) Interact with members of the
community both inside and outside the
facility; and
(3) Make choices about aspects of his
or her life in the facility that are
significant to the participant.
(c) Participant and family concerns.
The State home must document any
concerns submitted to the management
of the program by participants or their
family members.
(1) A participant’s family has the right
to meet with families of other
participants in the program.
(2) Staff or visitors may attend
meetings of participant or family groups
at the group’s invitation.
(3) The State home must respond to
written requests that result from group
meetings.
(4) The State home must listen to the
views of any participant or family group
and act upon the concerns of
participants and families regarding
policy and operational decisions
affecting participant care in the
program.
(d) Participation in other activities.
The State home must ensure that a
participant has the right to participate in
social, religious, and community
activities that do not interfere with the
rights of other participants in the
program.
(e) Therapeutic participant activities.
(1) The State home must provide for an
ongoing program of activities designed
to meet, in accordance with the
comprehensive assessment, the interests
and the physical, mental, and
psychosocial well-being of each
participant.
(2) The activities program must be
directed by a qualified professional who
is a qualified therapeutic recreation
specialist or an activities professional
who:
(i) Is licensed, if applicable, by the
State in which practicing; and
(ii) Is certified as a therapeutic
recreation specialist or an activities
professional by a recognized certifying
body.
(3) A critical role of adult day health
care is to build relationships and create
a culture that supports, involves, and
validates the participant. Therapeutic
activity refers to that supportive culture
and is a significant aspect of the
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individualized comprehensive care
plan. A participant’s activity includes
everything the individual experiences
during the day, not just arranged events.
As part of effective therapeutic activity,
the adult day health care program must:
(i) Provide direction and support for
participants, including breaking down
activities into small, discrete steps or
behaviors, if needed by a participant;
(ii) Have alternative programming
available for any participant unable or
unwilling to take part in group activity;
(iii) Design activities that promote
personal growth and enhance the selfimage and/or improve or maintain the
functioning level of participants to the
extent possible;
(iv) Provide opportunities for a variety
of involvements (social, intellectual,
cultural, economic, emotional, physical,
and spiritual) at different levels,
including community activities and
events;
(v) Emphasize participants’ strengths
and abilities rather than impairments,
and contribute to participants’ feelings
of competence and accomplishment;
and
(vi) Provide opportunities to
voluntarily perform services for
community groups and organizations.
(f) Social services. (1) The State home
must provide medically-related social
services to participants and their
families.
(2) An adult day health care program
must provide a qualified social worker
to furnish social services.
(3) A qualified social worker is an
individual with:
(i) A bachelor’s degree in social work
from a school accredited by the Council
of Social Work Education (Note: A
master’s degree in social worker with
experience in long-term care is
preferred);
(ii) A social work license from the
State in which the State home is
located, if that license is offered by the
State; and
(iii) A minimum of one year of
supervised social work experience in a
health care setting working directly with
individuals.
(4) The State home must have
sufficient social workers and support
staff to meet participant and family
social service needs. The adult day
health care program must:
(i) Provide counseling to participants
and to families/caregivers;
(ii) Facilitate the participant’s
adaptation to the adult day health care
program and active involvement in the
comprehensive care plan, if appropriate;
(iii) Arrange for services not provided
by adult day health care, and work with
these resources to coordinate services;
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(iv) Serve as an advocate for
participants by asserting and
safeguarding the human and civil rights
of the participants;
(v) Assess signs of mental illness or
dementia and make appropriate
referrals;
(vi) Provide information and referral
for persons not appropriate for adult day
health care;
(vii) Provide family conferences, and
serve as liaison between participant,
family/caregiver and program staff;
(viii) Provide individual or group
counseling and support to caregivers
and participants;
(ix) Conduct support groups or
facilitate participant or family/caregiver
participation in support groups;
(x) Assist program staff in adapting to
changes in participants’ behavior; and
(xi) Provide or arrange for individual,
group, or family psychotherapy for
participants with significant
psychosocial needs.
(5) Space for social services must be
adequate to ensure privacy for
interviews.
(g) Environment. The State home must
provide:
(1) A safe, clean, comfortable, and
homelike environment, and support the
participants’ ability to function as
independently as possible and to engage
in program activities;
(2) Housekeeping and maintenance
services necessary to maintain a
sanitary, orderly, and comfortable
interior;
(3) Private storage space for each
participant sufficient for a change of
clothes. Upon request of the participant,
the State home must offer storage space
that can be secured with a lock;
(4) Interior signs to facilitate
participants’ ability to move about the
facility independently and safely;
(5) A clean bed or reclining chair
available for acute illness;
(6) A shower for participants;
(7) Adequate and comfortable lighting
levels in all areas;
(8) Comfortable and safe temperature
levels; and
(9) Comfortable sound levels.
(The Office of Management and Budget has
approved the information collection
requirements in this section under control
number 2900–0160.)
§ 51.425 Physician orders and participant
medical assessment.
The State home must have a written
policy to determine how to coordinate
and complete the written initial and
comprehensive assessment processes
upon admission, annually, and as
required by a change in the participant’s
condition. The State home must also
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outline in its policy how it will
complete, implement, review, and
revise the assessments.
(a) Admission. At the time each
participant is admitted, the State home
must have physician orders for the
participant’s immediate care. An initial
medical assessment including a medical
history and physical examination with
documentation of tuberculosis screening
must be completed by a physician or
other health care provider qualified
under State law no earlier than 30
calendar days before admission and no
later than 7 calendar days after
admission. The findings must be
recorded in the participant’s medical
record.
(b) Comprehensive assessments. The
State home must complete the
comprehensive assessment no later than
14 calendar days after admission. The
State home must develop a
comprehensive care plan for each
participant based on his or her
comprehensive assessment. The State
home must review comprehensive
assessments annually, as well as
promptly after every significant change
in the participant’s physical, mental, or
social condition. The State home must
immediately change the participant’s
comprehensive care plan after a
significant change is identified. At
minimum, the written comprehensive
assessment must address the following:
(1) Ability to ambulate,
(2) Ability to use bathroom facilities,
(3) Ability to eat and swallow,
(4) Ability to hear,
(5) Ability to see,
(6) Ability to experience feeling and
movement,
(7) Ability to communicate,
(8) Risk of wandering,
(9) Risk of elopement,
(10) Risk of suicide,
(11) Risk of deficiencies regarding
social interactions, and
(12) Special needs (such as
medication, diet, nutrition, hydration,
or prosthetics).
(c) Coordination of assessments. (1)
Each initial and subsequent
comprehensive assessment must be
conducted and coordinated with the
participation of appropriate health
professionals.
(2) Each person who completes a
portion of an assessment must sign and
certify the accuracy of that portion of
the assessment.
(3) The results of the assessments
must be used to develop, review, and
revise the participant’s individualized
comprehensive care plan.
(d) Comprehensive care plans. (1) The
State home must ensure that each
participant has a comprehensive care
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plan no later than 21 calendar days after
admission. A participant’s
comprehensive care plan must be
individualized and must include
measurable objectives and timetables to
meet all physical, mental, and
psychosocial needs identified in the
most recent assessment. The
comprehensive care plan must describe
the following:
(i) The services that are to be provided
as part of the program of care and by
other sources to attain or maintain the
participant’s highest physical, mental,
and psychosocial well-being as required
under § 51.430;
(ii) Any services that would otherwise
be required under § 51.430 but are not
provided due to the participant’s
exercise of rights under § 51.70,
including the right to refuse treatment
under § 51.70(b)(4);
(iii) Type and scope of interventions
to be provided in order to reach desired,
realistic outcomes;
(iv) Roles of participant and family/
caregiver; and
(v) Discharge or transition plan,
including specific criteria for discharge
or transfer.
(2) The services provided or arranged
by the State home must
(i) Meet professional standards of
quality; and
(ii) Be provided by qualified persons
in accordance with each participant’s
comprehensive care plan.
(e) Discharge summary. Prior to
discharging a participant, the State
home must prepare a discharge
summary that includes the following:
(1) A summary of the participant’s
care;
(2) A summary of the participant’s
status at the time of the discharge to
include items in paragraph (b) of this
section; and
(3) A discharge/transition plan related
to changes in service needs and changes
in functional status that prompted
transition to another program of care.
(The Office of Management and Budget has
approved the information collection
requirements in this section under control
number 2900–0160.)
§ 51.430
Quality of care.
Each participant must receive, and the
State home must provide, the necessary
care and services to attain or maintain
the highest practicable physical, mental,
and psychosocial well-being, in
accordance with the comprehensive
assessment and comprehensive care
plan.
(a) Reporting of sentinel events—(1)
Definition. A ‘‘sentinel event’’ is defined
in § 51.120(a)(1).
(2) Duty to report sentinel events. The
State home must comply with the duties
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61283
to report sentinel events as set forth in
§ 51.120(a)(3), except that the duty to
report applies only to a sentinel event
that occurs while the participant is
under the care of the State home,
including while in State home-provided
transportation.
(3) Review and prevention of sentinel
events. The State home must establish a
mechanism to review and analyze a
sentinel event resulting in a written
report to be submitted to the VA
Medical Center of jurisdiction no later
than 10 working days after the event.
The purpose of the review and analysis
of a sentinel event is to prevent future
injuries to participants, visitors, and
personnel.
(b) Activities of daily living. Based on
the comprehensive assessment of a
participant, the State home must ensure
that:
(1) No diminution in activities of daily
living. A participant’s abilities in
activities of daily living do not diminish
unless the circumstances of the
individual’s clinical condition
demonstrate that diminution was
unavoidable. This includes the
participant’s ability to
(i) Bathe, dress, and groom;
(ii) Transfer and ambulate;
(iii) Toilet; and
(iv) Eat.
(2) Appropriate treatment and
services given. A participant is given the
appropriate treatment and services to
maintain or improve his or her abilities
specified in paragraph (b)(1) of this
section.
(3) Necessary services provided to
participant unable to carry out activities
of daily living. A participant who is
unable to carry out activities of daily
living receives the necessary services to
maintain good nutrition, hydration,
grooming, personal and oral hygiene,
mobility, and bladder and bowel
elimination.
(c) Mental and psychosocial
functioning. The State home must make
counseling and related psychosocial
services available for improving mental
and psychosocial functioning of
participants with mental or
psychosocial needs. The services
available must include counseling and
psychosocial services provided by
licensed independent mental health
professionals.
(d) Medication errors. The State home
must comply with § 51.120(n) with
respect to medication errors.
(The Office of Management and Budget has
approved the information collection
requirements in this section under control
number 2900–0160.)
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§ 51.435
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Nursing services.
The State home must provide an
organized nursing service with a
sufficient number of qualified nursing
personnel to meet the total nursing care
needs, as determined by participant
assessments and individualized
comprehensive care plans, of all
participants in the program.
(a) There must be at least one
registered nurse on duty each day of
operation of the adult day health care
program. This nurse must be currently
licensed by the State and must have, in
writing, administrative authority,
responsibility, and accountability for
the functions, activities, and training of
the nursing and program assistants.
(b) The number and level of nursing
staff is determined by the authorized
capacity of participants and the nursing
care needs of the participants.
(c) Nurse staffing must be adequate for
meeting the standards of this part.
§ 51.440
Dietary services.
The State home must comply with the
requirements concerning the dietary
services set forth in § 51.140, except
paragraph 51.140(f). For purposes of this
section, the references in the cited
section to resident refer to a participant
in subpart F of this part. The State home
adult day health care program will
provide nourishment to participants on
the following schedule:
(a) At regular times comparable to
normal mealtimes in the community,
each participant may receive and
program management must provide at
least two meals daily for those veterans
staying more than four hours and at
least one meal for those staying less
than four hours.
(b) The program management must
offer snacks and fluids as appropriate to
meet the participants’ nutritional and
fluid needs.
§ 51.445
Physician services.
As a condition of enrollment in adult
day health care program, a participant
must have a written physician order for
admission. Each participant’s medical
record must contain the name of the
participant’s primary care physician. If
a participant’s medical needs require
that the participant be placed in an
adult day health care program that offers
medical supervision, the primary care
physician must state so in the order for
admission. Each participant must
remain under the care of a physician.
(a) Physician supervision. If the adult
day health care program offers medical
supervision, the program management
must ensure that
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(1) The medical care of each
participant is supervised by a primary
care physician; and
(2) Another physician is available to
supervise the medical care of
participants when their primary care
physician is unavailable.
(b) Frequency of physician reviews. If
the adult day health care program offers
medical supervision:
(1) The participant must be seen by
the primary care physician at least
annually and as indicated by a change
of condition.
(2) The program management must
have a policy to help ensure that
adequate medical services are provided
to the participant.
(3) At the option of the primary care
physician, required reviews in the
program after the initial review may
alternate between personal physician
reviews and reviews by a physician
assistant, nurse practitioner, or clinical
nurse specialist in accordance with
paragraph (e) of this section.
(c) Availability of acute care. If the
adult day health care program offers
medical supervision, the program
management must provide or arrange for
the provision of acute care when it is
indicated.
(d) Availability of physicians for
emergency care. In case of an
emergency, the program management
must ensure that participants are able to
obtain necessary emergency care.
(e) Physician delegation of tasks. (1) A
primary care physician may delegate
tasks to
(i) A certified physician assistant or a
certified nurse practitioner, or
(ii) A clinical nurse specialist who(A) Is acting within the scope of
practice as defined by State law; and
(B) Is under the supervision of the
physician.
(2) The primary care physician may
not delegate a task when the provisions
of this part specify that the primary care
physician must perform it personally, or
when the delegation is prohibited under
State law or by the State home’s
policies.
(The Office of Management and Budget has
approved the information collection
requirements in this section under control
number 2900–0160.)
§ 51.450 Specialized rehabilitative
services.
(a) Provision of services. If specialized
rehabilitative services such as, but not
limited to, physical therapy, speech
therapy, occupational therapy, and
mental health services for mental illness
are required in the participant’s
comprehensive care plan, program
management must
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(1) Provide the required services; or
(2) Obtain the required services and
equipment from an outside resource, in
accordance with § 51.210(h), from a
provider of specialized rehabilitative
services.
(b) Written order. Specialized
rehabilitative services must be provided
under the written order of a physician
by qualified personnel.
§ 51.455
Dental services.
(a) If the adult day health care
program offers medical supervision,
program management must, if
necessary, assist the participant and
family/caregiver
(1) In making dental appointments;
and
(2) By arranging for transportation to
and from the dental services.
(b) If the adult day health care
program offers medical supervision,
program management must promptly
assist and refer participants with lost or
damaged dentures to a dentist.
§ 51.460
Administration of drugs.
If the adult day health care program
offers medical supervision, the program
management must assist participants
with the management of medication and
have a system for disseminating drug
information to participants and program
staff in accordance with this section.
(a) Procedures. The State home must
(1) Provide reminders or prompts to
participants to initiate and follow
through with self-administration of
medications.
(2) Establish a system of records to
document the administration of drugs
by participants and/or staff.
(3) Ensure that drugs and biologicals
used by participants are labeled in
accordance with currently accepted
professional principles, and include the
appropriate accessory and cautionary
instructions, and the expiration dates
when applicable.
(4) Store all drugs, biologicals, and
controlled schedule II drugs listed in 21
CFR 1308.12 in locked compartments
under proper temperature controls,
permit only authorized personnel to
have access, and otherwise comply with
all applicable State and Federal laws.
(b) Service consultation. The State
home must provide the services of a
pharmacist licensed in the State in
which the program is located who
provides consultation, as needed, on all
the provision of drugs.
(The Office of Management and Budget has
approved the information collection
requirements in this section under control
number 2900–0160.)
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§ 51.465
Infection control.
The State home must meet the
requirements concerning infection
control set forth in § 51.190. For
purposes of this section, the references
in the cited section to resident refer to
a participant in this section.
§ 51.470
Physical environment.
The State home must ensure that the
physical environment is designed,
constructed, equipped, and maintained
to protect the health and safety of
participants, personnel, and the public.
(a) Life safety from fire. The State
home must meet the applicable
requirements of National Fire Protection
Association’s NFPA 101, Life Safety
from fire, as incorporated by reference
in § 51.200.
(b) Space and equipment. (1) The
State home must—
(i) Provide sufficient space and
equipment in dining, health services,
recreation, and program areas to enable
staff to provide participants with
needed services as required by this
subpart F and as identified in each
participant’s comprehensive care plan;
and
(ii) Maintain all essential mechanical,
electrical, and patient care equipment in
safe operating condition.
(2) Each adult day health care
program, when it is co-located in a
nursing home, domiciliary, or other care
facility, must have its own separate
designated space during operational
hours.
(3) The indoor space for adult day
health care must be at least 100 square
feet per participant including office
space for staff and must be 60 square
feet per participant excluding office
space for staff.
(4) Each program of care will need to
design and partition its space to meet its
needs, but the following functional
areas must be available:
(i) A dividable multipurpose room or
area for group activities, including
dining, with adequate table-setting
space.
(ii) Rehabilitation rooms or an area for
individual and group treatments for
occupational therapy, physical therapy,
and other treatment modalities.
(iii) A kitchen area for refrigerated
food storage, the preparation of meals
and/or training participants in activities
of daily living.
(iv) An examination and/or
medication room.
(v) A quiet room (with a bed or a
reclining chair), which functions to
separate participants who become ill or
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disruptive, or who require rest, privacy,
or observation. It should be separate
from activity areas, near a restroom, and
supervised.
(vi) Bathing facilities adequate to
facilitate bathing of participants with
functional impairments.
(vii) Toilet facilities and bathrooms
easily accessible to people with mobility
problems, including participants in
wheelchairs. There must be at least one
toilet for every eight participants. The
toilets must be equipped for use by
persons with limited mobility, easily
accessible from all programs areas, i.e.,
preferably within 40 feet from that area,
designed to allow assistance from one or
two staff, and barrier-free.
(viii) Adequate storage space. There
should be space to store arts and crafts
materials, wheelchairs, chairs,
individual handiwork, and general
supplies. Locked cabinets must be
provided for files, records, supplies, and
medications.
(ix) An individual room for
counseling and interviewing
participants and family members.
(x) A reception area.
(xi) An outside space that is used for
outdoor activities that is safe, accessible
to indoor areas, and accessible to those
with a disability. This space may
include recreational space and garden
area. It should be easily supervised by
staff.
(c) Furnishings. Furnishings must be
available for all participants. This must
include functional furniture appropriate
to the participants’ needs. Furnishings
must be attractive, comfortable, and
homelike, while being sturdy and safe.
(d) Participant call system. The
coordinator’s station must be equipped
to receive participant calls through a
communication system from:
(1) Clinic rooms; and
(2) Toilet and bathing facilities.
(e) Other environmental conditions.
The State home must provide a safe,
functional, sanitary, and comfortable
environment for the participants, staff
and the public. The facility management
must
(1) Establish procedures to ensure that
water is available to essential areas if
there is a loss of normal water supply;
(2) Have adequate outside ventilation
by means of windows, or mechanical
ventilation, or a combination of the two;
(3) Equip corridors, when available,
with firmly-secured handrails on each
side; and
(4) Maintain an effective pest control
program so that the facility is free of
pests and rodents.
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§ 51.475
61285
Administration.
For purposes of this section, the
references in the cited section to nursing
home and nursing home care refer to
adult day health care programs and
adult day health care. The State home
must comply with all administration
requirements set forth in § 51.210 except
for the following if the adult day health
care program does not offer medical
supervision:
(a) Medical director. State home adult
day health care programs are not
required to designate a primary care
physician to serve as a medical director,
and therefore are not required to comply
with § 51.210(i).
(b) Laboratory services, radiology, and
other diagnostic services. State home
adult day health care programs are not
required to provide the medical services
identified in § 51.210(m) and (n).
(c) Quality assessment and assurance
committee. State home adult day health
care programs are not required to
comply with § 51.210(p), regarding
quality assessment and assurance
committees consisting of specified
medical providers and staff.
(The Office of Management and Budget has
approved the information collection
requirements in this section under control
number 2900–0160.)
§ 51.480
Transportation.
Transportation of participants to and
from the adult day health care facility
must be a component of the overall
program of care.
(a)(1) Except as provided in paragraph
(a)(2) of this section, the State home
must provide for transportation to
enable participants, including persons
with disabilities, to attend the program
and to participate in State homesponsored outings.
(2) The veteran or the family of a
veteran may decline transportation
offered by the adult day health care
program and make their own
arrangements for transportation.
(b) The State home must have a
transportation policy that includes
procedures for routine and emergency
transportation. All transportation
(including that provided under contract)
must be in compliance with such
procedures.
(c) The State home must ensure that
the transportation it provides is by
drivers who have access to a device for
two-way communication.
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(d) All systems and vehicles used by
the State home to comply with this
section must meet all applicable local,
State and Federal regulations.
(e) The State home must ensure that
the care needs of each participant are
addressed during transportation
furnished by the home.
PART 52—[REMOVED]
23. Remove part 52, consisting of
§§ 52.1 through 52.220.
■
[FR Doc. 2018–25115 Filed 11–27–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8320–01–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 229 (Wednesday, November 28, 2018)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 61250-61286]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2018-25115]
[[Page 61249]]
Vol. 83
Wednesday,
No. 229
November 28, 2018
Part III
Department of Veterans Affairs
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
38 CFR Parts 17, 51, and 52
Per Diem Paid to States for Care of Eligible Veterans in State Homes;
Final Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 83 , No. 229 / Wednesday, November 28, 2018 /
Rules and Regulations
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DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS AFFAIRS
38 CFR Parts 17, 51, and 52
RIN 2900-AO88
Per Diem Paid to States for Care of Eligible Veterans in State
Homes
AGENCY: Department of Veterans Affairs.
ACTION: Final rule.
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SUMMARY: This rulemaking adopts as final, with changes, proposed
amendments to VA's regulations governing payment of per diem to States
for nursing home care, domiciliary care, and adult day health care for
eligible veterans in State homes. This rulemaking reorganizes, updates,
and clarifies State home regulations, authorizes greater flexibility in
adult day health care programs, and establishes regulations regarding
domiciliary care, with clarifications regarding the care that State
homes must provide to veterans in domiciliaries.
DATES: This rule is effective on December 28, 2018.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Dr. George F. Fuller, Chief
Consultant, Geriatrics and Extended Care Services (10NC4), Veterans
Health Administration, 810 Vermont Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20420,
(202) 461-6750. (This is not a toll-free number.)
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: On June 17, 2015, VA proposed changes to
parts 17, 51, and 52 of title 38 Code of Federal Regulations. 80 FR
34794. VA published technical corrections to the proposed rulemaking on
June 24, 2015, 80 FR 36305. This final rule amends part 17 by deleting
provisions that applied to State home hospitals, because there no
longer are any, and moving to part 51 the other provisions that apply
to State homes, including State home domiciliary care programs. It
revises part 51 subparts A, B, and C to eliminate redundancy in the
regulations governing the payment of per diem to State home nursing
home, domiciliary, and adult day health care programs by combining
similar regulations from part 17 and part 52. It amends several
sections of the nursing home regulations in part 51 subpart D, and adds
subparts E and F on domiciliary care and adult day health care,
respectively, to part 51. Because of that, this rule eliminates the
State home regulations from part 17 and part 52, and combines in part
51 all the regulations for a State home to establish and maintain
qualification for receipt of VA per diem payments.
We invited interested parties to submit written comments on the
proposed rule on or before August 17, 2015, and we received 32 public
comments. Several commenters commended and supported revisions that
reorganize, update, and clarify the regulations, particularly those
that increase the State homes' ability to emphasize the independence of
adult day health care participants. VA thanks these commenters for
their support of the rule. We have responded to the rest of the
comments recommending changes to the proposed rule under the heading of
the sections with which the commenters expressed concern.
Technical Correction
The notice of proposed rulemaking proposed to amend 38 CFR part 51
under the part heading, ``PART 51--PER DIEM FOR NURSING HOME,
DOMICILIARY, OR ADULT DAY HEALTH CARE OF VETERANS IN STATE HOMES.'' The
correct heading of part 51 until this rulemaking becomes final is,
``PER DIEM FOR NURSING HOME CARE OF VETERANS IN STATE HOMES.'' The
notice of proposed rulemaking neglected to include amendatory language
proposing to change the heading of part 51. We are correcting this
omission by adding that amendatory language and the revised heading of
part 51 below as amendatory action 3. We have renumbered all subsequent
amendatory instructions accordingly.
Subpart A--General
51.1 Purpose and Scope of Part 51
We have changed ``rules'' to ``requirements'' in the sentence of
Sec. 51.1 beginning, ``Subpart C sets forth requirements governing . .
. .'' The term ``rule'' is commonly used as a synonym for
``regulation'' in federal rulemaking, as in the ACTION heading of this
rulemaking. Avoiding its use in the text of a regulation eliminates a
possible point of confusion. The term ``requirements'' better describes
the function and scope of the regulations in subpart C of part 51.
51.2 Definitions
VA received comments related to the definition of domiciliary care,
and concerns that the proposed definition, in addition to the standards
in subpart E of the proposed regulations imposing the entire nursing
home program regulations on the domiciliary care program, would impose
unnecessary and costly burdens on domiciliary programs that are
inconsistent with their purpose and that would replicate nursing home
care. Several commenters stated some States may have to close their
domiciliary programs because of these costs. A commenter said that VA's
proposed definition of ``domiciliary care'' needs to be clearer for the
State homes to tell whether their programs fit the definition.
Similarly, others said that States need a clearer definition of what
domiciliary care is to know whether the per diem rate for that care
will sustain their programs.
VA agrees that the application of whole regulations governing the
nursing home care program to the domiciliary care program, as proposed
Sec. Sec. 51.300 and 51.350 would have done, would be excessively
burdensome. We have revised those sections to eliminate the application
of multiple nursing home provisions to the domiciliary care program. We
discuss each change from the proposed rule in the discussion of
Sec. Sec. 51.300 and 51.350 below.
VA agrees that the definition of domiciliary care in proposed Sec.
51.2 requires clarification. We have, therefore, added to it a
description of what constitutes ``necessary medical services'' for
purposes of State home domiciliary care, which are the services
described in subpart E of this rulemaking. This updated definition,
along with the revisions to the proposed domiciliary care requirements
under subpart E of this rule, described in detail below, allows a user
to tell whether a State home program fits the definition of domiciliary
care.
A commenter said VA may need to clarify the definition of
domiciliary care regarding whether domiciliary care is a temporary or
permanent living arrangement so State homes could assess whether their
programs meet the definition. The commenter said that State home
domiciliaries offer different types of programs, including retirement,
independent living, transitional care, or permanent care programs. VA
received other comments raising similar concerns about State homes'
abilities to provide transitional care in domiciliaries under the
proposed rules.
VA declines to change the definition of domiciliary care to
differentiate between temporary and permanent services. We believe the
revised definition provides necessary guidance, and also provides
flexibility so that State homes can operate many variations of
domiciliary care within the definition, including transitional
services, as long as the State home meets VA's standards for per diem
payment while the resident resides in the home. The changes to the
definition of domiciliary care in Sec. 51.2 and to the domiciliary
requirements in subpart E of this rulemaking should resolve the issues
raised by this comment. We
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therefore make no changes based on these comments.
Although not defined in this section, we noticed the terms
``treatment plan,'' ``care plan,'' and ``plan of care'' are used
inconsistently throughout the proposed regulations to refer to the same
thing: The regimen of care based on a comprehensive assessment that is
offered in all State home programs of care. We changed all instances of
these terms to ``comprehensive care plan,'' which is also consistent
with the regulations in part 51 that are not changed by this final
rule.
We are also removing ``primary physician'' from the definition
proposed as ``primary physician or primary care physician,'' and
changing all references to ``primary physician'' to ``primary care
physician'' throughout part 51. Proposed part 51 had used each about
the same number of times. Though they mean the same thing, we think
this part would be clearer if the definition defines a single term and
uses that term consistently.
Subpart B--Obtaining Recognition and Certification for per Diem
Payments
51.20 Recognition of a State Home
In Sec. Sec. 51.20 and 51.30 of the proposed rule, we used some
terms that make sense applied to residential programs--nursing home and
domiciliary--that do not make sense applied to adult day health care
programs. For example, ``beds'' is a useful term when referring to the
number of residents in a nursing home care program or a domiciliary
care program, but not when referring to the number of participants in
an adult day health care program, which has no overnight operations. We
have, therefore revised Sec. Sec. 51.20 and 51.30 to speak of
``capacity'' of a program or facility, rather than of ``beds.''
We are changing proposed Sec. 51.20(b) to explicitly include
applicable requirements in subpart C in the list of requirements and
standards that VA may evaluate in a survey of the State home. Subpart C
contains requirements regarding eligibility, payment rates, and payment
procedures that apply to State home programs of care. We do not
consider this a substantive change, because State homes would clearly
need to comply with subpart C under the proposed rule. This change
makes Sec. 51.20(b) complete regarding the scope of surveys.
We are clarifying proposed Sec. 51.20(b)(3)(ii). As proposed, the
paragraph provided for the State home to respond to a medical center
director's recommendation to the Under Secretary for Health to not
recognize a state home and to submit additional evidence with that
response. The paragraph neglected to identify to whom the State home is
to submit the response or additional evidence. We are adding language
to the end of Sec. 51.20(b)(3)(ii) providing that the State's
submission of a response to a recommendation to not recognize a State
home is to the Under Secretary for Health. This is consistent with
current Sec. 51.30(d), which provides for appeal from a recommendation
against recognition, and inclusion of additional material with that
appeal. This is not a change from the current regulation; it merely
fills a gap in the proposed regulation.
We are further clarifying paragraph (b)(3)(ii) and multiple other
proposed provisions of part 51 that measure time by qualifying the 30
days as ``calendar'' days. As proposed, part 51 inconsistently
qualified the measure of time. We believe this inconsistency invites
confusion. Qualifying time in calendar days generally provides
certainty to the time allowed in provisions that prescribe deadlines.
There are three exceptions in part 51 that measure time in ``working''
days. These codify long-standing practice with which VA and the State
homes are accustomed. These are Sec. Sec. 51.30(d)(1)(iii), time to
provide a corrective action plan; 51.320(a)(4), time for a domiciliary
care program to report a sentinel event; and 51.430(a)(3), time for an
adult day health care program to report a sentinel event.
We are clarifying proposed Sec. 51.20(c). As proposed, the
paragraph provided, ``After receipt of a recommendation from the
Director, the Undersecretary for Health will award or deny recognition
based on all available evidence.'' Though it seems implicit, the
proposed regulation does not explicitly say that ``all available
evidence'' included any evidence the State home submits during the 30
calendar days the preceding paragraph allows for submission of a
response or additional evidence. To make the regulation explicit, we
are adding to paragraph (c), following ``Director,'' the following:
``and allowing 30 calendar days for the state to respond to the
recommendation and to submit evidence . . .'' As revised, the sentence
reads, ``After receipt of a recommendation from the Director, and
allowing 30 calendar days for the state to respond to the
recommendation and to submit evidence, the Under Secretary for Health
will award or deny recognition based on all available evidence.'' We
are also adding ``in writing'' at the end of the second sentence of
paragraph (c) because the current regulation, Sec. 51.30(e), requires
the Under Secretary's decision to be written. We omitted this
requirement from the proposed regulation.
We are removing the second sentence of proposed Sec. 51.20(d)(2),
which provided that changes in the use of particular beds between
recognized programs of care and increases in capacity that are not the
result of the expansion of the size of a home or relocation to a new
facility will not require recognition. Those changes are the subject of
Sec. 51.30. We are adding ``or capacity'' following ``size'' in the
remaining sentence of this paragraph to be clear that a recognized
state home only needs a new recognition if there is an expansion in the
physical size of the home, increased in the number of persons served,
or relocation to a new facility. So, we do not need to explain in Sec.
51.20 that the section on certification, Sec. 51.30, addresses any
changes that do not involve such an expansion or relocation. This is
not a substantive change.
51.30 Certification of a State Home
In Sec. 51.30(a) and throughout part 51 wherever proposed, we are
changing ``within'' as it pertains to numbers of days to ``no later
than.'' We believe one can be unsure whether ``within'' includes or
excludes the last day of the period. ``No later than'' more clearly
includes the last day of the period. If the regulation provides, as in
Sec. 51.30(a) for example, that something be done no later than 450
days after an event one can be sure on day 451 the deadline has been
missed.
VA is eliminating from proposed Sec. 51.30(c) the provisions that
would have allowed precertification when State homes switch capacity
between programs of care or increase capacity in a program of care. On
further consideration, we have determined that the regular surveys
described in paragraph (b) of this section are frequent enough, and the
provisional certification process holds the State homes accountable
enough, that the precertification process adds complexity with little
benefit. Deleting it eliminates an administrative burden on the State
homes and on VA. We are, therefore, deleting the precertification
provisions in proposed Sec. 51.30(c)(1).
One commenter applauded proposed Sec. 51.30(c)(2), which
eliminated the requirement that VA perform a new survey of a program
upon reduction of the capacity of that program. We have retained this
provision, but have redesignated it as Sec. 51.30(c). For
administrative convenience, in this final rule we have changed the
destination to
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which the State home must send its report regarding decreases in
capacity to the Office of Geriatrics and Extended Care in VA Central
Office, from the Director of the VAMC of jurisdiction, as proposed,
which will keep the regulations consistent with longstanding practice.
VA is clarifying the function and purpose of the provisional
certification provisions of proposed paragraph (d)(1). The paragraph
serves two purposes: (1) To allow the State home to receive per diem
payments while correcting deficiencies a survey reveals, and (2) to
ensure VA does not pay per diem if a survey reveals a deficiency that
is an immediate hazard to health or safety so great, and the need to
remediate so urgent, it is unreasonable to continue per diem payments
during the time until the next survey.
Specifically, VA is amending proposed Sec. 51.30(d)(1)(ii), which
would not allow VA to grant a provisional certification if the State
home is deficient in a standard that would jeopardize the health or
safety of any resident or participant. Because almost all of the
standards in these regulations are aimed at promoting the health and
safety of State home residents and participants, the regulation as
proposed would prevent VA from issuing most provisional certifications,
frustrating the purpose of provisional certifications. Though some
commenters favored imposing the strictest possible State home
compliance with all regulations, VA believes a provisional
certification scheme resulting in frequent denial of provisional
certification is not in the best interest of State home residents.
Consequently, we clarify that the deficiencies for which VA will grant
provisional certification are only those that will not jeopardize the
health and safety of Veterans before the State home can remedy them. We
are, therefore, adding the word ``immediately'' so that this provision
reads, ``None of these deficiencies immediately jeopardize the health
or safety of any resident or participant.''
VA is eliminating the provisions that were proposed as Sec.
51.30(d)(3), which detailed how VA would issue additional provisional
certifications to a State home that already received a provisional
certification. VA has determined that the proposed procedure is
inconsistent with VA's practices of working with State homes on
corrective action plans to ensure the programs are brought into
compliance with these regulations under one provisional certification.
The provisional certification procedures in this final rule are
complete without that proposed provision.
51.31 Surveys for Recognition and/or Certification
We have changed proposed Sec. 51.31(b)(1). We proposed, as a
requirement for VA to conduct a recognition survey, that a State home
nursing home care program or domiciliary care program must have at
least 21 residents or have a number of residents consisting of at least
50 percent of the resident capacity of the home. We have reduced the
residency number requirement from 21 to 20, while keeping the 50
percent alternative. We are making this change to facilitate
recognition of homes using the small house model which is based on
facilities of 20 beds.
We have removed ``the Assistant Deputy Under Secretary for Health
(10N);'' from the list in paragraph (c) of persons the director of the
VA medical center of jurisdiction must notify upon finding an immediate
threat to safety in a State home. Through reorganization, Veterans
Health Administration no longer has an officer with exactly that title.
The other listed VA offices are sufficient to accomplish the necessary
oversight of State homes. Consequently, we remove the named VA officer
without substitution of another.
Subpart C--Requirements Applicable to Eligibility, Rates, and Payments
We are revising the proposed heading of subpart C by inserting
``Requirements Applicable to'' before ``Eligibility, Rates, and
Payments'', to read, ``Subpart C-- Requirements Applicable to
Eligibility, Rates, and Payments''. As revised, the heading describes
the function and scope of subpart C better than the proposed heading.
51.40 Basic per Diem Rates
In proposed subpart F, VA proposed changes to requirements for
State home adult day health care to reduce the requirements for medical
supervision in the programs. VA received comments that VA should
establish a two-tier per diem payment system for adult day healthcare
programs under Sec. 51.40(a) because of the higher cost of providing
medical supervision and the lower cost of programs that do not. The
commenters said that failure to provide separate rates for programs
that offer medical supervision and for those that do not will
negatively affect State homes providing adult day health care services
with medical supervision and the veterans these programs serve. They
noted the current medical supervision style of programs has a
significant track record of keeping veterans out of hospital emergency
rooms and hospitalizations; they care for veterans who would otherwise
be institutionalized in a nursing home.
We explained in the proposed rule that VA would not pay different
rates of per diem to State home adult day health care programs that
provide medical supervision than to those that do not. We proposed to
expand the definition of adult day health care, which had previously
allowed only for the medical model of care, to afford State homes the
flexibility to offer a social model of care, and thereby expand
availability of adult day health care to more Veterans throughout the
country. Though a State home may still choose to provide medical
supervision, and must meet the standards in Sec. 51.445 if it does,
the method for calculating per diem payments will remain the same
regardless of the type of care provided. If the veteran needs more
medical care than the adult day health care program can provide, the
State home must transfer the veteran to another appropriate care
program. Even if VA were to implement, under 38 U.S.C. 1741, different
rates for adult day health care programs that provide the medical model
of care, the payment would still be subject to the statutory limit of
no more than one half of the cost of the veteran's care. 38 U.S.C.
1741(b). We point this out on the assumption that the commenter is
seeking a payment tier that provides higher payments for medical model
participants than the current per diem payment, and not a lower payment
tier for social model adult day health care participants. Because the
statute describes the maximum basic per diem payment as a percentage of
the cost of care, and because we see no value in tiered payments merely
for the sake of tiering, we make no change based on this comment.
We note that since the publication of VA's proposed rule in June
2015, the President signed into law the State Veterans Home Adult Day
Health Care Improvement Act of 2017. VA is working to implement this
new authority; if any further revisions in these regulations are needed
because of this recently enacted legislation, VA will make them through
subsequent rulemaking.
Another commenter addressed the cost of providing ``primary care,
medical services, and preventative care to domiciliary residents while
restricting the payments to `less than one half of the cost of care' ''
as inequitable and unrealistic. The commenter asserted the current
reimbursement structure does
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not always cover the cost of the required care, and that the proposed
new regulations would introduce more bureaucracy and ``paper work''
costs and shift the cost and much of the responsibility for the health
care of domiciliary veterans from VA to the State homes.
By law, the basic per diem rate cannot exceed one-half the cost of
the veteran's care in the State home. As such, per diem payments are
not intended to serve as a reimbursement for all the costs of the care
provided to veterans. We make no change based on this comment.
The per diem program does not shift costs of care or the
responsibility for providing health care from VA to the State homes.
Domiciliary care has long included all ``necessary medical services''
which essentially includes all outpatient care. See Sec. 17.30(b). So,
by limiting the care that State home domiciliaries are required to
provide, this rule could be seen as shifting the cost and
responsibility for most medical services to VA. Regarding additional
bureaucratic paper-work costs due to this rulemaking, the commenter did
not identify any specific provisions that would have that effect. We
refer the commenter to the discussions throughout this supplementary
information describing multiple changes from the proposed rules this
final rule makes to reduce administrative and other costs. For example,
see the discussion of changes from proposed Sec. 51.300. We make no
change based on this comment.
The same commenter expressed difficulty keeping track of the
services covered by the different per diem payments. The commenter
expressed the desire that VA publish a comprehensive list of services
covered by the nursing home, domiciliary, and adult day care per diem
payments for veterans with service-connected disabilities rated 70
percent or 100 percent disabling.
Per diem under 38 U.S.C. 1741 is paid under a VA grant program. VA
makes the payments to the States to support the care of veterans in
State homes; it is not ``coverage'' for specific services, like
insurance. The States must meet certain standards as a condition of
receiving VA per diem to ensure the State home provides for the health,
safety, and well-being of veterans in its care. The rate of per diem
paid for the nursing home care of veterans with service-connected
disabilities rated 70 percent or more is the subject of Sec. 51.41,
Contracts and provider agreements for certain veterans with service-
connected disabilities. VA published a notice of proposed rule;
correction and clarification, 80 FR 36305 (June 24, 2015),
acknowledging that VA omitted Sec. 51.41 from the initial notice of
proposed rulemaking proposing the rules this rulemaking finalizes. The
notice of correction stated VA is not amending Sec. 51.41 in this
rulemaking, consequently comments based on it are beyond the scope of
this rulemaking. We make no changes based on this comment.
Commenters objected that VA proposed to apply the same rule to
payment of per diem for veterans absent from State home domiciliaries
as it applies to payment of per diem for veterans absent from State
home nursing homes. As proposed, Sec. 51.40(c) would allow VA to pay
per diem for a day without an overnight stay if the State home
domiciliary had an occupancy of rate of 90 percent or greater on that
day. The per diem payments would be limited to the first 10 consecutive
days the veteran was admitted to any hospital and the first 12 days in
a calendar year for absences other than for the purpose of receiving
hospital care. Specifically, the commenters objected to the requirement
that the State home domiciliary care program be filled to 90 percent of
capacity before VA will pay per diem for a veteran's absence. One
comment said the requirement would have a major financial impact on
State home domiciliaries, and that the limit for payments of 12 days in
a calendar year for absences other than for hospital care would
adversely affect the residents' quality of life. One commenter
requested VA allow 24 days of leave other than for hospital care,
arguing this would be good for the resident and consistent with the
capacity for independence of domiciliary residents. Another asserted
the regulation was vague as proposed and needed clarification. The
commenter noted the proposed regulation omitted the ``original''
requirement that a resident not be absent from a State Home for more
than 96 consecutive hours for the Home to receive per diem for that
veteran, but the proposed section now states that per diem will be paid
only for a veteran who has an overnight stay, or if the State Home has
an occupancy rate of 90 percent or greater on that day. This commenter
pointed out that domiciliary residents are independent and may choose
to spend time away from the State home, which needs to guarantee their
accommodations will be available when they return and should be
reimbursed for that. These commenters said VA should continue the ``96-
hour'' rule for payment of per diem during absences from the
domiciliary for reasons other than hospitalization.
VA agrees that domiciliary residents require a different level of
care and have more independence than nursing home residents, and
imposing the same requirements for absences would impose an unfair
burden on domiciliaries. State home domiciliary care programs are
typically below 90 percent of capacity, but VA nonetheless believes
that it is important to pay per diem during short absences to ensure
that veterans who choose to take brief absences do not lose their
spaces in State home domiciliaries. We agree that the 12-day cumulative
absence rule is impracticable and overly burdensome for domiciliary
care programs for the same reasons. In fact, even a 24-day rule, as one
commenter requested, would allow less time away per year than the 96-
hour rule some commenters recommended. Consequently, we are removing
both the 90 percent and the 12-day requirements from the final rule. We
are instead codifying the 96-hour rule for absences from domiciliaries
in Sec. 51.40(c), as it is currently in VHA Directive 1601SH.01. Under
this rule, VA will pay per diem for any absence from the domiciliary of
96 or fewer consecutive hours, unless the absence is for hospital care
at VA expense. VA will not pay per diem for any absence that lasts
longer than 96 hours.
To effect these changes, we are revising the paragraph into two
paragraphs: (c)(1), ``Nursing homes'' and (c)(2), ``Domiciliaries.''
51.41 Contracts and Provider Agreements for Certain Veterans With
Service-Connected Disabilities
As published in a notice of correction and clarification, 80 CFR
36305 (June 24, 2015), this rulemaking as proposed inadvertently
omitted instructions for Sec. 51.41. VA did not intend to propose any
changes to that section, and we make none in this rulemaking. We have
provided amendatory language for subpart C to ensure inclusion of Sec.
51.41 in 38 CFR part 51, and have added Sec. 51.41 to the table of
contents.
51.42 Payment Procedures
As proposed, Sec. 51.42(a) read as a 147-word sentence. We have
revised it to read as three sentences for clarity. We have also revised
the proposed note to paragraph (a)(1)(i), redesignated ``Note 1,'' to
clarify who must complete the financial disclosure and that adult day
health care participants are not to complete the financial disclosure,
but they must sign the form to acknowledge financial responsibility. As
revised, the note also makes clear that VA will reject
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the form as incomplete if submitted without the required signature.
VA had proposed expanding the deadline for VA to receive the forms
from the State home identified in this section from 10 days to 12 days.
The statute only allows 10 days, and we have no authority to allow a
longer time. 38 U.S.C. 1743. VA will therefore maintain the 10-day
deadline in this final rule by changing 12 to 10 in paragraph (b)(3) of
this section. As discussed above, we are qualifying the time as 10
``calendar'' days and defining the time limit as ``no later than,''
rather than ``within'' as proposed, and adding ``after care began'',
consistent with the statute. We have also made minor technical edits to
this section. We have changed the heading of paragraph (b)(2) of this
section by deleting ``or precertified,'' because, as described above,
Sec. 51.30(c) will not establish a precertification procedure. We have
deleted the first sentence of paragraph (b)(2) of this section for the
same reason.
51.51 Eligible Veterans--Domiciliary Care
One commenter said that proposed Sec. 51.51(b)(7) is ambiguous in
requiring that a veteran must be able to ``[s]hare in some measure,
however slight, in the maintenance and operation of the State home'' to
be eligible for VA per diem payments, and this provision could violate
the protection from involuntary servitude of the thirteenth amendment
of the U.S. Constitution.
We disagree with the assertion that paragraph (b)(7) compels
involuntary servitude. Residency in the State home domiciliary care
program is itself voluntary. Any resident may leave. Paragraph (b)(7)
describes an ability that, with the other eligibility criteria, ensures
the enrollees on whose behalf VA pays per diem are appropriately in a
domiciliary care program, and that VA pays the State home domiciliary
care per diem only for such residents. Moreover, under revised Sec.
51.310(c), the veteran is consulted and must agree to the work
arrangement described in his or her comprehensive care plan, and Sec.
51.300(b) requires that the resident be paid for work that the State
home would need to pay others to perform. Together these provisions
protect residents from involuntary servitude and from a State home
otherwise taking unfair advantage of the resident through its work
program.
Based on this comment, however, we are revising paragraph (b)(7) to
read, ``Participate in some measure, however slight, in work
assignments that support the maintenance and operation of the State
home.'' This makes clear the eligibility criteria include the ability
to personally participate in the maintenance and operation of the State
home. The addition also harmonizes this eligibility criterion with the
role of resident work in the domiciliary care program as prescribed in
Sec. Sec. 51.300 and 51.310. The specific work the resident chooses
will be by agreement with the interdisciplinary team that develops the
resident's comprehensive care plan, and the resident will be paid a
competitive wage if the facility would otherwise pay a non-resident for
such work. There is flexibility in how this may be implemented, as
reflected in Sec. Sec. 51.300(b) on residents' rights and behavior and
51.310(c) on comprehensive care plans, respectively.
Multiple commenters commented the State home should pay residents
for work. Another objected to application through proposed Sec. 51.300
of the nursing home regulation, Sec. 51.70(h)(1), permitting a
resident to refuse to work. This commenter asserted the State home
should require each resident to work. In consideration of these
comments we are revising proposed Sec. 51.300 to require each
resident's comprehensive care plan to specify whether a resident's work
for the domiciliary is paid or unpaid.
51.52 Eligible Veterans--Adult Day Health Care
We have made non-substantive technical revisions to paragraph Sec.
51.52(d)(3)(ii). As proposed, this provision may have been interpreted
as requiring a minimum of 24 visits, 12 outpatient and 12 emergency, to
be considered as a high user of medical services and thereby establish
eligibility for adult day health care per diem payments. We intended 12
visits total, whether outpatient, emergency, or some combination, and
have changed the provision in this final rulemaking to clarify that.
51.58 Requirements and Standards Applicable for Payment of per Diem
We are changing the heading of Sec. 51.58, as shown, consistent
with the changed heading of subpart C, discussed above, and other
references to subpart C in this part. Similar to the change described
above in Sec. 51.20(b), we are changing proposed Sec. 51.58 to make
explicit in the introduction that State homes must meet the
requirements of subpart C to receive per diem payments. Subpart C
contains the eligibility requirements, payment rates, and payment
procedures that apply to all State home programs of care. Although we
do not consider this a substantive change, because the provisions of
subpart C clearly apply to State homes receiving per diem, Sec. 51.58
would be incomplete without it.
51.140 Dietary Services
This rulemaking makes a technical amendment to Sec. 51.140(a)(2)
that was not in the proposed rule. The paragraph refers to the
``American Dietetic Association,'' which changed its name to the
``Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics.'' This rulemaking updates that
name.
Subpart E--Standards Applicable to the Payment of per Diem for
Domiciliary Care
VA received comments asking VA to collaborate with national
associations representing State homes to revise the proposed
regulations regarding domiciliary care and to retain the prior
domiciliary rules in the interim, rather than implement the proposed
rules.
VA is grateful to the State homes, and to all parties who submitted
comments on this rulemaking. The rulemaking process we have followed
allows all members of the public to have a fair opportunity to
participate in the rulemaking process, as the Administrative Procedure
Act requires. 5 U.S.C. 553. VA has considered all comments it received,
including the comments about the effects of the proposed domiciliary
regulations submitted by national associations and individual State
homes, and is making substantial changes to the domiciliary regulations
in this final rulemaking. We therefore decline to retain the prior
rules on per diem payments to domiciliaries while developing new
regulations, but we welcome continuing feedback and opportunities to
work with the State homes to improve services to veterans.
Sec. 51.300 Residential Rights and Behavior; State Home Practices;
Quality of Life
VA received a number of comments about Sec. 51.300, which, as
proposed, would have applied to State home domiciliaries the
requirements of Sec. Sec. 51.70, 51.80, 51.90, and 51.100. These
regulations provide standards that apply to State home nursing home
resident rights; admission, transfer and discharge rights; resident
behavior and facility practices; and quality of life. In response to
these comments and for other reasons, we have revised proposed 51.300
so it does not apply to the domiciliary care program all of the nursing
home regulations we proposed to apply. We have changed the introduction
to Sec. 51.300 to specify which provisions of the nursing home
sections will not apply to the
[[Page 61255]]
domiciliary care program. Discussion of the specific comments and
changes to Sec. 51.300 follow.
Five commenters opined that compliance with Sec. Sec. 51.70,
51.80, 51.90, and 51.100 may seem reasonable as they pertain to
veterans' treatment and rights. They asserted, however, that compliance
with these sections also imposes additional, extensive ``nursing home''
standards on the domiciliary programs, creating new requirements that
are not feasible under current operation and staffing models. The
commenters noted, for example, that Sec. 51.70 contains 14 major
sections and multiple subsections of requirements, whereas the existing
domiciliary care program regulations have only one standard ``(13
Quality of Life).'' The commenters asserted the other sections to which
Sec. 51.300 refers are similarly burdensome, citing as another example
the Sec. 51.100 requirement that social workers meet specific
qualifications and that the domiciliary meet specific staffing
requirements.
We deduce that the commenters' citations of various ``existing
regulations,'' e.g., ``13 Quality of Life,'' refer to provisions of the
VA Guide for Inspection of State Veterans Homes: Domiciliary Care
Standards (Nov. 26, 1986) [hereafter 1986 Guide], because the citations
are, verbatim, to headings of standards in the 1986 Guide. We disagree
with assertions that the proposed regulations have many more provisions
than the 1986 Guide, and with the implicit argument that more
provisions means a greater burden of compliance. First, the commenters
comparison of Sec. 51.70 with the 1986 Guide, which incidentally does
not comprise regulations, misstated the differences. Section 51.70 is
one section comprising 14 paragraphs, (a)-(n), which each have multiple
provisions. Section 13 of the 1986 Guide, ``Quality of Life,''
comprises one section with six standards, each with one to four
indicators of compliance, which in turn each has as many as 13
elements, and each standard one through six has a corresponding
guideline paragraph. We further disagree that the number of provisions
defines the burden of compliance. The number of provisions, as the
commenters identify them, is an organizational device to aid
readability. It does not inherently correlate with the burden of
compliance.
The commenters also expressed particular concern about the cost of
applying these sections to domiciliary care programs that offer
primarily transition services. Commenters said the proposed rules would
have an adverse financial effect on the domiciliary programs, including
potential closures, which would have an especially negative effect on
the homeless population that some domiciliary care programs widely
serve. Commenters said the proposed rules would treat otherwise
homeless residents as patients and would medically institutionalize
them, whereas the traditional domiciliary model encourages self-
reliance. Some commented that nursing home standards would increase the
nursing requirements for assisted-living domiciliaries. Some said that
these requirements amounted to an unfunded mandate. Some said VA should
either increase the per diem payment for domiciliary care, or eliminate
or reduce the requirements.
We disagree that any requirement in this rulemaking is an unfunded
mandate, even if compliance with some provisions increases a State's
costs to run its program. An unfunded mandate, or a ``Federal
intergovernmental mandate'' as defined in the Unfunded Mandates Reform
Act of 1995, is, in pertinent part, ``any provision in legislation,
statute, or regulation that (i) would impose an enforceable duty upon
State, local, or tribal governments--except (I) a condition of Federal
assistance; or (II) a duty arising from participation in a voluntary
Federal program.'' 2 U.S.C. 658(5). No Federal law imposes an
enforceable duty on any the States to have a State home. VA's per diem
program is a benefit the United States affords veterans through the
States. This rulemaking provides conditions of this VA assistance. Each
State participates voluntarily. The cost of qualifying for VA per diem
payments to State homes is not an unfunded mandate; it is simply a
condition of Federal assistance or a duty arising from participation in
a voluntary Federal program. We make no change based on this comment.
VA agrees that certain of the requirements we proposed in Sec.
51.300 should not be applied to State home domiciliaries, and we have
made a number of changes to that section in response to the commenters'
recommendations. The standards VA will require State home domiciliary
care programs to meet under this final rule are those we have
determined are essential to the health, safety, and well-being of the
residents and that will enable the State homes to continue providing
services that foster veterans' independence. To that end, VA will apply
some provisions of Sec. Sec. 51.70, 51.80, 51.90, and 51.100 to
domiciliaries, but we are excluding some and establishing more suitable
standards in the place of certain paragraphs of each. From Sec. 51.70,
we are excluding Sec. 51.70(b)(9), (h)(1), and (m); from Sec. 51.80
we are excluding Sec. 51.80(a)(2), (a)(4), and (b); and from Sec.
51.100 we are excluding Sec. 51.100(g)(2), (h), and (i)(5)-(i)(7). We
have added provisions using the same or substantially similar headings
as the excluded paragraphs and added provisions in language similar to
the excluded provision, adapted and tailored to the needs of the
domiciliary care program. For the most part, these changes implement
changes commenters recommended or eliminate burdens commenters
identified.
Some commenters approved of the proposed application of nursing
home regulations to domiciliary care programs. They urged VA to apply
all nursing home regulations to domiciliary care programs. Some
suggested specific changes to various provisions of Sec. Sec. 51.70
and 51.100 as we proposed to apply them to domiciliary care programs.
The suggested amendments are addressed under the headings for those
provisions. One suggested a substantial rewrite of Sec. Sec. 51.70 and
51.100, which we discuss under the Other Issues heading below.
A description of changes from the proposed regulations follows.
51.300(a) Notice of Rights and Services--Notification of Changes
VA received comments that Sec. 51.70(b)(9), Notification of
changes, should not apply to domiciliary care program residents. The
comments said that State homes do not currently notify families or
legal representatives of changes to the domiciliary residents' medical
status or room assignments. They noted that the State home often asks
the residents to move from rooms with multiple residents to single
rooms based on availability and seniority, and there is no need to
inform family members in writing of such a change. One commenter
further noted, ``[T]here is no need to notify family members of changes
in their medical conditions against their will in violation of their
Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act rights,'' and
domiciliary residents are independent enough to oversee their own
affairs. We interpret the comment referencing HIPAA to mean, if a State
home were to notify family members of changes in the resident's medical
condition over the resident's objection, that notice would violate the
resident's rights under HIPAA, and therefore the proposed notice
requirement violates HIPPA.
We agree that the requirement to notify a resident's legal
representative or interested family member of changes to
[[Page 61256]]
the resident's medical status or room assignment as Sec. 51.70(b)(9)
requires is not necessary for domiciliary care program residents for
the reasons the commenters stated. We do not address whether the
proposed notice requirement would violate HIPAA because we are
eliminating the requirement to notify certain people. Instead, we have
added a right to notice provision in Sec. 51.300(a). In consideration
of the comments for and against notice of certain outside persons, we
are making changes intended to balance these conflicting concerns.
Paragraph (a) of this section will provide that the domiciliary
resident will have the right to decide whether to have the State home
notify other people of changes to the resident's medical status or room
assignment.
51.300(b) Work
VA received comments objecting to applying to domiciliaries via
proposed Sec. 51.300 the nursing home rule that allows residents to
refuse to work in Sec. 51.70(h)(1). A commenter said that work
programs allow residents to participate in their independent living
communities and provide valuable therapy and skills for residents who
will leave the facility. In contrast, VA also received comments that
supported the proposed right to refuse to work for domiciliary
residents.
We agree that sharing in some portion of the work to maintain the
domiciliary is an essential part of domiciliary care programs. By
longstanding practice, in the absence of comprehensive State home
domiciliary regulations, State home domiciliary care programs have
followed the same work requirement that applies to eligibility for VA's
domiciliary care program in Sec. 17.46(b). As described above, VA has
adopted a requirement in Sec. 51.51(b)(7) that to be eligible for per
diem payments for State home domiciliary care the veteran must be able
to participate in some measure, however slight, in work assignments
that support the maintenance and operation of the State home. We have,
therefore, also changed Sec. 51.300 to eliminate the nursing home rule
regarding the right to refuse work that VA had proposed to apply to
State home domiciliary residents. As revised, Sec. 51.300(b) now
states explicitly, in part, ``The resident must participate, based on
his or her ability, in some measure, however slight, in work
assignments that support the maintenance and operation of the State
home.'' To ensure that the work has therapeutic value, Sec. 51.300(b)
also requires that the State home have a written policy to implement
the work requirement, that each resident's comprehensive care plan
describe the work the resident will perform, that the facility
consulted with and the resident agrees to the work arrangement
described in the comprehensive care plan, and that, if the resident is
paid for the work he or she performs, payment will be at wages that
meet or exceed the prevailing wages for similar work in the area. We
have also included a provision to encourage the resident's
participation in vocational and employment services, in addition to
performing work.
VA received a comment saying that prevailing wages are not
currently paid for participation in work therapy or volunteer programs.
It's unclear whether the commenter means that State home domiciliaries
should have authority to pay residents some other wage, or whether they
should have authority to not pay residents for their work. VA believes
a resident may perform volunteer work designed for its therapeutic
value, even if the nature of the work is not one that an outside worker
would typically be contracted to perform. VA also believes, however,
that domiciliary residents are entitled to fair payment for the work
they perform for the maintenance and operation of the State home if the
home would otherwise hire non-residents to do the work. This
distinction protects the residents from being used under the guise of
therapy to reduce the State homes' operating costs by substituting
residents' labor for labor it would ordinarily hire at the prevailing
wage in the local labor market. VA applies similar rules regarding work
therapy to its own domiciliary and nursing home residents, and we see
no difference between VA and State home programs to suggest residents
should be paid different wages when doing work for which the State
homes must pay. To make clear that State homes must pay residents the
prevailing wage to perform work the State home would have otherwise
hired non-residents to perform, we revised paragraph (b)(3) to read as
follows: ``Compensation for work for which the facility would pay a
prevailing wage if done by non-residents is paid at or above prevailing
wages for similar work in the area where the facility is located''.
VA received comments saying the domiciliary residents should be
compensated for all work they perform. VA disagrees; the work
requirement does not preclude unpaid volunteer work, such as keeping
one's room orderly or other housekeeping chores ordinarily to be
expected of persons sharing a residence.
One commenter asserted VA's State home per diem regulations amount
to a contract between State homes and VA requiring that State homes pay
veterans Federal contract wages. The commenter cites an invalid World
Wide Web address, https://www.dol.gov/ofccp/OFCCPRecoveryActPlan.htm,
apparently referring to the Department of Labor Office of Federal
Contract Compliance Programs (OFCCP). State home compliance with VA per
diem regulations are not subject to the oversight of the Department of
Labor OFCCP. VA regulations on State home domiciliary residents' work
requirements are not Federal contracts, either between VA and the State
homes or between VA and the residents, and they do not subject the
States to Federal contract law. We make no change based on this
comment.
51.300(c) Married Couples
We received comments objecting to the proposed application to the
domiciliaries of the nursing home requirement from Sec. 51.70(m),
which provides married couples have the right to share a room if they
live in the same facility and both agree. One commenter noted that it
operates one of the oldest State homes in the country and lacks the
space or proper facilities to provide married living quarters in the
domiciliary, and to do so would need renovations and the possible
displacement of some unmarried residents. In contrast, one commenter
supported the requirement that State home domiciliary care programs
receiving VA per diem payments must provide shared living quarters for
married veteran residents who wish them and who each meet the
eligibility criteria for the program.
We agree that buildings might not always be able to accommodate
married living quarters; however, there are ways that the State Home
can make accommodations for married couples to have private space, even
if temporarily. To accommodate the physical space limitations of
certain State homes, but establish responsibility for programs to honor
such requests to the extent possible, we have added Sec. 51.300(c).
This paragraph restates Sec. 51.70(m), inserting ``if space is
available within the existing facility'' after ``has the right'' and
adding the following sentence: ``If the State home determines existing
space is not available to allow married residents to share rooms, the
State home will make accommodations for the privacy of married
residents.''
51.300(d) Transfer and Discharge
We received comments that State homes should have a concise
procedure for discharge of residents to prevent
[[Page 61257]]
arbitrary discharge at the whim of management. One commenter stated
there needs to be reasons for discharge and a right to contest the
discharge in a speedy way. The commenter was particularly concerned
about immediate discharges without any mechanism for immediate review,
resulting in the resident having to abandon property and even personal
effects. The commenters said a VA representative as well as a resident
should be part of the process to ensure that residents' rights are not
being violated. This comment pertains to the application of Sec.
51.80, Admissions, transfer and discharge rights, to domiciliary care
programs, under proposed Sec. 51.300.
We agree that State home domiciliaries must have a clearly
identified process for admissions, transfers, and discharges, and we
have amended the introductory paragraph of Sec. 51.300 to require the
State home domiciliary have a written policy on the topic.
Additionally, we have created Sec. 51.300(a) to require the facility
management to immediately inform the resident when there is a decision
to transfer or discharge the resident, and a new paragraph (d)(6) to
require the notice to include the resident's right to appeal and the
contact information for the State long-term care ombudsman. These
changes to the final rule give the residents a more defined process for
discharge. We understand the commenter's reference to a VA
representative to mean a VA employee. Involving a VA employee in this
process would impose an unnecessary burden on State homes. We therefore
make only the changes described based on that comment.
We received a comment objecting to the application to domiciliary
care programs of the transfer and discharge requirements from Sec.
51.80(a)(2)(ii). Section 51.80(a)(2) requires the facility management
to permit each resident to remain in the facility, and not transfer or
discharge the resident from the facility unless [circumstances meet one
or more of a list of conditions]. Among the circumstances permitting
transfer or discharge, Sec. 51.80(a)(2)(ii) provides, ``The transfer
or discharge is appropriate because the resident's health has improved
sufficiently so the resident no longer needs the services provided by
the nursing home.''. The commenter distinguished domiciliary residents
from nursing home patients, in that it is clear when nursing home
patients no longer need nursing home services, but not clear when
domiciliary residents no longer need domiciliary care, and domiciliary
residents are not discharged just because of improved health. For that
reason, it would be inappropriate to apply the nursing home
requirements for discharge or transfer of a resident to the
circumstances of most domiciliary residents.
We disagree with part of this comment. The structured, residential
environment of domiciliary programs can foster personal and financial
growth and accountability that allows residents to leave domiciliary
care programs because of their improved circumstances. We believe
therefore that it is appropriate to retain this provision with respect
to discharges due to improved circumstances. The comment revealed a gap
in the proposed rule, however. Focusing on transfer or discharge
because of improvement revealed the possibility transfer or discharge
could be appropriate because the residents may have ceased to meet one
or more of the eligibility criteria of Sec. 51.51. For example, the
veteran's annual income may have exceeded the maximum annual rate of
pension. To fill this gap, we have added paragraph (d)(2)(vii) to the
criteria for transfer or discharge in Sec. 51.300 to read, ``The
resident ceases to meet any of the eligibility criteria of Sec.
51.51.'' Section 51.51 provides eligibility criteria, but it does not
address whether those criteria apply only to the applicant, or also to
the resident. It is inconsistent with the function of the eligibility
requirements, to ascertain whether someone is suitable for the
domiciliary care program, to apply them at entrance and not during
residency. A resident who ceases to meet an eligibility criterion would
certainly meet a criterion for transfer or discharge.
We agree with the commenter that it is also important to include a
requirement for when a resident needs to be moved to a higher level of
care. We have, therefore, excluded domiciliaries from complying with
Sec. 51.80(a)(2), and instead establish domiciliary transfer and
discharge requirements in Sec. 51.300(d)(2), including the requirement
in Sec. 51.300(d)(2)(ii) that residents be discharged if they need a
higher level of long term or acute care.
VA received comments objecting to the application in proposed Sec.
51.300 of the requirement of Sec. 51.80(a)(4) to notify a legal
representative or family member of a transfer or discharge, and of the
requirement of Sec. 51.80(a)(5) to provide that notice 30 days in
advance of the transfer or discharge. The commenters said these
provisions eliminate flexibility necessary for managing an independent
living environment and are inconsistent with the independence of the
residents.
We have added Sec. 51.300(d) in response to these comments.
Regarding the requirement to notify a legal representative or family
member, in Sec. 51.300(d)(4) we have changed the regulation by
eliminating the State home's requirement to notify and giving the
resident the right to decide whether the state home notifies a legal
representative or family member. This is similar to the changes we made
in Sec. 51.300(a) regarding notifications about medical status and
room assignment changes. Regarding the 30-day advance notice of
transfer or discharge, we disagree that the requirement is overly
burdensome. New paragraph Sec. 51.300(d)(5)(i) provides ample
exceptions to the 30-day requirement to afford reasonable flexibility.
The 30-day notice requirement, with the exceptions to make it
practicable, affords the residents a reasonable safeguard against
transfer or discharge without warning.
51.300(e) Notice of Bed-Hold Policy and Readmission--Notice Before
Transfer
As proposed, Sec. 51.300 would have applied the nursing home
regulation on notice of bed-hold policy and readmission, Sec.
51.80(b), to domiciliary care programs. Based on comments asserting
this to be overly burdensome in the domiciliary care context, we have
determined there is no need to apply the detailed notice of policy
requirements to domiciliary care programs that Sec. 51.80(b) applies
to nursing home care programs. Domiciliary residents still need
information about the availability of a bed if they return to the home
from a period of hospital care. To achieve this, we have added
paragraph (e) to proposed Sec. 51.300, which provides, ``The facility
management must provide written information to the resident about the
State home bed-hold policy upon enrollment, annually thereafter, and
before a State home transfers a resident to a hospital.'' Additionally,
we have added as the first sentence of the paragraph, ``The State home
must have a written bed-hold policy, including criteria for return to
the facility.'' While we agree with the commenters that the domiciliary
care program bed-hold policy does not need the degree of detail Sec.
51.80(b) applies to the nursing home care program, we believe there
must be a policy. This is a logical corollary to the requirement to
provide a resident the bed-hold policy. While it may seem obvious that
the State home must have a bed-hold policy to notify a resident of it,
we believe the paragraph is clearer to explicitly require the State
home to have a bed-hold policy. We also added a provision regarding a
resident's right to
[[Page 61258]]
decide whether to have the State home notify others of the change.
51.300(f) Resident Activities, and (g) Social Services
Several commenters addressed social worker credentialing for
domiciliary care programs, which we discuss below. In reviewing those
comments, we concluded the commenters' reasoning about social workers'
credentials applies as well to credentialing of therapeutic recreation
specialists in domiciliary care programs. Unlike the nursing homes, the
domiciliaries do not require a credentialed or licensed professional to
oversee the residents' activities. We will not apply the credentials
provisions of Sec. 51.100(g) to the domiciliary care program as
proposed. To effect that change, we have amended the introductory
paragraph of Sec. 51.300 to exclude Sec. 51.100(g) and have added
Sec. 51.300(f), Resident activities, to adapt Sec. 51.100(g) to the
domiciliary care program. As adapted, Sec. 51.300(f)(1) restates Sec.
51.100(g)(1), and Sec. 51.300(f)(2) provides, ``The activities must be
directed by a qualified coordinator.'' Section 51.300 applies no other
provisions of Sec. 51.100(g) to the domiciliary care programs.
VA received comments objecting to the proposed application of
nursing home standards for social services from Sec. 51.100(h), Social
services, to domiciliary care programs under proposed Sec. 51.300. One
commenter objected only to the requirement of licensed social workers,
another objected on the grounds that the proposed regulations mandate
specific qualifications and staffing requirements that are not imposed
upon domiciliary programs currently. Another noted that the State homes
employ licensed and unlicensed social workers, with the latter
providing only case management for domiciliary residents that do not
require in-depth treatment, in keeping with a transitional model where
the social worker's job is to assist the resident with transitioning
out of the domiciliary.
We agree the specific credential requirements of Sec. 51.100(h)
are not necessary for State home domiciliary care programs. We have
added Sec. 51.300(g) to provide more flexibility in social worker
staffing for domiciliaries. Paragraph (g) provides that ``[t]he State
home must provide social work services to meet the social and emotional
needs of residents to attain or maintain the highest practicable mental
and psychosocial well-being of each resident;'' that ``[t]he State home
must have a sufficient number of social workers to meet the residents'
needs''; and that ``[t]he State home must have a written policy on how
it determines qualifications of social workers.'' Paragraph (g)(3)
provides that ``[i]t is highly recommended, but not required, that a
qualified social worker is an individual with'' the same qualifications
as those required for nursing home social services providers.
One commenter noted the proposed regulation applying 51.100 to
domiciliary care programs ``references the number of required licensed
social workers for the state veterans' home,'' and that ``clarity needs
to be given as it relates to requirements for Social Workers assigned
to the State Home Domiciliary.''
The regulation on the number of social workers, Sec. 51.300(g)(2),
provides, ``The State home must have a sufficient number of social
workers to meet residents' needs.'' We interpret the comment to be
asking how the required number of social workers specified for nursing
homes in Sec. 51.100(h), Social services, applies to the domiciliary
care program. As the introduction to final Sec. 51.300 states,
51.100(h) is among the nursing home provisions this final rule does not
apply to domiciliary care programs. Rather, Sec. 51.300(g)(2) affords
State homes flexibility in determining the number of social workers
``sufficient'' to meet the object of paragraph (g)(1). Additionally,
though Sec. 51.300(g)(3) strongly suggests the State home use licensed
social workers, licensure is not required.
51.300(h) Environment
VA received comments objecting to the application of Sec.
51.100(i), Environment, to the domiciliary care program. These objected
to the proposed closet space requirement and to maintaining
temperatures at 71-81 degrees Fahrenheit. They commented that
environmental requirements of Sec. 51.100(i) that have not previously
applied to domiciliary care facilities would pose extraordinary
challenges to States operating older facilities that were not designed
to meet these requirements. One commenter reported it would face
significant and costly upgrades, especially to a 130 year old facility,
if VA finalizes the proposed rule. The commenter requested VA
``grandfather in'' older facilities, permitting them not to make
upgrades to meet the Sec. 51.300 environment requirements. Another
objected it could not provide private closet space without ``massive
renovations.''
We agree that the temperature, sound, and lighting requirements VA
proposed are unnecessary for the health and well-being of domiciliary
residents, and we have eliminated them. We will not, however, remove
the closet space requirement, or waive it for older facilities. VA has
demonstrated its view of the importance of this requirement by
including it among the requirements of its construction grant
regulations. 38 CFR 59.140, 59.150. A State may seek a part 59 grant to
assist it to bring older facilities into compliance with these
essential standards, or to replace facilities that cannot come into
compliance, but VA will not ``grandfather in,'' i.e., waive the
requirement for, older facilities that currently lack the required
closet space. To effect these changes, we have restated the provisions
of Sec. 51.100(i)(1)-(4) in Sec. 51.300(h), and omitted the
provisions of Sec. 51.100(i)(5)-(7) from Sec. 51.300(h).
51.300 Other Comments
VA received comments saying we should not apply State home nursing
home requirements to State home domiciliaries that would require the
domiciliary care programs to provide services they do not now provide.
The commenters specifically mentioned access to an ombudsman. The
commenters distinguished between the needs of nursing home residents,
whom they described as an elder, very vulnerable population, and the
domiciliary residents, who do not have the same vulnerabilities. They
said the domiciliary care program residents are able to tend to their
own affairs, and an ombudsman is therefore not necessary.
VA also received comments asking VA to retain the proposed
requirement that State home domiciliary residents have access to an
ombudsman. The commenters asked VA to appoint or require the State to
appoint an ombudsman or patient advocate. One commenter said that
decisions would be less ad hoc, more thoughtful, and more considerate
of residents' welfare if an ombudsman were available.
We agree with the commenters who asked VA to require domiciliary
care program residents to have access to an ombudsman. We disagree with
the commenters who argue the relative soundness of the domiciliary
residents compared to nursing home residents means the domiciliary
residents do not need an ombudsman. VA makes no change to the proposed
application of the ombudsman requirement of Sec. 51.70(j) to
domiciliary programs. As some commenters pointed out, and VA believes,
domiciliary residents face vulnerabilities and are entitled to have an
advocate outside the facility who is able to advocate on their behalf
or mediate situations between State home
[[Page 61259]]
leadership and residents when necessary. State homes are already
required to ensure that nursing home residents have access to the State
long term care ombudsman. Extending that protection to domiciliary
residents does not require the State to create any new position; it
need only provide domiciliary residents with access to an existing
State long term care ombudsman and information how to contact that
ombudsman. Consistent with the application of the Sec. 51.70(j)
ombudsman rule to domiciliary residents, we are also adding paragraph
51.300(d)(6)(v) to require any notice of transfer or discharge to
include the name, address, and telephone number of the State long term
care ombudsman.
One commenter requested that out of sensitivity to the unique needs
of veterans, VA add to the quality of life regulations under 51.300 a
requirement that State homes recruit and hire veterans for all
positions in the State homes, and where veterans are unavailable,
require special training of non-veterans in ``veteranology'' [sic],
``or the study of veterans.''
We decline to add the suggested requirement to the quality of life
provisions of part 51. Though the commenter's ideas about the value of
veteran employees or of special education for non-veteran employees at
State homes have merit, the requirement sought would impose a
substantial new personnel burden on the state homes, which may conflict
with employment laws of these States. Rather than impose this
requirement on the States, we would prefer to give the States
discretion to hire the best employees for their Veterans. Further, the
commenter's suggestion is beyond the scope of this final rulemaking.
Consequently, we make no change based on this comment. Nevertheless, we
call upon the States to consider the ideas of the commenter.
The same commenter urged VA to require the States, as a condition
of receipt of VA per diem payments, to permit residents for whom VA
pays per diem to apply for career professional employment at State
homes as a ``civil right.'' The commenter requested regulations
providing specific employment practices. The commenter further
requested VA to establish by regulation ``a rating and employment
system whereby residents of US VA Per Diemed [sic] State Veterans Home
Domiciliary Programs [sic] who are working professionals living in an
SVH Domiciliary Program while seeking employment are registered as
members of a new Federally protected class of veteran--`the SVH
Domiciliary Veteran-Resident Career Professional.' ''
The employment regulation the commenter seeks would conflict with
38 U.S.C. 1742(b), which prohibits VA from having any authority over
the management or control of any State home. While a resident is free
to apply to any job, it is beyond the scope of this rulemaking to
create ``a new Federally protected class of veteran[s].'' Further, as
noted above, we would prefer to give the States discretion to hire whom
they consider the best qualified employees for their Veterans.
Regarding creation of protected classes under Federal civil rights
law, VA lacks authority to create protected classes of citizens under
Federal civil rights laws. Creation of the protected class the
commenter advocates would require legislation. Current statute
prohibits VA authority over ``the management or control of any State
home,'' 38 U.S.C. 1742(b), and the establishment of a ``rating and
employment system,'' as the commenter described it, seems very likely
to amount to management contrary to that statute. Even if VA had the
authority to regulate as the commenter seeks, the commenter's
suggestions are beyond the scope of this final rulemaking. We make no
changes based on this comment.
One commenter noted a State home provides transitional domiciliary
care to Veterans who are medically able to live fully independently,
but who lack the financial means for subsistence. The commenter said
that the proposed application of nursing home requirements for State
home domiciliaries would threaten the State home's ability to maintain
this practice ``because the Veterans would not meet the new
requirements of domiciliary care,'' potentially resulting in some
residents being without a housing alternative.
Though we are not making any changes in response to this comment,
we should clarify that the new regulations do not change eligibility
requirements for residents to require that they be in need of nursing
home care, nor will the rule change eligibility requirements for any
veterans receiving domiciliary care. Furthermore, as discussed above
regarding specific nursing home requirements, we are easing the
proposed application of multiple nursing home requirements on State
home domiciliaries. This final rule will not require Veterans to be
displaced in the manner the commenter described.
Another commenter asserted that VA should have regulations
requiring all cash donations to a State home be made known to the
residents, and that legacy accounts (accounts of deceased residents) be
made known to the residents and to the public.
We disagree with this suggestion. Donations to the State home, and
any disclosure, would be the subject of State law. All States have laws
governing access to public records like this. If the commenter believes
that State laws need to be changed, we recommend that the commenter
seek action at the State level. Requiring States to change their laws
governing such access is beyond the scope of this rulemaking. Regarding
the commenters concern about legacy accounts, current regulations
governing residents' funds are sufficient to regulate the State home's
handling of those funds. Current regulation, 38 CFR 51.70(c) Protection
of resident funds, applies to domiciliary care programs through final
Sec. 51.300. It provides for the handling and accounting for a
resident's funds on deposit with a State home, including their final
accounting and conveyance upon a resident's death. The regulation also
provides that each resident is to have personal control of the
resident's funds, that the State home cannot require the resident to
deposit the funds with the State home, that the State home account for
the funds to the resident or to a resident's legal representative, and
that the state make a final accounting and conveyance of funds to the
individual or probate jurisdiction administering the resident's estate
or other appropriate entity. These rules together are consistent with
treating the residents' finances as a private matter, even after death.
We make no change based on this comment.
51.310 Resident Admission, Assessment, Care Plan, and Discharge
We have made multiple changes to Sec. 51.310. Some are in direct
response to comments, and some simply improve organization, clarity,
and readability. We have revised the heading to read, ``Resident
admission, assessment, care plan, and discharge'', to be more
descriptive of the scope of the section. We have rearranged provisions,
grouping related provisions together and putting them in the sequence
the State homes will generally apply them. This reduces the number of
paragraphs in the section from the proposed introduction plus five
paragraphs, (a) through (e), to introduction plus four paragraphs, (a)
through (d). We have inserted the words ``medical and comprehensive''
before ``assessments'' in the introduction, and inserted
``comprehensive'' before ``assessment'' throughout the section, to
indicate they are different. The medical assessment informs the State
home of the new resident's medical status and immediate needs on
admission. The
[[Page 61260]]
comprehensive assessment incorporates the result of the medical
assessment and builds on it by bringing together multiple health
professionals' assessments of the resident's physical, mental, and
social needs. The comprehensive assessment, in turn, informs the
comprehensive care plan. We discuss these assessments below. The
introductory paragraph of Sec. 51.310 introduces each of these
assessments. We have also added a last sentence to the introduction,
``The State home must review comprehensive assessments annually, and
promptly after every significant change in the resident's physical,
mental, or social condition.'' This sentence adds no new requirement to
the proposed admission, assessment, and comprehensive care plan
process. Rather it clarifies the ongoing relationship between the
comprehensive assessment and the comprehensive care plan.
Three commenters asserted that the unknown cost of having
physician's orders for each resident's immediate care and an assessment
including medical history and physical examination within 72 hours of
admission, as proposed Sec. 51.310(a) required, would be excessive.
The commenters compared the proposed requirements with the 1986 Guide,
which required that the domiciliary provide and maintain a treatment
plan for each domiciliary patient.
We partly agree and partly disagree. We agree that 72 hours is not
always enough time to perform the assessment with medical history and
examination. We have changed proposed Sec. 51.310(a) to allow 7
calendar days for the medical assessment, which is consistent with VA
practice for its domiciliary care program and will provide the State
homes with ample time to perform an assessment of the resident. We have
clarified that the assessment upon admission is a medical assessment,
adding ``and medical assessment'' to the paragraph (a) heading, to
read, ``(a) Admission orders and medical assessment.'' This will
distinguish this assessment from the comprehensive assessment
identified in the introductory paragraph and in paragraph (b). We have
also added a last sentence to paragraph (a), ``The medical assessment
will be part of the comprehensive assessment.'' This makes clear that a
medical assessment is part of the comprehensive assessment, consistent
with the inclusion of a physician among the practitioners listed among
those to do the comprehensive assessment described in paragraph (b) of
this section.
Further, for clarity and certainty, we redesignated paragraph (b)
to allow the State home 14 calendar days after admission to complete
the comprehensive assessment and redesignated paragraph (c) to allow 21
calendar days after admission to develop the comprehensive care plan.
As proposed, Sec. 51.310(d)(2)(i) required a treatment plan be
``Developed within 7 calendar days after completion of the
comprehensive assessment,'' but there was no deadline for the
comprehensive assessment. Without a deadline for the comprehensive
assessment, the proposed rule was uninformative and afforded poor
guidance and no certainty about when the treatment plan might be done.
Compared to the proposed process from admission to care planning, these
changes afford more overall flexibility while also providing more
useful guidance to the State homes and more certainty for the State
homes and for VA. Also, we have added ``annually, and as required by a
change in the resident's condition'' at the end of paragraph (b)(1).
Though this restates a phrase of the introduction to Sec. 51.310, we
feel it is necessary to avoid any impression that the paragraph (b)(1)
requirement to do a comprehensive assessment on admission contradicts
the requirement of annual and as needed comprehensive assessments in
the introduction. Paragraph (b)(2) describes the purpose of the
comprehensive assessment to distinguish it from the medical assessment.
We disagree with the comment that physician orders for immediate
treatment should not be required upon admission. Admitting a resident
into a residential program with unknown current health needs is an
unreasonable risk, both for the patient and for other residents of the
domiciliary, although we recognize that this recommendation was made
under the assumption that VA would require doctor orders and the
complete assessment no later than 72 hours of admission. We have
revised the section to distinguish between the medical assessment
required shortly before or soon after admission and the subsequent
comprehensive assessment, of which the medical assessment is part. As
changed, the paragraph allows 7 calendar days after admission to
complete the medical assessment. This clarification and other changes
to this section provides the State homes with more flexibility in
completing the medical assessment and makes the physician orders
requirement perfectly reasonable in light of its importance.
Consequently, we decline to eliminate the physician orders requirement.
We have eliminated the proposed provision that ``physician orders may
be submitted when available'' from Sec. 51.310(a), because it is
essential to know of immediate medical needs at the time of admission,
and it is inconsistent with the changes in this final rule.
VA received comments saying the requirement that the medical
assessment be performed by a physician rather than a nurse is overly
burdensome and unnecessary because domiciliary residents are generally
in better health and have fewer medical needs than nursing home
residents. We agree that a physician need not perform the resident's
medical assessment upon entering a domiciliary care program. We have
therefore changed proposed paragraph (a), Admission orders and medical
assessment, to provide that ``a physician, or other health care
provider qualified under State law'' must perform the assessment.
We have removed proposed paragraph (b), which provided, ``The State
home must use the results of the assessment to develop, review, and
revise the resident's treatment plan.'' Initially proposed paragraph
(c), ``coordination of assessments,'' is redesignated paragraph (b) and
renamed to place this provision in the context of comprehensive
assessments. As restructured, the section now flows functionally from
(a), admission and medical assessment, through (b), comprehensive
assessment, to (c) comprehensive care plan, and finally (d) discharge
report.
VA received comments saying that the proposed global nursing home
assessment tool is inappropriate for domiciliary care programs. One
commenter noted we based proposed Sec. 51.310 on Sec. 51.110, which
requires nursing home care programs to use the Centers for Medicare and
Medicaid Services Resident Assessment Instrument Minimum Data Set
(MDS), Version 3.0. The commenter asserted the MDS 3.0 does not allow
for assessing domiciliary residents.
We did not propose using a global nursing home assessment tool. It
appears the commenters misread the notice of proposed rulemaking, which
specifically explained there is no national tool for assessment of
domiciliary residents as there is for nursing homes. Our intent was to
provide State homes with reasonable flexibility in conducting the
assessment, which is why proposed Sec. 51.310 stated the assessment
objectives and process without specifying an assessment tool.
VA received a comment that in a State with a State-established
required assessment tool for domiciliary care,
[[Page 61261]]
VA's assessment requirements would be duplicative, resulting in
additional, unreimbursed costs. The commenter recommended VA allow each
State to use its State required assessment tool and for VA to provide a
tool for the use of States without a state-required tool.
VA disagrees. Section 51.310(a) does not require duplicative
assessments, though it could require the State to augment its
assessment procedure. The introduction to this section requires the
State home to establish in a written policy how it will complete,
implement, review, and revise comprehensive assessments. This allows
the State home sufficient flexibility to use its existing assessment
tool if it produces an assessment with sufficient information about the
resident's emotional, behavioral, social, and physical needs to inform
a comprehensive care plan targeted as meeting those needs. We will not
change the regulation to explicitly provide that States may use any
assessment tool it may have because there would be no assurance that
the assessments would be comprehensive enough. Nor is it practicable
for VA to review States' assessment tools for sufficiency, and then
monitor them for continued sufficiency subsequent to any revision. We
do not require the State homes to use an assessment tool specifically
designed for nursing homes. We require the assessment to be adequate to
inform the comprehensive care plan. We believe this section is flexible
enough to enable the State to avoid the cost of duplicative
assessments, while providing for the health and wellness of State home
domiciliary residents. We make no change based on this comment.
In response to comments on Sec. 51.51 about residents' work in the
State home as part of a comprehensive care plan, discussed above, we
have added paragraph (c)(1)(ii) to this section, providing that a
comprehensive plan must describe: ``The specific work the resident
agrees to do to share in the maintenance and operation of the State
home upon consultation with the interdisciplinary team, and whether
that work is paid or unpaid''. This identifies with whom the resident
agrees to perform certain work, and also that the agreement is about
which work the resident will do to share in the maintenance and
operation of the State home, not whether the veteran agrees to do some
work.
We have changed the proposed description of the purpose of the
comprehensive care plan. Proposed paragraph (d)(1) provided the
comprehensive care plan is ``to address the resident's physical,
mental, and psychosocial needs''. In light of comments received and
described above about the role of mental health and other specialty
care services in domiciliary care, we feel a change in terminology
would allow State homes to better understand and implement this
provision. As changed, redesignated paragraph (c)(1) says the
comprehensive care plan is ``to address a resident's emotional,
behavioral, social, and physical needs.'' To allow care providers the
flexibility to ensure the comprehensive care plan best reflects each
resident's needs, we have also added to the last sentence of paragraph
(c)(1) a provision that the comprehensive care plan must describe the
items listed, ``as appropriate to the resident's circumstances.''
We have deleted the reference to Sec. 51.350 in proposed paragraph
(d)(1)(i), ``as required under Sec. 51.350;''. The reference made
sense as proposed, because Sec. 51.350 would have applied all of
multiple nursing home regulations to domiciliary care programs. As
revised, Sec. 51.350 does not apply most of those nursing home
regulations to domiciliary care programs, and removing the reference is
consistent with the flexibility we intend final rule Sec.
51.310(c)(1)(i) to allow.
We have also changed the reference to ``the resident's exercise of
rights under Sec. 51.300, including the right to refuse treatment'' in
proposed paragraph (d)(1)(ii). As revised and redesignated paragraph
(c)(1)(iii), the paragraph reads, ``Any services that would otherwise
be required under Sec. 51.350 but are not provided due to the
resident's exercise of rights under Sec. 51.70, including the right in
Sec. 51.70(b)(4) to refuse treatment. This change provides the reader
a more direct reference to the substantive provisions concerned. Though
the proposed reference to Sec. 51.300 is correct, it is indirect.
Reference to Sec. 51.300 requires the reader to ascertain that Sec.
51.300 applies Sec. 51.70, so the reader must then look to Sec. 51.70
for the substantive provisions. This change of cross reference
simplifies finding the provisions to which the paragraph refers.
In Sec. 51.310, we changed proposed paragraph (d)(2)(i), which
would have required the State home to complete a comprehensive care
plan within 7 calendar days of completion of the assessment. As
revised, redesignated paragraph (c)(2)(i) requires the State home to
develop a comprehensive care plan no later than 21 calendar days after
admission. This lets the State home manage time and resources better,
potentially allowing more than 7 calendar days to complete the
comprehensive care plan if the comprehensive assessment is completed in
less than the time allowed. It also affords certainty about when the
State home will have a comprehensive care plan for each resident.
Proposed paragraph (d)(2)(iii), redesignated paragraph (c)(2)(iii),
provided for periodic review and revision of the comprehensive
treatment plan. We determined that final paragraph (c)(2)(iii) would
provide clearer guidance if it tied in with the introduction of
paragraph (c)(1). Towards that end, we have changed the periodic review
and revision to be ``consistent with the most recent comprehensive
assessment''. With this change, paragraph (c)(2)(iii) reads, ``Reviewed
periodically and revised consistent with the most recent comprehensive
assessment by a team of qualified persons no less often than semi-
annually''.
We also determined that redesignated paragraph (c)(2) did not
complete the logical progression of the paragraph. The point of
periodic review is to change the treatment plan if the review reveals
it needs to change. We believe it is implicit in the Sec. 51.310
introductory requirement to reassess a resident promptly after every
significant change in condition that the comprehensive care plan must
also change promptly in response to a significant change in the
resident's condition. Consequently, we have added ``; and'' at the end
of final paragraph (c)(2)(iii), followed by new paragraph (c)(2)(iv),
which reads, ``Revised promptly after a comprehensive assessment
reveals a significant change in the resident's condition.''
Proposed paragraph (e)(3) did not state as well as we intended the
resident's right to control whether to include a legal representative
or interested family member in discharge planning. We have restated
that point in redesignated paragraph (d)(2) as an affirmative right.
51.330 Nursing Care
One commenter requested clarification of the statement in the
supplemental information of the proposed rule that the nursing care
required in domiciliary care programs ``would be similar to what is
required in nursing homes, except that we would not require the same
level of skilled nursing supervision.'' VA received comments that, as
proposed, Sec. 51.330 would require State homes to staff domiciliary
care programs with the same amount of nursing staff VA
[[Page 61262]]
requires State homes to provide for nursing home care programs. They
commented that currently, State home domiciliary care programs require
a licensed nurse as needed to meet the nursing care needs of the
patient, citing section 5E of the 1986 Guide, whereas the proposed rule
would require a licensed nurse for each shift, every day, around the
clock. The commenters said that requirement could increase their costs
for nursing supervision.
We agree the discussion was not clear about what ``similar to'' and
``level of supervision'' meant. We also agree that the proposed
requirement could result in increased costs and that domiciliary care
program residents may not require a licensed nurse on each shift, if
the nursing care needs of the residents are met. We have, therefore,
eliminated the proposed requirement that the director of the nursing
service designate a licensed nurse as the supervising nurse for each
tour of duty. Otherwise, the staffing requirements in this final rule
are similar to the existing nursing care requirements for domiciliary
care programs in section 5A of the 1986 Guide, which requires an
organized nursing service of personnel qualified to meet the nursing
care needs of the domiciliary patient. The final rule, however,
clarifies that the residents' individual comprehensive assessments and
comprehensive care plans determine their need for nursing services, and
that need must be met 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. We continue to
believe this is a reasonable and necessary requirement for availability
of nursing care.
One commenter said that some states have regulations prescribing
staffing levels for State homes. The commenter described the staffing
level required by its Residential Care Home Licensing Regulation. The
commenter recommended VA permit states with regulatory staffing levels
to follow those regulations and that VA provide a regulation for states
without a State regulated staffing level.
We decline to make the commenter's recommended change. Section
51.330, as revised, articulates VA's view of the minimum safe staffing
for nursing care in State home domiciliary care programs. VA would not
be comfortable relying on staffing levels set by the State because they
might not meet that minimum. So, to allow the exemption from Sec.
51.330 the commenter seeks, VA would have to review each State's
regulation to assure it requires staffing equivalent to the minimum
level VA considers acceptable. Such a plan would require a way for VA
to know if any State's regulation changed, to again review the
regulation, and to maintain a procedure for disallowing states from the
exemption if a change permitted an unacceptable level of nurse
staffing. This is not a practicable scheme for VA. We believe that if a
state's regulations require nurse staffing equivalent to the level VA
considers minimally acceptable, the cost cannot be significantly
different from the cost of compliance with Sec. 51.330, and the state
would not realize any cost savings from the exemption. Consequently, we
make no change based on this comment.
One commenter asked whether facilities with ``co-located''
domiciliary care and nursing home care programs on the same property or
in the same building must have a director of nursing for each or if
they may share a director of nursing. The commenter also asked whether
the two programs can share the supervising nurse for each tour of duty,
and whether a ``tour of duty'' is the same as a shift.
We intend the State homes to have the flexibility to staff their
programs to ensure that all residents get the nursing care each
resident's comprehensive assessment indicates each resident needs. The
regulation does not preclude sharing a nursing director. A shared
nursing director would comply with the regulation only, however, if the
State home can ensure it meets the total nursing care needs of all
residents in the facility. This final rule eliminates proposed Sec.
51.330(b), which required a licensed supervising nurse for each tour of
duty, so the questions about a shared nursing supervisor and whether a
tour of duty is the same as a ``shift'' are moot.
51.340 Physician and Other Licensed Medical Practitioner Services
VA received comments about the requirement in proposed Sec. 51.340
that State homes provide necessary primary care to domiciliary
residents. Commenters objected to the proposed requirement in this
rule, and raised concerns about the definition of ``primary care'' in
the VA General Counsel Precedent opinion ruling that State home
domiciliary care programs must provide primary care to be entitled to
per diem payments. VAOPGCPREC 1-2014 (Mar. 21, 2014). Some commenters
objected to the General Counsel's inclusion of surgical services in
primary care, and some objected to its inclusion of mental health
services in primary care. The commenters said surgical services and
mental health services are generally considered specialty care, and VA
should define primary care in the same manner as Medicare.
We recognize the confusion about what is included in primary care,
which has resulted from the General Counsel opinion and the proposed
rule, and therefore clarify that we do not consider primary care as
including comprehensive mental health or surgical services. We thus do
not consider Sec. 51.340 as requiring a State home to provide
domiciliary residents either surgical or comprehensive mental health
services--only to assist residents with obtaining these services. See
also section 51.2 of this rulemaking, which defines domiciliary care as
including ``necessary medical services'' that are described in subpart
E. Nothing in subpart E requires State domiciliaries to provide either
surgical or comprehensive mental health services. We note, however that
under this subpart (Sec. Sec. 51.300(f)-(g), 51.320(d), 51.340), the
State home is required to provide basic mental health screening. We
acknowledge that proposed Sec. 51.340 was unclear about what mental
health services the State home domiciliaries would be required to
provide without many of the clarifications in this final rule. The
final rule requires the State home to provide ``its residents the
primary care necessary to enable them to attain or maintain the highest
practicable . . . mental, and psychosocial well-being.'' Though this
could be misread to mean the domiciliary must provide all care
necessary to attain or maintain mental health, we believe it is clear
that it requires the domiciliary to provide only the necessary primary
care. The State home discharges its obligation to enable its residents
to attain or maintain mental and psychosocial well-being when it
provides primary care. It further requires the State home to assist its
residents to obtain other care when a resident needs care other than
care the State home must provide. So, if the veteran needs mental
health care other than that required by subpart E, the State home must
assist the resident to obtain that care.
One commenter objected to the primary care requirement because it
would substantially increase state expenses and undermine a resident's
ability to obtain care from a physician of his or her choice. The
commenter said the primary care requirement would require residents to
abandon their existing physicians and mental health specialists,
significantly reducing State home admissions and negatively affecting
current residents.
One commenter stated medical care should be the veteran's choice
when the veteran is capable of making the choice. The commenter did not
address the
[[Page 61263]]
comment to a specific provision, so it is not clear whether the
commenter was addressing a right to choose among health care
practitioners or a right to choose to refuse care.
This regulation will not prevent State home domiciliary residents
from seeing the private health care providers they choose to see. The
Sec. 51.340 requirements do not mean a resident may not see a private
physician of his or her choice or must abandon an existing relationship
with a private healthcare provider. Further, domiciliary residents
retain the right to receive care from their private physicians in the
State home domiciliary, provided the physician is credentialed and
privileged in the State home. If the commenter means the veteran should
have the choice whether to receive medical care, the veteran may refuse
treatment under Sec. 51.300, which applies to domiciliary residents
the right to refuse treatment as prescribed in Sec. 51.70(b)(4). We
make no change based on these comments.
Furthermore, it is unclear why the commenter believes costs would
increase; it may be because of the assumption that VA intended to
include mental health and surgical services in primary care. The
guidelines under which the State home domiciliary care programs have
long operated required each resident to have a primary care physician
responsible for the resident's medical care, and required that primary
care medical services be provided for residents as needed. Section
51.340 imposes no additional primary care burdens or costs. Further,
these regulations would not preclude States from charging the veteran's
insurance for providing primary care. We make no changes based on this
comment.
VA received a comment requesting a ``thorough and explicit
definition of what primary care entails.'' The commenter was
``concerned that the proposed rules would transfer all medical costs
associated with resident care to the state and nullify existing sharing
agreements'' with the local VA facility. Another commenter also raised
essentially the same points about the extent of health care the
proposed regulations require and about transferring costs and sharing
agreements, asserting the burden of shifting primary care costs could
make operating domiciliary care unsustainable.
The regulation, as proposed, does not specifically define primary
care, and we believe the common dictionary definition VA General
Counsel quoted in the precedent opinion cited above is sufficient and
widely used. VA declines to define primary care with a list of specific
medical services. We disagree that lack of definition of primary care
could affect the commenter's primary care sharing agreement with a
local VA medical facility. Under the final regulation, this arrangement
may continue. The State currently pays for the primary care VA provides
through a sharing agreement, so there is no cost to transfer to the
State. We make no change based on this comment.
VA received a comment saying that providing additional medical
services would be especially burdensome to some State homes that were
built in remote locations to care for veterans in underserved
communities. Those homes, the commenter stated, currently experience
hiring challenges and staffing shortages, and the new requirements
would pose challenges and costs associated with hiring additional staff
or contracting with outside providers.
We understand that staffing or otherwise obtaining the required
services can be more difficult in some areas than others, whether
because of remote location and a small labor pool, or because of a
central, densely served market with stiff labor competition among
employers. The primary care VA requires State homes provide is
essential to the health, safety, and well-being of the domiciliary care
residents. We will not eliminate or reduce the requirements in response
to the vagaries of the local labor market. We make no change based on
this comment.
VA received comments that the State home domiciliary care standards
in the 1986 Guide, required that a resident be seen annually and as
needed by the primary care physician or other licensed medical
practitioner. The proposed rule, however, specified that the resident
must be seen by the primary care physician or licensed medical
practitioner at least every 30 days for the first 90 days after
admission, and at least once annually thereafter, or more frequently
based on the condition of the resident. The commenter said this
requirement would result in a cost burden to the domiciliary,
potentially a 100% increase in physician visit costs.
We agree with the commenter that more frequent primary care
physician's visits than the State homes have been accustomed to
providing will increase the State homes' costs. We also agree a
domiciliary resident need not be seen every 30 days for the first 90
days of residency. The typical domiciliary resident's health does not
require the frequency of medical monitoring we proposed. We have
changed the requirement in Sec. 51.340(d) to require an annual medical
assessment, restating the provision in the active voice to read, ``The
primary care physician or other licensed medical practitioner must
conduct an in-person medical assessment of the resident at least once a
calendar year, or more frequently based on the resident's condition.''
Though redundant of the annual medical assessment Sec. 51.310
requires, it is useful also to restate here to consolidate the
requirements regarding physicians and other medical practitioner
services. This change also eliminates the colloquial expression ``be
seen'' in favor of the more precise term ``assessment.''
One commenter interpreted proposed paragraph (e) to mean the
domiciliary must provide or arrange for physician or other licensed
medical practitioner services 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, in case of
an emergency. The commenter also asked for clarification whether the
provider must be on site or may be on call.
We did not intend the commenter's interpretation of the provision,
which states, ``The State home must assist residents in obtaining
emergency care.'' Though a State home certainly may staff its facility
at all times, the provision does not require it. It requires only that
the facility management be able assist the resident in obtaining
emergency care. For example, a telephone call to local 911, if
available, could comply with Sec. 51.340(e). We make no change based
on this comment.
51.350 Provision of Certain Specialized Services and Environmental
Requirements
Proposed Sec. 51.350 would have applied all of the standards
applicable to State home nursing homes at Sec. Sec. 51.140, 51.170,
51.180, 51.190, and 51.200 to State home domiciliary care programs. We
are making multiple changes to this section. These correct errors in
the proposed rule, respond to comments, and will serve the needs of
State home domiciliary care programs and their residents better than
would the proposed application of the whole of the sections we proposed
to apply.
We are removing the phrase ``nursing home and nursing facility''
from the last sentence of the introduction to proposed Sec. 51.350.
Its use was an error. The cited regulations use the term ``the
facility,'' but not, ``nursing home'' or ``nursing facility.'' As
revised, the sentence reads, ``For purposes of this section, the
references to `facility' in the cited sections also refer to a
domiciliary.''
VA received comments opposing the imposition of the whole of these
regulations on domiciliary care
[[Page 61264]]
programs and recommending the domiciliary program standards be more
consistent and commensurate with the stated definition and purpose of
domiciliary care. Multiple commenters recommended increasing per diem
payments for domiciliary care, as one put it, ``to be compensated for
the increased requirements for our domiciliary care facility.'' This
commenter specifically reported a $103,000.00 loss in its domiciliary
care program in the past year, submitting a financial analysis.
We agree that certain standards that proposed Sec. 51.350 would
have applied to domiciliary care programs are impracticable or
inappropriate. Consequently, we have revised proposed Sec. 51.350, to
exclude Sec. 51.140(f)(2)-(4), Sec. 51.180(c), and Sec. 51.200(a),
(b), (d)(1)(ii)-(x), (f), and (h)(3) from application to domiciliary
care programs. In addition, we will exclude other provisions as
discussed below. Though the mechanism for setting the rate of per diem
payment is prescribed by statute, we anticipate these changes will also
reduce the costs of compliance.
Section 51.140(f), Frequency of meals, requires nursing home
residents to receive and nursing homes to provide three meals per day
at regular times comparable to normal meal times in the community.
Paragraph (f)(4) of that section allows an interval of 16 hours between
dinner and breakfast if a nourishing snack ``is provided'' at bedtime.
Consistent with comments about applying Sec. 51.140 to domiciliaries
that asserted the generally greater independence of domiciliary
residents than nursing home residents, we have added Sec. 51.350(a) to
apply to domiciliaries instead of paragraph (f)(2)-(4). Paragraph
(a)(1) requires no more than a 14-hour interval between the evening
meal and breakfast. Paragraph (a)(2) requires the facility staff to
offer snacks at bedtime daily, as does Sec. 51.140(f)(3). Paragraph
(a)(3) allows 16 hours between the evening meal and breakfast when the
bedtime snack is nourishing. The difference between the domiciliary
regulation and the nursing home regulation is the difference between
whether the nourishing snack ``is offered'' or ``is provided'' to
residents. This difference takes into account the greater independence
of domiciliary residents, who can maintain adequate nutrition without
the monitoring the nursing home requirement entails. It is, however,
the nutritional character of the offered bedtime snack, not the
resident's independence in whether to eat it, that affords the State
home the additional two hours between the evening meal and breakfast.
Some commenters objected to the proposed monthly drug regimen
review required under Sec. 51.180(c)(1), saying that compared to the
semiannual drug regimen review required for domiciliary residents in
the 1986 Guide, the proposed rule would result in a significant cost
increase.
VA agrees with the commenters. The intent of the proposal, to
preserve the health and safety of State home domiciliary residents, can
be met with a semiannual drug review. We have added Sec. 51.350(b),
which requires a drug regimen review at least once every six months and
included the requirement in Sec. 51.180(c)(2) requiring a report and
action if any irregularities are found.
VA received comments objecting to the burdens of bringing State
homes providing domiciliary care into compliance with the requirements
of Sec. 51.200, Physical environment. Multiple commenters said that
transition-based programs are not currently required or able to meet
many of the physical or plant features included in the nursing home
standards. The commenters paraphrased or quoted provisions of Sec.
51.200 to illustrate nursing home requirements they asserted
domiciliary care facilities could not meet. Among these paraphrases or
quotations were ``provide adequate room space in most rooms,''
apparently based on Sec. 51.200(d)(1)(i)-(iv); ``provide sufficient
privacy (ceiling suspended curtains extending around beds for total
visual privacy) in rooms with more than one resident,'' apparently
based on Sec. 51.200(d)(1)(vii)-(viii); ``provide prescribed storage
space for residents,'' apparently based on Sec. 51.200(d)(2)(iv);
``have a resident calling system directly to nursing,'' apparently
based on Sec. 51.200(f); and ``have corridors equipped with
handrails,'' paraphrasing Sec. 51.200(h)(3). We construe these
comments as references to these provisions because we do not interpret
the commenters to literally oppose providing ``adequate privacy,'' or
``sufficient privacy.''
In response to the comments, we have excluded Sec. 51.200(a),
Sec. 51.200(b), Sec. 51.200(d)(1)(ii-x), Sec. 51.200(f), and Sec.
51.200(h)(3) from application to domiciliaries, as noted above. In
place of the privacy requirements in Sec. 51.200(d), we have provided
for ``visual privacy'' in Sec. 51.350(d), which reads, ``The facility
must provide the means for visual privacy for each resident.'' This is
based on Sec. 51.200(d)(1)(vii), which requires nursing home bedrooms
``[b]e designed or equipped to ensure full visual privacy for each
resident.'' Section 51.200(d)(1)(viii) further specifies that the
nursing home bedrooms (other than private rooms) must have ``ceiling-
suspended curtains,'' further specifying their placement and specifying
other furnishings of the room to ensure ``visual privacy.'' We intend
this Sec. 51.350(d) to afford the State homes reasonable flexibility
in finding a way to let the domiciliary resident sleep or change
clothes or do other ordinarily private things without being watched or
in open view of other residents.
While many of these requirements are essential to the health,
safety, and well-being of the domiciliary residents, we agree with the
commenters that some would pose an excessive burden to State home
domiciliaries and are more appropriate for nursing home care than
domiciliaries, because domiciliary residents remain more independent.
For those reasons, in this final rule, we will not apply to
domiciliaries the following environmental requirements: Sec.
51.200(d)(1)(ii-x) regarding resident bedrooms; Sec. 51.200(f)
regarding resident call systems; and Sec. 51.200(h)(3) regarding
handrails. All of these requirements are more aligned with skilled
nursing home care then they are with domiciliaries, and they are not
requirements in VA domiciliaries.
VA received a comment that the cost of renovations and upgrades to
meet the environmental requirements would total hundreds of millions of
dollars nationwide, and the facilities would be forced to compete for
funding with the limited resources in VA's State home construction
grant program. We agree as discussed above that some of the proposed
requirements were too burdensome, and we revised the regulation
accordingly. We also agree that applications for grants from VA to meet
the cost of complying with a Sec. 51.350 requirement might compete
with applications to fund other projects in the construction grant
program, but life and safety projects are given priority over all other
types of construction when VA determines whether to award construction
or acquisition grants. (See 38 CFR part 59 for regulations governing
grants to States for construction or acquisition of State homes.) We
have revised the final rule to ease the burden of compliance with the
specialized services and physical requirements for State home
domiciliaries; the rest of the requirements under Sec. 51.350 are
essential to the health, safety, or well-being of domiciliary residents
and cannot be eased or removed.
One commenter asked VA to ``grandfather in'' (i.e., waive the
[[Page 61265]]
requirements for) older facilities that have not needed to comply with
environmental requirements of Sec. 51.100 and 51.200 that have
traditionally applied only to nursing homes, citing the high costs of
making the needed upgrades. Because these provisions are essential to
the health, safety, and well-being of domiciliary residents, we will
not waive the requirements for older facilities. We make no changes
based on this comment.
VA received a comment that imposing the nursing home fire safety
standards of Sec. 51.200 would ``drive many homes out of business,''
saying State homes would have to reconsider providing domiciliary care
altogether and perhaps provide only nursing home care.
We agree that some of the fire safety rules that apply to nursing
home care programs are inappropriate for domiciliary care programs,
because of the differences in the services they provide. Specifically,
we will not require State home domiciliary care programs to meet NFPA
99, Health Care Facilities Code, as Sec. 51.200(a) requires of State
nursing home programs. We are, therefore, changing proposed Sec.
51.350 by adding a new paragraph (c) that only requires State home
domiciliaries to meet the ``applicable'' requirements of NFPA 101. We
have changed the introduction to Sec. 51.350 to exclude Sec.
51.200(a) from application to domiciliaries.
We have also determined it would be inappropriate to apply the
nursing home emergency power requirements of NFPA 99 to domiciliary
facilities. NFPA 99 prescribes emergency generator specifications for
nursing homes. It is not necessary or appropriate to require State home
domiciliaries to have emergency power generating equipment that meets
the NFPA 99 specifications of the sort appropriate to nursing homes and
specified in Sec. 51.200(b). The applicable provisions of NFPA 101
regarding emergency power will apply instead under Sec. 51.350(c). We
have thus changed the introduction to Sec. 51.350 to exclude Sec.
51.200(b) from application to domiciliaries.
General Concerns Regarding Domiciliary Regulations
One commenter, observing the proposed rule appeared to require a
level of care for domiciliary residents that mirrors nursing home care,
suggested it would have been beneficial to review assisted living
regulations across the country because most State home domiciliaries
are also licensed by their state's assisted living regulatory licensure
and compliance.
We disagree about the benefit of reviewing State assisted living
regulations. State assisted living regulations are not pertinent to
VA's program of payment of per diem for veterans in State home
domiciliary care programs. VA does not pay for assisted living.
Veterans residing in a State home must meet the eligibility criteria
either for a nursing home care program or for a domiciliary care
program. The State home must meet VA's standards for receipt of per
diem for those veterans. Moreover, VA must administer a nation-wide
program. Consequently, we choose to have regulations of uniform,
nation-wide application. These may be like some State assisted living
regulations and unlike others, but State assisted living regulations
are not an appropriate model for VA per diem regulations. We make no
change based on this comment.
VA received a comment reporting grievances about conditions at
State home domiciliary programs and asking VA to apply all of the
regulations governing per diem payments to State home nursing home care
programs to State home domiciliary care programs. The commenter urged
VA to afford domiciliary care program residents the same care provided
nursing home residents. The commenter requested that VA effect that
change by issuing a VA General Counsel opinion. The commenter argued
for immediate implementation of this opinion as a ``regulatory
instrument'' until VA publishes domiciliary per diem regulations.
Specifically, the commenter recommended as the ``holding'' of the
opinion, ``[I]n order for a State to receive per diem payments from the
VA for a resident in its State home domiciliary, the home must provide
domiciliary care to the resident (or residents) in accordance with 38
CFR 51, the current VA regulation outlining long-term care of veterans
in state nursing homes.'' The commenter requested specific VA officers
implement the suggested General Counsel opinion.
Another commenter reported that a specific State home conducts
residents' room inspections, threatens sanctions for [resident] non-
compliance with the State home rules, schedules re-inspections, and
then fails to follow through. The commenter stated this lack of follow
through ``leaves us dangling,'' and demonstrates the ``ad hoc''
management of the State home.
Another commenter expressed grievances about a State's
administration of a State home, including concerns that the domiciliary
housed veterans unable or unwilling to meet the personal hygiene
requirements for residency, allegations of failure to maintain the
facility, allegations of failure to spend VA per diem payments on or on
behalf of the residents, or of diverting the funds into the State's
general fund. The commenter requested VA to regulate specific
oversight, staffing, financial accounting, and expenditure
requirements. Specifically, the commenter requested a regulation
requiring ``all monies that the VA gives to the States for these Homes
be placed in a separate account that can only be used for the Home.''
We decline to add a regulation to implement the suggestion
regarding dedicated accounts. VA monitors each State home's census and
its expenditures on nursing home, domiciliary, and adult day health
care services. The State home must report the census of each program
and submit a claim for per diem payments monthly on VA Form 10-5588.
See Sec. 51.42 of this rulemaking. By statute, VA ``shall have no
authority over the management or control of any State home.'' 38 U.S.C.
1742(b). We believe establishing the regulation the commenter seeks
would constitute management or control of State homes, contrary to the
statute, and would violate that law. We make no change based on this
comment.
Regarding the commenters' grievances relating to specific State
homes, VA takes reports of grievances from residents of State home
domiciliaries seriously; however, VA is unable to adjudicate the
grievances in this rulemaking. The commenters are encouraged to voice
their grievances directly with the State homes, which are better able
to address such grievances. We note that Sec. 51.300 now makes the
nursing home standards regarding grievances applicable to State
domiciliary care programs and these standards include the resident's
right to voice grievances and have the facility implement prompt
efforts to resolve these grievances. We further note that State homes
must satisfy these standards to receive per diem. Again, specific
allegations are best raised directly with the State home. VA therefore
makes no changes based on this comment.
Regarding application of all of the State home nursing home program
regulations to State home domiciliary care programs, we decline to do
so for the reasons previously stated in this preamble. To briefly
reiterate, many nursing home regulations would provide little benefit
to domiciliary residents, or even be a detrimental burden, while
imposing excessive operational constraints and costs on the States.
This rulemaking, however, applies to the domiciliary care programs
[[Page 61266]]
those nursing care program regulations necessary to the health, safety,
and well-being of domiciliary residents. See, for example, the
discussion of Sec. 51.300, above. VA therefore makes no changes based
on this comment.
We decline to implement the request the commenter submitted in the
form of a suggested VA General Counsel opinion the commenter authored
seeking to have the Secretary of Veterans Affairs assign certain named
VA officers to implement the requested changes. The Secretary's
statutory authority includes delegation of certain authority to certain
subordinate VA officers, but direct assignment of responsibilities to
specific VA officers is beyond the scope of this rulemaking. VA
therefore makes no changes based on this comment.
VA received comments recommending that part 51 ``further define the
sovereign powers of the Resident Councils.'' The commenter proposed the
creation of a National Association of State Veterans Homes Domiciliary
Residents' Councils under the auspices of VA Geriatric and Extended
Care Services. The commenter provided some details as to how the
relationship should be between council members, residents and a VA
liaison. The commenter also requested that VA provide whistleblower
protections for State home residents who report unethical, illegal, or
criminal conduct by a State home or VA employee or office, so that
State homes cannot evict residents for speaking up.
Although we decline to make the specific changes this commenter
requested, this rulemaking does implement protections for State home
domiciliary residents that formerly applied only to nursing home
residents. Section 51.300 requires domiciliaries to apply the
provisions of Sec. Sec. 51.70 and 51.100 not otherwise excluded from
Sec. 51.300. Among these are Sec. 51.70(b)(6)(ii) requiring the State
home to notify residents of the right to file complaints; Sec.
51.70(j)(1)(iv) guaranteeing access to the State long term care
ombudsman; Sec. 51.100(c) requiring the State home to document any
concerns the resident council submits; and Sec. 51.100(d)(6) requiring
the State home to listen to the views of any resident or family group,
including the resident council, regarding policy and operations
decisions affecting resident care and life in the facility. State home
domiciliary residents thus will now have recourse for redress of
grievances. We therefore make no change based on this comment.
Subpart F--Standards Applicable to the Payment of Per Diem for
Adult Day Health Care
51.410 Transfer and Discharge
We have clarified the language of proposed Sec. 51.410(b), which
provides the residents' right to be informed about the possible reasons
for a transfer or discharge from the program. We make no substantive
changes.
We have changed the proposed heading of paragraph (c) to read,
``Notice before transfer or discharge.'', to be more descriptive of the
text of the paragraph.
VA received comments asking to revise paragraph (c)(1), which
requires the State home to notify the participant or his or her legal
representative prior to a transfer or discharge. The commenters wanted
``or'' in the first sentence to be revised to ``and/or''. VA believes
that the intent of this recommendation is to allow the State homes to
notify, or ensure the State homes notify, both participants and their
legal representatives. In fact, the requirement to notify the
participant or the representative does not preclude the State home from
notifying both if that is the participant's choice. The ``and''
alternative of ``and/or'' would, however, permit the provision to be
read as requiring notice to the participant ``and'' to the
representative. We intend to afford the participant control of whether
the State home notifies a legal representative, a family member, or
both. On further review, we see that as written, ``Notify the
participant or the legal representative of the participant,'' could
permit the State home to notify someone other than the participant and
not notify the participant. To make clear the participant's right to
decide who besides the participant the State home notifies of a
transfer or discharge, we are revising Sec. 51.410(c)(1) to read as
does the revision to the domiciliary notice of transfer or discharge
provision, discussed above. As revised, paragraph (c)(1) reads,
``Notify the resident of the transfer or discharge and the reasons for
the move in writing and in a language and manner he or she understands.
The resident has the right to decide whether to have the State home
notify his or her legal representative or interested family member of
changes.''.
VA received a comment requesting changes to Sec. 51.410(e)(5),
which as proposed read, ``The name, address and telephone number of the
State long-term care ombudsman.'' The commenter stated the Older
Americans Act Ombudsman program did not apply to adult day health care
programs and recommended paragraph (e)(5) be revised as follows: ``The
name address and telephone number of the State home's State Department
of Health and/or the appropriate State Department of Social Services
representative.''
The commenter raised the prospect that a State might not have an
ombudsman who advocates for participants in a State home adult day
health care program. The proposed requirement derives from Sec.
52.70(h)(1)(iii), which requires State home program management to
provide the State long-term care ombudsman with immediate access to
participants. The object of proposed Sec. 51.410(e)(5) was to ensure
the notice of transfer or discharge includes information how to seek
help if the participant objects to the transfer or discharge. We are
changing Sec. 51.410(e)(5) to address the possibility that a State
does not have a long-term care ombudsman or any ombudsman responsive to
State home adult day health care participants. We decline to use the
``and/or'' construction the commenter suggested, because it would
permit the State to provide the contact information only for an
impersonal state agency possibly difficult to navigate instead of
providing the contact information of an ombudsman or other known
advocate. We acknowledge, however, that the proposed requirement could
be insufficient. We are changing paragraph (e)(5) by adding ``the first
listed of the following that exists in the State:'' following ``The
name, address and telephone number of''. We are further revising the
paragraph by adding after the paragraph (e) introductory language, the
following: ``(i) The State long-term care ombudsman, if the long-term
care ombudsman serves adult day health care facilities; or (ii) Any
State ombudsman or advocate who serves adult day health care
participants; or (iii) The State agency responsible for oversight of
State adult day care facilities.'' We intend the order of precedence
and other changes to afford the participants the intended protection,
with little additional burden to the State homes. These changes are a
logical outgrowth of the comment. We have removed from proposed
paragraph (g)(1) the phrase ``, and ensured of timely admission to the
hospital''. We have also changed ``and'' to ``or'' in both instances of
the phrase ``transfer and discharge.'' The State home will transfer
``or'' discharge a participant, as circumstances require. There is no
action called ``transfer and discharge.'' As revised, the paragraph
reads, ``Participants will be given a transfer or discharge from the
adult day health care program to the hospital when transfer or
[[Page 61267]]
discharge is medically appropriate as determined by a physician''.
Neither VA nor the State home can ensure timely admission to a
hospital; timeliness of admission is beyond VA and the State home's
control. In practice, a transfer or discharge to a hospital will result
in admission, observation, or other action according to the
participant's medical condition and the usual medical and business
practice of the hospital.
51.420 Quality of Life
VA received comments objecting to the storage requirement of Sec.
51.420(g)(3), saying that in the State homes' experience, adult day
health care participants need lockable storage on a very limited basis
because they do not live at the State home. They recommended the
participants be made aware that lockable storage is available, and that
the homes provide it upon request. They suggested a locked closet with
individual storage bins would be sufficient to secure a participant's
change of clothes, and that the State home should also provide a coat
closet for daily storage of coats, etc.
We agree that the proposed individually lockable storage is not
necessary in the adult day health care setting. We proposed that each
private storage space be lockable to afford security for wallets,
purses, and the like, and we agree the availability of locked storage
for those who wish to use it is sufficient. Accordingly, we have
changed Sec. 51.420(g)(3) to read, ``Private storage space for each
participant sufficient for a change of clothes. Upon request of the
participant, the State home must offer storage space that can be
secured with a lock.''
51.425 Physician Orders and Participant Medical Assessment
As proposed, this section provided for two types of assessments,
and as a result of the comments we received we have changed the names
of these assessments in the final rule for clarity and to distinguish
the initial medical assessment to determine that the veteran is
suitable for and well enough to participate in the program and the
subsequent assessment done to inform the comprehensive care plan. The
assessment that was proposed in paragraph (a) is now called the
``initial medical assessment'' and the assessment in Sec. 51.425(b) is
now called the ``comprehensive assessment'' throughout the paragraph.
VA received comments that the requirement of Sec. 51.425(a) for
new adult day health care participants to have tuberculosis (TB)
screening no sooner than 30 days before admission to the program would
be an undue hardship on the participant or the participant's care giver
because screening can take multiple doctor's office visits. The
commenters, referencing an unpublished report of the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention, acknowledged that ``elderly nursing
home residents are at greater risk for [TB] than elderly persons living
in the community.'' They noted current VA practice is to allow TB
screening upon admission. The commenters requested VA also allow the TB
screening to be performed at the adult day health care program no later
than 30 days after admission, which would reduce care-giver burden and
facilitate admission by eliminating a potential cause of delay.
We agree that allowing the TB screening to be performed after
admission to the adult day healthcare program could reduce the veteran
and caregiver's burden and facilitate admission. We disagree, however,
that 30 days after admission is an appropriate timeframe to complete
screening because of the increased risk of TB among the participant
population that the commenter identified. We also believe it is unsafe
to have a participant in the program any longer than that with his or
her medical history and current condition unknown. To allow more
flexibility than the proposed rule allowed, while also requiring the
history and physical examination with TB testing be done expeditiously,
we have changed Sec. 51.425(a) to allow them to be done no later than
7 calendar days after admission.
VA received comments regarding proposed Sec. 51.425(b), which
describes the State home adult day health care program's responsibility
to conduct comprehensive assessments for each participant, and lists
factors the program should consider in each assessment. The commenters
recommended that instead of the assessment guidelines in this
regulation, VA should allow each State with an established adult day
health care program assessment tool to use it, and that States without
assessment tools should work with a select group of members of the
National Association of State Veterans Homes to develop an assessment
tool to adopt as a national standard and submit to VA as an
alternative. The commenters noted that the existing regulation requires
each adult day health care program use the MDS-HC assessment tool, even
though it is not an ``industry standard'' among adult day healthcare
programs, and creating a new tool would solve the existing problem of
the lack of a nationally recognized assessment tool and better serve
the programs and veterans.
As with the assessments for domiciliary care programs, VA will not
change the regulation to explicitly allow State home adult day health
care programs to use State-mandated assessment tools, though the homes
may do so if those tools meet the requirements in paragraph Sec.
51.425(b). While we appreciate the offer to collaborate on a national
tool, we believe that Sec. 51.425(b) provides the States with
necessary flexibility to create policies to meet their state's
regulatory requirements or their program's needs, while ensuring the
health and well-being of participants. We have added an introduction
requiring the State home to establish in a written policy how it will
complete, implement, review, and revise assessments. In addition to
affording the State homes flexibility in devising their methods of
assessment, the introduction helps to distinguish between the initial
medical assessment and the subsequent comprehensive assessment.
VA received comments recommending that programs should make every
effort to coordinate the participant's comprehensive care plan with any
existing VA or community provider's comprehensive care plans, as
appropriate. The commenters noted many participants seek admission to
the State home adult day health care program without prior use of VA
services, and often prefer and plan to continue to use their community
physician for primary care. Because the State home is ultimately
responsible for the care and services provided to each participant, the
commenters said they should develop a comprehensive care plan that
includes the recommendations of other agencies, including VA.
We agree with these comments. We believe it is consistent with the
State home's responsibility to develop the comprehensive care plan that
those plans include the recommendations of others providing care to the
participant. We believe Sec. 51.425 allows the State home to include
the use or adaptation of existing care plans in its assessment and
comprehensive care plan policy. We make no change based on this
comment.
Based on the comments regarding Sec. 51.425(b) pointing out that
some participants enter State home adult day health care programs
without a current care plan, we are removing the requirement from
proposed Sec. 51.425(b) that the participant have an individualized
comprehensive care plan on ``the participant's first visit'' because
the requirement is unnecessarily
[[Page 61268]]
burdensome. Instead, we are requiring that the State home complete the
comprehensive assessment no later than 14 calendar days after
admission.
Consistent with the comment that residents might not have a
comprehensive care plan upon admission, we are revising proposed
paragraph (d) to allow up to 21 calendar days after admission for the
State to write a comprehensive care plan for each participant.
We changed certain word choices and phrasing in paragraph (c), but
none has substantive effect. We pluralized the word ``assessment'' in
the section heading, and rephrased the first sentence of paragraph
(c)(1) to clarify that the assessments must be both conducted and
coordinated with the appropriate health care professionals. We changed
``the assessment'' to ``an assessment'' in (c)(2) to ensure all
assessments are certified. We added (c)(3), ``The results of the
assessments must be used to develop, review, and revise the
participant's individualized comprehensive care plan.'' This provision
makes clear the ongoing relationships among the participant's
assessments, changing condition, and comprehensive care plan.
51.430 Quality of Care
We are making technical corrections to proposed paragraph (a)(2) of
this section. We are removing ``, review, and prevent'' from the
paragraph heading to more accurately state the topic of the paragraph.
As proposed, the heading ``Duty to report, review, and prevent sentinel
events'' commingled the topics of paragraphs (a)(2) and (a)(3). We are
also striking from Sec. 51.430(a)(2) the phrase ``, review, and
prevent'', because Sec. 51.430(a)(2) is solely a notice provision, as
is Sec. 51.120(a)(3) from which it derives. We are also removing the
reference to Sec. 51.120(a)(4) from proposed Sec. 51.430(a)(2)
because Sec. 51.120(a)(4) is the review, analysis, and prevention
provision applicable to nursing homes. The mandate to review, analyze
and prevent sentinel events in adult day health care programs derives
from Sec. 52.120(a)(4) and is restated in proposed Sec. 51.430(a)(3).
Additionally, Sec. 51.120(a)(4) has a final sentence we did not intend
to apply to Sec. 51.430(a)(3). We referred to Sec. 51.120(a)(4) in
proposed Sec. 51.430 erroneously.
51.440 Dietary Services
We have changed the second sentence of proposed Sec. 51.440 so the
references in Sec. 51.140 to ``resident'' apply to a participant ``in
subpart F.'' This clarifies the scope of the application of Sec.
51.140 to the adult day health care program. Because of the other
changes we are making to this section, discussed below, the text
proposed as Sec. 51.440 is now the introductory paragraph of the
section.
To make the per diem regulations more concise and to eliminate
repetition between current parts 51 and 52 of title 38 Code of Federal
Regulations, we proposed that Sec. 51.440 would apply the nursing home
dietary service provisions of current Sec. 51.140 to the adult day
health care program. That was partly a mistake. The proposal
inadvertently applied nursing home requirements for frequency of meals
under Sec. 51.140(f) that would be inapplicable to adult day health
care programs. For example, the nursing home bedtime snack requirements
have no application to a daytime only program. To correct this error,
we have revised the introduction of Sec. 51.440 to exclude application
of Sec. 51.140(f), and added the mealtime requirements of current
Sec. 52.140(e)(1) and (2) as paragraphs (a) and (b). These
requirements are essential to ensure every adult day health care
participant receives at least minimal nourishment during each session.
Adding these requirements imposes no new burden on the State homes.
They merely continue the current timing and nutritional requirements of
the adult day health care program without change.
51.445 Physician Services
We are revising the introduction of Sec. 51.445. The proposed
language mistakenly refers to a physician's order for enrollment, but
physicians don't write orders to enroll participants in the adult day
health care program; they write orders to admit participants. We have
corrected this error in terminology. We have also revised the next to
last sentence to be more readable. As revised, the sentence reads, ``If
a participant's medical needs require that the participant be placed in
an adult day health care program that offers medical supervision, the
primary care physician must state so in the order for admission.''
VA received comments recommending that VA require all State home
adult day health care programs undertake certain practices such as:
recording the name of the participant's primary care physician in his
or her medical record; requiring that each participant see a primary
care physician annually and when there is a change in condition;
providing or arranging for acute care when a resident needs it; and
ensuring participants are able to obtain emergency care when necessary.
The commenters believed these practices should not be restricted only
to adult day health care programs that offer medical supervision.
We agree with the first of these recommendations. As proposed, the
provision requiring the State home to record the name of each
participant's primary care physician is in paragraph (a) of this
section, which applies specifically to programs that offer medical
supervision. To apply it to all adult day health care program
participants, we have moved the requirement from proposed paragraph
(a)(2) to the introductory paragraph of this regulation in the final
rule, where it applies to the entire section. We redesignated proposed
paragraph (a)(3) as (a)(2).
We decline to require that each participant who is in a program
that does not offer medical supervision see a primary care physician
annually, because such a requirement is unnecessary for all adult day
health care programs. We make no change based on this comment.
We decline to require programs that do not offer medical
supervision to provide for acute care. State homes may choose to make
acute care available, but those services are not by design the intent
of social model programs. We make no change based on this comment.
Regarding the final recommendation, proposed paragraph (d),
Availability of physicians for emergency care, does require that the
management of all adult day health care programs ``must ensure that
participants are able to obtain necessary emergency care,'' and the
paragraph applies to all adult day health care programs. As with
domiciliaries, the State home can meet the requirement by calling 911
emergency services on behalf of the participant. The State home may
provide physicians for emergency care, but VA will not require it. We
make no change based on this comment.
51.455 Dental Services
For clarity, we have inserted the word ``dental'' into paragraph
Sec. 4.455(a)(1) as proposed to read, ``In making dental appointments;
and''.
51.470 Physical Environment
We have changed Sec. 51.470(a), Life safety from fire, to read,
``The State home must meet the applicable requirements of National Fire
Protection Association's NFPA 101, Life Safety from fire, as
incorporated by reference in Sec. 51.200.'' We determined that the
proposed language was confusing regarding which NFPA codes applied to
State home adult day health care programs. This change is for clarity
only.
[[Page 61269]]
VA received comments agreeing with the space requirements proposed
in Sec. 51.470(b), but only for adult day health care programs with
medical supervision. They suggested less space be required for programs
that do not provide intensive medical services. Specifically, they
suggested at least 70 square feet per participant, including office
space for staff, as opposed to the 100 square feet required in the
proposed rule; and 40 square feet per participant, excluding office
space for staff, as opposed to the 60 square feet required in the
proposed rule. They said programs that do not provide intensive medical
services do not require the same space as those that do, because they
do not provide rehabilitative services or require the same specialized
equipment as medical model programs.
The space requirements in proposed Sec. 51.470(b)(3) are the same
as the ones in current Sec. 52.200(b)(3). Moreover, they are the same
standards VA imposes on VA adult day health care facilities. Likewise,
we specify these space allotments in the standards for funding VA
construction grants. See 38 CFR part 59. We specify these space
allotments because we consider them essential to the health, safety,
and well-being of the participants. We make no changes based on this
comment.
51.480 Transportation
We received comments requesting that VA provide transportation
reimbursement to State homes that provide their residents
transportation to a VA medical center for medical care, noting VA
reimburses veterans for mileage when traveling to and from a VA medical
facility for medical services.
The commenter is correct that VA reimburses veterans for their
travel expenses through the Beneficiary Travel program. Veteran
residents of a State home may be eligible for Beneficiary Travel
depending on the purpose of the travel and other factors. Similarly, VA
may make a beneficiary travel payment to a person or organization other
than the beneficiary when certain factors are met. 38 CFR 70.2 and
70.20 (defining ``claimant'' for beneficiary travel payments and
explaining the application for payment process). This is addressed more
fully in 38 CFR part 70. We make no change based on this comment.
Other Issues
One commenter commented on VA's definition of ``State'' in proposed
Sec. 51.2. The commenter said that a judicial decision requires the
terms ``state'' and ``federal'' be interpreted to encompass any medical
care a veteran obtains under the Affordable Care Act anywhere in the
world. King v. Burwell, 576 U.S. ____(2015). By this interpretation,
the commenter argued, VA must pay per diem to any veteran wherever in
the world the veteran resides. The commenter advised VA to allow
Congress to draft the per diem regulations to determine VA's
logistical, financial, and fiduciary responsibilities.
VA was not a party to King v. Burwell, 576 U.S. ____(2015), and
nothing it decided is binding on VA's payment of per diem to State
homes. By law, VA cannot delegate the task of writing regulations for
the State home program to Congress. In fact, Congress has directed VA
to prescribe regulations which are necessary and appropriate to carry
out laws administered by VA which would include the laws governing the
payment of state home per diem and standards for State programs
receiving such payments. 38 U.S.C. 501. We make no changes in response
to this comment.
VA received a comment suggesting we revise the subject heading of
this rulemaking to read, ``Per Diem for Nursing Home, Domiciliary, or
Adult Day Health Care of Veterans in State Homes.'' The commenter
recommended this rulemaking keep the organization and scope of the
proposed rule in several respects. Specifically, that subpart D
continues to provide regulations for nursing home care programs and
part E for domiciliary care programs.
We decline to change the name of the final rule as the current name
adequately describes the content of the rule, and we are keeping the
subpart headings and their topics as proposed. We make no change in
response to this comment.
The commenter commented that VA should require each State home to
employ a regulatory compliance officer who will be a VA employee who
resides in the State home to insure the home's compliance with all VA
regulations.
VA uses regular surveys of the State homes to ensure compliance
with VA regulations governing VA payment of per diem. VA lacks
authority to place VA employees on a State home's staff, and adopting
this recommendation would blur the line between VA and the State home's
independent management. We make no change based on this comment.
In a related comment, another commenter asserted this rulemaking as
proposed fails to establish a firm and effective system of legal
enforcement by the VA of regulatory compliance and legislative
oversight by State Veterans Homes (SVH) of VA Domiciliary Care
Standards. A firm and effective VA regulatory enforcement mechanism
must be established with respect to State Veterans Homes for the new VA
regulation on VA-SVH Domiciliary Care Standards to have maximum
positive force and effect.
The commenter recommended enforcing a more visible, professional
and proactive role for the State Veterans Home [VISN] Liaison or for
the SVH VA Medical Facility Representative as those positions were
described in VHA Handbook 1145.01, Survey Procedures for State Veterans
Homes (SVH) Providing Nursing Home Care and/or Adult Day Health Care
(May 17, 2010). The commenter suggested adding certain duties to those
assigned VA officers, including prescribing that VA notify State home
residents and resident councils of the existence of these liaison
officers, and that those duties be enforced by legislative directives
in this rulemaking. The commenter urged that this rulemaking require
State Departments of Veterans Affairs to ``a) promulgate state
legislation that provides regulatory oversight of State Veterans Homes
management, administration and operations; and b) promulgate state
legislation that provides for the regulatory compliance by State
Veterans Homes of VA Program Regulations.''
VA cannot require States to legislate. We disagree about whether
this rulemaking provides effective means to ensure compliance with
these regulations. We believe the processes prescribed in this
rulemaking provide an effective means of oversight and enforcement of
compliance with these regulations. These include the surveys for
recognition and subsequent certification, provisional certification if
needed, and potentially denial of certification, together with the
multiple standards the State home must meet to obtain recognition and
certification under part 51. Further, we decline to revise the duties
of the VA officers as any such consideration would be beyond the scope
of this rulemaking.
The same commenter sought amendments of Sec. Sec. 51.70 and
51.100, providing specific language. Specifically, the commenter sought
amendments of Sec. 51.70(a)(1), (a)(2), (b)(9)(ii), (f), (j)(1)(iv),
(j)(3), and (m) (including extensive suggestions for creation and
management of married quarters); Sec. 51.100(c), (d), (f), and (i).
This comment is distinguishable from the others that addressed the
proposed rule's application of Sec. Sec. 51.70 and 51.100 to the
domiciliary care program because it seeks amendment of Sec. Sec. 51.70
and 51.100. This rulemaking did not
[[Page 61270]]
propose to amend those sections, and VA declines to make any such
amendments in this final rulemaking, without providing an adequate
period for notice and comment. We will consider these comments for
possible future amendment of Sec. Sec. 51.70 and 51.100. We make no
changes here based on these comments.
VA received a comment saying that as a resident of a State home in
a remote location, a requirement to provide accommodations for family
members to stay on special occasions would be a great benefit to
veterans with families, and even to those without, but who would
remember the happiness of family life and enjoy the presence of
families. Another commenter urged VA to require State homes to provide
private family visitation space, reporting that family has not visited
during the resident's 13 years of residence in a State home for lack of
a private visitation room or space.
We appreciate the commenters' desire for State homes to facilitate
family visits this way and certainly encourage State homes to do what
they can to facilitate family visits. However, providing accommodations
for visiting family could be a significant expense for State homes. We
thus make no change based on this comment.
VA received a comment that State politics and corruption take
precedence over State home residents' welfare. The commenter proposed
creation of an oversight group to take legal action against misuse of
Federal funds, lest the funds that States have earmarked for the care
of Veterans disappear into other accounts in each state.
While we understand the commenter has concerns, the solution the
commenter seeks is beyond the scope of this rulemaking. Consequently,
we make no changes based on this comment.
One commenter asked that VA ``coordinate the impact of the semantic
differential between terms,'' i.e., define terms the same in Veterans
Health Administration (VHA) regulations in 38 CFR part 51 and Veterans
Benefits Administration (VBA) regulations in 38 CFR parts 3 and 4. The
commenter asserted differences in the use or definition of the same or
similar terms could affect how and to whom VBA awards special monthly
compensation benefits or aid and attendance benefits under part 3, or
temporary total disability evaluations under part 4. The commenter
asserts VA regulations are unclear regarding whether a veteran's
residency in a State home can qualify for special monthly compensation
or pension rates that use nursing home care as a criterion of
entitlement. The commenter also urged VA to apply 38 U.S.C. 1151,
Benefits for persons disabled by treatment or vocational
rehabilitation, to disability incurred in State homes receiving VA per
diem payments. The commenter inquired of the significance of residence
in a State home to a veteran's VA disability compensation or pension
payments. The commenter asserted VA is creating additional burdens for
states and confusion through lack of consistency and clarity throughout
its regulations, like that resulting from conflict of laws regarding
pensioners getting Medicaid-covered nursing home care.
The commenter raises points worthy of legal review and perhaps of
rulemaking. It is beyond the scope of this rulemaking to harmonize
definitions among parts 3, 4, and 51 of title 38, Code of Federal
Regulations. The application of definitions in this rulemaking to
claims for monetary benefits the VBA administers, including benefits
under 38 U.S.C. 1151, and the effect of residency in a State home on
any veteran's monetary benefits, are appropriately addressed in an
individual claim to VBA for those benefits. They too are beyond the
scope of this rulemaking. Whereas the commenter has raised no issue
regarding, or requested any change to, the proposed regulations that
are within the scope of this rulemaking, we make no changes based on
this comment.
Based on the rationale set forth in the supplementary information
to the proposed rule and in the preceding discussion, VA is adopting
the provisions of the proposed rule as final, with changes as noted.
Effect of Rulemaking
Title 38 of the Code of Federal Regulations, as revised by this
final rule, represents VA's implementation of its legal authority on
this subject. Other than future amendments to this regulation or
governing statutes, no contrary guidance or procedures are authorized.
All existing or subsequent VA guidance must be read to conform with
this rulemaking if possible. If not possible, this rulemaking
supersedes such guidance.
Paperwork Reduction Act
The Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3507) requires that
VA consider the impact of paperwork and other information collection
burdens imposed on the public. Under 44 U.S.C. 3507(a), an agency may
not collect or sponsor the collection of information, nor may it impose
an information collection requirement, unless it displays a currently
valid Office of Management and Budget (OMB) control number. See also 5
CFR 1320.8(b)(3)(vi).
Although this action contains provisions constituting collections
of information at 38 CFR 51.20, 51.30, 51.31, 51.42, 51.210, 51.300,
51.310, 51.320, 51.350, 51.390, 51.400, 51.405, 51.410, 51.415, 51.420,
51.425, 51.430, 51.445, 51.460, and 51.475 under the provisions of the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501-3521), no new or
proposed revised collections of information are associated with this
final rule. The information collection requirements for Sec. Sec.
51.20, 51.30, 51.31, 51.42, 51.210, 51.300, 51.310, 51.320, 51.350,
51.390, 51.400, 51.405, 51.410, 51.415, 51.420, 51.425, 51.430, 51.445,
51.460, and 51.475 are currently approved by the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB) and have been assigned OMB control number 2900-0160.
Section 51.42 also provides for information collection. The OMB
currently approves this information collection under control number
2900-0091.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Secretary hereby certifies that this final rule will not have a
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities
as they are defined in the Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5 U.S.C. 601-
612. This rule affects veterans, State homes, and pharmacies. The State
homes that are subject to this rulemaking are State government entities
under the control of State governments. All State homes are owned,
operated, and managed by State governments or nonprofit organizations
created by the State except for a small number that are operated by
entities under contract with State governments. These contractors are
not small entities. Also, this rulemaking will not have a consequential
effect on any pharmacies that could be considered small entities.
Therefore, pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 605(b), this rulemaking is exempt from
the final regulatory flexibility analysis requirements of sections 603
and 604.
Executive Orders 12866, 13563, and 13771
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563 direct agencies to assess the
costs and benefits of available regulatory alternatives and, when
regulation is necessary, to select regulatory approaches that maximize
net benefits (including potential economic, environmental, public
health and safety effects, and other advantages; distributive impacts;
and equity). Executive Order 13563 (Improving Regulation and Regulatory
Review)
[[Page 61271]]
emphasizes the importance of quantifying both costs and benefits,
reducing costs, harmonizing rules, and promoting flexibility. Executive
Order 12866 (Regulatory Planning and Review) defines a ``significant
regulatory action,'' requiring review by OMB, unless OMB waives such
review, as ``any regulatory action that is likely to result in a rule
that may: (1) Have an annual effect on the economy of $100 million or
more or adversely affect in a material way the economy, a sector of the
economy, productivity, competition, jobs, the environment, public
health or safety, or State, local, or tribal governments or
communities; (2) Create a serious inconsistency or otherwise interfere
with an action taken or planned by another agency; (3) Materially alter
the budgetary impact of entitlements, grants, user fees, or loan
programs or the rights and obligations of recipients thereof; or (4)
Raise novel legal or policy issues arising out of legal mandates, the
President's priorities, or the principles set forth in this Executive
Order.''
OMB has examined the economic, interagency, budgetary, legal, and
policy implications of this regulatory action and it has been
determined not to be a significant regulatory action under Executive
Order 12866. VA's regulatory impact analysis can be found as a
supporting document at https://www.regulations.gov, usually within 48
hours after the rulemaking document is published. Additionally, a copy
of the rulemaking and its regulatory impact analysis are available on
VA's website at https://www.va.gov/orpm/, by following the link for ``VA
Regulations Published From FY 2004 Through FYTD.'' This rule is not an
E.O. 13771 regulatory action because this rule is not significant under
E.O. 12866.
Unfunded Mandates
The Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 requires, at 2 U.S.C.
1532, that agencies prepare an assessment of anticipated costs and
benefits before issuing any rule that may result in an expenditure by
State, local, and tribal governments, in the aggregate, or by the
private sector, of $100 million or more (adjusted annually for
inflation) in any one year. This final rule will have no such effect on
State, local, and tribal governments, or on the private sector.
Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance
The Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance numbers and titles for
the programs affected by this document are 64.005, Grants to States for
Construction of State Home Facilities; 64.007, Blind Rehabilitation
Centers; 64.008, Veterans Domiciliary Care; 64.009, Veterans Medical
Care Benefits; 64.010, Veterans Nursing Home Care; 64.011, Veterans
Dental Care; 64.012, Veterans Prescription Service; 64.013, Veterans
Prosthetic Appliances; 64.014, Veterans State Domiciliary Care; 64.015,
Veterans State Nursing Home Care; 64.016, Veterans State Hospital Care;
64.018, Sharing Specialized Medical Resources; 64.019, Veterans
Rehabilitation Alcohol and Drug Dependence; 64.022, Veterans Home Based
Primary Care; 64.026, Veterans State Adult Day Health Care; and 64.053,
Payments to States for Programs to Promote the Hiring and Retention of
Nurses at State Veterans Homes.
List of Subjects in 38 CFR Parts 17, 51, and 52
Administrative practice and procedure, Claims, Day care, Dental
health, Government contracts, Grant programs--health, Grant programs--
veterans, Health care, Health facilities, Health professions, Health
records, Mental health programs, Nursing homes, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Travel and transportation expenses,
Veterans.
Signing Authority
The Secretary of Veterans Affairs approved this document and
authorized the undersigned to sign and submit the document to the
Office of the Federal Register for publication electronically as an
official document of the Department of Veterans Affairs. Robert L.
Wilkie, Secretary, Department of Veterans Affairs, approved this
document on November 9, 2018, for publication.
Dated: November 13, 2018.
Consuela Benjamin,
Regulations Development Coordinator, Office of Regulation Policy &
Management, Office of the Secretary, Department of Veterans Affairs.
For the reasons stated in the preamble and under the authority of
38 U.S.C. 1741-1743 and 38 U.S.C. 1745, the Department of Veterans
Affairs is amending 38 CFR parts 17, 51, and 52 as follows:
PART 17--MEDICAL
0
1. The authority citation for part 17 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 38 U.S.C. 501, and as noted in specific sections.
Sec. Sec. 17.190-17.194 [Removed].
0
2. Remove the undesignated center heading ``Aid to States for Care of
Veterans in State Homes'' and Sec. Sec. 17.190 through 17.194.
Sec. Sec. 17.196-17.200 [Removed]
0
3. Remove Sec. Sec. 17.196 through 17.200.
PART 51--PER DIEM FOR NURSING HOME, DOMICILIARY, OR ADULT DAY
HEALTH CARE OF VETERANS IN STATE HOMES
0
4. The authority citation for part 51 is amended to read as follows:
Authority: 38 U.S.C. 101, 501, 1710, 1720, 1741-1743, 1745, and
as follows.
Section 51.20 and 51.30 also issued under 38 U.S.C. 511, 1742,
7104 and 7105.
Section 51.42 also issued under 38 U.S.C. 510 and 1744.
Section 51.43 also issued under 38 U.S.C. 1712.
Section 51.310 also issued under 38 U.S.C. 1720(f).
0
5. Revise the part heading as set forth above.
0
6. Revise subpart A, consisting of Sec. Sec. 51.1 and 51.2, to read as
follows:
Subpart A--General
Sec.
51.1 Purpose and scope of this part.
51.2 Definitions.
Subpart A--General
Sec. 51.1 Purpose and scope of this part.
The purpose of this part is to establish VA's policies, procedures,
and standards applicable to the payment of per diem to State homes that
provide nursing home care, domiciliary care, or adult day health care
to eligible veterans. Subpart B of this part sets forth the procedures
for recognition and certification of a State home. Subpart C sets forth
requirements governing the rates of, and procedures applicable to, the
payment of per diem; the provision of drugs and medicines; and for
which veterans VA will pay per diem. Subparts D, E, and F set forth
standards that any State home seeking per diem payments for nursing
home care (subpart D), domiciliary care (subpart E), or adult day
health care (subpart F) must meet.
Sec. 51.2 Definitions.
For the purposes of this part:
Activities of daily living (ADLs) means the functions or tasks for
self-care usually performed in the normal course of a day, i.e.,
mobility, bathing, dressing, grooming, toileting, transferring, and
eating.
Adult day health care means a therapeutic outpatient care program
that includes one or more of the following services, based on patient
care needs: Medical services, rehabilitation, therapeutic activities,
socialization, and nutrition. Services are provided in a congregate
setting.
[[Page 61272]]
Clinical nurse specialist means a licensed professional nurse with
a master's degree in nursing and a major in a clinical nursing
specialty from an academic program accredited by the National League
for Nursing.
Director means the Director of the VA medical center of
jurisdiction, unless the reference is specifically to another type of
director.
Domiciliary care means the furnishing of a home to a veteran,
including the furnishing of shelter, food, and other comforts of home,
and necessary medical services as defined in this part. For purposes of
the definition of ``domiciliary care,'' necessary medical services
means the medical services subpart E of this part requires the State
home to provide.
Eligible veteran means a veteran whose care in a State home may
serve as a basis for per diem payments to the State. The requirements
that an eligible veteran must meet are set forth in Sec. Sec. 51.50
(nursing home care), 51.51 (domiciliary care), and 51.52 (adult day
health care).
Licensed medical practitioner means a nurse practitioner,
physician, physician assistant, or primary care physician.
Nurse practitioner means a licensed professional nurse who is
currently licensed to practice in a State; who meets that State's
requirements governing the qualifications of nurse practitioners; and
who is currently certified as an adult, family, or gerontological nurse
practitioner by a nationally recognized body that provides such
certification for nurse practitioners, such as the American Nurses
Credentialing Center or the American Academy of Nurse Practitioners.
Nursing home care means the accommodation of convalescents or other
persons who are not acutely ill and not in need of hospital care, but
who require nursing care and related medical services, if such nursing
care and medical services are prescribed by, or are performed under the
general direction of, persons duly licensed to provide such care. The
term includes services furnished in skilled nursing care facilities, in
intermediate care facilities, and in combined facilities. It does not
include domiciliary care.
Participant means an individual receiving adult day health care.
Physician means a doctor of medicine or osteopathy legally
authorized to practice medicine or surgery in the State.
Physician assistant means a person who meets the applicable State
requirements for a physician assistant, is currently certified by the
National Commission on Certification of Physician Assistants as a
physician assistant, and has an individualized written scope of
practice that determines the authorization to write medical orders, to
prescribe medications, and to accomplish other clinical tasks under
appropriate physician supervision.
Primary care physician means a designated generalist physician
responsible for providing, directing, and coordinating health care that
is indicated for the residents or participants.
Program of care means any or all of the three levels of care for
which VA may pay per diem under this part.
Resident means an individual receiving nursing home or domiciliary
care.
State means each of the several States, the District of Columbia,
the Virgin Islands, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, Guam, the
Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, and American Samoa.
State home means a home recognized and, to the extent required by
this part, certified pursuant to this part that a State established
primarily for veterans disabled by age, disease, or otherwise, who by
reason of such disability are incapable of earning a living. A State
home must provide at least one program of care (i.e., domiciliary care,
nursing home care, or adult day health care).
VA means the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs.
Veteran means a veteran under 38 U.S.C. 101.
0
7. Revise subpart B, consisting of Sec. Sec. 51.20 and 51.30 through
51.32, to read as follows:
Subpart B--Obtaining Recognition and Certification for per Diem
Payments
Sec.
51.20 Recognition of a State home.
51.30 Certification of a State home.
51.31 Surveys for recognition and/or certification.
51.32 Terminating recognition.
Subpart B--Obtaining Recognition and Certification for per Diem
Payments
Sec. 51.20 Recognition of a State home.
(a) How to apply for recognition. To apply for recognition of a
home for purposes of receiving per diem from VA, a State must submit a
letter requesting recognition to the Office of Geriatrics and Extended
Care in VA Central Office, 810 Vermont Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20420.
The letter must be signed by the State official authorized to make the
request. The letter will be reviewed by VA, in accordance with this
section.
(b) Survey and recommendation by Director. (1) After receipt of a
letter requesting recognition, VA will survey the home in accordance
with Sec. 51.31 to determine whether the facility and program of care
meet the applicable requirements of subpart C and the applicable
standards in subpart D, E, or F of this part. For purposes of the
recognition process including the survey, references to State homes in
the standards apply to homes that are being considered by VA for
recognition as State homes.
(2) If the Director of the VA Medical Center of jurisdiction
determines that the applicable requirements and standards are met, the
Director will submit a written recommendation for recognition to the
Under Secretary for Health.
(3) If the Director does not recommend recognition, the Director
will submit a written recommendation against recognition to the Under
Secretary for Health and will notify in writing the State official who
signed the letter submitted under paragraph (a) of this section and the
State official authorized to oversee operations of the home. The
notification will state the following:
(i) The specific standard(s) not met; and
(ii) The State's right to submit a response to the Under Secretary
for Health, including any additional evidence, no later than 30
calendar days after the date of the notification to the State.
(c) Decision by the Under Secretary for Health. After receipt of a
recommendation from the Director, and allowing 30 calendar days for the
state to respond to a negative recommendation and to submit evidence,
the Under Secretary for Health will award or deny recognition based on
all available evidence. The applicant will be notified of the decision
in writing. Adverse decisions may be appealed to the Board of Veterans'
Appeals (see 38 CFR part 20).
(d) Effect of recognition. (1) Recognition of a State home means
that, at the time of recognition, the facility and its program of care
meet the applicable requirements of this part. The State home must
obtain certification after recognition in accordance with Sec. 51.30.
(2) After a State home is recognized, any new annex, new branch, or
other expansion in the size or capacity of a home or any relocation of
the home to a new facility must be separately recognized.
(The Office of Management and Budget has approved the information
collection
[[Page 61273]]
requirements in this section under control number 2900-0161.)
Sec. 51.30 Certification of a State home.
(a) General certification requirement. To be certified, the State
home must allow VA to survey the home in accordance with Sec. 51.31. A
State home must be certified no later than 450 calendar days after the
State home is recognized. Certifications expire 600 calendar days after
the date of their issuance.
(b) Periodic certifications required. The Director of the VA
medical center of jurisdiction will certify a State home based on a
survey conducted at least once every 270-450 calendar days, at VA's
discretion, and will notify the State official authorized to oversee
operations of the State home of the decision regarding certification.
(c) Decreasing capacity for a program of care. The State must
report any decreases in the capacity for a particular program of care
to the Office of Geriatrics and Extended Care in VA Central Office, 810
Vermont Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20420 no later than 30 calendar days
after such decrease, and must provide an explanation for the decrease.
(d) Provisional certification--(1) When issuance is required. After
a VA survey, the Director must issue a provisional certification for
the surveyed State home if the Director determines that all of the
following are true:
(i) The State home does not meet one or more of the applicable
requirements or standards in this part;
(ii) None of these deficiencies immediately jeopardize the health
or safety of any resident or participant;
(iii) No later than 20 working days after receipt by the State home
of the survey report, the State submitted to the Director a written
plan to remedy each deficiency in a specified amount of time; and
(iv) The plan is reasonable and the Director has sent a written
notice to the appropriate person(s) at the State home informing him or
her that the Director agrees to the plan.
(2) Surveys to continue while under provisional certification. VA
will continue to survey the State home while it is under a provisional
certification in accordance with this section and Sec. 51.31. After
such a survey, the Director will continue the provisional certification
if the Director determines that the four criteria listed in paragraphs
(c)(1)(i)-(iv) of this section are true.
(e) Notice and the right to appeal a denial of certification. A
State home has the right to appeal when the Director determines that a
State home does not meet the requirements of this part (i.e., denies
certification). An appeal is not provided to a State for a State home
that receives a provisional certification because, by providing the
corrective action plan necessary to receive a provisional
certification, a State demonstrates its acceptance of VA's
determination that it does not meet the VA standards for which the
corrective action plan was submitted.
(1) Notice of decision denying certification. The Director will
issue in writing a decision denying certification that sets forth the
specific standard(s) not met. The Director will send a copy of this
decision to the State official authorized to oversee operations of the
State home, and notify that official of the State's right to submit a
written appeal to the Under Secretary for Health as stated in paragraph
(e)(2) of this section. If the State home does not submit a timely
written appeal, the Director's decision becomes final and VA will not
pay per diem for any care provided on or after the 31st day after the
State's receipt of the Director's decision.
(2) Appeal of denial of certification. The State must submit a
written appeal no later than 30 calendar days after the date of the
notice of the denial of certification. The appeal must explain why the
denial of certification is inaccurate or incomplete and provide any
relevant information not considered by the Director. Any appeal that
does not identify a reason for disagreement will be returned to the
sender without further consideration. If the State home submits a
timely written appeal, the Director's decision will not take effect and
VA will continue to pay per diem to the State home pending a decision
by the Under Secretary for Health.
(3) Decision on appeal of a denial of certification. The Under
Secretary for Health will review the matter, including any relevant
supporting documentation, and issue a written decision that affirms or
reverses the Director's decision. The State will be notified of the
decision, which may be appealed to the Board of Veterans' Appeals (see
38 CFR part 20) if it results in a loss of per diem payments to the
State. VA will terminate recognition and certification and discontinue
per diem payments for care provided on and after the date of the Under
Secretary for Health's decision affirming a denial of certification or
on a later date that must be specified by the Under Secretary for
Health.
(f) Other appeals. Appeals of matters not addressed in this section
will be governed by 38 CFR part 20.
(The Office of Management and Budget has approved the information
collection requirements in this section under control number 2900-
0161)
Sec. 51.31 Surveys for recognition and/or certification.
(a) General. Both before and after a home is recognized and
certified, VA may survey the home as necessary to determine whether it
complies with applicable regulations. VA will provide advance notice
before a recognition survey, but advance notice is not required before
other surveys. A survey, as necessary, may cover all parts of the home
or only certain parts, and may include review, audit, and production of
any records that have a bearing on compliance with the requirements of
this part (including any reports from state or local entities), as well
as the completion and submission to VA of all required forms. The
Director will designate the VA officials and/or contractors to survey
the home.
(b) Recognition surveys. VA will not conduct a recognition survey
unless the following minimum requirements are met:
(1) For nursing homes and domiciliaries, the home has at least 20
residents or has a number of residents consisting of at least 50
percent of the resident capacity of the home;
(2) For adult day health care programs of care, the program has at
least 10 participants or has a number of participants consisting of at
least 50 percent of participant capacity of the program.
(c) Threats to public, resident, or participant safety. If VA
identifies a condition at the home that poses an immediate threat to
public, resident or participant safety, or other information indicating
the existence of such a threat, the Director of the VA medical center
of jurisdiction will immediately report this to the VA Network Director
(10N1-22); the Office of Geriatrics and Extended Care in VA Central
Office; and the State official authorized to oversee operations of the
home.
(The Office of Management and Budget has approved the information
collection requirements in this section under control number 2900-
0160.)
Sec. 51.32 Terminating recognition.
Once a home has achieved recognition, the recognition will be
terminated only if the State requests that the recognition be
terminated, or if VA makes a final decision that affirms the Director's
decision not to certify the State home.
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8. Revise the heading for subpart C to read as follows:
[[Page 61274]]
Subpart C--Requirements Applicable to Eligibility, Rates, and
Payments
* * * * *
0
9. Revise Sec. 51.40 to read as follows:
Sec. 51.40 Basic per diem rates.
(a) Basic rate. Except as provided in Sec. 51.41, VA will pay per
diem for care provided to an eligible veteran at a State home at the
lesser of the following rates:
(1) One-half of the daily cost of the care for each day the veteran
is in the State home, as calculated under paragraph (b) of this
section.
(2) The basic per diem rate for each day the veteran is in the
State home. The basic per diem rate is established by VA for each
fiscal year in accordance with 38 U.S.C. 1741(a) and (c).
Note to paragraph (a): To determine the number of days that a
veteran was in a State home, see paragraph (c) of this section.
(b) How to calculate the daily cost of a veteran's care. The daily
cost of care consists of those direct and indirect costs attributable
to care at the State home, divided by the total number of residents
serviced by the program of care. Cost principles are set forth in
Office of Management and Budget (OMB) regulations. 2 CFR 200.400-
200.475.
(c) Determining whether a veteran spent a day receiving nursing
home or domiciliary care--(1) Nursing homes. VA will pay per diem for
each day that the veteran is receiving nursing home care and has an
overnight stay at the State home. Per diem also will be paid for a day
when there is no overnight stay if the State home nursing home care
program has an occupancy rate of 90 percent or greater on that day.
However, these payments will be made only for the first 10 consecutive
days during which the veteran is admitted as a patient for any stay in
a VA or other hospital (a hospital stay could occur more than once in a
calendar year once there is an overnight stay in the State home between
hospital stays) and only for the first 12 days in a calendar year
during which the veteran is absent for purposes other than receiving
hospital care. Occupancy rate is calculated by dividing the total
number of residents (including nonveterans) in the nursing home on that
day by the total recognized nursing home capacity in that State home.
(2) Domiciliaries. VA will pay per diem for each day that the
veteran is receiving domiciliary care and has an overnight stay at the
State home. VA will also pay per diem during any absence of 96 or fewer
consecutive hours for purposes other than receiving hospital care at VA
expense, but VA will not pay per diem for any part of the absence if it
continues for longer than 96 consecutive hours. Absences that are not
interrupted by at least 24 hours of continuous residence in the State
home are considered one continuous absence.
(d) Determining whether a Veteran spent a day receiving adult day
health care. Per diem will be paid for a day of adult day health care.
For purposes of this section a day of adult day health care means:
(1) Six hours or more in one calendar day in which a veteran
receives adult day health care; or
(2) Any two periods of at least 3 hours each but less than 6 hours
each in any 2 calendar days in the same calendar month in which the
veteran receives adult day health care.
(3) Time during which the State home provides transportation
between the veteran's residence and the State home or to a health care
visit, or provides staff to accompany a veteran during transportation
or a health care visit, will be included as time the veteran receives
adult day health care.
0
10. Revise Sec. 51.42 to read as follows:
Sec. 51.42 Payment procedures.
(a) Forms required--(1) Forms required at time of admission or
enrollment. As a condition for receiving payment of per diem under this
part, the State home must submit the forms identified in paragraphs
(a)(1)(i) and (ii) of this section to the VA medical center of
jurisdiction for each veteran at the time of the veteran's admission to
or enrollment in a State home. If the home is not a recognized State
home, the home must, after recognition, submit forms for Veterans who
received care on and after the date of the completion of the VA survey
that provided the basis for determining that the home met the standards
of this part. The State home must also submit the appropriate form with
any request for a change in the type of per diem paid on behalf of a
veteran as a result of a change in the veteran's program of care or a
change in the veteran's service-connected disability rating that makes
the veteran's care eligible for payment under Sec. 51.41. Copies of VA
Forms can be obtained from any VA Medical Center and are available on
our website at www.va.gov/vaforms. The required forms are:
(i) A completed VA Form 10-10EZ, Application for Medical Benefits
(or VA Form 10-10EZR, Health Benefits Renewal Form, if a completed Form
10-10EZ is already on file at VA).
Note 1 to paragraph (a)(1)(i): Domiciliary applicants and
residents must complete the financial disclosure sections of VA
Forms 10-10EZ and 10-10EZR, and adult day health care applicants may
be required to complete the financial disclosure sections of these
forms in order to enroll with VA. Although the nursing home
applicants or residents or adult day health care participants do not
complete the financial disclosure sections of VA Forms 10-10EZ and
10-10EZR, an unsigned form is incomplete, and VA will not accept the
form.
(ii) A completed VA Form 10-10SH, State Home Program Application
for Care--Medical Certification.
(2) Form required for monthly payments. Except as provided in
paragraphs (b)(1) and (2) of this section, VA pays per diem on a
monthly basis for care provided during the prior month. To receive
payment, the State must submit each month to the VA a completed VA Form
10-5588, State Home Report and Statement of Federal Aid Claimed.
(b) Commencement of payments--(1) Per diem payments for a newly-
recognized State home. No per diem payments will be made until VA
recognizes the home and each veteran resident for whom VA pays per diem
is verified as being eligible; however, per diem payments will be made
retroactively for care that was provided on and after the date of the
completion of the VA survey that provided the basis for determining
that the home met the standards of this part.
(2) Per diem payments for capacity certified under Sec. 51.30(c).
Per diem will be paid for the care of veterans in capacity certified in
accordance with Sec. 51.30(c) retroactive to the date of the
completion of the survey if the Director certifies the capacity as a
result of that survey.
(3) Payments for eligible veterans. When a State home admits or
enrolls an eligible veteran, VA will pay per diem under this part from
the date of receipt of the completed forms required by this section,
except that VA will pay per diem from the date care began if the
Director receives the completed forms no later than 10 calendar days
after care began. VA will make retroactive payments of per diem under
paragraphs (b)(1) and (2) of this section only if the Director receives
the completed forms that must be submitted under this section.
(The Office of Management and Budget has approved the information
collection requirements in this section under control numbers 2900-
0091 and 2900-0160.)
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11. Revise Sec. 51.43 to read as follows:
Sec. 51.43 Drugs and medicines for certain veterans.
(a) In addition to the per diem payments under Sec. 51.40 of this
part, the
[[Page 61275]]
Secretary will furnish drugs and medicines to a State home as may be
ordered by prescription of a duly licensed physician as specific
therapy in the treatment of illness or injury for a veteran receiving
nursing home care in a State home if--
(1) The veteran:
(i) Has a singular or combined rating of less than 50 percent based
on one or more service-connected disabilities and needs the drugs and
medicines for a service-connected disability; and
(ii) Needs nursing home care for reasons that do not include care
for a VA adjudicated service-connected disability; or
(2) The veteran:
(i) Has a singular or combined rating of 50 or 60 percent based on
one or more service-connected disabilities and needs the drugs and
medicines; and
(ii) Needs nursing home care for reasons that do not include care
for a VA adjudicated service-connected disability.
(b) VA will also furnish drugs and medicines to a State home for a
veteran receiving nursing home, domiciliary, or adult day health care
in a State home pursuant to 38 U.S.C. 1712(d), as implemented by Sec.
17.96 of this chapter, subject to the limitation in Sec. 51.41(c)(2).
(c) VA may furnish a drug or medicine under paragraph (a) of this
section and under Sec. 17.96 of this chapter only if the drug or
medicine is included on VA's National Formulary, unless VA determines a
non-Formulary drug or medicine is medically necessary.
(d) VA may furnish a drug or medicine under this section and under
Sec. 17.96 of this chapter by having the drug or medicine delivered to
the State home in which the veteran resides by mail or other means and
packaged in a form that is mutually acceptable to the State home and to
VA set forth in a written agreement.
(e) As a condition for receiving drugs or medicine under this
section or under Sec. 17.96 of this chapter, the State must submit to
the VA medical center of jurisdiction a completed VA Form 10-0460 with
the corresponding prescription(s) for each eligible veteran.
(The Office of Management and Budget has approved the information
collection requirements in this section under control number 2900-
0160.)
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12. Revise Sec. 51.50 to read as follows:
Sec. 51.50 Eligible veterans--nursing home care.
A veteran is an eligible veteran for the purposes of payment of per
diem for nursing home care under this part if VA determines that the
veteran needs nursing home care; is not barred from receiving care
based on his or her service (see 38 U.S.C. 5303, 5303A), is not barred
from receiving VA pension, compensation or dependency and indemnity
compensation based on the character of a discharge from military
service (see 38 CFR 3.12) and is within one of the following
categories:
(a) Veterans with service-connected disabilities;
(b) Veterans who are former prisoners of war, who were awarded the
Purple Heart, or who were awarded the medal of honor under 10 U.S.C.
3741, 6241, or 8741 or 14 U.S.C. 491;
(c) Veterans who were discharged or released from active military
service for a disability incurred or aggravated in the line of duty;
(d) Veterans who receive disability compensation under 38 U.S.C.
1151;
(e) Veterans whose entitlement to disability compensation is
suspended because of the receipt of retired pay;
(f) Veterans whose entitlement to disability compensation is
suspended pursuant to 38 U.S.C. 1151, but only to the extent that such
veterans' continuing eligibility for nursing home care is provided for
in the judgment or settlement described in 38 U.S.C. 1151;
(g) Veterans who VA determines are unable to defray the expenses of
necessary care as specified under 38 U.S.C. 1722(a);
(h) Veterans solely seeking care for a disorder associated with
exposure to a toxic substance or radiation, for a disorder associated
with service in the Southwest Asia theater of operations during the
Persian Gulf War, as provided in 38 U.S.C. 1710(e), or for any illness
associated with service in combat in a war after the Gulf War or during
a period of hostility after November 11, 1998, as provided and limited
in 38 U.S.C. 1710(e);
(i) Veterans who agree to pay to the United States the applicable
co-payment determined under 38 U.S.C. 1710(f) and 1710(g).
Note 1 to paragraph (i): Neither enrollment in the VA healthcare
system nor eligibility to enroll is required to be an eligible
veteran for the purposes of payment of per diem for nursing home
care.
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13. Add Sec. 51.51 to read as follows:
Sec. 51.51 Eligible veterans--domiciliary care.
(a) A veteran is an eligible veteran for the purposes of payment of
per diem for domiciliary care in a State home under this part if VA
determines that the veteran is not barred from receiving care based on
his or her service (see 38 U.S.C. 5303, 5303A), is not barred from
receiving VA pension, compensation or dependency and indemnity
compensation based on the character of a discharge from military
service (see 38 CFR 3.12), and the veteran is:
(1) A veteran whose annual income does not exceed the maximum
annual rate of pension payable to a veteran in need of regular aid and
attendance; or
(2) A veteran who VA determines has no adequate means of support.
The phrase ``no adequate means of support'' refers to an applicant for
domiciliary care whose annual income exceeds the rate of pension
described in paragraph (a)(1) of this section, but who is able to
demonstrate to competent VA medical authority, on the basis of
objective evidence, that deficits in health or functional status render
the applicant incapable of pursuing substantially gainful employment,
as determined by the Chief of Staff of the VA medical center of
jurisdiction, and who is otherwise without the means to provide
adequately for himself or herself, or be provided for in the community.
(b) For purposes of this section, the eligible veteran must be able
to perform the following:
(1) Daily ablutions, such as brushing teeth, bathing, combing hair,
and body eliminations, without assistance.
(2) Dress himself or herself with a minimum of assistance.
(3) Proceed to and return from the dining hall without aid.
(4) Feed himself or herself.
(5) Secure medical attention on an ambulatory basis or by use of a
personally propelled wheelchair.
(6) Have voluntary control over body eliminations or have control
by use of an appropriate prosthesis.
(7) Participate in some measure, however slight, in work
assignments that support the maintenance and operation of the State
home.
(8) Make rational and competent decisions as to his or her desire
to remain in or leave the State home.
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14. Add Sec. 51.52 to read as follows:
Sec. 51.52 Eligible veterans--adult day health care.
A veteran is an eligible veteran for payment of per diem to a State
for adult day health care if VA determines that the veteran:
(a) Is not barred from receiving VA pension, compensation or
dependency and indemnity compensation based on the character of a
discharge from military service (see 38 CFR 3.12);
(b) Is enrolled in the VA health care system;
(c) Would otherwise require nursing home care; and
(d) Needs adult day health care because the veteran meets any one
of the following conditions:
[[Page 61276]]
(1) The veteran has three or more Activities of Daily Living (ADL)
dependencies.
(2) The veteran has significant cognitive impairment.
(3) The veteran has two ADL dependencies and two or more of the
following conditions:
(i) Seventy-five years old or older;
(ii) High use of medical services, i.e., three or more
hospitalizations per calendar year, or 12 or more visits to an
outpatient clinic or to an emergency evaluation unit per calendar year;
(iii) Diagnosis of clinical depression; or
(iv) Living alone in the community.
(4) The veteran does not meet the criteria in paragraph (d)(1),
(2), or (3) of this section, but nevertheless a licensed VA medical
practitioner determines the veteran needs adult day health care
services.
(Authority: 38 U.S.C. 501, 1720(f), 1741-1743)
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15. Add Sec. 51.58 to read as follows:
Sec. 51.58 Requirements and Standards applicable for payment of per
diem.
A State home must meet the requirements in subpart C and the
standards in the applicable subpart to be recognized, certified, and
receive per diem for that program of care:
(a) For nursing home care, subpart D.
(b) For domiciliary care, subpart E.
(c) For adult day health care, subpart F.
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16. Revise Sec. 51.59 to read as follows:
Sec. 51.59 Authority to continue payment of per diem when veterans
are relocated due to emergency.
(a) Definition of emergency. For the purposes of this section,
emergency means an occasion or instance where all of the following are
true:
(1) It would be unsafe for veterans receiving care at a State home
to remain in that home.
(2) The State is not, or believes that it will not be, able to
provide care in the State home on a temporary or long-term basis for
any or all of its veteran residents due to a situation involving the
State home, and not due to a situation where a particular veteran's
medical condition requires that the veteran be transferred to another
facility, such as for a period of hospitalization.
(3) The State determines that the veterans must be evacuated to
another facility or facilities.
(b) General authority to pay per diem during a relocation period.
Notwithstanding any other provision of this part, VA will continue to
pay per diem for a period not to exceed 30 calendar days for any
eligible veteran who resided in a State home, and for whom VA was
paying per diem, if such veteran is evacuated during an emergency into
a facility other than a VA nursing home, hospital, domiciliary, or
other VA site of care if the State is responsible for providing or
paying for the care. VA will not pay per diem under this section for
more than 30 calendar days of care provided in the evacuation facility,
unless the official who approved the emergency response under paragraph
(e) of this section determines that it is not reasonably possible to
return the veteran to a State home within the 30-calendar-day period,
in which case such official will approve additional period(s) of no
more than 30 calendar days in accordance with this section. VA will not
pay per diem if VA determines that a veteran is or has been placed in a
facility that does not meet the standards set forth in paragraph (c)(1)
of this section, and VA may recover all per diem paid for the care of
the veteran in that facility.
(c) Selection of evacuation facilities. The following standards and
procedures in paragraphs (c)(1) through (3) apply to the selection of
an evacuation facility in order for VA to continue to pay per diem
during an emergency. These standards and procedures also apply to
evacuation facilities when veterans are evacuated from a nursing home
in which care is being provided pursuant to a contract under 38 U.S.C.
1720.
(1) Each veteran who is evacuated must be placed in a facility
that, at a minimum, will meet the needs for food, shelter, toileting,
and essential medical care of that veteran.
(2) For veterans evacuated from nursing homes, the following types
of facilities may meet the standards under paragraph (c)(1) of this
section:
(i) VA Community Living Centers;
(ii) VA contract nursing homes;
(iii) Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services certified
facilities; and
(iv) Licensed nursing homes.
Note 1 to paragraph (c)(2): If none of the above options are
available, veterans may be evacuated temporarily to other facilities
that meet the standards under paragraph (c)(1) of this section.
(3) For veterans evacuated from domiciliaries, the following types
of facilities may meet the standards in paragraph (c)(1) of this
section:
(i) Emergency evacuation facilities identified by the city or
State;
(ii) Assisted living facilities; and
(iii) Hotels.
(d) Applicability to adult day health care programs of care.
Notwithstanding any other provision of this part, VA will continue to
pay per diem for a period not to exceed 30 calendar days for any
eligible veteran who was receiving adult day health care, and for whom
VA was paying per diem, if the adult day health care facility becomes
temporarily unavailable due to an emergency. Approval of a temporary
program of care for such veteran is subject to paragraph (e) of this
section. If after 30 calendar days the veteran cannot return to the
adult day health care program in the State home, VA will discontinue
per diem payments unless the official who approved the emergency
response under paragraph (e) of this section determines that it is not
reasonably possible to provide care in the State home or to relocate an
eligible veteran to a different recognized or certified facility, in
which case such official will approve additional period(s) of no more
than 30 calendar days at the temporary program of care in accordance
with this section. VA will not pay per diem if VA determines that a
veteran was provided adult day health care in a facility that does not
meet the standards set forth in paragraph (c)(1) of this section, and
VA may recover all per diem paid for the care of the veteran in that
facility.
(e) Approval of response. Per diem payments will not be made under
this section unless and until the Director of the VA medical center of
jurisdiction or the director of the VISN in which the State home is
located (if the VAMC Director is not capable of doing so) determines,
that an emergency exists and that the evacuation facility meets VA
standards set forth in paragraph (c)(1) of this section.
0
17. Revise the heading of subpart D to read as follows:
Subpart D--Standards applicable to the payment of per diem for
nursing home care.
* * * * *
Sec. 51.120 [Amended]
0
18. Amend Sec. 51.120 in paragraph (a)(3) by removing ``Chief
Consultant, Office of Geriatrics and Extended Care (114)'' and adding
in its place ``Office of Geriatrics and Extended Care in VA Central
Office''.
Sec. 51.140 [Amended]
0
19. Amend Sec. 51.140:
0
a. In paragraph (a)(2), by removing ``American Dietetic Association''
and adding in its place ``Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics''; and
0
b. In paragraph (d)(4), by removing ``who refuse food served''.
0
20. Amend Sec. 51.210:
[[Page 61277]]
0
a. In paragraph (b) introductory text, by removing ``Chief Consultant,
Office of Geriatrics and Extended Care (114)'' and adding in its place
``Office of Geriatrics and Extended Care''; and
0
b. Revising paragraph (b)(2), redesignating paragraph (b)(3) as (b)(4)
and revising it, and adding new paragraph (b)(3) and paragraph (h)(3).
The revision and additions read as follows:
Sec. 51.210 Administration.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(2) The State home administrator;
(3) The director of nursing services (or other individual in charge
of nursing services); and
(4) The State employee responsible for oversight of the State home
if a contractor operates the State home.
* * * * *
(h) * * *
(3) If a veteran requires health care that the State home is not
required to provide under this part, the State home may assist the
veteran in obtaining that care from sources outside the State home,
including the Veterans Health Administration. If VA is contacted about
providing such care, VA will determine the best option for obtaining
the needed services and will notify the veteran or the authorized
representative of the veteran.
* * * * *
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21. Add subpart E, consisting of Sec. Sec. 51.300 through 51.390, to
read as follows:
Subpart E--Standards Applicable to the Payment of Per Diem for
Domiciliary Care
Sec.
51.300 Resident rights and behavior; State home practices; quality
of life.
51.310 Resident admission, assessment, care plan, and discharge.
51.320 Quality of care.
51.330 Nursing care.
51.340 Physician and other licensed medical practitioner services.
51.350 Provision of certain specialized services and environmental
requirements.
51.390 Administration.
Subpart E--Standards Applicable to the Payment of Per Diem for
Domiciliary Care
Sec. 51.300 Resident rights and behavior; State home practices;
quality of life.
The State home must protect and promote the rights and quality of
life of each resident receiving domiciliary care, and otherwise comply
with the requirements in Sec. 51.70, except Sec. 51.70(b)(9), (h)(1),
and (m); Sec. 51.80, except Sec. 51.80(a)(2) and (4) and (b); Sec.
51.90; and Sec. 51.100, except Sec. 51.100(g)(2), (h), and (i)(5)
through (7). The State Home must have a written procedure for
admissions, discharges, and transfers. For purposes of this section,
the terms ``nursing home'' and ``nursing facility'' or ``facility'' in
the applicable provisions of the cited sections apply to a domiciliary.
(a) Notice of rights and services--notification of changes. (1)
Facility management must immediately inform the resident and consult
with the primary care physician when there is
(i) An accident involving the resident that results in injury and
has the potential for requiring physician intervention;
(ii) A significant change in the resident's physical, mental, or
psychosocial status (i.e., a deterioration in health, mental, or
psychosocial status in either life-threatening conditions or clinical
complications);
(iii) A need to alter treatment significantly (i.e., a need to
discontinue an existing form of treatment due to adverse consequences,
or to commence a new form of treatment); or
(iv) A decision to transfer or discharge the resident from the
facility as specified in paragraph (d) of this section.
(2) The facility management must also promptly notify the resident
when there is
(i) A change in room or roommate assignment as specified in Sec.
51.100(f)(2); or
(ii) A change in resident rights under Federal or State law or
regulations as specified in Sec. 51.70(b)(1).
(3) The facility management must record and periodically update the
address and phone number of the resident's legal representative or
interested family member, but the resident has the right to decide
whether to have the State home notify his or her legal representative
or interested family member of changes.
(b) Work. The resident must participate, based on his or her
ability, in some measure, however slight, in work assignments that
support the maintenance and operation of the State home. The State Home
management must create a written policy to implement the work
requirement. The resident is encouraged to participate in vocational
and employment services, which are essential to meeting the
psychosocial needs of the resident. The resident must perform work for
the facility after the State home has accomplished the following:
(1) The facility has documented the resident's need or desire to
work in the comprehensive care plan;
(2) The comprehensive care plan described in Sec. 51.310 specifies
the nature of the work performed and whether the work is unpaid or
paid;
(3) Compensation for work for which the facility would pay a
prevailing wage if done by non-residents is paid at or above prevailing
wages for similar work in the area where the facility is located; and
(4) The facility consulted with and the resident agrees to the work
arrangement described in the comprehensive care plan.
(c) Married couples. The resident has the right, if space is
available within the existing facility, to share a room with his or her
spouse when married residents live in the same facility and both
spouses consent to the arrangement. If the State home determines
existing space is not available to allow married residents to share
rooms, the State home will make accommodations for the privacy of
married residents.
(d) Transfer and discharge--(1) Definition: Transfer and discharge
includes movement of a resident to a bed outside of the facility
whether that bed is in the same physical plant or not. Transfer and
discharge does not refer to movement of a resident to a bed within the
same facility.
(2) Transfer and discharge requirements. The facility management
must permit each resident to remain in the facility, and not transfer
or discharge the resident from the facility unless
(i) The transfer or discharge is necessary for the resident's
welfare, including because the domiciliary resident's health has
improved sufficiently so the resident no longer needs the services
provided by the domiciliary;
(ii) The resident is in need of a higher level of long term or
acute care;
(iii) The safety of individuals in the facility is endangered;
(iv) The health of individuals in the facility would otherwise be
endangered;
(v) The resident has failed, after reasonable and appropriate
notice, to pay for a stay at the facility;
(vi) The domiciliary ceases to operate; or
(vii) The resident ceases to meet any of the eligibility criteria
of Sec. 51.51.
(3) Documentation. When the facility transfers or discharges a
resident under any of the circumstances specified in paragraphs
(a)(2)(i) through (vii) of this section, the primary care physician
must document the transfer and circumstances in the resident's clinical
record.
[[Page 61278]]
(4) Notice before transfer. Before a facility transfers or
discharges a resident, the facility must
(i) Notify the resident of the transfer or discharge and the
reasons for the move in writing and in a language and manner he or she
understands. The resident has the right to decide whether to have the
State home notify his or her legal representative or interested family
member of changes.
(ii) Record the reasons in the resident's clinical record; and
(iii) Include in the notice the items described in paragraph (d)(6)
of this section.
(5) Timing of the notice. (i) The notice of transfer or discharge
required by paragraph (d)(4) of this section must be made by the
facility at least 30 calendar days before the resident is transferred
or discharged, except when specified in paragraph (d)(5)(ii) of this
section,
(ii) Notice may be made as soon as practicable before transfer or
discharge when
(A) The safety of individuals in the facility would be endangered;
(B) The health of individuals in the facility would be otherwise
endangered;
(C) The resident's health improves sufficiently so the resident no
longer needs the services provided by the domiciliary; or
(D) The resident's needs cannot be met in the domiciliary.
(6) Contents of the notice. The written notice specified in
paragraph (d)(4) of this section must include the following:
(i) The reason for transfer or discharge;
(ii) The effective date of transfer or discharge;
(iii) The location to which the resident is transferred or
discharged;
(iv) A statement that the resident has the right to appeal the
action to the State official designated by the State; and
(v) The name, address and telephone number of the State long term
care ombudsman.
(7) Orientation for transfer or discharge. The facility management
must provide sufficient preparation and orientation to residents to
ensure safe and orderly transfer or discharge from the facility.
(e) Notice of bed-hold policy and readmission--notice before
transfer. The State home must have a written bed-hold policy, including
criteria for return to the facility. The facility management must
provide written information to the resident about the State home bed-
hold policy upon enrollment, annually thereafter, and before a State
home transfers a resident to a hospital. A Resident has the right to
decide whether to have the State home notify his or her legal
representative or interested family member of transfers.
(f) Resident activities. (1) The facility management must provide
for an ongoing program of activities designed to meet, in accordance
with the comprehensive assessment, the interests and the physical,
mental, and psychosocial well-being of each resident.
(2) The activities program must be directed by a qualified
coordinator.
(g) Social services. (1) The State home must provide social work
services to meet the social and emotional needs of residents to attain
or maintain the highest practicable mental and psychosocial well-being
of each resident.
(2) The State home must have a sufficient number of social workers
to meet residents' needs.
(3) The State home must have a written policy on how it determines
qualifications of social workers. It is highly recommended, but not
required, that a qualified social worker is an individual with
(i) A bachelor's degree in social work from a school accredited by
the Council of Social Work Education (Note: A master's degree social
worker with experience in long-term care is preferred), and
(ii) A social work license from the State in which the State home
is located, if offered by the State, and
(iii) A minimum of one year of supervised social work experience in
a health care setting working directly with individuals.
(4) The facility management must have sufficient support staff to
meet patients' social services needs.
(5) Facilities for social services must ensure privacy for
interviews.
(h) Environment. The facility management must provide
(1) A safe, clean, comfortable, and homelike environment, allowing
the resident to use his or her personal belongings to the extent
possible;
(2) Housekeeping and maintenance services necessary to maintain a
sanitary, orderly, and comfortable interior;
(3) Clean bed and bath linens that are in good condition; and
(4) Private closet space in each resident's room, as specified in
Sec. 51.200(d)(2)(iv).
(The Office of Management and Budget has approved the information
collection requirements in this section under control number 2900-
0160.)
Sec. 51.310 Resident admission, assessment, care plan, and discharge.
The State home must conduct accurate, written, medical and
comprehensive assessments of each resident's medical and functional
capacity upon admission, annually, and as required by a change in the
resident's condition. The comprehensive assessment will use information
from the medical assessment, and both assessments will inform the
comprehensive care plan. The State home must have a written policy to
determine how to coordinate and complete the comprehensive assessment
process, including how it will review, and revise the comprehensive
assessment in implementing the comprehensive care plan. The State home
must review comprehensive assessments annually, and promptly after
every significant change in the resident's physical, mental, or social
condition.
(a) Admission orders and medical assessment. At the time each
resident is admitted, the State home must have physician orders for the
resident's immediate care. A medical assessment, including a medical
history and physical examination, must be performed by a physician, or
other health care provider qualified under State law, and recorded in
the medical record no later than 7 calendar days after admission,
unless one was performed no earlier than 5 calendar days before
admission and the findings were recorded in the medical record. The
medical assessment will be part of the comprehensive assessment.
(b) Comprehensive assessments. (1) The state home must complete a
comprehensive assessment of each resident no later than 14 calendar
days after admission, annually, and as required by a change in the
resident's condition.
(2) Each comprehensive assessment must be conducted or coordinated
by a registered nurse with the participation of appropriate healthcare
professionals, including at least one physician, the registered nurse,
and one social worker. The registered nurse must sign and certify the
assessment. The comprehensive assessment is to determine the care,
treatment, and services that will meet the resident's initial and
continuing needs. It is an objective evaluation of a resident's health
and functional status, describing the resident's capabilities and
impairments in performing activities of daily living, strengths, and
needs. The assessment gathers information through collection of data,
observation, and examination.
[[Page 61279]]
(c) Comprehensive care plans. (1) The State home must develop a
comprehensive care plan for each resident based on the comprehensive
assessment, and develop, review, and revise the comprehensive care plan
following each comprehensive assessment. The comprehensive care plan
must include measurable objectives and timetables to address a
resident's emotional, behavioral, social, and physical needs, with
emphasis on assisting each patient to achieve and maintain an optimal
level of self-care and independence. The comprehensive care plan must
describe the following, as appropriate to the resident's circumstances:
(i) The services that are to be furnished to support the resident's
highest practicable emotional, behavioral, social rehabilitation, and
physical well-being;
(ii) The specific work the resident agrees to do to share in the
maintenance and operation of the State home upon consultation with the
interdisciplinary team, and whether that work is paid or unpaid; and
(iii) Any services that would otherwise be required under Sec.
51.350 but are not provided due to the resident's exercise of rights
under Sec. 51.70, including the right in Sec. 51.70(b)(4) to refuse
treatment.
(2) A comprehensive care plan must be:
(i) Developed no later than 21 calendar days after admission; and
(ii) Prepared by an interdisciplinary team of health professionals
that may include the primary care physician or a Licensed Independent
Practitioner (or designated Physician's Assistant or Nurse
Practitioner), a social worker, and a registered nurse who have
responsibility for the resident, and other staff in appropriate
disciplines as determined by the resident's needs, and, to the extent
practicable, the participation of the resident and the resident's
family (subject to the consent of the resident) or the resident's legal
representative, if appropriate;
(iii) Reviewed periodically and revised consistent with the most
recent comprehensive assessment by a team of qualified persons no less
often than semi-annually; and
(iv) Revised promptly after a comprehensive assessment reveals a
significant change in the resident's condition.
(3) The services provided by the facility must
(i) Meet professional standards of quality; and
(ii) Be provided by qualified persons in accordance with each
resident's written comprehensive care plan.
(d) Discharge summary. (1) Prior to discharging a resident, the
State home must prepare a discharge summary that includes
(i) A summary of the resident's stay, the resident's status at the
time of the discharge, and the resident's progress on the comprehensive
care plan in paragraph (b)(2) of this section; and
(ii) A post-discharge comprehensive care plan that is developed
with the participation of the resident.
(2) A resident has the right to decide if he or she would like to
involve his or her legal representative or interested family member in
development of a post-discharge plan.
(The Office of Management and Budget has approved the information
collection requirements in this section under control number 2900-
0160.)
Sec. 51.320 Quality of care.
The State home must provide each resident with the care described
in this subpart in accordance with the assessment and comprehensive
care plan.
(a) Reporting of sentinel events. (1) A sentinel event is an
adverse event that results in the loss of life or limb or permanent
loss of function.
(2) Examples of sentinel events are as follows:
(i) Any resident death, paralysis, coma or other major permanent
loss of function associated with a medication error;
(ii) Any suicide of a resident;
(iii) Assault, homicide or other crime resulting in resident death
or major permanent loss of function; or
(iv) A resident fall that results in death or major permanent loss
of function as a direct result of the injuries sustained in the fall.
(3) The State home must report sentinel events to the Director no
later than 24 hours after identification. The VA medical center of
jurisdiction must report sentinel events by notifying the VA Network
Director (10N1-10N22) and the Director, Office of Geriatrics and
Extended Care--Operations (10NC4) no later than 24 hours after
notification.
(4) The State home must establish a mechanism to review and analyze
a sentinel event resulting in a written report to be submitted to the
VA Medical Center of jurisdiction no later than 10 working days
following the event. The purpose of the review and analysis of a
sentinel event is to prevent injuries to residents, visitors, and
personnel, and to manage those injuries that do occur and to minimize
the negative consequences to the injured individuals and the State
home.
(b) Activities of daily living. Based on the comprehensive
assessment of a resident, the State home must ensure that a resident's
abilities in activities of daily living do not diminish unless
circumstances of the individual's clinical condition demonstrate that
diminution was unavoidable, and the resident is given appropriate
treatment and services to maintain or improve his activities of daily
living. This includes the resident's ability to:
(1) Bathe, dress, and groom;
(2) Transfer and ambulate;
(3) Toilet;
(4) Eat; and
(5) Talk or otherwise communicate.
(c) Vision and hearing. To ensure that residents receive proper
treatment and assistive devices to maintain vision and hearing, the
State home must, if necessary, assist the resident:
(1) In making appointments; and
(2) By arranging for transportation to and from the office of a
practitioner specializing in the treatment of vision or hearing
impairment or the office of a professional specializing in the
provision of vision or hearing assistive devices.
(d) Mental and psychosocial functioning. Based on the comprehensive
assessment of a resident, the State home must assist a resident who
displays mental or psychosocial adjustment difficulty obtain
appropriate treatment and services to correct the assessed problem.
(e) Accidents. The State home must ensure that:
(1) The resident environment remains as free of accident hazards as
possible; and
(2) Each resident receives adequate supervision and assistive
devices to prevent accidents.
(f) Nutrition. The State home must follow Sec. 51.120(j) regarding
nutrition in providing domiciliary care.
(g) Special needs. The State home must provide residents with the
following services, if needed:
(1) Injections;
(2) Colostomy, ureterostomy, or ileostomy care;
(3) Respiratory care;
(4) Foot care; and
(5) Non-customized or non-individualized prosthetic devices.
(h) Unnecessary drugs. The State home must ensure that the
standards set forth in Sec. 51.120(m) regarding unnecessary drugs are
followed in providing domiciliary care.
(i) Medication errors. The State home must ensure that the
standards set forth in Sec. 51.120(n) regarding medication
[[Page 61280]]
errors are followed in providing domiciliary care.
(The Office of Management and Budget has approved the
information collection requirements in this section under control
number 2900-0160.)
Sec. 51.330 Nursing care.
The State home must provide an organized nursing service with a
sufficient number of qualified nursing personnel to meet the total
nursing care needs of all residents within the facility, 24 hours a
day, 7 days a week, as determined by their comprehensive assessments
and their comprehensive care plans. The nursing service must be under
the direction of a full-time registered nurse who is currently licensed
by the State and has, in writing, administrative authority,
responsibility, and accountability for the functions, activities, and
training of the nursing service's staff.
Sec. 51.340 Physician and other licensed medical practitioner
services.
The State home must provide its residents the primary care
necessary to enable them to attain or maintain the highest practicable
physical, mental, and psychosocial well-being. When a resident needs
care other than the State home is required to provide under this
subpart, the State home is responsible to assist the resident to obtain
that care. The State home must ensure that a physician personally
approves in writing a recommendation that an individual be admitted to
a domiciliary. Each resident must remain at all times under the care of
a licensed medical practitioner assigned by the State home. The name of
the practitioner will be listed in the resident's medical record. The
State home must ensure that all of the following conditions in
paragraphs (a) through (e) of this section are met:
(a) Supervision of medical practitioners. Any licensed medical
practitioner who is not a physician may provide medical care to a
resident within the practitioner's scope of practice without physician
supervision when permitted by State law.
(b) Availability of medical practitioners. If the resident's
assigned licensed medical practitioner is unavailable, another licensed
medical practitioner must be available to provide care for that
resident.
(c) Visits. The primary care physician or other licensed medical
practitioner, for each visit required by paragraph (d) of this section,
must
(1) Review the resident's total program of care, including
medications and treatments;
(2) Write, sign, and date progress notes; and
(3) Sign and date all orders.
(d) Frequency of visits. The primary care physician or other
licensed medical practitioner must conduct an in-person medical
assessment of the resident at least once a calendar year, or more
frequently based on the resident's condition.
(e) Availability of emergency care. The State home must assist
residents in obtaining emergency care.
Sec. 51.350 Provision of certain specialized services and
environmental requirements.
The State home domiciliary care programs must comply with the
requirements of Sec. 51.140, except Sec. 51.140(f)(2) through (4)
concerning dietary services; Sec. 51.170 concerning dental services;
Sec. 51.180, except Sec. 51.180(c) concerning pharmacy services;
Sec. 51.190 concerning infection control; and Sec. 51.200, except
Sec. 51.200(a), (b), (d)(1)(ii) through (x), (f), and (h)(3)
concerning the physical environment. For purposes of this section, the
references to ``facility'' in the cited sections also refer to a
domiciliary.
(a) Dietary services. (1) There must be no more than 14 hours
between a substantial evening meal and the availability of breakfast
the following day, except as provided in (a)(3) of this section.
(2) The facility staff must offer snacks at bedtime daily.
(3) Sixteen hours may elapse between a substantial evening meal and
breakfast the following day when a nourishing snack is offered at
bedtime.
(b) Pharmacy services. (1) The drug regimen of each resident must
be reviewed at least once every six months by a licensed pharmacist.
(2) The pharmacist must report any irregularities to the primary
care physician and the director of nursing, and these reports must be
acted upon.
(c) Life safety from fire. The facility must meet the applicable
requirements of the National Fire Protection Association's NFPA 101,
Life Safety Code, as incorporated by reference in Sec. 51.200.
(d) Privacy. The facility must provide the means for visual privacy
for each resident.
(The Office of Management and Budget has approved the information
collection requirements in this section under control number 2900-
0160.)
Sec. 51.390 Administration.
The State home must follow Sec. 51.210 regarding administration in
providing domiciliary care. For purposes of this section, the
references in the cited section to nursing home and nursing home care
refer to a domiciliary and domiciliary care.
(The Office of Management and Budget has approved the information
collection requirements in this section under control number 2900-
0160.)
0
22. Add subpart F, consisting of Sec. Sec. 51.400 through 51.480, to
read as follows:
Subpart F--Standards Applicable to the Payment of per Diem for Adult
Day Health Care
Sec.
51.400 Participant rights.
51.405 Participant and family caregiver responsibilities.
51.410 Transfer and discharge.
51.411 Program practices.
51.415 Restraints, abuse, and staff treatment of participants.
51.420 Quality of life.
51.425 Physician orders and participant medical assessment.
51.430 Quality of care.
51.435 Nursing services.
51.440 Dietary services.
51.445 Physician services.
51.450 Specialized rehabilitative services.
51.455 Dental services.
51.460 Administration of drugs.
51.465 Infection control.
51.470 Physical environment.
51.475 Administration.
51.480 Transportation.
Subpart F--Standards Applicable to the Payment of per Diem for
Adult Day Health Care
Sec. 51.400 Participant rights.
The State home must protect and promote the rights of a participant
in an adult day health care program, including the rights set forth in
Sec. 51.70, except for the right set forth in Sec. 51.70(m). For
purposes of this section, the references to resident in the cited
section also refer to a participant in this section.
(The Office of Management and Budget has approved the information
collection requirements in this section under control number 2900-
0160.)
Sec. 51.405 Participant and family caregiver responsibilities.
The State home must post a written statement of participant and
family caregiver responsibilities in a place where participants in the
adult day health care program and their families will see it and must
provide a copy to the participant and caregiver at or before the time
of the intake screening. The statement of responsibilities must include
the following:
(a) Treat personnel with respect and courtesy;
(b) Communicate with staff to develop a relationship of trust;
[[Page 61281]]
(c) Make appropriate choices and seek appropriate care;
(d) Ask questions and confirm your understanding of instructions;
(e) Share opinions, concerns, and complaints with the program
director;
(f) Communicate any changes in the participant's condition;
(g) Communicate to the program director about medications and
remedies used by the participant;
(h) Let the program director know if the participant decides not to
follow any instructions or treatment; and
(i) Communicate with the adult day health care staff if the
participant is unable to attend adult day health care.
(The Office of Management and Budget has approved the information
collection requirements in this section under control number 2900-
0160.)
Sec. 51.410 Transfer and discharge.
(a) Definition. For purposes of this section, the term ``transfer
or discharge'' includes movement of a participant to a program outside
of the adult day health care program whether or not the program of care
is in the same facility.
(b) Transfer and discharge requirements. At the time of intake
screening, the State home must discuss the possible reasons for
transfer or discharge with the participant and, to the extent
practicable and appropriate, with family members (subject to the
consent of the participant) or the participant's legal representatives.
In the case of a transfer and discharge to a hospital, the transfer and
discharge must be to the hospital closest to the adult day health care
facility that can provide the necessary care. The State home must
permit each participant to remain in the program of care, and not
transfer or discharge the participant from the program of care unless:
(1) The transfer and discharge is necessary for the participant's
welfare and the participant's needs cannot be met in the adult day
health care setting;
(2) The transfer and discharge is appropriate because the
participant's health has improved sufficiently so that the participant
no longer needs the services provided in the adult day health care
program;
(3) The safety of individuals in the facility is endangered;
(4) The health of individuals in the facility would otherwise be
endangered;
(5) The participant has failed, after reasonable and appropriate
notice, to pay for participation in the adult day health care program;
or
(6) The adult day health care program ceases to operate.
(c) Notice before transfer or discharge. Before an adult day health
care program undertakes the transfer or discharge of a participant, the
State home must:
(1) Notify the resident of the transfer or discharge and the
reasons for the move in writing and in a language and manner he or she
understands. The resident has the right to decide whether to have the
State home notify his or her legal representative or interested family
member of changes;
(2) Record the reasons in the participant's clinical record; and
(3) Include in the notice the items described in paragraph (e) of
this section.
(d) Timing of the notice. (1) The notice of transfer or discharge
required under paragraph (c) of this section must be made by the State
home at least 30 calendar days before the participant is given a
transfer or discharge, except when specified in paragraph (d)(2) of
this section.
(2) Notice may be made as soon as practicable before a transfer or
discharge when
(i) The safety of individuals in the facility would be endangered;
(ii) The health of individuals in the facility would be otherwise
endangered;
(iii) The participant's health improves sufficiently that the
participant no longer needs the services provided by the adult day
health care program of care; or
(iv) The participant's needs cannot be met in the adult day health
care program of care.
(e) Contents of the notice. The written notice specified in
paragraph (c) of this section must include the following:
(1) The reason for the transfer or discharge;
(2) The effective date of the transfer or discharge;
(3) The location to which the participant is taken in accordance
with the transfer or discharge, if any;
(4) A statement that the participant has the right to appeal the
action to the State official responsible for the oversight of State
home programs; and
(5) The name, address and telephone number of the first listed of
the following that exists in the State:
(i) The State long-term care ombudsman, if the long-term care
ombudsman serves adult day health care facilities; or
(ii) Any State ombudsman or advocate who serves adult day health
care participants; or
(iii) The State agency responsible for oversight of State adult day
care facilities.
(f) Orientation for transfer and discharge. The State home must
provide sufficient preparation and orientation to participants to
ensure safe and orderly transfer or discharge from the State home.
(g) Written policy. The State home must have in effect written
transfer and discharge procedures that reasonably ensure that:
(1) Participants will be given a transfer or discharge from the
adult day health care program to the hospital when transfer or
discharge is medically appropriate as determined by a physician; and
(2) Medical and other information needed for care and treatment of
participants will be exchanged between the facility and the hospital.
(The Office of Management and Budget has approved the information
collection requirements in this section under control number 2900-
0160.)
Sec. 51.411 Program practices.
(a) Equal access to quality care. The State home must establish and
maintain identical policies and practices regarding transfer and
discharge under Sec. 51.410 and the provision of services for all
participants regardless of the source of payment.
(b) Admission policy. The State home must not require a third-party
guarantee of payment as a condition of admission or expedited
admission, or continued admission in the program of care. However, the
State home may require a participant or an individual who has legal
access to a participant's income or resources to pay for the care from
the participant's income or resources, when available.
(c) Hours of operation. Each adult day health care program must
provide at least 8 hours of operation 5 days a week. The hours of
operation must be flexible and responsive to caregiver needs.
Sec. 51.415 Restraints, abuse, and staff treatment of participants.
The State home must meet the requirements regarding the use of
restraints, abuse, and other matters concerning staff treatment of
participants set forth in Sec. 51.90. For purposes of this section,
the references in the cited section to resident refer to a participant
in this section.
(The Office of Management and Budget has approved the information
collection requirements in this section under control number 2900-
0160.)
Sec. 51.420 Quality of life.
The State home must provide an environment that supports the
quality of life of each participant by maximizing the participant's
potential strengths and skills. (a) Dignity. The State home must
promote care for participants in a manner and in an environment that
[[Page 61282]]
maintains or enhances each participant's dignity and respect in full
recognition of his or her individuality.
(b) Self-determination and participation. The State home must
ensure that the participant has the right to:
(1) Choose activities, schedules, and health care consistent with
his or her interests, assessments, and plans of care;
(2) Interact with members of the community both inside and outside
the facility; and
(3) Make choices about aspects of his or her life in the facility
that are significant to the participant.
(c) Participant and family concerns. The State home must document
any concerns submitted to the management of the program by participants
or their family members.
(1) A participant's family has the right to meet with families of
other participants in the program.
(2) Staff or visitors may attend meetings of participant or family
groups at the group's invitation.
(3) The State home must respond to written requests that result
from group meetings.
(4) The State home must listen to the views of any participant or
family group and act upon the concerns of participants and families
regarding policy and operational decisions affecting participant care
in the program.
(d) Participation in other activities. The State home must ensure
that a participant has the right to participate in social, religious,
and community activities that do not interfere with the rights of other
participants in the program.
(e) Therapeutic participant activities. (1) The State home must
provide for an ongoing program of activities designed to meet, in
accordance with the comprehensive assessment, the interests and the
physical, mental, and psychosocial well-being of each participant.
(2) The activities program must be directed by a qualified
professional who is a qualified therapeutic recreation specialist or an
activities professional who:
(i) Is licensed, if applicable, by the State in which practicing;
and
(ii) Is certified as a therapeutic recreation specialist or an
activities professional by a recognized certifying body.
(3) A critical role of adult day health care is to build
relationships and create a culture that supports, involves, and
validates the participant. Therapeutic activity refers to that
supportive culture and is a significant aspect of the individualized
comprehensive care plan. A participant's activity includes everything
the individual experiences during the day, not just arranged events. As
part of effective therapeutic activity, the adult day health care
program must:
(i) Provide direction and support for participants, including
breaking down activities into small, discrete steps or behaviors, if
needed by a participant;
(ii) Have alternative programming available for any participant
unable or unwilling to take part in group activity;
(iii) Design activities that promote personal growth and enhance
the self-image and/or improve or maintain the functioning level of
participants to the extent possible;
(iv) Provide opportunities for a variety of involvements (social,
intellectual, cultural, economic, emotional, physical, and spiritual)
at different levels, including community activities and events;
(v) Emphasize participants' strengths and abilities rather than
impairments, and contribute to participants' feelings of competence and
accomplishment; and
(vi) Provide opportunities to voluntarily perform services for
community groups and organizations.
(f) Social services. (1) The State home must provide medically-
related social services to participants and their families.
(2) An adult day health care program must provide a qualified
social worker to furnish social services.
(3) A qualified social worker is an individual with:
(i) A bachelor's degree in social work from a school accredited by
the Council of Social Work Education (Note: A master's degree in social
worker with experience in long-term care is preferred);
(ii) A social work license from the State in which the State home
is located, if that license is offered by the State; and
(iii) A minimum of one year of supervised social work experience in
a health care setting working directly with individuals.
(4) The State home must have sufficient social workers and support
staff to meet participant and family social service needs. The adult
day health care program must:
(i) Provide counseling to participants and to families/caregivers;
(ii) Facilitate the participant's adaptation to the adult day
health care program and active involvement in the comprehensive care
plan, if appropriate;
(iii) Arrange for services not provided by adult day health care,
and work with these resources to coordinate services;
(iv) Serve as an advocate for participants by asserting and
safeguarding the human and civil rights of the participants;
(v) Assess signs of mental illness or dementia and make appropriate
referrals;
(vi) Provide information and referral for persons not appropriate
for adult day health care;
(vii) Provide family conferences, and serve as liaison between
participant, family/caregiver and program staff;
(viii) Provide individual or group counseling and support to
caregivers and participants;
(ix) Conduct support groups or facilitate participant or family/
caregiver participation in support groups;
(x) Assist program staff in adapting to changes in participants'
behavior; and
(xi) Provide or arrange for individual, group, or family
psychotherapy for participants with significant psychosocial needs.
(5) Space for social services must be adequate to ensure privacy
for interviews.
(g) Environment. The State home must provide:
(1) A safe, clean, comfortable, and homelike environment, and
support the participants' ability to function as independently as
possible and to engage in program activities;
(2) Housekeeping and maintenance services necessary to maintain a
sanitary, orderly, and comfortable interior;
(3) Private storage space for each participant sufficient for a
change of clothes. Upon request of the participant, the State home must
offer storage space that can be secured with a lock;
(4) Interior signs to facilitate participants' ability to move
about the facility independently and safely;
(5) A clean bed or reclining chair available for acute illness;
(6) A shower for participants;
(7) Adequate and comfortable lighting levels in all areas;
(8) Comfortable and safe temperature levels; and
(9) Comfortable sound levels.
(The Office of Management and Budget has approved the information
collection requirements in this section under control number 2900-
0160.)
Sec. 51.425 Physician orders and participant medical assessment.
The State home must have a written policy to determine how to
coordinate and complete the written initial and comprehensive
assessment processes upon admission, annually, and as required by a
change in the participant's condition. The State home must also
[[Page 61283]]
outline in its policy how it will complete, implement, review, and
revise the assessments.
(a) Admission. At the time each participant is admitted, the State
home must have physician orders for the participant's immediate care.
An initial medical assessment including a medical history and physical
examination with documentation of tuberculosis screening must be
completed by a physician or other health care provider qualified under
State law no earlier than 30 calendar days before admission and no
later than 7 calendar days after admission. The findings must be
recorded in the participant's medical record.
(b) Comprehensive assessments. The State home must complete the
comprehensive assessment no later than 14 calendar days after
admission. The State home must develop a comprehensive care plan for
each participant based on his or her comprehensive assessment. The
State home must review comprehensive assessments annually, as well as
promptly after every significant change in the participant's physical,
mental, or social condition. The State home must immediately change the
participant's comprehensive care plan after a significant change is
identified. At minimum, the written comprehensive assessment must
address the following:
(1) Ability to ambulate,
(2) Ability to use bathroom facilities,
(3) Ability to eat and swallow,
(4) Ability to hear,
(5) Ability to see,
(6) Ability to experience feeling and movement,
(7) Ability to communicate,
(8) Risk of wandering,
(9) Risk of elopement,
(10) Risk of suicide,
(11) Risk of deficiencies regarding social interactions, and
(12) Special needs (such as medication, diet, nutrition, hydration,
or prosthetics).
(c) Coordination of assessments. (1) Each initial and subsequent
comprehensive assessment must be conducted and coordinated with the
participation of appropriate health professionals.
(2) Each person who completes a portion of an assessment must sign
and certify the accuracy of that portion of the assessment.
(3) The results of the assessments must be used to develop, review,
and revise the participant's individualized comprehensive care plan.
(d) Comprehensive care plans. (1) The State home must ensure that
each participant has a comprehensive care plan no later than 21
calendar days after admission. A participant's comprehensive care plan
must be individualized and must include measurable objectives and
timetables to meet all physical, mental, and psychosocial needs
identified in the most recent assessment. The comprehensive care plan
must describe the following:
(i) The services that are to be provided as part of the program of
care and by other sources to attain or maintain the participant's
highest physical, mental, and psychosocial well-being as required under
Sec. 51.430;
(ii) Any services that would otherwise be required under Sec.
51.430 but are not provided due to the participant's exercise of rights
under Sec. 51.70, including the right to refuse treatment under Sec.
51.70(b)(4);
(iii) Type and scope of interventions to be provided in order to
reach desired, realistic outcomes;
(iv) Roles of participant and family/caregiver; and
(v) Discharge or transition plan, including specific criteria for
discharge or transfer.
(2) The services provided or arranged by the State home must
(i) Meet professional standards of quality; and
(ii) Be provided by qualified persons in accordance with each
participant's comprehensive care plan.
(e) Discharge summary. Prior to discharging a participant, the
State home must prepare a discharge summary that includes the
following:
(1) A summary of the participant's care;
(2) A summary of the participant's status at the time of the
discharge to include items in paragraph (b) of this section; and
(3) A discharge/transition plan related to changes in service needs
and changes in functional status that prompted transition to another
program of care.
(The Office of Management and Budget has approved the information
collection requirements in this section under control number 2900-
0160.)
Sec. 51.430 Quality of care.
Each participant must receive, and the State home must provide, the
necessary care and services to attain or maintain the highest
practicable physical, mental, and psychosocial well-being, in
accordance with the comprehensive assessment and comprehensive care
plan.
(a) Reporting of sentinel events--(1) Definition. A ``sentinel
event'' is defined in Sec. 51.120(a)(1).
(2) Duty to report sentinel events. The State home must comply with
the duties to report sentinel events as set forth in Sec.
51.120(a)(3), except that the duty to report applies only to a sentinel
event that occurs while the participant is under the care of the State
home, including while in State home-provided transportation.
(3) Review and prevention of sentinel events. The State home must
establish a mechanism to review and analyze a sentinel event resulting
in a written report to be submitted to the VA Medical Center of
jurisdiction no later than 10 working days after the event. The purpose
of the review and analysis of a sentinel event is to prevent future
injuries to participants, visitors, and personnel.
(b) Activities of daily living. Based on the comprehensive
assessment of a participant, the State home must ensure that:
(1) No diminution in activities of daily living. A participant's
abilities in activities of daily living do not diminish unless the
circumstances of the individual's clinical condition demonstrate that
diminution was unavoidable. This includes the participant's ability to
(i) Bathe, dress, and groom;
(ii) Transfer and ambulate;
(iii) Toilet; and
(iv) Eat.
(2) Appropriate treatment and services given. A participant is
given the appropriate treatment and services to maintain or improve his
or her abilities specified in paragraph (b)(1) of this section.
(3) Necessary services provided to participant unable to carry out
activities of daily living. A participant who is unable to carry out
activities of daily living receives the necessary services to maintain
good nutrition, hydration, grooming, personal and oral hygiene,
mobility, and bladder and bowel elimination.
(c) Mental and psychosocial functioning. The State home must make
counseling and related psychosocial services available for improving
mental and psychosocial functioning of participants with mental or
psychosocial needs. The services available must include counseling and
psychosocial services provided by licensed independent mental health
professionals.
(d) Medication errors. The State home must comply with Sec.
51.120(n) with respect to medication errors.
(The Office of Management and Budget has approved the information
collection requirements in this section under control number 2900-
0160.)
[[Page 61284]]
Sec. 51.435 Nursing services.
The State home must provide an organized nursing service with a
sufficient number of qualified nursing personnel to meet the total
nursing care needs, as determined by participant assessments and
individualized comprehensive care plans, of all participants in the
program.
(a) There must be at least one registered nurse on duty each day of
operation of the adult day health care program. This nurse must be
currently licensed by the State and must have, in writing,
administrative authority, responsibility, and accountability for the
functions, activities, and training of the nursing and program
assistants.
(b) The number and level of nursing staff is determined by the
authorized capacity of participants and the nursing care needs of the
participants.
(c) Nurse staffing must be adequate for meeting the standards of
this part.
Sec. 51.440 Dietary services.
The State home must comply with the requirements concerning the
dietary services set forth in Sec. 51.140, except paragraph 51.140(f).
For purposes of this section, the references in the cited section to
resident refer to a participant in subpart F of this part. The State
home adult day health care program will provide nourishment to
participants on the following schedule:
(a) At regular times comparable to normal mealtimes in the
community, each participant may receive and program management must
provide at least two meals daily for those veterans staying more than
four hours and at least one meal for those staying less than four
hours.
(b) The program management must offer snacks and fluids as
appropriate to meet the participants' nutritional and fluid needs.
Sec. 51.445 Physician services.
As a condition of enrollment in adult day health care program, a
participant must have a written physician order for admission. Each
participant's medical record must contain the name of the participant's
primary care physician. If a participant's medical needs require that
the participant be placed in an adult day health care program that
offers medical supervision, the primary care physician must state so in
the order for admission. Each participant must remain under the care of
a physician.
(a) Physician supervision. If the adult day health care program
offers medical supervision, the program management must ensure that
(1) The medical care of each participant is supervised by a primary
care physician; and
(2) Another physician is available to supervise the medical care of
participants when their primary care physician is unavailable.
(b) Frequency of physician reviews. If the adult day health care
program offers medical supervision:
(1) The participant must be seen by the primary care physician at
least annually and as indicated by a change of condition.
(2) The program management must have a policy to help ensure that
adequate medical services are provided to the participant.
(3) At the option of the primary care physician, required reviews
in the program after the initial review may alternate between personal
physician reviews and reviews by a physician assistant, nurse
practitioner, or clinical nurse specialist in accordance with paragraph
(e) of this section.
(c) Availability of acute care. If the adult day health care
program offers medical supervision, the program management must provide
or arrange for the provision of acute care when it is indicated.
(d) Availability of physicians for emergency care. In case of an
emergency, the program management must ensure that participants are
able to obtain necessary emergency care.
(e) Physician delegation of tasks. (1) A primary care physician may
delegate tasks to
(i) A certified physician assistant or a certified nurse
practitioner, or
(ii) A clinical nurse specialist who-
(A) Is acting within the scope of practice as defined by State law;
and
(B) Is under the supervision of the physician.
(2) The primary care physician may not delegate a task when the
provisions of this part specify that the primary care physician must
perform it personally, or when the delegation is prohibited under State
law or by the State home's policies.
(The Office of Management and Budget has approved the information
collection requirements in this section under control number 2900-
0160.)
Sec. 51.450 Specialized rehabilitative services.
(a) Provision of services. If specialized rehabilitative services
such as, but not limited to, physical therapy, speech therapy,
occupational therapy, and mental health services for mental illness are
required in the participant's comprehensive care plan, program
management must
(1) Provide the required services; or
(2) Obtain the required services and equipment from an outside
resource, in accordance with Sec. 51.210(h), from a provider of
specialized rehabilitative services.
(b) Written order. Specialized rehabilitative services must be
provided under the written order of a physician by qualified personnel.
Sec. 51.455 Dental services.
(a) If the adult day health care program offers medical
supervision, program management must, if necessary, assist the
participant and family/caregiver
(1) In making dental appointments; and
(2) By arranging for transportation to and from the dental
services.
(b) If the adult day health care program offers medical
supervision, program management must promptly assist and refer
participants with lost or damaged dentures to a dentist.
Sec. 51.460 Administration of drugs.
If the adult day health care program offers medical supervision,
the program management must assist participants with the management of
medication and have a system for disseminating drug information to
participants and program staff in accordance with this section.
(a) Procedures. The State home must
(1) Provide reminders or prompts to participants to initiate and
follow through with self-administration of medications.
(2) Establish a system of records to document the administration of
drugs by participants and/or staff.
(3) Ensure that drugs and biologicals used by participants are
labeled in accordance with currently accepted professional principles,
and include the appropriate accessory and cautionary instructions, and
the expiration dates when applicable.
(4) Store all drugs, biologicals, and controlled schedule II drugs
listed in 21 CFR 1308.12 in locked compartments under proper
temperature controls, permit only authorized personnel to have access,
and otherwise comply with all applicable State and Federal laws.
(b) Service consultation. The State home must provide the services
of a pharmacist licensed in the State in which the program is located
who provides consultation, as needed, on all the provision of drugs.
(The Office of Management and Budget has approved the information
collection requirements in this section under control number 2900-
0160.)
[[Page 61285]]
Sec. 51.465 Infection control.
The State home must meet the requirements concerning infection
control set forth in Sec. 51.190. For purposes of this section, the
references in the cited section to resident refer to a participant in
this section.
Sec. 51.470 Physical environment.
The State home must ensure that the physical environment is
designed, constructed, equipped, and maintained to protect the health
and safety of participants, personnel, and the public.
(a) Life safety from fire. The State home must meet the applicable
requirements of National Fire Protection Association's NFPA 101, Life
Safety from fire, as incorporated by reference in Sec. 51.200.
(b) Space and equipment. (1) The State home must--
(i) Provide sufficient space and equipment in dining, health
services, recreation, and program areas to enable staff to provide
participants with needed services as required by this subpart F and as
identified in each participant's comprehensive care plan; and
(ii) Maintain all essential mechanical, electrical, and patient
care equipment in safe operating condition.
(2) Each adult day health care program, when it is co-located in a
nursing home, domiciliary, or other care facility, must have its own
separate designated space during operational hours.
(3) The indoor space for adult day health care must be at least 100
square feet per participant including office space for staff and must
be 60 square feet per participant excluding office space for staff.
(4) Each program of care will need to design and partition its
space to meet its needs, but the following functional areas must be
available:
(i) A dividable multipurpose room or area for group activities,
including dining, with adequate table-setting space.
(ii) Rehabilitation rooms or an area for individual and group
treatments for occupational therapy, physical therapy, and other
treatment modalities.
(iii) A kitchen area for refrigerated food storage, the preparation
of meals and/or training participants in activities of daily living.
(iv) An examination and/or medication room.
(v) A quiet room (with a bed or a reclining chair), which functions
to separate participants who become ill or disruptive, or who require
rest, privacy, or observation. It should be separate from activity
areas, near a restroom, and supervised.
(vi) Bathing facilities adequate to facilitate bathing of
participants with functional impairments.
(vii) Toilet facilities and bathrooms easily accessible to people
with mobility problems, including participants in wheelchairs. There
must be at least one toilet for every eight participants. The toilets
must be equipped for use by persons with limited mobility, easily
accessible from all programs areas, i.e., preferably within 40 feet
from that area, designed to allow assistance from one or two staff, and
barrier-free.
(viii) Adequate storage space. There should be space to store arts
and crafts materials, wheelchairs, chairs, individual handiwork, and
general supplies. Locked cabinets must be provided for files, records,
supplies, and medications.
(ix) An individual room for counseling and interviewing
participants and family members.
(x) A reception area.
(xi) An outside space that is used for outdoor activities that is
safe, accessible to indoor areas, and accessible to those with a
disability. This space may include recreational space and garden area.
It should be easily supervised by staff.
(c) Furnishings. Furnishings must be available for all
participants. This must include functional furniture appropriate to the
participants' needs. Furnishings must be attractive, comfortable, and
homelike, while being sturdy and safe.
(d) Participant call system. The coordinator's station must be
equipped to receive participant calls through a communication system
from:
(1) Clinic rooms; and
(2) Toilet and bathing facilities.
(e) Other environmental conditions. The State home must provide a
safe, functional, sanitary, and comfortable environment for the
participants, staff and the public. The facility management must
(1) Establish procedures to ensure that water is available to
essential areas if there is a loss of normal water supply;
(2) Have adequate outside ventilation by means of windows, or
mechanical ventilation, or a combination of the two;
(3) Equip corridors, when available, with firmly-secured handrails
on each side; and
(4) Maintain an effective pest control program so that the facility
is free of pests and rodents.
Sec. 51.475 Administration.
For purposes of this section, the references in the cited section
to nursing home and nursing home care refer to adult day health care
programs and adult day health care. The State home must comply with all
administration requirements set forth in Sec. 51.210 except for the
following if the adult day health care program does not offer medical
supervision:
(a) Medical director. State home adult day health care programs are
not required to designate a primary care physician to serve as a
medical director, and therefore are not required to comply with Sec.
51.210(i).
(b) Laboratory services, radiology, and other diagnostic services.
State home adult day health care programs are not required to provide
the medical services identified in Sec. 51.210(m) and (n).
(c) Quality assessment and assurance committee. State home adult
day health care programs are not required to comply with Sec.
51.210(p), regarding quality assessment and assurance committees
consisting of specified medical providers and staff.
(The Office of Management and Budget has approved the information
collection requirements in this section under control number 2900-
0160.)
Sec. 51.480 Transportation.
Transportation of participants to and from the adult day health
care facility must be a component of the overall program of care.
(a)(1) Except as provided in paragraph (a)(2) of this section, the
State home must provide for transportation to enable participants,
including persons with disabilities, to attend the program and to
participate in State home-sponsored outings.
(2) The veteran or the family of a veteran may decline
transportation offered by the adult day health care program and make
their own arrangements for transportation.
(b) The State home must have a transportation policy that includes
procedures for routine and emergency transportation. All transportation
(including that provided under contract) must be in compliance with
such procedures.
(c) The State home must ensure that the transportation it provides
is by drivers who have access to a device for two-way communication.
[[Page 61286]]
(d) All systems and vehicles used by the State home to comply with
this section must meet all applicable local, State and Federal
regulations.
(e) The State home must ensure that the care needs of each
participant are addressed during transportation furnished by the home.
PART 52--[REMOVED]
0
23. Remove part 52, consisting of Sec. Sec. 52.1 through 52.220.
[FR Doc. 2018-25115 Filed 11-27-18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8320-01-P