(a) Facility staff who are not health care
personnel, (the facility administrator, activity staff, clerical staff, laundry
and housekeeping staff, or other), can be used as feeding assistants upon
successful completion of an approved training program.
1. Volunteers and family members may assist
residents with feeding and drinking, without completing an approved training
program. A feeding assistant shall only assist residents to eat or drink who
have no complicated feeding problems and who have no known behaviors at meal
time. If a resident is determined, by the facility, to meet the criteria of
having a feeding assistant, then the facility must specify that the resident
will be assisted by a feeding assistant on the care plan.
(b) Examples of complicated feeding problems
include: difficulty swallowing, recurrent lung aspirations, and tube or
parenteral/IV feedings. Residents with a clinical condition, such as the
conditions listed above, require the employee providing feeding or hydration
services to be a licensed health care professional or certified nurse
aide.
(c) The facility must base
resident selection on the charge nurse's assessment and the resident's latest
assessment and plan of care. A feeding assistant must work under the direct
supervision of a registered nurse or licensed practical nurse in a dining room
or other common area.
(d) The
feeding assistant is not permitted to perform other nursing or nursing-related
duties (for example, measuring or recording output, transferring, and
toileting). In an emergency, a feeding assistant must immediately call a
supervisory nurse on the resident call system, or other appropriate means of
emergency notification.
(e)
Feeding Assistant Definition. Paid feeding assistant means a
person who does not meet the definition of health care personnel and who is
paid by a nursing home, to assist residents who have no feeding complications
with the activities of eating and drinking. The feeding assistant is not
permitted to provide any other nursing or nursing related service. Paid feeding
assistants must be at least 16 years old. A feeding assistant must work under
the direct supervision of a registered nurse or licensed practical nurse in a
dining room or other common area.
1. Nurse
aides who are on the nurse aide abuse registry and who have been disqualified
from working as a nurse aide may not work as a feeding assistant. A feeding
assistant does not include a person who is a:
(i) Licensed health professional or
registered dietitian;
(ii)
Volunteers without money compensation; or families
(iii) Certified nurse aide.
(f)
Feeding
Assistant Training Requirements.(1)
Feeding assistant training programs must require enrolled individuals to
successfully complete an approved training program, which includes the
following federally-mandated topics, covered during 9 hours of classroom
instruction and hands on training.
(i) Feeding
techniques.
(ii) Assistance with
feeding and hydration.
(iii)
Communication and interpersonal skills.
(iv) Appropriate responses to resident
behavior.
(v) Safety and emergency
procedures, including the Heimlich maneuver.
(vi) Infection control.
(vii) Resident rights.
(viii) Recognizing changes in residents that
are inconsistent with their normal behaviors and the importance of reporting
these changes to the supervisory nurse.
(ix) Abuse, neglect and misappropriation of
resident property including reporting requirements.
(x) Dementia.
2. Training must include an experienced staff
member demonstrating the correct way to feed a resident who requires minimal
assistance with feeding, including appropriate cueing, moderate assistance with
feeding, and a resident who requires total assistance with feeding.
3. The feeding assistant training program
must also provide instruction on the following topics:
(i) The resident population who will be
served by the feeding assistant in a facility-based program. The facilitybased
training program curriculum must include training specific to the identified
population type(s). This training must include, but is not limited to:
I. Characteristics of the population, such as
the population member's physical, social and mental health needs, and specific
medications or treatment needed by the residents.
II. Meeting the needs of persons with a dual
diagnosis (co-occurrences of mental health disorders and alcohol and/or drug
dependence or abuse), and maintaining or increasing his or her social
participation.
4. Feeding assistants who have been trained
by another facility's training program, must be trained for the specific needs
of a facility's population.
5.
Programs may choose to add increased training requirements.
6. Training programs must stress the only
direct, hands-on duty a feeding assistant is permitted to perform is assisting
residents to eat or drink who have no complicated feeding problems and who has
no known behaviors at meal time.
7.
Feeding assistant training programs must use a training curriculum, which has
been pre-approved by the department and determined to comply with the federal
requirements. Entities are allowed to choose one of the following pre-approved,
standardized curriculum models:
Assisting with Nutrition and Hydration in Long-Term Care.
Hartman Publishing Inc. 2004.
Assisted Dining: The Role and Skills of Feeding Assistants.
Walker, Bonnie L and Cole, Claire S. American Health Care Association.
2004.
8. In addition to the
pre-approved, standardized curriculum models facilities must also utilize the
following Dementia Education Training Act Care Series videotapes:
Tape 1 - Understanding Dementia
Tape 2 - Staff Communication
Tape 4 - Feeding Techniques and Nutrition
Tape 5 - Assuring Proper Hydration
Tape 11 - Recognizing Changes in Health Status
Tape 12 - Keeping Dementia Residents Within the Safety of the
Facility
9. Although the
pre-approved standardized training curriculums include additional skill
information (e.g., output, special care needs for resident with dysphagia,
etc.), the instructor must stress the feeding assistant will not be permitted
to perform any other hands-on duty, beyond assisting residents to eat and drink
who have no complicated feeding problems and who have no known behaviors at
meals.
10. An individual may not
provide hands-on assistance with feeding or hydrating residents unless the
individual has successfully completed the following:
(i) A state-approved training program for
feeding assistants, including additional instruction on any selected resident
population.
(ii) After completing
the training course, the individual must pass a State-approved standardized
written quiz with a minimum score of 80 percent. The individual may request the
quiz to be administered orally. Instructors should consider the needs of
persons who have limited English proficiency or reading difficulties
(iii) Successfully completing demonstration
of 1) feeding residents with minimal assistance/moderate assistance with cueing
and total feeding of resident; 2) Heimlich maneuver; and 3) appropriate hand
washing techniques
11.
Programs may choose to add increased testing requirements.
12. Students who do not successfully pass the
initial competency evaluation will be allowed the opportunity to review the
training materials and retake the test a maximum of 2 additional times.
Therefore, the student may only take the test a total of 3 times. The program
must document the failure, opportunity for review, and subsequent retake
testing date.
(h)
Records. Feeding assistants
must receive an annual inservice on relevant feeding assistant topics (any
topic area included in the curriculum is appropriate). In addition, feeding
assistants must be evaluated on a yearly basis to document that skill
performance and feeding competence is satisfactory.
1. Feeding assistant training programs must
maintain the following records:
(i) For a
minimum of 3 years, all students' written examinations, (skills checklists) and
other relevant training records
(ii) Documentation of the training conducted
and identification of the instructor conducting the training.
(iii) Record of all individuals who have
successfully completed the feeding assistant training and competency testing
program.
2. Training
programs must maintain the security of the test materials to ensure disclosure
or forgery does not occur.
3.
Facilities employing feeding assistants must maintain the following records:
(i) Feeding assistants must have in their
personnel file evidence of the following:
I.
Evidence of having successfully completed an approved feeding assistant
training and competency testing program.
II. Evidence of annual inservice sessions(s),
relating to feeding assistant duties.
III. Evidence of an annual evaluation,
determining a feeding assistant's continued competence in feeding
residents.
(ii) Feeding
assistant roster, recording all individuals employed by the facility as feeding
assistants who successfully completed the feeding assistant training and
competency evaluation.
(iii) The
selected resident's medical record, documenting no complicated feeding
condition exists.