Arizona Administrative Code
Title 9 - HEALTH SERVICES
Chapter 10 - DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH SERVICES - HEALTH CARE INSTITUTIONS: LICENSING
Article 5 - INTERMEDIATE CARE FACILITIES FOR INDIVIDUALS WITH INTELLECTUAL DISABILITIES
Section R9-10-522 - Food Services
Universal Citation: AZ Admin Code R 9-10-522
Current through Register Vol. 30, No. 38, September 20, 2024
A. An administrator shall ensure that:
1. The
ICF/IID has a license or permit as a food establishment under 9 A.A.C. 8,
Article 1;
2. A copy of the
ICF/IID's food establishment license or permit is maintained;
3. If the ICF/IID contracts with a food
establishment, as established in 9 A.A.C. 8, Article 1, to prepare and deliver
food to the ICF/ IID:
a. A copy of the
contracted food establishment's license or permit under 9 A.A.C. 8, Article 1
is maintained by the ICF/IID; and
b. The ICF/IID is able to store, refrigerate,
and reheat food to meet the dietary needs of a resident;
4. A registered dietitian:
a. Participates as part of an
interdisciplinary team for a resident requiring a modified or special
diet,
b. Reviews a food menu before
the food menu is used to ensure that a resident's nutritional needs are being
met,
c. Documents the review of a
food menu, and
d. Is available for
consultation regarding a resident's nutritional needs; and
5. If a registered dietitian is not employed
full-time, an individual is designated as a director of food services who
consults with a registered dietitian as often as necessary to ensure that the
nutritional needs of a resident are met.
B. A registered dietitian or director of food services shall ensure that:
1. Food is
prepared:
a. Using methods that conserve
nutritional value, flavor, and appearance; and
b. In a form to meet the needs of a resident
such as cut, chopped, ground, pureed, or thickened;
2. A food menu:
a. Is prepared at least one week in
advance,
b. Includes the foods to
be served on each day,
c. Is
conspicuously posted at least one day before the first meal on the food menu
will be served,
d. Includes any
food substitution no later than the morning of the day of meal service with a
food substitution, and
e. Is
maintained for at least 60 calendar days after the last day included in the
food menu;
3. Meals and
snacks for each day are planned and served using the applicable guidelines in
http://www.health.gov/dietaryguide-lines/2015.asp;
4. A resident is provided:
a. A diet that meets the resident's
nutritional needs as specified in the resident's comprehensive assessment and
individual program plan;
b. Food
served in sufficient quantities to meet the resident's nutritional needs and at
an appropriate temperature;
c.
Three meals a day with not more than 14 hours between the evening meal and
breakfast, except as provided in subsection (B)(4)(e);
d. The option to have a daily evening snack
identified in subsection (B)(4)(e)(ii) or other snack; and
e. The option to extend the time span between
the evening meal and breakfast from 14 hours to 16 hours if:
i. A resident group agrees; and
ii. The resident is offered an evening snack
that includes meat, fish, eggs, cheese, or other protein, and a serving from
either the fruit and vegetable food group or the bread and cereal food
group;
5. A
resident is provided with food substitutions of similar nutritional value if:
a. The resident refuses to eat the food
served, or
b. The resident requests
a substitution;
6.
Recommendations and preferences are requested from a resident or the resident's
representative for meal planning;
7. If food is used as a part of a program to
manage a resident's inappropriate behavior:
a.
A special diet is included as part of the resident's individual program plan,
and
b. The special diet is reviewed
and evaluated by a physician and a dietitian to ensure the special diet meets
the resident's nutritional needs;
8. Meals are served to residents at tables in
a dining area and in a manner that allows the resident to eat from an upright
position, unless otherwise specified in the resident's individual program plan
or by an attending physician;
9. A
resident requiring assistance to eat is provided with assistance that
recognizes the resident's nutritional, physical, and social needs, including
the use of adaptive eating equipment or utensils;
10. Personnel members supervise meals in
dining areas to:
a. Direct a resident's
self-help dining procedures,
b.
Ensure a resident consumes enough food to meet the resident's nutritional
needs, and
c. Ensure that a
resident eats in a manner consistent with the resident's developmental
level;
11. Tableware,
utensils, equipment, and food-contact surfaces are clean and in good repair;
and
12. Water is available and
accessible to residents.
Disclaimer: These regulations may not be the most recent version. Arizona may have more current or accurate information. We make no warranties or guarantees about the accuracy, completeness, or adequacy of the information contained on this site or the information linked to on the state site. Please check official sources.
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