Current through Reg. 50, No. 187; September 24, 2024
An assisted living facility must provide care and services
appropriate to the needs of residents accepted for admission to the
facility.
(1) SUPERVISION. Facilities
must offer personal supervision as appropriate for each resident, including the
following:
(a) Monitoring of the quantity and
quality of resident diets in accordance with Rule
59A-36.012, F.A.C.
(b) Daily observation by designated staff of
the activities of the resident while on the premises, and awareness of the
general health, safety, and physical and emotional well-being of the
resident.
(c) Maintaining a general
awareness of the resident's whereabouts. The resident may travel independently
in the community.
(d) Contacting
the resident's health care provider and other appropriate party such as the
resident's family, guardian, health care surrogate, or case manager if the
resident exhibits a significant change.
(e) Contacting the resident's family,
guardian, health care surrogate, or case manager if the resident is discharged
or moves out.
(f) Maintaining a
written record, updated as needed, of any significant changes, any illnesses
that resulted in medical attention, changes in the method of medication
administration, or other changes that resulted in the provision of additional
services.
(2) SOCIAL AND
LEISURE ACTIVITIES. Residents shall be encouraged to participate in social,
recreational, educational and other activities within the facility and the
community.
(a) The facility must provide an
ongoing activities program. The program must provide diversified individual and
group activities in keeping with each resident's needs, abilities, and
interests.
(b) The facility must
consult with the residents in selecting, planning, and scheduling activities.
The facility must demonstrate residents' participation through one or more of
the following methods: resident meetings, committees, a resident council, a
monitored suggestion box, group discussions, questionnaires, or any other form
of communication appropriate to the size of the facility.
(c) Scheduled activities must be available at
least 6 days a week for a total of not less than 12 hours per week. Watching
television is not an activity for the purpose of meeting the 12 hours per week
of scheduled activities unless the television program is a special one-time
event of special interest to residents of the facility. A facility whose
residents choose to attend day programs conducted at adult day care centers,
senior centers, mental health centers, or other day programs may count those
attendance hours towards the required 12 hours per week of scheduled
activities. An activities calendar must be posted in common areas where
residents normally congregate.
(d)
If residents assist in planning a special activity such as an outing, seasonal
festivity, or an excursion, up to 3 hours may be counted toward the required
activity time.
(3)
ARRANGEMENT FOR HEALTH CARE. In order to facilitate resident access to health
care as needed, the facility must:
(a) Assist
residents in making appointments and remind residents about scheduled
appointments for medical, dental, nursing, or mental health services.
(b) Provide transportation to needed medical,
dental, nursing or mental health services, or arrange for transportation
through family and friends, volunteers, taxi cabs, public buses, and agencies
providing transportation.
(c) The
facility may not require residents to receive services from a particular health
care provider.
(4)
ACTIVITIES OF DAILY LIVING. Facilities must offer supervision of or assistance
with activities of daily living as needed by each resident. Residents should be
encouraged to be as independent as possible in performing activities of daily
living.
(5) RESIDENT RIGHTS AND
FACILITY PROCEDURES.
(a) A copy of the
Resident Bill of Rights as described in Section
429.28, F.S., or a summary
provided by the Long-Term Care Ombudsman Program must be posted in full view in
a freely accessible resident area, and included in the admission package
provided pursuant to Rule
59A-36.006, F.A.C.
(b) In accordance with Section
429.28, F.S., the facility must
have a written grievance procedure for receiving and responding to resident
complaints and a written procedure to allow residents to recommend changes to
facility policies and procedures. The facility must be able to demonstrate that
such procedure is implemented upon receipt of a complaint.
(c) The telephone number for lodging
complaints against a facility or facility staff must be posted in full view in
a common area accessible to all residents. The telephone numbers are: the
Long-Term Care Ombudsman Program, 1(888)831-0404; Disability Rights Florida,
1(800)342-0823; the Agency Consumer Hotline 1(888)419-3456, and the statewide
toll-free telephone number of the Florida Abuse Hotline, 1(800)96-ABUSE or
1(800)962-2873. The telephone numbers must be posted in close proximity to a
telephone accessible by residents and the text must be a minimum of 14-point
font.
(d) The facility must have a
written statement of its house rules and procedures that must be included in
the admission package provided pursuant to Rule
59A-36.006, F.A.C. The rules and
procedures must at a minimum address the facility's policies regarding:
1. Resident responsibilities;
2. Alcohol and tobacco use;
3. Medication storage;
4. Resident elopement;
5. Reporting resident abuse, neglect, and
exploitation;
6. Administrative and
housekeeping schedules and requirements;
7. Infection control, sanitation, and
standard precautions;
8. The
requirements for coordinating the delivery of services to residents by third
party providers;
9. Assistive
devices; and
10. Physical
restraints.
(e) Residents
may not be required to perform any work in the facility without compensation.
Residents may be required to clean their own sleeping areas or apartments if
the facility rules or the facility contract includes such a requirement. If a
resident is employed by the facility, the resident must be compensated in
compliance with state and federal wage laws.
(f) The facility must provide residents with
convenient access to a telephone to facilitate the resident's right to
unrestricted and private communication, pursuant to Section
429.28(1)(d),
F.S. The facility must allow unidentified telephone calls to residents. For
facilities with a licensed capacity of 17 or more residents in which residents
do not have private telephones, there must be, at a minimum, a readily
accessible telephone on each floor of each building where residents
reside.
(6) THIRD PARTY
SERVICES.
(a) Nothing in this rule chapter is
intended to prohibit a resident or the resident's representative from
independently arranging, contracting, and paying for services provided by a
third party of the resident's choice, including a licensed home health agency
or private nurse, or receiving services through an out-patient clinic, provided
the resident meets the criteria for admission and continued residency and the
resident complies with the facility's policy relating to the delivery of
services in the facility by third parties. The facility's policies must require
the third party to coordinate with the facility regarding the resident's
condition and the services being provided.
(b) When residents require or arrange for
services from a third party provider, the facility administrator or designee
must allow for the receipt of those services, provided that the resident meets
the criteria for admission and continued residency. The facility, when
requested by residents or representatives, must coordinate with the provider to
facilitate the receipt of care and services provided to meet the particular
resident's needs.
(c) The
administrator or designee must ensure that:
1.
Care coordination includes documented communications about the resident's
condition and response to treatment or services ordered by the physician which
may impact the resident's appropriateness for continued residency in the
facility;
2. Communications occur
at least once every 30 days and whenever there is a significant change in the
resident's condition; and
3. If
physician ordered treatments or services occur less often than once a month,
communications must be conducted according to the ordered treatment or service
schedule and whenever there is a significant change in the resident's
condition.
4. When communication
with the third party provider is unsuccessful, at least two attempts at
communication on two separate days must be documented. Documentation must
include the name of the person from the third party provider with whom contact
was attempted, the method of communication, and the date and time of the
attempts. This documentation must be included in the resident's record in
accordance with the timeframes in subparagraphs
59A-36.007(6)(c)
2. and 3.
(d) If
residents accept assistance from the facility in arranging and coordinating
third party services, the facility's assistance does not represent a guarantee
that third party services will be received. If the facility's efforts to make
arrangements for third party services are unsuccessful or declined by
residents, the facility must include documentation in the residents' record
explaining why its efforts were unsuccessful. This documentation will serve to
demonstrate its compliance with this subsection.
(7) ELOPEMENT STANDARDS.
(a) Residents Assessed at Risk for Elopement.
All residents assessed at risk for elopement or with any history of elopement
must be identified so staff can be alerted to their needs for support and
supervision. All residents must be assessed for risk of elopement by a health
care provider or a mental health care provider within 30 calendar days of being
admitted to a facility. If the resident has had a health assessment performed
prior to admission pursuant to paragraph
59A-36.006(2)(a),
F.A.C., this requirement is satisfied. A resident placed in a facility on a
temporary emergency basis by the Department of Children and Families pursuant
to Section 415.105 or
415.1051, F.S., is exempt from
this requirement for up to 30 days.
1. As
part of its resident elopement response policies and procedures, the facility
must make, at a minimum, a daily effort to determine that at risk residents
have identification on their persons that includes their name and the
facility's name, address, and telephone number. Staff trained pursuant to
paragraph 59A-36.011(10)(a) or
(c), F.A.C., must be generally aware of the
location of all residents assessed at high risk for elopement at all
times.
2. The facility must have a
photo identification of at risk residents on file that is accessible to all
facility staff and law enforcement as necessary. The facility's file must
contain the resident's photo identification upon admission or upon being
assessed at risk for elopement subsequent to admission. The photo
identification may be provided by the facility, the resident, or the resident's
representative.
(b)
Facility Resident Elopement Response Policies and Procedures. The facility must
develop detailed written policies and procedures for responding to a resident
elopement. At a minimum, the policies and procedures must provide for:
1. An immediate search of the facility and
premises,
2. The identification of
staff responsible for implementing each part of the elopement response policies
and procedures, including specific duties and responsibilities,
3. The identification of staff responsible
for contacting law enforcement, the resident's family, guardian, health care
surrogate, and case manager if the resident is not located pursuant to
subparagraph (8)(b)1.; and,
4. The
continued care of all residents within the facility in the event of an
elopement.
(c) Facility
Resident Elopement Drills. The facility must conduct and document resident
elopement drills pursuant to Section
429.41(1)(k),
F.S.
(8) PHYSICAL
RESTRAINTS. Residents for whom a physician has prescribed a physical restraint
must have a written care plan for the use of the physical restraint. The care
plan must be developed within 14 days of the device being prescribed, and prior
to use on the resident.
(a) The care plan
must specify:
1. The device prescribed for
use;
2. The maximum amount of time
the resident is to have the restraint applied each day; and,
3. In what manner and frequency staff will
monitor, observe, and report to the physician any injuries, increase in
agitation, signs and symptoms of depression, or decline in mobility or function
related to the use of the prescribed restraint.
(b) Facility staff must ensure that the
device is applied appropriately and safely.
(c) The resident's physician must review the
appropriateness of the continued use of the physical restraint annually, and
documentation of this review must be maintained in the resident's record. If
the resident's ability to independently remove or avoid the device fluctuates,
the device must be considered a physical restraint and all requirements of this
subsection apply.
(9)
ASSISTIVE DEVICES. Facilities are responsible for ensuring the safe usage of a
resident's assistive devices.
(a) The facility
must have policies and procedures that include the requirements and methods for
assessing the physical condition of assistive devices that may injure the
resident and procedures for recommending repair or replacement for the
continuing safety of a resident's assistive device.
(b) Documentation of each assistive device a
resident uses must be included in the resident's record.
(c) Direct care staff using assistive devices
while rendering personal services to residents must know how to operate and
utilize the equipment.
(d) All
assistive devices must be clean, in good repair, and free of hazards.
(e) The facility must encourage and allow the
resident to function with independence when using the assistive
device.
(10) INFECTION
CONTROL PROCEDURES. Facilities must provide services in a manner that reduces
the risk of transmission of infectious diseases.
(a) The facility must implement a hand
hygiene program before and after the provision of personal services to
residents whenever there is an expectation of possible exposure to infectious
materials or bodily fluids. Hand hygiene may include the use of alcohol-based
rubs, antiseptic handwash, or handwashing with soap and water.
(b) Standard precautions must be used when
there is an anticipated exposure to transmissible infectious agents in blood,
body fluids, secretions, excretions, nonintact skin, and mucuous membranes
during the provision of personal services. Standard precautions include: hand
hygiene, and dependent upon the exposure, use of gloves, gown, mask, eye
protection, or a face shield.
(c)
The facility must clean and disinfect reusable medical equipment and communal
assistive devices that have been designed for use by multiple residents before
and after each use according to the manufacturer's
recommendations.
(11)
OTHER STANDARDS. Additional care standards for residents residing in a facility
holding a limited mental health, extended congregate care or limited nursing
services license are provided in Rules
59A-36.020,
59A-36.021 and
59A-36.022, F.A.C.,
respectively.
(12) This rule is in
effect for five years from its effective date.
Rulemaking Authority 429.41 FS. Law Implemented 429.255,
429.26, 429.28, 429.41 FS.
New 9-17-84, Formerly 10A-5.182, Amended 10-20-86, 6-21-88,
8-15-90, 9-30-92, Formerly 10A-5.0182, Amended 10-30-95, 4-20-98, 11-2-98,
10-17-99, 7-30-06, 10-9-06, 4-15-10, 4-17-14, 5-10-18, Formerly
58A-5.0182, Amended
8-16-21.