Current through Reg. 50, No. 187; September 24, 2024
(1)
GENERAL RESPONSIBILITIES. When food service is provided by the facility, the
administrator, or an individual designated in writing by the administrator,
must be responsible for total food services and the day-to-day supervision of
food services staff. In addition, the following requirements apply:
(a) If the designee is an individual who has
not completed an approved assisted living facility core training course, such
individual must complete the food and nutrition services module of the core
training course before assuming responsibility for the facility's food service.
The designee is not subject to the 1 hour in-service training in safe food
handling practices.
(b) If the
designee is a certified food manager, certified dietary manager, registered or
licensed dietitian, dietetic registered technician, or health department
sanitarian, the designee is exempt from the requirement to complete the food
and nutrition services module of the core training course before assuming
responsibility for the facility's food service as required in paragraph (1)(a)
of this rule.
(c) An administrator
or designee must perform his or her duties in a safe and sanitary
manner.
(d) An administrator or
designee must provide regular meals that meet the nutritional needs of
residents, and therapeutic diets as ordered by the resident's health care
provider for residents who require special diets.
(e) An administrator or designee must comply
with the food service continuing education requirements specified in Rule
59A-36.011,
F.A.C.
(2) DIETARY
STANDARDS.
(a) The meals provided by the
assisted living facility must be planned based on the current USDA Dietary
Guidelines for Americans, 2020-2025, which are incorporated by reference and
available for review at:
http://www.flrules.org/Gateway/reference.asp?No=Ref-04003,
and the current table of Dietary Reference Intakes established by the Food and
Nutrition Board of the Institute of Medicine of the National Academies, 2019,
which are incorporated by reference and available for review at:
https://ods.od.nih.gov/HealthInformation/Dietary_Reference_Intakes.aspx.
Therapeutic diets must meet these nutritional standards to the extent
possible.
(b) The residents'
nutritional needs must be met by offering a variety of meals adapted to the
food habits, preferences, and physical abilities of the residents, and must be
prepared through the use of standardized recipes. For facilities with a
licensed capacity of 16 or fewer residents, standardized recipes are not
required. Unless a resident chooses to eat less, the facility must serve the
standard minimum portions of food according to the Dietary Reference
Intakes.
(c) All regular and
therapeutic menus to be used by the facility must be reviewed annually by a
licensed or registered dietitian, a licensed nutritionist, or a registered
dietetic technician supervised by a licensed or registered dietitian, or a
licensed nutritionist to ensure the meals meet the nutritional standards
established in this rule. The annual review must be documented in the facility
files and include the original signature of the reviewer, registration or
license number, and date reviewed. Portion sizes must be indicated on the menus
or on a separate sheet.
1. Daily food servings
may be divided among three or more meals per day, including snacks, as
necessary to accommodate resident needs and preferences.
2. Menu items may be substituted with items
of comparable nutritional value based on the seasonal availability of fresh
produce or the preferences of the residents.
(d) Menus must be dated and planned at least
1 week in advance for both regular and therapeutic diets. Residents must be
encouraged to participate in menu planning. Planned menus must be conspicuously
posted or easily available to residents. Regular and therapeutic menus as
served, with substitutions noted before or when the meal is served, must be
kept on file in the facility for 6 months.
(e) Therapeutic diets must be prepared and
served as ordered by the health care provider.
1. Facilities that offer residents a variety
of food choices through a select menu, buffet style dining, or family style
dining are not required to document what is eaten unless a health care
provider's order indicates that such monitoring is necessary. However, the food
items that enable residents to comply with the therapeutic diet must be
identified on the menus developed for use in the facility.
2. The facility must document a resident's
refusal to comply with a therapeutic diet and provide notification to the
resident's health care provider of such refusal.
(f) For facilities serving three or more
meals a day, no more than 14 hours must elapse between the end of an evening
meal containing a protein food and the beginning of a morning meal. Intervals
between meals must be evenly distributed throughout the day with not less than
2 hours nor more than 6 hours between the end of one meal and the beginning of
the next. For residents without access to kitchen facilities, snacks must be
offered at least once per day. Snacks are not considered to be meals for the
purposes of calculating the time between meals.
(g) Food must be served attractively at safe
and palatable temperatures. All residents must be encouraged to eat at tables
in the dining areas. A supply of eating ware sufficient for all residents,
including adaptive equipment if needed by any resident, must be on
hand.
(h) A 3-day supply of
nonperishable food, based on the number of weekly meals the facility has
contracted with residents to serve, must be on hand at all times. The quantity
must be based on the resident census and not on licensed capacity. The supply
must consist of foods that can be stored safely without refrigeration. Water
sufficient for drinking and food preparation must also be stored, or the
facility must have a plan for obtaining water in an emergency, with the plan
coordinated with and reviewed by the local disaster preparedness
authority.
(3) FOOD
HYGIENE. Copies of inspection reports issued by the county health department
for the last 2 years pursuant to Rule
64E-12.004, or Chapter 64E-11,
F.A.C., as applicable, depending on the licensed capacity of the assisted
living facility, must be on file in the facility.
(4) CONTRACTED FOOD SERVICE. When food
service is contracted by the facility, the facility must ensure that the
contracted food service meets all dietary standards imposed by this rule and is
adequately protected upon delivery to the facility pursuant to subsection
64E-12.004(4),
F.A.C. The facility must maintain:
(a) A copy
of the current contract between the facility and the food service
contractor.
(b) A copy of the
annually issued certificate or license authorizing the operation of the food
service contractor issued by the applicable regulating agency. The license or
certificate must provide documentation of the food service contractor's
compliance with food service regulatory
requirements.
Rulemaking Authority 429.41 FS. Law Implemented 429.41,
429.52 FS.
New 5-14-81, Amended 1-6-82, 5-19-83, 9-17-84, Formerly
10A-5.20, Amended 10-20-86, 6-21-88, 8-15-90, 9-30-92, Formerly 10A-5.020,
Amended 10-30-95, 6-2-96, 10-17-99, 4-17-14, Formerly
58A-5.020, Amended
10-4-22.