Current through Reg. 50, No. 187; September 24, 2024
(1) Agency Intent. It is the intent of the
Agency to ensure the availability of hospital inpatient substance abuse
services for children, adolescents and adults in need of these services
regardless of their ability to pay. This rule regulates the establishment of
new inpatient substance abuse hospitals, and specifies which services can be
provided by licensed or approved providers of hospital inpatient substance
abuse services.
(2) Definitions.
(a) "Adolescent." A person age 14 through
17.
(b) "Adult." A person age 18
and over.
(c) "Agency." The Agency
for Health Care Administration.
(d)
"Approved Hospital Inpatient Substance Abuse Bed." A proposed hospital
inpatient substance abuse bed for which an exemption, notification, a
certificate of need, a letter of intent to grant a certificate of need, a
signed stipulated agreement, or a final order granting a certificate of need
was issued, consistent with the provisions of paragraph
59C-1.008(2)(b),
F.A.C., as of the most recent published deadline for Agency initial decisions
prior to publication of the fixed need pool, as specified in paragraph
59C-1.008(1)(g),
F.A.C.
(e) "Charity Care." Is
defined the same as in Section
409.911(1),
F.S.
(f) "Child." A person under
the age of 14 years.
(g)
"District." A District of the Agency defined in Section
408.032(5),
F.S.
(h) "Fixed Bed Need Pool." The
numerical hospital inpatient substance abuse bed need for adults for the
applicable planning horizon, as established by the Agency in accordance with
this rule and subsection
59C-1.008(2),
F.A.C.
(i) "General Hospital."
Means any facility which meets the provisions of Section
395.002(12),
F.S.
(j) "Hospital Inpatient
Substance Abuse Bed." A bed designated for the exclusive use of patients
receiving hospital inpatient substance abuse services as defined by this
rule.
(k) "Hospital Inpatient
Substance Abuse Services." Services provided under the direction of a
professional trained and experienced in substance abuse services, including a
psychiatrist, a physician certified by the American Society of Addiction
Medicine, a physician subspecialty certified in Addiction Medicine by the
American Osteopathic Association, a Certified Addictions Professional, a
clinical psychologist, a clinical social worker (as defined in Section
491.003(2),
F.S.) or a certified master social worker (as defined in Section
491.0145, F.S.) to persons whose
sole diagnosis, or in the event of more than one diagnosis, the principal
diagnosis is a substance abuse disorder defined in paragraph (2)(s) of this
rule.
(l) "Planning Horizon." The
projected date by which a proposed hospital inpatient substance abuse service
would be initiated. For purposes of this rule, the planning horizon for
applications submitted between January 1 and June 30 is July of the year 5
years subsequent to the year the application is submitted; the planning horizon
for applications submitted between July 1 and December 31 is January of the
year 5 years subsequent to the year which follows the year the application is
submitted.
(m) "Psychiatric
Disorder." For purposes of this rule, a psychiatric disorder is a mental
illness as defined in Section
394.455(18),
F.S., which requires inpatient hospitalization.
(n) "Separately Organized Unit." A specific
section, ward, wing, or floor with a separate nursing station designated
exclusively for the care of hospital inpatient substance abuse services
patients.
(o) "Specialty Hospital."
A specialty hospital is as defined by subsection
395.002(28),
F.S.
(p) "Substance Abuse." The
misuse or abuse of, or a dependence on alchohol, illicit drugs or prescription
medications which requires inpatient hospitalization. A disorder coded in any
sub-classification of categories 291, 292, 303, 304 or 305 in Axis I or Axis II
consistent with the diagnostic categories defined in the Diagnostic and
Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-III-R), incorporated herein by
reference; or equivalent codes in the following sub-classifications in the
International Classification of Disease (ICD 9), incorporated herein by
reference: category 291, 292, 303, 304 or 305.
(3) General Provisions.
(a) Admissions to Hospital Inpatient
Substance Abuse Services. Admission to facilities with a certificate of need
for hospital inpatient substance abuse services is limited to persons whose
sole diagnosis, or in the event of more than one diagnosis, the principal
diagnosis is a substance abuse disorder as defined in subsection (2).
(b) Service Location. The hospital inpatient
substance abuse services regulated under this rule may be provided in a
hospital licensed as a general hospital or licensed as a specialty
hospital.
(c) Separate Regulation
of Age Categories. The Agency regulates two types of hospital inpatient
substance abuse services, those services which are used for substance abuse
treatment of adults, and those services used for substance abuse treatment of
children and adolescents. Certificate of need applications for the
establishment of hospital inpatient substance abuse services for adults shall
be reviewed separately from certificate of need applications for hospital
inpatient substance abuse services for children and adolescents. A separate
certificate of need shall be issued for each service.
(d) Separately Organized Units. Hospital
inpatient substance abuse services for adults shall be provided in one or more
separately organized units within a general hospital or specialty hospital.
Hospital inpatient substance abuse services for children and adolescents shall
be provided in one or more separately organized units within a general hospital
or specialty hospital.
(e) Minimum
Size of Specialty Hospitals. A specialty hospital providing hospital inpatient
substance abuse services shall have a minimum total capacity of 40 beds, which
may include beds used for hospital inpatient psychiatric services regulated
under Rule 59C-1.040, F.A.C. The separately
organized units for hospital inpatient substance abuse services for adults or
for children and adolescents in specialty hospitals shall meet the minimum size
requirements stated in subsection (5) of this rule.
(f) Conformance with the Criteria for
Approval. A certificate of need for the establishment of new inpatient
substance abuse hospitals shall not normally be approved unless the applicant
meets the applicable review criteria in Section
408.035, F.S., and the standards
and need determination criteria set forth in this rule.
(g) Required Services. Hospital inpatient
substance abuse services whether provided directly by the hospital or under
contract shall include, at a minimum, emergency screening services; treatment
planning services; pharmacology, if appropriate; individual therapy; family
therapy; discharge planning; referral services, including written referral
agreements for educational and vocational services; and occupational and
recreational therapies.
(h)
Excluded Hospitals. Hospitals operated by the State of Florida are not
regulated under this rule pursuant to Sections
408.036(3)(d), (r) and
(s), F.S.
(4) Criteria for Determination of Need.
(a) Bed Need. A favorable need determination
for proposed inpatient substance abuse hospitals for adults shall not normally
be made unless a bed need exists according to the numeric need methodology in
paragraph (4)(c) of this rule.
(b)
Fixed Bed Need Pool. The future need for hospital inpatient substance abuse
services for adults shall be determined twice a year and published by the
Agency as a fixed bed need pool for the applicable planning horizon.
(c) Need Formula for Hospital Inpatient
Substance Abuse Beds for Adults. The net bed need for hospital inpatient
substance abuse beds for adults in each District shall be calculated in
accordance with the following formula:
NNA = ((PDA/PA x PPA) / (365 x .75)) - LBA - ABA
where:
1. NNA equals
the net need for hospital inpatient substance abuse beds for adults in a
district.
2. PDA equals the number
of inpatient days in hospital inpatient substance abuse beds for adults in a
district for the 12-month period ending 6 months prior to the beginning date of
the quarter of the publication of the fixed bed need pool.
3. PA equals the estimated population age 18
or over in the district. For applications submitted between January 1 and June
30, PA is the population estimate for January of the preceding year; for
applications submitted between July 1 and December 31, PA is the population
estimate for July of the preceding year. The population estimate shall be the
most recent estimate published by the Office of the Governor and available to
the Agency at least 6 weeks prior to publication of the fixed bed need
pool.
4. PPA equals the estimated
population age 18 or over in the district for the applicable planning horizon.
The population estimate shall be the most recent estimate published by the
Office of the Governor and available to the Agency at least 6 weeks prior to
publication of the fixed bed need pool.
5. .75 equals the desired average annual
occupancy rate for hospital inpatient substance abuse beds for adults in the
district.
6. LBA equals the
district's number of licensed hospital inpatient substance abuse beds for
adults as of the most recent published deadline for Agency initial decisions
prior to publication of the fixed bed need pool.
7. ABA equals the district's number of
approved hospital inpatient substance abuse beds for adults, as determined
consistent with the provisions of subsection (2) of this
rule.
(d) Need for
Hospital Inpatient Substance Abuse Services for Children and Adolescents. The
need for proposed hospital inpatient substance abuse services for children and
adolescents shall be determined consistent with the following:
1. The Agency shall consider the need for
hospital inpatient substance abuse services for children and adolescents within
the context of licensed or approved hospital inpatient substance abuse services
for children and adolescents and licensed non-hospital residential treatment
programs for children and adolescents with substance abuse disorders. The
applicant for hospital inpatient substance abuse services for children and
adolescents shall provide documentation that the district's licensed
non-hospital residential treatment programs for children and adolescents with
substance abuse disorders do not meet the need for the proposed
service.
2. No additional hospital
inpatient substance abuse beds for children and adolescents shall normally be
approved in a district having one or more facilities with hospital inpatient
substance abuse services for children and adolescents unless the average annual
occupancy rate of all licensed hospital inpatient substance abuse beds for
children and adolescents in the district equaled or exceeded 75 percent during
the 12 month period ending 6 months prior to the application submission
deadline.
(e) Preferences
among competing applicants for hospital inpatient substance abuse services. In
weighing and balancing statutory and rule review criteria, preference will be
given to applicants who:
1. Provide Medicaid
and charity care days as a percentage of their total patient days equal to or
greater than the average percentage of Medicaid and charity care patient days
of total patient days provided by other hospitals in the district, as
determined by the Florida Center for Health Information and Policy Analysis
hospital discharge data for the 12-month period ending six months prior to the
beginning date of the quarter of the publication of the fixed bed need
pool.
2. Propose to serve
Medicaid-eligible persons.
3.
Propose to serve substance-abusing pregnant and post-partum women regardless of
their ability to pay.
4. Propose to
serve individuals without regard to their ability to pay.
(f) Non-Competitive Applicants. The factors
contained in paragraph (4)(e) shall also be considered in the review of a
single non-competitive certificate of need application within the
district.
(5) Unit Size.
A separately organized unit for hospital inpatient substance abuse services for
adults shall have a minimum of 10 beds. A separately organized unit for
hospital inpatient substance abuse services for children and adolescents shall
have a minimum of five beds.
(6)
Access Standard. Hospital inpatient substance abuse services should be
available within a maximum ground travel time of 45 minutes under average
travel conditions for at least 90% percent of the district's total
population.
(7) Quality of Care.
(a) Compliance with Agency Standards.
Hospital Inpatient Substance Abuse Services for Adults or for Children and
Adolescents shall comply with the Agency standards for program licensure
described in Chapter 59A-3, F.A.C. Applicants who include a statement in their
certificate of need application that they will meet applicable Agency licensure
standards are deemed to be in compliance with this provision.
(b) Hospital Inpatient Substance Abuse
Services for Children. Facilities providing Hospital Inpatient Substance Abuse
Services to children must have beds and common areas designated for children
which cannot be used by adults. Adolescents may be treated in the units
designated for children. Adolescents may only be treated in units designated
for adult hospital inpatient substance abuse services if the admitting
physician indicates that such placement is medically indicated, or for reasons
of safety.
(c) Applicants proposing
a new hospital inpatient substance abuse service shall state how they will
comply with the provisions of hospital licensure as defined in Rule
59A-3.066, F.A.C.
(d) Continuity. Providers of hospital
inpatient substance abuse services shall also provide outpatient or referral
services, either directly or through written agreements with community
outpatient substance abuse programs, such as local psychiatrists, other
physicians trained in the treatment of psychiatric or substance abuse
disorders, local psychologists, community mental health programs, or other
local substance abuse outpatient programs.
(e) Screening Program. All facilities
providing hospital inpatient substance abuse services shall have a screening
program to assess the most appropriate treatment for the patient. Patients with
a dual diagnosis of substance abuse, as defined in subsection (2), and a
psychiatric disorder, as defined in subsection (2), shall be evaluated to
determine the types of treatment needed, the appropriate treatment setting,
and, if necessary, the appropriate sequence of treatment for the substance
abuse and psychiatric disorders.
(8) Services Description. An applicant for an
inpatient substance abuse hospital shall provide a detailed program description
in its certificate of need application including:
(a) Age groups to be served.
(b) Specialty programs to be provided (e.g.
alcoholism treatment programs, drug abuse treatment programs).
(c) Proposed staffing, including
qualifications of the clinical director, a description of staffing appropriate
for any specialty program, and a discussion of the training and experience
requirements for all staff who will provide substance abuse services.
(d) Therapeutic approaches to be
used.
(e) Expected sources of
patient referrals.
(f) Expected
average length of stay for the hospital inpatient substance abuse services
discharges by age group.
(g)
Projected number of hospital inpatient substance abuse services patient days by
payer type, including Medicare, Medicaid, private insurance, self-pay and
charity care patient days for the first 2 years of operation after completion
of the proposed project.
(h)
Admission policies of the facility with regard to charity care
patients.
(9) Quarterly
Reports. Facilities providing licensed hospital inpatient substance abuse
services shall report to the Agency or its designee, within 45 days after the
end of each calendar quarter, the number of hospital inpatient substance abuse
services admissions and patient days by age groups (patients under age 18 years
and adults).
Rulemaking Authority 408.034(3), (8), 408.15(8) FS. Law
Implemented 408.035, 408.036(1)(b), (c), 408.039(4)(a)
FS.
New 1-1-77, Amended 11-1-77, 6-5-79, 4-24-80, 2-1-81,
4-1-82, 11-9-82, 2-14-83, 4-7-83, 6-9-83, 6-10-83, 12-12-83, 3-5-84, 5-14-84,
7-16-84, 8-30-84, 10-15-84, 12-25-84, 4-9-85, Formerly 10-5.11, Amended
6-19-86, 11-24-86, 1-25-87, 3-2-87, 3-12-87, 8-11-87, 8-7-88, 8-28-88, 9-12-88,
4-19-89, 10-19-89, 5-30-90, 7-11-90, 8-6-90, 10-10-90, 12-23-90, Formerly
10-5.011(1)(q), 10-5.041, Amended 8-24-93, 2-22-95,
6-23-16.