Current through Reg. 50, No. 187; September 24, 2024
(1) Purpose. This rule applies to all Florida
Medicaid-certified nursing facilities (NF), regardless of payer source; all
providers rendering NF services to Florida Medicaid recipients; and all
entities that perform a function in the Preadmission Screening and Resident
Review (PASRR) process as specified in this rule.
(2) Definitions.
(a) Hospital Discharge Exemption - Exception
to the Level II evaluation and determination requirement prior to admission to
an NF in accordance with Title 42, Code of Federal Regulations (CFR), section
483.106(b)(2)(i)(A)-(C).
(b)
Intellectual Disability (ID) - As defined in
42 CFR
483.102(b)(3). The diagnosis
of ID includes related conditions, i.e., individuals who have a severe, chronic
disability that meets all of the following conditions:
1. Is attributable to one of the following:
a. Cerebral palsy or epilepsy.
b. Any other condition, (other than mental
illness), found to be closely related to ID because the condition results in
impairment of general intellectual functioning or adaptive behavior similar to
that of persons diagnosed with ID, and requires treatment or services similar
to those required for these persons.
2. Is manifested before the person reaches
the age of 22 years.
3. Is likely
to continue indefinitely.
4.
Results in substantial functional limitations in three or more of the following
areas of major life activity:
a.
Self-care.
b. Understanding and use
of language.
c. Learning.
d. Mobility.
e. Self-direction.
f. Capacity for independent
living.
(c)
Inter-Facility Transfer - The transfer of a resident from one NF to another
NF.
(d) Level I PASRR Screen -
Process to identify diagnosed or suspected ID, serious mental illness (SMI), or
both, based on information gathered by the screener.
(e) Level II Evaluation and Determination -
An in-depth, individualized, assessment of the individual to confirm whether
the applicant to an NF has SMI, ID, or both; to assess the need for NF
services; and evaluate what specialized services, if any, are needed.
(f) New Admission - An individual admitted to
any NF for the first time, who was not readmitted or admitted as an
inter-facility transfer.
(g)
Preadmission Screening and Resident Review - Federal requirement mandated by
42 CFR
483.100-483.138.
(h) Readmission - When an NF resident is
transferred to a hospital and returns to any NF within 90 calendar
days.
(i) Resident Review (RR) - An
evaluation and determination conducted by state-designated authorities when an
NF resident experiences a significant change in his or her physical or mental
status.
(j) Serious Mental Illness
(SMI) - As defined in 42 CFR
483.102(b)(1).
(k) Significant Change - A decline or
improvement in an NF resident's physical or mental status that is anticipated
to require intervention.
(l)
Specialized Services - Services specified by the state, or its designee, that
are not covered in the NF per diem, and are required for appropriate placement
in the NF setting for individuals with ID, SMI, or both.
(3) Level I PASRR Screen.
(a) The Agency for Health Care Administration
(AHCA), or its designee, performs the Level I PASRR screens for all individuals
seeking admission to an NF.
(b) The
Agency for Health Care Administration delegates the following entities to
perform Level I PASRR screens (collectively referred to as the Level I PASRR
screeners):
1. Florida Department of Health
(DOH) for individuals under the age of 21 years. The Department of Health may
not further delegate Level I screening responsibilities.
2. Florida Department of Elder Affairs'
(DOEA) Comprehensive Assessment and Review for Long-Term Care Services (CARES)
program for individuals age 21 years and older. The CARES program may only
delegate the Level I PASRR screen responsibility to hospital and NF staff who
are licensed clinical social workers, physicians, physician assistants,
registered nurses, mental health counselors, psychologists, or persons who hold
a Master's Degree in Social Work.
(c) The Level I PASRR screen must be
completed by the Level I PASRR screener prior to all new admissions to an NF,
and within two business days of the request.
(4) Level II PASRR Evaluation Request.
Upon completion of the Level I PASRR screen, if the
individual has a diagnosis of or suspicion of having an SMI, ID, or
both:
(a) The Level I PASRR screener
must send the individual or their legal representative, as applicable, written
notice stating the individual has a diagnosis of, or is suspected of having, an
SMI, ID, or both, and is being referred for a Level II PASRR
evaluation.
(b) The AHCA-designated
Level I PASRR screener must send all of the following documentation for a Level
II PASRR evaluation to the Agency for Persons with Disabilities (APD), or the
state's contracted vendor, for individuals diagnosed with, or suspected of
having, an ID; or, to the state's contracted Level II PASRR evaluator for
individuals diagnosed with, or suspected of having, an SMI:
1. Completed Preadmission Screening and
Resident Review (PASRR) Level I Screen For Serious Mental Illness (SMI) and/or
Intellectual Disability or Related Conditions (ID) (Level I PASRR Screen), AHCA
MedServ Form 004 Part A, March 2017, incorporated by reference and available on
AHCA's website at
http://ahca.myflorida.com/Medicaid/review/index.shtml,
and at
https://www.flrules.org/Gateway/reference.asp?No=Ref-07931.
2. Informed consent, as documented on the
Level I PASRR Screen, AHCA MedServ Form 004 Part A, March 2017, or the
Preadmission Screening and Resident Review (PASRR) Resident Review (RR) -
Evaluation Request For a Significant Change for Serious Mental Illness (SMI)
and/or Intellectual Disability or Related Conditions (ID) (Resident
Review-Evaluation Request), AHCA MedServ Form 004 Part A1, March 2017,
incorporated by reference and available on AHCA's website at
http://ahca.myflorida.com/Medicaid/review/index.shtml,
and at
https://www.flrules.org/Gateway/reference.asp?No=Ref-07932.
3. AHCA 5000-3008 Form, incorporated by
reference in Rule 59G-1.045, F.A.C.
4. Other medical documentation including
history, most recent physical, relevant case notes or records of treatment and
medication administration records, as applicable.
5. Psychiatric or psychological evaluation,
if available.
6. An assessment
conducted by CARES or the minimum data set (MDS), if applicable, if the
individual is age 21 years and older.
7. An assessment conducted by DOH or the MDS,
if applicable, if the individual is under the age of 21
years.
(5) The
Level I PASRR screener must document the type of provisional admission an
individual is seeking, if applicable, and ensure the individual is referred for
a Level II evaluation and determination in accordance with subsection (6), as
appropriate.
(6) Level II
Evaluation Time Frames.
(a) A Level II
evaluation must be finalized within seven business days of a completed Level II
request if the Level I PASRR screen indicates a diagnosis, or suspicion of,
SMI, ID, or both.
(b) Exceptions to
the timeframe specified in paragraph (6)(a) are as follows:
1. Within seven calendar days after the
delirium clears, in cases of delirium.
2. Within seven calendar days of admission
for emergency admissions requiring protective services.
3. In advance of the expiration of the 14
days, when an individual is admitted to an NF for an in-home caregiver's
respite in accordance with Section
400.172, Florida Statutes
(F.S.), and is expected to remain in the facility for longer than a 14 calendar
day stay, no more than twice in a calendar year.
4. By calendar day 40, when an individual is
admitted to an NF under the hospital discharge exemption, and is expected to
stay in the NF longer than 30 calendar days. In this instance, the NF must
notify the AHCA-designated Level I screener on the 25th day of the individual's
stay if the stay is expected to extend past 30 calendar days.
5. Prior to returning to the NF, when an
individual with SMI, ID, or both, is transferred to the hospital from the NF,
and the hospital stay is longer than 90 consecutive
days.
(7) If
the individual is not admitted to an NF within 30 calendar days of the Level II
evaluation, another Level II evaluation must be completed.
(8) Level II Evaluation Entities and
Components.
(a) The following entities are
responsible for completing the Level II evaluation for applicants to an NF or
residents referred for an RR (collectively known as the Level II evaluator):
1. State-contracted vendor for individuals
diagnosed with, or suspected of having, an SMI.
2. Agency for Persons with Disabilities, or
the state's contracted vendor, for individuals diagnosed with, or suspected of
having, an ID.
(b) All
Level II evaluations must involve the following:
1. Individual being evaluated and the legal
representative, if appropriate.
2.
Individual's family if the individual or the legal representative agrees to
family participation.
(c)
The Level II evaluation may be terminated if the evaluator determines at any
time during the evaluation that the individual:
1. Does not have an SMI or ID.
2. Has a primary diagnosis of
dementia.
3. Has a non-primary
diagnosis of dementia without a primary diagnosis of SMI or
ID.
(9) Level
II Evaluation for Individuals with Diagnosis of, or Suspicion of Having, an
SMI.
(a) A Level II evaluation for
individuals with a diagnosis, or suspicion of having, an SMI must:
1. Confirm or rule out the diagnosis, or
suspicion of, an SMI. A qualified mental health professional must review
accurate and recent data of a comprehensive history and a physical examination,
or perform or ensure performance of the same, including:
a. Complete medical history.
b. Review of all body systems.
c. Specific evaluation of the individual's
neurological system in the areas of motor functioning, sensory functioning,
gait, deep tendon reflexes, cranial nerves, and abnormal reflexes.
d. Additional evaluations conducted by
appropriate specialists, where abnormal findings are the basis for an NF
placement.
e. Comprehensive drug
history including current or immediate past use of medications that could mask
symptoms or mimic SMI.
f.
Psychosocial evaluation of the person, including current living arrangements
and medical and support systems.
g.
Comprehensive psychiatric evaluation including a complete psychiatric history,
evaluation of SMI functioning, memory functioning, and orientation; description
of current attitudes and overt behaviors; affect, suicidal or homicidal
ideation, paranoia; and degree of reality testing (presence and content of
delusions) and hallucinations.
2. Include a functional assessment of the
individual's ability to engage in activities of daily living and the level of
support that would be needed to assist the individual to perform these
activities while living in the community. The assessment must determine whether
this level of support can be provided to the individual in an alternative
community setting or whether the level of support needed is such that an NF
placement is required. The functional assessment must address the individual's
ability to:
a. Self-monitor health
status.
b. Self-administer and
schedule medical treatment (including medication compliance) or both.
c. Self-monitor nutritional status.
d. Handle money.
e. Dress appropriately.
f. Self-groom.
3. Confirm the need for NF services and
recommend specialized services, if applicable.
(b) Specialized services for an SMI diagnosis
are:
1. Services that are utilized to address
an episode of SMI and that are rendered in an NF at levels required to avert or
eliminate the need for inpatient psychiatric care.
2. Developed and supervised by a qualified
mental health professional and include one or all of the following:
a. Psychiatric consultation and
evaluation.
b. Psychotropic
medication management.
c.
Psychological evaluation.
d.
Psychotherapy.
(10) Level II Evaluation for Individuals with
Diagnosis, or Suspicion of Having, an ID.
(a)
A Level II evaluation for individuals diagnosed with, or suspected of having,
an ID must:
1. Confirm or rule out the
diagnosis, or suspicion, of an ID. A licensed psychologist must identify the
intellectual functioning measurement of individuals with an ID.
2. Confirm the need for NF services and
recommend specialized services as necessary by assessing:
a. The individual's medical
problems.
b. The level of impact
these problems have on the individual's independent functioning.
c. All current medications used by the
individual, and the current response of the individual to any prescribed
medications in the following drug groups:
(I)
Hypnotics.
(II) Antipsychotics
(neuroleptics).
(III) Mood
stabilizers and antidepressants.
(IV) Antianxiety-sedative agents.
(V) Anti-Parkinson
agents.
d.
Self-monitoring of health status.
e. Self-administering and scheduling of
medical treatments, including medication compliance.
f. Self-monitoring of nutritional
status.
g. Self-help development
such as toileting, dressing, grooming, and eating.
h. Sensorimotor development such as
ambulation, positioning, transfer skills, gross motor dexterity, visual motor
perception, fine motor dexterity, hand-eye coordination, and extent to which
prosthetic, orthotic, corrective, or mechanical supportive devices can improve
the individual's functional capacity.
i. Speech and language (communication)
development such as expressive language (verbal and nonverbal), receptive
language (verbal and nonverbal), extent to which non-oral communication systems
can improve the individual's functional capacity, auditory functioning, and
extent to which amplification devices (e.g., hearing aid) or a program of
amplification can improve the individual's functional capacity.
j. Social development such as interpersonal
skills, recreation-leisure skills, and relationships with others.
k. Academic or educational development,
including functional learning skills.
l. Instrumental activities of daily
living.
m. Vocational development,
including present vocational skills.
n. Affective development such as ability to
express emotions, make judgments and independent decisions.
o. The presence of identifiable maladaptive
or inappropriate behaviors of the individual based on systematic observation
such as the frequency and intensity of identified maladaptive or inappropriate
behaviors.
(b)
Specialized services for ID are directed toward the acquisition of the
behaviors necessary for the individual to function with as much
self-determination and independence as possible, and toward the prevention or
deceleration of regression or loss of current optimal functional status.
Specialized services for individuals with ID are:
1. Behavior analysis services, pursuant to
Rule 65G-4.009, F.A.C.
2. Training services, to include:
a. Services intended to support the
participation of recipients in daily, meaningful, valued routines of the
community which may include work-like settings that do not meet the definition
of supported employment.
b.
Training in the activities of daily living, self-advocacy, and adaptive and
social skills that are age and culturally appropriate. The service expectation
is to achieve the goals defined by each individual or, if appropriate, the
individual's legal representative. The training, activities, and routine
established by the adult day training program must be meaningful to the
individual and provide an appropriate level of variation and interest in
accordance with a formal implementation plan that is developed under the
direction of the individual or, if appropriate, the individual's legal
representative.
(11) Level II Determination.
(a) The following entities are responsible
for completing the Level II determination:
1.
The Agency for Persons with Disabilities for individuals diagnosed with, or
suspected of having, an ID.
2. The
Department of Children and Families' (DCF) for individuals diagnosed with, or
suspected of having, an SMI.
3. The
Department of Children and Families is the lead agency in coordinating a joint
determination with APD when the individual has a diagnosis of, or suspicion of
having, both an SMI and an ID.
(b) The Level II determination must be issued
in the form of a written summary report that:
1. Confirms or rules out SMI or ID.
2. Identifies the name and professional title
of each person who performed the evaluation(s) and the date on which each
portion of the evaluation was administered.
3. Summarizes the medical and social history,
including the positive traits, developmental strengths and weaknesses, and
developmental or mental health needs of the individual.
4. Identifies whether NF services and
specialized services are needed.
5.
Identifies any specific SMI or ID services the individual requires, including
those of a lesser intensity when specialized services are not
recommended.
6. Identifies
placement options that are available to the individual, including whether the
individual's needs could be met in a community setting, and what services would
be needed for the individual to live in such a setting.
7. Documents the individual and legal
representative, if appropriate, have been educated about all placement options
(including information about the benefits of integrated settings), and that any
concerns or objections raised by the individual or legal representative have
been addressed.
8. Includes the
basis for the summary report's conclusions.
9. Notifies the individual and legal
representative of the right to appeal the determination.
10. Interprets and explains the summary
report to the individual and legal representative.
(c) If the Level II evaluator rules out SMI
or ID, the determination does not have to include the items indicated in
subparagraphs (11)(b)4.-7., of this section.
(d) The Department of Children and Families
or APD must send the completed determination summary with the notice of the
administrative fair hearing process and the individual's rights to:
1. The evaluated individual and his or her
legal representative, as appropriate.
2. The admitting or retaining NF.
3. The individual's attending
physician.
4. The discharging
hospital, if applicable.
5. The
Level I screener appropriate to individual's age.
(12) Resident Review.
(a) The NF must notify CARES or DOH, as
appropriate, when an NF resident who has, or is newly suspected of having, SMI,
ID, or both, experiences a significant change that:
1. Will not normally resolve itself without
intervention by staff or by implementing standard disease-related clinical
interventions (for individuals experiencing a decline in condition).
2. Impacts more than one area of the
resident's health status.
(b) The NF must submit all of the following
documentation:
1. Completed AHCA MedServ Form
004 Part A1, March 2017.
2.
Documented informed consent.
3.
Level I PASRR screen.
4. Level II
evaluation and determination or most recent RR, as applicable.
5. Long Term Care MDS or the most recent
physical assessment, or an assessment provided by CARES or DOH.
6. Case notes.
7. Record of treatment.
8. Medication administration
record.
9. Psychiatric or
psychological evaluation, if available.
(13) Medicaid-certified nursing facilities
must comply with 42 United States Code
section 1396r(e)(7)(C), when
a resident no longer requires NF services, but still requires specialized
services, or no longer requires either NF services or specialized
services.
(14) Consent for Level II
Evaluation.
(a) If a Level II evaluation is
required as a result of the Level I screen, or a resident review is required,
written notice must be issued in accordance with
42 CFR
483.128(a) to individuals
who have, or are suspected of having, SMI or ID, and are being referred to the
state authorities for SMI or ID to perform the Level II evaluation. The
signature of the individual being assessed, or their legal representative, must
be obtained on AHCA MedServ Form 004 Part A1, March 2017, when possible as
acknowledgement and consent for the Level II evaluation. Signing does not mean
that the signator agrees with any determination(s).
(b) The signature is an acknowledgement of
the signator's:
1. Opportunity to participate
in decisions regarding the arrangements for continued care.
2. Acknowledgement of verbal and written
information regarding the range of services in the assessed individual's
community.
(c) If an
individual is unwilling, or unable, to sign and has no legal representative or
health care agent to sign, information regarding the reason for the inability
to obtain the signature must be indicated on the Level I PASRR Screen, AHCA
MedServ Form 004 Part A, March 2017, or Resident Review-Evaluation Request,
AHCA MedServ Form 004 Part A1, March 2017.
(15) Records. Nursing facilities must
maintain copies of all PASRR screenings, evaluations, re-evaluations, and
determinations in the individual's file for the duration of his or her stay in
the facility and for a period of five years after the individual has been
discharged or transferred to another facility.
(16) Appeals. In accordance with state and
federal law, an individual may request an appeal through the Medicaid fair
hearing process if he or she believes the State has made an erroneous
determination with regard to the preadmission and annual resident review
processes.
Rulemaking Authority 409.919 FS. Law Implemented 409.902,
409.905(8), 409.912 FS.
New 12-31-13, Amended
3-29-17.