Hawaii Administrative Rules
Title 17 - DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN SERVICES
Department of Human Services
Chapter 1427 - RESPITE SERVICES
Subchapter 2 - RESPITE COMPANION SERVICE PROGRAM
Section 17-1427-7 - Scope of respite companion service
Universal Citation: HI Admin Rules 17-1427-7
Current through August, 2024
(a) The respite companion's services to clients and client families shall include the following duties and responsibilities:
(1) Health and
personal services which shall include:
(A)
Attending the client during the absence of client family members;
(B) Assisting the client with such activities
as bathing, personal grooming, and dressing;
(C) Monitoring the use of medication and
health; and
(D) Assisting with
occupational and physical therapy or other activities as prescribed in the care
plan;
(2) Socialization
activities which shall include:
(A) Providing
companionship, conversation, and informal counseling; and
(B) Reading, writing, reality orientation,
and assistance with hobbies and similar activities;
(3) Home management activities which shall
include:
(A) Assisting the client family with
shopping for special needs and aiding the client with personal errands;
and
(B) Planning meals, preparing
food and related activities which are prescribed in the care plan while client
family members are absent; or
(4) other duties which shall include:
(A) Meeting regularly with designated respite
station supervisors and the respite companion service program coordinator to
review the status of each assignment;
(B) Attending all training sessions, group
and individual, as scheduled by the respite companion service program and
respite station; and
(C) Submitting
all time and expense reports, work schedules, annual medical report, income
declaration, and other reports or information required by the respite companion
service program office.
(b) Respite companions shall not perform services such as:
(1) Housework that
ordinarily would be performed by household members, homemakers, or paid
domestic help, such as washing and ironing clothes, scrubbing walls and floors,
or washing windows;
(2) Personal
services to client-family members apart from activities for the frail elderly
person;
(3) Extensive home repair
activities;
(4) Activities usually
performed by doctors or nurses;
(5)
Signing legal papers for the frail elderly person;
(6) Activities detrimental to respite
companions; and
(7) Activities not
specified in the care plan.
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