Current through Register Vol. 47, No. 6, September 18, 2024
(1)
General admission
policies.
a. A subacute care
facility shall not admit or retain a resident who is in need of greater
services than the facility can provide.
b. Prior to admission of an applicant, the
facility shall obtain sufficient information to determine if its program is
appropriate and adequate to meet the individual's needs.
c. A subacute care facility shall admit only
as many residents as indicated by the number of beds for which the facility is
licensed.
d. A subacute care
facility shall adopt policies regarding the admission requirements outlined in
subrule 71.13(2).
(2)
Admission requirements.
a.
Eligibility for individualized subacute mental health services will be
determined by the standardized preadmission screening utilized by the facility.
The screening shall be conducted by a mental health professional as defined in
Iowa Code section
228.1(7),
a physician, a physician assistant, or an advanced registered nurse
practitioner.
b. In order to be
admitted, the individual must:
(1) Be 18
years or older;
(2) During the past
year, have had a diagnosable mental, behavioral or emotional disorder that
meets the diagnostic criteria specified in the most current edition of the
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM);
(3) Demonstrate a high degree of impairment
through significantly impaired mental, social, or educational functioning
arising from the psychiatric condition or serious emotional
disturbance;
(4) Demonstrate an
impairment that severely limits the skills necessary to maintain an adequate
level of functioning outside a treatment program and requires active treatment
to obtain an adequate level of functioning;
(5) Demonstrate a low level of stability
through any two of the following conditions:
1. The individual presents moderate to high
risk of danger to self or others.
2. The individual lacks adequate skills or
social support to address mental health symptoms.
3. The individual is medically stable but
requires observation and care for stabilization of a mental health condition or
impairment.
(3)
Admission agreement. A
subacute care facility shall provide an admission agreement to each resident
upon admission to the facility. Each admission agreement shall include:
a. Method of payment;
b. Schedule of services and any additional
fees;
c. The facility's policies
regarding length of stay, discharge and transfer.
(4)
Exclusion criteria.
a. A subacute care facility shall not admit
an individual into the facility if:
(1) The
individual manifests behavioral or psychiatric symptoms that require acute
care;
(2) The individual can be
safely maintained and effectively treated with less intensive services in a
community setting; or
(3) The
symptoms of the individual do not meet admission criteria in subrule
71.13(2).
b. An
individual's lack of adequate place of residence, placement, or housing is not
reason to receive subacute mental health services.
(5)
Continued stay criteria
policies. By the tenth day following admission and every ten calendar
days thereafter, the mental health professional shall conduct and document an
assessment of the resident and determine if:
a. The severity of the behavioral and
emotional symptoms continues to require the subacute level of intervention and
the DSM diagnosis remains the principal diagnosis.
b. The prescribed interventions remain
consistent with the intended treatment plan outcomes.
c. There is documented evidence of active,
individualized discharge planning.
d. There is a reasonable likelihood of
substantial benefit in the resident's mental health condition as a result of
active intervention of the 24-hour supervised program.
e. Symptoms and behaviors that required
admission are continuing.
f. A less
intensive level of care would be insufficient to stabilize the resident's
condition.
g. New issues that meet
the admission guidelines in subrule 71.13(2) have appeared.
h. The resident requires further
stabilization subsequent to acute care to treat active mental health symptoms
such as psychosis, depression or mood disorder.
(6)
Discharge criteria
policies. A resident may be discharged from subacute level of care if:
a. The resident's treatment plan goals and
objectives for subacute services have been met and a discharge plan to
outpatient or other community-based services is in place.
b. The resident's physical condition
necessitates transfer to a more intensive level of care.
c. The resident is not making progress toward
treatment goals and there is no reasonable expectation of progress at the
subacute level of care.
d. The
resident becomes a danger to self, others, or facility structure and requires
an emergency transfer to a higher level of care.
e. The resident repeatedly refuses to
participate in the resident's treatment plan.
(7)
Discharge or transfer.
a. The facility shall give prior notification
to the resident, as well as the resident's next of kin, legal representative,
attending physician or advanced registered nurse practitioner, and sponsoring
agency, if any, prior to transfer or discharge of any resident.
b. The subacute care facility shall make
proper arrangements for the welfare of the resident prior to transfer or
discharge in the event of an emergency or inability to reach the next of kin or
legal representative.
c. The
facility shall make advance notification to the receiving facility prior to the
transfer of any resident if the resident is to be transferred to another
facility.
(1) Notification shall be made no
less than 24 hours prior to transfer unless paragraph
71.13(6)"d" applies.
(2) Prior to the transfer or discharge of a
resident to another health care facility, arrangements to provide for
continuity of care shall be made with the facility to which the resident is
being transferred.
d. The
appropriate record as set forth in subrule 71.20(1) shall accompany the
resident when the resident is transferred or discharged.