Current through Register Vol. 51, No. 3, September 1, 2024
RELATES TO:
KRS
194A.030(1),
211.842-211.852,
216B.010,
216B.015,
216B.040,
216B.042,
216B.045-216B.055,
216B.075,
216B.105-216B.131,
216B.176,
216B.177,
216B.990, Chapter 311,
Chapter 314,
29 C.F.R.
1910.1030(d)(2)(vii),
42
C.F.R. 413.65,
42 U.S.C.
1320d-2
NECESSITY, FUNCTION, AND CONFORMITY:
KRS
216B.105 and
216B.042
require the Cabinet for Health and Family Services to license and regulate
health care facilities and health care services. This administrative regulation
provides licensure requirements for the operation of and services provided by
outpatient health care centers.
Section
1. Definitions.
(1) "Campus"
means the physical area on which the licensee's main administrative building,
other areas and structures are located as well as that physical area located,
immediately adjacent to and within 250 yards of the main administrative
building.
(2) "Main provider" means
a licensed acute care hospital under which an outpatient health care center
functions as a subordinate and integral part, and which is under the same name,
ownership, and control as the outpatient health care center.
(3) "Outpatient health care center" or
"center" means a licensed health care facility that is designated in the
Certificate of Need State Health Plan as a primary care center with outpatient
diagnostic and surgical services, and which is certified by the Centers for
Medicare and Medicaid Services under
42
C.F.R. 413.65 as a provider-based
institution, with permanent facilities on a single campus that is operated
under the supervision of an organized medical staff and is comprised of service
components for the provision of primary care, ambulatory surgery, twenty-four
(24) hour emergency care, and radiological and magnetic resonance imaging
"MRI".
Section 2.
Services. The center shall provide component services that include primary care
services, 24-hour emergency services, diagnostic imaging including MRI, and
ambulatory surgery services on a single campus that is located in a county that
has no hospital, that has a population of 60,000 or more persons and that also
is a medically-underserved area as determined by the Secretary of the Federal
Department for Health and Human Services.
(1)
A primary care component shall include the following services, which shall be
provided in the center or shall be arranged through other providers with which
the center has linkage agreements in accordance with Section 7 of this
administrative regulation:
(a) Basic health
care services to patients of all ages during normal hours of
operation;
(b) A variety of
preventative, diagnostic, and therapeutic services of sufficiently broad scope
to provide for the usual and expected needs of patients in all age
groups;
(c) Coordinated services
for all other health components in this administrative regulation;
and
(d) Services established in
Section 8(1) of this administrative regulation.
(2) An ambulatory surgical care component
shall include:
(a) Ambulatory surgical
services that, in the professional judgment of the surgeon and the facility's
medical director, may be safely performed in the outpatient setting on a
patient whose recovery under normal circumstances shall not require inpatient
care, observation-hold, or convalescence in excess of twenty-three (23)
hours;
(b) Follow-up care and
services as necessary for a surgical patient's recovery; and
(c) Services established in Section 8(4) of
this administrative regulation.
(3) An emergency medical services component
shall include:
(a) Twenty-four (24) hour
emergency medical treatment by a board certified or board eligible emergency
room physician seven (7) days per week;
(b) A specific area for emergency treatment
that shall be located adjacent to an exterior entrance and is immediately
accessible to emergency transport vehicles;
(c) Facilities sufficient to assure prompt
diagnosis, treatment, and stabilization of injuries and trauma; and
(d) Services established in Section 8(2) of
this administrative regulation.
(4) A diagnostic imaging and MRI component
shall include:
(a) Radiologic and magnetic
resonance imaging with permanent, fixed-site equipment licensed or registered
pursuant to
KRS
211.842 to
211.852
and 900 KAR 6:050, but shall not include any services for which a separate
certificate of need is required;
(b) Radiologic and imaging services shall be
provided in accordance with protocols established by the center, which shall
include a concise statement of the reason for the service; and
(c) Services established in Section 8(3) of
this administrative regulation.
Section 3. Administration and Operations.
(1) The licensee shall:
(a) Be legally responsible for the center and
for compliance with federal, state, and local laws and administrative
regulations pertaining to the operation of the center;
(b) Appoint a full-time administrator of the
center whose qualifications, responsibilities, authority, and accountability
shall be defined in writing and approved by the hospital governing authority;
and
(c) Be responsible for and
assure compliance with this administrative regulation, and make immediately
available for public inspection at the center all licensure and complaint
inspection reports and plans of correction pertaining to the last three (3)
year survey period.
(2)
The administrator shall:
(a) Be responsible
for the daily operations of the center and shall delegate that responsibility
in his absence;
(b) Assure the
establishment and implementation of written policies and procedures covering
all aspects of the center's operation and, if appropriate, shall be consistent
with the policies and procedures of the main provider;
(c) Serve as liaison between the center, its
medical staff, and the main provider;
(d) Hold at least quarterly, component and
departmental staff meetings that shall include a discussion of administrative
and patient care standards;
(e)
Ensure that a sufficient number of trained staff are available to meet the
needs of all persons who receive services in the center; and
(f) Appoint a licensed physician to serve as
medical director who shall direct and coordinate all medical services and
oversee implementation of patient care standards and policies, who may serve as
the licensed physician in charge as established in Section 5(1)(a)1 of this
administrative regulation.
Section 4. Policies and Procedures.
(1) Development of policies and procedures.
The administrator shall assure development or adoption and implementation of
the following policies and procedures:
(a)
Administrative standards and policies covering all aspects of the center's
operation and specific to each component part, including at least the
following:
1. A description of organizational
structure, staffing, and allocation of responsibility and accountability within
each component part;
2. A
description of referral linkages with inpatient facilities and other
providers;
3. A description of the
component services provided by the center;
4. Policies and procedures for the guidance
and control of personnel performance and quality assurance;
5. Policies and procedures for creation and
maintenance of administrative and patient care records and reports;
6. Policies for expense and accrual-based
revenue accounting system following generally-accepted accounting
procedures;
7. Policies and
procedures governing the use of aseptic techniques in all areas of the
center;
8. Policies and procedures
for sterilization of equipment and supplies;
9. Policies and procedures for disposal of
patient waste and other potentially-infectious materials; and
10. Policies and procedures for granting and
withdrawal of medical staff surgical privileges and privileges for the
administration of anesthetics.
(b) Patient care policies and standards,
which shall be developed by staff physicians and other qualified professional
staff, for all medical aspects of the center including:
1. Written protocols for standing orders,
rules of practice, and medical directives applying to each of the component
services, which shall be signed by the administrator and staff
physician;
2. Patient care policies
and standards for patients held in the center's holding-observation
area;
3. Patient care policies and
standards for primary care services;
4. Patient care policies and standards for
emergency medical services;
5.
Patient care policies and standards for ambulatory surgical services;
and
6. Patient care policies and
standards for diagnostic imaging and magnetic resonance imaging services;
and
(c) Patient rights
policies which shall be developed and assure that each patient is:
1. Informed of the patient's rights and
facility responsibilities, including procedures for handling patient
grievances;
2. Informed of services
available at the center and any charges not covered under Medicare, Medicaid,
or other third-party payor arrangements;
3. Informed of his medical condition, unless
medically contraindicated and documented in the medical record, and is afforded
the opportunity to participate in the planning of medical treatment, the right
to refuse treatment, and informed consent;
4. Encouraged and assisted to understand and
exercise patient rights and the right to make grievances and receive a response
to a grievance;
5. Assured
confidentiality in treatment, care, and records, and is afforded the
opportunity to approve or refuse release of records to any individual not
involved in his care except as required by Kentucky law or third-party payment
contract; and
6. Treated with
consideration, respect, and full recognition of his dignity and individuality,
including privacy in treatment, and in the care of his personal health
needs.
(2)
Accessibility of policies and procedures. Written policies and procedures shall
be maintained in the facility in a readily-accessible electronic format or a
written manual that is available and conveniently accessible to all staff
employed in the component service.
Section 5. Personnel and Qualifications.
(1) Personnel. The center shall have
sufficient trained personnel to meet the needs of each patient who presents for
treatment at the center, which shall include:
(a) At a minimum, a core center provider team
to coordinate services for the component services, composed of at least one (1)
licensed physician in charge, who may also serve as the center's medical
director and the physician in charge of emergency medicine; one (1) fulltime
registered nurse, who shall provide services within the scope of practice; and
other nursing personnel, aides, and technicians as required to meet the needs
of the patients, as follows:
1. A licensed
physician shall be in charge in the center twenty-four (24) hours a day, seven
(7) days a week, who shall be a physician in active practice and who shall be
responsible for all medical aspects of the center's operation. The licensed
physician in charge may provide direct medical services in accordance with KRS
Chapter 311.
2. The center shall
employ or have contractual or other linkage agreements with other physicians as
necessary to meet the surgical needs of the center's patients, and who shall be
qualified to practice general medicine (e.g., general practitioner, family
practitioner, obstetrician/gynecologist, pediatrician, and internist), and who
shall hold at least courtesy staff privileges at one (1) or more hospitals with
which the center has a formal transfer agreement.
3. The registered nurse shall provide nursing
services within the scope of practice pursuant to KRS Chapter 314.
(b) At a minimum, a core
ambulatory surgery component provider team composed of one (1) licensed
physician in charge; other licensed physicians, dentists, or podiatrists, as
necessary to meet the surgical needs of the center's patients; an
anesthesiologist or nurse anesthetist; a full-time registered nurse; and other
nursing personnel, aides, and technicians as required to meet the needs of the
patients, as follows:
1. A licensed physician
shall be in charge of the ambulatory surgery component, and may also serve as
the center's medical director. This physician shall be in active practice and
shall either:
a. Have surgical privileges at
the provider-based hospital or one (1) or more hospitals with which the center
has a formal transfer agreement; or
b. Be a board-certified anesthesiologist in
active practice and be employed full time by the center or have a contract to
work full time at the center.
2. Surgical procedures shall be performed by
physicians who are legally authorized to perform these procedures and have been
granted privileges by the center through its medical staff or governing
body.
3. The ambulatory surgery
registered nurse shall be employed full-time and shall provide services within
the scope of practice pursuant to KRS Chapter 314.
4. Other nursing personnel, aides, and
technicians shall be employed to meet the needs of the patients. A registered
nurse shall be available during the surgical procedure and if a patient is in
recovery for patient care in the operating or post-anesthesia recovery
room.
(c) At a minimum,
the emergency medical component shall be composed of a licensed physician,
board certified in emergency medicine or board eligible, who shall serve as
director of emergency medicine; at least one (1) full-time registered nurse;
and other physicians and medical staff who shall be available or on duty at all
times for the emergency service, as follows:
1. A licensed physician shall be present in
the center twenty-four (24) hours a day, seven (7) days a week, shall serve as
director of emergency services and may also serve as the center's medical
director. The director of emergency medicine shall assure creation and
implementation of patient care policies, and assure at least the following:
a. Each patient presenting for or requesting
care shall be evaluated by a qualified physician or registered nurse;
b. Qualified medical personnel shall be
available to treat a patient presenting for or requesting emergency
care;
c. At least one (1) physician
shall be available on-site at all times to treat a patient;
d. Establishment and maintenance of a manual
of policies and procedures for emergency and nursing care provided in the
emergency room;
e. Nursing
personnel shall be assigned to or available to cover the emergency service at
all times; and
f. Diagnostic and
treatment equipment, drugs, and supplies shall be readily available for the
provision of emergency services and shall be adequate in terms of the scope of
services provided.
2.
Physicians employed by or under contract with the center to provide emergency
medical treatment shall be board certified in emergency medicine or board
eligible.
3. Other nursing
personnel, aides, and technicians shall be available in the emergency
department to meet the needs of the patients who present for
treatment.
(2)
Center staffing and qualifications. In addition to the core service component
staff requirements, the center shall employ sufficient numbers of qualified
administrative and medical personnel to provide prompt and effective patient
care and services, and shall assure at least the following:
(a) A written job description for each
position, which shall be reviewed and revised by the administrator as
necessary;
(b) An employee health
program for mutual protection of employees and patients, including provisions
for preemployment and periodic health examination;
(c) A tuberculosis skin test of each staff
member, which shall be implemented according to the following requirements be
documented in the employee's personnel record and which shall:
1. A test shall be initiated on each new
staff member before or during the first week of employment. The results shall
be documented in the employee's personnel record within the first month of
employment, unless the employee documents a prior skin test of ten (10) or more
millimeters of induration, or is currently receiving or has completed nine (9)
months of therapy for latent tuberculosis infection (LTBI) or a course of
multiple-drug chemotherapy for tuberculosis;
2. There shall be a two (2) step skin testing
for a new employee regardless of age whose initial test shows less than ten
(10) millimeters of induration, unless the employee can document that he has
had a tuberculosis skin test within one (1) year prior to his current
employment;
3. A staff member who
has never had a skin test result of ten (10) or more millimeters induration
shall be skin tested annually, on or before the anniversary of the last skin
test;
4. A staff member who has a
skin test result of ten (10) or more millimeters induration on initial
employment or annual testing shall receive a chest x-ray unless:
a. A chest x-ray within the previous two (2)
months showed no evidence of tuberculosis; or
b. The individual can document the previous
completion of a course of prophylactic treatment with Isoniazid. The employee
shall be advised of the symptoms of the disease and instructed to report to his
employer and to seek medical attention promptly if symptoms persist;
5. The following shall be reported
by the center administrator to the local health department having jurisdiction
immediately upon becoming known:
a. Names of
staff who convert from a skin test of less than ten (10) to a skin test of ten
(10) millimeters or more induration at the time of employment; and
b. Chest x-rays suspicious for
tuberculosis;
6. A staff
member whose skin test status changes on annual testing from less than ten (10)
to ten (10) or more millimeters of induration shall be considered to be
recently infected with Mycobacterium tuberculosis. A recently-infected person
who has no sign or symptom of tuberculosis disease on chest x-ray or medical
history shall receive preventative therapy with Isoniazid for six (6) months,
unless medically contraindicated, as determined by a licensed physician.
Medication shall be administered only upon the written order of a physician or
other ordering personnel acting within their statutory scope of practice. If an
individual is unable to take Isoniazid therapy, the individual shall be advised
of the clinical symptoms of the disease, and shall have an interval medical
history and a chest x-ray taken and evaluated for tuberculosis every six (6)
months during the two (2) years following conversation, for a total of five (5)
x-rays; and
7. A staff member who
documents completion of preventive treatment with Isoniazid shall be exempt
from further screening requirements; and
(d) An employee file, which shall include at
least the following information for each employee:
1. Name, address, Social Security
number;
2. Evidence of current
professional registration, certification, or licensure;
3. Complete record of training, experience,
and in-service;
4. Records of
performance evaluation;
5. Records
of incidents and accidents in which the employee was involved; and
6. Documentation of current tuberculin
screening.
(3)
Personnel in-service training. Center personnel shall participate in quarterly
in-service training programs relating to their respective job duties and
activities, which shall include at least the following:
(a) Job orientation for new personnel and
recurring in-service training, including a requirement that each staff member
shall be knowledgeable of the center's policies;
(b) Quarterly in-service training for all
staff emphasizing professional competence, quality assurance, policy
development; and the physical, nutritional, environmental, and social
components necessary for effective health care;
(c) Quarterly in-service training pertaining
to medical documentation and maintenance of medical records;
(d) Reporting, identifying, and preventing
abuse and neglect of children and adults; and
(e) Maintaining privacy and confidentiality
of patient-specific information and records.
Section 6. Medical Records.
(1) Maintenance of records. The center or the
main provider shall maintain a medical record at the center for each patient to
include at least the following:
(a) Medical
and social history, including data from other providers;
(b) Description of each medical visit or
contact, including identification of the condition or reason for the visit or
contact, assessment performed, medical diagnosis, services provided,
medications and treatments prescribed, and disposition;
(c) Reports of all laboratory, x-ray, and
other test findings;
(d)
Documentation pertaining to a patient referred to the center for treatment,
including the reason for the referral, to whom the patient was referred, and
information obtained from the referral source;
(e) Physicians' orders, nurses' notes, and
surgical and medical consent forms;
(f) History and physical examination record
prior to surgery;
(g) For surgical
patients, the complete medical record signed by the operating surgeon,
including anesthesia record, preoperative diagnosis, operative procedures and
findings, postoperative diagnosis and, if required, tissue diagnosis by a
pathologist on specimens surgically removed;
(h) Charts, including records of temperature,
pulse, respiration, and blood pressure; and
(i) Discharge summary completed at the time
of discharge which includes condition on discharge and post-treatment
instructions to the patient;
(2) Confidentiality. Confidentiality of
patient records shall be maintained at all times;
(3) Transfer of records. The center shall
establish systematic procedures to assist in continuity of care if the patient
moves to another provider of care, and the center shall, upon proper release,
transfer medical records or an abstract, if requested;
(4) Attending signature. The attending
physician shall complete and sign the medical record of each patient as soon as
practicable after discharge, but not to exceed ten (10) days; and
(5) Retention of records. Medical records
shall be maintained by the center for a period of five (5) years following the
last treatment, assessment, or visit made by the patient.
Section 7. Linkage Agreements. The center
shall have linkages through written agreements.
(1) Linkage agreements. Linkage agreements
shall be established with other providers of other levels of care which may be
medically indicated to supplement the services available in the center and
shall include:
(a) Hospitals;
(b) Emergency medical transportation services
in the service area;
(c) In-patient
care facilities; and
(d) Other
agreements as necessary.
(2) Inpatient agreements. Linkage agreements
with inpatient care facilities shall incorporate provisions for:
(a) Appropriate referral and acceptance of
patients from the center;
(b)
Provisions for appropriate coordination of discharge planning with center
staff; and
(c) Provisions for the
center to receive a copy of the discharge summary for each patient referred to
the center.
(3) Transfer
agreements. The written transfer agreements shall include designation of
responsibility for:
(a) Transfer of
information;
(b) Provision of
transportation;
(c) Sharing of
services, equipment, and personnel;
(d) Provision of total care or portions
thereof in relation to facility and agency capability; and
(e) Patient record confidentiality.
Section 8. Provision of
Services. The center shall provide the following component services on its
campus:
(1) Primary care component. The center
shall provide at least the following services during scheduled hours of
operation that reasonably accommodate various segments of the population:
(a) Medical diagnostic and treatment services
of sufficiently broad scope to accommodate the basic health needs of all age
groups;
(b) Preventive health
services of sufficiently broad scope to provide for the usual and expected
health needs of persons in all age groups;
(c) Educational offerings in the appropriate
use of health services, preventive health services, and health
maintenance;
(d) Chronic illness
management;
(e) Laboratory, x-ray,
and treatment services shall be provided directly or arranged through other
providers; and
(f) Supplemental
services may also be provided for pharmacy, dentistry, optometry, nutrition,
and counseling.
(2)
Emergency services component. The center shall have written policies for
operation of the emergency component and shall assure the following:
(a) A patient presenting for or requesting
emergency care shall be evaluated and triaged by a registered nurse or
emergency department physician in accordance with the center's formal operating
policies and procedures;
(b) The
physician, in conjunction with the administrator and other medical staff, shall
establish and maintain policies and procedures for emergency and nursing care,
which shall assure that:
1. Emergency services
shall at all times be under the direction of a licensed physician;
2. Sufficient medical staff shall be
available and on site at all times to perform emergency medical care in
accordance with accepted standards of practice; and
3. Current medical staff schedules and
telephone numbers shall be posted in the emergency treatment area;
(c) Sufficient nursing and medical
personnel shall be assigned to or designated to cover the provision of
emergency services at all times;
(d) Appropriate facilities shall be provided
to assure prompt diagnosis and emergency treatment for patients requiring
emergency care on arrival;
(e)
Adequate diagnostic and treatment equipment, drugs, and supplies shall be
readily available for the provision of emergency services;
(f) Adequate medical records shall be kept
for each patient seen in the emergency department, which shall include at
least:
1. A log listing the patient visits to
the emergency department in chronological order, including:
a. Patient identification;
b. Means of arrival;
c. Person transporting patient;
d. Time of arrival;
e. History of present complaint and physical
findings;
f. Laboratory and x-ray
reports, if applicable;
g.
Diagnosis;
h. Treatment ordered and
details of treatment provided;
i.
Patient disposition; and
j. Record
of referrals.
2.
Instructions to the patient or family for those not admitted to the center;
and
3. Signatures of attending
medical staff member, and nurse if applicable.
(3) Diagnostic imaging and MRI services. The
center shall have written policies for the operation of the component and shall
assure the following:
(a) The center shall
have diagnostic radiology facilities currently licensed or registered pursuant
to
KRS
211.842 to
211.852,
the Kentucky Radiation Control Act of 1978;
(b) The center shall employ or contract with
a radiologist on at least a consulting basis to:
1. Function as the director of the
department; and
2. Interpret films
requiring specialized knowledge for accurate reading;
(c) The center shall employ and have on duty
sufficient personnel to supervise and conduct services, including one (1)
certified radiation operator who shall be on duty or on call at all
times;
(d) Written policies and
procedures governing radiologic services and administrative routines that
support sound radiologic practices;
(e) Signed reports shall be filed in the
patient's record, and duplicate copies kept in the department;
(f) Radiologic services shall be performed
only upon written order of qualified personnel in accordance with their scope
of practice and the center's protocols and bylaws, and the order shall contain
a concise statement of the reason for the service or examination;
(g) Reports of interpretations shall be
written or dictated and signed by the radiologist;
(h) Only a certified radiation operator,
under the direction of medical staff, if necessary, shall use any x-ray
apparatus or material. Uses shall include application, administration, and
removal of radioactive elements, disintegration products, and radioactive
isotopes. A certified radiation operator under the direction of a physician may
administer medications allowed within his professional scope of practice and
the context of radiological services and procedures being performed;
and
(i) The radiology department
shall be free of hazards for patients and personnel. Proper safety precautions
shall be maintained against fire and explosion hazards, electrical hazards, and
radiation hazards.
(4)
Ambulatory surgical component services. The center shall have written policies
for the operation of the component and shall assure the following:
(a) The patient or the patient's legal
representative shall sign a written informed consent prior to all surgical
operations;
(b) A medical history
and physical evaluation shall be performed and entered into the medical record
no more than thirty (30) days prior to surgery on a patient;
(c) Pertinent preoperative diagnostic studies
and laboratory tests shall be performed and made a part of the medical record
prior to surgery. The preoperative diagnosis shall be recorded in the medical
record;
(d) A patient shall be
examined by a physician immediately prior to surgery to evaluate the risk of
anesthesia and of the procedure to be performed, taking into account site of
service, the invasive nature of the procedure, and the need for extended
postoperative recovery time or monitoring;
(e) The center shall employ a registered
nurse who shall serve as operating room supervisor;
(f) A registered nurse shall be available to
circulate in the operating room at all times.
(g) A list of physicians with surgical
privileges at the center and the privileges assigned to each by the medical
staff shall be on file;
(h) The
operating room shall have an up-to-date operating room register;
(i) The operating room shall have
medically-appropriate supplies and equipment available at all times to meet the
needs of the patients, including the following:
1. Oxygen;
2. Mechanical ventilator assistance equipment
including airways, manual breathing bag, and ventilator;
3. Cardiac defibrillator,
4. Cardiac monitoring equipment,
5. Tracheostomy set,
6. Laryngoscopes,
7. Endotracheal tubes,
8. Suction equipment; and
9. Emergency medical equipment and supplies
specified by the medical staff;
(j) The operating room shall have on hand, or
make arrangements for obtaining, an adequate supply of blood in a timely manner
to meet the needs of each patient;
(k) Operating room administrative regulations
shall be posted;
(l) Physicians'
orders shall be in writing and signed by the physician;
(m) Except for cases requiring only local
infiltration anesthetics, a physician qualified to administer anesthesia, a
dentist qualified to administer anesthesia, or a registered nurse anesthetist
acting under the direction of the operating surgeon shall administer the
anesthetics and shall remain present during the surgical procedure and until
the patient is discharged to home or observation;
(n) The patient's attending physician shall
be responsible for assuring that tissue removed during surgery is delivered to
the center's pathologist and that an examination and report is made on the
tissue, if required by the center's written policies;
(o) Voluntary interruption of pregnancy. The
center shall comply with the applicable Kentucky statutes, including
KRS 311.710
to
311.810;
(p) The center shall have written surgery
policies and protocols that shall include:
1.
Infection control policies addressing the use of aseptic techniques and
procedures for surgical patients;
2. Protocols for sterilization of surgical
equipment and supplies;
3.
Protocols for disposal of patient waste and other potentially-infectious
materials;
4. Protocol for
obtaining pathological examination of tissues removed during surgery;
and
5. Policies for granting and
withdrawing surgical privileges and privileges for the administration of
anesthetics.
(q) The
center shall have the following postanesthesia recovery services:
1. At least one (1) postanesthesia recovery
unit;
2. Adequate staff available
in the recovery unit so that no patient is left alone at any time;
3. At least one (1) licensed physician shall
be present until all surgical patients are discharged;
4. A registered nurse shall be present in the
recovery unit while a patient is recovering from anesthesia;
5. A registered nurse shall be available to
the recovery unit at all times;
6.
A person staffing the postanesthesia recovery unit shall be adequately trained
in all aspects of postoperative and postanesthetic care; and
7. The recovery unit nurse shall record a
nursing note on the patient, noting the following:
a. Postoperative abnormalities or
complications;
b. Pulse;
c. Respiration;
d. Blood pressure;
e. Presence or absence of swallowing
reflex;
f. Cyanosis; and
g. The general condition of the
patient.
(r)
The ambulatory surgery component shall assure the following equipment is
available to the operating area:
1. Suction
machine;
2. Stethoscope;
3. Sphygmomanometer;
4. Emergency crash cart;
5. Necessary drugs; and
6. Oxygen.
(s) The surgical center shall provide
suitable accommodations for its patients, including:
1. Adequate floor space, furnishings, bed
linens, and utensils, equipment, and supplies reasonably required for the
proper care and comfort of patients accommodated;
2. Holding-observation and convalescent
accommodations within the following limitations:
a. Holding-observation and convalescent
accommodations shall not exceed twenty-three (23) hours postadmission for
medical observation, recuperation, or convalescence in anticipation of
discharge to the patient's home;
b.
The decision to hold a patient shall be the responsibility of a physician on
the medical staff of the center, who shall document the reason for and duration
of the hold in the patient's medical record and shall date and sign the entry;
and
c. A physician or registered
nurse shall be on duty at the center, if a patient is held in the center's
accommodations beyond regularly scheduled hours.
(5) Physical and sanitary
environment.
(a) The condition of the
physical plant and the overall environment shall be maintained in such a manner
that the safety and well-being of patients, personnel, and visitors are
assured.
(b) There shall be an
infection control committee charged with the responsibility of investigating,
controlling, and preventing infections. This committee shall develop written
infection control policies that are consistent with Centers for Disease Control
guidelines and include:
1. Prevention of
disease transmission to and from patients, visitors, and employees, including:
a. Universal blood and body fluid
precautions;
b. Precautions against
airborne transmittal of infections; and
c. Work restrictions for employees with
infectious diseases;
2.
Use of environmental cultures. Culture testing results shall be recorded and
reported to the Infection Control Committee; and
3. Cleaning, disinfection, and sterilization
methods used for equipment and the environment.
(c) The center shall provide in-service
education programs on the cause, effect, transmission, prevention, and
elimination of infections.
(d) The
center's buildings, equipment, and surroundings shall be kept in a condition of
good repair, neat, clean, free from accumulation of dirt, rubbish, and foul,
stale, or musty odors.
(e)
Hazardous cleaning solutions, compounds, and substances shall be labeled,
stored in closed metal containers, and kept separate from other cleaning
materials.
(f) The facility shall
be kept free from insects and rodents, and their nesting places, and entrances
shall be eliminated.
(g) Garbage
and trash:
1. Shall be stored in areas
separate from those used for preparation and storage of food;
2. Shall be removed from the premises
regularly; and
3. Containers shall
be cleaned on a regular basis.
(h) Sharp wastes:
1. Sharp wastes, including needles, scalpels,
razors, or other sharp instruments used for patient care procedures, shall be
segregated from other wastes and placed in puncture-resistant containers
immediately after use.
2. A needle
or other contaminated sharp shall not be purposely bent, broken, or otherwise
manipulated by hand as a means of disposal, except as permitted by Occupational
Safety and Health Administration guidelines at
29 C.F.R.
1910.1030(d)(2)(vii).
3. A sharp waste container shall be
incinerated or shall be rendered nonhazardous.
4. Nondisposable sharps, such as large-bore
needles or scissors, shall be placed in a puncture-resistant container for
transport to the Central Medical and Surgical Supply Department in accordance
with
902 KAR
20:009, Section 22.
(i) Disposable waste:
1. Disposable waste shall be placed in a
suitable bag or closed container so as to prevent leakage or spillage, and
shall be handled, stored, and disposed of in such a way as to minimize direct
exposure of personnel to waste materials.
2. The center shall establish specific
written policies regarding handling and disposal of waste material.
3. The following wastes shall receive special
handling:
a. Microbiology laboratory waste
including a viral or bacterial culture, contaminated swab, or a specimen
container or test tube used for microbiologic purposes shall be incinerated,
auto-claved, or otherwise rendered nonhazardous; and
b. Pathological waste including a tissue
specimen from a surgical or necropsy procedure shall be incinerated.
(6)
Utilization review and medical audit. In order to determine the appropriateness
of the services delivered, the center shall establish procedures for the
medical audit and utilization review of services provided in the center. The
center may use professional capabilities and assistance obtainable from other
agencies and sources. There shall be a written plan for utilization review
developed by the center including frequency of review and composition of the
body conducting the review.