Current through Register Vol. 51, No. 3, September 1, 2024
RELATES TO:
KRS
194A.030(1),
216B.010,
216B.015,
216B.040,
216B.045-216B.055,
216B.075,
216B.105-216B.131,
216B.990
NECESSITY, FUNCTION, AND CONFORMITY:
KRS
216B.042(1) requires the
Cabinet for Health and Family Services to establish administrative regulations
for proper administration of the health care facility licensure function. This
administrative regulation establishes minimum licen-sure requirements for
inpatient comprehensive physical rehabilitation services, including
rehabilitation services in hospital-based rehabilitation units.
Section 1. Definitions.
(1) "Dietician" is defined at
KRS
310.005(3).
(2) "Full-time equivalent" (FTE) means:
(a) One (1) employee working thirty-seven and
five-tenths (37.5) hours per week; or
(b) More than one (1) part-time employee
whose combined working hours total thirty-seven and five-tenths (37.5) hours
per week.
(3) "Governing
authority" means the individual, agency, partnership, or corporation that
directs and establishes policy concerning the management and operation of a
comprehensive physical rehabilitation program.
(4) "Institution" means a freestanding
specialty hospital or a general hospital based unit providing inpatient
comprehensive physical rehabilitation services.
(5) "Medical staff" means an organized body
of physicians, and dentists if applicable, appointed by the governing
authority. Members of the medical staff shall be licensed to practice medicine
or dentistry in Kentucky, except for graduate physicians in the first year of
facility training.
(6)
"Nutritionist" is defined at
KRS
310.005(4).
(7) "Protective device" means a device
designed to protect a person from falling, including a side rail, safety vest,
or safety belt.
(8) "Registered
Health Information Administrator" means a person certified as a registered
records administrator by the American Health Information Management
Association.
(9) "Registered Health
Information Technician" means a person certified as an Accredited Record
Technician by the American Health Information Management Association.
(10) "Restraint" means any pharmaceutical
agent or physical or mechanical device used to restrict the movement of a
patient or the movement of a portion of a patient's body.
Section 2. Administration and Operation.
(1) Governing authority.
(a) The licensee shall be responsible for
compliance with federal, state, and local law pertaining to comprehensive
physical rehabilitation programs.
(b) The governing authority shall appoint an
administrator whose qualifications, responsibilities, authority and
accountability are defined in writing and approved by the governing authority,
and shall designate a mechanism for the periodic performance review of the
administrator.
(2)
Administrator. The administrator shall:
(a) Be
responsible for daily management of the institution;
(b) Provide a liaison between the governing
authority and the medical staff;
(c) Attend meetings of the governing
authority;
(d) Report to the
governing authority concerning the conduct of the institution;
(e) Hold departmental and interdepartmental
meetings on a regular basis;
(f)
Attend or be represented at departmental and interdepartmental meetings;
and
(g) Present to the departments
a report of pertinent activities of the institution.
(3) Administrative records and reports.
(a) Administrative reports shall be
established, maintained and utilized as necessary to guide the operation,
measure productivity and reflect the programs of the institution. An
administrative report shall include:
1.
Minutes of the governing authority and staff meetings;
2. Financial records and reports;
3. Incident investigation reports;
and
4. Other pertinent reports
prepared in the regular course of business.
(b) The institution shall maintain a patient
admission and discharge register.
(c) Licensure inspection reports and plans of
correction shall be made available to the general public upon
request.
(4) Policies.
The institution shall have written documents on file governing the operation of
the institution and the services provided, including:
(a) A mission statement of the comprehensive
physical rehabilitation service;
(b) A program narrative which describes in
detail the rehabilitation conditions for which the institution provides
services, the delivery of these services, and the goals and
treatment;
(c) A description of the
organizational structure of the facility, including lines of authority,
responsibility, and communication;
(d) An admission policy to assure patient
admission is in accordance with medical staff protocol;
(e) A list of constraints imposed on
admissions by limitation of service, physical facilities, staff coverage, or
other relevant factors;
(f) The
financial requirements for a patient to be admitted;
(g) The requirement for an informed consent
by patient, parent, guardian or legal representative for diagnostic or
treatment procedure;
(h) A
procedure for:
1. Recording an accident
involving a patient, visitor, or staff member;
2. Recording an incident of drug reaction or
medication error; and
3. Reporting
in writing through the appropriate committees;
(i) A policy for the use of restraints and a
mechanism for monitoring and controlling their use;
(j) A policy for patient discharge and
termination of services; and
(k) A
policy describing the use of volunteers in program
activities.
(5) Patient
identification. The institution shall identify each patient from time of
admission to time of discharge with an identification bracelet imprinted with
the name of the patient, and the date of admission.
(6) Discharge planning.
(a) The discharge decision and plan shall be
established with the participation of the patient, if possible, or a
significant other person. Discharge planning shall begin early in the treatment
phase. Each professional practitioner involved with the patient shall
participate in formulating the discharge plan, including professionals from
agencies outside the institution who have been or will be involved in the
patient's care, if possible.
(b) A
discharge authorization and summary shall be prepared for each patient who has
been discharged or transferred from the institution to a supportive service.
The summary shall contain:
1. The reason for
referral;
2. The
diagnosis;
3. The rehabilitation
problem;
4. The services
provided;
5. The results of
services provided;
6. Any referral
action recommended; and
7.
Procedures and activities for patient and family to assist the patient to
maintain or improve postdischarge functioning and to increase
independence.
(c) The
family, appropriate staff members, the referring source, and community agencies
proposed to work with the patient, shall receive advance notice of the
discharge decision and plan.
(7) Patient follow-up.
(a) The institution shall establish a
procedure for patient follow-up.
(b) Follow-up shall be conducted after the
patient is:
1. Discharged from the
institution;
2. Transferred to a
supportive service; or
3. Placed in
an inactive status.
(8) Transfer procedures and agreements.
(a) The institution shall have written
patient transfer procedures and agreements with other health care facilities
which provide a level of inpatient care not provided by the institution.
Transfer procedures and agreements shall include:
1. Written procedures insuring prompt
notification to the receiving facility;
2. Accommodation for safe and appropriate
transfer; and
3. Specification of
staff responsibilities during transfer.
(b) If a patient is transferred to another
health care facility, a transfer form shall accompany the patient. The transfer
form shall include:
1. The attending
physician's instructions for continuing care;
2. A current summary of the patient's medical
record;
3. Information concerning
special supplies or equipment needed for the patient's care; and
4. Pertinent social information concerning
the patient the patient's and family.
(c) A copy of the patient's signed discharge
summary shall be forwarded to the receiving health care facility within thirty
(30) days following the patient's discharge.
(9) Medical staff.
(a) The facility shall have a medical staff
organized under bylaws approved by the governing authority. The medical staff
shall be responsible to the governing authority for the quality of medical care
provided and for the ethical and professional practice of its
members.
(b) The medical staff
shall develop and adopt policies or bylaws which shall be approved by the
governing authority. The policies or bylaws shall:
1. Establish the qualifications for medical
staff membership, including professional licensure, except for graduate
physicians in their first year of hospital training;
2. Define and describe the responsibilities
and duties of each category of medical staff, including each person who is
designated active, associate, or courtesy;
3. Delineate the clinical privileges of staff
members and allied health professionals;
4. Establish a procedure for granting and
withdrawing staff privileges and credentials;
5. Provide a mechanism for appeal of
decisions regarding staff membership and privileges;
6. Provide a method for the selection of
officers of the medical staff;
7.
Establish requirements regarding the frequency of, and attendance at, general
staff and department or service meetings of the medical staff;
8. Provide for the appointment of standing
and special committees and establish requirements for:
a. Composition and organization;
b. Frequency of and attendance at meetings;
and
c. Maintenance of minutes and
reports in the permanent hospital records:
9. Standing and special committees may
include:
a. An executive committee;
b. A credentials committee;
c. A medical audit committee;
d. A medical records committee:
e. An infection control committee:
f. A tissue committee;
g. A pharmacy and therapeutics committee;
h. A utilization review committee;
and
i. A quality assurance
committee; and
10.
Establish a policy requiring a member of the medical staff to sign the written
documentation of a verbal order for diagnostic testing or treatment:
a. As soon as possible after the order is
given; or
b. Within thirty (30)
days of the patient's discharge if the patient is discharged prior to the order
being authenticated.
(10) Director of rehabilitation. The director
of rehabilitation shall:
(a) Be a licensed
physician who has completed a one (1) year facility internship and has two (2)
years of training or experience in medical management of inpatients requiring
rehabilitation services; and
(b)
Provide services:
1. On a full-time basis for
a freestanding specialty hospital;
2. At least twenty (20) hours per week for a
general hospital based unit with twenty (20) or more beds; or
3. At least ten (10) hours per week for a
general hospital-based unit with less than twenty (20) beds.
(11) Quality assurance
and review.
(a) The quality and
appropriateness of major clinical functions shall be monitored and evaluated
utilizing:
1. Objective criteria that reflects
current knowledge and clinical experience; and
2. Information about identified aspects of
rehabilitation care that is collected on a routine basis;
(b) Information from the quality assurance
and review shall be:
1. Reviewed and assessed
on a periodic basis; and
2.
Utilized to improve clinical operations and patient care.
(c) The effectiveness of action taken to
improve patient care shall be evaluated.
(d) Findings and conclusions regarding the
following shall be documented and reported to the administrator and appropriate
committees:
1. Monitoring and
evaluation;
2. Problem-solving
activity;
3. Activity for the
improvement of patient care; and
4.
The impact of actions taken.
(e) The quality and appropriateness of
patient rehabilitation services provided by an outside source shall be
monitored and evaluated, and identified problems resolved.
(12) Personnel.
(a) The institution shall employ qualified
personnel sufficient to provide effective patient care and related services and
shall make available to all employees written personnel policies and
procedures.
(b) There shall be a
written job description for each position which shall assure that an employee
is appropriately classified and licensed for the position in which he is
employed.
(c) There shall be an
employee health program that includes preemployment and periodic health
examinations.
(d) Each staff member
shall be tested for tuberculosis, as follows:
1. The skin test status of each staff member
shall be documented in the employee's personnel record.
a. A new staff member shall undergo a skin
test before or during the first week of employment.
b. The results shall be documented in the
employee's personnel record within the first month of employment.
c. A skin test shall not be required at the
time of initial employment if the employee:
(i) Documents a prior skin test of ten (10)
or more millimeters of induration; or
(ii) If the employee is currently receiving
or has completed six (6) months of prophylactic therapy or a course of
multiple-drug chemotherapy for tuberculosis.
d. A two (2) step skin test is required for a
new employee over age forty-five (45) whose initial test shows less than ten
(10) millimeters of induration, unless he can document that he has had a
tuberculosis skin test within one (1) year prior to his current employment. An
employee who has never had a skin test of ten (10) or more millimeters
induration shall be skin tested annually, on or before the anniversary of his
last skin test.
2. An
employee whose initial or annual skin test results in ten (10) or more
millimeters induration 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 employee can document the previous
completion of a course of prophylactic treatment with isoniazid. An employee
whose initial skin test shows ten (10) or more millimeters of induration shall
be advised of the symptoms of the disease and instructed to report to his
employer and seek medical attention promptly.
3.
a. The
director of rehabilitation shall be responsible for ensuring that skin tests
and chest x-rays are done in accordance with subparagraphs 1 and 2 of this
paragraph.
b. Skin testing dates and
results and chest x-ray reports shall be recorded as a permanent part of the
employee's personnel record.
4. The administrator shall report to the
local health department, immediately upon discovery, the name of an employee
whose:
a. Skin test results are ten (10)
millimeters or more induration at the time of employment;
b. Skin test results change from less than
ten (10) millimeters induration to more than ten (10) millimeters; or
c. Chest x-rays are suspicious for
tuberculosis.
5.
Prophylaxis of a person with recent infection but no disease.
a. A resident or staff member whose skin test
status changes upon 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.
b. A
recently infected person who has no sign or symptom of tuberculosis disease
upon chest x-ray or medical history shall be given preventive therapy with
isoniazid for six (6) months unless medically contraindicated by a licensed
physician.
c. Medications shall be
administered to patients only upon the written order of a physician or other
practitioner acting within his statutory scope of practice.
d. If an infected person is unable to take
isoniazid therapy, the person 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 disease every six (6) months during the two (2)
years following conversion, for a total of five (5) chest x-rays.
6. A staff member who documents
completion of preventive treatment with isoniazid shall be exempt from further
screening requirements.
(e) A current personnel record shall be
maintained for each employee which shall include the following:
1. Name, address, and Social Security
number;
2. Health
records;
3. Evidence of current
registration, certification or licensure;
4. Records of training and
experience;
5. Records of
performance evaluation;
6. Evidence
of completion of an orientation to the facility's written policies initiated
within the first month of employment; and
7. Evidence of regular in-service training
which corresponds with job duties and includes a list of training and dates
completed.
(13)
Physical and sanitary environment.
(a) The
physical plant and premises shall be maintained to promote the safety and
well-being of patients, personnel and visitors.
(b) A person shall be designated to be in
charge of services and shall be responsible for the establishment of policies
and procedures for plant maintenance, laundry, and housekeeping.
(c) The institution's buildings, equipment
and surroundings shall be in good repair and shall be neat, clean, free from
accumulations of dirt and rubbish, and free from foul, stale, or musty
odors.
(d) The institution shall be
free of insects and rodents.
(e)
Garbage receptacles and trash cans shall be kept clean and shall be stored away
from areas used for preparation and storage of food and the contents shall be
regularly removed from the premises.
(f) Hazardous cleaning solutions, compounds,
and substances shall be labeled, stored in closed containers and shall not be
stored with nonhazardous items.
(g)
The institution shall have a supply of clean linen available at all times for
the proper care and comfort of patients.
1.
Linens shall be handled, stored and processed to prevent the spread of
infection.
2. Clean linen and
clothing shall be stored in clean, dry, dust-free areas.
3. Soiled linen and clothing shall be placed
in suitable bags or closed containers and stored in separate
areas.
(h)
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 on or off site, or shall be rendered nonhazard-ous.
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.
(14) Patient medical records.
(a) The institution shall have a health
information management service that is responsible for the integrity and
confidentiality of a patient's medical records. A medical record shall be
maintained, in accordance with accepted professional principles, for each
patient admitted to the facility or receiving outpatient services.
(b) The health information management service
shall be under the direction of a Registered Health Information Administrator,
either on a full-time, part-time, or consultative basis, or by a Registered
Health Information Technician on a full-time basis and shall have available a
sufficient number of regularly-assigned employees to insure that records are
stored and retrieved efficiently.
(c) Medical records shall be retained for a
minimum of five (5) years from date of discharge or, in the case of a minor,
three (3) years after the patient reaches age eighteen (18).
(d) The facility shall designate a location
and maintain medical records there in the event the facility ceases to operate
for any reason.
(e) Medical record
contents shall be pertinent and current and shall include the following:
1. Identification data and signed consent
forms, including name and address of next of kin and of person or agency
responsible for patient;
2. Date of
admission, name of attending medical staff member, and allied health
professional responsible for the provision of therapy services;
3. Chief complaint;
4. Medical history including present illness,
past history, family history, and physical examination results;
5. Report of special examinations or
procedures performed and results;
6. Provisional diagnosis or reason for
admission;
7. Orders for diet,
diagnostic tests, therapeutic procedures, and medications, including patient
limitations, signed and dated by the medical staff member or other ordering
personnel acting within the limits of his statutory scope of practice if
applicable, including records of all medication administered to the
patient;
8. Complete surgical
record signed by attending surgeon or oral surgeon, to include anesthesia
record signed by anesthesiologist or anesthetist, preoperative physical
examination and diagnosis, description of operative procedures and findings,
postoperative diagnosis, and tissue diagnosis by qualified pathologist on
tissue surgically removed;
9.
Patient care plan which addresses the comprehensive care needs of the patient,
to include the coordination of the facility's service departments that impact
patient care;
10. Nurses'
observations and progress notes of a physician, dentist, or other ordering
personnel acting within his statutory scope of practice;
11. Record of temperature, blood pressure,
pulse, and respiration;
12. Final
diagnosis using terminology in the current version of the International
Classification of Diseases or the American Psychiatric Association's Diagnostic
and Statistical Manual, as applicable; and
13. Discharge summary, including condition of
patient on discharge and date of discharge.
(f) Records shall be indexed according to
disease, operation, and attending medical staff member. Any recognized indexing
system may be used.
1. The disease and
operative indices shall:
a. Use recognized
nomenclature;
b. Include each
specific disease diagnosed and each operative procedure performed;
and
c. Include essential data on
each patient having that particular condition.
2. The attending medical staff index shall
include all patients attended or seen for consultation by each medical staff
member.
3. Indexing shall be
current, within six (6) months following discharge of the patient.
(g) Medical record review.
1. The institution shall regularly review and
evaluate records maintenance and retention policies and shall propose
improvements if necessary and appropriate.
2. The institution shall establish and
maintain a medical records committee, which shall include a representative from
each service department and which shall report to the administrator. The
committee shall:
a. Review at least quarterly
a sampling of records to measure their adequacy and compliance with established
record maintenance policies and procedures; and
b. Review at least annually the medical
records policies and procedures and make recommendations for consideration by
the administrator.
(h) A statement of professional judgment and
a report of services to an individual shall be signed by the person qualified
by professional competency and official position. The medical record shall
record that services recommended and planned were received by the patient at
the time stated.
(i) Clinical
information shall be recorded as soon as practicable, but no later than
forty-eight (48) hours after the event.
(j) Discharge summaries shall be recorded
within thirty (30) days of discharge.
(k) A completed medical record shall include:
1. Name, address and next of kin;
2. The name and address of the personal
representative, conservator, guardian, or representative payee, if one has been
appointed for the person served;
3.
Pertinent history, diagnosis of disability, rehabilitation problem, goals, and
prognosis;
4. Reports from
referring sources;
5. Reports of
service referrals;
6. Reports from
outside consultation, and from laboratory, radiology, orthotic and prosthetic
services;
7. Designation of the
case manager for the patient, unless there is a written policy identifying who
is responsible for the plan management of specified groups;
8. Evidence of the patient's participation in
devising his own plan;
9.
Evaluation reports from each service;
10. Reports of staff conferences;
11. The patient's total treatment
plan;
12. Treatment plans from each
service;
13. Signed and dated
service and progress reports from each service;
14. Correspondence pertinent to the person
being served;
15. A signed and
dated authorization from the patient, his parent or guardian, if information or
photographs have been released or used;
16. Discharge report; and
17. Follow-up reports.
Section 3. Provision of
Services.
(1) General requirements.
(a) A medication or treatment shall not be
given without a written or verbal order signed by a physician, dentist, or
other ordering practitioner acting within his statutory scope of
practice.
(b) A verbal order for a
medication shall be given only to a licensed practical or registered nurse,
paramedic, or pharmacist and shall be signed by a member of the medical staff
or other ordering practitioner:
1. As soon as
possible after the order is given; or
2. Within thirty (30) days of the patient's
discharge if the patient is discharged prior to the order being
authenticated.
(c) A
verbal order for a diagnostic test or treatment order may be given to a
licensed practitioner acting within his statutory scope of practice and the
institutions' protocols.
(d) At the
time received, verbal orders from medications, diagnostic tests, and treatments
shall be:
1. Immediately transcribed by the
person receiving the order;
2.
Repeated back to the person requesting the order to ensure accuracy;
and
3. Annotated on the patient's
medical record by the person receiving the order as repeated and
verified.
(e) Medications
shall be administered by a physician, registered nurse, dentist, or a licensed
practical nurse under the supervision of a registered nurse, advanced practice
registered nurse, physician's assistant, or a paramedic acting within his scope
of practice.
(f) A restraint or
protective device, other than bed rails and wheelchair safety belts shall not
be used, except in an emergency until the attending medical staff member can be
contacted, or upon written or telephone orders of the attending medical staff
member. If restraint is necessary, it shall be the least restrictive protective
device which affords the patient the greatest possible degree of mobility and
protection. A locking restraint shall not be used under any
circumstances.
(g) Patient
physical. A physician shall conduct a physical examination and determine
whether the patient can benefit from a rehabilitation program through the use
of therapies provided by the institution within twenty-four (24) hours after
admission.
(h) Psychosocial
history. Each patient shall have a history and assessment interview within
seventy-two (72) hours after admission. The following resultant data shall be
entered on the patient record:
1. A
determination of current emotional state;
2. Vocational history;
3. Familial relationships;
4. Educational background;
5. Social support system; and
6. A determination of whether the patient can
benefit from a rehabilitation program through the use of therapies provided by
the institution.
(i)
Basic cardiopulmonary resuscitation shall be available within the institution
twenty-four (24) hours a day, seven (7) days a week.
(2) Staffing requirements.
(a) The program shall have personnel adequate
to meet the needs of patients on a twenty-four (24) hour basis. The number and
classification of personnel required shall be based on the number of patients
and the individual treatment plans. If the staff to patient ratio does not meet
the needs of the patients, the Office of Inspector General shall determine and
inform the program administrator in writing how many additional personnel are
to be added and of what job classification, and shall give the basis for this
determination.
(b) The staffing
ratio of therapists and pathologists to patients shall be equal to or greater
than one (1) full-time equivalent for every three (3) patients. Only licensed
or certified therapists or speech and language pathologists in the areas of
physical therapy, occupational therapy, speech and language pathology, or
psychology shall be utilized in the computation of this ratio. Certified or
licensed assistants shall not be utilized in the computation of this ratio. The
staffing for the facility shall be utilized in the computation of the
ratio.
(c) There shall be no more
than one (1) aide or assistant for each licensed or certified therapist or
speech and language pathologist on staff.
(3) Medical staff services.
(a) Medical care provided in the institution
shall be under the direction of the medical director or a medical staff member
in accordance with staff privileges granted by the governing
authority.
(b) Physician services
shall be available twenty-four (24) hours a day on at least an on-call
basis.
(c) There shall be
sufficient medical staff coverage for services provided in the institution in
keeping with the size of the institution, the scope of services provided and
the types of patients admitted to the facility.
(d) An individual rehabilitation program plan
shall be developed for each patient under the supervision of a physician. The
attending physician shall attend and actively participate in conferences
concerning those served.
(e) The
attending physician shall complete the discharge summary and sign the records
within thirty (30) days of discharge.
(f) The physician responsible for the
patient's rehabilitation program shall have specialized training or experience
in rehabilitation.
(g) There shall
be direct individual contact by a physician on any day there is an active
interdisciplinary treatment program.
(4) Nursing services.
(a) Nursing services shall be directed toward
prevention of complications of disability, restoration of optimal functioning,
and adaptation to an altered lifestyle.
1. The
institution shall have a nursing department organized to provide basic nursing
services and rehabilitation nursing services. A registered nurse with training
and experience in rehabilitative nursing shall serve as director of the nursing
department.
2. A registered nurse
shall be on duty at all times.
a. Nursing
staff for each nursing unit shall be supervised by a registered nurse in order
to insure immediate availability of a registered nurse with rehabilitation
experience on a twenty-four (24) hour basis.
b. Other nursing personnel shall be present
in sufficient numbers to provide nursing care not requiring the services of a
registered nurse.
c. Nursing care
shall be documented on each shift by staff members rendering care to patients.
This documentation shall describe the nursing care provided and shall include
information and observations significant to the continuity of patient
care.
(b)
Rehabilitation nursing services shall include physical and psychosocial
assessment of the following:
1. Body systems
related to the patient's physical rehabilitation nursing needs, with special
emphasis on skin integrity, bowel and bladder function, and respiratory and
circulatory systems function;
2.
Self-care skills development;
3.
Interpersonal relationships;
4.
Adaptation mechanisms and patterns used to manage stress; and
5. Sleep and rest patterns.
(c) Nursing services shall include
the following interventions:
1. Health
maintenance and discharge teaching;
2. Prevention of the complications of
immobility;
3. Physical care
including hygiene, skin care, physical transfer from one place to another,
positioning, and bowel and bladder care;
4. Psychosocial care including socialization,
adaptation to an altered lifestyle; and
5. Reinforcement of the multidisciplinary
treatment plan.
(d) A
nurse shall collaborate with the patient, family, and other disciplines and
agencies in discharge planning and teaching.
(e) Rehabilitation shall monitor the degree
of achievement of individualized nursing patient care goals.
(5) Multidisciplinary team. A
multidisciplinary team shall develop individual treatment plans and discharge
plans and shall conduct quality assurance reviews. The multidisciplinary team
shall include a physician, rehabilitation nurse, social worker or psychologist,
and a therapist involved in the patient's care.
(6) Case manager.
(a) A single case manager shall be designated
for each patient served. The provision of services by the institution to each
patient shall be organized through the patient's case manager. The case manager
shall:
1. Assume responsibility for the
patient during the course of treatment;
2. Coordinate the treatment plan;
and
3. Cultivate the patient's
participation in the program.
(b) If more than one (1) major program is
being provided simultaneously, there shall be only one (1) case manager. If the
patient's plan changes sequentially from one (1) program area to another, a new
case manager may be assigned.
(c)
The patient's case manager shall evaluate regularly the appropriateness of the
treatment plan in relation to the progress of the patient toward the attainment
of stated goals. The case manager shall assure that:
1. The patient is adequately
oriented;
2. The plan proceeds in
an orderly, purposeful, and timely manner; and
3. The discharge decision and arrangements
for follow-up are properly made.
(7) Treatment plan.
(a) The multidisciplinary team, with the
participation of the patient shall, within seven (7) days after admission for
rehabilitation, develop an individual treatment plan based on the patient's
medical evaluation and psychosocial history and assessment, which shall be
reviewed at least biweekly. The treatment plan shall include:
1. An assessment of the biological, social
and psychological needs of the patient, performed by qualified health care
professionals;
2. A description of
the patient's capacities, strengths, disabilities, and weaknesses;
3. Identification of the patient's
rehabilitation goals stated in functional, performance and behavioral
objectives relative to the performance of life tasks and capabilities, with
criteria for termination of treatment or discharge from the program;
4. Participation of the patient and his
family, to the extent possible;
5.
Physician input relative to both the general medical and rehabilitation medical
needs of the patient;
6. Discharge
planning addressed as part of goal setting as early as possible in the
rehabilitation process;
7. Time
intervals at which treatment or service outcomes will be reviewed;
8. Anticipated time frames for accomplishment
of the individual's specified goals;
9. The measures to be used to assess the
effects of treatment or services; and
10. The person responsible for implementation
of the plan.
(b) The
institution shall obtain and retain a signed consent form if
applicable.
(c) The institution
shall adopt a procedure to protect against release of a patient to an
unauthorized individual if a patient is unable to represent his own
interests.
(8)
Therapeutic services.
(a) The institution
shall provide allied services directly or under contract. Skilled therapy shall
be provided to a patient at an intensity appropriate to the disability and to
the patient's ability to tolerate treatment, at least three (3) hours per
person per day, and at least five (5) times per week, or, if the patient's
medical condition limits participation, an equivalent amount of combined
therapy, medical, nursing, and other professional care that shall be
provided.
(b) Occupational therapy
services shall be provided by or under the supervision of an individual
certified by the American Occupational Therapy Association as an occupational
therapist. Services shall include:
1.
Assessment and treatment of functional performance; independent living skills;
prevocational or work adjustment skills; educational, play or leisure and
social skills.
2. Assessment and
treatment of performance components; neuromuscular, sensori-integrative,
cognitive and psychosocial skills.
3. Therapeutic interventions, adaptations and
prevention.
4. Individualized
evaluations of past and current performance, achieved through observation of
individual or group tasks, standardized tests, record review, interviews, or
activity histories.
5. Assessment
of architectural barriers in home and workplace, and recommendation for
equipment, adaptations, and different arrangements.
6. Treatment goals, achieved by modalities
and techniques which include:
a. Task oriented
activities; simulation or actual practice of work, self-care, home management,
leisure and social skills and their components, creative media, games,
computers and other equipment;
b.
Prevocational training;
c.
Sensorimotor activities;
d. Patient
and family education and counseling;
e. Design, fabrication and application of
orthotic devices;
f. Guidance in
use of adaptive equipment and prosthetic devices;
g. Adaptation to physical and social
environment, and use of therapeutic milieu;
h. Joint protection and body mechanics;
i. Positioning;
j. Work simplification and energy
conservation; and
k. Cognitive
remediation.
7.
Occupational therapy services that monitor the extent to which goals are met
relative to assessing and increasing the patient's functional ability in daily
living skills.
(c)
Physical therapy services shall be provided by or under the supervision of a
licensed physical therapist employed on a full-time basis by a freestanding
specialty hospital, or at least twenty (20) hours per week for a general
hospital based unit.
1. Services shall
include the following:
a. An initial physical
therapy evaluation and assessment of the patient prior to the provision of
services;
b. Development of
treatment goals and plans in accord with the initial evaluation findings, with
treatment aimed at preventing or reducing disability or pain and restoring lost
function; and
c. Therapeutic
interventions which focus on posture, locomotion, strength, endurance, balance,
coordination, joint mobility, flexibility, and restoring loss of
function.
2. Physical
therapy services shall monitor the extent to which services have met
therapeutic goals relative to the initial and all subsequent examinations, and
the degree to which improvement occurs relative to the identified movement
dysfunction or reduction of pain associated with movement.
(d) Psychological services shall be provided
by or under the supervision of a licensed psychologist.
1. Assessment areas shall include
psychological, vocational, and neuropsychological functioning.
2. Interventions include individual and group
psychotherapy; family consultation and therapy; and design of specialized
psychological intervention programs including behavior modification, behavioral
treatment regimens for chronic pain, and biofeedback and relaxation
procedures.
3. Psychological
services shall monitor the cognitive and emotional adaptation of the patient
and family to the patient's disability.
(e) Speech-language services shall be
provided by or under the supervision of a licensed speech-language pathologist
certified in clinical competency by the American Speech-Language-Hearing
Association. Services shall include the following:
1. Screening to identify individuals who
require further evaluation to determine the presence or absence of a
communicative disorder;
2. Speech
and language competency evaluation resulting in the pathologist's plan,
direction, and conduct of habilitative, rehabilitative, and counseling programs
to improve language, voice, cognitive linguistic skills, articulation, fluency,
and adjustment to hearing loss, and an assessment and provision of alternative
and augmentative communicative devices;
3. A plan for discharge and provision for the
patient's understanding of communication abilities and prognosis; and
4. Monitoring of services for effectiveness
of actions taken to improve communication skills of patients.
(9) The institution
shall provide the following services directly or through a contractual
arrangement with other providers, as needed, in accordance with the
institution's program narrative:
(a) Social
work services shall be provided by an individual with a masters degree in
social work from a curriculum accredited by the Council for Social Work
Education.
1. The scope of rehabilitation
social services shall include the following areas related to work assessment
and interventions to facilitate rehabilitation:
a. Assessment of the personal coping history
and current psychosocial adaptation to the disability;
b. Assessment of immediate and extended
family and other support persons relative to increasing support networks;
and
c. Assessment of housing,
living arrangements, and stability and source of income relative to
facilitating discharge plans.
2. Intervention strategies, aimed at
increasing effectiveness of coping, strengthening informal support systems, and
facilitating continuity of care, shall include at least the following:
a. Discharge planning;
b. Casework with individual
patients;
c. Family counseling and
therapy;
d. Group work focused on
both education and therapy; and
e.
Community service linkage referrals.
3. Social work services shall monitor the
achievement of goals relative to discharge planning activities designed to meet
the basic sustenance, shelter, and comfort needs of patients and their
families.
(b) Audiology
services shall be provided by or under the supervision of a licensed
audiologist who is certified by the American Speech-Language-Hearing
Association. The audiologist shall direct and conduct required aural
habilitation and rehabilitation programs after determination of the patient's
range, nature, and degree of auditory and vestibular function using
instrumentation such as audiometers, electroacoustic emittance equipment, brain
stem evoked response equipment, and electronystagmographic equipment. Programs
shall include:
1. Hearing aid and assistive
listening device selection and orientation;
2. Counseling, guidance and auditory
training; and
3. Speech
reading.
(c) Vocational
and vocational rehabilitation services shall provide assessment and evaluation
of the patient's or client's need for services to enable return to productive
activity through the use of testing, counseling, and other service-related
activities. Identified needs are met either directly or through referral.
Services shall include:
1. Evaluation and
assessment focusing on maximizing the independent, productive functioning of
the individual;
2. Comprehensive
services to include at least the following areas:
a. Physical and intellectual capacity
evaluation;
b. Interest and
attitudes;
c. Emotional and social
adjustment;
d. Work skills and
capabilities;
e. Vocational
potential and objectives; and
f.
Job analysis;
3. The use
of instruments, equipment and methods, under supervision of a qualified
therapist;
4. Preparation of a
written report, with interpretation and recommendations, to be shared with the
individual and referral source; and
5. Monitoring the degree to which appropriate
work skills are achieved; the improvement in independent functioning relative
to work skill capability; and, the achievement of vocational
objectives.
(d)
Prosthetic or orthotic services.
1. Prosthetic
and orthotic services shall be provided by a specialist who is qualified to
manage the orthotic or prosthetic needs of a patient by:
a. Performing an examination;
b. Participating in the prescribing of
specialized equipment;
c. Designing
and fitting specialized equipment; and
d. Following up to ensure that the equipment
is properly functioning and fitting.
2. Monitoring of prosthetic or orthotic
services shall include:
a. Documented evidence
of communication with the prescribing physician; and
b. Patient satisfaction with the function and
fit of the equipment.
(e) Therapeutic recreation services shall be
provided by or under the supervision of a therapeutic recreation specialist or
an occupational therapist. The services may be provided in conjunction with
occupational therapy services. Services shall include the following:
1. Assessment of the patient's leisure or
social or recreational abilities, deficiencies, interests, barriers, life
experiences, needs, and potential;
2. Treatments designed to improve social,
emotional, cognitive and physical functional behaviors as a necessary
prerequisite to future leisure or social involvement;
3. Leisure education designed to help the
patient acquire knowledge, skills and attitudes needed for independent leisure
or social involvement, community adjustment, responsible decision-making, and
use of free time; and
4. Monitoring
which measures the extent to which goals are achieved relative to the use of
leisure time and socialization skills.
(f) Pharmaceutical services. The institution
shall provide for handling, storing, recording, and distributing
pharmaceuticals in accordance with state and federal law. A supply of medicinal
agents adequate to meet institutional needs shall be available on site. They
shall be stored in a safe manner and kept properly labeled and accessible.
Controlled substances and other dangerous or poisonous drugs shall be handled
in a safe manner to protect against their unauthorized use. Controlled
substances shall be under double lock. There shall be adequate refrigeration
for biologicals and drugs which require refrigeration.
1. An institution which maintains a pharmacy
for the compounding and dispensing of drugs shall provide pharmaceutical
services under the supervision of a registered pharmacist on a fulltime or
part-time basis, according to the size and demands of the program.
a. The pharmacist shall be responsible for
supervising and coordinating the activities of the pharmacy
department.
b. Additional personnel
competent in their respective duties shall be provided in keeping with the size
and activity of the department.
2. An institution not maintaining a pharmacy
shall have a drug room utilized only for the storage and distribution of drugs,
drug supplies and equipment. Prescription medications shall not be dispensed in
this area. The drug room shall be operated under the supervision of a
pharmacist employed at least on a consultative basis.
a. The consulting pharmacist shall assist in
establishing procedures for the distribution of drugs, and shall visit the
institution on a regular schedule.
b. The drug room shall be kept locked and the
key shall be in the possession of a responsible person on the premises, as
designated by the administrator.
c.
A record shall be kept of each transaction of the pharmacy or drug room and
shall be correlated with other institution records if indicated.
3. The pharmacist shall establish
and maintain a system of records and bookkeeping, in accordance with policies
of the institution, for maintaining control over requisitioning and dispensing
of drugs and drug supplies, and for charging patients for drugs and
pharmaceutical supplies.
4. A
record of the stock on hand and of the dispensing of all controlled substances
shall be maintained in such a manner that the disposition of any particular
item may be readily traced.
5. The
medical staff in cooperation with the pharmacist and other disciplines, as
necessary, shall develop policies and procedures that govern the safe
administration of drugs, including:
a. The
administration of medications only upon the order of an individual who has been
assigned medical clinical privileges or who is an authorized member of the
house medical staff;
b. Review of
the ordering practitioner's original order, or a direct copy, by the pharmacist
dispensing the drugs;
c. The
establishment and enforcement of automatic stop orders;
d. Proper accounting for and disposition of
unused medications or special prescriptions returned to the pharmacy as a
result of the patient being discharged, or if such medications or prescriptions
do not meet requirements for sterility or labeling;
e. Provision for emergency pharmaceutical
services; and
f. Provision for
reporting adverse medication reactions to the appropriate committee of the
medical staff.
6.
Therapeutic ingredients of medications dispensed shall be included in the
United States Pharmacopeia- National Formulary (USP-NF), the United States
Pharmacopeia-Drug Information (USP_DI), or the American Dental Association
(ADA) Guide to Dental Therapeutics except for those drugs and biologicals
unfavorably evaluated in the ADA Guide to Dental Therapeutics, or shall be
approved for use by the appropriate committee of the medical staff.
a. A pharmacist shall be responsible for
determining specifications and choosing acceptable sources for all drugs, with
approval of the appropriate committee of the medical staff.
b. There shall be available a formulary or
list of drugs accepted for use in the institution which shall be developed and
amended at regular intervals by the appropriate committee of the medical
staff.
(g)
Radiology services.
1. The institution shall
provide diagnostic radiology services directly or through arrangements with a
radiology service that has a current license or registration pursuant to
KRS
211.842 to
211.850
and associated administrative regulations. If the institution provides
radiology services directly, the institution shall have:
a. A radiologist, on at least a consulting
basis, to function as medical director of the department and to interpret films
that require specialized knowledge for accurate reading; and
b. Personnel adequate to supervise and
conduct the services.
2.
Written policies and procedures governing radiologic services shall be in
accordance with
902 KAR
100:115.
3. 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.
(h) Laboratory
services. The institution shall provide laboratory services directly or through
arrangements with a licensed facility which has the appropriate laboratory
facilities, or with an independent laboratory licensed pursuant to
KRS
333.030 and associated administrative
regulations.
1. Laboratory facilities and
services shall be available at all times.
a.
Emergency laboratory services shall be available twenty-four (24) hours a day,
seven (7) days a week, including holidays, either in the institution or through
a contractual arrangement as specified in subsection (10) of this
section.
b. The conditions,
procedures, and availability of services provided by an outside laboratory
shall be in writing and available in the institution.
2. Dated reports of laboratory services
provided shall be filed with the patient's medical record and duplicate copies
shall be kept in the department.
a. The
original report from work performed by an outside laboratory shall be filed in
the patient's medical record.
b.
The laboratory report shall have the name of the technologist who performed the
test.
c. A request for a laboratory
test shall be ordered and signed by an ordering practitioner acting within his
statutory scope of practice.
3. If laboratory services are provided
directly, there shall be a basic clinical laboratory which provides services
necessary for routine examinations.
a.
Equipment necessary to perform the basic tests shall be provided by the
facility.
b. Equipment shall be in
good working order, routinely checked, and precisely calibrated.
c. Clinical laboratory examinations shall
include chemistry, microbiology, hematology, serology, and clinical
microscopy.
d. There shall be a
clinical laboratory director and a sufficient number of supervisors,
technologists and technicians to perform promptly and proficiently the tests
requested of the laboratory. Laboratory services shall be under the direction
of a pathologist on a full-time, part-time, or a consultative basis. The
laboratory shall not perform procedures and tests which are outside the scope
of training of the laboratory personnel.
(i) Dietary services.
1. The institution shall provide dietary
services directly or by contract.
2. The dietary service shall be organized,
directed and staffed to provide quality food service and optimal nutritional
care.
a. The dietary department shall be
directed on a full-time basis by an individual who by education or specialized
training and experience is knowledgeable in food service management.
b. The dietary service shall have at least
one (1) dietician or nutritionist, either full time, part time, or on a
consultative basis, to supervise the nutritional aspects of patient
care.
c. Sufficient additional
personnel shall be employed to perform assigned duties to meet the dietary
needs of all patients.
d. The
dietary department shall have available for all dietary personnel current
written policies and procedures for food storage, handling, and
preparation.
e. An in-service
training program, which shall include the proper handling of food, safety and
personal grooming, shall be given at least quarterly for new dietary
employees.
3. Menus shall
be planned, written and rotated to avoid repetition. Nutritional needs shall be
met in accordance with recommended dietary allowances of the Food and Nutrition
Board of the National Research Council of the National Academy of Sciences and
in accordance with the medical staff member's orders.
4. Meals shall correspond with the posted
menu. If changes in menu are necessary, substitutions shall provide equal
nutritive value and the changes shall be recorded on the menu. Menus shall be
kept on file for thirty (30) days.
5. Each diet, regular or therapeutic, shall
be prescribed in writing, dated, and signed by the attending medical staff
member or other ordering practitioner acting within his statutory scope of
practice. Ordering information shall be specific and complete and shall include
the title of the diet, modifications in specific nutrients stating the amount
to be allowed in the diet, and specific problems that may affect diet or eating
habits.
6. Food shall be:
a. Prepared by methods that conserve
nutritive value, flavor, and appearance;
b. Served at the proper temperature;
and
c. Served in a form to meet
individual patient needs, including cut, chopped, or
ground.
7. If a patient
refuses foods served, nutritious substitutions shall be offered.
8. At least three (3) meals or their
equivalent shall be served daily with not more than a fifteen (15) hour span
between a substantial evening meal and breakfast, unless otherwise directed by
the attending medical staff member. Meals shall be served at regular times.
Between-meal or bedtime snacks of nourishing quality shall be
offered.
9. The dietary service
shall comply with
KRS
217.015 to
217.045 and
902 KAR
45:005.
(10) If a service is provided under contract,
the contract shall:
(a) Require that the
service is in accordance with the plan of care approved by the physician
responsible for the patient's care, except in the case of an adverse reaction
to a specific treatment.
(b)
Specify the geographical area in which the service is to be
furnished;
(c) Provide that
personnel and services contracted for meet the same requirements as those which
would be applicable if the personnel and services were furnished
directly;
(d) Provide that
personnel will participate in conferences required to coordinate the care of an
individual patient, as needed;
(e)
Provide for the preparation of treatment records, with progress notes and
observations, and their prompt incorporation into the clinical records of the
institution; and
(f) Specify the
period of time the contract is to be in effect and the manner of termination or
renewal.
(11) Outpatient
services.
(a) An institution which has an
organized outpatient department shall have written policies and procedures
relating to the staff, functions of service, and outpatient medical
records.
(b) The outpatient
department shall be organized in sections or clinics, the number of which shall
depend upon the size and degree of departmentalization of the medical staff,
the available facilities, patient needs, and the program narrative.
(c) The outpatient department shall have
appropriate cooperative arrangements and communications with community agencies
such as home health agencies, the local health department, social and welfare
agencies, and other outpatient departments.
(d) Services offered by the outpatient
department shall be under the direction of a physician who is a member of the
medical staff.
1. A registered nurse shall be
responsible for the nursing services of the department.
2. The number and type of other personnel
employed shall be determined by the volume and type of services provided and
type of patient served in the outpatient department.
(e) Necessary laboratory and other diagnostic
tests shall be available either through the facility or a laboratory in a
licensed facility or a laboratory licensed pursuant to
KRS
333.030 and associated administrative
regulations.
(f) Medical case
records shall be maintained and, if appropriate, coordinated with other
institution case records.
1. The outpatient
medical record shall be filed in a location which ensures ready accessibility
to the medical staff members, nurses, and other personnel of the outpatient
department.
2. Information in the
medical record shall be complete and sufficiently detailed relative to the
patient's history, physical examination, laboratory and other diagnostic tests,
diagnosis, and treatment to facilitate continuity of
care.