Louisiana Administrative Code
Title 48 - PUBLIC HEALTH-GENERAL
Part I - General Administration
Subpart 3 - Licensing and Certification
Chapter 96 - Hospitals-Crisis Receiving Centers
Subchapter B - Level I Crisis Receiving Centers
Section I-9617 - Level I Services
Universal Citation: LA Admin Code I-9617
Current through Register Vol. 50, No. 9, September 20, 2024
A. 24-Hour Telephone Hotline
1. A Level I CRC-SU
shall either maintain a telephone hotline that operates 24 hours per day, seven
days per week or enter into a formal cooperative agreement with an existing
24-hour hotline as specified in the region's crisis response systems
plan.
2. The hotline shall be
staffed at all times by trained crisis workers.
a. A trained crisis worker is one who is:
i. trained in the assessment and management
of crisis phone calls;
ii. able to
assess the priority of the call; and
iii. able to provide interventions that are
appropriate to the level of acuity of the caller.
b. The trained crisis worker shall have
resource data available whenever calls are answered in order to facilitate
crisis intervention.
c. The trained
crisis worker shall have the ability to provide active intervention (i.e.
contacting emergency medical services, police, fire department, etc.) in
life-threatening situations.
3. The CRC-SU shall have written procedures
for handling crisis calls.
4. The
telephone settings shall be set up so as to protect the confidentiality of
callers.
5. The CRC-SU shall have
well written procedures to expand the facility's capacity to handle multiple
calls coming into the CRC-SU simultaneously.
B. Triage and Screening
1. The Level I CRC-SU shall conduct a
triage/screening of each individual who applies for crisis assistance or is
under an order for involuntary examination.
2. The triage/screening shall be available 24
hours per day and shall be conducted within 15 minutes of the individual
presenting to the unit. The CRC-SU shall have procedures to prioritize
imminently dangerous patients and to differentiate between medical emergencies
and behavioral health emergencies.
3. Until a patient receives triage/screening,
he or she shall wait in a location with restricted access and egress with
constant staff observation and monitoring.
4. The triage/screening shall include:
a. an evaluation of the existence of a
medical emergency;
b. an evaluation
of imminent threat of harm to self or others;
c. an evaluation for the presence or absence
of cognitive signs suggesting delirium or dementia;
d. an evaluation of the need for an immediate
full assessment;
e. an evaluation
of the need for an emergency intervention; and
f. a medical screening including at a
minimum, vital signs and a medical history, as soon as the patient's condition
permits.
5. The
triage/screening shall be conducted by licensed professionals in the medical or
behavioral health fields that have the training and experience to triage/screen
individuals for both behavioral and medical emergent needs in accordance with
the scope of practice of their licensed discipline.
6. When emergency medical services are not
available onsite at the Level I CRC-SU, the staff shall be prepared to render
first-responder healthcare (basic cardiac life support, first aid, etc.) at all
times. A CRC-SU shall also ensure that access to emergency transportation
services to the nearest emergency department is available.
7. A Level I CRC-SU shall have procedures in
place to ensure that based on the triage/screening, patients are prioritized
for further assessment and services according to their risk level, or they are
referred to other resources for care.
C. Assessments
1. After the triage/screening is completed,
patients who have not been referred to other resources shall receive a full
assessment.
2. Assessments shall be
conducted based on the priority level determined by the triage/screening. Every
patient under the age of 18 shall be assessed by staff with appropriate
training and experience in the assessment and treatment of children and
adolescents in a crisis setting.
3.
The assessment shall be initiated within two hours of the triage/screening
evaluation and shall include:
a. a full
psychiatric assessment;
b. a
physical health assessment; and
c.
an assessment for possible abuse and/or neglect.
4. A full psychiatric assessment shall
include:
a. patient interviews by board
certified/eligible licensed psychiatrist(s) or psychiatric nurse
practitioner(s) trained in emergency psychiatric assessment and
treatment;
b. a review of the
medical and psychiatric records of current and past diagnoses, treatments,
medications and dose response, side-effects and compliance, if
available;
c. contact with current
behavioral health providers whenever possible;
d. a psychiatric diagnostic
assessment;
e. identification of
social, environmental, and cultural factors that may be contributing to the
crisis;
f. an assessment of the
patient's ability and willingness to cooperate with treatment;
g. a general medical history that addresses
conditions that may affect the patient's current state (including a review of
symptoms) and is focused on conditions that may present with psychiatric
symptoms or that may cause cognitive impairment, e.g., a history of recent
physical trauma; and
h. a detailed
assessment of substance use, abuse, and misuse; and
i. an assessment for possible abuse and
neglect; such assessment shall be conducted by an LMHP trained in how to
conduct an assessment to determine abuse and neglect. The CRC-SU shall ensure
that every patient is assessed for sexual, physical, emotional, and verbal
abuse and/or neglect.
5.
All individuals shall be seen by a licensed psychiatrist or a licensed APRN
within eight hours of the triage/screening. The board certified/eligible
psychiatrist or APRN shall formulate a preliminary psychiatric diagnosis based
on review of the assessment data collected.
a. The APRN must be a nurse practitioner
specialist in adult psychiatric and mental health, family psychiatric and
mental health, or a certified nurse specialist in psychosocial, gerontological
psychiatric mental health, adult psychiatric and mental health, or
child-adolescent mental health and may practice to the extent that services are
within the APRN's scope of practice.
6. A physical health assessment shall be
conducted by a licensed physician, licensed advanced nurse practitioner, or a
licensed physician's assistant and shall include the following:
a. vital signs;
b. a cognitive exam that screens for
significant cognitive or neuropsychiatric impairment;
c. a neurological screening exam that is
adequate to rule out significant acute pathology;
d. medical history and review of
symptoms;
e. pregnancy test in all
women of child-bearing age, as applicable;
f. urine toxicology evaluation;
g. blood levels of psychiatric medications
that have established therapeutic or toxic ranges; and
h. other testing or exams as appropriate and
indicated.
7.
Repealed.
D. Brief Intervention and Stabilization
1. If an
assessment reveals that immediate stabilization services are required, the
Level I CRC-SU shall provide behavioral health interventions and stabilization
which may include the use of psychotropic medications.
2. Following behavioral health interventions
and stabilization measures, the Level I CRC-SU shall assess the patient to
determine if referral to community based behavioral health services is
appropriate or a higher level of care is required.
E. Linking/Referral Services
1. If an assessment reveals a need for
emergency or continuing care for a patient, the Level I CRC-SU shall make
arrangements to place the patient into the appropriate higher level of care.
Patients in a Level I CRC-SU shall be transitioned out of the Level I CRC-SU
within 24 hours unless there is documented evidence of the CRC-SU's measures
taken to transfer the patient to the higher level of needed care and the
reasons the transfer of the patient exceeds 24 hours.
2. If the assessment reveals no need for a
higher level of care, the Level I CRC-SU shall provide:
a. referrals, and make appointments where
possible, to appropriate community-based behavioral health services for
individuals with developmental disabilities, addiction disorders, and mental
health issues; and
b. brief
behavioral health interventions to stabilize the crises until referrals to
appropriate community-based behavioral health services are established or
contact is made with the individual's existing provider and a referral is made
back to the existing provider in the form of a follow-up appointment or other
contact.
AUTHORITY NOTE: Promulgated in accordance with R.S. 36:254 and R.S. 40:2100-2115.
Disclaimer: These regulations may not be the most recent version. Louisiana may have more current or accurate information. We make no warranties or guarantees about the accuracy, completeness, or adequacy of the information contained on this site or the information linked to on the state site. Please check official sources.
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