Current through Register Vol. 51, No. 19, September 20, 2024
A. Assessment. If a comprehensive
developmental assessment has not been completed within the 90 days before
admission, before the child's 6th visit, the therapeutic nursery staff shall
assure the completion of an assessment, including, when appropriate,
standardized measurement, that includes, at a minimum, an assessment of the
following:
(1) Social and emotional
development;
(2) Cognitive skills
and deficits;
(3) Language
development;
(4) Motor skills, fine
and gross;
(5) Self-help and
adaptive skills;
(6) Family history
and evaluation;
(7) Home
environment;
(8) Developmental
history;
(9) Mental status;
and
(10) Medical history and needs,
if any.
B. Diagnosis.
Before the child's 6th visit, an individual qualified to diagnose under the
provisions of Health Occupations Article, Annotated Code of Maryland, shall:
(1) Conduct a face-to-face evaluation of the
child;
(2) Formulate and document a
diagnosis; and
(3) Document the
rationale for the diagnosis.
C. Individual Treatment Plan (ITP).
(1) Treatment Team. At a minimum, the
following individuals shall participate on a child's treatment team:
(a) At least one of the following:
(i) The therapeutic nursery physician,
or
(ii) A staff psychologist or
psychologist consultant;
(b) At least one other mental health
professional;
(c) All therapeutic
nursery staff who are involved in providing services to the child and family;
and
(d) If the therapeutic nursery
is affiliated with an educational preschool program, the educational staff, as
determined appropriate by the therapeutic nursery clinical director.
(2) Plan. Before the child's 6th
visit, the therapeutic nursery treatment team, working cooperatively with the
child's primary caretaker and classroom teacher, shall prepare an ITP that
includes:
(a) The diagnostic formulation, as
required by §B of this regulation;
(b) A description of the child's behavior
that includes:
(i) Problem list,
and
(ii) Asset list;
(c) Goals and objectives stated in
behavioral, measurable terms;
(d)
Treatment strategies;
(e) Classroom
interventions;
(f) Home
interventions;
(g) For children in
Program A, that portion of an IFSP, if any, that pertains to therapeutic
nursery services; and
(h) As
relevant, the information about the following from the child's parent,
guardian, or primary caretaker, in consultation with appropriate health care or
other service providers:
(i) Instructions for
care in an emergency,
(ii) History
of allergies, including to medication,
(iii) History of seizures,
(iv) Medication prescribed,
(v) Nutritional requirements, limitations,
and feeding procedures, and
(vi)
Essential medical or nonmedical treatments or procedures, including any
advanced directives.
(3) Signatures on the ITP. The following
shall sign the ITP:
(a) The treatment
coordinator of the therapeutic nursery;
(b) The therapeutic nursery physician, staff
psychologist, or psychologist consultant;
(c) If the child is receiving medication, the
therapeutic nursery physician;
(d)
If the individual who signs under the provisions of §C(3)(b) of this
regulation is also the treatment coordinator, at least one other mental health
professional; and
(e) Following
review of the ITP, the parent, guardian, or primary caretaker.
(4) 45-Day Review. At a minimum of
every 45 days:
(a) The treatment coordinator
shall:
(i) Review the progress on the
ITP,
(ii) Document in the child's
record a description of progress toward goals and changes in goals and
interventions based on the review of progress under §C(4)(a)(i) of this
regulation, and
(iii) Update the
ITP accordingly; and
(b)
A minimum of two treating mental health professionals shall sign the 45-day
review.
(5) 3-Month
Review. Every 3 months, at a treatment team meeting, the:
(a) Treatment team shall review the ITP
according to the process outlined in §C(4) of this regulation;
(b) Treatment coordinator shall update and
sign the 3-month review; and
(c)
Therapeutic nursery physician, staff psychologist, or psychologist consultant
shall sign the ITP review.
D. Continuing Evaluation. In order to ensure
that services to a child are timely and appropriate, therapeutic nursery staff
shall document in the child's record:
(1) As
outlined in the policy and procedures manual, contact notes regarding all
clinically relevant face-to-face, telephone, and written contacts with or about
the child, including the dates, locations, and types of contacts; and
(2) Progress summary notes, entered at least
monthly, by staff members involved in the child's treatment and classroom
activities, regarding progress toward treatment goals.