Current through Register Vol. 49, No. 18, September 16, 2024
(1) The following
principles shall apply to all decisions made pursuant to this chapter:
(A) The safety and welfare of children is
paramount;
(B) All providers of
direct services to children and their families will be evaluated in a uniform,
transparent, objective, and consistent basis;
(C) Services to children and their families
which are provided by the division and licensed residential care facilities
shall be provided in a timely manner to maximize the opportunity for successful
outcomes, and such services shall be tracked and routinely evaluated through a
quality assurance program;
(D) Any
provider of direct services to children and families shall have the appropriate
and relevant training, education, and expertise to provide the highest quality
of services possible which shall be consistent with federal and state
standards;
(E) Resources and
efforts of the division and licensed residential care facilities shall be
committed to pursue the best possible opportunity for a successful outcome for
each child. In the case of children and youth who are in the foster care
system, successful outcomes may include preparing youth for a productive and
successful life as an adult outside the foster care system, such as independent
living. For those providers that work with children requiring intensive
twenty-four- (24-) hour treatment services, successful outcomes shall be based
on the least restrictive alternative possible based on the child's needs as
well as the quality of care received; and
(F) All licensed service providers shall
prioritize methods of reducing or eliminating a child's need for residential
treatment through community-based services and supports.
(2) For the purpose of all regulations in 13
CSR Chapter 71, unless otherwise specified or unless the context clearly
requires otherwise, the definitions of terms specified in sections
210.110,
210.481,
210.1253, RSMo, and
13 CSR
35-71.015 shall apply to all of the regulations in
this chapter. The singular includes the plural and plural includes the
singular. In addition, the following terms are defined as follows:
(A) "Agency" in the context of regulations
governing licensed residential care facilities shall mean the same as licensed
residential care facility or LRCF;
(B) "Background check" means a background
check which complies with the requirements of 210.493, RSMo, and
13 CSR
35-71.015;
(C) "Chemical restraints" are drugs which are
prescribed or administered to temporarily restrain a child who presents a
likelihood of serious physical harm to him/herself or others;
(D) A "critical incident" is an incident
involving a child in the care of the agency, in which the child or another
person directly involved with the child is placed at significant risk of death,
serious physical, mental, or sexual harm. A critical incident may involve
conduct of the child, other children, and/or acts or omissions of staff of the
agency. Examples of critical incidents include, but are not limited to: injury
of a child during physical restraint; serious physical or sexual aggression by
or toward the child; significant physical injuries requiring medical attention;
allegations of sexual abuse; criminal conduct involving the child; elopement;
attempted suicide; fire setting; child death; and information which must be
reported to the child abuse and neglect hotline pursuant to 210.115, RSMo. A
"critical incident report" is a report documenting a critical
incident;
(E) "Director" is the
director of the Children's Division;
(F) "Division" is the Children's Division of the
Department of Social Services of Missouri as defined in section
210.481(3),
RSMo;
(G) "Elopement" is when a
child leaves a facility or designated area off the campus of a LRCF without
permission and places the child out of sight and sound of direct
supervision;
(H) "Family Care
Safety Registry" means the family care safety registry administered by the
Department of Health and Senior Services;
(I) "Good standing" refers to a licensed residential
treatment agency for children and youth in substantial compliance with Chapter
71 of the Children's Division residential treatment agencies for children and
youth rules and is not under involuntary intake suspension, license denial,
license suspension, and/or license revocation;
(J) "Intensive residential treatment" for children and
youth is provided in a living unit of an agency for gravely, emotionally
dys-regulated youth that has the capability of providing a highly structured
and secure environment to prevent runaway behavior, address the likelihood of
rage and physical aggression, and minimize the likelihood of youth injuring
themselves or others. Intensive residential treatment for children and youth
may be achieved through a combination of staffing patterns, architectural
design of the operating site, electronic monitoring of the operating site and
its exits, or other means necessary to assure safety;
(K) "Mechanical restraints" are any device,
instrument, or physical object used to confine or limit a child's freedom of
movement, except when necessary for orthopedic, surgical, and other medical
purposes, or when necessary, to transport a child that may abscond or cause
injury during transportation. Support devices used in normal situations to
achieve proper body position and balance are not mechanical
restraints;
(L) "Medical
examination" is a thorough physical examination conducted by a licensed
physician, certified nurse practitioner, advanced practice nurse in a
collaborative practice agreement with a licensed physician, or a registered
nurse who is under the supervision of a licensed physician. It may include a
variety of tests, depending on the age, sex, and health of the person being
examined, that includes tests for communicable diseases including, but not
limited to, tuberculosis and hepatitis, when recommended by a licensed
physician. It should also include a statement of the patient's mental state as
determined by a licensed physician;
(M) "Operating site" is any building or
campus of a licensed agency in which children receive care;
(N) "Physical restraint" is physical holding
involving restriction of a child's voluntary movement to temporarily restrain
an agitated, violent, or aggressive child who presents a likelihood of serious
physical harm to him/herself or others;
(O) "Professional staff" of residential care
facility are staff or contractors of the residential care facility who are
qualified and required by law to be licensed in good standing to provide
services for children to provide the services which they are providing.
Examples of professional staff include, but are not limited to, physicians,
nurses, physician assistants, teachers, licensed professional counselors,
physical therapists, and occupational therapists;
(P) "Social services" are planned
psycho-social interventions that are intended to lead to increased individual
and family self-sufficiency and empowerment, and will support the child's
transition from the placement into the family or community. Social services
shall include, but shall not necessarily be limited to, individual, family, or
group therapy that is provided in conjunction with other age and
developmentally appropriate expressive, experiential, and adjunct
activities;
(Q) "Transitional
living services" are services provided to older adolescents that combine life
skills training with opportunities to practice same. The goal of such services
is to prepare the youth for successful adult living in the community upon their
discharge from residential treatment for children and youth;
(R) "Variance" is a minor, time limited,
deviation from a rule that may be requested by a licensed residential treatment
for children and youth agency on a form prescribed by the division and approved
or denied by the division. Approval may be granted by the division when a
variance does not negatively impact child health and safety and is not under
the purview of another regulatory entity. Examples include, but are not limited
to, time limited deviations in licensed capacity and age range; and
(S) "Well-known religious order, church, and
religious organization" are defined as follows:
1. A church, synagogue, or mosque;
2. An entity that would qualify for federal
tax exempt status as a not-for-profit religious organization under section
501(c) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954; or
3. An entity where the real property on which
the residential treatment for children and youth operating site is located is
exempt from local taxation because it is used for religious purposes.
*Original authority: 210.506, RSMo 1982, amended 1993,
1995.