Current through Register Vol. 49, No. 18, September 16, 2024
(1) Each
organization that is certified or deemed certified as a CPR program by the
department shall comply with requirements set forth in Department of Mental
Health Core Rules for Psychiatric and Substance Use Disorder Treatment
Programs, 9
CSR 10-7.110 Personnel.
(2) Qualified Staff. The program director
shall ensure an adequate number of qualified professionals are available to
provide community psychiatric rehabilitation (CPR) services.
(A) Caseload size may vary according to the
acuity, symptom complexity, and needs of individuals served. An individual
being served or his or her parent/guardian has the right to request an
independent review by the CPR director if they believe individual needs are not
being met. If the CPR director deems it necessary, caseload size or other
changes may be implemented.
(B) The
supervisory-to-staff ratio shall be based on the needs of individuals being
served, focusing on successful outcomes and satisfaction with services and
supports as expressed by persons served.
(C) The organization shall have policies and
procedures for monitoring and adjusting caseload size and ensure there is
documented, ongoing supervision of clinical and direct service staff.
(3) The program shall have and
implement a process for granting clinical privileges to practitioners to
deliver CPR services.
(A) Each treatment
discipline shall define clinical privileges based upon identified and accepted
criteria approved by the governing body.
(B) The process shall include periodic review
of each practitioner's credentials, performance, education, and the like, and
the renewal or revision of clinical privileges at least every two (2)
years.
(C) Initial granting and
renewal of clinical privileges shall be based on-
1. Well-defined written criteria for
qualifications, clinical performance, and ethical practice related to the goals
and objectives of the program;
2.
Verified licensure, certification, or registration, if applicable;
3. Verified training and
experience;
4. Recommendations from
the agency's program, department service, or all of these, in which the
practitioner will be or has been providing service;
5. Evidence of current competence;
6. Evidence of health status related to the
practitioner's ability to discharge his/her responsibility, if indicated;
and
7. A statement signed by the
practitioner that he/she has read and agrees to be bound by the policies and
procedures established by the provider and governing body.
(D) Renewal or revision of clinical
privileges shall also be based on-
1.
Relevant findings from the CPR program's quality assurance activities;
and
2. The practitioner's adherence
to the policies and procedures established by the CPR program and its governing
body.
(E) As part of the
privileging process, the CPR program shall establish procedures to-
1. Afford a practitioner an opportunity to be
heard, upon request, when denial, curtailment, or revocation of clinical
privileges is planned;
2. Grant
temporary privileges on a time-limited basis; and
3. Ensure that non-privileged staff receive
close and documented supervision from privileged practitioners until training
and experience are adequate to meet privilege requirements.
(4) Direct care staff
and staff providing supervision to direct care staff shall complete training in
the service competency areas listed below.
(A)
Competent staff shall-
1. Operate from
person-centered, person-driven, recovery-oriented, and stage-wise service
delivery approaches that promote health and wellness;
2. Develop cultural competence that results
in the ability to understand, communicate with, and effectively interact with
people across cultures;
3. Deliver
services according to key service functions that are evidence-based and best
practices;
4. Practice in a manner
that demonstrates respect and understanding of the unique needs of persons
served;
5. Use effective strategies
for engagement, re-engagement, relationship-building, and communication;
and
6. Be knowledgeable of mandated
reporting requirements for abuse and neglect of children and reporting
requirements related to abuse, neglect, or financial exploitation of senior
citizens and individuals who are disabled.
(B) Staff providing supervision to community
support specialists must have additional training or experience in order to be
knowledgeable in the supervision competency areas listed below. Competent
supervisors-
1. Practice in a manner that
demonstrates use of management strategies that focus on individual outcomes,
care coordination, collaboration, and communication with other service
providers both within and external to the organization;
2. Ensure new and existing staff are
competent by providing training/supervision, guidance and feedback, field
mentoring, and oversight of services to individuals served by the
team;
3. Ensure processes exist for
tracking and review of data such as missed appointments, hospitalization and
follow-up care, crisis responsiveness and follow-up, timeliness and quality of
documentation, and need for outreach and engagement; and
4. Monitor and review services,
interventions, and contacts with individuals served to ensure services are
implemented according to individualized treatment plans or crisis prevention
plans, evaluate the effectiveness and appropriateness of services in achieving
recovery/resiliency outcomes in areas such as housing, employment, education,
leisure activities and family, peer and social relationships.
(C) New staff shall job shadow
their supervisor and/or experienced staff in a position equivalent to their
qualifications and skill level.
(D)
Staff shall receive ongoing and regular clinical supervision.
(E) A written plan shall be developed
indicating how competencies will be measured and ensured for all staff
providing direct services and staff providing supervision including, but not
limited to, some combination of the following:
1. Testing;
2. Observation/field supervision;
3. Clinical supervision/case
discussion;
4. Quality review of
case documentation;
5. Use of
relevant findings from quality assurance activities;
6. Satisfaction with services as conveyed by
individuals served and family members/natural supports;
7. Stakeholder/interagency satisfaction with
services; and
8. Treatment outcomes
for individuals and family members/natural supports.
(F) Demonstrated competency must be
documented within the first six (6) months of employment with the CPR
program.
(G) Staff shall
participate in at least thirty-six (36) clock hours of relevant training during
any two (2) year period. A minimum of twelve (12) clock hours of training must
be completed annually.
(H)
Documentation of all orientation, training, job shadowing, and supervision
activities must be maintained and available for review by department staff or
other authorized representatives.
(I) Documentation of training must include
the topic, date(s) and length, skills targeted/objective of skill,
certification/continuing education units (as applicable), location, and name,
title, and credentials of instructor(s).
*Original authority: 630.050, RSMo 1980, amended 1993,
1995, 2008; 630.655, RSMo 1980; and 632.050, RSMo
1980.