Current through Register Vol. 46, No. 39, September 25, 2024
The facility shall establish and maintain an infection
control program designed to provide a safe, sanitary, and comfortable
environment in which residents reside and to help prevent the development and
transmission of disease and infection.
(a) Infection control program. The facility
shall establish an infection control program with written policies and
procedures under which it:
(1) investigates,
controls and takes action to prevent infections in the facility;
(2) determines what procedures such as
isolation and universal precautions should be utilized for an individual
resident and implements the appropriate procedures;
(3) maintains a record of incidence and
corrective actions related to infections; and
(4) collects documentation of vaccination
against influenza, or requires wearing of a surgical or procedure mask during
the influenza season, for personnel who have not received the influenza vaccine
for the current influenza season, pursuant to section
2.59 of this Title.
(5) Repealed.
(b) Preventing spread of infection.
(1) When the infection control program
determines that isolation is needed to prevent the spread of infection, the
facility shall isolate the resident.
(2) The facility shall assure that all
equipment and supplies are cleaned and properly sterilized where necessary and
are stored in a manner that will not violate the integrity of the
sterilization.
(3) The facility
shall prohibit persons, including but not limited to, staff, volunteers, and
visitors known to have a communicable disease or infected skin lesions from
direct contact with residents or their food, if direct contact will transmit
the disease.
(4) The facility shall
require physicians and staff to wash their hands after each direct resident
contact for which handwashing is indicated by accepted professional
practice.
(c) Linens.
Personnel shall handle, store, process, and transport linens so as to prevent
the spread of infection.
(d)
Reporting. The facility shall report increased incidence of infections,
including nosocomial infections as defined in section
2.2 of this Title, to the
appropriate area office of the Office of Health Systems Management and shall
report, immediately, the presence of any communicable disease as defined in
section 2.1 of this Title to the city,
county or district health officer.
(e) Notice to funeral directors. If, at the
time of death, a resident was diagnosed as having a specific communicable
disease designated in Part 2 of this Title or an infectious disease, a written
report of such disease shall accompany the body when it is released to the
funeral director or his or her agent, except that no HIV-related information
shall be disclosed to the funeral director unless the funeral director has
access in the ordinary course of business to HIV-related information on the
death certificate of the deceased individual.
(f)
(1) The
nursing home shall possess and maintain a supply of all necessary items of
personal protective equipment (PPE) sufficient to protect health care
personnel, consistent with federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
guidance, for at least 60 days, by August 31, 2021.
(2) The 60-day stockpile requirement set
forth in paragraph (1) of this subdivision shall be determined by the
Department as follows for each type of required PPE:
(i) for single gloves, the applicable
positivity rate, multiplied by the nursing home's average census as determined
annually by the Department, multiplied by 24;
(ii) for gowns, the applicable positivity
rate, multiplied by the nursing home's average census as determined annually by
the Department, multiplied by 3;
(iii) for surgical masks, the applicable
positivity rate, multiplied by the nursing home's average census as determined
annually by the Department, multiplied by 1.5; and
(iv) for N95 respirator masks, the applicable
positivity rate, multiplied by the nursing home's average census as determined
annually by the Department, multiplied by 1.4.
(v) For the purposes of this paragraph, the
term "applicable positivity rate" shall mean the greater of the following
positivity rates:
(a) The nursing home's
average COVID-19 positivity rate, based on reports made to the Department,
during the period April 26, 2020 through May 20, 2020; or
(b) The nursing home's average COVID-19
positivity rate, based on reports made to the Department, during the period
January 3, 2021 through January 31, 2021; or
(c) 20.15 percent, representing the highest
Regional Economic Development Council average COVID-19 positivity rate, as
reported to the Department, during the periods April 26, 2020 through May 20,
2020 and January 3, 2021 through January 31, 2021.
(d) In the case of nursing homes previously
designated by the Department as a COVID-positive only facility, the term
"applicable positivity rate" shall be as defined in clause (c) of this
subparagraph.
(3) A nursing home shall be considered to
possess and maintain the required PPE if:
(i)
it maintains all PPE on-site; or
(ii) it maintains PPE off-site, provided that
the off-site storage location is within New York State, can be accessed by the
nursing home within at least 24 hours, and the nursing home maintains at least
a 10-day supply of all required PPE on-site, as determined by the calculations
set forth in paragraph (2) of this subdivision. A nursing home may enter into
an agreement with a vendor to store off-site PPE, provided that such agreement
requires the vendor to maintain unduplicated, facility-specific stockpiles, the
vendor agrees to maintain at least a 60-day supply of all required PPE (less
the amount that is stored on-site at the facility), and the PPE is accessible
by the facility 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, year round. In the event the
Department finds a nursing home has not maintained the required PPE stockpile,
it shall not be a defense that the vendor failed to maintain the
supply.
(iii) Any PPE stored
outside of New York State shall not count toward the facility's required 60-day
stockpile.
(4) The
Department shall determine the nursing home's average census annually, by
January 1st of each year, and shall communicate such determination to each
facility. Nursing homes shall have 90 days to come into compliance with the new
PPE stockpile requirements, as set forth in paragraph (2) of this subdivision,
following such determination by the Department.
(5) In order to maximize the shelf life of
stockpiled inventory, providers should follow the appropriate storage
conditions as outlined by manufacturers, and providers are strongly encouraged
to rotate inventory through regular usage and replace what has been used in
order to ensure a consistent readiness level and reduce waste. Expired products
should be disposed of when their expiration date has passed. Expired products
shall not be used to comply with the stockpile requirement set forth in
paragraph (1) of this subdivision.
(6) Failure to possess and maintain the
required supply of PPE may result in the revocation, limitation, or suspension
of the nursing home's license; provided, however, that no such revocation,
limitation, or suspension shall be ordered unless the Department has provided
the nursing home with a fourteen day grace period, solely for a nursing home's
first violation of this section, to achieve compliance with the requirement set
forth herein.
(7) In the event a
new methodology relating to PPE in Residential Health Care Facilities is
developed, including but not limited to a methodology by the U.S. Department of
Health & Human Services, and the Commissioner determines that such
alternative methodology is appropriate for New York nursing homes and will
adequately protect facility staff and patients, the Commissioner shall amend
this subdivision to reflect such new
methodology.