Current through Register Vol. 46, No. 39, September 25, 2024
(a) Definitions.
(1) Foster family care is assistance with
personal hygiene, dressing, and feeding and the performance of tasks essential
to the maintenance of a foster family care recipient's health and safety within
a foster family care home which is ordered by a physician, provided in
accordance with a plan of care, and supervised by a registered professional
nurse.
(2) A foster family
caregiver is a person who provides the following services in his or her home to
one or two foster family care recipients pursuant to an admission agreement
with a sponsoring agency and the standards set forth in this section: room and
board; supervision of, or assistance with, activities of daily living; and
personal care and other related services which are necessary to maintain the
recipient in the community.
(3) A
foster family care demonstration program is a demonstration program the purpose
of which is to determine whether foster family care is an appropriate
alternative to institutional placement for elderly or disabled persons who lack
the homes, the resources, or the family support to live in the
community.
(4) A respite caregiver
is a person who provides foster family care for up to 21 days per year, as
determined by the sponsoring agency, as a substitute for a foster family
caregiver.
(5) A sponsoring agency
is a general hospital, a residential health care facility (RHCF), a certified
home health agency, a long-term home health care program, or a social services
district which administers a foster family care demonstration
program.
(b) Contracts
and agreements.
(1) Contract. The sponsoring
agency, other than a sponsoring agency which is a social services district,
must have a written contract with the social services district. A sponsoring
agency which is a social services district must have a written contract with
the department. The contract must specify the parties' functions and
responsibilities, include provisions governing the contract's renewal and
termination prior to expiration, and include all reimbursement provisions and
any other provisions the department may require. The contract's term must not
exceed one year, and the contract may be renewed for additional one year terms
with the department's approval. The contract must provide that either party may
terminate the contract only upon 60 calendar days written notice to the other
party. The social services district must submit the contract to the department
for its review and must not implement the contract until the department has
approved it. The department will approve or disapprove the contract in writing
within 60 business days after it receives the contract.
(2) Admission agreement. The sponsoring
agency, the foster family care recipient, and the foster family caregiver must
execute a written admission agreement at or prior to the recipient's admission
to the foster family care demonstration program. The agreement must be printed
in legible and easily read type and include the following provisions:
(i) the date the recipient is admitted to the
foster family care demonstration program, which will also be the agreement's
effective date;
(ii) a description
of any payments the sponsoring agency or recipient must make to the foster
family caregiver;
(iii) a
description of the personal fund accounting services the foster family
caregiver will provide for the recipient;
(iv) a statement that the recipient may
terminate the admission agreement at any time;
(v) a description of the conditions under
which the foster family caregiver or sponsoring agency may terminate the
admission agreement;
(vi) a
statement that the foster family caregiver or sponsoring agency may terminate
the agreement only upon 60 calendar days' written notice to each of the other
parties to the agreement, except in an emergency as determined by the social
services district; and
(vii) a
statement that the sponsoring agency must notify the social services district
when the admission agreement is terminated and assist the district to make
alternative arrangements for a recipient who continues to be eligible for
medical assistance (MA).
(c) Sponsoring agency responsibilities. The
sponsoring agency is responsible for the following general activities:
(1) recruiting persons who meet eligibility
requirements for the receipt of foster family care services, as specified in
subdivision (d) of this section;
(2) participating in the authorization
process for foster family care services by obtaining a physician's order and
completing a nursing assessment and a social assessment and recommending to the
social services district whether a person is appropriate for the foster family
care demonstration program, as specified in subdivision (e) of this
section;
(3) providing, or
arranging for the provision of, nursing supervision, as specified in
subdivision (f) of this section;
(4) performing case management services,
including assisting the social services district to make alternative
arrangements for a foster family care recipient whose admission agreement is
terminated, as specified in subdivision (g) of this section;
(5) recruiting foster family caregivers and
respite caregivers who meet the qualifications specified in subdivision (h) of
this section;
(6) reviewing
applications from prospective foster family caregivers and respite caregivers,
as specified in subdivision (i) of this section;
(7) training foster family caregivers and
respite caregivers, or arranging for them to be trained, in accordance with
subdivision (j) of this section;
(8) terminating a foster family caregiver's
or a respite caregiver's authority to provide foster family care services when
he or she fails to comply with the requirements of this section;
(9) compiling statistical data regarding
recipients, foster family caregivers, and respite caregivers and forwarding
such data to the department at such times as the department may require and on
a form the department approves; and
(10) for a sponsoring agency that is not a
social services district, maintaining sufficient insurance coverage to protect
the social services district from liability claims resulting from personal
injury to recipients, foster family caregivers, respite caregivers, or other
occupants of the foster family care home which result from acts, omissions, or
negligence of sponsoring agency personnel.
(d) Eligibility for foster family care
services.
(1) Subject to paragraph (2) of
this subdivision, a person must meet the following requirements to be eligible
to participate in a foster family care demonstration program:
(i) be eligible for MA;
(ii) be at least 65 years old or disabled and
at least 18 years old;
(iii) be
medically eligible for RHCF services or personal care services; and
(iv) have been determined by the sponsoring
agency to be capable of being cared for in the community if a suitable home
environment and medical support services are provided and to lack a home, the
resources, or the family support to live in the community.
(2) A person is not eligible to participate
in a foster family care demonstration program if he or she meets any of the
following characteristics:
(i) has a
chronically unstable medical condition, which is a condition that exhibits, or
may exhibit, sudden deterioration or improvement and requires frequent medical
or nursing judgment to determine changes in the person's plan of
care;
(ii) has a serious and
persistent mental disability which manifests as gross confusion or nocturnal
wandering;
(iii) requires medical
or mental health services which cannot be provided safely and effectively by
the foster family caregiver;
(iv)
repeatedly behaves in a manner which causes or may reasonably be expected to
cause a danger to the recipient or to other occupants of the foster family care
home or which interferes with the foster family caregiver's operation of the
home;
(v) refuses or is unable to
comply with a prescribed treatment program, including a prescribed medication
regimen under which the person self-administers medications;
(vi) is chronically bedfast;
(vii) has chronic and unmanaged urinary or
bowel incontinence, is unwilling to participate in a bladder/bowel management
program, and cannot otherwise maintain his or her personal hygiene;
(viii) has a communicable disease or health
condition which is dangerous to other occupants of the foster family care home;
or
(ix) depends on medical
equipment unless:
(a) the equipment is not a
safety hazard; and
(b) use of the
equipment does not restrict the recipient to his or her bedroom, inhibit the
recipient from participating in the activities of the foster family care home,
or impede the recipient's mobility or the mobility of other occupants of the
foster family care home.
(e) Authorizations for foster family care
services. This subdivision sets forth the sponsoring agency's and the social
services district's responsibilities for authorizing foster family care
services.
(1) The sponsoring agency must
obtain a physician's order for services. The physician's order must be based
upon the person's medical condition as determined by a medical examination that
is conducted within 30 calendar days before the sponsoring agency receives the
request for foster family care services. The physician's order must include the
person's medical history and current medical condition and the person'
prescribed medication regimen.
(2)
Within five business days after receiving the request for foster family care
services, the sponsoring agency must complete a nursing assessment of the
person.
(i) The nursing assessment must
include the following:
(a) a review and
interpretation of the physician's order;
(b) an evaluation of the person's medical and
service needs and a plan of care based on those needs;
(c) information on the person's ability to
self-administer medications;
(d)
recommendations on methods of assisting the person in activities of daily
living; and
(e) a determination
whether the person is medically eligible for RHCF services or personal care
services but is capable of being cared for in the community if a suitable home
environment and medical support services are provided.
(ii) The nursing assessment must be completed
by a registered professional nurse who meets the requirements set forth in
section
505.14 of
this Part for registered professional nurses who perform nursing assessments
for personal care services recipients.
(3) The sponsoring agency must timely
complete a social assessment of the person. The social assessment must include
an evaluation of the potential contribution of informal caregivers, such as
family and friends, to the person's care and must otherwise meet the
requirements set forth in section
505.14 of
this Part for social assessments of personal care services
recipients.
(4)
(i) If the sponsoring agency is not a social
services district, the sponsoring agency must recommend to the social services
district whether placement in the foster family care demonstration program is
appropriate for the person. The sponsoring agency's recommendation must be
based on the physician's order, the nursing assessment, and the social
assessment.
(ii) When a sponsoring
agency which is not a social services district recommends that placement in the
foster family care demonstration program is not appropriate for the person, the
sponsoring agency must forward the following documents to the social services
district: the sponsoring agency's recommendation that placement in the foster
family care demonstration program is appropriate for the person, the
physician's order, the nursing assessment, and the social assessment.
(iii) When a sponsoring agency which is not a
social services district recommends that placement in the foster family care
demonstration program is not appropriate for the person, the sponsoring agency
must forward the following documents to the social services district: the
sponsoring agency's recommendation that placement in the foster family care
demonstration program is not appropriate for the person, the physicians's
order, the nursing assessment, and the social assessment.
(5) The social services district is
responsible for determining whether placement in the foster family care
demonstration program is appropriate for the person. The social services
district's determination must be based upon the following documents: the
physician's order; the nursing assessment; the social assessment; the
district's evaluation of the cost-effectiveness of foster family care services
compared to institutional long-term care; and, if the social services district
is not a sponsoring agency, the sponsoring agency's recommendations required
pursuant to paragraph (4) of this subdivision.
(6) When the social services district
determines that placement in the foster family care demonstration program is
appropriate for the person, it must complete an authorization for foster family
care services. The authorization must be completed prior to the delivery of
foster family care services and must not exceed a period of one year.
(7) An independent medical review of the case
must be completed by the local professional director appointed pursuant to
section 365-b of the Social Services Law, a
physician designated by the local professional director, or a physician under
contract to the social services district if there is disagreement between the
physician's order, the social assessment, or the nursing assessment or if there
is a question regarding the amount or type of foster family care services
required. The independent medical review will result in a final determination
whether foster family care services are appropriate for the person.
(8) Foster family care services can be
reauthorized for one year periods. Each reauthorization must follow the
procedures outlined in paragraphs (1) through (7) of this
subdivision.
(9)
(i) A social services district must notify
the person in writing, on forms required by the department, of the decision to
authorize, deny, reauthorize, reduce, or discontinue foster family care
services. The notice must meet the notice requirements set forth in Part 358 of
this Title.
(ii)
(a) Except as provided in clause (b) of this
subparagraph, a foster family care services applicant or recipient is entitled
to a fair hearing in accordance with the requirements of Part 358 of this
Title.
(b) Neither a foster family
care services applicant or recipient, a foster family caregiver, a respite
caregiver, nor any other person or entity is entitled to a fair hearing when a
sponsoring agency terminates a foster family caregiver's or a respite
caregiver's authority to provide foster family care services or when a social
services district or the department terminates its contract with a sponsoring
agency.
(iii) A foster
family care services recipient for whom the social services district proposes
to reduce or discontinue foster family care services is entitled to aid
continuing in accordance with the requirements of Part 358 of this Title.
(f) Nursing
supervision.
(1) The sponsoring agency must
provide, or arrange for the provision of, nursing supervision.
(2) Nursing supervision must be provided by a
registered professional nurse who meets the requirements set forth in section
505.14(f)(3)
or this Part for registered professional nurses who perform nursing supervision
for personal care services recipients.
(3) Nursing supervision includes the
following activities:
(i) evaluating the
recipient's health status, medical needs, the adequacy of the foster family
care services provided, and the foster family caregiver's or respite
caregiver's ability to provide foster family care services;
(ii) making an initial nursing supervisory
visit to the foster family care home within 72 hours after the recipient's
placement in the home to ensure that the foster family caregiver understands
the recipient's medical needs and has been trained to address those
needs;
(iii) determining the
frequency of subsequent nursing supervisory visits, which must occur at least
every 90 calendar days, by considering the recipient's medical needs and the
foster family caregiver's ability to provide foster family care
services;
(iv) maintaining records
of nursing supervisory visits and providing a copy of the records to the case
manager; and
(v) reporting to the
sponsoring agency any change in the recipient's condition or any action which
might jeopardize the recipient's health or safety.
(g) Case management.
(1) The sponsoring agency is responsible for
case management from the day the sponsoring agency first has contact with the
recipient to the day the recipient leaves the foster family care demonstration
program.
(2) Case management
activities include the following:
(i)
arranging for the delivery of all needed services;
(ii) monitoring the foster family care
services a recipient receives and assessing whether his or her continued
participation in the foster family care demonstration program is
appropriate;
(iii) assessing the
foster family caregiver's or the respite caregiver's compliance with the
provisions of this section during each visit to the foster family care
home;
(iv) providing opportunities
for the recipient to participate in activities within or outside of the foster
family care home and assisting in arranging the recipient's transportation to
activities outside of the foster family care home;
(v) assisting the recipient to:
(a) attend to personal financial
matters;
(b) establish and maintain
ties with family, friends, and occupants of the foster family care home;
and
(c) participate in the daily
routine of the foster family care home, including orienting the recipient to
the foster family care home; and
(vi) assisting the social services district
to make alternative arrangements for a recipient who continues to be eligible
for MA when the recipient, the foster family caregiver, or the sponsoring
agency terminates the admission agreement or when the sponsoring agency's
contract with the social services district or the department is
terminated.
(3) The case
manager must maintain current records of its compliance with this subdivision's
requirements and notify the social services district whenever there is a change
in the recipient's condition or circumstances.
(4) The case manager must visit the recipient
at least once every 90 calendar days.
(h) Foster family caregiver and respite
caregiver qualifications. A foster family caregiver and respite caregiver must
meet the following qualifications:
(1) be at
least 21 years old;
(2) demonstrate
sufficient income, not derived solely from the foster family care demonstration
program, to meet the household expenses of the foster family caregiver and any
other occupants of the home, except that a respite caregiver need not meet this
requirement;
(3) not be otherwise
employed in or out the home while providing foster family care services unless
the social services district has approved the employment in writing;
(4) be able to speak, read, and write English
and speak the recipient's predominant language; record messages; keep simple
records concerning the recipient and the services provided; and understand and
implement directions provided by the sponsoring agency, the nurse supervisor,
or the social services district;
(5) demonstrate maturity, emotional and
mental stability, and experience in caregiving and homemaking;
(6) demonstrate a sympathetic attitude toward
recipients;
(7) be in good physical
health, as evidenced by the documentation which the Department of Health
requires for employees of certified home health agencies pursuant to 10 NYCRR
763.4; and
(8) live in the foster
family care home.
(i)
Applying to become a foster family caregiver or a respite caregiver.
(1) A person who seeks to become a foster
family caregiver or a respite caregiver must submit an application to the
sponsoring agency. An application must include the following information:
(i) the names and addresses of each of the
applicant's employers during the previous five years;
(ii) the names and addresses of two persons,
unrelated to the applicant, who are acquainted with the applicant's desire and
ability to provide foster family care services;
(iii) a statement listing the applicant's
education, caregiving and homemaking experience, and community activities;
and
(iv) a statement of the
applicant's current income and the sources of that income, except that this
requirement does not apply to respite caregiver applicants.
(2) The sponsoring agency must
assist the applicant to complete the application and obtain the information
listed in paragraph (1) of this subdivision.
(3) A sponsoring agency which is not a social
services district must send the following information to the social services
district within 10 business days after the day the sponsoring agency receives a
person's application to become a foster family caregiver or a respite
caregiver: a copy of the application; comments regarding the applicant's
character, competence, and, except for a respite caregiver applicant, the
applicant's financial ability to provide foster family care; and
recommendations whether the social services district should approve the
application. Within 20 business days after the day the social services district
receives this information, it must approve or deny the application and send the
applicant and the sponsoring agency a written notification of its
determination. The social services district's approval or denial must be based
on such information and, except for a respite caregiver applicant, on a survey
of the applicant's home conducted by a district representative and a sponsoring
agency representative.
(4) A
sponsoring agency which is a social services district must send the applicant a
written notification of its approval or denial of the application within 30
business days after receiving the application. The district's approval or
denial must be based on its assessment of the applicant's character and
competence and, except for a respite caregiver applicant, on the district's
assessment of the applicant's financial ability to provide foster family care.
The social services district's approval or denial of a foster family
caregiver's application must also be based on a survey of the applicant's home
conducted by a district representative.
(5) If a social services district denies a
person's application to become a foster family caregiver or a respite
caregiver, neither the person nor the sponsoring agency is entitled to a fair
hearing to review the denial.
(j) Training.
(1) Each foster family caregiver and respite
caregiver must successfully complete a training program approved by the
department. An approved training program must meet the basic training, periodic
and continuous in-service training, and on-the-job instruction and supervision
requirements specified in section
505.14(e)
of this Part for persons who provide personal care services.
(2) Before providing foster family care
services, a foster family caregiver or respite caregiver must successfully
complete the prescribed part of the basic training program, as specified in
section
505.14(e)(3)
of this Part. Within three months after the foster family caregiver or respite
caregiver begins providing services, he or she must complete the entire basic
training program. The department may waive the requirement that the foster
family caregiver or respite caregiver complete a basic training program under
the circumstances specified in section
505.14(e)(4)
of this Part.
(k) Foster
family caregiver and respite caregiver responsibilities for recipients.
(1) Supervision. A foster family caregiver or
respite caregiver must supervise recipients. Supervision includes the
following:
(i) knowing each recipient's
general physical location;
(ii)
monitoring the recipient to identify abrupt or gradual changes in the
recipient's behavior or appearance which indicate his or her needs should be
reassessed or that he or she needs additional medical or social services, and
promptly reporting such changes to the sponsoring agency;
(iii) monitoring the foster family care home
and grounds to protect recipients from harm; and
(iv) handling emergencies occurring in the
home.
(2) Food services.
(i) The foster family caregiver or respite
caregiver must provide recipients with the following daily meals and snacks:
(a) three nutritionally balanced meals a day
which meet recipients' dietary needs, include a hot entree at lunch or dinner,
and vary in menu and preparation; and
(b) at least two nutritious snacks between
meals.
(ii) The foster
family caregiver or respite caregiver must consider each recipient's prescribed
dietary regimen, food allergies, and food preferences when planning, preparing,
and serving meals and snacks. If a recipient requires a modified diet, the
foster family caregiver or respite caregiver must provide the recipient with
meals and snacks which conform to his or her dietary requirements.
(iii) The foster family caregiver or respite
caregiver must maintain food reserves sufficient for three days of meals and
snacks.
(iv) The foster family
caregiver or respite caregiver must store, prepare, and serve food to assure
its safety and nutritional value.
(v) The foster family caregiver must maintain
a sufficient supply of dishes, glasses, and utensils to meet recipients'
needs.
(vi) The foster family
caregiver or respite caregiver must not require recipients to dine separately
from other occupants of the foster family care home.
(3) Personal care services. The foster family
caregiver or respite caregiver must perform personal care services as outlined
in the recipient's plan of care.
(4) Respite care. The foster family caregiver
must notify the sponsoring agency when he or she requires a respite
caregiver.
(l) Foster
family caregiver responsibilities for the foster family care home.
(1) Home maintenance and renovations.
(i) A foster family caregiver must operate
and maintain the foster family care home in good repair, in a sanitary
condition, and in compliance with this section and with the State Uniform Fire
Prevention and Building Code or other local fire and building code.
(ii) A foster family caregiver may renovate
or remodel his or her home only with the sponsoring agency's and the social
services district's approval. Renovation or remodeling plans must comply with
this section and with the State Uniform Fire Prevention and Building Code or
other local fire and building code.
(2) Recipients' bedrooms.
(i) A recipient's bedroom may be located only
on the first or second floor of a foster family care home that is of frame or
ordinary construction, as defined by Part 704 of the State Uniform Fire
Prevention and Building Code, and whose structural elements are unprotected by
fire-resistant materials. A recipient's bedroom may be located only on the
first through the sixth floors of a foster family care home that is of frame or
ordinary construction, as defined by Part 704 of the State Uniform Fire
Prevention and Building Code, and whose structural elements are protected by
fire-resistant materials.
(ii) A
recipient's bedroom must have adequate light and ventilation and have
sufficient floor space to contain the following required furnishings: a chair;
a nightstand; a lamp; a dresser; adequate closet space; and a standard size
single bed which is neither a rollaway bed, a metal cot, a folding bed, nor a
bed higher than 36 inches from the floor.
(iii) A recipient's access to his or her
bedroom must not be through another bedroom or bathroom. A recipient's access
to a bathroom must not be through another bedroom.
(iv) A recipient must not be required to
share a bedroom with another recipient unless both consent.
(v) A recipient's bedroom must be equipped
with a hinged door. If chainlocks, hasps, bars, padlocks, or similar devices
are used in the foster family care home, they must not inhibit a recipient's
access to an exit or his or her movement in the foster family care
home.
(vi) Windows in a recipient's
bedroom must be furnished with curtains, shades, or blinds.
(vii) The foster family caregiver must supply
each recipient with the following clean bed linens and supplies: a set of bed
sheets, a pillow of average bed size, a pillowcase, a blanket, a bedspread, and
adequate towels and washcloths. The foster family caregiver must change each
recipient's bed sheets, pillowcase, towels, and washcloths every week and more
often if necessary.
(viii) Electric
blankets must not be used on recipients' beds.
(3) Other furnishings and equipment.
(i) A foster family care home's furnishings
and equipment must be clean, constructed to withstand daily use, and in good
repair.
(ii) Each foster family
care home must have a working telephone.
(4) Heating and cooling.
(i) The foster family care home must have a
permanently installed central heating system capable of maintaining required
temperatures.
(ii) When the
temperature outside the foster family care home is 65 degrees Fahrenheit or
colder, the temperature in recipients' bedrooms and common areas must be at
least 68 degrees Fahrenheit. When the temperature outside the foster family
care home is 85 degrees Fahrenheit or hotter, the foster family caregiver must
take steps to maintain a comfortable environment in recipients' bedrooms and
common areas.
(5) Smoke
and fire protection.
(i) Smoke detectors
which meet Underwriters Laboratories standards must be installed in the
following locations:
(a) In a multi-level
foster family care home, at the top of all stairways and in recipients'
bedrooms that are located more than 20 feet from the top of
stairways;
(b) In a single level
foster family care home, in all corridors leading to recipients' bedrooms;
and
(c) In a multi-level or single
level foster family care home, in any other locations recommended by the local
fire department.
(ii) An
ABC-rated fire extinguisher which meets National Fire Protection Association
standards must be properly installed in the kitchen.
(iii) Portable electric space heaters must
not be used in a foster family care home.
(iv) Building exits and corridors must be
free of obstructions at all times.
(v) Fire escapes, if required by a local fire
and building code, must be installed and maintained according to such
code.
(6) Disaster and
emergency plan. The foster family caregiver must develop a disaster and
emergency plan in consultation with the sponsoring agency and the social
services district. The plan must include procedures for evacuating the home and
temporarily providing essential services to recipients.
(i) The sponsoring agency must train all
recipients, foster family caregivers, respite caregivers, and other occupants
of the foster family care home to evacuate the home during a fire or other
emergency.
(ii) The foster family
caregiver must conduct semi-annual evacuation drills for all recipients, foster
family caregivers, and other occupants of the foster family care home and
record the date and time of each drill and the length of time that the
evacuation required.
(m) Payment for foster family care.
(1) Provided other funds are not available,
the cost of foster family care services provided under this section will be
paid out of funds appropriated to the MA program if Federal financial
participation is available.
(2) The
department will make payments to a sponsoring agency, at a rate the department
and the Division of the Budget approve, for expenditures for foster family care
services provided to foster family care recipients in accordance with the
provisions of this section.
(3) No
payments will be made to a sponsoring agency for foster family care services
expenditures unless the sponsoring agency supports its claim for payment with
documentation, as required by the department, of the foster family care
services provided to each recipient.
(n) Recordkeeping and confidentiality
requirements. The sponsoring agency, the foster family caregiver, and any
respite caregivers must perform the following recordkeeping activities:
(1) collect, maintain, and submit such
information, records, or reports as required by the department and the social
services district and make such records available for review at the
department's or the district's request; and
(2) maintain the confidentiality of
recipients' records in accordance with section 369 of the Social Services Law and Part 357
and Subpart 360-8 of this Title.