New York Codes, Rules and Regulations
Title 18 - DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL SERVICES
Chapter II - Regulations of the Department of Social Services
Subchapter E - Medical Care
Article 3 - Policies and Standards Governing Provision of Medical and Dental Care
Part 505 - Charges For Professional Health Services
Section 505.33 - Personal emergency response services (PERS)
Universal Citation: 18 NY Comp Codes Rules and Regs ยง 505.33
Current through Register Vol. 46, No. 39, September 25, 2024
(a) Definitions.
(1) Personal emergency response services
mean:
(i) the provision and maintenance of
electronic communication equipment in the home of an individual which signals a
monitoring agency for help when activated by the individual, or after a period
of time if a timer mechanism has not been reset; and
(ii) the continuous monitoring of such
signals by a trained operator and, in case of receipt of such signals, the
immediate notification of such emergency response organizations or persons, if
necessary, as the individual has previously specified.
(2) Electronic communication equipment (PERS
equipment) means equipment that electronically signals a monitoring agency for
help via telephone lines. PERS equipment includes the following:
(i) an emergency response activator, which is
a small electronic device that the PERS recipient presses or otherwise
activates to send a signal for help to the monitoring agency; and
(ii) an emergency response communicator,
which is an electronic unit connected to a PERS recipient's telephone line. The
emergency response communicator accepts a signal for help from the emergency
response activator and also has its own device to generate a signal for help.
It sends the signal via telephone lines to the monitoring agency.
(3) Monitoring agency means an
agency that is capable of receiving signals for help from a recipient's PERS
equipment 24 hours per day, seven days per week; determining whether an
emergency exists; and notifying an emergency response organization or an
emergency responder that the PERS recipient needs emergency help.
(4) Emergency response organization means a
police department, a fire department, an ambulance service, a hospital, or
other entity that the PERS recipient has designated to respond to specific
signals for help when notified by the monitoring agency or an emergency
responder.
(5) Emergency responder
means a PERS recipient's neighbor, family member, or other person who has
agreed, at the recipient's request, to respond to specific signals for help
when notified by the monitoring agency.
(6) PERS provider means a certified home
health agency, a long term home health care program, an area agency on aging, a
police department, a fire department, an ambulance service, a hospital, or any
other entity that is capable of providing PERS either directly or through
subcontracts. A PERS provider may also be a monitoring agency.
(b) Social Services districts' PERS plans.
(1) Each social services district
must submit a PERS plan to the department on a form the department requires and
must not authorize PERS until the department has approved the district's PERS
plan. Each social services district must submit any changes to its approved
PERS plan to the department on a form the department requires. The district may
include such changes to its approved PERS plan as part of the district's annual
plan for the provision of personal care services, as required by section
505.14(j)
of this Part.
(2) A social services
district's PERS plan must be in a form acceptable to the department and must
include descriptions of the following:
(i)
the process the social services district will use to authorize PERS;
(ii) the PERS equipment that the social
services district will require to be used, including whether the equipment will
have a voice-to-voice capability;
(iii) the process by which the social
services district will select the PERS providers with which it will
contract;
(iv) the coordination
among the social services district, the PERS providers with which it will
contract, and any entities with which the PERS providers will subcontract;
and
(v) the projected cost savings
that PERS will achieve.
(3) The department will notify a social
services district of its approval or disapproval of the district's PERS plan
within 45 business days after it receives the plan. If the department
disapproves a social services district's PERS plan, the district must submit a
revised plan to the department within 30 business days after the day the
district receives the department's disapproval notice.
(c) PERS assessments, authorizations, and reauthorizations.
(1) As part of its
assessment for an authorization of personal care services or home health
services, a social services district may also assess whether PERS would be
appropriate for a person.
(2) An
initial authorization for PERS must be based on a physician's order and a
comprehensive assessment of the person.
(i)
The comprehensive assessment must be performed by social services district
staff, or by staff of the district's designee, on forms that the department
approves to be used.
(ii) The
comprehensive assessment must evaluate the following factors: the person's
physical disability status, the degree to which the person is at risk of an
emergency due to a medical or functional impairment or disability, and the
degree of the person's social isolation.
(iii) A social services district may
authorize PERS only when the comprehensive assessment indicates that PERS would
be appropriate for the person because:
(a)
the person has a medical condition, disability, or impairment that warrants use
of PERS;
(b) PERS would reduce or
eliminate the number of hours of personal care services or home health services
that the person would need;
(c) the
person's safety in the home must be monitored;
(d) the person has insufficient informal
caretakers, such as family members and friends, directly and continuously
available to monitor his or her health and safety;
(e) the person is alert and self-directing,
which means that he or she is capable of making choices about activities of
daily living, understanding the impact of the choices, and assuming
responsibility for the results of the choices;
(f) the person can communicate in basic
English or, if the person is unable to communicate in basic English, the
person's emergency responder or responders can communicate in basic
English;
(g) the person would be
able to use the PERS equipment effectively; and
(h) the person has a functioning telephone
that is compatible with the PERS equipment or will have such a telephone when
the PERS equipment is installed.
(3) If a social services district authorizes
PERS, the PERS authorization and plan of care may be incorporated in the
authorization and plan of care for personal care services or home health
services.
(4) The duration of an
initial PERS authorization must be based upon the person's needs, as reflected
in the comprehensive assessment. No initial authorization may exceed six
months.
(5) When a PERS recipient's
physical circumstances, mental status, or medical condition significantly
change during the authorization period, social services district staff, or
staff of the district's designee, must perform a new comprehensive assessment
and make any necessary changes in the authorization.
(6) A social services district must not
authorize PERS if the person is eligible for the long term home health care
program (LTHHCP), can obtain PERS through the LTHHCP, and wishes to obtain PERS
through the LTHHCP.
(7) A
reauthorization of PERS must follow the procedures set forth in paragraphs (2)
through (6) of this subdivision, except that the recipient's physician, the
social services district's local professional director, or a physician at the
area Office of Health Systems Management must review the comprehensive
assessment and be responsible for the final determination to reauthorize PERS.
No single reauthorization may exceed six months.
(8) A social services district must notify
the person in writing of its decision to authorize, deny, reauthorize, or
discontinue PERS on forms required by the department. The notice must meet the
notice requirements set forth in Part 358 of this Title. The person will be
entitled to a fair hearing in accordance with the requirements of Part 358 of
this Title. A PERS recipient for whom the social services district proposes to
discontinue PERS will be entitled to aid continuing in accordance with the
requirements of Part 358 of this Title.
(d) Contracting for PERS.
(1) A social services district must have
contracts with a sufficient number of PERS providers to provide PERS to all
persons for whom the district has authorized PERS.
(2) Before contracting with any PERS
provider, a social services district must determine that the provider is
qualified to provide PERS either directly or through subcontracts and can meet
this section's requirements and any local requirements contained in the
district's approved PERS plan described in subdivision (b) of this
section.
(3) A social services
district's contracts with PERS providers must be on a form that the department
has approved to be used. A district may attach local variations to the form. A
district must not implement any contract for PERS or any local variations until
the department has approved the contract and any local variations.
(4) A PERS provider must maintain appropriate
insurance coverage to protect the social services district from liability
claims resulting from acts, omissions, or negligence of provider personnel that
cause personal injuries to PERS recipients or such personnel.
(e) Responsibilities of social services districts.
(1) A social services
district must ensure that the PERS recipient designates an emergency response
organization; one emergency responder or, if possible, two such responders; a
representative, who may be the same person as an emergency responder; and a
preferred hospital. Ths district must also ensure that ths PERS recipient, or
his or her representative, signs a written authorization for emergency response
organization personnel and an emergency responder to enter the recipient's home
and provide emergency treatment and transportation.
(2) On the day that a social services
district authorizes PERS, it must perform the following activities:
(i) telephone the PERS provider and inform
the provider:
(a) of the name, telephone
number, and address of the person for whom the social services district has
authorized PERS;
(b) that the
provider must telephone the person or the person's representative that same day
to arrange a mutually convenient time for the provider to install the PERS
equipment into the person's functioning telephone line; and
(c) that the provider must install the PERS
equipment within seven business days after the day the provider receives a
written PERS authorization from the social services district and that, if the
provider cannot install the equipment within this seven day period, it must
immediately notify the district.
(ii) send the PERS provider a written PERS
authorization; and
(iii) send the
PERS provider the information regarding the person that is described in clauses
(f)(3)(i)(a) through (g) of this section.
(3) If a PERS recipient's physical
circumstances, medical condition, or mental status change during the
authorization period, the social services district must send to the PERS
provider the information regarding these changes so that the provider may
update the recipient's data record, as described in subparagraph (f)(3)(i) of
this section.
(4)
(i) Subject to the notice, aid continuing,
and fair hearing requirements set forth in subdivision (e)(8) of this section
and Part 358 of this Title, a social services district must discontinue PERS
when the recipient is continuously hospitalized for more than 60 days or when
his or her physical circumstances, mental status, or medical condition has
changed significantly so that PERS are no longer appropriate for the person.
Whenever a social services district discontinues PERS because PERS are no
longer appropriate for the recipient, the district must ensure that personal
care services, if appropriate, are provided to the recipient.
(ii) On the day that the social services
district discontinues PERS, it must perform the following activities:
(a) telephone the PERS provider and inform
the provider that it must telephone the recipient or the recipient's
representative that same day to arrange a mutually convenient time for the PERS
equipment's removal, and that the provider must remove the PERS equipment
within seven business days after the day the provider receives the district's
written notification to remove the equipment; and
(b) send the PERS provider a written
notification to remove the PERS equipment.
(5) A social services district must monitor a
PERS provider's compliance with this section's requirements. The district must
monitor the timeliness of the provider's installation, maintenance, and removal
of PERS equipment; the timeliness and efficiency of the monitoring agency's
responses to signals for help from recipients' PERS equipment; the timeliness
of the provider's reports of emergencies; the reliability of PERS equipment,
and all complaints by PERS recipients regarding the PERS provider or the PERS
equipment.
(f) Responsibilities of PERS providers.
(1) A PERS
provider must properly install all PERS equipment into a PERS recipient's
functioning telephone line and must furnish all supplies necessary for
installing this equipment.
(i) On the day that
the PERS provider receives the district's telephoned PERS authorization, it
must telephone the recipient or the recipient's representative to arrange a
mutually convenient time for the provider to install the PERS equipment into
the recipient's functioning telephone line. The PERS provider must install the
PERS equipment within seven business days from the day it receives the
district's written PERS authorization. If the provider is unable to install the
PERS equipment within this period, it must notify the district
immediately.
(ii) On the day that
the PERS provider installs the PERS equipment, it must perform the following
activities:
(a) telephone the social services
district and notify it that the equipment has been installed;
(b) instruct the PERS recipient regarding the
use of the PERS equipment and give the PERS recipient simple written
instructions that describe these procedures;
(c) inform the PERS recipient that he or she
should immediately notify the provider or the social services district if the
equipment malfunctions; and
(d)
inform the PERS recipient that he or she may call the monitoring agency when he
or she wants to test the PERS equipment or when he or she has questions
regarding the PERS equipment.
(iii) At the PERS recipient's or the social
services district's request, the PERS provider must give follow-up instructions
to the recipient regarding his or her use of the PERS equipment.
(iv) Within seven business days after the day
the PERS equipment is installed, the PERS provider must forward to the social
services district, by mail or facsimile machine, a written confirmation that
the equipment has been installed and that the PERS recipient has been
instructed how to use the equipment. The confirmation must be signed by a
representative of the provider and by the PERS recipient or the recipient's
representative.
(2) A
PERS provider must maintain all installed PERS equipment in proper working
order.
(i) The PERS provider must monitor all
installed PERS equipment to insure that the equipment operates properly at all
times. The provider's monitoring of the PERS equipment should be automated and
result in the least possible inconvenience to the PERS recipient.
(ii) The PERS provider must replace PERS
equipment batteries when necessary, at no additional cost to the social
services district, the department, or the recipient.
(iii) Within 24 hours after the PERS provider
is notified that any PERS equipment has malfunctioned, the provider must repair
or replace the equipment at no additional cost to the social services district,
the department, or the recipient. The PERS provider may be notified that the
PERS equipment has malfunctioned by the social services district, the PERS
recipient, the PERS recipient's representative, or another responsible party.
When any PERS equipment is repaired or replaced, the PERS provider must notify
the social services district by telephone within 24 hours.
(3) A PERS provider must maintain the
following records at no additional cost to the social services district or the
department:
(i) a data record for each PERS
recipient. The provider must update this record at least every six months by
contacting the social services district. The provider must also update the
recipient's data record whenever the social services district notifies the
provider that changes should be made to the PERS recipient's data record. Each
PERS recipient's data record must contain the following information, which the
social services district will send to the provider on the day it authorizes
PERS and whenever the social services district is informed that such
information has changed:
(a) the PERS
recipient's name, telephone number, and address, including his or her apartment
number and floor, if applicable;
(b) the PERS recipient's personal medical
history, including his or her age, sex, medical condition, diagnosis, and other
relevant medical history;
(c) the
name, telephone number, and address of the person or persons whom the PERS
recipient has designated as the emergency responder or responders;
(d) the name, telephone number, and address
of the person whom the PERS recipient has designated as his or her
representative, if different from an emergency responder;
(e) the name, telephone number, and address
of the police department, fire department, ambulance service, hospital, or
other entity that the PERS recipient has designated as an emergency response
organization;
(f) the PERS
recipient's written authorization for the emergency response organization and
an emergency responder to enter his or her home and provide emergency treatment
and transportation; and
(g) the
name, telephone number, and address of the PERS recipient's physician and the
recipient's preferred hospital.
(ii) a record of the PERS provider's
instructions to the PERS recipient regarding his or her use of the PERS
equipment;
(iii) a record of the
PERS equipment's installation and removal;
(iv) a record of the maintenance of PERS
equipment and any repairs or replacements of malfunctioning equipment that were
necessary;
(v) a record of the
monitoring agency's 24-hour monitoring of PERS recipients;
(vi) a record of each signal for help from a
recipient's PERS equipment that the monitoring agency receives and the
monitoring agency's response to the signal; and
(vii) a record of PERS recipients whom the
monitoring agency monitors each month.
(4)
(i) The
PERS provider must ensure that the monitoring agency performs the following
activities when the monitoring agency receives a signal for help from a
recipient's PERS equipment:
(a) if the PERS
recipient's equipment has voice-to-voice capability, establish immediate verbal
contact with the PERS recipient via the incoming signal to determine whether an
emergency exists at the PERS recipient's home;
(b) retrieve the PERS recipient's data
record;
(c) if unable to establish
immediate verbal contact with a PERS recipient whose equipment has
voice-to-voice capability, or if the PERS recipient's equipment lacks such
capability, immediately notify an emergency responder that the PERS recipient
has signaled for help;
(d) if
unable to notify an emergency responder, immediately notify an emergency
response organization that the PERS recipient has signaled for help;
(e) maintain appropriate contact with the
PERS recipient, the emergency responder, or the emergency response
organization; and
(f) monitor the
provision of emergency services to verify that these services have been
provided and that the emergency at the PERS recipient's home has been
resolved.
(ii) The PERS
provider must telephone the social services district on the first business day
after the emergency occurred and inform it of the nature of the emergency and
how it was resolved. The provider must forward to the social services district,
by mail or facsimile machine, a written report of the emergency within seven
business days after the day the emergency occurred. This report must contain at
least the information described in paragraphs (3)(v) and (vi) of this
subdivision.
(5) The
PERS provider must ensure that the monitoring agency can continuously monitor
and respond to signals for help from recipients' PERS equipment during power
failures, mechanical malfunctions, or other technical emergencies. The provider
must ensure that the monitoring agency has the monitoring capabilities
specified in subdivision (g)(2) of this section.
(6) A PERS provider must remove PERS
equipment from a recipient's home when notified to do so by the social services
district. The provider must not remove PERS equipment unless the district has
notified it that the equipment must be removed.
(i) On the day the social services district
telephones the PERS provider and notifies it that PERS equipment must be
removed, the provider must telephone the recipient or the recipient's
representative to arrange a mutually convenient time for the equipment's
removal.
(ii) The PERS provider
must remove PERS equipment within seven business days after the day the
provider receives the social services district's written notification that PERS
equipment must be removed.
(iii) On
the day the PERS equipment is removed, the PERS provider must notify the social
services district by telephone of the equipment's removal.
(iv) Within seven business days after the day
the PERS equipment is removed, the PERS provider must forward to the social
services district, by mail or facsimile machine, a written confirmation that
the equipment has been removed. The confirmation must be signed by a
representative of the provider and by the former PERS recipient or his or her
representative.
(g) Standards for PERS equipment and monitoring agencies.
(1) All PERS equipment
must be approved by the Federal Communications Commission and meet the
Underwriters' Laboratories, Inc. (UL) safety standard Number 1637, which is the
UL safety standard for home health care signaling equipment. (Standard for Home
Health Care Signaling Equipment, UL 1637, First Edition, May 30, 1989,
effective January 2, 1991; published by Underwriters Laboratories, Inc., 333
Pfingsten Road, Northbrook, Illinois, 60062. Copies are available for public
use and inspection at the Department of State, 162 Washington Avenue, Albany,
New York 12231.) The UL listing mark on the equipment will be accepted as
evidence of the equipment's compliance with such standard.
(i) The emergency response activator must be
activated either by breath, by touch, or by some other means and must be usable
by persons who are visually or hearing impaired or physically
disabled.
(ii) The emergency
response communicator must be attached to the PERS recipient's telephone line
and must not interfere with normal telephone use. The emergency response
communicator must be capable of operating without external power during a power
failure at the recipient's home in accordance with UL requirements for home
health care signaling equipment with stand-by capability.
(2) The monitoring agency must be capable of
simultaneously responding to multiple signals for help from:
(i) a primary receiver and a back-up
receiver, which must be independent and interchangeable;
(ii) a back-up information retrieval
system;
(iii) a clock printer,
which must print out the time and date of the emergency signal, the PERS
recipient's identification code, and the emergency code that indicates whether
the signal is active, passive, or a responder test;
(iv) a back-up power supply;
(v) a separate telephone service;
and
(vi) a telephone line monitor,
which must give visual and audible signals when an incoming telephone line is
disconnected for more than 10 seconds.
(3) The monitoring agency must maintain
detailed technical and operations manuals that describe PERS elements,
including the installation, functioning, and testing of PERS equipment;
emergency response protocols; and recordkeeping and reporting
procedures.
(h) Payment for PERS.
(1) A social services district must
negotiate payment rates for PERS at or below rates included in a rate schedule
established by the department with the approval of the Director of the Budget.
A social services district must not negotiate PERS payment rates that exceed
local prevailing PERS rates.
(2)
PERS rates must include payment for the rental or lease of PERS equipment; the
installation, maintenance, and removal of PERS equipment; and a monthly service
charge for monitoring agency services.
(3) The social services district must submit
all negotiated PERS rates to the department for approval.
(4) Payments for PERS will be made only when
the PERS provider's claim is supported by documentation required by section
540.7(a)(8)
of this Title.
(5) Payments for
PERS must end the day the social services district sends the PERS provider
written notification that PERS equipment must be removed from the recipient's
home.
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