Current through all regulations passed and filed through September 16, 2024
(A) Except as provided for in division (D) of
section 3721.011 of the Revised Code, a
residential care facility may admit or retain individuals who
are in need
of skilled nursing care beyond the supervision of special diets,
application of dressings, or administration of medication only if the skilled
nursing care will be provided on a part-time, intermittent basis for not more
than a total of one hundred twenty days in any twelve-month period regardless
of any transfer or discharge and readmission to the facility. A part-time,
intermittent basis means that skilled nursing care is rendered for less than
eight hours a day or less than forty hours a week. For the purposes of this
provision:
(1) The residential care facility
is obligated
to use the following criteria in tracking the one hundred and twenty days
of part-time, intermittent skilled nursing care permitted under this paragraph:
(a) Self-care
does not
count toward the allowable one hundred twenty
days;
(b) Services provided by
physical and occupational therapists and assistants licensed under Chapter
4755. of the Revised Code and speech-language pathologists licensed under
Chapter 4753. of the Revised Code do not constitute skilled nursing care and
are not
to be counted;
(c) Only days on which skilled nursing care
is performed
are to be counted toward the allowable one hundred and
twenty days; and
(d) Medication
administration, supervision of therapeutic diets or application of dressings
will be
counted toward the allowable one hundred and twenty days, if the residential
care facility does not provide for these services, pursuant to rule
3701-16-09 of the Administrative
Code.
(2) Skilled
nursing care may be provided by one or more of the following:
(a) A home health agency certified under
Title XVIII of the "Social Security Act," 49 Stat. 620 (1935),
42 U.S.C.A.
301, as amended (1981);
(b) A hospice care program licensed under
Chapter 3712. of the Revised Code;
(c) A member of the staff who is authorized
under state law to provide skilled nursing care.
If a resident's condition
is in need
of more skilled nursing care than permitted under this paragraph, the
residential care facility
is obligated to transfer or discharge the
resident in accordance with section
3721.16 of the Revised Code and
Chapter 3701-61 of the Administrative Code.
(B) Each residential care facility
that provides skilled nursing care using staff members
is obligated
to:
(1) Develop and follow policies and
procedures which assure that the skilled nursing care is provided in accordance
with acceptable standards of practice;
(2) Ensure that the skilled nursing care is
provided in accordance with accepted standards of practice only by individuals
authorized under state law to provide skilled nursing care. Skilled nursing
care may be delegated in accordance with Chapter 4723-13 of the Administrative
Code;
(3) Except for residents
receiving medication administration, supervision of special diets, the
application of dressings, or skilled nursing care permitted by paragraph (D) of
this rule, evaluate each resident receiving skilled nursing care at least once
every seven days to determine whether the resident should be transferred to a
nursing home or other appropriate health care setting. The evaluation and
determination is obligated to be performed by the appropriate
licensed health care professional and documented in the resident's
record;
(4) Document all skilled
nursing care provided by the residential care facility in the resident's
record. Such documentation is obligated to include, but not be limited to,
medication and treatment orders when needed to authorize provision of a service
and nurse's notes indicating the nature of the service provided and the
resident's status. All orders are obligated to be signed and dated by the licensed
health professional who gave the order within fourteen days after the order was
given;
(a) Telephone orders
are not
allowed to
be accepted by a
person other than a licensed nurse on duty, another physician or a pharmacist,
except that a licensed health professional may receive, document and date
medication and treatment orders concerning
their specific discipline for
residents under their care, to the extent permitted by applicable licensing
laws.
(b) The residential care
facility may accept signed treatment and medication orders issued by a licensed
health professional by facsimile transmission if the facility has instituted
procedural safeguards for authentication and maintaining confidentiality of the
facsimile order, and for handling the order in an expedient and priority
manner.
(c) An entry that is an
electronic record as defined in section
3701.75 of the Revised Code may
be authenticated by an electronic signature in accordance with section
3701.75 of the Revised
Code.
(5) Meet the
skilled nursing care needs of each resident receiving care as determined by the
assessment
obligated by
rule 3701-16-08 of the Administrative
Code and consistent with the resident agreement
obligated
by rule
3701-16-07 of the Administrative
Code; and
(6) Ensure that a nurse
coordinates the overall nursing care of each resident who receives skilled
nursing care from facility staff.
(C) In addition to paragraphs (A) and (B) of this
rule, each residential care facility that provides enteral tube feedings on a
part-time intermittent basis is obligated:
(1)
Establish in writing the types of enteral tube feedings that are routinely
managed by the facility. The determination of the types of enteral tube
feedings that are provided by the facility are to be based
on staff education, staff competence, the amount of staff experience with the
listed types of enteral tube feedings, and support services available in the
facility;
(2) Develop and follow
policies and procedures which assure that enteral tube feedings are prepared
and offered as ordered and that sanitary conditions are maintained in
procurement, storage, preparation, and the administration of the enteral tube
feedings;
(3) Document the weight
of the resident and the resident's acceptance and tolerance of the enteral tube
feedings in accordance with policies and procedures developed by the dietitian
and the nurse responsible for the overall nursing care of the resident;
and
(4) Provide or arrange for a
dietitian.
(D) A
residential care facility may admit or retain an individual who
is in need
of skilled nursing care for more than one hundred twenty days in any
twelve-month period only if:
(1) The facility
has entered into a written agreement with each of the following:
(a) The individual, the individual's sponsor,
or both;
(b) The individual's
personal physician or other licensed health professional acting within their
applicable scope of practice, unless either of the following apply:
(i) If the provision of the skilled nursing
care is not overseen by the individual's personal physician, the provider of
the skilled nursing care may enter into the agreement; or
(ii) If the individual is a hospice patient
as defined in section
3712.01 of the Revised Code, a
hospice care program licensed under Chapter 3712. of the Revised Code may enter
into the agreement.
(2) The written agreement
obligated by this paragraph includes a statement
signed by all parties acknowledging that they understand the agreement and that
the individual's needs can be met at the facility. The agreement
is not
considered
complete without this signed statement
and
includes all of the following provisions:
(a) That the individual will be provided
skilled nursing care in the facility only if a determination has been made that
the individual's needs can be met at the facility. This determination
is obligated
to be made by the residential care facility, the individual's attending
physician, and, if applicable, the provider of the skilled nursing
care;
(b) That the individual will
be retained in the facility only if periodic re- determinations are made that
the individual's needs can be met at the facility;
(c) That the re-determinations will be made
according to a schedule specified in the agreement and as the resident's
condition necessitates, but no less frequently than every thirty
days, except for hospice patients whose re-determinations
are to be
made be no less frequently than every fifteen days;
(d) Unless the individual is a hospice
patient, the individual's personal physician has determined that the skilled
nursing care the resident or prospective resident needs is routine. For
purposes of this rule, "routine" does not include those conditions listed in
paragraph (B) of rule
3701-16-07 of the Administrative
Code; and
(e) If the individual is
a hospice patient, that the individual has been given an opportunity to choose
the hospice care program that best meets the individual's needs.