Current through all regulations passed and filed through September 16, 2024
(A) A residential facility that is certified
by the Ohio department of job and family services (ODJFS) and accepts children
for placement is to comply with the requirements in this rule. Agencies whose
initial certification date is on or after October 1, 2020 are to be compliant
with this rule in order to become certified. Agencies certified prior to
October 1, 2020 have until October 1, 2024 to become compliant with the
requirements related to meeting QRTP standards. In order to maintain title IV-E
reimbursability, residential agencies are to meet the standards in this rule by
October 1, 2021.
(B) A QRTP is
defined as a facility that:
(1) Is not a
private, nonprofit therapeutic wilderness camp.
(2)
Is not a scholars
residential facility.
(3) Has a residential
program that is accredited by at least one of the following national
accrediting bodies and provides ongoing proof of such accreditation status to
ODJFS:
(a) Commission on accreditation of
rehabilitation facilities.
(b)
Joint commission on accreditation of healthcare organizations.
(c) Council on accreditation.
(4) Implements a
trauma-informed approach in which all employees, volunteers, interns and
independent contractors within the facility are trained in that trauma-informed
approach. Trauma-informed training is to occur within the first thirty days of
hire and annually thereafter in accordance with rule
5101:2-9-03 of the
Administrative Code. The required trauma training competencies are located at
https://jfs.ohio.gov/ocf/Family-First.stm.
(5)
Utilizes a trauma-informed treatment model that is approved by ODJFS for the
population the facility serves. A trauma-informed treatment model is a program,
organization or system that:
(a) Ensures all
clinical staff are trained on the trauma model approved by ODJFS. If the
program adds that staff other than those with clinical responsibilities are to
be trained on the trauma model, the program is to document this through policy
and training records;
(b) Realizes
the widespread impact of trauma and understands potential paths for
recovery;
(c) Recognizes the signs
and symptoms of trauma in clients, families, staff and others involved with the
system;
(d) Responds by fully
integrating information about trauma into policies, procedures and
practices;
(e) Seeks to actively
resist re-traumatization;
(f)
Includes service of clinical needs and that:
(i) Is an approved trauma informed treatment
model applicable to the population of youth served, located at
https://jfs.ohio.gov/ocf/Family-First.stm,
or
(ii) Meets the substance abuse
and mental health services administration (SAMHSA) implementation domains and
follows the six key principles of the SAMHSA trauma informed approach which are
located at
https://jfs.ohio.gov/ocf/Family-First.stm;
and
(iii) Receives approval by the
department or designee.
(6) Has registered or
licensed nursing and clinical staff who operate in accordance with the
following:
(a) Provide care within the scope
of their practice as defined by state law.
(b) Are accessible on-site or face-to-face
via interactive videoconferencing based on the youth's clinical and/or medical
needs. Interactive videoconferencing may not be appropriate for a youth in
crisis at the facility.
(c) Are
available twenty-four hours a day and seven days a week.
(7)
Cooperates with the qualified individual and the family and permanency team to
complete the assessment within thirty days of placement of a child in a QRTP in
accordance with rule
5101:2-42-12 of the
Administrative Code.
(8) Provides
consideration for the youth's safety and developmental needs, the treatment
should be family-driven with both the youth and the family included in all
aspects of care, if in the best interest of the youth. The key components of
family-centered residential treatment are to be documented in the child's
record and include the following:
(a)
Facilitation of regular contact between the youth and other members of the
family including siblings;
(b)
Actively involving and supporting families who have a youth placed in the
residential facility;
(c) Providing
outreach, ongoing support and aftercare for the youth and the family.
(9) Completes discharge
planning that is to:
(a) Include planning for
all youth discharged from the QRTP.
(b) Begin in partnership with the legal
custodian and/or custodial agency no later than the next business day after a
youth is admitted to the QRTP.
(c)
Be reviewed by the QRTP no less than every thirty days and during every service
plan review.
(10) Provides aftercare
support for all youth placed more than fourteen days who are exiting the QRTP
to family-based settings including:
(a)
Reunification with family.
(b)
Pre-finalized adoptive family.
(c)
Kinship care.
(d) Foster
care.
(e) Independent
living.
(11) Includes at least
a six-month period of family-based aftercare support for all youth after
discharge, even if the youth reaches the age of majority. The aftercare support
is to:
(a) Be provided within the youth or
family's community as appropriate to promote the continuity of care for
children.
(b) Be individualized and
driven by the youth, the caregivers and the family as appropriate, and include
the following:
(i) Monthly contact with the
youth and caregivers to promote and maintain engagement, and to regularly
evaluate the family's needs. Monthly contact may be in-person, through
interactive videoconferencing, or via phone or other electronic
means.
(ii) Referring and
coordinating engagement with any applicable community providers serving the
youth or family. The QRTP will ensure they make themselves available to the
community providers for ongoing consultation and document the consultation in
writing. Documentation should include all resources and services needed and
detail how the resources and services will be provided.
(iii) Written documentation provided to all
participants of the discharge plan prior to discharge with information on how
to access additional supports from the QRTP and community providers including
contact information and steps required to access each provider.
(12) May provide six
months of aftercare services as defined in rule
5101:2-1-01 and pursuant to
rule 5101:2-47-23.1 of the
Administrative Code, if the child was placed by a Title IV-E agency.
(13)
Ensures all QRTP requirements able to be recorded in the residential treatment
information system (RTIS) are documented within RTIS.