Current through all regulations passed and filed through September 16, 2024
(A) The purpose of this rule is to describe
the role and responsibilities of boards in the client rights and grievance procedures.
(B) The provisions of this rule are
applicable to each board of alcohol, drug addiction,
and mental health services constituted according to section
340.02
of the Revised Code, or a community mental health board
or an alcohol and drug addiction services board as
described in section
340.021
of the Revised Code. In addition, the provisions of rule 5122-26-18 of the Administrative Code are also applicable to each board which itself
provides mental health or addiction services when
permitted to do so in accordance with section
340.037
of the Revised Code.
(C)
Definitions.
(1)
"Board" means a board of alcohol, drug addiction, and mental
health services constituted according to section
340.02
of the Revised Code, or a community mental health board or an alcohol and drug
addiction services board as described in section
340.021
of the Revised Code.
(2) "Client
advocate" means the individual designated by a
community mental health or addiction services provider or board with responsibility for assuring
compliance with the client rights and grievance procedure rule as implemented
within each
provider or board. For these purposes the
the
title
has the same meaning as
client rights officer or client rights
specialist.
(3) "Contract provider" means
a public or private service provider with which a board enters into a
contract for the delivery of mental health or
addiction services. A board which is itself providing mental health
or addiction services is subject to the same
requirements and standards which are applicable to contract
providers, as specified in rule 5122:2-1-05 of the Administrative Code.
(4) "Grievance" means
a written complaint initiated either verbally or in writing by a client or by
any other person or
provider on behalf of a client regarding denial
or abuse of any client's rights.
(5) "Services" means
the complete array of professional interventions designed to help a person
achieve improvements in mental health such as counseling, individual or group
therapy, education, community psychiatric supportive treatment, assessment,
diagnosis, treatment planning and goal setting, clinical review,
psychopharmacology, discharge planning, professionally-led support,
etc.
(D)
Board procedure.
(1)
Each board shall
assure that each
contract
provider has a grievance procedure in place which
meets the requirements of rule 5122-26-18 of the Administrative Code. Each board shall recognize that, for a provider accredited and granted
deemed status by the Ohio department of mental health and addiction services in accordance with rule
5122-25-02 of the Administrative Code, the
requirements of rule 5122-26-18 of the Administrative Code are met by
provider
conformance to its accrediting body standards.
(2) Each board must establish a procedure for addressing client
rights complaints, including, when applicable, complaints initiated in
accordance with rule 5122-30-22
or 5122-30- 22.1 of the Administrative Code on behalf
of a resident of a residential facility. This procedure must include:
(a) Provision for accessing
provider information relevant to the
complaint;
(b) Provision of written
copy of the board's grievance procedure to be available on request;
(c) Specification of time lines for a
resolution of the grievance, not to exceed twenty-one working days from the date the grievance is
filed;
(d) Provision for written
notification and explanation of the resolution to be provided to the client, or
to the griever if other than the client, with the client's
permission;
(e) A statement
regarding the option of the griever to further grieve with any or all of the
following: Ohio department of mental health and
addiction services, the Ohio protection and advocacy system
(disability rights Ohio), or the U.S.
department of health and human services. Appropriate professional licensing or
regulatory boards' relevant names, addresses, and telephone numbers shall be
included; and
(f) Provision for
providing, upon request, relevant information about the grievance to one or
more of the organizations specified in this paragraph to which the griever has
initiated a complaint.
(E) Implementation and monitoring.
(1) Any board may accomplish its
responsibilities in regard to the provisions of this rule and rule 5122-26-18 of the Administrative Code through utilization of its own staff or board members as appropriate, or through agreement with outside staff, agencies, providers, or organizations, except that:
(a) Each board must assure prompt
accessibility of the client advocate.
(b) The utilization of outside persons must
be clearly explained to clients, applicants, and grievers.
(2) The board shall also keep records of grievances it receives,
the subject of the grievances, and the resolution of each, and shall assure the
availability of these records for review by the department of mental health
and addiction services upon request. The board
shall summarize annually its records to include number of grievances received,
types of grievances, and resolution status.
(3) The department of mental health
and addiction services may periodically review
the implementation of client rights policy and grievance procedures in each
board area. Each board shall maintain a client rights policy and grievance
procedure that is approved by the department of mental health
and addiction services. Subsequent substantive
changes to such written policy and procedure shall be submitted to and approved
by the department before enactment.