(E) Organization and responsibilities of
OhioMHAS's advocacy program:
(1) An OhioMHAS
advocacy services administrator lead for
inpatient services
is to be appointed for the department.
General responsibilities of the OhioMHAS
advocacy services administrator lead
include, but are not
limited to, the following:
(a) Providing support for
the rights and recovery administrator within
each
RPH;
(b) Serving as
the resource person for
patient advocacy issues;
(c) Evaluating and reviewing OhioMHAS
policies, procedures, and mechanisms for assurance of
individual rights;
(d) Ensuring that alleged
patient abuse and neglect cases receive prompt and
appropriate action;
(e) Promoting
liaison with federal, state, local, community, legal, and civil rights advocacy groups;
(f) Consulting with appropriate OhioMHAS
staff, including the executive committee team,
regarding
complaints, grievances, and grievance appeals, including those having a potential impact on policy
development;
(g) Referring matters
requiring legal expertise in the area of
patient rights
to the department's office of legal services;
(h) Investigating and responding to
patient grievance appeals;
(i) Meeting with RPH
rights and recovery administrators on at least a
quarterly basis;
(2)
Each RPH
is
to have at least one full-time
rights and recovery
administrator for inpatient services, who reports directly to the
RPH chief executive officer (CEO) or
the CEO's designee.
Each RPH
is to have a
rights and recovery administrator alternate,
appointed by the RPH CEO and who reports to the
CEO or the CEO's designee.
(3) Duties for the each RPH
rights and recovery
administrator include, but are not limited to, the following:
(a)
Planning, implementing, and coordinating RPH
advocacy programs, including
all of the following:
(i)
Developing policies and procedures for the promotion
and protection of human rights in accordance with state and federal
statutes, joint commission
guidance, and centers for medicare and medicaid
services
policy;
(ii)
Monitoring and evaluating RPH
compliance;
(iii) Establishing
mechanisms for resolution of
patient advocacy problems;
(iv)
Providing consultation,
negotiation, training, and technical advice;
and
(v) Representing RPH
on matters concerning patient rights.
(b) Providing
patient
advocacy services
, including all of the
following:
(i)
Assuring adequate privacy for
patient interviews;
(ii) Being accessible
to
patients in person and at work locations;
(iii)
Representing and assisting
patients especially in the areas of rights, abuse
and neglect, and fulfillment of recovery and human dignity;
(iv)
Investigating and responding to grievances on behalf of
patients;
(v) Attending RPH
investigatory interviews with
patients, as requested by
patients;
(vi) Protecting
human and civil rights;
(vii) Reviewing
unusual incident reports as part of the quality assurance process;
(viii)
Ensuring that
patients have legal representation at court
hearings related to hospital services; and
(ix) Ensuring that
patient rights are prominently displayed in writing on
every unit.
(c)
Attending meetings related to
patient advocacy; serving as a member of the
executive governing body and other committees to ensure representation of the
hospital's advocacy program; preparing reports
for RPH or campus administration and central office; maintaining records;
and responding in writing to correspondence
pertaining to
patient advocacy;
(d) Providing input into program and
environmental changes to meet the needs
identified by
patients and assuring protection of patient
rights
, as well as being involved in
administrative
decisions affecting
patient rights, choice, dignity, and recovery;
(e) Advising all levels of RPH staff and
volunteers of
patient rights
, as well as
consulting with appropriate department staff, including legal staff, regarding
policy issues and responses to complaints or grievances;
(f) Advocating for
patient
access to community mental health systemsand facilitating access to
outside entities, including legal counsel, as needed;
(g) Assuring that equal opportunity is
implemented with particular emphasis on advocating that people with
disabilities are free from
discrimination in the provision of
services on the basis of religion, race,
ethnicity, color, creed, sex, national origin, age, lifestyle, sexual
orientation, gender identity, physical or mental handicap, disability,
developmental disability, or inability to pay as prescribed in department
policies and rules and state and federal
statutes;
(h) Ensuring that each
patient
understands the functions of and resources available through the Ohio
protection and advocacy system and receives a copy of the patient rights in
oral and written format
in accordance with all of the
following:
(i) The written rights
are to
be furnished to a
patient within twenty-four hours after
admission;
(ii) If a
patient is unable to read or speaks a language other
than standard English as a primary means of communication, or has a limitation
on their ability to communicate effectively
( such as deafness
or hearing impairment), the list of rights
is to
be explained to them by providing interpreters, readers,
or appropriate communication devices, or
by providing other assistance; and
(iii)
The notification and explanation of
patient rights
is to be
documented in the
patient's health record.
(4) Compliance with paragraph
(D)(3)(h) of this rule
will be
monitored by the RPH quality assurance programs.