Current through all regulations passed and filed through September 16, 2024
(A) Specialized recovery service program
providers shall maintain professional relationships with the individuals they
serve. Providers shall furnish services in a person-centered manner that is in
accordance with the individual's approved person- centered service plan, is
attentive to the individual's needs and maximizes the individual's
independence. Providers shall refrain from any behavior that may detract from
the goals, objectives and services outlined in the individual's approved
person- centered service plan and/or that may jeopardize the individual's
health and welfare.
(B) Specialized
recovery services program providers shall:
(1)
Maintain an active, valid medicaid provider agreement as set forth in rule
5160-1-17.2 of the
Administrative Code.
(2) Comply
with all applicable provider requirements set forth in this chapter of the
Administrative Code, including but not limited to:
(a) Provider requirements as set forth in
rule 5160-43-04 of the Administrative
Code;
(b) Incident reporting as set
forth in rule
5160-44-05 of the Administrative
Code;
(c) Provider monitoring,
oversight, reviews and investigations as set forth in rule
5160-43-07 of the Administrative
Code; and
(d) Criminal records
checks for providers of home and community-based services (HCBS) as set forth
in rule 5160-43-09 of the Administrative
Code.
(3) Deliver
services in a person-centered manner, professionally, respectfully and
legally.
(4) Ensure that
individuals to whom the provider is furnishing services are protected from
abuse, neglect, exploitation and other threats to their health, safety and
well-being. Upon entering into a medicaid provider agreement, and annually
thereafter, all providers including all employees who have direct contact with
individuals enrolled in the program must acknowledge in writing they have
reviewed rule
5160-44-05 of the Administrative
Code regarding incident management procedures.
(5) Work with the individual and his or her
trans-disciplinary care team to coordinate service delivery, including, but not
limited to:
(a) Agreeing to provide and
providing services in the amount, scope, location and duration they have
capacity to provide, and as specified on the individual's approved
person-centered service plan.
(b)
Contacting the individual, the recovery manager and/or his or her supervisor,
as applicable, when the provider is unable to render services on the appointed
date and time, and verify their receipt of information about the
absence.
(6) To the
extent not otherwise required by rule
5160-44-05 of the Administrative
Code, notify the Ohio department of medicaid (ODM) or its designee within
twenty-four hours when the provider is aware of issues that may affect the
individual and/or provider's ability to render services as directed in the
individual's person-centered service plan. Issues may include, but are not
limited to:
(a) The individual consistently
declines services,
(b) The
individual plans to or has moved to another residential address,
(c) There are significant changes in the
physical, mental and/or emotional status of the individual,
(d) There are changes in the individual's
environmental conditions,
(e) The
individual's caregiver status has changed causing service delivery to be
impacted or interrupted,
(f) The
individual no longer requires medically necessary services as defined in rule
5160-1-01 of the Administrative
Code,
(g) The individual's actions
toward the provider are threatening or the provider feels unsafe in the
individual's environment,
(h) The
individual's requests conflict with his or her person-centered service plan and
may jeopardize his or her health and welfare, and
(i) Any other situation that affects the
individual's health and welfare.
(7) Upon request and within the time frame
prescribed in the request, provide information and documentation to ODM, its
designee and the centers for medicare and medicaid services (CMS).
(8) Cooperate with ODM and its designee
during all provider monitoring and oversight activities by being available to
answer questions during reviews, and by ensuring the availability and
confidentiality of documentation that may be requested regarding service
delivery to individuals.
(9)
Participate in all provider trainings mandated or sponsored by ODM or its
designees, including but not limited to those set forth in rule
5160-43-04 of the Administrative
Code.
(10) Be knowledgeable about
and comply with all applicable federal and state laws, including the "Health
Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996" (HIPAA) regulations set
forth in 45 C.F.R. parts 160 and 164 (October 1, 2023),
confidentiality of alcohol and drug abuse patient records set forth in 42 C.F.R
part 2 (October 1, 2023), and the medicaid safeguarding
information requirements set forth in 42 C.F.R. parts 431.300 to 431.307
(October 1, 2023), along with sections
5160.45 to
5160.481 of the Revised
Code.
(11) Ensure that the
provider's contact information, including but not limited to address, telephone
number, fax number and email address, is current. When contact information
changes, the provider shall notify ODM via the medicaid information technology
system (MITS) and its designee, no later than seven calendar days after such
changes have occurred.
(12) Make
arrangements to accept all correspondence sent by ODM or its designee,
including certified mail.
(13)
Maintain and retain all required documentation related to the services
delivered during a visit including but not limited to: an individual-specific
description and details of the services provided or not provided in accordance
with the person- centered service plan.
(a)
Validation of service delivery shall include, but not be limited to, the date
and location of service delivery, arrival and departure times and the dated
signature of the provider.
(b)
Retain all records of service delivery and billing for a period of six years
after the date of receipt of the payment based upon those records, or until any
initiated audit is completed, whichever is longer.
(14) Submit written notification to the
individual and ODM or its designee at least thirty calendar days before the
anticipated last date of service if the provider is terminating the provision
of program services to the individual. Exceptions to the thirty-day advance
notification requirement include:
(a) A verbal
and written notification to the individual and ODM or its designee at least ten
days before the anticipated last date of services when the individual:
(i) Has been admitted to a
hospital;
(ii) Has entered into an
institutional setting; or
(iii) Has
been incarcerated.
(b)
ODM may waive advance notification for a provider upon request and on a
case-by-case basis.
(C) Specialized recovery services program
providers shall not:
(1) Engage in any
behavior that causes or may cause physical, verbal, mental or emotional abuse
or distress to the individual.
(2)
Engage in any behavior that may compromise the health and welfare of the
individual.
(3) Engage in any
behavior that may take advantage of the individual, his or her family,
household members or authorized representative, or that may result in a
conflict of interest, exploitation or any other advantage for personal gain.
This includes but is not limited to:
(a)
Misrepresentation;
(b) Accepting,
obtaining, attempting to obtain, borrowing, or receiving money or anything of
value including but not limited to gifts, tips, credit cards or other
items;
(c) Being designated on any
financial account including, but not limited to bank accounts and credit
cards;
(d) Using real or personal
property of another;
(e) Using
information of another;
(f) Lending
or giving money or anything of value;
(g) Engaging in the sale or purchase of
products, services or personal items;
(h) Engaging in any activity that takes
advantage of or manipulates specialized recovery services program
rules.
(4) Falsify the
individual's signature, including copies of the signature.
(5) Make fraudulent, deceptive or misleading
statements in the advertising, solicitation, administration or billing of
services.
(6) Submit a claim for
program services rendered while the individual is hospitalized,
institutionalized, incarcerated, or otherwise residing in a setting that does
not meet the HCBS setting requirements set forth in rule
5160-44-01 of the Administrative
Code.
(D) While
rendering services, specialized recovery services providers shall not:
(1) Take the individual to the provider's
place of residence;
(2) Bring
animals which are not service animals, children, friends, relatives, or any
others to the individual's place of residence;
(3) Provide care to persons other than the
individual;
(4) Smoke without
consent of the individual;
(5)
Sleep;
(6) Engage in any
distracting activity that is not related to the provision of services which may
interfere with service delivery. Such activities include, but are not limited
to:
(a) Using electronic devices for personal
or entertainment purposes including, but not limited to watching television,
using a computer or playing games;
(b) Making or receiving personal
communications; and
(c) Engaging in
socialization with persons other than the individual.
(7) Deliver services when the provider is
medically, physically or emotionally unfit;
(8) Use or be under the influence of the
following while providing services:
(a)
Alcohol,
(b) Illegal
drugs,
(c) Chemical substances,
or
(d) Controlled substances that
may adversely affect the provider's ability to furnish services.
(9) Engage in any activity that
may reasonably be interpreted as sexual in nature, regardless of whether it is
consensual;
(10) Engage in any
behavior that may reasonably be interpreted as inappropriate involvement in the
individual's personal beliefs or relationships including, but not limited to
discussing religion, politics or personal issues; or
(11) Consume the individual's food and/or
drink without his or her offer and consent.
(E) Program service providers shall not be
designated to serve or make decisions for the individual in any capacity
involving a declaration for mental health treatment, general power of attorney,
health care power of attorney, financial power of attorney, guardianship
pursuant to court order, as an authorized representative, or as a
representative payee.
(F) Providers
shall pay applicable federal, state and local income and employment taxes in
compliance with federal, state and local requirements. Federal employment taxes
include medicare and social security.
(G) Failure to meet the requirements set
forth in this rule may result in any of the actions set forth in rules
5160-44-05 and
5160-43-07 of the Administrative
Code including, but not limited to, termination of the medicaid provider
agreement in accordance with rule
5160-1-17.6 of the
Administrative Code. When ODM proposes termination of the medicaid provider
agreement, the provider shall be entitled to a hearing under Chapter 119. of
the Revised Code in accordance with Chapter 5160-70 of the Administrative
Code.