Oklahoma Administrative Code
Title 310 - Oklahoma State Department of Health
Chapter 670 - City and County Detention Facility Standards
Subchapter 5 - Standards for Detention Facilities
Section 310:670-5-8 - Medical care and health services
Current through Vol. 42, No. 1, September 16, 2024
Adequate medical care shall be provided in a facility. The administrator shall develop and implement written policies and procedures for complete emergency medical and health care services. Policies and procedures shall include at least the following:
(1) The administrator shall be responsible for the facility's medical services and shall develop, with the assistance of a designated medical authority, the facility's health care plan. Security restrictions shall be considered in the development of the plan, and any medical personnel included in the plan shall have their responsibilities regulated by written job descriptions. The health care plan shall cover at least the standards outlined in this section.
(2) Intake screening shall be performed on all inmates immediately upon admission to the facility and before being placed in the general population or housing area. An inmate whose screening indicates a significant medical or psychiatric problem, or who may be a suicide risk, shall be observed frequently by the staff consistent with the facility's policy and the identified need until the appropriate medical evaluation has been completed. After medical evaluation, these inmates may be assigned to housing consistent with the medical evaluation.
(3) Delousing procedures shall be developed in coordination with the designated medical authority and used whenever vermin are detected.
(4) Inmates are informed upon admission to the facility about the procedures for gaining access to medical and health care services. These procedures shall be posted in a conspicuous place.
(5) Each facility shall have a plan and provide twenty-four (24) hour emergency medical and dental care. Emergency plans shall at least include arrangements for:
(6) If the need is indicated by the intake screening at booking, inmates held for forty-eight (48) hours or more, shall be scheduled for a medical examination which shall be conducted by licensed medical personnel.
(7) An appointment shall be made with a physician or other licensed medical personnel, as defined at Title 57 O.S. § 4.1(3), within forty-eight (48) hours of a valid written request unless more immediate action is dictated by the severity of the current situation.
(8) If medical services are delivered in the facility, adequate space, equipment, supplies and materials as determined by the designated medical authority, shall be provided for primary health care delivery.
(9) First aid kits approved by the designated medical authority shall be available in each facility. They shall be located in an area(s) also approved by the designated medical authority.
(10) Referral sources shall be identified in advance by the designated medical authority or administrator.
(11) The administration of medications, and the date, time and place of medical encounters shall be documented.
(12) Copies of the medical record, or a discharge summary if any, shall accompany an inmate upon transfer to another facility.
(13) Any remaining medications, for which the inmate has been charged, shall accompany the inmate upon transfer to another facility or upon release, or those charges shall be reversed. Medications that were in the possession of the inmate on admission, and were not dispensed, and for which the inmate has a lawful prescription, shall be returned unless there is documentation of abandonment. The amount of medications provided shall be documented. The count at that time shall be logged. Continuity of care is required when transferring or discharging inmates from the facility, including when referring an inmate to community-based providers. When health care is transferred to another facility or to providers in the community, appropriate information shall be shared with the new providers in accordance with consent requirements. Sufficient medications shall be provided upon transfer or release for inmates with known serious health conditions. Sufficient medication should be coordinated with the receiving facility. The inmate is liable for payment of the cost of these medications pursuant to Oklahoma statute [Title 19 O.S. § 746(B) ].
(14) Staff shall wear disposable gloves when dealing with possible exposure to an inmate's body fluids.
(15) Biomedical waste shall be stored and destroyed in compliance with state and federal requirements.
(16) Sharps, i.e., needles, lancets and scalpels shall be disposed of in a puncture-proof container.
(17) Staff shall receive a TB skin test as a part of the pre-employment evaluation and each twelve (12) months as long as the test is negative. Individuals with positive skin tests shall be referred to the local health department or personal physician for evaluation. Employees will also be offered hepatitis B vaccination within one month of employment, at no cost to the employee.
(18) Universal precautions shall be used at all times by all employees.
(19) Medication aides are restricted in the scope of activities they may perform. Those restrictions are established in Title 63 O.S. § 1-1950.3(E).
(20) County jails, under the authority of the sheriff and Title 19 O.S. § 531(B), may deduct monies collected from an inmate as a medical payment on account for each medical services visit the inmate receives while incarcerated in the county jail, except as otherwise provided in Title 19 O.S. § 531(B).
(21) Inmates are responsible for the costs of incarceration, medical care and treatment as provided in Section 979a of Title 22 of the Oklahoma Statutes.