Current through Vol. 42, No. 1, September 16, 2024
(a) Long
Term Care Hospital services includes routine items and services that must be
provided directly or through appropriate arrangement by the facility when
required by Medicaid residents. Charges for routine services may not be made to
resident's personal funds or to resident family members, guardians or other
parties who have responsibility for the resident. If reimbursement is available
from Medicare or another public or private insurance or benefit program, those
programs are billed by the facility. In the absence of other available
reimbursement, the facility must provide routine services from the funds
received from the regular Medicaid vendor payment and Medicaid resident's
applied income, or spenddown amount.
(b) An ad hoc committee composed of
recognized nursing facility representatives and Oklahoma Health Care Authority
staff will review the listing at least annually for additions or deletions, as
indicated. Routine services should be patient specific and in accordance with
standard medical care. Routine Services include, but are not limited to:
(1) Regular room;
(2) Dietary Services:
(A) regular diets,
(B) special diets,
(C) salt and sugar substitutes,
(D) supplemental feedings,
(E) special dietary preparations,
(F) equipment required for preparing and
dispensing tube and oral feedings, and
(G) special feeding devices (furnished or
arranged for);
(3)
Medically related social services to attain or maintain the highest practicable
physical, mental and psychosocial well-being of each resident, nursing care,
and activities programs (costs for a private duty nurse or sitter are not
allowed);
(4) Personal services -
personal laundry services for residents (does not include dry
cleaning);
(5) Personal hygiene
items (personal care items required to be provided does not include electrical
appliances such as shavers and hair dryers, or individual personal batteries)
include:
(A) shampoo, comb and
brush;
(B) bath soap;
(C) disinfecting soaps or specialized
cleansing agents when indicated to treat or prevent special skin problems or to
fight infection;
(D) razor and/or
shaving cream;
(E) nail hygiene
services; and
(F) sanitary napkins,
douche supplies, perineal irrigation equipment, solutions and disposable
douches;
(6) Routine
oral hygiene items including:
(A)
toothbrushes,
(B)
toothpaste,
(C) dental
floss,
(D) lemon glycerin swabs or
equivalent products,
(7)
Necessary items furnished routinely as needed to all patients, e.g., water
pitcher, cup and tray, towels, wash cloths, hospital gowns, emesis basin,
bedpan, and urinal.
(8) The
facility will furnish as needed items such as alcohol, applicators, cotton
balls, tongue depressors. Also, first aid supplies including small bandages,
ointments and preparations for minor cuts and abrasions, enema supplies,
including disposable enemas, gauze, 4 × 4's ABD pads, surgical and
micropore tape, telfa gauze, ace bandages, etc.
(9) Over the counter drugs (non-legend) not
covered by the prescription drug program (PRN or routine). In general, long
term care hospitals are not required to provide any particular brand of
non-legend drugs, only those items necessary to ensure appropriate care.
(A) If the physician orders a brand specific
non-legend drug with no generic equivalent, the facility must provide the drug
at no cost to the patient. If the physician orders a brand specific non-legend
drug that has a generic equivalent, the facility may choose a generic
equivalent, upon approval of the ordering physician;
(B) If the physician does not order a
specific type or brand of non-legend drug, the facility may choose the type or
brand;
(C) If the recipient,
family, or other responsible party (excluding long term care hospital) prefers
a specific type or brand of non-legend drug rather than the ones furnished by
the facility, the recipient, family or responsible party may be charged the
difference between the cost of the brand the resident requests and the cost of
the brand generally provided by the facility. (Facilities are not required to
provide an unlimited variety of brands of these items and services. It is the
required assessment of resident needs, not resident preferences, that will
dictate the variety of products facilities need to provide);
(D) Before purchasing or charging for the
preferred items, the facility must secure written authorization from the
recipient, family member, or responsible party indicating his or her desired
preference, the date and signature of the person requesting the preferred item.
The signature may not be that of an employee of the facility. The authorization
is valid until rescinded by the maker of the instrument;
(10) The facility will furnish or obtain any
necessary equipment to meet the needs of the patient upon physician order.
Examples include: trapeze bars and overhead frames, foot and arm boards, bed
rails, cradles, wheelchairs, foot stools, adjustable crutches, canes, walkers,
bedside commode chairs, hot water bottles or heating pad, ice bags, sand bags,
traction equipment, I.V. stands, etc.;
(11) Physician prescribed lotions, ointments,
powders, medications and special dressings for the prevention and treatment of
decubitus ulcers, skin tears and related conditions, when medications are not
covered under the Vendor Drug Program or other third party payor;
(12) Supplies required for dispensing
medications, including needles, syringes including insulin syringes, tubing for
IVs, paper cups, medicine containers, etc.;
(13) Equipment and supplies required for
simple tests and examinations, including scales, sphygmomanometers,
stethoscopes, clinitest, acetest, dextrostix, pulse oximeters, blood glucose
meters and test strips, etc.;
(14)
Underpads and diapers, waterproof sheeting and pants, etc., as required for
incontinence or other care.
(A) If the
assessment and care planning process determines that it is medically necessary
for the resident to use diapers as part of a plan to achieve proper management
of incontinence, and if the resident has a current physician order for adult
diapers, then the facility must provide the diapers without charge;
(B) If the resident or the family requests
the use of disposable diapers and they are not prescribed or consistent with
the facility's methods for incontinent care, the resident/family would be
responsible for the expense;
(15) Oxygen for emergency use, or
intermittent use as prescribed by the physician for medical
necessity;
(16) Other physician
ordered equipment to adequately care for the patient and in accordance with
standard patient care, including infusion pumps and supplies, and nebulizers
and supplies, etc.
Added at 15 Ok Reg
1100, eff 1-6-98 (emergency); Added at 15 Ok Reg 1535, eff
5-11-98