Texas Administrative Code
Title 25 - HEALTH SERVICES
Part 1 - DEPARTMENT OF STATE HEALTH SERVICES
Chapter 133 - HOSPITAL LICENSING
Subchapter K - HOSPITAL LEVEL OF CARE DESIGNATIONS FOR MATERNAL CARE
Section 133.208 - Maternal Designation Level III
Universal Citation: 25 TX Admin Code ยง 133.208
Current through Reg. 49, No. 38; September 20, 2024
(a) A Level III (Subspecialty Care). The Level III maternal designated facility must:
(1) provide care for pregnant and postpartum
patients with low risk conditions to significant complex medical, surgical or
obstetrical conditions that present a high risk of maternal morbidity or
mortality;
(2) ensure access to
consultation to a full range of medical and maternal subspecialists, surgical
specialists, and behavioral health specialists;
(3) ensure capability to perform major
surgery on-site;
(4) have
physicians with critical care training available at all times to actively
collaborate with Maternal Fetal Medicine physicians or Obstetrics and
Gynecology Physicians with obstetrics training and privileges in maternal
care;
(5) have skilled personnel
with documented training, competencies, and annual continuing education,
specific for the population served;
(6) facilitate transports; and
(7) provide outreach education related to
trends identified through the QAPI Plan, specific requests, and system needs to
lower level designated facilities, and as appropriate and applicable, to
non-designated facilities, birthing centers, independent midwife practices, and
prehospital providers.
(b) Maternal Medical Director (MMD). The MMD must be a physician who:
(1) is a
board-certified obstetrics and gynecology physician with obstetrics training
and experience, or a board-certified maternal fetal medicine physician, both
with privileges in maternal care;
(2) demonstrates administrative skills and
oversight of the QAPI Plan; and
(3)
has completed annual continuing education specific to maternal care, including
complicated conditions.
(c) If the facility has its own transport program, there must be an identified Transport Medical Director (TMD). The TMD must be a physician who is a board-certified maternal fetal medicine specialist or board-certified obstetrics and gynecology physician with privileges and experience in obstetrical care and maternal transport.
(d) Program Functions and Services.
(1) Triage and assessment of all patients
admitted to the perinatal service.
(A)
Pregnant patients who are identified at high risk of delivering a neonate that
requires a higher level of neonatal care than the scope of their neonatal
facility must be transferred to a higher level neonatal designated facility
before delivery unless the transfer is unsafe.
(B) Pregnant or postpartum patients
identified with conditions or complications that require a higher level of
maternal care must be transferred to a higher level maternal designated
facility unless the transfer is unsafe.
(2) Provide care for pregnant patients with
the capability to detect, stabilize, and initiate management of unanticipated
maternal-fetal or maternal problems that occur during the antepartum,
intrapartum, or postpartum period until the patient can be transferred to a
higher level of neonatal or maternal care.
(3) Supportive and emergency care must be
delivered by appropriately trained personnel for unanticipated maternal-fetal
problems that occur requiring a higher level of maternal care, until the
patient is stabilized or transferred;
(4) An obstetrics and gynecology physician
with maternal privileges must be on-site at all times and available for urgent
situations.
(5) A board-certified
or board-eligible Maternal Fetal Medicine physician with inpatient privileges
must be available at all times for inpatient consultation and arrive at the
patient bedside within 30 minutes of an urgent request to co-manage patients.
(A) When telehealth or telemedicine is
utilized for maternal fetal medicine co-management for non-urgent inpatient
situations where an in-person response is not required, the facility must have
the following:
(i) a written plan for the
appropriate use of telehealth/telemedicine for inpatient hospital care that is
compliant with the Texas Medical Board Telemedicine rules, Texas Administrative
Code, Title 22, Chapter 174, and the Texas Occupations Code, Chapter
111;
(ii) a process for informed
consent and agreement from the patient for the use of telehealth or
telemedicine; and
(iii) a maternal
fetal medicine physician with inpatient privileges at the facility, who
regularly participates in the on-site care of patients at the facility, has
access to the patient's medical record, and participates as needed in the QAPI
Plan and process for the facility's maternal program.
(B) The facility has processes to monitor the
compliance and outcomes of maternal telehealth and telemedicine encounters
through the QAPI Plan.
(C) The use
of telemedicine for on call consultation does not substitute for the
requirement of maternal fetal medicine availability for in-person consultation
on complex and critically ill patients on a regular basis.
(6) Intensive Care Services. The facility
must provide critical care services for critically ill pregnant or postpartum
patients, including fetal monitoring in the Intensive Care Unit (ICU),
respiratory failure and ventilator support, procedure for emergency cesarean,
coordination of nursing care, and consultative or co-management roles to
facilitate collaboration.
(7) Level
III maternal designated facilities that serve as referral centers for placenta
accreta spectrum disorder must fulfill all of the Level IV requirements for a
Placenta Accreta Spectrum Disorder Team defined in §
133.209 of this title (relating to
Maternal Designation Level IV).
(8)
Medical and surgical physicians, including critical care specialists, must be
available at all times and arrive at the patient bedside within 30 minutes of
an urgent request.
(9) Consultation
by a behavioral health professional, with training or experience in maternal
counseling must be available at all times and arrive by telemedicine or
in-person when requested within a time period consistent with current standards
of professional practice and maternal care.
(10) Ensure that a qualified physician, or a
certified nurse midwife with appropriate physician back-up, is available to
attend all deliveries or other obstetrical emergencies.
(11) The primary provider caring for a
pregnant or postpartum patient who is a family medicine physician with
obstetrics training and experience, obstetrics and gynecology physician,
maternal fetal medicine physician, or a certified nurse midwife, physician
assistant or nurse practitioner with appropriate physician back-up, whose
credentials have been reviewed by the MMD and is on call:
(A) must arrive at the patient bedside within
30 minutes for an urgent request; and
(B) must complete annual continuing
education, specific to the care of pregnant and postpartum patients, including
complicated and critical conditions.
(12) Certified nurse midwives, physician
assistants and nurse practitioners who provide care for maternal patients:
(A) must operate under guidelines reviewed
and approved by the MMD; and
(B)
must have a formal arrangement with a physician with obstetrics training or
experience, and with maternal privileges who must:
(i) provide back-up and
consultation;
(ii) arrive at the
patient bedside within 30 minutes of an urgent request; and
(iii) meet requirements for medical staff as
described in §
133.205 of this title (relating to
Program Requirements) respectively.
(13) An on-call schedule of providers,
back-up providers, and provision for patients without a physician must be
readily available to facility and maternal staff and posted on the labor and
delivery unit.
(14) Ensure that the
physician providing back-up coverage must arrive at the patient bedside within
30 minutes for an urgent request.
(15) Anesthesia Services must comply with the
requirements found at §
133.41 of this title (relating to
Hospital Functions and Services) and must have:
(A) anesthesia personnel with experience and
expertise in obstetric anesthesia must be available on-site at all
times;
(B) a board-certified
anesthesiologist with training or experience in obstetric anesthesia in charge
of obstetric anesthesia services;
(C) a board-certified or board-eligible
anesthesiologist with training or experience in obstetric anesthesia, including
critically ill obstetric patients available for consultation at all times, and
arrive at the patient bedside within 30 minutes for urgent requests;
and
(D) anesthesia personnel on
call, including back-up contact information, posted and readily available to
the facility and maternal staff and posted in the labor and delivery
area.
(16) Laboratory
Services must comply with the requirements found at §
133.41 of this title and must
have:
(A) laboratory personnel on-site at all
times;
(B) a blood bank capable of:
(i) providing ABO-Rh specific or O-Rh
negative blood, fresh frozen plasma, cryoprecipitate, and platelet components
on-site at the facility at all times;
(ii) implementing a massive transfusion
protocol;
(iii) ensuring guidelines
for emergency release of blood components; and
(iv) managing multiple blood component
therapy; and
(C)
perinatal pathology services available.
(17) Medical Imaging Services must comply
with the requirements found at §
133.41 of this title and must
have:
(A) personnel appropriately trained in
the use of x-ray equipment available on-site at all times;
(B) advanced imaging, including computed
tomography (CT), magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and echocardiography
available at all times;
(C)
interpretation of CT, MRI and echocardiography within a time period consistent
with current standards of professional practice and maternal care;
(D) basic ultrasonographic imaging for
maternal or fetal assessment, including interpretation available at all times;
and
(E) a portable ultrasound
machine available in the labor and delivery and antepartum unit.
(18) Pharmacy services must comply
with the requirements found in §
133.41 of this title and must have
a pharmacist with experience in perinatal pharmacology available at all
times.
(19) Respiratory Therapy
Services must comply with the requirements found at §
133.41 of this title and have a
respiratory therapist immediately available on-site at all times.
(20) Obstetrical Services.
(A) The ability to begin an emergency
cesarean delivery within a time period consistent with current standards of
professional practice and maternal care.
(B) Ensure the availability and
interpretation of non-stress testing, and electronic fetal
monitoring.
(C) A trial of labor
for patients with prior cesarean delivery must have the capability of
anesthesia, cesarean delivery, and maternal resuscitation on-site during the
trial of labor.
(21)
Resuscitation. The facility must have written policies and procedures specific
to the facility for the stabilization and resuscitation of the pregnant or
postpartum patient based on current standards of professional practice. The
facility:
(A) ensures staff members, not
responsible for the neonatal resuscitation, are immediately available on-site
at all times who demonstrate current status of successful completion of ACLS,
or a department-approved equivalent course, and the skills to perform a
complete resuscitation; and
(B)
ensures that resuscitation equipment, including difficult airway management
equipment for pregnant and postpartum patients, is readily available in the
labor and delivery, antepartum and postpartum areas.
(22) The facility must have a written
hospital preparedness and management plan for patients with placenta accreta
spectrum disorder who are undiagnosed until delivery, including educating
hospital and medical staff who may be involved in the treatment and management
of placenta accreta spectrum disorder about risk factors, diagnosis, and
management.
(23) The facility must
have written guidelines or protocols for various conditions that place the
pregnant or postpartum patient at risk for morbidity or mortality, including
promoting prevention, early identification, early diagnosis, therapy,
stabilization, and transfer. The guidelines or protocols must address a minimum
of:
(A) massive hemorrhage and transfusion of
the pregnant or postpartum patient in coordination of the blood bank, including
management of unanticipated hemorrhage or coagulopathy;
(B) obstetrical hemorrhage, including
promoting the identification of patients at risk, early diagnosis, and therapy
to reduce morbidity and mortality;
(C) placenta accreta spectrum disorder,
including team education, risk factor screening, evaluation, diagnosis,
fostering telemedicine medical services and referral as appropriate, treatment
and multidisciplinary management of both anticipated and unanticipated placenta
accreta spectrum disorder cases, including postpartum care;
(D) hypertensive disorders in pregnancy,
including eclampsia and the postpartum patient to promote early diagnosis and
treatment to reduce morbidity and mortality;
(E) sepsis or systemic infection in the
pregnant or postpartum patient;
(F)
venous thromboembolism in the pregnant and postpartum patient, including
assessment of risk factors, prevention, early diagnosis and
treatment;
(G) shoulder dystocia,
including assessment of risk factors, counseling of patient, and
multidisciplinary management; and
(H) behavioral health disorders, including
depression, substance abuse and addiction that includes screening, education,
consultation with appropriate personnel and referral.
(24) The facility must have nursing
leadership and staff with training and experience in the provision of maternal
nursing care who must coordinate with respective neonatal services.
(25) The facility must have a program for
genetic diagnosis and counseling for genetic disorders, or a policy and process
for consultation referral to an appropriate facility.
(26) Perinatal Education. A registered nurse
with experience in maternal care, including moderately complex and ill
obstetric patients, must provide the supervision and coordination of staff
education. Perinatal education for high risk events must be provided at
frequent intervals to prepare medical, nursing, and ancillary staff for these
emergencies.
(27) Support personnel
with knowledge and skills in breastfeeding to meet the needs of maternal
patients must be available at all times.
(28) A certified lactation consultant must be
available at all times.
(29) Social
services, pastoral care and bereavement services must be provided as
appropriate to meet the needs of the patient population served.
(30) Dietician or nutritionist available with
training and experience in maternal nutrition and can plan diets that meet the
needs of the pregnant and postpartum patient must comply with the requirements
in §
133.41 of this title.
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