Texas Administrative Code
Title 26 - HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Part 1 - HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES COMMISSION
Chapter 263 - HOME AND COMMUNITY-BASED SERVICES (HCS) PROGRAM AND COMMUNITY FIRST CHOICE (CFC)
Subchapter A - GENERAL PROVISIONS
Section 263.5 - Description of HCS Program Services
Universal Citation: 26 TX Admin Code § 263.5
Current through Reg. 50, No. 13; March 28, 2025
(a) HCS Program services are described in this section and in Appendix C of the HCS Program waiver application approved by CMS and available on the HHSC website.
(1) Adaptive aids are devices, controls, or
items that are necessary to address specific needs identified in an
individual's service plan. Adaptive aids enable an individual to maintain or
increase the ability to perform ADLs or the ability to perceive, control, or
communicate with the environment in which the individual lives.
(2) Audiology is the provision of audiology
as defined in the Texas Occupations Code Chapter 401.
(3) Speech and language pathology is the
provision of speech-language pathology as defined in the Texas Occupations Code
Chapter 401.
(4) Occupational
therapy is the provision of occupational therapy as described in the Texas
Occupations Code Chapter 454.
(5)
Physical therapy is the provision of physical therapy as defined in the Texas
Occupations Code Chapter 453.
(6)
Dietary services are the provision of nutrition services as defined in the
Texas Occupations Code Chapter 701.
(7) Behavioral support is the provision of
specialized interventions that:
(A) assist an
individual to increase adaptive behaviors to replace or modify maladaptive or
socially unacceptable behaviors that prevent or interfere with the individual's
inclusion in home and family life or community life; and
(B) improve an individual's quality of
life.
(8) Social work is
the provision of social work as defined in Texas Occupations Code Chapter
505.
(9) Cognitive rehabilitation
therapy is assistance to an individual in learning or relearning cognitive
skills that have been lost or altered as a result of damage to brain
cells/chemistry in order to enable the individual to compensate for the lost
cognitive functions, including reinforcing, strengthening, or reestablishing
previously learned patterns of behavior, or establishing new patterns of
cognitive activity or compensatory mechanisms for impaired neurological
systems.
(10) Day habilitation is
assistance with acquiring, retaining, or improving self-help, socialization,
and adaptive skills provided in a location other than the residence of an
individual. Day habilitation does not include in-home day
habilitation.
(11) In-home day
habilitation is assistance with acquiring, retaining, or improving self-help,
socialization, and adaptive skills provided in an individual's
residence.
(12) Dental treatment
is:
(A) emergency dental treatment;
(B) preventive dental treatment;
(C) therapeutic dental treatment;
and
(D) orthodontic dental
treatment, excluding cosmetic orthodontia.
(13) Minor home modifications are physical
adaptations to an individual's home to address specific needs identified by an
individual's service planning team and include pre-enrollment minor home
modifications which are modifications completed before an applicant is
discharged from a nursing facility, an ICF/IID, or a GRO and before the
effective date of the applicant's enrollment in the HCS Program.
(14) Licensed vocational nursing is the
provision of licensed vocational nursing as defined in the Texas Occupations
Code Chapter 301.
(15) Registered
nursing is the provision of professional nursing as defined in the Texas
Occupations Code Chapter 301.
(16)
Specialized registered nursing is the provision of registered nursing to an
individual who has a tracheostomy or is dependent on a ventilator.
(17) Specialized licensed vocational nursing
is the provision of licensed vocational nursing to an individual who has a
tracheostomy or is dependent on a ventilator.
(18) Supported home living is transportation
of an individual with a residential type of "own/family home."
(19) Host home/companion care is residential
assistance provided in a residence that is owned or leased by the service
provider of host home/companion care or the individual and is not owned or
leased by the program provider. The service provider of host home/companion
care must live in the same residence as the individual receiving the
service.
(20) Supervised living is
residential assistance provided in a three-person residence or four-person
residence in which service providers are present in the residence and are able
to respond to the needs of individuals during normal sleeping hours.
(21) Residential support is residential
assistance provided in a three-person residence or four-person residence in
which service providers are present and awake in the residence whenever an
individual is present in the residence.
(22) Respite is temporary relief for an
unpaid caregiver in a location other than the individual's home for an
individual who has a residential type of "own/family home."
(23) In-home respite is temporary relief for
an unpaid caregiver in the individual's home for an individual who has a
residential type of "own/family home."
(24) Employment assistance is assistance to
help an individual locate paid employment in the community.
(25) Supported employment is assistance, in
order to sustain competitive employment, to an individual who, because of a
disability, requires intensive, ongoing support to be self-employed, work from
home, or perform in a work setting at which individuals without disabilities
are employed.
(26) Employment
readiness is assistance that prepares an individual to participate in
employment. Employment readiness services are not job-task oriented.
(27) TAS is assistance to an applicant in
setting up a household in the community before being discharged from a nursing
facility, an ICF/IID, or a GRO and before enrolling in the HCS Program and
consists of:
(A) for an applicant whose
initial IPC does not include residential support, supervised living, or host
home/companion care:
(i) paying security
deposits required to lease a home, including an apartment, or to establish
utility services for a home;
(ii)
purchasing essential furnishings for a home, including a table, a bed, chairs,
window blinds, eating utensils, and food preparation items;
(iii) paying for expenses required to move
personal items, including furniture and clothing, into a home;
(iv) paying for services to ensure the health
and safety of the applicant in a home, including pest eradication, allergen
control, or a one-time cleaning before occupancy; and
(v) purchasing essential supplies for a home,
including toilet paper, towels, and bed linens; and
(B) for an applicant whose initial IPC
includes residential support, supervised living, or host home/companion care:
(i) purchasing bedroom furniture;
(ii) purchasing personal linens for the
bedroom and bathroom; and
(iii)
paying for allergen control.
(b) The services described in this subsection are for an individual who is receiving at least one HCS Program service through the CDS option.
(1) FMS is a service defined
in §
264.103 of this title (relating to
Definitions).
(2) Support
consultation is a service defined in §
264.103 of this
title.
Disclaimer: These regulations may not be the most recent version. Texas may have more current or accurate information. We make no warranties or guarantees about the accuracy, completeness, or adequacy of the information contained on this site or the information linked to on the state site. Please check official sources.
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