Current through Reg. 49, No. 52; December 27, 2024
(a) A limited
services rural hospital (LSRH) shall develop, adopt, implement, enforce, and
maintain a written emergency preparedness plan. The LSRH shall review and
update the plan at least every two years. The plan shall:
(1) be based on and include a documented,
facility-based and community-based risk assessment, using an all-hazards
approach;
(2) include strategies
for addressing emergency events identified by the risk assessment;
(3) identify the services the LSRH has the
ability to provide in an emergency and include strategies for addressing and
serving the patient population;
(4)
include the use of a Texas Health and Human Services Commission (HHSC)-approved
process to update patient station availability as requested by HHSC during a
public health emergency or state-declared disaster;
(5) include continuity of operations,
including delegations of authority and succession plans;
(6) include a process for cooperation and
collaboration with local, tribal, regional, state, and federal emergency
preparedness officials' efforts to maintain an integrated response during a
disaster or emergency situation; and
(7) incorporate applicable information listed
in subsection (e) of this section and the State of Texas Emergency Management
Plan. Information regarding the State of Texas Emergency Management Plan is
available from the city or county emergency management coordinator.
(b) An LSRH shall send the plan,
which may be subject to review and approval by HHSC, to the local disaster
management authority.
(c) The LSRH
shall develop the plan through a joint effort of the LSRH governing body,
administration, medical staff, LSRH personnel, and emergency medical services
partners.
(d) An LSRH shall have an
effective procedure for obtaining emergency laboratory, radiology, and
pharmaceutical services when these services are not immediately available due
to system failure.
(e) An LSRH
shall develop and implement emergency preparedness policies and procedures,
based on the emergency plan set forth in subsection (a) of this section, risk
assessment at subsection (a)(1) of this section, and the communication plan at
subsection (f) of this section. The LSRH shall review and update the policies
and procedures at least every two years. The policies and procedures shall at
least address the following:
(1) reception,
treatment, and disposition of casualties that can be used if a disaster
situation requires the LSRH to accept multiple patients;
(2) the process, developed in conjunction
with appropriate agencies, for allowing essential health care workers and
personnel to safely access their delivery care sites;
(3) providing subsistence needs throughout
the duration of the response for staff, volunteers, and patients, whether they
evacuate or shelter in place, including:
(A)
food, water, medical and pharmaceutical supplies, personal protection
equipment, and appropriate immunizations;
(B) alternate sources of power to maintain:
(i) temperatures to protect patient health
and safety and for the safe and sanitary storage of provisions;
(iii) fire detection, extinguishing, and
alarm systems; and
(iv) sewage and
waste disposal; and
(C) a
system to track the location of on-duty staff and sheltered patients in the
LSRH's care during an emergency, which also requires the LSRH to document the
specific name and location of the receiving facility or other location when
on-duty staff or sheltered patients are relocated during the
emergency;
(4) safe
evacuation from the LSRH, which includes the following:
(A) activation procedures, including who
makes the decision to activate and how it is activated;
(B) consideration of care and treatment needs
of evacuees;
(C) staff
responsibilities;
(D) plan for the
order of removal of patients and planned route of movement;
(E) transportation of staff, volunteers, and
patients;
(F) records and supplies
transportation, including the protocol for transferring patient-specific
medications and records to the receiving facility, which requires records to
include at a minimum:
(i) the patient's most
recent physician assessment if seen by a physician;
(ii) the most recent assessment if the
patient was last assessed by a practitioner within the scope of their license
and education;
(iv) medication
administration record (MAR); and
(v) patient history with physical
documentation;
(G) a
weather-proof patient identification wrist band (or equivalent identification)
must be intact on all patients;
(H)
identification of any evacuation locations and destinations, including protocol
to ensure the patient destination is compatible to patient acuity and health
care needs; and
(I) primary and
alternate means of communication with external sources of assistance;
(5) a means to shelter in place
for patients, staff, and volunteers who remain in the LSRH;
(6) a system of medical documentation that
does the following:
(A) preserves patient
information;
(B) protects
confidentiality of patient information; and
(C) secures and maintains the availability of
records;
(7) the use of
volunteers in an emergency and other staffing strategies, including the process
and role for integration of state and federally designated health care
professionals to address surge needs during an emergency; and
(8) An LSRH's emergency preparedness policies
and procedures shall include the LSRH's role in providing care and treatment at
an alternate care site identified by federal and local emergency management
officials, in the event of a declared disaster or national emergency in
accordance with federal rules, regulations, and associated waivers.
(f) An LSRH must develop and
maintain an emergency preparedness communication plan that complies with
federal, state, and local laws. The LSRH shall review and update the
communication plan at least every two years. The communication plan shall
include:
(1) names and contact information
for:
(B) entities providing services under
arrangement;
(C) patients'
physicians; and
(2) contact
information for:
(A) federal, state, tribal,
regional, and local emergency preparedness staff, including the city and county
emergency management officers;
(B)
the LSRH water supplier; and
(C)
other sources of assistance;
(3) primary and alternate means for
communicating with:
(B) federal, state, tribal,
regional, and local emergency management agencies;
(4) procedures for notifying each of the
following entities, as soon as practicable, regarding the closure or reduction
in hours of operation of the LSRH due to an emergency:
(B) each hospital with which the facility has
a transfer agreement in accordance with §
511.66 of this subchapter
(relating to Patient Transfer Agreements);
(C) the trauma service area regional advisory
council that serves the geographic area in which the facility is located;
and
(D) each applicable local
emergency management agency;
(5) a method for sharing information and
medical documentation for patients under the LSRH's care, as necessary, with
other health care providers to maintain the continuity of care;
(6) a means, in the event of an evacuation,
to notify a patient's emergency contact or contacts of an evacuation and the
patient's destination and release patient information as permitted under Code
of Federal Regulations Title 45 (45 CFR) §164.510(b)(1)(ii) (relating to
Uses and Disclosures Requiring an Opportunity for the Individual to Agree or to
Object);
(7) a means of providing
information about the general condition and location of patients under the
LSRH's care as permitted under
45 CFR §
164.510(b)(4);
(8) a means of providing information about
the LSRH's needs, and its ability to provide assistance, to the authority
having jurisdiction, the Incident Command Center, or designee; and
(9) evidence that the LSRH has communicated
prospectively with the local utility and phone companies regarding the need for
the LSRH to be given priority for the restoration of utility and phone services
and a process for testing internal and external communications systems
regularly.
(g) An LSRH
shall post a phone number listing specific to the LSRH equipment and locale to
assist staff in contacting mechanical and technical support in the event of an
emergency.
(h) An LSRH must develop
and maintain an emergency preparedness training and testing program that is
based on the emergency plan set forth in subsection (a) of this section, risk
assessment in subsection (a)(1) of this section, policies and procedures in
subsection (E) of this section, and the communication plan in subsection (f) of
this section. The LSRH shall review and update the training and testing program
at least every two years.
(1) The LSRH shall:
(A) provide initial training in emergency
preparedness policies and procedures to all new and existing staff, individuals
providing on-site services under arrangement, and volunteers, consistent with
their expected roles;
(B) provide
emergency preparedness training at least every two years;
(C) maintain documentation of all emergency
preparedness training;
(D)
demonstrate staff knowledge of emergency procedures; and
(E) conduct training on the updated policies
and procedures if the LSRH significantly updates the emergency preparedness
policies and procedures.
(2) The LSRH shall conduct exercises to test
the emergency plan at least annually. The LSRH shall comply with all of the
following requirements.
(A) The LSRH shall
participate in a full-scale exercise that is community-based every two years.
(i) When a community-based exercise is not
accessible, the LSRH shall conduct an LSRH-based functional exercise every two
years; or
(ii) If the LSRH
experiences an actual natural or man-made emergency that requires activation of
the emergency plan, the LSRH is exempt from engaging in its next required
community-based or individual, facility-based functional exercise following the
onset of the emergency event.
(B) The LSRH shall conduct an additional
exercise at least every two years, opposite the year the LSRH conducts the
full-scale or functional exercise under subparagraph (A) of this paragraph,
that may include the following:
(i) a second
full-scale exercise that is community-based, or an individual, facility-based
functional exercise;
(ii) a mock
disaster drill; or
(iii) a tabletop
exercise or workshop that is led by a facilitator and includes a group
discussion using a narrated, clinically relevant emergency scenario, and a set
of problem statements, directed messages, or prepared questions designed to
challenge an emergency plan.
(C) The LSRH shall analyze the LSRH's
response to and maintain documentation of all drills, tabletop exercises, and
emergency events and revise the LSRH's emergency plan, as needed.
(3) An LSRH
participating in an exercise or responding to a real-life event shall develop
an after-action report (AAR) within 60 days after the exercise or event. The
LSRH shall retain an AAR for at least three years and be available for review
by the local emergency management authority and HHSC. The LSRH shall revise the
LSRH's emergency plan, as needed, in response to the AAR.
(i) An LSRH must implement emergency and
standby power systems based on the emergency plan set forth in subsection (a)
of this section.
(1) The generator shall be
located in accordance with the location requirements found in the Health Care
Facilities Code (National Fire Protection Association (NFPA) 99 and Tentative
Interim Amendments (TIA) 12-2, TIA 12-3, TIA 12-4, TIA 12-5, and TIA 12-6),
Life Safety Code (NFPA 101 and Tentative Interim Amendments TIA 12-1, TIA 12-2,
TIA 12-3, and TIA 12-4), and NFPA 110, when a new structure is built or when an
existing structure or building is renovated.
(2) The LSRH shall implement emergency power
system inspection and testing requirements found in the Health Care Facilities
Code, NFPA 110, and the Life Safety Code.
(3) An LSRH that maintains an onsite fuel
source to power emergency generators must have a plan for how it will keep
emergency power systems operational during the emergency unless it evacuates.
(j) When an LSRH is part
of a health care system consisting of multiple separately certified health care
facilities that elects to have a unified and integrated emergency preparedness
program, the LSRH may choose to participate in the health care system's
coordinated emergency preparedness program. If elected, the unified and
integrated emergency preparedness program shall:
(1) demonstrate that each separately
certified facility within the system actively participated in the development
of the unified and integrated emergency preparedness program;
(2) be developed and maintained in a manner
that takes into account each separately certified facility's unique
circumstances, patient populations, and services offered;
(3) demonstrate that each separately
certified facility is capable of actively using the unified and integrated
emergency preparedness program and is in compliance;
(4) include a unified and integrated
emergency plan that meets the requirements of this section and include the
following:
(A) a documented community-based
risk assessment, utilizing an all-hazards approach; and
(B) a documented individual facility-based
risk assessment for each separately certified facility within the health
system, utilizing an all-hazards approach; and
(5) include integrated policies and
procedures that meet the requirements set forth in subsection (e) of this
section, and a coordinated communication plan and training and testing programs
that meet the requirements of subsections (f) and (h) of this section,
respectively.
(k) The
following material listed in this subsection is incorporated by reference into
this section.
(1) NFPA 99, Health Care
Facilities Code, 2012 edition, issued August 11, 2011.
(2) TIA 12-2 to NFPA 99, issued August 11,
2011.
(3) TIA 12-3 to NFPA 99,
issued August 9, 2012.
(4) TIA 12-4
to NFPA 99, issued March 7, 2013.
(5) TIA 12-5 to NFPA 99, issued August 1,
2013.
(6) TIA 12-6 to NFPA 99,
issued March 3, 2014.
(7) NFPA 101,
Life Safety Code, 2012 edition, issued August 11, 2011.
(8) TIA 12-1 to NFPA 101, issued August 11,
2011.
(9) TIA 12-2 to NFPA 101,
issued October 30, 2012.
(10) TIA
12-3 to NFPA 101, issued October 22, 2013.
(11) TIA 12-4 to NFPA 101, issued October 22,
2013.
(12) NFPA 110, Standard for
Emergency and Standby Power Systems, 2010 edition, including TIAs to chapter 7,
issued August 6, 2009.