Texas Administrative Code
Title 26 - HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Part 1 - HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES COMMISSION
Chapter 551 - INTERMEDIATE CARE FACILITIES FOR INDIVIDUALS WITH AN INTELLECTUAL DISABILITY OR RELATED CONDITIONS
Subchapter C - STANDARDS FOR LICENSURE
Section 551.50 - Emergency Preparedness and Response
Universal Citation: 26 TX Admin Code § 551.50
Current through Reg. 50, No. 13; March 28, 2025
(a) Definitions. In this section, "plan" means a facility's emergency preparedness and response plan.
(b) Administration. A facility must:
(1) develop
and implement a written plan as described in subsection (c) of this
section;
(2) maintain a current
written copy of the plan that is accessible to all staff at all
times;
(3) evaluate the plan to
determine if information in the plan needs to change:
(A) within 30 days after an emergency
situation;
(B) due to remodeling or
making an addition to the facility; and
(C) at least every two
years;
(4) revise the
plan within 30 days after information in the plan changes; and
(5) maintain documentation of compliance with
this section.
(c) Emergency Preparedness and Response Plan. A facility's plan must:
(1) include a risk assessment of potential
internal and external emergency situations, including a fire, failure of
heating and cooling systems, a power outage, an explosion, a hurricane, a
tornado, a flood, extreme snow and ice conditions for the area, a wildfire,
terrorism, or a hazardous materials accident;
(2) include a description of the facility's
resident population;
(3) include a
description of the services and assistance needed by the residents in an
emergency situation;
(4) include a
section for each core function of emergency management that complies with
subsection (d) of this section and is based on a facility's decision to either
shelter-in-place or evacuate during an emergency situation; and
(5) include a fire safety plan that complies
with subsection (f) of this section.
(d) Plan Requirements Regarding Eight Core Functions of Emergency Management.
(1)
Direction and control. A facility's plan must contain a section for direction
and control that:
(A) identifies the emergency
preparedness coordinator (EPC), who is the facility staff person with the
authority to manage the facility's response to an emergency situation in
accordance with the plan;
(B)
identifies the alternate EPC, who is the facility staff person with the
authority to act as the EPC if the EPC is unable to serve in that capacity;
and
(C) documents the name and
contact information for the local emergency management coordinator (EMC) for
the area in which the facility is located, as identified by the office of the
local mayor or county judge.
(2) Warning. A facility's plan must contain a
section for warning that:
(A) describes how
the EPC will be notified of an emergency situation;
(B) identifies who the EPC will notify of an
emergency situation and when the notification will occur, including during off
hours, weekends, and holidays; and
(C) ensures monitoring of local news and
weather reports.
(3)
Communication. A facility's plan must contain a section for communication that:
(A) identifies the facility's primary mode of
communication and alternate mode of communication to be used in an emergency
situation;
(B) includes procedures
for maintaining a current list of telephone numbers for residents' responsible
parties;
(C) includes procedures
for maintaining a current list of telephone numbers for potential places to
which to evacuate, such as hotels, motels, and other facilities licensed under
this chapter or certified to participate in the Medicaid ICF/IID
program;
(D) includes procedures
for maintaining a current list of telephone numbers for the facility's staff,
by residence or unit, that identifies the facility's EPC and administrative
staff;
(E) identifies the location
of the lists described in subparagraphs (B) - (D) of this paragraph, which must
be a place where facility staff can obtain the information quickly;
(F) includes procedures to notify:
(i) facility staff about an emergency
situation;
(ii) a receiving
facility about an impending or actual evacuation of residents; and
(iii) residents, legally authorized
representatives, and other persons about an impending or actual
evacuation;
(G) provides
a method for persons to obtain resident information during an emergency
situation; and
(H) includes
procedures for the facility to maintain communication with:
(i) facility staff involved in an emergency
situation;
(ii) a receiving
facility, if applicable; and
(iii)
the driver of a vehicle transporting residents, medications, records, food,
water, equipment, or supplies during an evacuation.
(4) Sheltering Arrangements. A
facility's plan must contain a section for sheltering arrangements that:
(A) includes procedures for implementing a
decision to shelter-in-place that include:
(i)
having access to medications, records, food, water, equipment, and supplies;
and
(ii) sheltering facility staff
involved in responding to an emergency situation, and their family members, if
necessary;
(B) includes
procedures for notifying the HHSC regional office for the area in which the
facility is located by telephone immediately after a decision to
shelter-in-place has been made; and
(C) includes procedures for accommodating
evacuated residents, if the facility serves as a receiving facility for a
facility that has evacuated.
(5) Evacuation. A facility's plan must
contain a section for evacuation that:
(A)
requires posting building evacuation routes prominently throughout the
facility, except in small one-story buildings where all exits are
obvious;
(B) includes procedures
for implementing a decision to evacuate residents to a receiving facility in an
emergency situation, if applicable;
(C) identifies evacuation destinations and
routes and includes a map that shows the destinations and routes;
(D) includes a current copy of the agreement
with a receiving facility, if the evacuation destinations identified in
accordance with subparagraph (C) of this paragraph include a receiving facility
that is not owned by the same entity as the facility;
(E) includes procedures for:
(i) ensuring that facility staff accompany
evacuating residents;
(ii) ensuring
that residents and facility staff present in the building have been
evacuated;
(iii) accounting for
residents after they have been evacuated;
(iv) accounting for residents absent from the
facility at the time of the evacuation;
(v) releasing resident information in an
emergency situation to promote continuity of a resident's care;
(vi) contacting the local EMC to find out if
it is safe to return to the geographical area; and
(vii) determining if it is safe to re-enter
and occupy the building after an evacuation;
(F) includes procedures for notifying the
local EMC regarding an evacuation of the facility;
(G) includes procedures for notifying the
HHSC regional office for the area in which the facility is located by telephone
immediately after a decision to evacuate is made; and
(H) includes procedures for notifying the
HHSC regional office for the area in which the facility is located by telephone
that residents have returned to the facility, within 48 hours of their return
to the facility after an evacuation.
(6) Transportation. A facility's plan must
contain a section for transportation that:
(A)
provides for a sufficient number of facility-owned vehicles to evacuate all
residents and for alternate transportation arrangements if the facility-owned
vehicles are not available;
(B)
includes procedures for safely transporting residents, facility staff involved
in an evacuation and, if necessary, their family members, and the facility's
and residents' pets during an evacuation; and
(C) includes procedures to safely transport
and have timely access to oxygen, medications, records, food, water, equipment,
and supplies needed during an evacuation.
(7) Health and Medical Needs. A facility's
plan must contain a section for health and medical needs that:
(A) identifies all the facility's residents
with special medical needs; and
(B)
ensures that the needs of those residents are met during an emergency
situation.
(8) Resource
Management. A facility's plan must contain a section for resource management
that:
(A) includes procedures for maintaining
accurate and detailed checklists of medications, records, food, water,
equipment and supplies needed during an emergency situation;
(B) identifies facility staff who are
assigned to locate and ensure the transportation of the items on the list
described in subparagraph (A) of this paragraph during an emergency situation;
and
(C) includes procedures to
ensure that medications are secure and stored at the proper temperatures during
an emergency situation.
(e) Training. A facility must:
(1) inform a facility staff member of the
staff member's responsibilities under the plan within five working days after
assuming job duties;
(2) re-train a
facility staff member at least annually on the staff member's responsibilities
under the plan and when the staff member's responsibilities under the plan
change; and
(3) conduct
unannounced, annual drills with facility staff for severe weather and other
emergency situations identified by the facility as likely to occur, based on
the results of the risk assessment required by subsection (c)(1) of this
section.
(f) Fire Safety Plan. A facility's fire safety plan must:
(1)
for a large facility, include the provisions described in the Operating
Features section of NFPA 101, Chapter 18 (for new healthcare occupancies) and
Chapter 19 (for existing healthcare occupancies) concerning:
(A) use of alarms;
(B) transmission of alarms to fire
department;
(C) emergency phone
calls to fire department;
(D)
response to alarms;
(E) isolation
of fire;
(F) evacuation of
immediate area;
(G) evacuation of
smoke compartment;
(H) preparation
of floors and building for evacuation; and
(I) extinguishment of fire;
(2) for a small facility, include
the provisions described in the Operating Features section of NFPA 101, Chapter
32 (for new residential board and care occupancies) and Chapter 33 (for
existing residential board and care occupancies) concerning:
(A) use of alarms;
(B) staff response in the event of a
fire;
(C) fire protection
procedures for a resident;
(D)
actions to take if the primary escape route is blocked; and
(E) specification of an assembly point after
a resident evacuates from the facility; and
(3) include procedures for:
(A) rehearsing the fire safety plan at least
once per quarter on each work shift;
(B) evacuating residents as follows:
(i) for a small facility that has a prompt or
slow evacuation capability, during every fire drill; or
(ii) for a large facility or facility with an
impractical evacuation capability, during at least one fire drill each year on
each work shift;
(C)
completing the HHSC form 4719 titled "Fire Drill Report" or a form containing,
at a minimum, the information on the HHSC form; and
(D) providing residents and facility staff
with experience in egressing through all exits and means of escape.
(g) Reporting Fires. A facility must report a fire at the facility to HHSC as follows:
(1) by calling 1-800-458-9858 within 24 hours
after the fire; and
(2) by
submitting a completed HHSC form 3707 titled "Fire Report for Long Term Care
Facilities" within 15 days after the fire.
(h) Emergency Response System.
(1) The facility administrator and designee
must enroll in an emergency communication system in accordance with
instructions from HHSC.
(2) The
facility must respond to requests for information received through the
emergency communication system in the format established by HHSC.
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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