Current through Reg. 49, No. 38; September 20, 2024
(a)
Definitions. The following words and terms, when used in this section, have the
following meanings, unless the context clearly indicates otherwise.
(1) Designated emergency contact--A person
that a resident, or a resident's legally authorized representative, identifies
in writing for the facility to contact in the event of a disaster or
emergency.
(2) Disaster or
emergency--An impending, emerging, or current situation that:
(A) interferes with normal activities of a
facility and its residents;
(B)
may:
(i) cause injury or death to a resident
or staff member of the facility; or
(ii) cause damage to facility
property;
(C) requires
the facility to respond immediately to mitigate or avoid the injury, death,
damage, or interference; and
(D)
except as it relates to an epidemic or pandemic, or to the extent it is
incident to another disaster or emergency, does not include a situation that
arises from the medical condition of a resident, such as cardiac arrest,
obstructed airway, or cerebrovascular accident.
(3) Emergency management coordinator
(EMC)--The person who is appointed by the local mayor or county judge to plan,
coordinate, and implement public health emergency preparedness planning and
response within the local jurisdiction.
(4) Emergency preparedness coordinator
(EPC)--The facility staff person with the responsibility and authority to
direct, control, and manage the facility's response to a disaster or
emergency.
(5) Evacuation
summary--A current summary of the facility's emergency preparedness and
response plan that includes:
(A) the name,
address, and contact information for each receiving facility or pre-arranged
evacuation destination identified by the facility under subsection (g)(3)(B) of
this section;
(B) the procedure for
safely transporting residents and any other individuals evacuating a
facility;
(C) the name or title,
and contact information, of the facility staff member to contact for evacuation
information;
(D) the facility's
primary mode of communication to be used during a disaster or emergency and the
facility's supplemental or alternate mode of communication;
(E) the facility's procedure for notifying
persons referenced in subsection (g)(5) of this section as soon as practicable
about facility actions affecting residents during a disaster or emergency,
including an impending or actual evacuation, and for maintaining ongoing
communication with them for the duration of the disaster, emergency, or
evacuation;
(F) a statement about
training that is available to a resident, the resident's legally authorized
representative, and each designated emergency contact for the resident, on
procedures under the facility's plan that involve or impact each of them,
respectively; and
(G) the
facility's procedures for when a resident evacuates with a person other than a
facility staff member.
(6) Plan--A facility's emergency preparedness
and response plan.
(7) Receiving
facility--A separate licensed assisted living facility:
(A) from which a facility has documented
acknowledgement, from an identified authorized representative, as described in
subsection (i)(2)(C) of this section; and
(B) to which the facility has arranged in
advance of a disaster or emergency to evacuate some or all of a facility's
residents, on a temporary basis due to a disaster or emergency, if, at the time
of evacuation:
(i) the receiving facility can
safely receive and accommodate the residents; and
(ii) the receiving facility has any necessary
licensure or emergency authorization required to do so.
(8) Risk assessment--The process
of evaluating, documenting, and examining potential disasters or emergencies
that pose the highest risk to a facility, and their foreseeable impacts, based
on the facility's geographical location, structural conditions, resident needs
and characteristics, and other influencing factors, in order to develop an
effective emergency preparedness and response plan.
(b) A facility must conduct and document a
risk assessment that meets the definition in subsection (a)(8) of this section
for potential internal and external emergencies or disasters relevant to the
facility's operations and location, and that pose the highest risk to a
facility, such as:
(1) a fire or
explosion;
(2) a power,
telecommunication, or water outage; contamination of a water source; or
significant interruption in the normal supply of any essential, such as food or
water;
(3) a wildfire;
(4) a hazardous materials accident;
(5) an active or threatened terrorist or
shooter, a detonated bomb or bomb threat, or a suspicious object or
substance;
(6) a flood or a
mudslide;
(7) a hurricane or other
severe weather conditions;
(8) an
epidemic or pandemic;
(9) a cyber
attack; and
(10) a loss of all or a
portion of the facility.
(c) A facility must develop and maintain a
written emergency preparedness and response plan based on its risk assessment
under subsection (b) of this section and that is adequate to protect facility
residents and staff in a disaster or emergency.
(1) The plan must address the eight core
functions of emergency management, which are:
(A) direction and control;
(B) warning;
(C) communication;
(D) sheltering arrangements;
(E) evacuation;
(F) transportation;
(G) health and medical needs; and
(H) resource management.
(2) The facility must prepare for a disaster
or emergency based on its plan and follow each plan procedure and requirement,
including contingency procedures, at the time it is called for in the event of
a disaster or emergency. In addition to meeting the other requirements of this
section, the emergency preparedness plan must:
(A) document the contact information for the
EMC for the area, as identified by the office of the local mayor or county
judge;
(B) include a process that
ensures communication with the EMC, both as a preparedness measure and in
anticipation of and during a developing and occurring disaster or emergency;
and
(C) include the location of a
current list of the facility's resident population, which must be maintained as
required under subsection (g)(3) of this section, that identifies:
(i) residents with Alzheimer's disease or
related disorders;
(ii) residents
who have an evacuation waiver approved under §
553.259(e) of
this chapter (relating to Admission Policies and Procedures); and
(iii) residents with mobility limitations or
other special needs who may need specialized assistance, either at the facility
or in case of evacuation.
(3) A facility must notify the EMC of the
facility's emergency preparedness and response plan, take actions to coordinate
its planning and emergency response with the EMC, and document communications
with the EMC regarding plan coordination.
(d) A facility must:
(1) maintain a current printed copy of the
plan in a central location that is accessible to all staff, residents, and
residents' legally authorized representatives at all times;
(2) at least annually and after an event
described in subparagraphs (A)-(D) of this paragraph, review the plan, its
evacuation summary, if any, and the contact lists described in subsection
(g)(3) of this section, and update each:
(A)
to reflect changes in information, including when an evacuation waiver is
approved under §
553.259(e) of
this chapter;
(B) within 30 days or
as soon as practicable following a disaster or emergency if a shortcoming is
manifested or identified during the facility's response;
(C) within 30 days after a drill, if, based
on the drill, a shortcoming in the plan is identified; and
(D) within 30 days after a change in a
facility policy or HHSC rule that would impact the plan;
(3) document reviews and updates conducted
under paragraph (2) of this subsection, including the date of each review and
dated documentation of changes made to the plan based on a review;
(4) provide residents and the residents'
legally authorized representatives with a written copy of the plan or an
evacuation summary, as defined in subsection (a)(5) of this section, upon
admission, on request, and when the facility makes a significant change to a
copy of the plan or evacuation summary it has provided to a resident or a
resident's legally authorized representative;
(5) provide the information described in
subsection (a)(5)(A) of this section to a resident or legally authorized
representative who does not receive an evacuation summary under paragraph (4)
of this subsection and requests that information;
(6) notify each resident, next of kin, or
legally authorized representative, in writing, how to register for evacuation
assistance with the Texas Information and Referral Network (2-1-1 Texas);
and
(7) register as a provider with
2-1-1 Texas to assist the state in identifying persons who may need assistance
in a disaster or emergency. In doing so, the facility is not required to
identify or register individual residents for evacuation assistance.
(e) Core Function One: Direction
and Control. A facility's plan must contain a section for direction and control
that:
(1) designates the EPC, who is the
facility staff person with the responsibility and authority to direct, control,
and manage the facility's response to a disaster or emergency;
(2) designates an alternate EPC, who is the
facility staff person with the responsibility and authority to act as the EPC
if the EPC is unable to serve in that capacity; and
(3) assigns responsibilities to staff members
by designated function or position and describes the facility's system for
ensuring that each staff member clearly understands the staff member's own role
and how to execute it, in the event of a disaster or emergency.
(f) Core Function Two: Warning. A
facility's plan must contain a section for warning that:
(1) describes applicable procedures, methods,
and responsibility for the facility and for the EMC and other outside
organizations, based on facility coordination with them, to notify the EPC or
alternate EPC, as applicable, of a disaster or emergency;
(2) identifies who, including during off
hours, weekends, and holidays, the EPC or alternate EPC, as applicable, will
notify of a disaster or emergency, and the methods and procedures for
notification;
(3) describes a
procedure for keeping all persons present in the facility informed of the
facility's present plan for responding to a potential or current disaster or
emergency that is impacting or threatening the area where the facility is
located; and
(4) addresses
applicable procedures, methods, and responsibility for monitoring local news
and weather reports regarding a disaster or potential disaster or emergency,
taking into consideration factors such as:
(A)
location-specific natural disasters;
(B) whether a disaster is likely to be
addressed or forecast in the reports; and
(C) the conditions, natural or otherwise,
under which designated staff become responsible for monitoring news and weather
reports for a disaster or emergency.
(g) Core Function Three: Communication. A
facility's plan must contain a section for communication that:
(1) identifies the facility's primary mode of
communication to be used during an emergency and the facility's supplemental or
alternate mode of communication, and procedures for communication if
telecommunication is affected by a disaster or emergency;
(2) includes instructions on when to call
911;
(3) includes the location of a
list of current contact information, where it is easily accessible to staff,
for each of the following:
(A) the legally
authorized representative and designated emergency contacts for each
resident;
(B) each receiving
facility and pre-arranged evacuation destination, including alternate
pre-arrangements, together with the written acknowledgement for each, as
described and required in subsection (i)(2)(C) of this section;
(C) home and community support services
agencies and independent health care professionals that deliver health care
services to residents in the facility;
(D) personal contact information for facility
staff, and
(E) the facility's
resident population, which must identify residents who may need specialized
assistance at the facility or in case of evacuation, as described in subsection
(c)(2)(C) of this section;
(4) provides a method for the facility to
communicate information to the public about its status during an emergency;
and
(5) describes the facility's
procedure for notifying at least the following persons, as applicable and as
soon as practicable, about facility actions affecting residents during an
emergency, including an impending or actual evacuation, and for maintaining
ongoing communication for the duration of the emergency or evacuation:
(A) all facility staff members, including
off-duty staff;
(B) each facility
resident;
(C) any legally
authorized representative of a resident;
(D) each resident's designated emergency
contacts;
(E) each home and
community support services agency or independent health care professional that
delivers health care services to a facility resident;
(F) each receiving facility or evacuation
destination to be utilized, if there is an impending or actual evacuation,
which, if utilized at the time of evacuation, must be utilized in accordance
with the pre-arranged acknowledged procedures described in subsection (i)(2)(C)
of this section, where applicable, and must verify with the applicable
destination that it is available, ready, and legally authorized at the time to
receive the evacuated residents and can safely do so;
(G) the driver of a vehicle transporting
residents or staff, medication, records, food, water, equipment, or supplies
during an evacuation, and the employer of a driver who is not a facility staff
person, and
(H) the EMC.
(h) Core Function Four:
Sheltering Arrangements. A facility's plan must contain a section for
sheltering arrangements that:
(1) describes
the procedure for making and implementing a decision to remain in the facility
during a disaster or emergency, that includes:
(A) the arrangements, staff responsibilities,
and procedures for accessing and obtaining medication, records, equipment and
supplies, water and food, including food to accommodate an individual who has a
medical need for a special diet;
(B) facility arrangements and procedures for
providing, in areas used by residents during a disaster or emergency, power and
ambient temperatures that are safe under the circumstances, but which may not
be less than 68 degrees Fahrenheit or more than 82 degrees Fahrenheit;
and
(C) if necessary, sheltering
facility staff or emergency staff involved in responding to an emergency and,
as necessary and appropriate, their family members; and
(2) includes a procedure for notifying HHSC
Regulatory Services regional office for the area in which the facility is
located and, in accordance with subsection (g)(5)(H) of this section, the EMC,
immediately after the EPC or alternate EPC, as applicable, makes a decision to
remain in the facility during a disaster or emergency.
(i) Core Function Five: Evacuation.
(1) A facility has the discretion to
determine when an evacuation is necessary for the health and safety of
residents and staff. However, a facility must evacuate if the county judge of
the county in which the facility is located, the mayor of the municipality in
which the facility is located mandates it by an evacuation order issued
independently or concurrently with the governor.
(2) A facility's plan must contain a section
for evacuation that:
(A) identifies evacuation
destinations and routes, including at least each pre-arranged evacuation
destination and receiving facility described in subparagraph (C) of this
paragraph, and includes a map that shows each identified destination and
route;
(B) describes the procedure
for making and implementing a decision to evacuate some or all residents to one
or more receiving facilities or pre-arranged evacuation destinations, with
contingency procedures, and a plan for any pets or service animals that reside
in the facility;
(C) includes the
location of a current documented acknowledgment with an identified authorized
representative of at least one receiving facility or pre-arranged evacuation
destination, and at least one alternate. The documented acknowledgment must
include acknowledgement by the receiving facility or pre-arranged evacuation
destination of:
(i) arrangements for the
receiving facility or pre-arranged destination to receive an evacuating
facility's residents; and
(ii) the
process for the facility to notify each applicable receiving facility or
pre-arranged destination of the facility's plan to evacuate and to verify with
the applicable destination that it is available, ready, and not legally
restricted at the time from receiving the evacuated residents, and can do so
safely;
(D) includes the
procedure and the staff responsible for:
(i)
notifying HHSC Regulatory Services regional office for the area in which the
facility is located and, in accordance with subsection (g)(5)(H) of this
section, the EMC, immediately after the EPC or alternate EPC, as applicable,
makes a decision to evacuate, or as soon as feasible thereafter, if it is not
safe to do so at the time of decision;
(ii) ensuring that sufficient facility staff
with qualifications necessary to meet resident needs accompany evacuating
residents to the receiving facility, pre-arranged evacuation destination, or
other destination to which the facility evacuates, and remain with the
residents, providing any necessary care, for the duration of the residents'
stay in the receiving facility or other destination to which the facility
evacuates;
(iii) ensuring that
residents and facility staff present in the building have been
evacuated;
(iv) accounting for and
tracking the location of residents, facility staff, and transport vehicles
involved in the facility evacuation, both during and after the facility
evacuation, through the time the residents and facility staff return to the
evacuated facility;
(v) accounting
for residents absent from the facility at the time of the evacuation and
residents who evacuate on their own or with a third party, and notifying them
that the facility has been evacuated;
(vi) overseeing the release of resident
information to authorized persons in an emergency to promote continuity of a
resident's care;
(vii) contacting
the EMC to find out if it is safe to return to the geographical area after an
evacuation;
(viii) making or
obtaining, as appropriate, a comprehensive determination whether and when it is
safe to re-enter and occupy the facility after an evacuation;
(ix) returning evacuated residents to the
facility and notifying persons listed in subsection (g)(5) of this section who
were not involved in the return of the residents; and
(x) notifying the HHSC Regulatory Services
regional office for the area in which the facility is located immediately after
each instance when some or all residents have returned to the facility after an
evacuation.
(j) Core Function Six: Transportation. A
facility's plan must contain a section for transportation that:
(1) identifies current arrangements for
access to a sufficient number of vehicles to safely evacuate all
residents;
(2) identifies facility
staff designated during an evacuation to drive a vehicle owned, leased, or
rented by the facility; notification procedures to ensure designated staff's
availability at the time of an evacuation; and methods for maintaining
communication with vehicles, staff, and drivers transporting facility residents
or staff during evacuation, in accordance with subsection (g)(5)(A) and (G) of
this section;
(3) includes
procedures for safely transporting residents, facility staff, and any other
individuals evacuating a facility; and
(4) includes procedures for the safe and
secure transport of, and staff's timely access to, the following resident items
needed during an evacuation: oxygen, medications, records, food, water,
equipment, and supplies.
(k) Core Function Seven: Health and Medical
Needs. A facility's plan must contain a section for health and medical needs
that:
(1) identifies special services that
residents use, such as dialysis, oxygen, or hospice services;
(2) identifies procedures to enable each
resident, notwithstanding an emergency, to continue to receive from the
appropriate provider the services identified under paragraph (1) of this
subsection; and
(3) identifies
procedures for the facility to notify home and community support services
agencies and independent health care professionals that deliver services to
residents in the facility of an evacuation in accordance with subsection
(g)(5)(E) of this section.
(l) Core Function Eight: Resource Management.
A facility's plan must contain a section for resource management that:
(1) identifies a plan for identifying,
obtaining, transporting, and storing medications, records, food, water,
equipment, and supplies needed for both residents and evacuating staff during
an emergency;
(2) identifies
facility staff, by position or function, who are assigned to access or obtain
the items under paragraph (1) of this subsection and other necessary resources,
and to ensure their delivery to the facility, as needed, or their transport in
the event of an evacuation;
(3)
describes the procedure to ensure medications are secure and maintained at the
proper temperature throughout an emergency; and
(4) describes procedures and safeguards to
protect the confidentiality, security, and integrity of resident records
throughout an emergency and any evacuation of residents.
(m) Receiving Facility. To act as a receiving
facility, as defined in paragraph (a)(7) of this section, a facility's plan
must include procedures for accommodating a temporary emergency placement of
one or more residents from another assisted living facility, only in an
emergency and only if:
(1) the facility does
not exceed its licensed capacity, unless pre-approved in writing by HHSC, and
the excess is not more than 10 percent of the facility's licensed
capacity;
(2) the facility ensures
that the temporary emergency placement of one or more residents evacuated from
another assisted living facility does not compromise the health or safety of
any evacuated or facility resident, facility staff, or any other
individual;
(3) the facility is
able to meet the needs of all evacuated residents and any other persons it
receives on a temporary emergency basis, in accordance with §553.18(h) of this
chapter, while continuing to meet the needs of its own residents, and of any of
its own staff or other individuals it is sheltering at the facility during an
emergency, in accordance with its plan under subsection (h) of this
section;
(4) the facility maintains
a log of each additional individual being housed in the facility that includes
the individual's name, address, and the date of arrival and
departure.
(5) the receiving
facility ensures that each temporarily placed resident has at arrival, or as
soon after arrival as practicable and no later than necessary to protect the
health of the resident, each of the following necessary to the resident's
continuity of care:
(A) necessary physician
orders for care;
(B)
medications;
(C) a service
plan;
(D) existing advance
directives; and
(E) contact
information for each legally authorized representative and designated emergency
contact of an evacuated resident, and a record of any notifications that have
already occurred.
(n) Emergency preparedness and response plan
training. The facility must:
(1) provide staff
training on the emergency preparedness plan at least annually;
(2) train a facility staff member on the
staff member's responsibilities under the plan:
(A) prior to the staff member assuming job
responsibilities; and
(B) when a
staff member's responsibilities under the plan change;
(3) conduct at least one unannounced annual
drill with facility staff for severe weather or another emergency identified by
the facility as likely to occur, based on the results of the risk assessment
required by subsection (b) of this section;
(4) offer training, and document, for each,
the provision or refusal of such training, to each resident, legally authorized
representative, if any, and each designated emergency contact, on procedures
under the facility's plan that involve or impact each of them, respectively;
and
(5) document the facility's
compliance with each paragraph of this subsection at the time it is
completed.
(o)
Self-reported incidents related to a disaster or emergency.
(1) A facility must report a fire to HHSC as
follows:
(A) by calling 1-800-458-9858
immediately after the fire or as soon as practicable during the course of an
extended fire; and
(B) by
submitting a completed HHSC form titled "Fire Report for Long Term Care
Facilities" within 15 calendar days after the fire.
(2) A facility must report to HHSC a death or
serious injury of a resident, or threat to resident health or safety, resulting
from an emergency or disaster as follows:
(A)
by calling 1-800-458-9858 immediately after the incident, or, if the incident
is of extended duration, as soon as practicable after the injury, death, or
threat to the resident; and
(B) by
conducting an investigation of the emergency and resulting resident injury,
death, or threat, and submitting a completed HHSC Form 3613-A titled "SNF, NF,
ICF/IID, ALF, DAHS and PPECC Provider Investigation Report with Cover Sheet."
The facility must submit the completed form within five working days after
making the telephone report required by paragraph (2)(A) of this
subsection.
(p)
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.