Current through Register Vol. 24-18, September 15, 2024
(1) The licensee shall:
(a) Comply with the provisions of chapter
71.12 RCW and this chapter;
(b)
Post the private psychiatric hospital license in a conspicuous place on the
premises;
(c) Maintain the bed
capacity at or below the licensed bed capacity;
(d) Cooperate with the department during
on-site surveys and investigations;
(e) Respond to a statement of deficiencies by
submitting to the department, according to the dates specified on the statement
of deficiencies form:
(i) A written plan of
correction for each deficiency stated in the report and date to be completed;
and
(ii) A progress report stating
the dates deficiencies were corrected.
(f) Obtain department approval before
changing the bed capacity;
(g)
Obtain department approval before starting any construction or making changes
in department-approved plans or specifications;
(h) Notify the department immediately upon a
change of administrator or governing body;
(i) When assuming ownership of an existing
hospital, maintain past and current clinical records, registers, indexes, and
analyses of hospital services, according to state law and regulations;
and
(j) Obtain department approval
of a plan for storing and retrieving patient records and reports prior to
ceasing operation as a hospital.
(2) An applicant or licensee may contest a
disciplinary decision or action of the department according to the provisions
of RCW
43.70.115, chapter 34.05 RCW and chapter
246-10 WAC.
(3) The department
shall:
(a) Issue or renew a license when the
applicant or licensee meets the requirements in chapter 71.12 RCW and this
chapter;
(b) Conduct an on-site
inspection of the hospital prior to granting an initial license;
(c) Conduct on-site inspections at any time
to determine compliance with chapter 71.12 RCW and this chapter;
(d) Give the administrator a written
statement of deficiencies of chapter 71.12 RCW and this chapter observed during
on-site surveys and investigations; and
(e) Comply with
RCW
43.70.115, chapter 34.05 RCW and chapter
246-10 WAC when denying, suspending, modifying, or revoking a hospital
license.
(4) The
department may deny, suspend, or revoke a private psychiatric hospital license
if the department finds the applicant, licensee, its agents, officers,
directors, or any person with any interest therein:
(a) Is unqualified or unable to operate or
direct operation of the hospital according to chapter 71.12 RCW and this
chapter;
(b) Makes a
misrepresentation of, false statement of, or fails to disclose a material fact,
to the department:
(i) In an application for
licensure or renewal of licensure;
(ii) In any matter under department
investigation; or
(iii) During an
on-site survey or inspection;
(c) Obtains or attempts to obtain a license
by fraudulent means or misrepresentation;
(d) Fails or refuses to comply with the
requirements of chapter 71.12 RCW or this chapter;
(e) Compromises the health or safety of a
patient;
(f) Has a record of a
criminal or civil conviction for:
(i)
Operating a health care or mental health care facility without a
license;
(ii) Any crime involving
physical harm to another individual; or
(iii) Any crime or disciplinary board final
decision specified in
RCW
43.43.830;
(g) Had a license to operate a health care or
mental health care facility denied, suspended or revoked;
(h) Refuses to allow the department access to
facilities or records, or fails to promptly produce for inspection any book,
record, document or item requested by the department, or interferes with an
on-site survey or investigation;
(i) Commits, permits, aids or abets the
commission of an illegal act on the hospital premises;
(j) Demonstrates cruelty, abuse, negligence,
assault or indifference to the welfare and well-being of a patient;
(k) Fails to take immediate appropriate
corrective action in any instance of cruelty, assault, abuse, neglect, or
indifference to the welfare of a patient;
(l) Misappropriates the property of a
patient;
(m) Fails to exercise
fiscal accountability and responsibility toward individual patients, the
department, or the business community; or
(n) Retaliates against a staff person,
patient or other individual for reporting suspected abuse or other alleged
improprieties.
(5) The
department may summarily suspend a license pending proceeding for revocation or
other action if the department determines a deficiency is an imminent threat to
a patient's health, safety or welfare.
(6) The department may assess civil fines on
a psychiatric hospital according to
RCW
71.12.710.
(a) The department may assess a civil fine of
up to $10,000 per violation, not to exceed a total fine of $1,000,000, on a
psychiatric hospital when:
(i) The psychiatric
hospital has previously been subject to an enforcement action for the same or
similar type of violation of the same statute or rule; or
(ii) The psychiatric hospital has been given
any previous statement of deficiency that included the same or similar type of
violation of the same or similar statute or rule; or
(iii) The psychiatric hospital failed to
correct noncompliance with a statute or rule by a date established or agreed to
by the department.
(b)
The department will assess a civil fine in accordance with Table 1 of this
section:
Table 1
Fine Amounts in Relation to the
Severity of the Violation
|
Impact of Potential or Actual
Harm
|
Scope
|
Low
|
Moderate
|
High
|
Limited
|
Up to $1,000
|
$1,000 - $4,000
|
$2,000 - $8,000
|
Pattern
|
Up to $2,000
|
$2,000 - $5,500
|
$3,500 - $9,000
|
Widespread
|
Up to $3,000
|
$3,000 - $7,000
|
$6,500 - $10,000
|
(c)
The "severity of the violation" will be considered when determining fines.
Levels of severity are categorized as low, moderate, or high, and defined as:
(i)
"Low" means harm could
happen but would be rare. The violation undermines safety or quality or
contributes to an unsafe environment but is very unlikely to directly
contribute to harm;
(ii)
"Moderate" means harm could happen occasionally. The violation
could cause harm directly, but is more likely to cause harm as a continuing
factor in the presence of special circumstances or additional failures. If the
deficient practice continues, it would be possible that harm could occur but
only in certain situations or patients;
(iii)
"High" means harm could
happen at any time or did happen. The violation could directly lead to harm
without the need for other significant circumstances or failures. If the
deficient practice continues, it would be likely that harm could happen at any
time to any patient.
(d)
Factors the department will consider when determining the severity of the
violation include, but are not limited to:
(i)
Whether harm to the patient has occurred, or could occur including, but not
limited to, a violation of patient's rights;
(ii) The impact of the actual or potential
harm on the patient;
(iii) The
degree to which the hospital failed to meet the patient's highest practicable
physical, mental, and psychosocial well-being;
(iv) Whether a fine at a lower severity has
been levied and the condition or deficiency related to the violation has not
been adequately resolved; and
(v)
Whether the hospital has been offered, or requested, and received and
implemented technical assistance from the department.
(e) The scope of the violation is the
frequency, incidence or extent of the occurrence of the violation(s). The
levels of scope are defined as follows:
(i)
"Limited" means a unique occurrence of the deficient practice that
is not representative of routine or regular practice and has the potential to
impact only one or a very limited number of patients, visitors, or staff. It is
an outlier. The scope of the violation is limited when one or a very limited
number of patients are affected or one or a very limited number of staff are
involved, or the deficient practice occurs in a very limited number of
locations.
(ii)
"Pattern" means multiple occurrences of the deficient practice, or
a single occurrence that has the potential to impact more than a limited number
of patients, visitors, or staff. It is a process variation. The scope of the
violation becomes a pattern when more than a very limited number of patients
are affected, or more than a very limited number of staff are involved, or the
situation has occurred in several locations, or the same patient(s) have been
affected by repeated occurrences of the same deficient practice.
(iii)
"Widespread" means the
deficient practice is pervasive in the facility or represents a systemic
failure or has the potential to impact most or all patients, visitors, or
staff. It is a process failure. Widespread scope refers to the entire
organization, not just a subset of patients or one unit.
(f) When determining the scope of the
violation, the department will also consider the duration of time that has
passed between violations that relate to the same or similar
circumstances.
(g) A hospital may
appeal the department's action of assessing civil fines under
RCW
43.70.095.
Statutory Authority: Chapter 71.12 RCW and RCW 43.60.040.
95-22-012, § 246-322-025, filed 10/20/95, effective
11/20/95.