Washington Administrative Code
Title 246 - Health, Department of
FACILITY STANDARDS AND LICENSING
Chapter 246-341 - Behavioral health agency licensing and certification requirements
CERTIFICATION AND SERVICE STANDARDS FOR BEHAVIORAL HEALTH SUPPORT SERVICES
Section 246-341-0715 - Crisis support services-Service standards
Universal Citation: WA Admin Code 246-341-0715
Current through Register Vol. 24-18, September 15, 2024
Crisis support services are short-term (less than two weeks per episode) services that include face-to-face and other means of assistance with life skills training and understanding of medication effects on an individual.
(1) An agency providing crisis support services must:
(a) Assure
communication and coordination with the individual's mental health or substance
use disorder treatment provider, if indicated and appropriate;
(b) If an individual is found to be
experiencing an acute crisis, remain with the individual in order to provide
stabilization and support until the crisis is resolved or referral to another
service is accomplished;
(c) As
appropriate, refer individuals to voluntary or involuntary treatment facilities
for admission on a seven day a week, 24 hour a day basis, including
arrangements for contacting the designated crisis responder;
(d) Transport or arrange for transport of an
individual in a safe and timely manner, when necessary;
(e) Document whether the individual has a
crisis plan and any request to obtain the crisis plan;
(f) Develop and implement policies and
procedures for training staff to identify and assist individuals in crisis
before assigning the staff member unsupervised duties; and
(g) Maintain a current list of local
resources for referrals, legal, employment, education, interpreter and social
and health services.
(2) An agency providing crisis support services for substance use disorder must ensure a professional appropriately credentialed to provide substance use disorder treatment is available or on staff 24 hours a day, seven days a week.
(3) When services are provided in a private home or nonpublic setting, the agency must:
(a) Have a written plan for training, staff
back-up, information sharing and communication for staff members who respond to
a crisis in an individual's personal residence or in a nonpublic
location;
(b) Ensure that a staff
member responding to a crisis is able to be accompanied by a second trained
individual when services are provided in the individual's personal residence or
other nonpublic location;
(c)
Ensure that any staff member who engages in home visits is provided access, by
their employer, to a wireless telephone or comparable device for the purpose of
emergency communication;
(d)
Provide staff members who are sent to a personal residence or other nonpublic
location to evaluate an individual in crisis, prompt access to information
about any history of dangerousness or potential dangerousness on the individual
they are being sent to evaluate that is documented in a crisis plan(s) or
commitment record(s). This information must be made available without unduly
delaying the crisis response.
Disclaimer: These regulations may not be the most recent version. Washington 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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